Book, Chapter
1 I, II | the gourbi, in which of necessity he was quartered, was uncomfortable
2 I, VIII | appeared. Ben Zoof admitted the necessity of extemporizing a kind
3 I, XIII | that they made a virtue of necessity, and resigned themselves
4 I, XVII | that there was the greatest necessity to maintain the utmost possible
5 I, XX | produced; and this involved the necessity of felling the numerous
6 I, XXI | his mind: he must yield to necessity; he must do the best he
7 I, XXIII| acknowledged that, in case of necessity, it might become a very
8 II, IV | except under the most urgent necessity, would not permit him to
9 II, IX | to spoil, and he felt the necessity of turning them into money,
10 II, IX | purchaser. Mutual interest and necessity thus conspired to draw Hakkabut
11 II, X | the future; they saw no necessity for expending the strength
12 II, XII | afford a foothold. It must of necessity be entered from the interior.~
13 II, XII | it is an old saying that ‘Necessity is the mother of invention.’
14 II, XIII | Nevertheless, except the necessity became far more urgent than
15 II, XIII | had it not been for the necessity of obtaining fresh water,
16 II, XVI | atmosphere to atmosphere.~The necessity was becoming more and more
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