1 All human sciences have traveled along that path.
2 "I am very sorry to have made you travel so far," said he.
3 You are fond of travel, and in three days you will see Moscow.
4 Willarski was going to Moscow and they agreed to travel together.
5 It was impossible for him to travel, it would not do to let him die on the road.
6 The countess was still unwell and unable to travel but it was impossible to wait for her recovery.
7 Prince Andrew in a traveling coat without epaulettes had been packing with his valet in the rooms assigned to him.
8 Her equipages were the huge family coach in which she had traveled to Voronezh, a semiopen trap, and a baggage cart.
9 Denisov was going home to Voronezh and Rostov persuaded him to travel with him as far as Moscow and to stay with him there.
10 de Beausset, who was so fond of travel, to accompany him on his ride, he went out of the tent to where the horses stood saddled.
11 All these traveling effects of Prince Andrew's were in very good order: new, clean, and in cloth covers carefully tied with tapes.
12 Half the wagons laden with hardtack that had traveled the first stages with them had been captured by Cossacks, the other half had gone on ahead.
13 de Beausset, the man so fond of travel, having fasted since morning, came up to the Emperor and ventured respectfully to suggest lunch to His Majesty.
14 Europe would in this way soon have been, in fact, but one people, and anyone who traveled anywhere would have found himself always in the common fatherland.
15 With her traveled Mademoiselle Bourienne, little Nicholas and his tutor, her old nurse, three maids, Tikhon, and a young footman and courier her aunt had sent to accompany her.
16 There is a well known, so-called sophism of the ancients consisting in this, that Achilles could never catch up with a tortoise he was following, in spite of the fact that he traveled ten times as fast as the tortoise.
17 He showed an interest in trifles, joked about de Beausset's love of travel, and chatted carelessly, as a famous, self-confident surgeon who knows his job does when turning up his sleeves and putting on his apron while a patient is being strapped to the operating table.
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