Book,  chapter

 1    1,    8|         consequently water. The rough weather prevented the passengers
 2    1,   15|   However, it seemed as if good rough hugging did not hurt sick
 3    1,   26|       was very high and the sea rough. The clouds were scudding
 4    1,   26|         the sea so particularly rough, that in heavy weather vessels
 5    1,   26|     said Tom Austin. “It is too rough.”~“Nor John Mangles,” added
 6    2,    3|      crews of which are usually rough, coarse men.~M. Viot presented
 7    2,    6| unexplored.~The boats had hard, rough work of it now, but the
 8    2,    7|     keep her eyes off his face, rough and homely though it was,
 9    2,    8|      had to take it. But if the rough construction could not be
10    3,    1|                     CHAPTER I A ROUGH CAPTAIN~IF ever the searchers
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