Book,  chapter

1    1,    5|  the features were somewhat coarse. He had been brought up
2    2,    3|    which are usually rough, coarse men.~M. Viot presented his
3    2,    7|    though his features were coarse, his face was so full of
4    2,   15|     as it was called, was a coarse man with an ill-tempered
5    2,   19|     This was converted into coarse bread, which stilled the
6    3,    1| sailors of his crew. With a coarse, red face, thick hands,
7    3,    4|   any conversation with the coarse seaman; but neither Glenarvan
8    3,    6|     had to fall back on the coarse viands of the ship; sea
9    3,   10|    words that escaped their coarse mouths left no doubt that
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