Book,  chapter

 1    1,   25|     monster such a tremendous blow, that it fell back into
 2    2,    5|       wheel, by an unexpected blow from the tiller. The DUNCAN
 3    2,    9|       because the trade winds blow regularly on the coasts,
 4    2,   11| matter.~“Those who dealt that blow,” said he, “were already
 5    2,   18|    barrels. He felt a violent blow on his side and was thrown
 6    3,    1|     hopes were destroyed at a blow. Toward what quarter of
 7    3,    4|     steering received a smart blow, and could not comprehend
 8    3,    6|       forward, fended off the blow, and the yawl was drawn
 9    3,    9|    New Zealand.~This terrible blow befell Glenarvan at the
10    3,   11|    victim rose; but a violent blow from a “MERE,” a kind of
11    3,   17|    the fable where the storm, blow as it will, cannot tear
12    3,   20|      the Major that dealt the blow, though strangely contrary
13    3,   20|  compared to the geographical blow which had stunned him?~He
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