Book,  chapter

  1    1,    2|                exclaimed Lady Helena. “Go on, John!”~“On the same
  2    1,    2|                Helena. “Look!”~“Let us go steadily to work,” said
  3    1,    2|                the Major.~“Well, we’ll go on,” resumed Glenarvan. “
  4    1,    2|              German for CRUEL!”~“Let’s go on,” said Lord Glenarvan,
  5    1,    2|                Malcolm Castle, while I go on to London and lay this
  6    1,    2|                Lord Glenarvan, “let us go on with our investigations,
  7    1,    2|               alone, I would engage to go right to the place where
  8    1,    2|                 friends, we had better go up on deck, as the boat
  9    1,    4|               adopt, but determined to go to Dumbartonshire immediately,
 10    1,    4|               Helena made the children go to bed, for she knew they
 11    1,    4|         exclaimed little Robert, “I’ll go and speak to those people
 12    1,    4|         gratitude; and then we’ll both go together.”~“Mary!” said
 13    1,    4|                in a tone of surprise.~“Go where?” asked Lord Glenarvan.~“
 14    1,    4|                the hand, and turned to go away; but she stepped back
 15    1,    4|               in the Southern Seas, or go round the world if necessary.
 16    1,    4|             world if necessary. Let us go, Edward; let us start off
 17    1,    5|                she herself proposed to go, all hesitation was at an
 18    1,    5|               tried. He would not even go as a passenger, but must
 19    1,    6|               it; and I should like to go down and see how our brave
 20    1,    7|             prevent sea-sickness is to go to bed as soon as you start,
 21    1,    7|             Edinburgh when you want to go to Dumbarton might happen;
 22    1,    7|                Chili when you meant to go to India— that is a blunder
 23    1,    7|              should reply, ‘Let us all go to India together,’ and
 24    1,    7|             America when he set out to go to the East Indies!”~But
 25    1,    8|              the same to you, we might go on to the Canary Isles instead.”~“
 26    1,    8|            Cape Verde Islands. We must go in there anyhow for coal,
 27    1,    8|              to collect his luggage to go on shore. The DUNCAN was
 28    1,    8|         extreme.~Lady Helena could not go on shore as she had purposed;
 29    1,    8|                little known.”~“You can go up the large rivers,” suggested
 30    1,    8| Yarou-Dzangbo-Tchou—what about that?”~“Go up the Rio Colorado instead.
 31    1,    8|             Monsieur Paganel, will you go with us?” asked Lady Helena,
 32    1,    9|               take thirty-six hours to go through them, and the moving
 33    1,   10|             not got,” he said.~“Let us go to the Custom-house,” replied
 34    1,   10|              me that it is our duty to go along the line my finger
 35    1,   10|              those we seek, if even we go right round the world?”~
 36    1,   10|            Glenarvan, “we’ll manage to go, my boy, and find him. Nothing
 37    1,   10|   reconnoitered the situation, we must go back to the DUNCAN on the
 38    1,   10|                  said Lord Glenarvan. “Go we must, and as soon as
 39    1,   10|              my dear McNabbs. We shall go through the capital of Araucania,
 40    1,   10|                to draw lots who should go. This was accordingly done,
 41    1,   10|               Lord Glenarvan at last.~“Go then, dear Edward,” said
 42    1,   10|             got strong enough grips to go some way towards satisfying
 43    1,   10|                we’ll help ourselves.”~“Go on,” sung out the captain
 44    1,   11|               once a day, and they can go with ease ten leagues in
 45    1,   12|           mares and sheep and oxen can go that way, we can, so let’
 46    1,   12|                  Yes, but no more will go; the last earthquake has
 47    1,   12|             right. His mules could not go farther. When he talked
 48    1,   12|         companions and said:~“Will you go on in spite of all the difficulty?”~“
 49    1,   12|          gallop over the plains. Let’s go forward then, I say, and
 50    1,   12|               exclaimed. “You will not go with us, then?” said Glenarvan
 51    1,   12|             manfully, but he could not go much farther.~At three o’
 52    1,   13|         readiness for supper, and I’ll go out and turn woodcutter.”~“
 53    1,   13|        woodcutter.”~“Wilson and I will go with you,” said Paganel.~“
 54    1,   13|              regular howling.”~“Let us go out and see,” said Glenarvan.~“
 55    1,   13|             Take my advice, and let us go to sleep without troubling
 56    1,   13|                 I say, Major, shall we go to sleep?”~“Yes, we’ll go
 57    1,   13|              go to sleep?”~“Yes, we’ll go to sleep, Paganel.”~Each
 58    1,   14|            crying for succor.~“We must go and look for him, and look
 59    1,   14|           fastened round my waist, and go down myself. I insist upon
 60    1,   14|               sighs were,~“I shall not go away! I shall not go away!”~
 61    1,   14|               not go away! I shall not go away!”~No one of the party
 62    1,   14|               a matter of necessity to go and bring back the poor
 63    1,   14|            lead them to the Pampas. To go back would be more difficult
 64    1,   14|              be more difficult than to go forward. Besides, the Atlantic
 65    1,   14|              parachute. He had not let go his prey, but gently sank
 66    1,   15|                 and said stiffly,~“You go a little too far, Major.”~“
 67    1,   15|             talk Portuguese! Why, if I go on like this, some day I
 68    1,   17|                Glenarvan determined to go up to them; but he had no
 69    1,   18|                to make up our minds to go seventy-two miles south,
 70    1,   18|               Pampas for us to let you go. Neither Mulrady, nor Wilson,
 71    1,   18|                my understanding him.”~“Go, then, my worthy friend,”
 72    1,   18|            Thalcave thought it best to go first to Guamini, as it
 73    1,   18|              reins, and making a horse go through all sorts of movements,
 74    1,   18|              wearied animals could not go quicker than a walking pace.
 75    1,   18|                an hour. They could not go on at all, and refused to
 76    1,   18|           chests.~Their masters had to go on too, whether they would
 77    1,   18|                them.”~“But couldnt we go to meet them? It would spare
 78    1,   19|             feared; but they generally go in immense packs, and one
 79    1,   19|                 and none of them would go back to their dens without
 80    1,   19|             frightened horses, “Let us go together.”~“No,” replied
 81    1,   19|               must do. It is for me to go, and for him to stay by
 82    1,   20|       flamingos, leaving the others to go on in advance.~As soon as
 83    1,   20|                must we do then?”~“I’ll go and ask him,” replied Paganel.~
 84    1,   20|                advice of Thalcave, and go to the village of Tandil.
 85    1,   20|            stop at any of them, but to go straight on to Fort Independence.
 86    1,   20|              it was the surest plan to go straight on to the village
 87    1,   21|              having allowed himself to go on a wrong scent. No one,
 88    1,   22|              the guide and asked him.~“Go on fast,” was the reply.~
 89    1,   22|              their pace, but could not go fast enough to escape the
 90    1,   23|               replied Wilson; “we must go down to his Lordship.”~Next
 91    1,   23|                dry myself by. Who will go and cut wood in the forest?”~“
 92    1,   23|                my dear Edward. When we go on board the DUNCAN, turn
 93    1,   23|             beak head to the east, and go right along the thirty-seventh
 94    1,   23|           continent, wouldnt it be to go away from the very spot
 95    1,   23|              in the Amsterdam group.”~“Go on.”~“It cuts Australia
 96    1,   24|               he proposed to Robert to go and hunt in the neighboring
 97    1,   24|              shot, and set off.~“Dont go too far,” said the Major,
 98    1,   24|                 rejoined McNabbs. “But go on, Scheherazade, and tell
 99    1,   25|              Glenarvan, “we had better go down to our friends, and
100    1,   25|                silence around.~“Let us go down,” said Glenarvan; “
101    1,   26|             miles now that they had to go, and Thaouka would not refuse
102    1,   26|            could see at night. He must go and wake him.~The learned
103    1,   26|             six-oared one— to come and go in a shorter space of time.~
104    1,   26|               face. Then he said:~“Now go. You are a man.”~“Good-by,
105    2,    1|                Lordship that I did not go through the Straits of Magellan
106    2,    1|          French, I will ask Paganel to go over it for your benefit.”~
107    2,    1|       incontestable and uncontested.”~“Go on, Major,” said Paganel; “
108    2,    1|               of the question.~“Let us go on then,” resumed Paganel. “
109    2,    1|               examine and compare, and go over and over each word,
110    2,    1|                  interrupted McNabbs.~“Go on then.”~“Whatever likelihood
111    2,    2|                learn Australian, dont go and study it in a Chinese
112    2,    3|            from the 37th parallel, and go two degrees north. In less
113    2,    3|                 said the Major, “dont go and tell us that it is your
114    2,    4|                 sailing clippers often go faster.”~“Well, then, instead
115    2,    4|          immense wilds of Australia.”~“Go on, Paganel,” said Lord
116    2,    4|           going too far.”~“And I might go farther, McNabbs,” replied
117    2,    5|               them, and begged them to go below again immediately.
118    2,    5|             must be alone with my men. Go into the saloon. The vessel
119    2,    5|              But we might be a help.”~“Go in, my Lord, go in. I must
120    2,    5|                help.”~“Go in, my Lord, go in. I must indeed insist
121    2,    6|                them? How far must they go to regain the parallel.
122    2,    6|         through his telescope.~“Let us go to it, then,” said Glenarvan.~
123    2,    7|                in her soft voice: “Oh, go on, Mr. Ayrton, tell us
124    2,    7|           re-embark in the DUNCAN, and go right to the scene of the
125    2,    7|        Melbourne.”~“Well, let the ship go to Melbourne then,” said
126    2,    7|             said Paganel, “and we will go without her to Twofold Bay.”~“
127    2,    7|               Melbourne. If we have to go on to the coast, on the
128    2,    7|             350 miles, not more. If we go twelve miles a day it will
129    2,    7|              the heat is tropical, and go where the most adventurous
130    2,    7|            asked Glenarvan, anxious to go into all the difficulties
131    2,    7|                as much. Well, will you go?”~“What do you think, Helena?”
132    2,    8|            said, “Yes, my Lord, I will go with you, and if I can not
133    2,    8|          replied Glenarvan. “You shall go with us, for it would be
134    2,    8|               Ayrton thought proper to go too, and about four oclock
135    2,    9|               but if the horses are to go far, their speed must be
136    2,    9|            eloquent than statistics.”~“Go on,” said the Major.~“Well,
137    2,   10|               consequently they had to go first, divided into two
138    2,   10|             dogs. But when they had to go through great forests and
139    2,   10|               a “leaderunfortunately go astray, he had to be found,
140    2,   10|              but they still refused to go forward. The rams were dragged
141    2,   10|              Ayrton proposed he should go to Black Point Station,
142    2,   10|             blacksmith with him.~“Yes, go, my good fellow,” said Glenarvan. “
143    2,   11|               quit the Wimerra camp to go and look for a blacksmith
144    2,   12|         Northern Australia. They often go to the large towns, such
145    2,   12|                primitive costume. They go to barter their few articles
146    2,   12|            That’s an understood thing. Go on.”~Paganel’s face betrayed
147    2,   12|          delight of the Major.~“Let us go on to Asia,” said the geographer.~“
148    2,   12|                more. He was obliged to go away and take his laugh
149    2,   13|                 My advice, then, is to go forward.”~“And good advice
150    2,   13|              event should oblige us to go to Melbourne, we might be
151    2,   14|             some thousands, young men. Go to a distant colony; and
152    2,   14|              Besides, they would never go into the deserts of the
153    2,   15|             pass. They were obliged to go at a venture, and enter
154    2,   15|             replied Glenarvan. “Let us go in.”~Glenarvan, followed
155    2,   15|                when the team could not go well round sharp turnings,
156    2,   15|            trees. It was impossible to go on till this tremendous
157    2,   15|              the ladies do? Could they go over the one hundred and
158    2,   16|             and Glenarvan was about to go back to the wagon, when
159    2,   16|             replied Glenarvan. “Let us go back now, or they will be
160    2,   16|                Mary Grant undertook to go five miles a day. The courageous
161    2,   16|              Fifteen or twenty days to go seventy-five miles?” cried
162    2,   16|               A good swimmer could not go over without danger.”~“Let
163    2,   16|            should leave Melbourne, and go to the east coast.”~“Oh,
164    2,   16|                orders to Tom Austin to go on to Twofold Bay.”~This
165    2,   16|               Mangles.~“He will simply go back to the Lucknow Road
166    2,   16|               straight to Melbourne.”~“Go two hundred and fifty miles
167    2,   16|              Honor’s permission I will go myself. I am accustomed
168    2,   16|              across worse parts. I can go through where another would
169    2,   16|            Captain’s interests.~“Well, go, Ayrton,” said Glenarvan. “
170    2,   17|               and that since we cannot go to Twofold Bay, we must
171    2,   17|                to Twofold Bay, we must go to Melbourne. We have still
172    2,   17|                me, my Lord, and I will go to Melbourne.”~“But that
173    2,   17|        observation. That some one must go to Melbourne is evident,
174    2,   17|            careful of his life. I will go instead.”~“That is all very
175    2,   17|               should you be the one to go?”~“Are we not here?” said
176    2,   17|             Glenarvan, “one of us must go, so let it be decided by
177    2,   17|               Edward, you ought not to go.”~“Danger is involved in
178    2,   17|              had drawn lots who should go, and Mulrady had been chosen.
179    2,   17|                 Order to Tom Austin to go to sea without delay; and
180    2,   18|             advised Mulrady to let him go gently as soon as he got
181    2,   18|               to us without delay. Now go, my brave sailor, and God
182    2,   18|              Lord,” said John. “I will go alone.”~“You will do nothing
183    2,   18|               besides, where would you go? Where would you find Mulrady?
184    2,   18|             they have no choice but to go on.~“My Lord,” said John
185    2,   18|            will undertake it.”~“I will go with you, John,” said Paganel.~
186    2,   19|               IV Verne yacht could not go to sea; suppose there was
187    2,   19|             and his friends could only go half a mile an hour. Should
188    2,   19|                Ocean. They required to go round the bay to gain the
189    3,    1|              Glenarvan had a desire to go again to the point on the
190    3,    4|                sudden attack.~“Let her go! Let her go!” said the young
191    3,    4|           attack.~“Let her go! Let her go!” said the young captain,
192    3,    4|           Whether she would be able to go about under shortened sail,
193    3,    4|             doubtful whether she would go about without further damage.~
194    3,    6|                hesitate a moment.~“Let go the anchor,” said he.~Mulrady,
195    3,    6|                execute this order, let go the anchor in five fathoms
196    3,    6|                Mangles did not care to go on in the dark, the anchorage
197    3,    7|        Detached parties do not like to go far into the country, where
198    3,    8|     practicable for the vehicles which go almost across the island,
199    3,    9|             district, so that he might go to the aid of the indomitable
200    3,   12|          plight than ourselves. Let us go.”~Truly, the moments were
201    3,   12|              persons; therefore let us go in rotation. Lord and Lady
202    3,   12|              to us to follow.”~“I will go first,” said Robert. “I
203    3,   12|               and wait for the rest.”~“Go, my boy,” said Glenarvan,
204    3,   13|              or be discovered.~“Let us go down!” cried he, “before
205    3,   13|             Yes, McNabbs.”~“No matter; go in.”~Glenarvan, the Major,
206    3,   13|               points out a way, I will go at once.”~“I wish,” remarked
207    3,   13|             salvation.~“And now let us go to the ‘oudoupa!’” cried
208    3,   15|              they had to turn aside or go around for some obstacle,
209    3,   15|             about to give the order to go up the coast, when he suddenly
210    3,   15|           DUNCAN!” cried John, letting go his oar and rising.~“Yes,
211    3,   15|               still. Where should they go? Whither fly? What choice
212    3,   16|           Melbourne without delay, and go and cruise on the eastern
213    3,   16|                  replied Austin. “I’ll go and fetch it.”~V. IV Verne~
214    3,   16|               strange to be ordered to go and cruise on the coast
215    3,   16|             Grant, it was necessary to go where I was told to go.
216    3,   16|              to go where I was told to go. I thought that in consequence
217    3,   16|            cabin without attempting to go out.”~“That’s well, Tom.”~
218    3,   17|            DUNCAN had only to turn and go back.~After Glenarvan had
219    3,   17|               amply provisioned, might go south, double Cape Horn,
220    3,   18|             And yet he was prepared to go still further in disinterestedness.~“
221    3,   18|     circumstances from your recital.”~“Go on, Ayrton,” said Glenarvan.~“
222    3,   18|           repaired. I therefore let it go to Melbourne, and joined
223    3,   18|              your former deductions.”~“Go on, Major; I am ready to
224    3,   19|             will keep under steam, but go very slowly, and to-morrow,
225    3,   19|           deceived? My Lord, do let us go to my father’s help. A boat!
226    3,   20|                than he cared to show.~“Go on!” shouted John to the
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