Book,  chapter

  1    1,    1|          and thrown on the deck. A man came forward immediately,
  2    1,    2|           Mangles, “it is the very man. He sailed from Glasgow
  3    1,    3|  Southerners. And yet he was not a man behind the times, and there
  4    1,    4|            have killed an ordinary man. But Harry would not be
  5    1,    4|      requested not to speak to the man at the wheel.~Lady Glenarvan
  6    1,    5|        face and regular features—a man who did whatever he was
  7    1,    5|        feeling of irritation.~This man was endowed in an eminent
  8    1,    6|             thin, withered-looking man, about forty years of age,
  9    1,    6|          was a lively, intelligent man; he had not the crabbed
 10    1,    6|             pardonable enough in a man who came all the way, without
 11    1,    6|    traveler of that name. A daring man he was, sir. I offer you
 12    1,    6|          asked himself whether the man was mad, or some heedless
 13    1,    7|       never seen it. Well now, the man at the helm has only to
 14    1,    7|            ridiculous plight for a man to be in, to find himself
 15    1,    8|          tell me, after that great man?”~“Well, certainly, there
 16    1,    9|          was probably the happiest man in all the southern hemisphere.
 17    1,   10|          continent, the way a good man goes through the world,
 18    1,   11|         few drops of rum, and each man carries a supply of this
 19    1,   11|           moreover, was a taciturn man naturally, and had not been
 20    1,   13|         rest yourself. You’ll be a man, when others are only children
 21    1,   15|         fifty paces from the RIO a man of very tall stature was
 22    1,   15|           Paganel will be the very man for him. It is lucky for
 23    1,   15|          de bem.” (You are a brave man.)~The native listened, but
 24    1,   15|         Yes, it’s clear enough the man speaks Spanish.”~“He!”~“
 25    1,   15|             of course, because the man speaks badly,” replied the
 26    1,   16|     friends, he means a courageous man.”~“My father!” exclaimed
 27    1,   16|            the Poyuches Indians, a man with two tongues and two
 28    1,   17|      geographer. “Do I look like a man that would commit crimes?”~“
 29    1,   18|          on the yards must teach a man to hold on firm; and as
 30    1,   19|        elbows on his knees, like a man roused suddenly from his
 31    1,   21|          person. He was a vigorous man about fifty years of age,
 32    1,   21|            evident that the worthy man must have left his native
 33    1,   21|     Argentine Government. He was a man about fifty years of age,
 34    1,   21|          for a few minutes, like a man trying to ransack his memory.
 35    1,   22|           firm at his post, like a man on whom discouragement takes
 36    1,   22|        tents and coverlets as each man lay down and fell asleep
 37    1,   22|          sorry about, for the poor man was obliged to swallow down
 38    1,   24|            and last of all a white man.”~“I am delighted to hear
 39    1,   24|    intractable Paganel. “The white man proclaimed himself chief
 40    1,   24|           put the shirt of a happy man on your shoulders.’ Whereupon
 41    1,   24|            Prince embraced the old man, and set out at once to
 42    1,   24|          vain: he could not find a man among them that was happy.
 43    1,   24|           he thought, ‘Surely this man is happy, if there is such
 44    1,   25|     Paganel, a nest wont do for a man, and you will learn that
 45    1,   25|       parent branch, as thick as a man’s wrist, and surrounded
 46    1,   26|        little wonder, then, if the man on the look-out could neither
 47    1,   26|        reeled about like a drunken man. Glenarvan looked at him,
 48    1,   26|           said:~“Now go. You are a man.”~“Good-by, good-by, friend!”
 49    2,    1|          while to persist in it, a man must be a fool.”~“Stop,
 50    2,    2|        after, at break of day, the man on the look-out was heard
 51    2,    3|            solitudes of the Poles, man scarcely dares to venture;
 52    2,    3|         madam! You dont believe a man could be happy on a desert
 53    2,    3|         desert island?”~“I do not. Man is made for society and
 54    2,    3|           he will be like the last man on the last day of the world.
 55    2,    3|           Monsieur Paganel, such a man is not to be envied.”~Paganel
 56    2,    3|            s fishing-huts. The old man had been long on the island,
 57    2,    3|        receiving in return the old man’s blessing on their expedition.~
 58    2,    4|            was by no means a timid man, was so afraid in 1802,
 59    2,    6|         Mary,” said Captain John. “Man’s extremity is God’s opportunity.
 60    2,    6|            moment a pleasant-faced man, about fifty years of age,
 61    2,    6|            of the Irish colonist—a man who, weary of the miseries
 62    2,    6|        government. Any industrious man, by proper cultivation,
 63    2,    6|          the BRITANNIA, and like a man who goes right to the point,
 64    2,    7|          started up and toward the man that Paddy OMoore had addressed
 65    2,    7|        hands. It seemed as if this man’s presence was the sure
 66    2,    7|           not say. The replies the man gave to the thousand questions
 67    2,    7|  unexpected meeting. Certainly the man had mentioned facts and
 68    2,    7|            for his being an honest man. He has been two months
 69    2,    7|            captivity. He is a true man, worthy of your entire confidence.”~
 70    2,    7|           his good faith, when the man came in and brought his
 71    2,    7|        document if he were not the man named in it.~“Now then,”
 72    2,    8|    attached to the presence of the man, and submitted. The whole
 73    2,    8|            saw he had to do with a man who understood such matters,
 74    2,    8|           Ayrton is an intelligent man,” said Paganel to the Major.~“
 75    2,   10|        vo-ciferations.~Presently a man came out of the cloud. This
 76    2,   11|         daybreak, accompanied by a man who gave himself out as
 77    2,   11|       which looked so painful. The man continued his work without
 78    2,   11|            latter was a tall, thin man, im-perturbably cool, and,
 79    2,   12|      understand English, my little man?” asked the young lady.~“
 80    2,   12|         but unfortunately the poor man was killed.”~“And you did
 81    2,   13|           escaped fellows. A brave man wouldnt care a bit for
 82    2,   14|          out his hand to the young man, “receive the sincere compliments
 83    2,   14|        macropus giganteus, an “old man,” as the bushmen say.~For
 84    2,   14|        troop stopped, and the “old manleaned against the trunk
 85    2,   15|       certainly take a very absent man who could cross over a chain
 86    2,   15|             But I am not an absent man now. I appeal to the ladies.
 87    2,   15|           was called, was a coarse man with an ill-tempered face,
 88    2,   15|        declared to be the greatest man in Great Britain, even above
 89    2,   16|          the Major is not at all a man to speak without reason.”~“
 90    2,   16|            said, with the air of a man who knew what he was about: “
 91    2,   16|      quartermaster was the fittest man for the mission. All the
 92    2,   16|          quartermaster to him as a man worthy of all confidence.
 93    2,   17|          The Major, like a prudent man, extinguished these carefully,
 94    2,   17|              but in my opinion the man’s name is really Ayrton.
 95    2,   17|        hardly have chosen a better man, for he was not only brave
 96    2,   18|        heard him repeating, like a man struggling with himself: “
 97    2,   18|            weapon in the hand of a man who does not tremble, for
 98    2,   18|        Mary Grant. A more timorous man than the sailor would have
 99    2,   18|         Yes,” said McNabbs. “Is it man or beast?”~“A man,” replied
100    2,   18|            Is it man or beast?”~“A man,” replied John Mangles.~
101    2,   18|            of an hour, the wounded man, who till then had lain
102    2,   18|           too great a risk for one man to venture alone into a
103    2,   18|            hour since, the wounded man had awakened from his lethargy,
104    2,   19|            when everything fails a man, and he finds himself without
105    2,   19|         shore by the perversity of man.~END OF BOOK TWO~
106    3,    1|         that they had to do with a man of no education, and whose
107    3,    2|          with a nineteenth century man. No such mistake can be
108    3,    3|           of the Maories is a lost man. I have urged my friends
109    3,    4| Fortunately, Will Halley was not a man in a hurry, and did not
110    3,    4|  bitterness of his grief. He was a man of energy, till now happy
111    3,    4|          the ship to the wind. The man who was steering received
112    3,    4|        restrain them; the wretched man tore his hair and wrung
113    3,    5|         Robert has shown himself a man, and I treat him as such,
114    3,    7|         Rivers. Potatau was an old man, remarkable rather for cunning
115    3,    8|            betray the existence of man. The stream was fringed
116    3,    9|         steered with a paddle by a man seated in the stern.~This
117    3,    9|          seated in the stern.~This man was a tall Maori, about
118    3,   10|           on the Waikato. He was a man about forty years of age,
119    3,   12|            said he, “it might be a man.”~“Animal or man,” answered
120    3,   12|        might be a man.”~“Animal or man,” answered the Major, “I
121    3,   12|         soon became evident that a man, or men, clinging to the
122    3,   13|        puzzled by the reserve of a man generally so talkative;
123    3,   13|          rest.~“Paganel is another man!” thought McNabbs.~His face
124    3,   13|          fifteen days, or the dead man forever.~The vegetable aliments
125    3,   15|      clayey soil which the foot of man had never trod. They knew
126    3,   16|     replied Tom, with the air of a man who does not in the least
127    3,   16|         put his hands on the dying man when he started up as if
128    3,   16|           the most terrible absent man. I can’t change my skin.”~“
129    3,   16|         for me to see the wretched man.”~“He must be confronted
130    3,   17|           certainties to condemn a man, and certainties you have
131    3,   17|       Ayrton shook his head like a man determined to be silent.~“
132    3,   17|       whether painful or joyous— a man who could have invented
133    3,   17|           he shook his head like a man who has given up all hope,
134    3,   17|          lost.~And yet there was a man on board who could have
135    3,   17|          the quartermaster. When a man had failed, a woman perhaps,
136    3,   17|            last with this pitiless man, and went next day herself
137    3,   18|            bargaining between this man and himself seemed strange.~“
138    3,   18|    quartermaster.~Was this strange man glad of this decision? One
139    3,   18|        colony. Harry Grant was the man to carry out grand projects,
140    3,   18|          villain might have been a man,” said the Major.~“Yes,”
141    3,   19|         later, at two oclock, the man on watch signaled land on
142    3,   19|             called out John to the man at the helm. “To-morrow
143    3,   19|          forepart of the yacht the man on watch was pacing the
144    3,   19|           there was no one but the man at the wheel.~At this moment
145    3,   19|            and will always hope. A man like my father doesnt die
146    3,   19|         would be ungrateful, but a man, my father has said a hundred
147    3,   19|           father! Help! Help!”~The man at the wheel darted forward
148    3,   19|         once more by saying to the man at the wheel:~“Hawkins,
149    3,   19|          father!” she exclaimed.~A man was standing on the beach,
150    3,   19|        Robert. This was indeed the man the children had so often
151    3,   20|          How he has grown! he is a man!” was his delighted exclamation.
152    3,   20|           an intelligent, intrepid man,” he added, “whose passions
153    3,   20|          refuge there, the hand of man began to organize the efforts
154    3,   20|            husband. “Must the poor man be left there?”~“He must,
155    3,   20|             as if in presence of a man who was about to die, and
156    3,   21|          was soon the most popular man in old Caledonia. His son
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