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Alphabetical [« »] mam-mifers 1 mamma 2 mammoth 1 man 156 man-eaters 1 man-eating 1 man-of-war 1 | Frequency [« »] 158 down 158 first 156 good 156 man 156 new 155 should 153 came | Jules Verne In search of the Castaways Concordances man |
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 won’t 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 don’t 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 O’Moore 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 wouldn’t 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 man” leaned 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 o’clock, 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 doesn’t 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