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  1    1,    4|       educate him, working day and night, denying herself everything,
  2    1,    4|             Lady Helena passed the night in great anxiety, and could
  3    1,    5|      Glasgow. At eight oclock the night before, Lord Glenarvan and
  4    1,    6|           in the day and better at night. It was evident from his
  5    1,    7|          left Paris. It was a dark night, and I saw no one on board,
  6    1,    9|         Tarn rose 6,500 feet high. Night came~V. IV Verne on after
  7    1,    9|     crumbling buildings, which the night invested with grandeur,
  8    1,   11|        stop till they camp for the night, about 4 P. M. Glenarvan
  9    1,   11|         Loja, and encamped for the night at the foot of the Sierras,
 10    1,   12|        should continue part of the night. There was a very steep
 11    1,   12|        toiling steadily upward all night, hoisting themselves up
 12    1,   12|        cold, and saw the shadow of night fast overspreading the desolate
 13    1,   13|        already sunk in shadow, and night was fast drawing her mantle
 14    1,   13|         increased every instant as night deepened, and the whole
 15    1,   13|      forthwith out of the CASUCHA. Night had completely set in, dark
 16    1,   13|           fire was made up for the night.~Loud snores in every tune
 17    1,   14|             So the day passed, and night came on, calm and peaceful
 18    1,   14|             though he wandered all night on the mountain. Sometimes
 19    1,   15|            the day and the ensuing night. Two grave questions, moreover,
 20    1,   16|        glad enough to halt for the night on the banks of the Neuquem,
 21    1,   16|           importance occurred that night or the following day. They
 22    1,   16|         PAMPERO blew violently all night, and was sufficiently trying
 23    1,   17|           looked forward to a good night’s rest to compensate for
 24    1,   18|       Paganel dreamed of water all night, of torrents and cascades,
 25    1,   18|            about the middle of the night, so the best thing we can
 26    1,   18|       could not be found for their night’s lodging, provided they
 27    1,   18|            over them that terrible night on the Cordilleras, but
 28    1,   19|         CHAPTER XIX THE RED WOLVES~NIGHT came, but the orb of night
 29    1,   19|         NIGHT came, but the orb of night was invisible to the inhabitants
 30    1,   19|           roused suddenly from his night’s sleep.~A whole hour passed,
 31    1,   19|          fireflies, which shine at night in many parts of the Pampas;
 32    1,   19|        swimming, prowling about by night and sleeping during the
 33    1,   19|       flames shot up into the dark night. Glenarvan could now get
 34    1,   19|        AGUARA only prowls about at night, and goes back to his lair
 35    1,   19|           Once more the shadows of night fell on the prairie, and
 36    1,   19|    Glenarvan spent the rest of the night in torturing anxiety. He
 37    1,   20|         Pampas, and camped for the night on the frontiers of the
 38    1,   20|          the travelers camped that night.~The passage in the morning
 39    1,   20|       evening, they camped for the night in an immense TOLDERIA,
 40    1,   22|  discomforts and his fatigues. The night was stormy, and the planks
 41    1,   22|        guardian eye of Heaven.~The night passed safely, and no one
 42    1,   23|    companions began to arrange the night quarters, and prepare their
 43    1,   25|          The deep blackness of the night was already scarified with
 44    1,   25|         fire-ship through the dark night, the flames spreading themselves
 45    1,   26|      regularly half of the day and night, bent down the heads of
 46    1,   26|         immediately to prepare the night’s encampment beneath the
 47    1,   26|        nyctalope, and could see at night. He must go and wake him.~
 48    2,    1|       caimans, the waterspout, the night on the Atlantic shore— all
 49    2,    2|     working away from morning till night at a work entitledSublime
 50    2,    5|         remained on deck the whole night, for though as yet the sky
 51    2,    5|      tempest.~The remainder of the night was spent in this manner,
 52    2,    5|       passed away, and the ensuing night, John Mangles never left
 53    2,    6|          to wait long for the same night the hurricane had ceased
 54    2,    7|         what date?”~“It was on the night of the 27th of June, 1862.”~“
 55    2,    7|          in the face, when, on the night of the 22d of June, as Paganel
 56    2,    7| innumerable dangers.~At length one night in October, 1864, he managed
 57    2,    7|            day and by the stars at night. He went on, though often
 58    2,    8|         the caravan camped for the night. John Mangles exercised
 59    2,    8|     Paganel, for he spent half the night in arranging, and wiping,
 60    2,    9|    reckoned on their sleeping next night at Apsley, the most westerly
 61    2,   10|        disposed themselves for the night in the wagon and in the
 62    2,   10|            the plains, sleeping at night and making good progress
 63    2,   10|            stock-keeper hoped when night came he might manage them
 64    2,   10|           till they halted for the night at the foot of Mount Talbot.~
 65    2,   11|          glades, and after a short night the sun reappeared on the
 66    2,   11|       accident had occurred in the night, to the express train which
 67    2,   12|         prepare their camp for the night at once. Ayrton unfastened
 68    2,   12|           his pocket.~By this time night had closed in; it was 10
 69    2,   13|        this immense solitude.~When night came they camped at the
 70    2,   13|     precautions were taken for the night, and Ayrton, Mulrady, Wilson
 71    2,   13|            I fancy, to have a good night’s rest.”~“My dear Edward,
 72    2,   13|          be remembered that on the night of the 29th or 30th of last
 73    2,   13|        Melbourne to Sandhurst. The night express, 11.45, dashing
 74    2,   14|            A. M., after a tranquil night passed in longitude 146
 75    2,   14|    resolved to camp there the same night. Ayrton goaded on his team,
 76    2,   14|            the great trees, and as night had drawn on supper was
 77    2,   14|           absence of the moon, the night was almost luminous with
 78    2,   14|          melody on the still clear night was indescribable. Paganel
 79    2,   14|        from the divine Mozart last night?”~“It was, sir,” replied
 80    2,   15|           a thousand detours. When night came they found they had
 81    2,   15|    Gippsland in deep shadow, as if night had suddenly fallen on the
 82    2,   15|         camped on the plateau that night, and next day the descent
 83    2,   15|          and the tent pitched. The night passed without inconvenience
 84    2,   15|          they might camp that same night on the banks of the Snowy
 85    2,   15|        advice, and came to a halt. Night came on rapidly after a
 86    2,   15|     Arrangements were made for the night immediately. They did the
 87    2,   15|            of wind. The silence of night was only interrupted by
 88    2,   16|       DISCOVERY~IT was a frightful night. At two A. M. the rain began
 89    2,   16|         the animals had passed the night. It was a gloomy-looking
 90    2,   16|            left them the preceding night. They could not have wandered
 91    2,   16|           to make up for their bad night, the discussion was opened,
 92    2,   17|        horses that had died in the night. This would prevent the
 93    2,   18|            on such a dark, raining night on an errand so full of
 94    2,   18|     intensified the horrors of the night.~The travelers went back
 95    2,   18|          to run in the darkness of night among the convicts in their
 96    2,   18|           Tom Austin was gone!~The night wore away amid anxiety and
 97    2,   18|       speed as the darkness of the night would allow. He reckoned
 98    2,   19|      carbine.~It was a dark, rainy night, and morning seemed as if
 99    2,   19|            zeal. All that day, and night, too, they traveled on at
100    3,    4|             All day long, even all night, regardless of the torrents
101    3,    4|          not appear, and the sixth night from their departure from
102    3,    4|           being realized.~But that night was to be a night of terrors.
103    3,    4|         But that night was to be a night of terrors. Darkness came
104    3,    4|          and made all snug for the night. John Mangles approved in
105    3,    5|       advantage of the darkness of night and the sleep of the passengers,
106    3,    5|         considerable progress when night came and interrupted them.~
107    3,    5|          sail by day and anchor at night.”~“Then those wretches who
108    3,    6|         heavy swell on that pitchy night, they ran to certain death.”~
109    3,    6|          the anchorage was for the night, or at least till five o110    3,    6|           the danger was imminent.~Night drew on; the sun’s disc,
111    3,    6|         overtaken by the shades of night.~Some of the party fell
112    3,    8|           by Glenarvan. During the night the rain had ceased. The
113    3,    8|        possible precaution for the night. His companions and he,
114    3,    8|        this two-footed jaguar.~The night passed pleasantly with the
115    3,    8|          further on, and there the night halt could be made. Two
116    3,    8|         obliged to camp during the night once more.”~“Yes,” said
117    3,    8|          we not stay there for the night? Lady Helena and Miss Grant
118    3,    8|          preferred to pass another night in the open air, and not
119    3,    8|      latitude, and how quickly the night follows it. They were very
120    3,    9|           and the two sailors.~The night before, the little band
121    3,    9|           Toward the middle of the night they were surprised in their
122    3,   11|      extend beyond himself.~What a night he and his companions passed!
123    3,   12|         fires of day.~They had one night in which to prepare for
124    3,   12|          was so.~The hours of this night, wretched as they were,
125    3,   13|           flax rope, especially at night.~This lasted for three days;
126    3,   13|           unfortunate friends.~One night, however, he managed to
127    3,   13|           had arrived the previous night at the tomb of Kara-Tete,
128    3,   13|        observation, under cover of night, they might possibly reach
129    3,   13|           then they waited for the night.~The natives had not stirred.
130    3,   13|          try my hand on them.”~The night was cold; but happily Kara-Tete
131    3,   13|            furnished with his best night gear, and the party wrapped
132    3,   14|            the island must on that night have lost their usual intensity.~
133    3,   14|           fled from the scene.~All night long, and fanned by the
134    3,   14|      buried! But this evening when night comes, we shall rise and
135    3,   14|         free.~At nine oclock, the night being unusually dark, Glenarvan
136    3,   14|          natives were encamped the night before, and then the ridge
137    3,   15|           FROM PERIL TO SAFETY~THE night favored their escape, and
138    3,   15|           said to him on that last night at Ware-Atoua. He was too
139    3,   19|           CHAPTER XIX A CRY IN THE NIGHT~THE crew soon heard that
140    3,   19|           gazing out into the dark night, and giving way to long
141    3,   19|            caught a glimpse of the night before.~The yacht was coasting
142    3,   19|      Robert and Mary the preceding night. The children were right,
143    3,   20|       elements.~“It was during the night of the 26th or 27th of June,
144    3,   20|          fire on one of the peaks. Night came on, but no signal came
145    3,   20|       double the island during the night. I jumped into the sea,
146    3,   20|            dead. It was a horrible night this last we spent on the
147    3,   20|  disappeared in the shadows of the night.~
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