Book,  chapter

  1    1,    1|      sporting in the wake of the ship. Lord Edward, who was immediately
  2    1,    2|        and that’s what they call ship captains often in England.
  3    1,    2|          neither the name of the ship nor the place where she
  4    1,    2|          evidently refer to some ship that sailed out of the port
  5    1,    3|        induce them to send out a ship immediately in search of
  6    1,    4|    service of the cause, built a ship, and manned it with a picked
  7    1,    4|         bottom of some abandoned ship, it would be a relief from
  8    1,    4|           They have refused me a ship! They talked of the millions
  9    1,    4|          DUNCAN is a good strong ship, she can venture in the
 10    1,    5|          in the maneuvering of a ship; a valiant little troop,
 11    1,    6|       wind is favorable, and the ship goes all alone.”~Just at
 12    1,    6|          By the SCOTIA? Why, the ship we’re on, of course—a good
 13    1,    6|          re on, of course—a good ship that has been commended
 14    1,    7|      name and destination of the ship, in which he had taken passage?~“
 15    1,    7|         fell on the wheel of the ship, and he saw the two words
 16    1,    7|         happen; but to mistake a ship and be sailing for Chili
 17    1,    7|      Madeira, and you will get a ship there to take you back to
 18    1,    8|         while I am waiting for a ship to take me back to Europe.”~“
 19    1,    8|     eight months you would get a ship, I dare say, to take you
 20    1,    9|   himself, when the sails of his ship, the TRINIDAD, first bent
 21    1,   13|       would reel and roll like a ship in a storm, coasting past
 22    1,   24|          house, or the deck of a ship, to this aerial dwelling.”~“
 23    1,   26|         but the yacht was a good ship, and the captain was a good
 24    1,   26|        said to himself; “I saw a ship’s light, one of the lights
 25    1,   26|    McNabbs; “he cannot leave the ship.”~“My sister, my sister!”
 26    2,    1|         not unhappy on board his ship.”~“How could I be?” replied
 27    2,    1|   carried away with his disabled ship by the southern currents
 28    2,    2|         back into their ordinary ship life, and it hardly seemed
 29    2,    3|          human energies, and the ship is the true vehicle of civilization.
 30    2,    4|   Captain Grant, with a disabled ship and diminished crew, had
 31    2,    4|        different currents on the ship’s chart, and explained to
 32    2,    4|          Mangles.~“Could a quick ship make the distance in a month
 33    2,    5|           for he had covered his ship with canvas, intending to
 34    2,    5|          tempest against which a ship is no match.”~“Well, John,”
 35    2,    5| Glenarvan, “the DUNCAN is a good ship, and her captain is a brave
 36    2,    5|        dash over the side of the ship, and the sea might any moment
 37    2,    5|      struggle between their good ship and the waves, lost in wondering
 38    2,    5|      rushing on the bridge.~“The ship is heeling over on her side,”
 39    2,    5|        second in extricating his ship from the peril in which
 40    2,    5|          but he trembled for his ship, and those on board. The
 41    2,    5|         see those breakers. What ship could stand them. Let us
 42    2,    5|  abundance of water to float the ship over the dangerous bar;
 43    2,    5|    temporary. The moment after a ship has passed over the smooth
 44    2,    6|       taking the position of the ship, and it was found that she
 45    2,    6|         to destroy the keel of a ship, and the BRITANNIA might
 46    2,    6|          two years, at least, no ship had been wrecked on that
 47    2,    7|        swept off the deck as the ship struck.”~“Then you are not
 48    2,    7|         them in Glasgow when the ship sailed. He remembered them
 49    2,    7|        it before, as news of the ship had come regularly up to
 50    2,    7|          coast of Australia.~The ship soon neared the shore, and
 51    2,    7|       himself on the deck of his ship, evidently quite nonplussed.~“
 52    2,    7|       Melbourne.”~“Well, let the ship go to Melbourne then,” said
 53    2,    8|         the very place where his ship struck.”~“Thanks, Ayrton.”~“
 54    2,    8|       party then returned to the ship, after arranging a rendezvous
 55    2,    8|         sailor. He will take the ship to her destination, see
 56    2,    8|        day, John Mangles and the ship’s carpenter, accompanied
 57    2,    8|          sailor who knows what a ship is worth, to compliment
 58    2,    8|       will be wanted to work the ship, and to help in the repairs.
 59    2,   13|          few months ago, by what ship is not known, and who has
 60    2,   18|          Joyce will surprise the ship,” said the Major, “and then—”~“
 61    2,   19|         the sea was heavy, and a ship would not dare to venture
 62    2,   19|     within the last few days.~No ship had touched the bay for
 63    2,   19|    Scotch yacht was now a pirate ship in the hands of Ben Joyce!~
 64    2,   19|   success had cost the loss of a ship’s crew. Lord Glenarvan had
 65    3,    1|        to be done? Waiting for a ship might be a tedious affair,
 66    3,    1|         proposal was to take the ship in question, and get to
 67    3,    1|     thought it best to visit the ship mentioned by the geographer.
 68    3,    1|       brought them alongside the ship anchored two cableslength
 69    3,    1|       stepped on the poop of his ship.~“The captain,” answered
 70    3,    1|      they are satisfied with the ship’s mess.”~“They would bring
 71    3,    1|        and John Mangles left the ship, Halley not so much as touching
 72    3,    1|       taking a last look at some ship disappearing in the distance.
 73    3,    2|          faded out of sight. The ship labored on the lumpy sea,
 74    3,    3|       heed to the working of the ship; he let things take their
 75    3,    3|     followed his example, and no ship ever sailed more entirely
 76    3,    3|          threatened to throw the ship on her beam-ends. Often
 77    3,    3|          I suppose he thinks the ship knows the way, and steers
 78    3,    3|        avoid them. The strongest ship would be lost if her keel
 79    3,    4|        currents were against the ship’s course, and she scarcely
 80    3,    4|         What could we do in this ship if the DUNCAN gave chase.
 81    3,    4|        dangerous, I will put the ship’s head to sea again. So
 82    3,    4|    released his watch. Any other ship would have made no account
 83    3,    4|     scuppers, might submerge the ship. It would have been the
 84    3,    4|  main-topsail brace to bring the ship to the wind. The man who
 85    3,    4|        John Mangles, knowing the ship to be safely lodged in the
 86    3,    4|    impatiently for the dawn. The ship was now quite motionless.
 87    3,    4|     silence reigned on board the ship, herself slumbering peacefully
 88    3,    4|         cannot leave them on the ship.”~Mulrady and Wilson went
 89    3,    5|       been the first to quit the ship.~“The cowards are off!”
 90    3,    5|      could have been done in the ship’s boat?”~“Yes, if necessary,”
 91    3,    6|        for New Plymouth, and the ship had struck just between
 92    3,    6|         the coarse viands of the ship; sea biscuits of inferior
 93    3,    6|       which held the raft to the ship’s side.~The sail was spread,
 94    3,    6|        it! It is the boat.”~“The ship’s boat?” exclaimed Glenarvan.~“
 95    3,    6|    Glenarvan.~“Yes, my lord. The ship’s boat, keel up.”~“The unfortunate
 96    3,   15|        out into the distance.~“A ship! a ship!” he cried. “My
 97    3,   15|         the distance.~“A ship! a ship!” he cried. “My friends,
 98    3,   15|    indicated.~“Yes,” said he, “a ship! a steamer! they are under
 99    3,   16|          alter the course of the ship; because he threatened me;
100    3,   17|          take possession of this ship and deliver it into the
101    3,   18|         Glasgow on Harry Grant’s ship on the 12th of March, 1861.
102    3,   18|         some chance of seizing a ship. This was my one idea. Two
103    3,   18|     document and the loss of the ship somewhere along the 37th
104    3,   19|    ice-belt of the Polar Sea. No ship would come to reconnoiter
105    3,   20|     collecting the planks of the ship, the tools, a little powder,
106    3,   20|          out of the spars of the ship, but 1,500 miles lay between
107    3,   20|         It increased, and soon a ship appeared in sight. It seemed
108    3,   20|          was growing deeper. The ship might double the island
109    3,   20|      quartermaster gazing at the ship, standing with folded arms
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