Book,  chapter

  1    1,    1|        what sort of an animal he thought it was.~“Well, since your
  2    1,    3|         a great traveler, and he thought it likely that she would
  3    1,    4| GLENARVAN’S PROPOSAL~LADY HELENA thought it best to say nothing to
  4    1,    4|           Possibly he might have thought that some day they would
  5    1,    4|         with their poverty. Mary thought only of her brother, and
  6    1,    4|         it was evident she never thought her conduct had been that
  7    1,    4|    trying years. But Lady Helena thought it for her, and more than
  8    1,    5|       only he could not bear the thought of parting from her. But
  9    1,    6|        come from? Who is he?” he thought to himself. “He can not
 10    1,    8|         that effect. But I never thought of it.”~“Just like you.”~“
 11    1,   12|        heart began to sink as he thought of the snow lying far as
 12    1,   13|    success was close at hand. He thought of Captain Grant and his
 13    1,   14|  imploring tones, one might have thought him a criminal begging a
 14    1,   14|    exclaimed Glenarvan.~A sudden thought flashed across his mind,
 15    1,   15|       deliverance over, the next thought was who was the deliverer?
 16    1,   17|         very crabbed.”~Glenarvan thought it was high time to interfere,
 17    1,   18|   Paganel asked Thalcave what he thought was best to be done. A rapid
 18    1,   18|        and this was why Thalcave thought it best to go first to Guamini,
 19    1,   18|         sister. We were his only thought: and whenever he came home
 20    1,   19|         I should not give them a thought.”~“Never mind; we are all
 21    1,   19|   sorrowful glance round him. He thought of the lad standing there,
 22    1,   19|       imagination. But Glenarvan thought for him, and pictured to
 23    1,   19|          appeared buried in deep thought. Was he planning some daring,
 24    1,   21|      Commandant would have never thought of presenting her husband
 25    1,   21|         and it was the Major who thought of it, for all the others
 26    1,   21|         one, however, would have thought of reproaching him for an
 27    1,   23|          hunger.”~“I should have thought of it, too,” said Paganel, “
 28    1,   23|         for the morrow had to be thought of; the immense basin might
 29    1,   23|      Paganel.~“From Thalcave. He thought it might be useful to us,
 30    1,   23|          suppose that I have not thought of that, Mr. McNabbs?” replied
 31    1,   24|      labyrinth in which they had thought themselves hopelessly entangled,
 32    1,   24|      loss of Captain Grant. This thought so filled them with joy
 33    1,   24|            he added, jestingly, “thought ourselves hunting in the
 34    1,   24|          drove the plow, that he thought, ‘Surely this man is happy,
 35    1,   26|       the dark?”~All at once the thought rushed across him that Paganel
 36    1,   26|        noble guide, when a happy thought struck him. He had an exquisite
 37    2,    1|            Upon my word, I never thought of that,” said McNabbs. “
 38    2,    1|     Patagonia could possibly, we thought, have been the scene of
 39    2,    4|   speeding her course, when they thought that these very same waves
 40    2,    5|       and for an instant the men thought she would never rise again.
 41    2,    6|     shrubs and bushes. Glenarvan thought it resembled some glens
 42    2,    7|        this time no one had ever thought of doubting either the veracity
 43    2,    7|         be put to him, though he thought to himself that he surely
 44    2,    7|        it.”~After a few minutesthought, Ayrton replied—“I thank
 45    2,    8|        of Lord Glenarvan. Ayrton thought proper to go too, and about
 46    2,   10|          little party might have thought themselves in the grand
 47    2,   11|      walked part of the way, and thought it no hardship.~At eleven
 48    2,   11|          Australian colonies.~“I thought,” said Glenarvan, “convicts
 49    2,   12|         puzzled that Lady Helena thought she had better inform him
 50    2,   13|     added the Major. “These only thought of themselves, and not at
 51    2,   14|      Michael and Sandy Patterson thought it a duty to make themselves
 52    2,   14|         to kill it, of course he thought it charming.~“An adorable
 53    2,   15|        all means of research. He thought it would certainly be advisable
 54    2,   15|      should act upon it. He also thought that the presence of the
 55    2,   15|         like a lake, and McNabbs thought at first it was the commencement
 56    2,   17|      this revelation; no one had thought of it yet except Mary Grant.
 57    2,   18|          the faintest sound. The thought that one of his men was
 58    2,   18|        when several menfive, he thoughtsprang to his horse’s head.
 59    2,   18|       his revolver and fired. He thought he saw two of his assailants
 60    2,   18|     consciousness. The murderers thought he was dead. He felt them
 61    2,   19|           Perhaps Tom Austin had thought it his duty to cast anchor
 62    3,    1|        her own anguish, when she thought of the unfortunate crew
 63    3,    1|       coming to any decision, he thought it best to visit the ship
 64    3,    2|       idea; it became his ruling thought. After Patagonia, after
 65    3,    2|       the American continent. He thought he had found “the Great
 66    3,    4|         eight miles off, when he thought it was thirty or forty miles
 67    3,    4|       wrung his hands. His whole thought was his uninsured cargo. “
 68    3,    4|       own quarters. John Mangles thought no more of these drunken
 69    3,    5|        Europeans need not give a thought to an attack by a handful
 70    3,    5|   Scotland, you will see what he thought of your forefathers. And
 71    3,    6|      further delay was not to be thought of, and an ax-blow committed
 72    3,    7|   islands. No European power had thought of taking possession of
 73    3,    8|        windings of the coast, he thought it better to make for a
 74    3,   11|       right to strike her dead?” thought John, whose heart was broken.~
 75    3,   12|      another; but Glenarvan only thought how best to get lost among
 76    3,   13|         Paganel is another man!” thought McNabbs.~His face was really
 77    3,   13|       exceptional circumstances, thought the meal a slender one.
 78    3,   13|   regarded the edible fern. Some thought the flavor sweet and agreeable,
 79    3,   14|   absolute monopoly.~Paganel had thought of all this; but he intended
 80    3,   14|       once off their track, they thought themselves safe from all
 81    3,   14|         of the party gave that a thought. If they could only reach
 82    3,   14|      clung to his arm.~He had no thought of turning back. Neither
 83    3,   15|       and the Major, who had not thought highly of the edible fern
 84    3,   15|          way to Auckland, in the thought of his massacred men; the
 85    3,   15|         John, united by the same thought, cherished the same hope.
 86    3,   15|        for he had recognized, or thought he had recognized, these
 87    3,   16|          of the yacht they never thought to see again. And in what
 88    3,   16|      with such assurance that he thought after all he must have made
 89    3,   16|         the explosion. Everybody thought something terrible must
 90    3,   16|   forecastle gun.~“At any rate,” thought the Major, “the geographer
 91    3,   16|       and all that the travelers thought about now was to get back
 92    3,   16|      think?” asked Glenarvan.~“I thought, your Honor, that in the
 93    3,   16|        where I was told to go. I thought that in consequence of fresh
 94    3,   17|           On this yacht which he thought he was to command as master,
 95    3,   17|       around him. One would have thought him a stranger to the whole
 96    3,   17|       heart did not swell at the thought of seeing his own country
 97    3,   18|    Glenarvan and the Major. They thought the quartermaster in the
 98    3,   19|      Mary, pale with emotion, “I thought—yes, I thought as you did,
 99    3,   19|       emotion, “I thought—yes, I thought as you did, that—We must
100    3,   19|        cabin. “Close sympathy in thought and grief does not suffice
101    3,   19|         Instantaneously everyone thought of the voice heard by Robert
102    3,   19|        assuredly no. And as they thought of the dreadful disappointment
103    3,   20|        eyes off his daughter. He thought her beautiful, charming;
104    3,   20|         had so often wept at the thought of them. A boat was manned,
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