Book,  chapter

 1    1,    2|        monit of long~and ssistance~lost~“There’s not much to be
 2    1,    2|             The words SINK, ALAND, LOST are entire; SKIPP is evidently
 3    1,    2|     latitude Bring them assistance~lost~Just at that moment one
 4    1,    2|           a week afterward, she is lost on the coast of Patagonia.
 5    1,    2|            assistance, or they are lost.”~“Capital! capital! dear
 6    1,    4|         only children. Harry Grant lost his wife when Robert was
 7    1,    4|      affair. So the poor fellow is lost for ever.”~“My father! my
 8    1,    5|        there was not an hour to be lost. A telegram was dispatched
 9    1,   12|            him and asked if he had lost his way.~“No, your Lordship,”
10    1,   12|           gone on. Glenarvan never lost sight of young Robert, for
11    1,   13|            disappeared like a star lost in the distant darkness
12    1,   15|           But his compliments were lost on the Patagonian, for he
13    1,   15|          learned geographer was so lost in delight, that he seemed
14    1,   16|        CHAPTER XVI THE NEWS OF THE LOST CAPTAIN~NEXT day, the 22d
15    1,   16|      outlines being already almost lost in the evening mists. They
16    1,   16|       explanations would have been lost on nineteen in every twenty
17    1,   18|           hour’s shooting wont be lost time. Are you ready, Robert?”~“
18    1,   19|           he had to deal with, and lost no time in loading his carbine
19    1,   19|        that not a moment was to be lost, for should this maneuver
20    1,   22|      intersected these plains, and lost themselves among the tall
21    1,   22|             gave themselves up for lost, as the horses were fast
22    1,   24|         What could he mean? Had he lost his sense? He spoke with
23    1,   25|          height, and seemed almost lost in the atmosphere, and sometimes,
24    1,   25|           gave themselves up to be lost. A frightful death was in
25    1,   26|       steam half up. Her smoke was lost in the morning mist. The
26    1,   26|          last his friends of a day lost sight of him altogether.~
27    2,    3|          events no vessel had been lost on its coast. Had any shipwreck
28    2,    4|            help as if she had been lost on the inhospitable shores
29    2,    4|           the natives, or they are lost in the immense wilds of
30    2,    4|           him.”~“And what if he is lost in that immense country?”
31    2,    4|           supposition of his being lost, not for an instant.”~“Neither
32    2,    4|        accounts of travelers being lost in this immense country.
33    2,    5|           good ship and the waves, lost in wondering and half-terrified
34    2,    5|         the way in herself, we are lost.”~“The tide is high at present,
35    2,    7|       where the BRITANNIA had been lost. After the Major’s inquiry,
36    2,    7|       among the breakers, where he lost consciousness. When he recovered,
37    2,    8|            JOURNEY~GLENARVAN never lost much time between adopting
38    2,    8|           except the Irishman, who lost in him an intelligent and
39    2,   10|          and Glenarvan’s horse had lost a shoe.~This was an accident
40    2,   11|         object.~Ayrton luckily had lost neither his time nor his
41    2,   12|            said Mary Grant. “Is he lost, I wonder, in this desert?”~“
42    2,   13|     unnecessary. The hunters never lost sight of the wagon, and
43    2,   13|            leafy dome, which never lost its greenness, the air circulated
44    2,   13|       capitally, and the smoke was lost in the dark foliage above.
45    2,   13|        were only slanting yet, and lost in the mist. It was gradually
46    2,   14|         like the dwarf palm, quite lost in their crown of long narrow
47    2,   15|           toward the great trunks, lost in shadow, and he had got
48    2,   19|           seemed to be irrevocably lost. This ill success had cost
49    3,    1|          BRITANNIA might have been lost on this part of the Australian
50    3,    1|             Have you recovered the lost tracks?”~“No, friend John.
51    3,    2| imprisonment.~Each one of them was lost in his own reflections.
52    3,    3|            strongest ship would be lost if her keel struck one of
53    3,    3|          hands of the Maories is a lost man. I have urged my friends
54    3,    4|          comprehending the danger, lost his head. His sailors, hardly
55    3,    4|          this stupid sot had quite lost his self-control. He was
56    3,    4|          cargo. “I am ruined! I am lost!” he would cry, as he ran
57    3,    6|            the east and north, was lost in darkness.~The shipwrecked
58    3,    6|       improvised.~Half an hour was lost in vain efforts. John, impatient
59    3,    6|     lengths from the shore. Having lost their anchor, they were
60    3,    7|          prophetic words: “We have lost our country! henceforth
61    3,    8|         shapes, and their outlines lost in a deceptive haze, they
62    3,    9|            turn of mind, and never lost his trust in Providence
63    3,   10|           grief. Not only had they lost the relative or friend they
64    3,   12|            thought how best to get lost among them. Time enough
65    3,   14|       summit of the Maunganamu was lost in portentous darkness.
66    3,   14|            must on that night have lost their usual intensity.~An
67    3,   14|        that their figures might be lost in the dark mass of the
68    3,   15|            feet high, and then was lost in the clouds, and he printed
69    3,   15|          to the sea. He apparently lost sight of the dangers which
70    3,   15|           trees, and the sportsmen lost their powder and their pains.~
71    3,   15|          not an oar-stroke must be lost. Paganel alone rose, and
72    3,   15|            and his companions were lost in wonder when they saw
73    3,   17|         put me on the track I have lost. Will you speak?”~Ayrton
74    3,   17|       BRITANNIA seemed irrevocably lost, and the document did not
75    3,   17|          believed them irrevocably lost.~And yet there was a man
76    3,   18|            help you to recover the lost traces of Captain Grant.”~
77    3,   18|        must fear he is irrevocably lost. Poor children! Who can
78    3,   18|            their help, or they are lost.)~Paganel stopped. His interpretation
79    3,   19|         Mary, Captain John has not lost all hope, he says. You have
80    3,   20|            but you will be neither lost nor forsaken, as Captain
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