Book,  chapter

 1    1,    5|  resolved upon, there was not an hour to be lost. A telegram was
 2    1,    5|          made seventeen miles an hour, a higher speed than any
 3    1,    5|        of modern times. From the hour she reached the steamboat
 4    1,    6|   Glasgow. What is the breakfast hour?”~“Nine oclock,” replied
 5    1,   10|          lived at Concepcion, an hour’s ride distant. Glenarvan
 6    1,   10|         over it for more than an hour when Glenarvan interrupted
 7    1,   12|      trust to them.~For about an hour longer the CATAPEZ kept
 8    1,   13|        the opening after half an hour’s hard work, to the great
 9    1,   13|       the rate of fifty miles an hour. Not a cry was possible,
10    1,   14|        we must start.”~“Wait one hour longer.”~“Yes, we’ll wait
11    1,   14|           replied the Major.~The hour slipped away, and again
12    1,   15|     walked at a good pace for an hour and a half, and had to make
13    1,   15|        camp in less than half an hour, and were hailed with acclamations
14    1,   16|        lesson had lasted half an hour, when the geographer left
15    1,   17|      kills an ox in less than an hour.~For two days they plodded
16    1,   17|        less than a quarter of an hour they reached its banks;
17    1,   18|          to let them rest for an hour. They could not go on at
18    1,   18| satisfied. It strikes me that an hour’s shooting wont be lost
19    1,   18|     eating.~In less than half an hour the hunters had all the
20    1,   19|       his night’s sleep.~A whole hour passed, and anyone except
21    1,   19|          and in the course of an hour fifteen dead animals lay
22    1,   19|       things to a crisis.~“In an hour’s time,” he said, “we shall
23    1,   19|       was, fully a quarter of an hour elapsed before he could
24    1,   19|       prodigious rate for a full hour, dreading every minute to
25    1,   20|        the Sierra Tandil, and an hour afterward the village appeared
26    1,   21|          took up a quarter of an hour, to the great astonishment
27    1,   22|         the Argentine plains.~An hour afterward and the field
28    1,   22|        head.~For a quarter of an hour this supreme struggle with
29    1,   22|       gone fully twenty miles an hour.~All hope of delivery seemed
30    1,   26|  beginning to close.~For half an hour he followed his impatient
31    1,   26|      sight of him altogether.~An hour afterward Robert was the
32    2,    5|        on deck, for now that the hour of shipwreck was at hand,
33    2,    6|      after walking about half an hour, the country began to assume
34    2,    8|     reached, and a quarter of an hour afterward the Irishman’s
35    2,   11|     uttering four words.~Half an hour later, the travelers were
36    2,   11|  laborious inhabitants.~After an hour devoted to visiting Carisbrook,
37    2,   14|        less than a quarter of an hour. The wines and viands were
38    2,   15|       stoned. It lasted about an hour, and then the march commenced
39    2,   16|      with disappointed faces. An hour had passed in vain endeavors,
40    2,   16|         of the river. In half an hour they rejoined Paganel, and
41    2,   17|      round it, who were relieved hour by hour.~The first care
42    2,   17|        who were relieved hour by hour.~The first care of Lady
43    2,   17|      heard anything for the last hour?” said Glenarvan to the
44    2,   18|            Dont let him lose an hour. He is to sail for Twofold
45    2,   18|      After about a quarter of an hour, the wounded man, who till
46    2,   18|       then learned that about an hour since, the wounded man had
47    2,   19|        the fatal coast, and each hour was bringing her nearer.~
48    2,   19|     passage of more than half an hour, struck against the steep
49    2,   19|     could only go half a mile an hour. Should this lack of food
50    2,   19|         the rate of six miles an hour.~In the morning at sunrise,
51    2,   19|          doubt.”~A quarter of an hour afterward a telegram was
52    3,    6|     steered the raft.~In half an hour they had made half a mile.
53    3,    6|        land.”~There was still an hour before the turn of the tide.
54    3,    6|        violently, and every half hour John had to take in a fathom
55    3,    6|          had improvised.~Half an hour was lost in vain efforts.
56    3,    6|          current of two knots an hour.~The sail was spread. They
57    3,    7|        liked to start without an hour’s delay, and follow the
58    3,   11|          delirium. He allowed an hour for this orgy of blood to
59    3,   11|       fainter. For about half an hour the funeral procession remained
60    3,   12|       thoughts toward God in the hour of death? This done, the
61    3,   12|         worked on; after half an hour they had gone three feet
62    3,   12|          a minute that seemed an hour, his ear intent, his eye
63    3,   12|        the rear.~Another half an hour and the glorious sun would
64    3,   12|         the horizon. For half an hour the fugitives walked on
65    3,   14|        their usual intensity.~An hour after this volcano burst
66    3,   15|         four rowers. For half an hour she kept her distance; but
67    3,   15|     energy, and for another half hour, keeping their distance,
68    3,   17|        get up the steam. Half an hour afterward the beak-head
69    3,   17|          of success.~For a whole hour the two ladies were closeted
70    3,   19|         rate of sixteen knots an hour.~Gradually the form of the
71    3,   20|      English hearts.~The parting hour had come. The crew and all
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