Book,  chapter

 1    1,    2|       hemisphere. Making for the shore, two sailors and Captain
 2    1,    3|     appeared to have reached the shore, and had written an appeal
 3    1,    4|          been found on a distant shore, or in the bottom of some
 4    1,    8|     collect his luggage to go on shore. The DUNCAN was already
 5    1,    8|      Lady Helena could not go on shore as she had purposed; indeed,
 6    1,    9|         water, even close to the shore, and there is a good bottom
 7    1,    9|          numerous bays along the shore, easy of access, but the
 8    1,   10|         immediately, and went on shore, accompanied by Paganel.
 9    1,   11|        rapidly along the winding shore of the bay of Talcahuano,
10    1,   20|       Indian hammock; and on the shore magnificent flamingos stalked
11    1,   26|          so much as a creek. The shore was composed of sand-banks
12    1,   26|     their feet and rushed to the shore, shoutingHurrah, hurrah!”
13    1,   26|       water and died away on the shore. The sails were instantly
14    1,   26|       receded gradually from the shore. For a long time, his dark,
15    2,    1|          close to the Patagonian shore. At Cape Corrientes they
16    2,    1|        the night on the Atlantic shore— all these details, amusing
17    2,    3|         been thrown on the sandy shore, and any poor sufferers
18    2,    4|       document to indicate which shore was the scene of the catastrophe,
19    2,    4|     Captain Grant had gained the shore on the east of Australia,
20    2,    5|     obliged to cast the yacht on shore.~“To save the lives of those
21    2,    5|       light revealed a low-lying shore about six miles distant.
22    2,    6|          stratified rocks on the shore were richly carpeted with
23    2,    6|          waves threw them on the shore, and been dragged away into
24    2,    6|         girl, as they neared the shore; “God’s hand will still
25    2,    6|          on an absolutely desert shore. Cliffs composed of beds
26    2,    6|         that part of the western shore. Now, my Lord,” he added, “
27    2,    7|         The ship soon neared the shore, and presently dashed violently
28    2,    8|          off. In ten minutes the shore was reached, and a quarter
29    2,   10|        wagon toward the opposite shore, and the bank began to slope
30    2,   11|         drawn up to the opposite shore, hung, still unharmed, by
31    2,   18|       crew would reach the other shore of the Snowy River; and
32    2,   19|      hoped to reach the opposite shore. At half-past twelve, they
33    2,   19|        raft, still moored to the shore. John Mangles had installed
34    2,   19|          them nearer to the left shore. They were not more than
35    2,   19|       steep bank of the opposite shore. The shock was so violent
36    2,   19|     reach Delegete, and five the shore—that is to say, the 26th
37    2,   19|          of his should reach the shore, they would find the DUNCAN
38    2,   19|       there running close to the shore, as a month ago, when they
39    2,   19|         dare to venture near the shore. “To Eden!” cried Glenarvan.
40    2,   19|      conquered on the Australian shore by the perversity of man.~
41    3,    1|        thrown some bodies on the shore.~Glenarvan, accompanied
42    3,    1|  discovered on the skirts of the shore evident traces of camping,
43    3,    1|          decaying on this desert shore.~“You see, John,” said Glenarvan, “
44    3,    2|         Tasman sent his boats on shore, and they returned accompanied
45    3,    5|          and scatter them on the shore. John was anxious to reach
46    3,    5|        raft will bring us to the shore,” said Glenarvan.~“The very
47    3,    5|     avoid them by keeping to the shore? But in any case what have
48    3,    6|         carry them away from the shore, and they would be compelled
49    3,    6|       were still five miles from shore. A tolerably clear sky allowed
50    3,    6|        about four miles from the shore, and not one of the crew
51    3,    6|      raft could not get near the shore. What toil and pain to reach
52    3,    6|        It was a steeply-shelving shore, fringed with breakers;
53    3,    6|          carried the raft to the shore, but steering had become
54    3,    6|         cableslengths from the shore. Having lost their anchor,
55    3,    6|         toward this inaccessible shore.~In the midst of his perplexities,
56    3,    8|          commenced to follow the shore of Aotea Bay. From prudential
57    3,   15|         from Maunganamu, and the shore was still thirty miles away.
58    3,   15|      toiling painfully along the shore, when they saw, at a distance
59    3,   15|       and fly from the dangerous shore, was only a minute’s work.
60    3,   15|       quarter of a mile from the shore. The sea was calm. The fugitives
61    3,   15|    flight, fled and regained the shore.~“Come on, Tom, come on!”
62    3,   16|       last canoe approaching the shore.~But at the sight of Glenarvan
63    3,   18|        wandering there along the shore, I met a band of convicts
64    3,   19| exclaimed, “another fire? On the shore this time! Look! It moves!
65    3,   19|         t want me to swim to the shore, let a boat be lowered.
66    3,   19|          stop them from going on shore? Lord Glenarvan had not
67    3,   19|    presently almost close to the shore.~At ten fathomsdistance
68    3,   20|          myself managed to reach shore after twenty unsuccessful
69    3,   20|          Then I came back to the shore, exhausted and overcome
70    3,   20|       Ayrton jumped on the sandy shore, and the boat returned to
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