Book,  chapter

 1    1,    5|        high-pressure one, of 160-horse power, and put in motion
 2    1,   15|     wished to purchase an eighth horse for the Patagonian, but
 3    1,   16|          Thalcave’s refusal of a horse was that he preferred walking,
 4    1,   16|         all the good points of a horse, was loud in admiration
 5    1,   16| particular point, he checked his horse suddenly, and said to Paganel:~“
 6    1,   16|       arms, lifted him up on his horse, and gazed at him with peculiar
 7    1,   18|         without loss of time. My horse is in tolerable good trim,
 8    1,   18|          the reins, and making a horse go through all sorts of
 9    1,   18|       NANDOU would soon tire out horse and rider by involving them
10    1,   19|      good meal of human flesh or horse flesh, and none of them
11    1,   19|       short, and going up to his horse, who was trembling with
12    1,   19|    Patagonian caught hold of the horse’s mane, Glenarvan seized
13    1,   19|      which meant: “Thaouka; good horse; quick; will draw all the
14    1,   19|        frightened; Thaouka, good horse.”~“Be it so then!” returned
15    1,   19|  desperate. and that he knew his horse well enough to be able to
16    1,   19|        speed on the track of the horse.~Thalcave and Glenarvan
17    1,   19|         and said:~“Thaouka, good horse. Brave boy. He will save
18    1,   19|   Thaouka; and also that boy and horse had outdistanced the wolves
19    1,   19|         reply, but took Robert’s horse and sprung into the saddle.
20    1,   19|       had torn the flanks of his horse with his spurs in his mad
21    1,   22|           who had spurred on his horse toward the north.~It was
22    1,   22|         that moment Tom Austin’s horse gave a smothered neigh and
23    1,   22|      arms.”~“Robert, how is your horse going?” asked his Lordship,
24    1,   22|        up first, and got off his horse to hoist up Robert and help
25    1,   23|          against leaving out the horse,” said Paganel. “He is part
26    1,   24|          can twist the neck of a horse with a single stroke of
27    1,   26|       was heard. The gallop of a horse resounded over the plain,
28    1,   26|      deliverance to his intrepid horse. Then Paganel tried to make
29    2,    5|        turned about like a swift horse that feels the spur, and
30    2,   10|           he sprang on a capital horse of the native breed, that
31    2,   10|        the jolt, and Glenarvan’s horse had lost a shoe.~This was
32    2,   11|          good. As to Glenarvan’s horse, it was soon disposed of.
33    2,   11|     mixed with other herds.”~The horse was soon shod. The blacksmith
34    2,   11|        by the rest, urged on his horse. In a few minutes he arrived
35    2,   14|        confused, and Glenarvan’s horse no longer left on the dust
36    2,   15|        illness. It was Mulrady’s horse that fell, and on attempting
37    2,   15|         replied Ayrton.~“Take my horse, Mulrady,” added Glenarvan. “
38    2,   15|          forward, and he and his horse fell down in a lump. Was
39    2,   15|             Just this. I have no horse, now!” he replied, disengaging
40    2,   15|        the stirrups.~“What! your horse?”~“Dead like Mulrady’s,
41    2,   15|     found Paganel was right. His horse had been suddenly struck
42    2,   15|         He could not get a fresh horse in the desert, and if an
43    2,   15|         to be justified. A third horse, Wilson’s, fell dead, and
44    2,   16|         away the bullock and the horse we have left; they will
45    2,   16|     bullock and Mulrady from the horse, and they began to return
46    2,   16|        ruts, and the bullock and horse, yoked together, were straining
47    2,   16|        strength of our remaining horse and bullock. If we are obliged
48    2,   16|    replied Ayrton. “There is one horse sound enough at present.
49    2,   16|           one of whom saw to the horse and the other to the provisions.
50    2,   17|     Melbourne. We have still one horse. Give it to me, my Lord,
51    2,   17|      Wilson undertook to get the horse ready. He had a project
52    2,   17|         his head of changing the horse’s left shoe, for one off
53    2,   18|       was the time to start. The horse prepared for Mulrady was
54    2,   18|    question. You have not even a horse for the journey, which is
55    2,   18|          was true, for Mulrady’s horse, the only one that remained,
56    2,   18|         he thoughtsprang to his horse’s head. The animal reared;
57    2,   18|      added Ben Joyce, ‘catch the horse. In two days I shall be
58    2,   18|          the convicts. Mulrady’s horse was brought, and Ben Joyce
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