Book,  chapter

 1    1,    2|   better go up on deck, as the boat must be getting near the
 2    1,   10|     the Clyde.~Glenarvan had a boat lowered immediately, and
 3    1,   26|  through the glass, they saw a boat lowered.~“Lady Helena will
 4    1,   26|        it was impossible for a boat—a six-oared one— to come
 5    1,   26|        a share to Thaouka.~The boat from the DUNCAN was now
 6    1,   26| accompanied his friends to the boat, which had been pushed back
 7    1,   26|     away on the breeze, as the boat receded gradually from the
 8    2,    1| waiting for the arrival of the boat, and trying to count the
 9    2,    1|     the young girl. But as the boat came nearer, her illusion
10    2,    2|   gentlemen, got into the long boat and were rowed ashore. They
11    2,    6|        a gentle slope, and the boat glided easily into a sort
12    2,    8|  thanks to John Mangles, and a boat was waiting to take the
13    2,    8|    forth from the yacht as the boat rowed off. In ten minutes
14    2,   11|    evidence of a boatman whose boat passed Camden Bridge at
15    2,   16|       danger.”~“Let us build a boat then,” said Robert, who
16    2,   19|      and formed a very fragile boat. The captain and the sailor
17    2,   19|      dangerous experiment. The boat disappeared, dragged down
18    3,    1|        Mangles himself, took a boat, and a few strokes brought
19    3,    2|    attacked them fiercely. The boat capsized and filled. The
20    3,    4|      deck in great masses. The boat was washed out of the davits
21    3,    4|           Can we not lower the boat?”~“In such a sea, and in
22    3,    4|       which was now their only boat, would carry the crew and
23    3,    4|     coast. Could their fragile boat hold out on a long trip?~
24    3,    4|      toward the stern: “To the boat!” said he.~Wilson and Mulrady
25    3,    5|         had fled with the only boat. There could be no doubt
26    3,    5|        been done in the ship’s boat?”~“Yes, if necessary,” answered
27    3,    5|      replied Paganel; “for the boat would have been very useful
28    3,    6|   miles off, a distance that a boat with good oars would have
29    3,    6| Mangles; “I know it! It is the boat.”~“The ship’s boat?” exclaimed
30    3,    6|      is the boat.”~“The ship’s boat?” exclaimed Glenarvan.~“
31    3,    6|       Yes, my lord. The ship’s boat, keel up.”~“The unfortunate
32    3,    6|        have escaped.~“But this boat may be of use to us,” said
33    3,    6|        before they reached the boat.~Mulrady, stationed forward,
34    3,    6|      answered the sailor, “the boat is empty. and all its seams
35    3,    6|  prefer our raft to that crazy boat. A very slight shock would
36    3,    9|       the vapor disappeared, a boat was seen ascending the current
37    3,    9|  vigorously, and propelled the boat against the not very rapid
38    3,   15|    when John Mangles cried:~“A boat! a boat!”~And there, twenty
39    3,   15|      Mangles cried:~“A boat! a boat!”~And there, twenty paces
40    3,   15|       their heads, and now the boat remained motionless between
41    3,   15|       was about to scuttle the boat and sink it with his unfortunate
42    3,   19|    daybreak, we can send off a boat.”~At eight oclock in the
43    3,   19|      go to my father’s help. A boat! a boat!”~Glenarvan saw
44    3,   19|       father’s help. A boat! a boat!”~Glenarvan saw it was impossible
45    3,   19|       swim to the shore, let a boat be lowered. Oh, my Lord,
46    3,   19|       heart to do it.~“Lower a boat,” he called out.~Another
47    3,   19|         Another minute and the boat was ready. The two children
48    3,   20|      at the thought of them. A boat was manned, and the Captain
49    3,   20|     Archipelago of Pomotou. No boat could have stood so long
50    3,   20|         under easy steam. Your boat was lowered—we were saved—
51    3,   20|     and the quartermaster. The boat was ready and Ayrton got
52    3,   20|    crimes.”~At that moment the boat, in charge of John Mangles,
53    3,   20|      was about to die, and the boat went off in profound silence.~
54    3,   20|       the sandy shore, and the boat returned to the yacht. It
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