Book,  chapter

 1    1,    1|           said Lady Glenarvan.~“Wait a little, dear Helena, wait;
 2    1,    1|     Wait a little, dear Helena, wait; we must have patience with
 3    1,    4|        called out: “Mary Grant! wait, my child, and listen to
 4    1,    6|     Burdness!”~But he could not wait for any one’s intervention,
 5    1,    7|        Yarou-Dzangbo-Tchou will wait for you still in the mountains
 6    1,    7|        from Lisbon, and I shall wait there for some means of
 7    1,    8| secretary was silent.~“I should wait,” said the Major, just as
 8    1,    8|         had said, “I should not wait.”~Paganel spoke again at
 9    1,   11|         thing to be done was to wait patiently and press forward
10    1,   13|        you were asked to lie in wait for a llama, notwithstanding
11    1,   14|         and respect it.~“Let us wait,” said Paganel to the Major
12    1,   14|           Yes, we must start.”~“Wait one hour longer.”~“Yes,
13    1,   14|       hour longer.”~“Yes, we’ll wait another,” replied the Major.~
14    1,   14| gradually getting lower! Let us wait.”~Paganel was not mistaken,
15    1,   16|        once.~He had not long to wait for an answer, and learned
16    1,   18|       in the river, they are to wait on the banks till their
17    1,   18|          it is better for us to wait for them as we agreed. They
18    1,   19|        in the circumstances but wait; and wait he did, in a half-recumbent
19    1,   19|     circumstances but wait; and wait he did, in a half-recumbent
20    1,   19|        of the fence.~He did not wait long, for a strange cry—
21    1,   19|       fire. It will never do to wait till then before we settle
22    2,    6|      fair wind. They had not to wait long for the same night
23    2,    7|         Glenarvan; “but we must wait till the DUNCAN is repaired.”~“
24    2,    8|         upon him that he was to wait at Melbourne for Lord Glenarvan’
25    2,    9|         but Paganel told him to wait, and he would soon see a
26    2,    9|         to tease Paganel.~“Just wait, impatient Major,” was his
27    2,   10|      would be himself forced to wait on the banks of a stream
28    2,   13|     think it would be better to wait.”~“All right,” said Ayrton,
29    2,   15|        decided that they should wait till they came to Twofold
30    2,   16|       and most probably we must wait till the water goes down.”~“
31    2,   16|     till the water goes down.”~“Wait!” cried John. “Is there
32    2,   16|   condition. It is here we must wait till help comes, and this
33    2,   18|      not separate again. Let us wait a week, or a fortnight,
34    2,   18|      and second, in deciding to wait till the passage of the
35    2,   18|       proceed to the coast, and wait for me. I will easily manage
36    2,   19|    daring young fellow, “let us wait.”~And they both returned
37    2,   19|         where Tom Austin was to wait their arrival.~When the
38    3,    4|       Yes, my Lord, and we must wait for the day.”~“Can we not
39    3,    4|        Well, then, John, let us wait for the daylight.”~Will
40    3,    6|         compelled to anchor and wait for the next tide, a serious
41    3,   12|      can conceal themselves and wait for the rest.”~“Go, my boy,”
42    3,   13|         two lines of marksmen.~“Wait till to-morrow,” said Paganel, “
43    3,   16|      Zealand, and that I was to wait for you on the east coast
44    3,   18|    cabin,” said Glenarvan, “and wait our decision.”~The quartermaster
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