Book,  chapter

 1    1,    5|         good people of Glasgow. At eight oclock the night before,
 2    1,    6|        well,” he said, “it is only eight oclock at present. Fetch
 3    1,    8|        Villa Praya and anchored in eight fathoms of water before
 4    1,    8|         and, moreover, in seven or eight months you would get a ship,
 5    1,    8|         back to Europe.”~“Seven or eight months!” exclaimed Paganel.~“
 6    1,   11|           with ease ten leagues in eight hours.~There are no inns
 7    1,   11| immediately after breakfast, about eight oclock, and not to stop
 8    1,   12|      suspended in the air seven or eight hundred feet above their
 9    1,   14|         the Atlantic. It was about eight oclock.~Lord Glenarvan
10    1,   15|        learned Van der Brock, both eight feet high; but he caught
11    1,   16|             the 22d of October, at eight oclock in the morning,
12    1,   16|      individual, a little troop of eight men, all mounted and well
13    1,   17|        forgotten his grievance.~At eight oclock in the evening,
14    1,   22|          activity, next morning at eight oclock the little troop
15    1,   22|          the anguish of mind these eight men endured; they felt their
16    1,   26|     betimes and ready to start. At eight oclock they set off. No
17    2,    3|           Mountain was sighted. At eight oclock they entered the
18    2,    3|        visible fifty miles off. At eight oclock, its form, indistinct
19    2,    4|            screw set in motion. By eight oclock, when the passengers
20    2,    4|           on the 7th of June, only eight days after leaving the shores
21    2,    7|            work the pumps, and for eight days the BRITANNIA was tossed
22    2,    8|            ready the next day, and eight oclock in the morning was
23    2,   12|    European garb, and seemed about eight years of age. There was
24    2,   12|     animation from a child of only eight years, might have provoked
25    2,   13|            scoundrels can frighten eight well-armed, determined men.
26    2,   14|           with a frontage of about eight miles along the Peron, one
27    2,   15|          the base is not more than eight miles wide. Consequently
28    2,   17|            departure was fixed for eight oclock, immediately after
29    2,   18|            perilous enterprise.~At eight oclock it got very dark;
30    3,    4|   proximity of the land, which was eight miles off, when he thought
31    3,    5|           interrupted them.~Toward eight oclock in the evening,
32    3,    6|           Next day, February 5, at eight oclock, the raft was finished.
33    3,    8|            and Auckland; it was an eight daysjourney if they made
34    3,    8|            some difficulty, but at eight oclock in the evening the
35    3,    8|            Auckland twice a month, eight hours would be sufficient.~“
36    3,    8|         confluence was at hand. At eight oclock the little troop
37    3,    9|            It was swiftly rowed by eight oars, and steered with a
38    3,    9|        dogs lay at their feet. The eight rowers in the prow seemed
39    3,   14|         violators of the taboo.~At eight oclock, the summit of the
40    3,   15|           the evening they stopped eight miles from the mountains,
41    3,   19|           can send off a boat.”~At eight oclock in the evening,
42    3,   20|          to stir the waves, and by eight oclock the last peaks of
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License