Book,  chapter

 1    1,    2|         fatePR, that must mean prisoners, and CRUEL INDIAN is evidently
 2    1,    2|        where they will be taken prisoners by cruel Indians. They have
 3    1,    4|      the Indians, who made them prisoners, would have dragged them
 4    1,   10|       were expecting to be made prisoners by the Indians?”~“I take
 5    1,   10|        to find the track of the prisoners. You can easily convince
 6    1,   20|    Harry Grant and his men were prisoners.~From the time of leaving
 7    1,   20|        ones who had the foreign prisoners in their hands, the natives
 8    1,   21|      whether any Europeans were prisoners in the hands of the Caciques?”~
 9    1,   21|        that some Europeans were prisoners, but I never saw them.”~“
10    1,   21|        was born. There were two prisoners.”~“No, three!” said Glenarvan.~“
11    1,   21|   Manuel must have heard if any prisoners had fallen into the hands
12    2,    4|   neighbors. Though they may be prisoners, their lives have never
13    2,    6|        companions had been made prisoners the moment the waves threw
14    2,    7|       my own, and that they are prisoners in the hands of some of
15    2,    7|      shipwrecked men were taken prisoners, as they feared. But must
16    3,    9|      together, sat ten European prisoners closely packed together.~
17    3,    9|       in their sleep, were made prisoners, and carried on board the
18    3,   10|          or Maori fortress. The prisoners, whose feet and hands were
19    3,   10|         for a number being made prisoners by the invaders, how many
20    3,   10|        his tribe, conducted his prisoners to a sacred place, on an
21    3,   10|        He wants to exchange his prisoners for some chiefs of his tribe!
22    3,   10|     Maories do not search their prisoners. But, Edward, this is for
23    3,   10|     entered.~He motioned to the prisoners to follow him. Glenarvan
24    3,   10| Kara-Tete.~And then pushing his prisoners aside, he laid his hand
25    3,   11|         of the taboo.~As to the prisoners confined in the Ware-Atoua,
26    3,   11|       natives and the “tabooedprisoners. A limited supply of provisions
27    3,   11|       taking their eyes off the prisoners.~The three prescribed days
28    3,   11|        they might rush upon the prisoners, who were already terrified
29    3,   12|        of death? This done, the prisoners embraced each other. Mary
30    3,   12|         indifferent warder; the prisoners were not bound, but it was
31    3,   12|        Ware-Atoua. The group of prisoners was lit up for a moment;
32    3,   12|         of the existence of the prisoners, or was it some private
33    3,   12|         to the undertaking?~The prisoners redoubled their efforts.
34    3,   12|   mountain. From this point the prisoners could soon gain the lower
35    3,   12|     perceived the flight of the prisoners, would have to make a long
36    3,   12|         paths in pursuit of the prisoners who were flying from their
37    3,   14|       could no longer see their prisoners; and this was the moment
38    3,   14|       edges of the opening. The prisoners. hidden behind the inclosure
39    3,   14|      meaning was obvious to the prisoners. As Paganel had foreseen,
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