Book,  chapter

 1    1,   11|        coverings a traveler may sleep soundly, and brave exposure
 2    1,   13|        advice, and let us go to sleep without troubling our heads
 3    1,   13|      say, Major, shall we go to sleep?”~“Yes, we’ll go to sleep,
 4    1,   13|       sleep?”~“Yes, we’ll go to sleep, Paganel.”~Each one, thereupon,
 5    1,   13|         But Glenarvan could not sleep. Secret uneasiness kept
 6    1,   18|   rejoined Glenarvan, “and then sleep, if we can, till it is starting
 7    1,   18|        the lack of it by a good sleep. But Paganel dreamed of
 8    1,   18|        brave papa. He put me to sleep on his knee, crooning an
 9    1,   19|    light.~However, the Indian’s sleep did not last long; for about
10    1,   19|       suddenly from his night’s sleep.~A whole hour passed, and
11    1,   22|       such circumstances was to sleep, and accordingly each one
12    1,   22|         ruined RANCHO. However, sleep overpowered them at length.
13    1,   23|          said Paganel, “we must sleep on the first floor. The
14    1,   23|       safely tucked up we shall sleep as if we were in the best
15    1,   25|      his poncho and lay down to sleep.~But the approach of the
16    1,   25|       ago, when I was trying to sleep, several facts occurred
17    1,   26|     chin, and fell into a heavy sleep.~But Glenarvan kept watch.
18    1,   26|      people do when roused from sleep, followed Glenarvan to the
19    2,   12|        child turned over in his sleep, and, to the extreme surprise
20    2,   13|        now at dusk, who used to sleep with open doors and windows.~
21    2,   14|      keep himself from going to sleep. In spite of the absence
22    2,   14|      they were all aroused from sleep by the sudden loud barking
23    2,   15|      heat destroy appetite, and sleep was needed more than food.
24    2,   15|      they all fell into a heavy sleep. The darkness deepened owing
25    2,   15|  wretched, heavy, unre-freshing sleep, the Major woke. His half-closed
26    2,   16|         the wagon; they did not sleep, but talked of one thing
27    2,   19| consequently with food too, and sleep in their wet clothes, while
28    3,    4|        now wrapped in a drunken sleep, also refreshed themselves
29    3,    5|       darkness of night and the sleep of the passengers, had fled
30    3,    6|      party fell into a troubled sleep, a prey to evil dreams;
31    3,    8|        supper and then get some sleep.”~“Supper by all means,”
32    3,    8|        and presently a profound sleep overcame the travelers,
33    3,    9|         were surprised in their sleep, were made prisoners, and
34    3,   12|         hut, lay down on a mat. Sleep, which keeps all sorrow
35    3,   15|       required no persuasion to sleep in the open air.~Next day
36    3,   19|        were hastily roused from sleep.~“My sister is dying, and
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