Book,  chapter

 1    1,    1|       more nor less, that the fellow has got in his inside, and
 2    1,    4|     whole affair. So the poor fellow is lost for ever.”~“My father!
 3    1,    5| impossible to resist a little fellow like that, and, indeed,
 4    1,    6|     for a reply, the rattling fellow continued:~“Now the introduction
 5    1,    7|       usual. At last the poor fellow shrugged his shoulders,
 6    1,    8|       I say, Mangles, my dear fellow, are there no ports in the
 7    1,   10|        a strong, jovial young fellow, and Mulrady, so good a
 8    1,   12|    Precisely.”~“Well, my good fellow, both these passes have
 9    1,   15|       Paganel, my unfortunate fellow, Camoens was a Portuguese!
10    1,   24|       he found that the brave fellow had actually managed to
11    1,   26|     least, to leave the brave fellow some souvenir of his European
12    2,    1|      said the Major.~“Selfish fellow! you advise me to do that
13    2,    3|   Paganel.~“Come now, my good fellow,” said the Major, “dont
14    2,    3|  engross the poor shipwrecked fellow, just snatched from the
15    2,    3|   himself alone, far from his fellow men, without any hope of
16    2,    5|  elements.~“He’s an energetic fellow, this brave John of mine!”
17    2,    7|       He was a coarse-looking fellow, about forty-five years
18    2,    7|     is an honest, intelligent fellow and a good~V. IV Verne worker;
19    2,   10|   with him.~“Yes, go, my good fellow,” said Glenarvan. “How long
20    2,   11|    Station. He was a powerful fellow, and tall, but his features
21    2,   11|    conclude that the wretched fellow was an accomplice of these
22    2,   12|       his bed, and the little fellow accepted it. Lady Helena
23    2,   14|      They had to dispatch the fellow with rifles. Nothing but
24    2,   15|  pounds 100 sterling.~“He’s a fellow that’s worth hanging, and
25    2,   16|      You are a clever, daring fellow, and you will succeed.”~
26    2,   17|  began again. ‘He is a clever fellow, this Ben Joyce,’ said the
27    2,   17|  shipwreck, and the audacious fellow determined to act his part
28    2,   18|    The Major removed the poor fellow’s flannel shirt, which was
29    2,   18|      understand why the brave fellow was so determined to speak.”~
30    2,   19|   back the bold, daring young fellow, “let us wait.”~And they
31    2,   19|   tried his modesty. The poor fellow’s greatest trouble was the
32    3,   13|     or Sunbeam, was not a bad fellow. Paganel’s spectacles and
33    3,   16|     an idiot, an incorrigible fellow, and I shall live and die
34    3,   17|        There was no doubt the fellow knew, if not the present
35    3,   18|     is a strong, clear-headed fellow. Why was it that he must
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