Book,  chapter

 1    1,    1|   distance, when the sailor on watch caught sight of an enormous
 2    1,    5|   regiment, the Highland Black Watch, composed entirely of Scotch
 3    1,    6| stranger tried to pull out his watch to see the time; but it
 4    1,   10|       than life, and who is to watch over them but the devoted
 5    1,   13|     guanacos. He looked at his watch and found the time was about
 6    1,   23|      to fear. Besides, we will watch, and we are numerous enough
 7    1,   25|        to read by. Holding his watch close to the insect, Paganel
 8    1,   25|       uninterrupted rolling.”~“Watch in hand?” asked the Major.~“
 9    1,   25|       hand?” asked the Major.~“Watch in hand. Only one thing
10    1,   26|      sleep.~But Glenarvan kept watch. There was still a stiff
11    2,    2|     Glenarvan found leisure to watch John Manglesgrowing attachment
12    2,    2|   asked Tom Austin, who was on watch.~“Leeward!” was the reply.~
13    2,   13|       one was always placed on watch. Morning and evening the
14    2,   13|      undertook in turn to keep watch until sunrise.~On the 3d
15    2,   14|      Paganel who had the first watch did not lie down, but shouldered
16    2,   14|     Wilson came to relieve the watch, he found the geographer
17    2,   14|       John Mangles promised to watch over him, and Mary felt
18    2,   17|       Wilson, who were keeping watch. Profound silence reigned
19    2,   17|       Mangles and the Major on watch.~Lady Helena was informed
20    2,   18|  faithful guardians kept close watch, bearing philosophically
21    3,    4|     Mangles never released his watch. Any other ship would have
22    3,    8|        he, well armed, were to watch in turns, two and two, till
23    3,   11|       armed to the teeth, kept watch at the door of Ware-Atoua.~
24    3,   12|     lad!” repeated Glenarvan.~“Watch the savages outside,” said
25    3,   13|        but made up his mind to watch for an opportunity, or make
26    3,   14|    perished, and abandon their watch.”~“But,” said Miss Grant, “
27    3,   14|      the savages prolong their watch at the foot of Maunganamu,
28    3,   14|    settled, they resumed their watch of the native proceedings,
29    3,   17|       the door, with orders to watch his slightest movement.
30    3,   18|     their chief, they had kept watch on the yacht, and at length,
31    3,   19|        two oclock, the man on watch signaled land on the horizon.
32    3,   19|        of the yacht the man on watch was pacing the deck, while
33    3,   19|       the girl. The sailors on watch ran to assist, and John
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