Book,  chapter

 1    1,    5|   valiant little troop, ready to follow him any where, even in the
 2    1,    7|       1846; in a word, I want to follow the course of the river
 3    1,    8|    chance, or rather providence. Follow our example. It was providence
 4    1,   10|      Glenarvan.~“My advice is to follow the 37th parallel from the
 5    1,   10|          out on the table.~“Just follow me for a moment,” he said, “
 6    1,   10|          to keep straight on and follow the 37th parallel till we
 7    1,   10|    Paganel’s theory, and we must follow the course he points out
 8    1,   12|        the difficulty?”~“We will follow your Lordship,” replied
 9    1,   16|       travelers had to do was to follow the slope right down to
10    1,   20|         and therefore decided to follow the advice of Thalcave,
11    1,   23|  provided for us, that we should follow it up to the end.”~“What
12    1,   23|      think with you that we must follow the thirty-seventh parallel
13    1,   24|      which great results were to follow; it completely changed the
14    2,    1|       round, so as to be able to follow the argument of Paganel.~“
15    2,    6|   attempts that had been made to follow up the precise indications
16    2,    8|        they intended strictly to follow, but they might come upon
17    2,    9|      everybody was at liberty to follow his inclinations within
18    2,   10|          but the sheep would not follow. They tried what thirst
19    2,   11|       made a sign to the rest to follow him. “There is no reason,”
20    2,   13|     agreed with the one voice to follow their original programme.~“
21    2,   15|          would be better able to follow it up than any one else,
22    2,   18|          the case. To attempt to follow the sailor, to run in the
23    2,   18| direction? Which track would you follow?”~At that very moment, as
24    2,   18|        immediately. They were to follow the course of the Snowy
25    2,   18|       course of the Snowy River, follow its banks till they reached
26    3,    1|  Glenarvan had nearly decided to follow the coast road to Sydney,
27    3,    5|       whether the raft could not follow the coast as far as Auckland,
28    3,    7|     without an hour’s delay, and follow the coast to Auckland. But
29    3,    8|         provisions, commenced to follow the shore of Aotea Bay.
30    3,    8|          said Paganel, “we shall follow the banks of the Waipa,
31    3,   10|     motioned to the prisoners to follow him. Glenarvan and the rest
32    3,   11|          if their slaves did not follow them into the other world.~
33    3,   12|        will be a signal to us to follow.”~“I will go first,” said
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