Book,  chapter

 1    1,    1| exploration, and withdrew to the cabin again. The fish was still
 2    1,    1|        then, and bring it to the cabin.”~Tom obeyed, and in a few
 3    1,    6|            I am the passenger in cabin Number 6.”~“Number 6!” repeated
 4    1,    7|    SCOTIA, where I had booked my cabin before I left Paris. It
 5    1,    7|         one on board, so I found cabin No. 6, and went to my berth
 6    1,    7|          stairs, and away to his cabin.~As soon as the unfortunate
 7    1,    7|        And then, too, there is a cabin taken for me on board the
 8    1,   22|        dashed against the ruined cabin outside found their way
 9    2,    1|         soon slipped away to his cabin, and began to shave himself
10    2,    1|         Lord Glenarvan’s private cabin and seated themselves round
11    2,    2|       board at a given port. His cabin was got ready, and berths
12    2,    2|         berths for the men. This cabin was next to the famous number
13    2,    5|       and they returned to their cabin. At the same moment the
14    2,    5|      begged him to retire to his cabin, with the rest of the passengers.
15    2,    5|         for the name of king? To cabin! Silence! Trouble us not.’”~
16    2,    5|      anyone to be shut up in his cabin.~“John!” said Glenarvan
17    2,    7|           John Mangles paced the cabin with great strides, as if
18    2,   19|          But with this miserable cabin they were obliged to be
19    3,    2|       Halley had not offered his cabin to his lady passengers.
20    3,    3|       passed all his time in his cabin, but for the fact that the
21    3,    4|         Will Halley. He left his cabin, rubbed his eyes, and shook
22    3,   16|      Verne~He ran at once to his cabin in the forecastle. During
23    3,   16|         Glenarvan eagerly.~“In a cabin in the forecastle, and under
24    3,   16|      then he has remained in his cabin without attempting to go
25    3,   17|       quietly walked back to his cabin, which served as his prison.
26    3,   17|          the solitude of his own cabin, and it was seldom that
27    3,   17|          being taken back to his cabin, the sailors met him with
28    3,   17|          next day herself to his cabin to avoid exposing him again
29    3,   17|    anxiety, remained outside the cabin, alternately resolved to
30    3,   17|       Lady Helena retired to her cabin with Mary Grant, and the
31    3,   18|          Ayrton.~“Return to your cabin,” said Glenarvan, “and wait
32    3,   19|         had to be carried to her cabin, where Lady Helena lavished
33    3,   19|    geographer, going back to his cabin. “Close sympathy in thought
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