Book,  chapter

 1    1,    2|         down each page with his eye in search of the name required.
 2    1,    6|    peculiar construction of the eye, which makes the sight imperfect
 3    1,    7|         at that very moment his eye fell on the wheel of the
 4    1,   11|         has no existence in the eye of geographical law.”~He
 5    1,   12|       the snow lying far as the eye could reach, and of the
 6    1,   14|        to strike the traveler’s eye.~The ground, moreover, had
 7    1,   14| repeated Glenarvan, keeping his eye immovably fixed on the bird.
 8    1,   14|      the Major. And with a calm eye, and sure hands and motionless
 9    1,   19|        lagoon. An inexperienced eye might have mistaken them
10    1,   19|      attempt at flight when his eye fell on Thalcave.~The Indian
11    1,   20|      quite the reverse, for the eye has a particularly villainous
12    1,   21|  grayish hair, and an imperious eye, as far as one could see
13    1,   22| sleeping too under the guardian eye of Heaven.~The night passed
14    1,   22|      danger was apparent to the eye, the ear could catch the
15    1,   23|      all sides, and, far as the eye could reach, seemed to have
16    1,   23|         already caught Wilson’s eye. It was Thalcave and his
17    1,   26|     gazed at it with a softened eye, and said:~“Good and beautiful.”~
18    2,    1|         word, for his practiced eye saw plainly that the captain
19    2,    6|        quick-set hedges met the eye, inclosing recent clearings.
20    2,    8|       the yacht with a sailor’s eye, the quartermaster of the
21    2,   10|         to start. As far as the eye could reach, nothing was
22    2,   15|      leaves which gladdened the eye.~“We shall have hard work
23    2,   16|       as he went along kept his eye fixed on the gray sky, on
24    2,   17|         the last word, when his eye chanced to fall on the Australian
25    3,    1|        broken nose, blind of an eye, and his lips stained with
26    3,    3|      Mangles to keep a watchful eye ever open. Mulrady and Wilson
27    3,    6|       others could not close an eye. When the day dawned, the
28    3,   10|      that it was so, from their eye sockets being hollow and
29    3,   12|       hour, his ear intent, his eye peering into the darkness.
30    3,   15|   country more pleasant for the eye to ramble over, than for
31    3,   19|    details could be seen by the eye.~Suddenly Robert gave a
32    3,   20|      You will be alone, with no eye upon you but that of God,
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