Book,  chapter

 1    1,   10|       part of its course we shall fall in with the shipwrecked
 2    1,   12|     manage to hold out against it fall victims to the violence
 3    1,   12|          air, and might cause the fall of the masses of snow suspended
 4    1,   13|      crash of the avalanches, the fall of masses of granite and
 5    1,   14|           some cry for help would fall upon his ear. He ventured
 6    1,   14|          turned over and began to fall, supported by his great
 7    1,   17|           the travelers could not fall back on this resource, not
 8    1,   19|        said Glenarvan.~“He’ll not fall.”~But notwithstanding Thalcave’
 9    1,   22|        and were pulled up only to fall again and again, and be
10    2,    5|       John’s only resource was to fall back on his sails, and seek
11    2,   11|         and then there had been a fall. The affair recalled the
12    2,   11|           rose. After the fearful fall came fire, more fearful
13    2,   16|           A. M. the rain began to fall in torrents from the stormy
14    2,   17|            and I hope the lot may fall on me.”~His will was obeyed.
15    2,   17|           when his eye chanced to fall on the Australian and New
16    2,   18|         saw two of his assailants fall. By the flash he recognized
17    3,    1|          Glenarvan. “If ever they fall into my hands I will avenge
18    3,    4|        presentiment that we shall fall in with her.”~“God keep
19    3,    5|     Mangles, “is that we must not fall into their hands. Let us
20    3,    6|      scanty resource. They had to fall back on the coarse viands
21    3,    7|          have the good fortune to fall in with a detachment of
22    3,    8|          if Glenarvan happened to fall in with the mail coach that
23    3,    8|        shades of evening began to fall. The sun, before disappearing
24    3,   10|     neither Mary Grant nor I must fall into the hands of these
25    3,   12|      twenty feet of perpendicular fall outside the grotto.~After
26    3,   12|      themselves imprudently, as a fall would be fatal.~“This rope,”
27    3,   14| geographer, “we are to pretend to fall victims to the flames of
28    3,   16|       rope with both hands in his fall.~Suddenly a tremendous explosion
29    3,   19|       fondly as he felt her tears fall on his forehead.~“Mary,
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