Book,  chapter

 1    1,   10|      succeed.”~“Besides, you can hardly call it a journey,” added
 2    1,   11|    loquacious by his calling. He hardly spoke to his PEONS. They
 3    1,   12|    apparent exertion. Perhaps he hardly knew, indeed, that he was
 4    1,   13|    pleasure—”~His companions had hardly time to thank him for his
 5    1,   15|         friend Paganel is, it is hardly likely he would study one
 6    1,   15|          delight, that he seemed hardly to have started before they
 7    1,   16|         was so excited, he could hardly find words, and he gazed
 8    1,   17| countryman, while the Patagonian hardly cared to encounter the nomadic
 9    1,   22|        of the largest size could hardly have dashed up the ocean
10    1,   22|      along that the riders could hardly keep their saddles.~“Anda,
11    1,   24|        without them. Paganel can hardly expect to meet with wild
12    1,   25|          the water, and it could hardly be distinguished from the
13    1,   25|     another “good-night,” though hardly daring to hope for it, and
14    1,   25|       water leagued against him, hardly knowing what deliverance
15    2,    1|       Major and Paganel, it need hardly be said, came in for their
16    2,    2|       ordinary ship life, and it hardly seemed as if they really
17    2,    7|   official document, and, though hardly absent a minute, Paddy O’
18    2,    7|         for hostile tribes would hardly remain anywhere near the
19    2,    9|         his rejoinder. “You have hardly put your foot on the frontier,
20    2,   10|      endured. Truly the gain was hardly earned.~Sam Machell told
21    2,   10|        They looked at each other hardly knowing what to do, till
22    2,   13|   whatever might happen.~It need hardly be said these precautions
23    2,   13| different varieties of which can hardly be enumerated, is the tree
24    2,   16|      with him.”~Such a reply was hardly looked for, as hitherto
25    2,   17|         to his heart. Fate could hardly have chosen a better man,
26    2,   17|        fixed idea that he seemed hardly to know what he was about.
27    3,    4|      lost his head. His sailors, hardly sobered, could not understand
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