Book,  chapter

 1    1,    9|       and instructed him in the history of the country they were
 2    1,   21|   Commandant related his entire history, and was not in a mood to
 3    2,    2| unfaithful to Clio, the muse of history, he invoked in his transports
 4    2,    4|      certainly, but still it is history in the United Kingdom.”~“
 5    2,    6|       Paddy OMoore related his history. It was that of all emigrants
 6    2,    6|     elicited in reply the whole history of the expedition. Glenarvan
 7    2,    7|        narrate his own personal history, which was short and simple
 8    2,   10|    earned.~Sam Machell told his history in a few words, while the
 9    2,   10|     stock-keeper, completed the history of this expedition, worthy
10    2,   12|        talk to him and hear his history. It was simple enough. He
11    2,   14|         He was listening to the history of the young gentlemen.
12    2,   14|       before they were told the history of the expedition, and had
13    2,   17|         his gang.”~Such was the history of Ben Joyce. The Major
14    2,   18|           said McNabbs, “is the history of Mulrady; and now you
15    3,    2|      went mentally over all his history; he called to mind the scenes
16    3,    2|        country.~But in all that history was there a fact, was there
17    3,    7|        ought to be known of the history of the struggle which had
18    3,   11|       well as a duty, and Maori history has no lack of such sacrifices.~
19    3,   18|         related Captain Grant’s history, and I learned then facts
20    3,   18|  command the DUNCAN. Such is my history, gentlemen. My disclosures,
21    3,   20|    brief sketch of the DUNCAN’S history.~What an immense debt he
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