Book,  chapter

 1    1,    2|      great catastrophe, and the lives of several human beings
 2    1,    3|         gone now to London. The lives of the shipwrecked men were
 3    1,    4|         perilous, and cost more lives than it saved. In short,
 4    1,   10|      hands of the Indians their lives at least have been spared.”~“
 5    1,   14|        they must, for all their lives depended on prompt action.~“
 6    1,   22|       imperative, for all their lives depended on it. Should the
 7    2,    4|         may be prisoners, their lives have never been threatened,
 8    2,    5|    yacht on shore.~“To save the lives of those on board, my Lord,”
 9    2,   12|       Governor, Lord Napo-leon, lives.”~This was too much for
10    2,   19|      and nearly paid with their lives for the dangerous experiment.
11    3,    1|        those who ventured their lives. Lord Glenarvan must return
12    3,    4|        not stop at a crime! Our lives would be worth little. We
13    3,    5|      their cowardice with their lives.”~“So much the worse for
14    3,    8| australis of naturalists, which lives with equal satisfaction
15    3,   11|         the spirit of the dead, lives on mortal food, as the body
16    3,   12|     said: “My dear friends, our lives and the lives of these poor
17    3,   12|      friends, our lives and the lives of these poor women are
18    3,   18|     blunder which has saved our lives. When I was in the very
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