Book,  chapter

 1    1,    4|       good strong ship, she can venture in the Southern Seas, or
 2    1,   14|    their eyes, but they did not venture to meet his gaze.~At last
 3    1,   19|        horde? Glenarvan did not venture to ask.~At this very moment
 4    2,    3|    Poles, man scarcely dares to venture; the most daring shrinks
 5    2,   10|       wagon might safely enough venture.~“I suppose there is no
 6    2,   15|         were obliged to go at a venture, and enter the depths of
 7    2,   16|      propose that we should not venture beyond the Snowy in our
 8    2,   17|         the American rapids. To venture over that foaming current
 9    2,   17|        that will be a dangerous venture, John,” said Glenarvan. “
10    2,   18|     great a risk for one man to venture alone into a robber-haunted
11    2,   19|        a ship would not dare to venture near the shore. “To Eden!”
12    3,    5|      anything is better than to venture into this treacherous country.”~“
13    3,    8|        allowed the travelers to venture on a journey by day.~Paganel
14    3,    9|       at having been induced to venture into this country of savages.~
15    3,    9| audacious tourist will scarcely venture to invade these sacred shores;
16    3,   13|      was out of the question to venture again on the ridge between
17    3,   17|       to me. For my own part, I venture to affirm that the best
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