Book,  chapter

 1    1,    6|        for he had never seen the stranger in his life before.~He was
 2    1,    6|          in a shoulder-belt.~The stranger’s excitement was a strong
 3    1,    6|        This was too much for the stranger, and he called out, with
 4    1,    6|      Olbinett, mechanically.~The stranger tried to pull out his watch
 5    1,    6|         he meant for the voluble stranger kept on talking incessantly,
 6    1,    6| stupefied, as much at seeing the stranger on board as at hearing himself
 7    1,    6|      staring at Olbinett and the stranger alternately.~But without
 8    1,    6|         came up on the poop. The stranger caught sight of them directly,
 9    1,   15|        no words were needed. The stranger bowed slightly in return,
10    1,   15|         at once, and saluted the stranger with all the grace of a
11    1,   15|    exchange a few words with the stranger, and found out even that
12    1,   19|   silence round him. But where a stranger would have suspected nothing,
13    2,    9|          its climate. It is even stranger than its productions.”~“
14    2,   14|          to meet them, and, as a stranger, announced his name and
15    2,   14|        It was, sir,” replied the stranger, “and my cousin Sandy accompanied
16    3,    7|         it is not ours; soon the stranger will come and take it, and
17    3,   17|         would have thought him a stranger to the whole affair. But
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