Book,  chapter

 1    1,   10|  gave a decided negative. No report of such an event had been
 2    1,   10|     returned to the yacht to report his ill success. Mary Grant
 3    1,   13|       At the same moment the report of firearms was heard. The
 4    1,   14|   had pulled the trigger the report of a gun resounded from
 5    1,   17| others, rode hastily back to report the approach of a troop
 6    1,   19| followed next instant by the report of the carbine, which made
 7    1,   19|  returned Glenarvan.~A fresh report resounded that instant.
 8    1,   22|    went back to Glenarvan to report the result of his conversation.~“
 9    1,   24|      these observations, the report of firearms resounded frequently
10    1,   25|       Glenarvan, what’s your report?” asked Paganel.~“I say
11    2,    6|  down below the stern. Their report was that one of the branches
12    2,   17|      grasped his revolver. A report was heard, and Glenarvan
13    2,   18|    and answered by a kind of report, but almost indistinguishable,
14    2,   18|  ill-boding whistle, and the report which echoed under the tilt. “
15    2,   18|      the same quarter as the report, but less than a quarter
16    3,   15|  canoe, when suddenly a loud report was heard, and a ball from
17    3,   17|     incredulity.~However the report soon spread among the sailors
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