Book,  chapter

 1    1,    2|        Glenarvan, becoming quite excited over his task, as the incomplete
 2    1,   16|          glances. Paganel was so excited, he could hardly find words,
 3    1,   17|     lively that the Major became excited, and, quite contrary to
 4    1,   19|        to you.”~Glenarvan was so excited that he mixed up English
 5    1,   22|       head was burning. Paganel, excited by the difficulty, was turning
 6    1,   25|    succession. Others would have excited the interest of a SAVANT
 7    2,    1|    details, amusing or terrible, excited by turns laughter and horror
 8    2,    7|      impression. The interest he excited was still further heightened
 9    2,   12|       whose interest was greatly excited by this spectacle, got out
10    2,   15|          ferns, which would have excited the admiration of less weary
11    3,    4|     nervous organization, highly excited, could not submit to confinement
12    3,   10|    unhappy Maories, bleeding and excited, were hideous to look upon.~
13    3,   13|        This phenomenon of course excited no surprise in those that
14    3,   16|   buttoning it up in a strangely excited manner.~“But, Paganel,”
15    3,   19| consciousness, but wandering and excited, called out, “My father!
16    3,   20|          A general curiosity was excited by this question of the
17    3,   21|     mystery still, which greatly excited McNabbs’s curiosity. Why
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