Book,  chapter

 1    1,    5|   larger than any of the first vessels that touched the shores
 2    1,   26|   rough, that in heavy weather vessels that run aground there are
 3    2,    2|        Acunha.~Several whaling vessels were lying quietly at anchor
 4    2,    2|       Inaccessible Island, two vessels have stranded on the chief
 5    2,    7|    Peninsular Company if their vessels continued to take in coal
 6    2,   15|    must have broken some blood vessels,” said Glenarvan.~“Evidently,”
 7    2,   19|  entrance of the port. Several vessels were moored in the roadstead,
 8    2,   19|   inquire about the arrival of vessels within the last few days.~
 9    3,    1|     were scarce. Three or four vessels, anchored in Twofold Bay,
10    3,    1|    Melbourne. But of the three vessels anchored in the roadstead
11    3,    4| certain of it, on the track of vessels between Australia and New
12    3,    7|       been visited by European vessels, they had maintained their
13    3,   20|       were out of the route of vessels, and could not be rescued
14    3,   20|      rocks and watched the few vessels passing in the distance
15    3,   20|        exile only two or three vessels appeared on the horizon,
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