Book,  chapter

 1    1,   17|         bent on quenching their thirst for past, present and future.
 2    1,   17|       had enough to satisfy his thirst no one felt it too painful.~
 3    1,   18|       bad, and could not quench thirst. Hunger and fatigue were
 4    1,   18|       done out with fatigue and thirst that they can scarcely drag
 5    1,   18|      being able to quench their thirst, that this compulsory bath
 6    1,   20|     feeling— they were dying of thirst. Most fortunately for them,
 7    2,   10|         along, and slaked their thirst at the numerous creeks that
 8    2,   10|         follow. They tried what thirst would do, by keeping them
 9    2,   10|      they simply quenched their thirst, and declined a more intimate
10    2,   19|    quartz. Not only hunger, but thirst began to assail the travelers.
11    2,   19|         They all quenched their thirst with these, and felt new
12    3,   13|      calculated that hunger and thirst would restore them their
13    3,   13|         days against hunger and thirst, and they needed no persuasion
14    3,   15|         of renewing them; their thirst was increasing by fatigue,
15    3,   16| imperious demands of hunger and thirst, Glenarvan questioned Tom
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