Book,  chapter

 1    1,    2|        families who mourn their loss. Perhaps this ill-fated
 2    1,   18|        will act upon it without loss of time. My horse is in
 3    1,   24|        to mourn the irrevocable loss of Captain Grant. This thought
 4    1,   24|          and said:~“Whether the loss of ferocious animals is
 5    1,   26|      himself.~He was quite at a loss how to show his recognition
 6    2,    8|      though he would regret the loss of his excellent servant.~“
 7    2,   13|     Paganel, who was never at a loss for an answer, immediately
 8    2,   15| immediately, but was quite at a loss to account for the disaster.~“
 9    2,   17|       him in astonishment, at a loss to understand this unaccountable
10    2,   19|         vital part was injured. Loss of blood accounted for the
11    2,   19|        ill success had cost the loss of a ship’s crew. Lord Glenarvan
12    3,    7|      not carry it without great loss. Just as I was leaving Paris,
13    3,   16|       friends were totally at a loss to understand the bewilderment
14    3,   18|      about the document and the loss of the ship somewhere along
15    3,   19|    waves.~They were wholly at a loss to understand him.~“Yes!”
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