Book,  chapter

 1    1,    3|        did not care much for the favor of the House of Hanover,
 2    1,    6|       making a voyage by special favor, so that in a manner we
 3    1,   24| evidently he was not inclined to favor his friend’s views.~“Yes,”
 4    2,    1|     every probability was in his favor.~“And where is the next
 5    2,    1|          certainties, are not in favor of the Australian continent.”~“
 6    2,    2|           seemed now disposed to favor them to the utmost. The
 7    2,   10|         to have exhausted in its favor all the primitive colors
 8    2,   11|         prepossess anyone in his favor. But that was nothing, provided
 9    2,   14|   accepting it you will confer a favor on poor exiles, who will
10    2,   16|          but as every one was in favor of the plan all there was
11    3,    1|      used this as an argument in favor of his scheme; in fact,
12    3,    6|       that the wind was in their favor, rigged up the royal-yard
13    3,    8|          luck, the fog is in our favor.”~The clump of trees was
14    3,   12|       escape, the chances are in favor of the prisoner; the fact
15    3,   18|    parallel, the chances were in favor of New Zealand.~“Now, Paganel,”
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