Book,  chapter

 1    1,    1|      vengeance was satisfied, their curiosity was not; they knew the brute
 2    1,    6|         Scotchman, or awakening his curiosity in the least, to know where
 3    2,    1|           hastened to satisfy their curiositygoing over incident by incident,
 4    2,    7|            satisfied all legitimate curiosity. What could remain to be
 5    2,    8|            Lord,” he said after his curiosity was satisfied.~“A good one,
 6    2,    9|       exclaimed his auditors, their curiosity aroused by this preamble.~“
 7    3,    8|        peculiar to New Zealand. His curiosity as a naturalist overcame
 8    3,   12|     continue, he listened; then his curiosity was aroused, and he put
 9    3,   13|    Glenarvan stopped this misplaced curiosity.~“The savages?” said he.~“
10    3,   13|            Paganel picked up out of curiosity, and with some trouble deciphered.~“
11    3,   14|        Paganel soon satisfied their curiosity. “My friends,” said he, “
12    3,   15|         track of these animals.~His curiosity was excusable, for he had
13    3,   20|          delighted to gratify their curiosity, and commenced his narration
14    3,   20| indecipherable document?”~A general curiosity was excited by this question
15    3,   21|           greatly excited McNabbs’s curiosity. Why was it that Paganel
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