Book,  chapter

 1    1,    4|     only hope my husband will succeed, for the poor children’s
 2    1,    4|     not.”~“He will be sure to succeed, or the Lords of the Admiralty
 3    1,    6|      cause. We shall not only succeed in our enterprise, but there
 4    1,    7|  travelers. I mean to try and succeed where Krick, the missionary
 5    1,    7|      to the traveler who will succeed in ascertaining a fact which
 6    1,   10|  right; and I do hope you may succeed.”~“Besides, you can hardly
 7    1,   19|      should this maneuver not succeed, it would only render the
 8    2,   11|       Glenarvan, impatient to succeed, could brook no delay, in
 9    2,   14|    know life by labor. If you succeed, so much the better. If
10    2,   16|   daring fellow, and you will succeed.”~It was quite evident the
11    2,   18|     where my sailor could not succeed.”~“No, John! it is out of
12    3,    6|    anxiety.~Still he hoped to succeed. The wind freshened. The
13    3,   14| present. But it must, it will succeed.”~“And what is it?” asked
14    3,   17|      gentler influence, might succeed. Is there not a constant
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