Book,  chapter

 1    1,    3|        not delude you with vain hopes.”~“Oh, tell me all, tell
 2    1,    3|      the same. I only trust the hopes we are leading you to entertain
 3    1,    4|      damp their newly cherished hopes? It would not in the least
 4    1,   10|    Ought we to disappoint their hopes? Do you not all agree with
 5    1,   14|         hope, but what is it he hopes?”~“Who knows!” said Tom
 6    1,   18|        Guamini disappoint their hopes, the landscape was totally
 7    1,   21|       complete overthrow of his hopes, and Robert walked silently
 8    1,   26|    document, and the consequent hopes they were indulging. Whether
 9    2,    1|         disappoint our sanguine hopes.”~“It seems to me a good
10    2,    4|        that Mcintyre had strong hopes of having discovered traces
11    3,    1|      this moment when all their hopes were destroyed at a blow.
12    3,   11| Glenarvan cherished no illusive hopes as to his own fate; nothing
13    3,   18|     buoy you up again with vain hopes. Besides, we were going
14    3,   20|       words with which our last hopes were linked.”~“And what
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