Book,  chapter

 1    1,   13|       state of wakefulness. His thoughts reverted involuntarily to
 2    1,   24|        took time to collect his thoughts before complying with his
 3    1,   24|   hesitation, and already their thoughts had flown to the Australias.
 4    2,    4|      said Paganel, divining her thoughts. “The aborigines of Australia
 5    2,   16|        for him to speak out his thoughts, but the Major was silent,
 6    3,    1| understood each other. The same thoughts, the same anguish harrowed
 7    3,    1|     evening sadly enough. Their thoughts recalled all the misfortunes
 8    3,   12|      her. Who does not turn his thoughts toward God in the hour of
 9    3,   12|     were absorbed in their last thoughts, and a deathlike silence
10    3,   12|      them from their melancholy thoughts, led them to the end of
11    3,   13|      Mangles turned Glenarvan’s thoughts into their saddest channel;
12    3,   19|    through trouble, divined the thoughts that troubled his sister,
13    3,   20|     what were Jacques Paganel’s thoughts during Captain Grant’s recital?
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