Part, Chapter
1 I, I | sound. Presently an awful silence ensued. Nature seemed to
2 I, II | were heard from outside. Silence immediately fell upon the
3 I, XII | All watched in anxious silence.~“Noon!” cried Jaspar Hobson
4 I, XV | Hobson examined them in silence, but with great attention,
5 I, XVI | rivals gazed at each other in silence.~The rest of the party now
6 I, XVI | was the first to break the silence, during which he had not
7 I, XVIII| the tempest replaced the silence usually so complete in these
8 I, XVIII| on the 29th November the silence all around the fort told
9 I, XIX | gazed at the Europeans in silence.~“Does any one understand
10 I, XXIII| awaited the eclipse in solemn silence.~Towards half-past nine
11 II, I | maintained a gloomy, even haughty silence.~“Poor Mr Black,” said Mrs
12 II, IV | broke the sublime, the awful silence of the night.~“Who would
13 II, VII | minutes they pressed on in silence, fearing, not without reason,
14 II, XX | Barnett examined the map in silence. She saw the pencil-mark
15 II, XXII | gathered together in gloomy silence in the rough shelter still
16 II, XXII | all watched in breathless silence as the form of a vessel
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