Chapter
1 I | audience. “We’d like to see a man of such extraordinary daring,
2 I | his appearance.~He was a man of about forty years of
3 I | won over by the singular man before him, and immediately
4 I | with him, from the young man’s earliest years, in the
5 I | Moreover, his father, who was a man of thorough instruction,
6 II | naturally the most affable man in the world. More than
7 III | said he. “Don’t I know my man? Isn’t it just like him?
8 III | old English proverb: ‘The man who was born to be hung
9 VI | all this!~But then, what a man the doctor was in the eyes
10 VI | Moreover, he was just the man to render the greatest service
11 VI | Dangerous! What! with a man like Dr. Ferguson?”~“I don’
12 VI | if I can get this crazy man to give up his scheme.”~“
13 VIII | time. Bennet was rather a man of science than a man of
14 VIII | a man of science than a man of war, which did not, however,
15 VIII | balloon—that might be; but a man?” insinuated Kennedy.~“Yes,
16 VIII | insinuated Kennedy.~“Yes, a man, too!—for the balloon is
17 IX | see, my friends, when a man has had a taste of that
18 IX | that’s all right! But can a man get a drop of the real stuff
19 IX | splendid planets that my old man so often talks about. For
20 XV | the exclusion of the old man’s legitimate children. He
21 XV | reclining. There he saw a man of about forty, completely
22 XVI | can offer to the gaze of man. Below them, the tempest;
23 XVII | time! What more could a man ask? And there was Kennedy,
24 XVII | once, selected the part of Man Friday for himself.~The
25 XIX | Maybe so!” said Joe. “Every man for himself.”~In the afternoon,
26 XXI | harm to the unfortunate man whom you wish to aid.”~“
27 XXI | re the greatest learned man in the world!”~The doctor
28 XXII | lay a human being—a young man of thirty years or more,
29 XXII | Joe.~“Poor, unfortunate man!” said Kennedy.~“We must
30 XXII | fresh atmosphere.”~“How that man has suffered!” said Joe,
31 XXII | carefully tending the sick man, Ferguson kept watch over
32 XXII | and magnificent. The sick man was able to call his friends
33 XXII | hours, held him like a dead man under the eye of Dr. Ferguson.
34 XXII | until, at length, the sick man revived, little by little,
35 XXII | missionary was a poor young man from the village of Aradon,
36 XXIII | Rage.—The Death of a Good Man.—The Night of watching by
37 XXIII | spite of all, this good man could find words only to
38 XXIII | falling asleep.”~The dying man uttered some broken words,
39 XXIII | in what kind of soil that man of self-denial, that poor
40 XXIII | once rushed like a crazy man among the scattered fragments,
41 XXIII | gold? Has not this dead man whom you have just helped
42 XXIII | hunter put on the air of a man who could do nothing in
43 XXIV | I, doctor, I’m not the man to despair; no one was less
44 XXVI | far from pleasant. That man is to be pitied the most
45 XXVI | the steps of an enfeebled man quite out of practice in
46 XXVII | hunter; “we’ll fight him. A man feels strong when only a
47 XXVII | and he would be a lost man!”~“But what are we to do?
48 XXX | disappeared. This young man, at the age of twenty-three,
49 XXX | nearer to Kernak than a man would be to London, if he
50 XXXIV | it does not belong to man to undertake such a journey!” —
51 XXXV | more natural than for one man to give himself up to save
52 XXXV | have some respect for a man that fell from the sky!
53 XXXV | as good as another when a man has no choice. The main
54 XXXV | fatigue to crush him, for a man’s system is not greatly
55 XXXV | heart of the unfortunate man. He saw that he was lost.
56 XXXV | longer reflect!~Like a crazy man, his feet bleeding, his
57 XXXVII | my life! Nothing sets a man up like a little pleasure-trip
58 XXXVII | his own good share, like a man who had eaten nothing for
59 XXXVIII| namely, to recover the lost man’s papers, as well as to
60 XXXVIII| invisible hand.”~“I suppose a man has a right not to believe
61 XXXVIII| then that a brave young man, with his own feeble resources,
62 XLIX | beaten; but the last learned man still lingering in the place
63 XLIX | nothing, doctor; when a man lies stretched out all day
64 XLI | cried Kennedy.~“Wretched man!” was the doctor’s agonized
65 XLIII | you are, indeed, a great man!”~Joe and Kennedy at once
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