Chapter
1 I | indicates a great pedestrian.~A calm gravity seemed to surround
2 III | explosion of wrath.~“Come, be calm, my dear Dick!” resumed
3 XI | Mozambique Channel was especially calm and pleasant. The agreeable
4 XIII | the Daytime.~The night was calm. However, on Saturday morning,
5 XIV | and, at last, seeing this calm of all nature, he resolved
6 XV | well disposed; the air is calm; there is not a breath of
7 XVI | the eye could make out the calm and sombre forms of palm-trees,
8 XVI | could see his countenance calm as ever even amid the flashing
9 XVIII | the wind having fallen calm toward evening, they remained
10 XXI | work, gazed out upon the calm obscurity; he eagerly scanned
11 XXIV | suspended in the air at a dead calm.~“Let us wait with resignation,”
12 XXVI | atmosphere was in a dead calm—one of those calms which
13 XXVI | below him, and absolute calm seemed to reign, up to the
14 XXVI | contemplating the limitless calm, and could see no reason
15 XXX | be caught in another dead calm?” sighed the doctor.~“Well,
16 XXXIV | midst of a most unlooked-for calm; the north wind had abruptly
17 XXXVII| of millet. The night was calm, and began to break into
18 XLII | the instant.~The night was calm. A few clouds broke against
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