Chapter
1 I | fact one of those practical men to whom is due the prosperity
2 I | assigned by professional men for the exhaustion of coal-mines
3 I | women, children, and old men, all were collected in the
4 I | forget you either.~When men have worked together, they
5 I | belonged to that class of men whose brain is always on
6 IV | of the most conspicuous men in the district which supplies
7 V | wonder as they went.~Two men, however, better educated
8 VI | what the ‘monk,’ as the men called him, used to do.
9 VI | he murmured. “No: these men know what they are about.
10 VII | Aberfoyle was not the work of men, but the work of the Creator.~
11 VIII | our way along, like blind men. There’s no fear of losing
12 IX | of the farm, but to warn men who, without being aware
13 IX | cried the superstitious men in terror.~Clearly, it needed
14 IX | delay in the mine. Several men were placed at his disposal,
15 IX | had been brought up, the men fixed to the landing a rope
16 IX | the hands of one of the men, he proceeded with a rapid
17 IX | round. The lamps held by the men gave light only just where
18 IX | distance. “After that light, my men!” exclaimed Sir William.~“
19 IX | The president and his men, little given to superstition,
20 IX | It was hard to say.~The men, seeing that the distance
21 XI | failing, he was seized by the men, and with the child was
22 XII | the girl.~“Because those men were James Starr, my father,
23 XVI | the workmen.~Simon and his men could not decide whether
24 XVI | The evil deeds of such men would certainly, in the
25 XVII | made me believe that all men were base and perfidious,
26 XVIII| these bold and persevering men, by whose means the mine
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