Chapter
1 1 | little material difference in time; considering, moreover,
2 II | tons burden. Up to this time my sole experience of their
3 II | doubtless lead us in due time to an interchange of ideas.
4 V | course; but you see that this time the captain hasn’t chosen
5 V | have been told that at one time English ladies would wear
6 V | their labours; and with time, that fundamental element
7 VII | now observed for the first time that they were covered with
8 IX | into the hold, For some time I hoped that we had been
9 IX | to check the fire. At one time I thought of knocking a
10 X | chance of reaching them in time.~Carrying royals and studding-sails,
11 X | right; it is not the first time I have done it.”~“But don’
12 X | know that any shock at any time might cause an explosion?”~“
13 XII | well-nigh unbearable, and the time must come when the flames
14 XII | persuade him that with a little time and care he would soon recover
15 XII | order; you must, from this time, at once take the command
16 XII | to do my duty.”~A short time afterwards he sent for the
17 XII | command to me. From this time forward, I am captain of
18 XIII | for the picrate, for the time we have quite forgotten
19 XIV | being thus for the first time made aware of the true nature
20 XIV | to prevent them, but this time all in vain; Owen urged
21 XIV | watch, and note down the time in his memorandum-book,
22 XIV | flames.~But where, all this time, was the picrate? perhaps,
23 XV | position for a considerable time, evidently listening to
24 XV | from land. All are for the time possessed with one idea,
25 XVI | to larboard that at one time Curtis feared she would
26 XVI | s side, and at the same time a voice was distinguished,
27 XVI | service to us at some future time, and with that idea it has
28 XVI | securely to the stern.~By this time it was light enough to see
29 XVI | joined sea and sky. After a time Curtis made his way along
30 XVI | After retiring for a short time to calculate the result;
31 XVII | given him the command in time. Whatever man can do I know
32 XVII | resources for passing our time. Letourneur, Andre and myself,
33 XVII | shall have abundance of time on our hands, I have proposed
34 XVIII | Not impossibly, by the time it gets marked upon the
35 XVIII | to give the ‘Chancellor’ time to extinguish her flames,
36 XVIII | knuckle. The tide at this time was low, and the ship now
37 XVIII | pass without spending some time in our Ham Rock grotto.
38 XIX | lockers, in the front; but time and labour were all that
39 XX | anxious faces. Curtis lost no time in assembling passengers
40 XX | barren reef, that may at any time be overwhelmed by a tempestuous
41 XX | ten minutes before that time the ship had been hauled
42 XX | and round we went, keeping time in regular monotony to the
43 XX | advance an inch. Was there time to go back? She would inevitably
44 XXI | There was assuredly no time to be lost before we ought
45 XXI | captain, perhaps by that time the ship may be knocked
46 XXI | and at the end of that time the explosion took place;
47 XXII | that there might yet be time to reach the land before
48 XXII | repairing them was so much time lost.~Slowly, but surely,
49 XXII | Curtis’s brow contracted each time that the boatswain or the
50 XXII | it was only a question of time, and not for an instant
51 XXIII | is very evident that the time cannot be far distant when
52 XXIII | operation difficult, but for a time it was effectual, and at
53 XXIV | at the pumps, until the time came and everything was
54 XXIV | Keat, who had been for some time in a state of drowsy unconsciousness,
55 XXV | up beside him.~I now had time to look about me. The night
56 XXVI | inclined to give, and at one time if seemed as though the
57 XXVI | carefully, and from the time it took him, I should think
58 XXVIII | his father; at the same time exhibiting a calm Christian
59 XXIX | surface of the water.~The time was come. At Curtis’s word “
60 XXX | human probability must be a time of the direst distress.~
61 XXX | store-room were destroyed at the time when the ship’s deck was
62 XXXI | fortunate for us, and no time was to be lost in taking
63 XXXI | and in a couple of hours’ time he had made and fixed to
64 XXXI | three times that length of time will be required to accomplish
65 XXXII | had embarked, “that our time on board the raft passes
66 XXXII | greater portion of their time in dozing on the fore part
67 XXXII | him sit for an hour at a time, with his hand resting on
68 XXXII | rain had fallen at the same time we should have been more
69 XXXIII | becalmed, we shall probably in time overcome our fears, and
70 XXXIV | summer lightning that from time to time illumined the horizon
71 XXXIV | lightning that from time to time illumined the horizon far
72 XXXV | descend, and during that time the wind slightly abated
73 XXXV | corner of a spar, for a time I lost all consciousness.~
74 XXXVI | even in that short space of time what an irreparable loss
75 XXXVI | reserved it for another time. Falsten divided his ration
76 XXXVII | possible to exist for so long a time. To our daily half-pound
77 XXXVII | diminish rapidly, and the time is fast approaching when
78 XXXVIII| horizon, and many and many a time did our imagination shape
79 XXXVIII| command!” they shouted from time to time in their drunken
80 XXXVIII| they shouted from time to time in their drunken fury; and,
81 XXXVIII| hand upon my arm.~By this time the mutineers had been driven
82 XXXIX | ask,” I replied; and this time my manner was kinder and
83 XXXIX | bring him some more another time. Andre asked no more questions,
84 XLI | agony.~But there was no time to be lost; perhaps we were
85 XLI | the night is the best time for catching large fish.
86 XLII | it was that for the first time I fully realized how the
87 XLII | vomiting, however, had for the time relieved him, and he was
88 XLIII | poisoned barrel had at some time or other contained copperas;
89 XLIII | her attentively for some time, he said, “She is a brig
90 XLIII | bounded with hope every time that our poor flag fluttered
91 XLIV | preparations, at the same time using every means in our
92 XLIV | right over it; at the same time he shook the line a little,
93 XLIV | again was lowered, this time to the depth of twenty fathoms,
94 XLV | realized; for in a very short time, Dowlas, with a shout of
95 XLVI | clear, and although at that time the wind had slightly freshened,
96 XLVI | sufferings in sleep.~After a time I fell into a restless,
97 XLVII | loathing he seemed for the time to have quite forgotten
98 XLIX | survivors would a second time resist the temptation to
99 LI | we have drifted, and each time he has been unable to give
100 LI | cannot tell, but after a time a loud peal of laughter
101 LI | sea; but, determined this time to preserve the body, that
102 LII | and would, in course of time, dispel the vapour. Towards
103 LIV | deemed to be his last.~Some time afterwards, when I was alone
104 LV | the ocean, many and many a time I fancied I caught sight
105 LV | he shouted,—~“Now then, time’s up!” and followed by Dowlas,
106 LVII | indissoluble, I believe, for either time or circumstance to destroy;
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