Chapter
1 II | to deny; but that he is a man of resolute temperament,
2 II | I can to understand the man who, as commander of a vessel,
3 II | mistaken there is another man on board who, if circumstances
4 IV | with me. He is a fine tall man, about fifty years of age,
5 IV | a most intelligent young man.”~“Yes, Mr. Kazallon,” replied
6 IV | he is impressed with the man’s undecided manner and sluggish
7 IV | Robert Curtis, the mate, a man of about thirty years of
8 IV | contracted brow all betokened a man of energy, thoroughly endowed
9 IV | the United States. He is a man of about fifty, a most uninteresting
10 V | three o’clock the lookout man sung out that there was
11 VI | your obedience! Suppose the man is actually mad, what then?”~“
12 VII | the conclusion that the man is mad. I have had various
13 VII | came an deck. The young man enjoyed the early morning
14 VII | carried on in whispers. The man repeatedly shook his head
15 VII | he said at length; “the man at the helm had made a false
16 VIII | overheard one of the sailors, a man named Owen say to his mates,—~“
17 X | leaves his post beside the man at the helm, and without
18 XI | for Andre but the young man preserved an admirable composure,
19 XI | resistance the miserable man was captured and safely
20 XII | suffering;” and the unfortunate man pressed both his hands convulsively
21 XII | conscientious, energetic man, who will shirk nothing
22 XVI | make out the figure of a man clinging to the rigging.
23 XVI | life, hastened to bring the man on board, It proved to be
24 XVII | command in time. Whatever man can do I know that Curtis
25 XXIII | abandon his post was Owen, a man whom I have mentioned before,
26 XXIV | which even the strongest man could hardly fail to succumb.
27 XXIV | caught hold of the young man, and was hurrying him to
28 XXVI | gravity. He is an oldish man, not less than sixty, with
29 XXVI | over to one of the men, The man counted them carefully,
30 XXVI | they gave the unfortunate man a shove, and sent him rolling
31 XXIX | Ay, ay! sure enough, my man; and you’d better look sharp.”~“
32 XXXII | never appreciated the young man so well. His originality
33 XXXIII | grave anxiety, the young man being weakened by attacks
34 XXXIII | this morning, “that young man gets manifestly weaker every
35 XXXIII | s my business,” said the man insolently, and pursued
36 XXXV | flash I saw the unhappy man, although he had managed
37 XXXVI | Austin, a fine active young man of about eight-and-twenty;
38 XXXVII | parched lips of the young man, who almost too weak to
39 XXXVII | of respiration. The young man was now suffering from the
40 XXXVII | as he had fixed it. The man was quite discouraged at
41 XXXVII | The words, coming from a man usually so reserved, have
42 XXXVIII| the chest. The unfortunate man rolled over the side of
43 XXXIX | is Hobart the steward, a man with whom hitherto I have
44 XXXIX | my suspicions about the man, and intend to watch him
45 XXXIX | from myself.” The young man clutched at it eagerly.~“
46 XLI | could have taken the dead man’s foot.~“Oh yes, I dare
47 XLI | it better to eat a dead man than a living one?”~I was
48 XLI | followed my example; the poor man devoured his food like a
49 XLII | arrested my attention.~The man was up in the mast, and
50 XLIII | his lines. A plague the man had been to us in his life;
51 XLIII | the water. As a drowning man clutches at a straw, so
52 XLIV | pale with anger.~“The first man who speaks,” he said, “I
53 XLVII | that it was the body of a man, attached to a rope, and
54 XLVII | was better to eat a dead man than a live one.”~Do what
55 L | boatswain, strong, energetic man that he was, has shrunk
56 L | recognize him to be the same man. He keeps perpetually to
57 LI | sails. Curtis was the only man who remained on his feet,
58 LI | amongst us like an intoxicated man. With the loss of his senses
59 LV | Dowlas, as he tore the young man away from his father’s embrace.~
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