Chapter
1 IV | talks about Andre. This morning, in the course of conversation,
2 VI | voyage across the ocean.~Each morning at daybreak the Atlantic
3 VII | along.~At six o’clock this morning I mounted the poop and made
4 VII | young man enjoyed the early morning air, laden with its briny
5 VII | about three o’clock this morning, and it seemed to me as
6 VII | before he even wished me good morning, I saw him cast a quick
7 VIII | once for all, in the early morning, the crew did not utter
8 VIII | get a breath of air.~This morning at daybreak I went on deck.
9 XII | admiration.~OCTOBER 23rd.—This morning, Captain Huntly sent for
10 XV | Towards half-past four in the morning the curtain of fire and
11 XVI | western horizons, but the morning mists limited our view.
12 XVI | vessel, and in the dusky morning twilight we could make out
13 XVI | considerably since the early morning, and the swell in the sea
14 XVI | tide turned at seven this morning, and by eleven all the rocks
15 XVI | who had already in the morning been able to calculate an
16 XVII | accompany us; so to-morrow morning, we hope to make our little
17 XVIII | first proceeding on the morning of the 31st was to make
18 XXI | been falling ever since the morning, the sea was getting rougher,
19 XXI | take place on the following morning, but when daylight appeared
20 XXI | until eight o’clock on the morning of the 23rd was the work
21 XXI | lives.~At high tide this morning, the 24th, with low, top,
22 XXII | Towards two o’clock in the morning I was myself preparing to
23 XXII | rise, and on the following morning the soundings gave five
24 XXIII | pressure of the waves, and this morning, after taking the sounding,
25 XXIV | obliged to come on deck.~This morning, after a somewhat protracted
26 XXVII | when at four o’clock in the morning, I was rudely aroused by
27 XXVIII | Curtis preferred to wait till morning we should be able to embark
28 XXVIII | further incident. Towards morning I touched the dead woman’
29 XXXI | incident. At eight o’clock this morning Curtis asked our attention
30 XXXI | s superintendence every morning at ten o’clock. Each person
31 XXXI | twice a day—at ten in the morning and six in the evening;
32 XXXII | of regret that when the morning came I had to note down “
33 XXXIII | more especially in the morning; the pinched-in nose, the
34 XXXIII | Kazallon,” she said to me this morning, “that young man gets manifestly
35 XXXIII | our grog served out every morning as usual.”~“Then you certainly
36 XXXIV | at half-past one in the morning, but the night was singularly
37 XXXIV | blast.~At one o’clock in the morning one vivid flash, followed,
38 XXXV | last, towards three in the morning, when the hurricane seemed
39 XXXVIII| nothing until on the following morning the hour came round for
40 XXXVIII| hours.~At six o’clock this morning I was roused by the sound
41 XLI | cast his lines early in the morning, caught three large cod,
42 XLI | watching them himself. In the morning I went to ascertain what
43 XLIII | boatswain and two sailors took a morning bath, and as their plunge
44 XLV | was eleven o’clock in the morning. I listened for distant
45 XLV | clouds, which in the early morning had been marked by the distinctness
46 XLVIII | any sleep, and, towards morning, was disturbed by hearing
47 LII | a last farewell.~Towards morning I woke from my sleep, if
48 LII | Towards two o’clock in the morning my thirst was so intense
49 LII | long it seemed before the morning dawned! and when that morning
50 LII | morning dawned! and when that morning came it brought another
51 LII | It was ten o’clock in the morning. The pangs of hunger and
52 LV | lengths away.~But when morning came, the sun rose once
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