Chapter
1 VII | fro, and the voices of the men were loud and eager, as
2 VII | obedience to orders, called the men who were on watch, and made
3 VIII | Kear, nor Mr. Ruby are the men to take it up, and consequently
4 VIII | holes. After watching the men for a while as they ran
5 IX | disturbance upon deck. The men on watch noticed a slight
6 IX | terrified women and cowardly men to add to our embarrassment;
7 XI | gave orders to some of his men to seize him and gag him;
8 XII | main-mast. As soon as the men were together, he addressed
9 XII | calmly, but very firmly.~“My men,” he said, “I have to tell
10 XIII | his determined manner, the men retire, some clambering
11 XIV | Chancellor’s” side.~The men stood aghast; they were
12 XIV | how can you get at your men beyond that sheet of flame?”~
13 XVI | made us feel that they are men to be relied on. As for
14 XIX | and lower in the hold the men were enabled to resume their
15 XXI | appeared we found that the men, although they had laboured
16 XXII | about at the pumps. The men applied themselves to their
17 XXIII | Amongst the five or six other men who had struck work, I noticed
18 XXIII | Twice did Curtis order the men back to the pumps, and twice
19 XXIII | with the remainder of the men, he returned to his work.~
20 XXIV | flames.~Curtis kept the men up to the mark, and, willing
21 XXIV | rose, till, at length, the men in the hold who were passing
22 XXIV | almost complete, and the men were lowering empty barrels,
23 XXV | Back to your places, my men; back to your places. The
24 XXV | captain’s voice brought the men to their senses, and although
25 XXV | was far too rough for the men to venture to take out the
26 XXVI | long discussion ensued. The men evidently were asking more
27 XXVI | them over to one of the men, The man counted them carefully,
28 XXVII | together.~As I watched the men at their work M. Letourneur,
29 XXVII | ay, sir,” said one of the men—O’Ready, I think.~“Where’
30 XXVIII | metallurgic art, they were men “at the highest degree of
31 XXVIII | body I heard one of the men in the shrouds say,—~“There
32 XXIX | rapidly that the carpenter and men who were on the raft were
33 XXIX | reach them the unfortunate men, after a vain struggle for
34 XXIX | Meantime, Dowlas and his men, by means of some spars
35 XXXIII | sure I have. Allow those men to have brandy! I would
36 XXXIV | taken place amongst the men. For a few hours the fish
37 XXXIV | very sailors, coarse-minded men as they were, seemed struck
38 XXXV | double, was removed by the men from its socket before it
39 XXXVIII| extremity.~Owen and his men advanced towards us. The
40 XLI | that any of the wretched men could have taken the dead
41 XLVIII | prevented the infuriated men from tearing the devoted
42 XLIX | the case with shipwrecked men, we were tormented by thirst
43 XLIX | Curtis and several of the men tried their utmost to control
44 LV | increase the fury of the men who were so staunchly bent
|