Chapter
1 II | Chancellor” carries eight passengers, including myself. Hitherto,
2 II | have not even seen all the passengers. Probably sea- sickness
3 II | and subjoin a list of the passengers. They are as follow:— Mr.
4 III | limited space reserved for passengers’ luggage, is closely packed
5 IV | longer incommode any of the passengers, who are all more or less
6 VIII | hopelessly, and soon drops. The passengers too are now, with good cause,
7 IX | whether any of the other passengers are at all aware of the
8 X | day long on the 20th, the passengers were assembled on the poop.
9 X | the only one of all the passengers who has remarked the change
10 X | as the observation of the passengers has reached, the ordinary
11 XI | on deck; the rest of the passengers soon joined them, and the
12 XII | words he left me.~The other passengers, in common with the crew,
13 XIII | heat gradually drove the passengers nearly all, on deck, and
14 XIV | ascended to the sky. All the passengers, and several of the crew,
15 XV | the captain to my fellow passengers. None of them seem to realize
16 XVI | and biscuit amongst the passengers and crew already half fainting
17 XVI | accordingly resolved that both passengers and crew were safest on
18 XVII | tempest, what was to become of passengers and crew if the vessel should
19 XVII | I and some of our fellow passengers are ready to offer our assistance
20 XVII | aloof from their fellow passengers, and we are not sorry to
21 XIX | put over the hatches, and passengers and crew together proceeded
22 XX | lost no time in assembling passengers and crew, and announcing
23 XX | was exactly at its height, passengers and crew together were at
24 XXI | thought advisable that the passengers and crew should take refuge
25 XXII | more than ever. Most of the passengers had retired to their cabins,
26 XXII | quietly informed such of the passengers as were already on deck
27 XXII | example of endurance, and the passengers have now begun to take their
28 XXIII | hesitated to transfer the passengers, and even have allowed the
29 XXV | ourselves; and yet with her passengers and crew clinging to her
30 XXVI | means of the stays. For the passengers, cowering on their narrow
31 XXX | number includes the five passengers, namely M. Letourneur, Andre,
32 XXX | and Flaypole.~Such are the passengers on the raft; it is but a
33 XXXII | reserved for the use of us passengers, and by erecting some uprights
34 XXXIII| reserved for the use of the passengers.~“Where are you off to now,
35 XLIV | boatswain, “haul away!”~Passengers and sailors, one and all,
36 XLVII | presence of all my fellow- passengers; yet my alarm was vain.
37 LIV | and I saw him count the passengers on the raft. He looked puzzled;
38 LVII | the thirty-two souls—nine passengers, and twenty-three seamen—
39 LVII | board the ship, only five passengers and six seamen remain. Eleven
40 LVII | arisen between the surviving passengers of the “Chancellor” a bond
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