Chapter
1 IV | son, M. Letourneur. I have just been talking to him. He
2 V | the tail of a whale; it’s just the strongest bit of it.
3 VI | Think; why they think just the same as I do,” replied
4 VIII | say to his mates,—~“Now I just give you all warning that
5 IX | hole in the ship’s timbers just on her waterline, and letting
6 IX | waterline, and letting in just as much water as the pumps
7 X | not inform the captain?”~“Just because if I had informed
8 XI | and Falsten were sitting just as I had left them. Curtis
9 XII | desperate?” I asked.~“It is just this,” he answered deliberately “
10 XII | command of the ship, and act just as if I were not on board.
11 XV | the Atlantic, that it was just possible that we had been
12 XVI | Well,” said Mr. Kear, “just please to know that I don’
13 XVI | Letourneur, his son, and I, have just had a long conversation
14 XVII | and as the bales that lie just above the level of the water
15 XVII | through his routine of duties just as though the vessel were
16 XVIII | would make it disappear just that the ship might be free
17 XX | part of her stern, however, just cleared the obstruction,
18 XXI | pounds of explosive matter. Just as the picrate was being
19 XXVII | Curtis and the boatswain.~Just at that moment a sailor,
20 XXIX | resign all hope.~We were just on the point of embarking
21 XXXI | to me. Here on this raft, just as when we were on board
22 XXXVII| he interrupted, “tell me just what you think.”~I looked
23 XXXVII| good at all. Let me but just get hold of one fish, and
24 XL | during the scene that I have just described has only served
25 XLI | swallowed my portion of fish just as it was,—raw and bleeding.
26 XLIII | by the light breeze that just then was ruffling the surface
27 XLIV | cannot now be long deferred.~Just as I moved away I heard
28 XLVI | rarely fails to circulate just above the water. My brain
29 XLVI | one day at least. I was just on the point of raising
30 XLVII | the foot of the mast, and, just as I had guessed, Hobart
31 XLVIII| night. Why suspect us?”~“Now just look here, Mr. Kazallon,”
32 LII | I must cease to suffer. Just as I was on the point of
33 LIII | All that we desired was just once to slake our raging
34 LIV | it may seem, prevailed.~Just as the boatswain was about
35 LIV | pleaded, “will you not wait just one more day? If no land
36 LVI | the cannibals, and it was just as they were yielding to
37 LVI | in sight, and the raft, just as ever, was the centre
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