Chapter
1 1 | current of the ebbing tide has carried us through the harbour-mouth.~
2 VI | considerable, and we have been carried far to the south we can
3 VII | on the larboard tack, and carried low-sails, top-sails, and
4 VII | another conversation was carried on in whispers. The man
5 XVI | remarkable how far she had been carried on to the shelf of rock,
6 XVI | Huntly, who, after being carried overboard with the mast,
7 XVIII | not a germ had the wind carried to its surface, not a bird
8 XX | smaller vessel that might have carried us safely to land; but I
9 XX | while, to prevent her being carried back on to the reef, she
10 XX | To be sure she had been carried over the obstacle once before,
11 XX | Two more anchors were next carried outside the passage, which
12 XXII | north- west. Although we carried no top-sails at all, the
13 XXIII | was dark, but the captain carried all the sail he could, eager
14 XXIX | the platform; this mast carried a large royal.~Perhaps,
15 XXXII | almost sure that we are being carried along by a westerly current,
16 XXXII | incessant dread of being carried down with a foundering vessel.
17 XXXIII | This done, the raft was carried along with something more
18 XXXIII | the risk of their being carried overboard, an accident that
19 XXXV | the back of the raft was carried away.~The raft itself, however,
20 XXXV | they were not altogether carried away, why we were not all
21 XXXV | overturned, so that we should be carried down and stifled in the
22 XXXVI | prevented me from being carried away by a second heavy wave.~
23 XXXVII | more hoisted, and we were carried along at the rate of two
24 XXXVIII| fragment of food that the wind carried into their interstices has
25 XLII | proof that we have been carried far to the south, and here,
26 XLIII | going to put about. She carried all her canvas, even to
27 XLVI | the Atlantic we have been carried by the currents, it matters
28 XLVI | paper. I clutched it up, and carried it off to a place where
29 XLVII | A horrible presentiment carried me to the foot of the mast,
30 LI | imagines that we have been carried westwards, that is to say,
31 LV | whilst Burke and Sandon carried off their victim to the
32 LVII | Stream we must have been carried far, far to the south, and
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