Chapter
1 V | there is not a day to be lost.”~“Right, sir, quite right;
2 V | there is not a day to be lost.”~Struck by his manner,
3 X | completely demoralized; he has lost all power and energy; and
4 XIV | all.~Poor Ruby, indeed, is lost and gone, but his last words
5 XX | with anxious faces. Curtis lost no time in assembling passengers
6 XXI | assuredly no time to be lost before we ought to leave
7 XXII | were white, but he had not lost his self-possession. He
8 XXII | repairing them was so much time lost.~Slowly, but surely, the
9 XXVI | group of sailors, and I lost sight of him.~I attached
10 XXVII | boatswain.~“Faith, an it’s five lost ye’ll be maning,” said O’
11 XXVII | for the medicine chest was lost when the ship began to sink.
12 XXVIII| but the rest had well-nigh lost their wits. Some of the
13 XXIX | a moment was then to be lost. The waves were eddying
14 XXX | the first raft having been lost in the partial submersion
15 XXXI | us, and no time was to be lost in taking advantage of it
16 XXXII | her forget that she has lost those who should have been
17 XXXIII| her hands, she remained lost in thought.~An incident
18 XXXV | of a spar, for a time I lost all consciousness.~
19 XXXVII| the place of the one we lost, but with the wind in its
20 XLI | there was no time to be lost; perhaps we were already
21 XLI | voyage, speaking of our lost companions, of the fire,
22 XLIII | upon the waters, would be lost in the intense irradiation
23 XLIV | to the raft, it was not lost. The bait had been seized
24 XLIV | attempts, but as the whirl was lost, and they had no means of
25 XLIX | to decide for how long I lost my consciousness; but when
26 LI | of the raft, where he lay lost in a heavy slumber.~
27 LIV | looked puzzled; when he lost consciousness there had
28 LVII | must inevitably have been lost.~Of the thirty-two souls—
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