Chapter
1 II | consists of Walter, the lieutenant, the boatswain, and fourteen
2 VI | was all right.”~“What do Lieutenant Walter and your boatswain
3 VII | appeared, that he might relieve Lieutenant Walter of the watch. I advanced
4 VII | nothing of him,” answered the lieutenant “is there anything fresh
5 VII | said Curtis aloud as the lieutenant moved away.~The boatswain
6 X | consultation between captain, mate, lieutenant, and boatswain has taken
7 XII | without a word.~Curtis, Lieutenant Walter, Falsten, and myself
8 XII | our best wishes, in which Lieutenant Walter and the boatswain
9 XIV | suppress.~As far as we knew, Lieutenant Walter, the boatswain, and
10 XV | step upon the deck, the lieutenant and the boatswain contrived
11 XVI | Curtis thought not; and the lieutenant and the boatswain agreed
12 XVI | been beyond all praise. Lieutenant Walter, the boatswain, and
13 XX | attention to the sails; the lieutenant was on the forecastle; the
14 XXII | that the boatswain or the lieutenant brought him their report.
15 XXV | Herbey, and Mr. Falsten The lieutenant and the boatswain were on
16 XXVIII| dimensions of the raft. Lieutenant Walter, although his courage
17 XXX | officers, Captain Curtis, Lieutenant Walter, the boatswain, Hobart
18 XXXII | tolerably satisfactory. Lieutenant Walter is the only invalid,
19 XXXIII| with a bath.~The health of Lieutenant Walter continues to cause
20 XXXIII| endured the agonies of thirst.~Lieutenant Walter suffers more than
21 XXXVII| feel the pangs of hunger. Lieutenant Walter seemed as it were
22 XXXVII| tuberculous complaints.~The lieutenant kept his eye fixed upon
23 XL | nursing could do nothing for Lieutenant Walter, and about half-past
24 XLI | a few articles from the lieutenant’s pockets, which we purposed,
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