Chapter
1 VII | wants three days to her last quarter she does not set until 10.
2 XV | the tempest. In about a quarter of an hour he returned to
3 XVIII | the reef, which is about a quarter of a mile long. With the
4 XVIII | following close behind. A quarter of an hour sufficed to bring
5 XXV | wind remains in its present quarter, in the course of a few
6 XXVI | anxious to know from which quarter the breeze would come, for
7 XXVI | any one. He remained for a quarter of an hour, then after silently
8 XXVII | life is precious.”~At a quarter to eight we heard the boatswain
9 XXXIII | from the same favourable quarter we did not complain, and
10 XXXIII | walked deliberately to the quarter of the raft that has been
11 XXXV | after having shifted from quarter to quarter, it once more
12 XXXV | shifted from quarter to quarter, it once more blew with
13 XXXVII | settled back into its old quarter, blowing pretty briskly
14 XXXVII | the wind in its present quarter it is in little requisition.
15 XXXVII | water, with which every quarter of an hour she moistened
16 XXXVIII| given for half, nay, for a quarter of the meagre ration which
17 XLIII | an anxious glance to that quarter of the horizon of which
18 XLVI | Ignorant as we are as to what quarter of the Atlantic we have
19 XLVI | moon was entering her last quarter, so that it was dark till
20 XLVIII | work again to ransack every quarter of the raft; they rolled
21 LI | the faintest idea to what quarter of the Atlantic we have
22 LV | The waning moon rose at a quarter to one, and through the
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