Chapter
1 IV | boy!” muttered the father half to himself. “Ah, Mr. Kazallon,”
2 XVI | passengers and crew already half fainting with hunger and
3 XXVI | individual being also allowed half a glass of water. Mrs. Kear,
4 XXXV | metallic ring.~For about half an hour the meteoric shower
5 XXXVI | a total barely exceeding half the number of those who
6 XXXVI | persons! Eight days, with half a pound a day apiece, will
7 XXXVII | rate of two or two and a half knots an hour. A new rudder,
8 XXXVIII| would we not have given for half, nay, for a quarter of the
9 XXXIX | No, no,” she replied, half smiling; “you were quite
10 XL | reduce the daily allowance to half a pint for each person.
11 XLIII | three miles in an hour and a half, and it was doubtful whether
12 XLIV | gaping jaws, as it turned half over on its back, exhibited
13 XLIV | twenty fathoms, but for half an hour or more not a shark
14 XLV | coming; and sure enough, not half a mile from the raft, the
15 XLV | when the cloud, still only half exhausted, passed quite
16 XLVI | characteristic of cool nights. Half frantic with that sense
17 XLVI | length a strange sensation half brought me to myself. Was
18 XLVII | see some unusual dark mass half way up the mast. But although
19 LII | There was no wind, and for half an hour longer the fog hung
20 LIII | Curtis, Sandon. More than half had now been called, and
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