Book, Chapter
1 I, I | Count Wassili Timascheff,~On board the Schooner “Dobryna.”~
2 I, III | in the matter either of board or lodging. After dinner,
3 I, IX | right. If the count were on board, a strange fatality was
4 I, IX | engine, as whoever was on board, would be naturally impatient
5 I, IX | eagerly. “You will take me on board, count, will you not?”~“
6 I, IX | difficult. The stock of coal on board was adequate for two months’
7 I, XI | transcended the powers of those on board to elucidate the origin
8 I, XI | to think it is a light on board some ship,” replied the
9 I, XI | they seemed to those on board as if their end would never
10 I, XII | sprang up a sanguine hope on board the schooner that land might
11 I, XII | we might take Ben Zoof on board, and then make away for
12 I, XII | astronomical wonders attracted on board the Dobryna. All interest
13 I, XII | broke forth from all on board. But it was no cry of terror.
14 I, XIII | replaced the pieces on the board which had been disturbed
15 I, XIV | his horses, and came on board the Dobryna with me. We
16 I, XIV | They were glad to be on board again, that they might résumé
17 I, XV | Procope had been left on board in charge of the Dobryna,
18 I, XV | property of some one on board a ship; and the figures
19 I, XV | unlikely that any one on board a ship would use a telescope-case
20 I, XVII | were safely quartered on board the yacht. It is needless
21 I, XVII | the attention of all on board was arrested by the phenomenon
22 I, XVIII| lived almost entirely on board the Hansa, as he had named
23 I, XIX | Spaniards who had arrived on board the Hansa consisted of nine
24 I, XIX | all I could to my men on board the Dobryna, and no inconvenience
25 I, XX | we saw, whilst we were on board the Dobryna?”~The lieutenant
26 I, XX | still about ten tons on board the Dobryna), and manned
27 I, XXI | Russian sailors were sent on board, and only a few minutes
28 I, XXI | insisted on remaining on board his tartan.~“He is afraid,”
29 I, XXIII| proprietor being still on board. There was nothing to prevent
30 II, V | Hakkabut has a steelyard on board his tartan,” said Ben Zoof,
31 II, V | the misanthrope leads on board the Hansa.”~The proposal
32 II, IX | turned to the cargo on board the Hansa, and he resolved,
33 II, IX | Servadac’s appearance on board the Hansa.~“Hakkabut,” said
34 II, IX | pair of common scales on board.~“Come, I say, old Jedediah,
35 II, XII | winter in Arctic regions. On board the whaling-vessels, and
36 II, XII | far more healthy; and on board ship the entire hold, and
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