Book,  chapter

 1    1,    6|     waiting, for I am actually falling through sheer inanition.”~
 2    1,   13| fragments of the mountain were falling, tearing up trees by the
 3    1,   14| outspread wings, and sometimes falling with the swiftness of inert
 4    1,   16|  mingling with each other, and falling and rising in wild confusion;
 5    2,    5|    days the barometer has been falling in a most ominous manner,
 6    2,   11| Maryborough. The fine rain was falling, which, in any other country,
 7    2,   18|   dined together. The rain was falling in torrents. The tent was
 8    2,   18|         the rattling branches, falling trees, and roaring of the
 9    2,   19|      penetrating rain had been falling. There would have been no
10    3,    7|         Therefore let us avoid falling into their hands.”~“We might
11    3,   10|  before historic times, by the falling in of caverns among the
12    3,   10|       island. And these waters falling from the surrounding heights
13    3,   20|      It was difficult to avoid falling into the error, however,
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