Book,  chapter

 1    2,    1| geographer smiling. “But for a month that has been our usual
 2    2,    2|       have been absent a whole month. Instead of the Pacific,
 3    2,    4|    ship make the distance in a month over that part of the Pacific
 4    2,    7|       come regularly up to the month of May, 1862. In the course
 5    2,    7|   immense forests. For a whole month he subsisted on roots, edible
 6    2,    7|       it will barely take us a month, just long enough to put
 7    2,    9|     1864, a dull, damp, dreary month in the northern hemisphere;
 8    2,   10|     affairs would last a whole month, and the stock-keeper would
 9    2,   16|       I think, my Lord, that a month hence, unless some help
10    2,   19|       close to the shore, as a month ago, when they crossed Cape
11    3,    7|    Kingi protested, and by the month of March he had made the
12    3,    8|       Bay and Auckland twice a month, eight hours would be sufficient.~“
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