Book,  chapter

 1    1,   13|   ought to have been quietly sleeping?”~“That’s a question, my
 2    1,   13|     his companions, who were sleeping soundly after their fatigue,
 3    1,   18| provided they had no fear of sleeping in the open air beneath
 4    1,   19|  prowling about by night and sleeping during the day. Its attacks
 5    1,   22|    all the rest were soundly sleeping too under the guardian eye
 6    1,   26|   The learned geographer was sleeping as sound as a mole. A strong
 7    2,    9|     Ayrton reckoned on their sleeping next night at Apsley, the
 8    2,   10|      the tent, and were soon sleeping soundly, notwithstanding
 9    2,   10|     that watered the plains, sleeping at night and making good
10    2,   14|     the party cared more for sleeping than eating, after such
11    2,   14|      The profound silence of sleeping nature was only interrupted
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