Book,  chapter

 1    1,    6| walking-stick. Of course, his weight shut up the instrument immediately
 2    2,    5|    the masts bend beneath the weight of the sails, and completely
 3    2,   11|       the engine. Whether the weight of the train had been too
 4    2,   17|      passage. I would pay its weight in gold for a raft which
 5    3,    4|      the wheel with all their weight. Some cordage gave way,
 6    3,    6|       which crashed under its weight. The MACQUARIE was thus
 7    3,    6|    sailor, throwing his whole weight on the great oar that steered
 8    3,   11|        The taboo has the same weight as a law; or rather, the
 9    3,   12|       he, “will only bear the weight of two persons; therefore
10    3,   14|      the cone, and by its own weight prevented the egress of
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