Book,  chapter

 1    2,   10|     course between tall rows of gum-trees and acacias. Magnificent
 2    2,   14|        a boundary of myalls and gum-trees, beyond which rose Mount
 3    2,   15| eucalyptus, and various odorous gum-trees, broke the uniform monotony
 4    2,   16|   gloomy-looking forest of tall gum-trees; nothing but dead trees,
 5    2,   16|      the smallest branch of the gum-trees was sharply defined. Ayrton
 6    2,   17|        gang scattered among the gum-trees.~The tent was no shelter
 7    2,   19|     large sheets of bark of the gum-trees. These sheets were kept
 8    2,   19|  accordingly felled some of the gum-trees, and made a rude but solid
 9    2,   19|    miles, they camped under the gum-trees. The small store of provisions
10    3,   20|         was shaded by luxuriant gum-trees. The magnificent ocean stretched
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