Book,  chapter

1    1,    5|         remains intact amid the ruins made by the Reformation;
2    1,    9|    luminous darkness. Presently ruins came in sight, crumbling
3    1,    9| survivor dying of hunger in the ruins.~After sailing along these
4    1,   10|        it lay in desolation and ruins, its walls still blackened
5    1,   13|     Santiago four times laid in ruins in fourteen years. This
6    2,   11|     From this shapeless mass of ruins flames and black smoke still
7    2,   11|         and mangled under those ruins.~Glenarvan, Paganel, the
8    2,   11|      the bridge lay beneath the ruins of the train, the other
9    3,   15|      several deserted huts, the ruins of a village lately destroyed
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