Book,  chapter

1    1,   10|           said Lady Helena, while a shade of sadness beclouded her
2    1,   23|         they formed an impenetrable shade. The third arm, on the contrary,
3    2,    2|            and there was scarcely a shade of difference in the waves
4    2,    9|            and consequently give no shade; where the wood is often
5    2,   10|         seated themselves under the shade of a wide-spreading gum-tree,
6    2,   12|             fast asleep beneath the shade of a magnificent banksia.
7    2,   13| perspectives of bold colors, little shade, little freshness at all,
8    2,   13|            flora.~The reason of the shade not being deep, nor the
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