Book,  chapter

1    2,   11| ferruginous rock lay among the scrub and the tall grass, where
2    2,   16|       say; plains covered with scrub, where is no beaten track
3    2,   18|       they perceived among the scrub a human form dragging itself
4    3,    8|        grass gave way to a low scrub of small bushes bearing
5    3,    8|   delayed if this interminable scrub continues to obstruct our
6    3,    8|       through these forests of scrub, New Zealand will only be
7    3,   15|      from thickets of tea-tree scrub. They diffused a powerful
8    3,   15|     For two days plains of low scrub succeeded each other without
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