Book,  chapter

1    2,    5|       violence, and woe to the bark that follows. The casks
2    2,    9|     where the trees lose their bark every year, instead of their
3    2,   12|        Ah! I think that meansbark of a tree’ in Australian.”~
4    2,   13|  hundred feet high, with tough bark five inches thick. The trunks,
5    2,   13|   whole length. With the thick bark still covering them, they
6    2,   19|   manner, with large sheets of bark of the gum-trees. These
7    2,   19| Experience had proved that the bark was powerless against the
8    3,    6|   submerged rocks, and steer a bark that did not readily answer
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