Book,  chapter

 1    1,    9|     ship, the TRINIDAD, first bent before the breeze from the
 2    1,   17|    their fill greedily, as if bent on quenching their thirst
 3    1,   26|    half of the day and night, bent down the heads of the tall
 4    2,    5|    captain.~“The propeller is bent or entangled,” was the reply. “
 5    2,    6|     branches of the screw was bent, and had got jammed against
 6    2,   11|      axles, shattered wagons, bent rails, charred sleepers;
 7    2,   18| wandered about the wagon, and bent a listening ear to the faintest
 8    3,    4|       And if your Lordship is bent on looking out for her,
 9    3,   11|    from Kai-Koumou, a warrior bent his steps toward Ware-Atoua.~“
10    3,   11|   were raised, the limbs were bent, and laid against the stomach
11    3,   12|    and listened with his head bent forward. He remained in
12    3,   16|     lifted up Paganel, almost bent double. The geographer uttered
13    3,   20|     Paganel’s shoulder almost bent him double. Truth obliges
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