Book,  chapter

1    1,   11|    on the horizon, and the pain of parting too keenly felt.
2    1,   16|   caused both pleasure and pain, for nothing could be more
3    1,   17| which would have eased the pain of their stings. The Major
4    2,   10|     cost what it might, on pain of a general disbandment,
5    3,    6|   the shore. What toil and pain to reach a coast so full
6    3,   11| the slope of Maunganamu on pain of death, for it was “tabooed,”
7    3,   14|   risen, howling under the pain inflicted by the burning
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