Book,  chapter

  1  Int      |     careful description of each country and of its inhabitants,
  2    1,    2|         Doesnt the name of the country strike you even in the mere
  3    1,    2|         needed now, we know the country. With the latitude alone,
  4    1,    3|         Glenarvan.~“Some of the country people?” asked Lady Helena.~“
  5    1,    4|       eyes the interests of his country were not identified with
  6    1,    4|      fellows, cast off by their country?”~“Helena!” exclaimed Lord
  7    1,    5|      the ancient customs of his country. This was the reason he
  8    1,    6|         we are still in our own country. The DUNCAN is Malcolm Castle,
  9    1,    7|   dreams, to find myself in the country of elephants and Thugs.”~“
 10    1,    7|        to you, to visit another country instead.”~“No, my Lord;
 11    1,    7|    observation: India is a fine country, and can offer many a surprising
 12    1,    8|      are no trees.”~“A charming country!” said the Major.~“Comfort
 13    1,    9|       him in the history of the country they were so rapidly approaching.~
 14    1,   10|      looking at this map of the country.”~He unrolled a map of Chili
 15    1,   11|         years’ residence in the country. He made a livelihood by
 16    1,   11|      breed. Those reared in the country are much superior to their
 17    1,   11|        banks of Rio Biobio. The country still presented the same
 18    1,   11|        boy in proper order.~The country now became more diversified,
 19    1,   11|          Any question about the country that Glenarvan might ask
 20    1,   16|       of the peasants in my own country.”~Glenarvan requested him
 21    1,   16|      the tribes that roamed the country between the Colorado and
 22    1,   18|   ballad about the lochs of our country. The time sometimes comes
 23    1,   20|   canter almost constantly. The country was not so parched up now,
 24    1,   20|         a mountain in so flat a country, was sighted in the distance.
 25    1,   20|       race.~But desolate as the country appeared, Thalcave was on
 26    1,   21|       old subalterns in his own country.~Thalcave was spokesman,
 27    1,   21|       must have left his native country many years back, for his
 28    1,   21|        after his arrival in the country he was naturalized, took
 29    1,   21|     Indians having deserted the country.~“Ah! there was no one!”
 30    1,   22|         Well, this is a strange country. They sow horns, and they
 31    1,   22|          and changing the whole country into an ocean. The tall
 32    1,   24|    GONIE, does not refer to the country of the Patagonians.”~“Certainly
 33    2,    1|      after Australia some other country may not appear with equal
 34    2,    1|        we come across any other country which would agree with the
 35    2,    1|         be made to fit this new country.”~“In no way whatever,”
 36    2,    3|    carry the travelers from one country to another, and on the 6th
 37    2,    3|      without any hope of seeing country and friends again, what
 38    2,    3|     Amsterdam Island became the country of deserted sailors, providentially
 39    2,    4|         is lost in that immense country?” asked Mary.~“Well, we’
 40    2,    4|      being lost in this immense country. Indeed, I believe Leichardt
 41    2,    4|        is 1550, which mention a country south of Asia, called by
 42    2,    4|         navigator, discovered a country which he named Australia
 43    2,    6|     their way back to their own country long since.~“Hope on! Hope
 44    2,    6|         But along the coast the country appeared to be inhabited,
 45    2,    6|         about half an hour, the country began to assume a new aspect,
 46    2,    6|    weary of the miseries of his country, had come, with his family,
 47    2,    6|       misfortune from their own country. Many come to seek fortunes
 48    2,    6|        one can be in the freest country in the world.~His guests
 49    2,    7|        into the interior of the country. Since that time he had
 50    2,    7|      have some knowledge of the country, and the habits of the natives,
 51    2,    7|      Victoria, quite an English country, with roads and railways,
 52    2,    8|        of conveyance across the country.~When John Mangles supported
 53    2,    9|                    CHAPTER IX A COUNTRY OF PARADOXES~IT was the
 54    2,    9|     singular resemblance in the country to the monotonous plains
 55    2,    9|        about the wonders of the country they were just beginning
 56    2,    9|         for you in this strange country.”~“It does not look like
 57    2,    9|        this is the most curious country on the earth. Its formation,
 58    2,    9|          Oh, strange, illogical country, land of paradoxes and anomalies,
 59    2,    9|     Paganel, in this privileged country—you who are so good already?”
 60    2,   10|        a flower peculiar to the country.~A few cassowaries were
 61    2,   11|    stretch of sparsely timbered country, which quite deserved its
 62    2,   11|    falling, which, in any other country, would have soaked the ground;
 63    2,   12|  replied Toline, “is an immense country. CapitalCalcutta. Chief
 64    2,   13| ruffians was prowling about the country, and though there was no
 65    2,   13|      easily understand. In this country where the air is dry and
 66    2,   14|         animals peculiar to the country, the very names of which
 67    2,   15|          that he would know the country about the coast, and that
 68    2,   15|       hundred miles over a wild country.~His counsel prevailed.
 69    2,   16|        am accustomed to all the country round. Many a time I have
 70    2,   17|       John hunted all round the country, but there was not a convict
 71    2,   17|   hundred miles over an unknown country, the road and the by-ways
 72    2,   18|        across an almost unknown country. Nothing, consequently,
 73    3,    1|         had encountered in this country. They remembered how full
 74    3,    2|         of? Of New Zealand, the country to which destiny was leading
 75    3,    2|         past in that ill-omened country.~But in all that history
 76    3,    4|        this new and ill-reputed country without enthusiasm, without
 77    3,    5|         be nothing in any other country than New Zealand. You cannot
 78    3,    5|   venture into this treacherous country.”~“Anything is better, in
 79    3,    6|            CHAPTER VI A DREADED COUNTRY~PAGANEL’S facts were indisputable.
 80    3,    7|        words: “We have lost our country! henceforth it is not ours;
 81    3,    7|         like to go far into the country, where the smallest tussock,
 82    3,    8|       the minutest details.~The country looked like an immense prairie
 83    3,    8|        almost reconciled to the country. The Maories, whom he particularly
 84    3,    8|      fled toward the unoccupied country, and is fast disappearing
 85    3,    8|         bird is peculiar to the country. It has been introduced
 86    3,    8|         banks of the Waipa. The country was quite deserted; not
 87    3,    9| Auckland, and so regain his own country; but no one who looked at
 88    3,    9|    induced to venture into this country of savages.~His companions
 89    3,   10|          never to return to the country of their ancestors!~This
 90    3,   10| personages of rank in their own country.”~The warrior gazed coldly
 91    3,   14|       the midst of this unknown country. But Kai-Koumou once off
 92    3,   14|      stations. That part of the country had hitherto escaped the
 93    3,   14|       the habit of scouring the country.~As to the distance that
 94    3,   15|      the Wahiti Ranges. It is a country more pleasant for the eye
 95    3,   15|  fatigue in traveling in such a country as this will be best understood.
 96    3,   15|    physical difficulties of the country.~On the whole, owing to
 97    3,   17|      there was not even another country, and the DUNCAN had only
 98    3,   17|       thought of seeing his own country once more; and yet there
 99    3,   18|         and incendiaries in the country parts of New South Wales.~
100    3,   19|      was already a glory to our country, and that he would have
101    3,   20|       you so popular in our old country?”~“No, my Lord, and God
102    3,   20|       their misery, and my dear country must have a colony of her
103    3,   20|    while what we need is a vast country, whose virgin soil abounds
104    3,   20|        future is ours, and this country we will seek for together.”~
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