Book,  chapter

 1    1,    8|           African Islands, who lack trees and consequently water.
 2    1,    8|          can’t make forests without trees, and there are no trees.”~“
 3    1,    8|             trees, and there are no trees.”~“A charming country!”
 4    1,    9|            for an instant among the trees, and then the strait wound
 5    1,   13|            were falling, tearing up trees by the roots, and leveling,
 6    1,   14|            adorned with magnificent trees, among which, in great numbers,
 7    1,   14|         chose a clump of tall carob trees, under which they arranged
 8    1,   15|          were flitting about in the trees like moving flowers; while
 9    1,   16|          miles covered with stunted trees and bushes; the second 450
10    1,   18|         plain, covered with stunted trees not above ten feet high,
11    1,   23|         impetuous torrent, they saw trees torn up by the roots, twisted
12    1,   24|         jaguar, takes refuge in the trees, when the chase gets too
13    1,   24|            were intended to live on trees.”~“But they want wings,”
14    1,   25|          never to take refuge under trees during a storm.”~“Most seasonable
15    1,   26|             aspect. A few clumps of trees, planted by European hands,
16    1,   26|       Tapalquem Sierras. The native trees are only found on the edge
17    2,    1|        unless we sat astride on the trees. Consequently, the meal
18    2,    2|        choked up with the DEBRIS of trees and plants torn off the
19    2,    9|           or in the soil; where the trees lose their bark every year,
20    2,   11|            as if towns shot up like trees, owing to the heat of the
21    2,   12|        charming region, where grand trees, not closely planted, but
22    2,   12|       meantime sunk behind the tall trees, and as a few miles would
23    2,   13|           those forests of gigantic trees which extend over a super-fices
24    2,   13|             sight of the eucalyptus trees, two hundred feet high,
25    2,   13|             easily pass between the trees, for they were standing
26    2,   13|           with the trunks of fallen trees, and overgrown with inextricable
27    2,   13|           carpet at the foot of the trees, and a canopy of verdure
28    2,   13|             verdure, was that these trees presented a curious anomaly
29    2,   13|          the ground is parched, the trees have no need of wind or
30    2,   13|             walking under shadeless trees, though all the time he
31    2,   13|            lived in the tops of the trees, but at such a height they
32    2,   13|    destruction of these magnificent trees, and they will disappear
33    2,   13|         same symmetrical avenues of trees; it seemed as if they never
34    2,   13|         toward evening the ranks of trees began to thin, and on a
35    2,   14|           pitched beneath the great trees, and as night had drawn
36    2,   14|         high. Long avenues of green trees were visible on all sides.
37    2,   14|             a thick clump of “grass trees,” tall bushes ten feet high,
38    2,   14|           charming groups of native trees were added transplantations
39    2,   14|          The peach, pear, and apple trees were there, the fig, the
40    2,   14|           beneath the shadow of the trees of their own native land,
41    2,   14|        buried in a forest of exotic trees.~At Sandy Patterson’s bidding,
42    2,   15|        planted with green young gum trees appeared here and there.
43    2,   15|       products and water, and great trees where the woodman’s ax was
44    2,   15|   themselves into the trunks of the trees. It was impossible to go
45    2,   15|          over, and a forest of tall trees came in sight at a bend
46    2,   15|            the shelter of the great trees; and if the rain did not
47    2,   15|           tent or outside under the trees, which is no great hardship
48    2,   15|             running among the great trees. It looked like a white
49    2,   16|         gum-trees; nothing but dead trees, with wide spaces between,
50    2,   17|            over the tops of the gum trees. The tall tufts of gastrolobium
51    2,   17|         closely as far as the great trees; the place was abandoned.
52    2,   17| conflagration in this forest of dry trees.~“The convicts have disappeared!”
53    2,   17|           the lower branches of the trees, and the kangaroos feeding
54    2,   18|          rattling branches, falling trees, and roaring of the unchained
55    2,   18|             the dark curtain of gum trees. The silence seemed deeper
56    2,   18|            the branches of the dead trees. In the pelting storm, Glenarvan,
57    3,    8|           that of a little clump of trees grown expressly to shelter
58    3,    8|            our favor.”~The clump of trees was reached and all concurred
59    3,   10|            summits clothed with low trees; on the east a broad beach
60    3,   10|            and a grove of beautiful trees, the “kai-kateas” with persistent
61    3,   14|            the thick foliage of the trees.~
62    3,   15|           Lebanon, and the “Mammoth trees” of California. The kauris
63    3,   15|          forest was not composed of trees, but of innumerable groups
64    3,   15|            of innumerable groups of trees, which spread their green
65    3,   15|            heaps at the foot of the trees, and which would have lasted
66    3,   15|          disappeared among the tall trees, and the sportsmen lost
67    3,   20|            placed beneath the grand trees, and all the guests seated
68    3,   20|             long, with about thirty trees in the interior, a few meadows,
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