Book,  chapter

 1    3,    3|          sea.”~“You refer to the Maories, Monsieur Paganel?” asked
 2    3,    3|      falls into the hands of the Maories, and a prisoner in the hands
 3    3,    3|     prisoner in the hands of the Maories is a lost man. I have urged
 4    3,    5|      Besides, in the eyes of the Maories, nothing is more natural
 5    3,    5|     renew the muscles. Until the Maories become members of the Vegetarian
 6    3,    5| inhospitable shores, so that the Maories have always eaten human
 7    3,    7|        long before that date the Maories were occupied in making
 8    3,    7|         sanguinary struggle, the Maories were entrenched in strong
 9    3,    7|      they gave no quarter to the Maories after the barbarous murder
10    3,    7|          twelve hours before the Maories yielded to the English cannonade.
11    3,    7|         and depopulated, for the Maories escaped in all directions.
12    3,    7|       were related. Four hundred Maories who were shut up in the
13    3,    8|   reconciled to the country. The Maories, whom he particularly dreaded,
14    3,    8|          legion, concur with the Maories in keeping strangers off
15    3,    8|  Glenarvan.~“My dear Lord, where Maories are concerned, distrust
16    3,    9|    general, and particularly the Maories, have a notion of dignity
17    3,    9|        New Zealand. It is to the Maories what the Rhine is to the
18    3,   10|         At this moment a hundred Maories were assembled in the “pah,”
19    3,   10|       great despair. The unhappy Maories, bleeding and excited, were
20    3,   10|     priests or arikis taught the Maories about a Triune God, father,
21    3,   10|         flashing eyes.~“Yes! the Maories do not search their prisoners.
22    3,   11|     frequently happens among the Maories, joined the title of ariki
23    3,   11|        most trifling acts of the Maories are directed and modified
24    3,   11|          rather, the code of the Maories, indisputable and undisputed,
25    3,   11|         reason of the delay.~The Maories believe that for three days
26    3,   11|           in all several hundred Maories, assembled in the “pah,”
27    3,   11|       crumbs. Of the two hundred Maories present everyone obtained
28    3,   12|          the Ware-Atoua, and the Maories guarded the promontory which
29    3,   12|         lower valleys; while the Maories, if they perceived the flight
30    3,   12|          the hut and watched the Maories from behind the mat. At
31    3,   13|          in the movements of the Maories.~Their pursuit had suddenly
32    3,   13|        out of the “oudoupa.” The Maories were still in the same position
33    3,   13|         of the Range and put the Maories off the scent.~But there
34    3,   13|        relieved to find that the Maories were more dominated by superstition
35    3,   13|        answered Paganel, “if the Maories allow us to pass.”~“And
36    3,   13|        All went well so far. The Maories, stretched beside the fires,
37    3,   14|  sleepers of the Maunganamu. The Maories had long since been astir,
38    3,   14|       superstitious ideas of the Maories there seemed good ground
39    3,   14|      would be enough to dupe the Maories, and there was no need for
40    3,   14|         enjoyed it like the real Maories. The meat was excellent
41    3,   14|        about to throw on it. The Maories could no longer see their
42    3,   14|          in the native camp.~The Maories had fled to the neighboring
43    3,   14|          were still smoking. The Maories, forming here and there
44    3,   14|       feared nothing but meeting Maories. At any cost they wanted
45    3,   14|    indicated the presence of the Maories at the base. The road was
46    3,   14|      natives. If by ill luck the Maories, more cunning than the fugitives,
47    3,   15|      districts frequented by the Maories; the native dogs drive them
48    3,   16|      have been recaptured by the Maories. But for my sake tell me
49    3,   21|        dayscaptivity among the Maories, had been tattooed from
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