Book,  chapter

 1  Int      |           sulphur springs and in a housetabooed”; they escape by
 2    1,    1|         peers who sit in the Upper House, and the most distinguished
 3    1,    3|      represented his county in the House of Lords; but, with his
 4    1,    3|          much for the favor of the House of Hanover, and he was looked
 5    1,    3|         her room, Mr. Halbert, the house steward, came in and asked
 6    1,    3|          are not strangers in this house, and I should like Lord
 7    1,   10|            went straight on to the house of Mr. Bentic, her Majesty’
 8    1,   22|     gutter-spouts on the roof of a house, and the unfortunate horsemen
 9    1,   23|            on the first floor. The house is large, and as the rent
10    1,   24|            park, or the floor of a house, or the deck of a ship,
11    2,    3|            of penguins. The little house where the three solitary
12    2,    6|            of age, came out of the house, warned, by the loud barking
13    2,    6|        party had time to reach the house and present themselves in
14    2,    6|          Strangers! welcome to the house of Paddy OMoore!”~“You
15    2,    6|           whoever you may be, this house is yours.”~It was impossible
16    2,    6|            the ground floor of the house, which was built of strong
17    2,    6|     perfect keeping with the solid house and robust inmates.~The
18    2,    7|           pleases, Paddy OMoore’s house shall be his.”~Ayrton thanked
19    2,    8|            back to Paddy OMoore’s house to consult the Irishman
20    2,    8|    mountebank’s caravan— a movable house, which goes or stops wherever
21    2,   11|         honors of their ambulatory house with perfect grace. John
22    2,   14| proprietors of Hottam Station. Our house is scarcely a quarter of
23    2,   14|            oaks.~It was a charming house, built of wood and brick,
24    2,   14|           village and the master’s house, which, far removed from
25    2,   15|            inn, a miserable public house, had not suddenly presented
26    2,   15|            from time to time, as a house of rest for the pedestrians.
27    3,   10|           They stood near an empty house, waiting the pleasure of
28    3,   10|             oudoupa,” that is the “house of glory.” These tombs are
29    3,   10|          this “Ware-Atoua,” sacred house, the priests or arikis taught
30    3,   10|         and as far as Kai-Koumou’s house.~“They are all crowding
31    3,   11|          is building a canoe, or a house; when he is seriously ill,
32    3,   11|          chief wishes to clear his house of hangers-on, he taboos
33    3,   11|           of provisions was in the house, which the unhappy inmates
34    3,   11|         Kai-Koumou came out of his house, and surrounded by the principal
35    3,   12|          from the Ware-Atoua.~This house, with its back to the rock
36    3,   12|         pah,” and the posts of the house creaked: the fire outside
37    3,   12|            over it the mats of the house, so that the entrance to
38    3,   20|           them to visit his wooden house, and dine with him in Robinson
39    3,   20|        longing to see the solitary house where their father had so
40    3,   20|          of excellent quality.~The house was shaded by luxuriant
41    3,   20|         everything in order in his house. He took nothing away, wishing
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