Book,  chapter

 1    1,    4|    persuaded that her father was dead. What, then, was her emotion
 2    1,   12|          of the Cordilleras with dead bodies.~They went on toiling
 3    1,   14|    reached the spot the bird was dead, and the body of Robert
 4    1,   19|        course of an hour fifteen dead animals lay stretched on
 5    1,   20|  precincts were strewed with the dead wolves, and judging from
 6    1,   22|    ground had once more become a dead level, the last mountains
 7    1,   23|        And what with?”~“With the dead wood we cut off the tree.”~“
 8    1,   23|     branch.~But was he living or dead, for his hands made no attempt
 9    1,   25|       west side of the OMBU; the dead wood and nests of dried
10    2,    1|   Pilares he had found the winds dead against him, and therefore
11    2,    6|       wreck as the vultures do a dead body, would have pounced
12    2,   11|       guess how many victims lay dead and mangled under those
13    2,   15|       the animal was found to be dead. Ayrton examined it immediately,
14    2,   15|       leaving the carcass of the dead animal to the ravens.~The
15    2,   15|   stirrups.~“What! your horse?”~“Dead like Mulrady’s, as if a
16    2,   15|         had been suddenly struck dead.~“That is strange,” said
17    2,   15|      third horse, Wilson’s, fell dead, and what was, perhaps equally
18    2,   16|      tall gum-trees; nothing but dead trees, with wide spaces
19    2,   16| Australia, entire forests struck dead by some epidemic; no one
20    2,   16|      buried in the groves of the dead, have ever seen them green.~
21    2,   17|    Wimerra.’ ‘All the horses are dead.’ ‘The poison is not far
22    2,   18|        among the branches of the dead trees. In the pelting storm,
23    2,   18|         murderers thought he was dead. He felt them search his
24    2,   18|       whence we found him almost dead. There,” said McNabbs, “
25    2,   19|          went out to pick up the dead wood scattered all over
26    3,    4|         like himself.”~“Probably dead drunk, like himself,” added
27    3,    5|      notion is, that in eating a dead enemy they consume his spiritual
28    3,   11|    seriously ill, and when he is dead. If excessive consumption
29    3,   11|        has a right to strike her dead?” thought John, whose heart
30    3,   11|        funeral ceremonies of the dead chief would doubtless be
31    3,   11|     circle some distance off, in dead silence.~At a sign from
32    3,   11|        have seen him.”~“Alive?”~“Dead! English have shot him.”~
33    3,   11|   Kara-Tete, and the soul of the dead warrior had finally departed;
34    3,   11|      extolled the virtues of the dead, alternated with her moans,
35    3,   11|      Waidoua,” the spirit of the dead, lives on mortal food, as
36    3,   12|    companions, took an armful of dead wood, and threw it into
37    3,   13|         for fifteen days, or the dead man forever.~The vegetable
38    3,   14|        brave friends, we are all dead and buried! But this evening
39    3,   18|      horses and bullocks dropped dead one by one, poisoned by
40    3,   20|         sailors received me half dead. It was a horrible night
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