Book,  chapter

 1    1,   11|      and not to stop till they camp for the night, about 4 P.
 2    1,   15|    came in sight of the Indian camp, or TOLDERIA, situated in
 3    1,   15|  useless.~They got back to the camp in less than half an hour,
 4    2,   10|        once, then, and we will camp here, on the banks of the
 5    2,   11|        Ayrton quit the Wimerra camp to go and look for a blacksmith
 6    2,   11|        so wonderfully that the camp did not suffer in the least.~
 7    2,   12|        orders to prepare their camp for the night at once. Ayrton
 8    2,   13|     monuments burnt by unlucky camp fires.~Olbinett, acting
 9    2,   14|    horizon. It was resolved to camp there the same night. Ayrton
10    2,   14|  walked up and down before the camp, to keep himself from going
11    2,   14|    station. The horses and the camp were left to the care of
12    2,   15|      reason to hope they might camp that same night on the banks
13    2,   15|        could not stir.~“Let us camp here,” suggested John Mangles.~“
14    2,   16|        from the DUNCAN. Let us camp here, where we have provisions,
15    2,   16|       hours to get back to the camp, and in a week the messenger
16    2,   16|       come back by Eden to our camp.”~A gleam of satisfaction
17    2,   17|     was made the center of the camp, and two men mounted guard
18    2,   17|      now, and came back to the camp quite convinced, begging
19    2,   18|  futile.~“You cannot leave the camp, my Lord,” said John. “I
20    2,   18| forbade him to wander from the camp. He returned to the wagon,
21    2,   18|    sailor!~When he reached the camp he found his companions
22    2,   18|  information: When he left the camp Mulrady followed one of
23    2,   18|   three hundred paces from the camp, whence we found him almost
24    2,   19|      they both returned to the camp. The day passed in the most
25    2,   19|        should leave him in the camp under Wilson’s care, should
26    3,    7|      question into a fortified camp, surrounded with high palisades.
27    3,    8|         we shall be obliged to camp during the night once more.”~“
28    3,    8|        said the Major, “Let us camp here. It seems to me that
29    3,   11|   captives:~“You come from the camp of the Pakekas?”~“Yes,”
30    3,   13|   walked straight into a Maori camp, where he met a tall, intelligent-looking
31    3,   13|       the cries of the enemy’s camp.~At nine oclock the darkness
32    3,   13|    lines, fifty feet above the camp.~All went well so far. The
33    3,   14|       flowed toward the native camp and the lower valleys.~All
34    3,   14|  foaming in the midst of their camp.~Those whom the liquid fire
35    3,   14|        movements in the native camp.~The Maories had fled to
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