Book,  chapter

 1    1,    7|     Yarou-Dzangbo-Tchou, which waters Thibet for a distance of
 2    1,   10|      carried the bottle on its waters. Then, perhaps, in the midst
 3    1,   10|    began to agitate the limpid waters of Talcahuano, Glenarvan,
 4    1,   18| deposited on its banks, as the waters contain great quantities
 5    1,   19|       illumined the plain. The waters of the Guamini ran silently,
 6    1,   22|        again. The level of the waters was sensibly rising, and
 7    1,   22|        solitary head above the waters.~His companions needed no
 8    1,   22|  engulfed them in its seething waters.~When it had rolled on,
 9    1,   22|       down into the tumultuous waters, and came up again ten fathoms
10    1,   23|     position above the roaring waters, into which the lower leaves
11    1,   23|   stood alone amid the rolling waters, and trembled before them.
12    1,   23|    resist the current, but the waters might rise higher and higher,
13    1,   23|        fallen into the roaring waters had not the Major’s strong
14    1,   25|     defend themselves from the waters above, they might at least
15    1,   25|     faithfully mirrored in the waters as if they were masses of
16    2,    3| thermal springs and chalybeate waters escaped from the black lava,
17    2,    3|       in these all but boiling waters, a fact which made Paganel
18    2,   10|   banks of the White Lake, the waters of which are brackish and
19    2,   10|     complete misnomer, for the waters were no more white than
20    2,   14|   surrounded by box, and whose waters were rather temporary than
21    2,   15|     Toward the north the quiet waters of Lake Omco, all alive
22    2,   18|       roaring of the unchained waters.~At times the wind would
23    2,   19|     The swollen and tumultuous waters had not gone down the least.
24    2,   19|      morning.~By this time the waters had visibly diminished;
25    3,    3|  Halley is so at home in these waters that he takes no observations.”~“
26    3,    3|       have a bad name in these waters. It is not a matter of timid
27    3,    4|      to question the voiceless waters; he longed to tear away
28    3,    4|    Black reefs rose out of the waters. Then a line became defined
29    3,    9|   uniting streams. The swifter waters of the Waipa rushed against
30    3,    9|     its course of 200 miles it waters the finest lands of the
31    3,    9|      against the invaders.~The waters of this river are still
32    3,   10|       of the island. And these waters falling from the surrounding
33    3,   15|      dazzling snow. The limpid waters were nearly at boiling point,
34    3,   15|        natural terraces; their waters gradually flowed together
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