Book,  chapter

 1    1,    8|          from the sea winds. The rain fell in such torrents that
 2    1,    8|        through the thick veil of rain was mournful in the extreme.~
 3    1,    8|   Frenchman.~“You could not face rain like that, Monsieur Paganel,”
 4    1,   12|          blue. At this elevation rain is unknown, and vapors only
 5    1,   22|        themselves in torrents of rain. Moreover, the vicinity
 6    1,   22|        true tropical torrents of rain. Never was there a finer
 7    1,   22|       alight, as the torrents of rain which dashed against the
 8    1,   22|         set off immediately.~The rain had abated, but floods of
 9    1,   25|          much as the torrents of rain that will accompany it.
10    1,   25|      aspect.~However, as yet, no rain had fallen, and the wind
11    1,   25|     illuminated surface.~Was the rain the FINALE of the storm?
12    1,   26|       storm was nearly over. The rain had given place to light
13    2,    9|      stones are dissolved by the rain; where the forests are low
14    2,   11|       from Maryborough. The fine rain was falling, which, in any
15    2,   13|         where the air is dry and rain seldom falls, and the ground
16    2,   15|          great trees; and if the rain did not come, they had not
17    2,   16|          night. At two A. M. the rain began to fall in torrents
18    2,   16|        At last day appeared; the rain ceased, but sunlight could
19    2,   17|          so swollen by the heavy rain that the water was a foot
20    2,   18|          all dined together. The rain was falling in torrents.
21    2,   18|       the ominous roaring of the rain. The heavy clouds, driving
22    2,   18|      bearing philosophically the rain and wind that beat on their
23    2,   18|       hands bathed in blood.~The rain came down with redoubled
24    2,   18|          dripping with blood and rain. He soon found the wound;
25    2,   18|         hands.~Day came, and the rain had ceased. Great clouds
26    2,   18|        soaked by the torrents of rain, had yielded still more;
27    2,   19|           a fine but penetrating rain had been falling. There
28    3,    4| complaint, though the continuous rain obliged them to stay below,
29    3,    4|    regardless of the torrents of rain and the dashing waves, he
30    3,    7|    vapors condensed into violent rain, so that instead of starting
31    3,    7|       duration of this deluge of rain would be in an inverse ratio
32    3,    8|  Glenarvan. During the night the rain had ceased. The sky was
33    3,   11| detestable crew groveled under a rain of blood. It was like the
34    3,   15|          stars. Neither heat nor rain increased the discomfort
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