Book,  chapter

 1    1,   10|      splendid. From November to March the sky is always cloudless,
 2    1,   11|   accident was repaired and the march resumed.~The custom of the
 3    1,   11|        out in the usual line of march, a line which it was hard
 4    1,   12|      ask is a two hourslonger march.”~“Are you all of the same
 5    1,   12|        I’ll carry the boy.”~The march eastward was forthwith resumed.
 6    1,   16|       almost solemnly. “We will march east, and if it needs be,
 7    1,   18|        them would necessitate a march of one hundred and thirty
 8    1,   20|       with water, and the day’s march commenced. The horses were
 9    1,   26| accomplished, the given line of march being scrupulously adhered
10    2,    1|         by incident, the entire march from one ocean to another,
11    2,    9|       was not above a two daysmarch, and Ayrton reckoned on
12    2,    9|         everywhere at once.~The march across Adelaide presented
13    2,    9|        In this fashion, after a march of sixty miles in two days,
14    2,   10|       the drove continued their march among the groves of mimosas.
15    2,   11|       the 29th of December, the march was delayed somewhat by
16    2,   13|        beings. The order of the march had been changed in one
17    2,   14|      eating, after such a day’s march.~Paganel who had the first
18    2,   15|     about an hour, and then the march commenced anew over slanting
19    2,   15|         In the evening, after a march of only ten miles, the signal
20    3,    7|  protested, and by the month of March he had made the six hundred
21    3,    7|         The English resolved to march on Taranaki province and
22    3,    8|         After a fourteen milesmarch, they might well think of
23    3,    8|        and they continued their march along the river.~Two hours
24    3,    8|       with their fifteen milesmarch.~
25    3,   12|         at his success, led the march, and the two sailors brought
26    3,   14|        hundred miles. Ten daysmarch at ten miles a day, could
27    3,   14|        stoppage interrupted the march of those behind.~He remained
28    3,   15|     shelter of the high ranges, march to the coast across the
29    3,   15|       to the Pacific Ocean. The march was all day long across
30    3,   15|      their pains.~That evening, March 1, Glenarvan and his companions,
31    3,   17|        The same day (the 5th of March), Ayrton was conducted to
32    3,   18|     Grant’s ship on the 12th of March, 1861. For fourteen months
33    3,   19|     this phenomenon.”~Next day, March 4, at 5 A. M., at dawn,
34    3,   21|     ENTANGLEMENT~ON the 19th of March, eleven days after leaving
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