Book,  chapter

 1    1,    4|            with a picked crew, and leaving his children to the care
 2    1,    8|           of the Canary group, and leaving Teneriffe on her larboard.
 3    1,   10| Cordilleras by the pass of Antuco, leaving the volcano on the south,
 4    1,   20|        prisoners.~From the time of leaving the Guamini, there was marked
 5    1,   20|         off towards the flamingos, leaving the others to go on in advance.~
 6    1,   22|      further he stopped again, and leaving the straight route, made
 7    1,   23|     Patagonia.”~“I protest against leaving out the horse,” said Paganel. “
 8    1,   23|         now.”~“Listen, then. After leaving America the thirty-seventh
 9    1,   23|      Victoria.”~“And then.”~“After leaving Australia in—”~This last
10    2,    1|         out that Captain Grant, on leaving the coast of Peru to return
11    2,    1|            resumed Paganel. “After leaving the Atlantic, we pass two
12    2,    1|          is easily answered. After leaving Twofold Bay, we cross an
13    2,    4|        June, only eight days after leaving the shores of Peru, that
14    2,    4|         about six days after their leaving Amsterdam Island, when they
15    2,    5|            lifting her up and then leaving her almost dry, would infallibly
16    2,    8|          had much reason to regret leaving their cosy cabins on board
17    2,   11|          twenty-five minutes after leaving Castlemaine, it arrived
18    2,   13|           for the first time since leaving Cape Bernouilli, struck
19    2,   13|             The Major without even leaving the hotel, was soon aware
20    2,   15|            their fatiguing ascent, leaving the carcass of the dead
21    2,   15|            up the Murray district, leaving Gippsland in deep shadow,
22    2,   17|            went back to the wagon, leaving John Mangles and the Major
23    3,    4|           hard down, while Wilson, leaving the line, hauled at the
24    3,    6|      Mangles felt the necessity of leaving without delay a vessel doomed
25    3,    7|          great loss. Just as I was leaving Paris, I heard that the
26    3,    8|          Major and Robert, without leaving their companions, shot some
27    3,   12|       grotto. John Mangles, before leaving the hut, disposed of all
28    3,   14|           of the mountain, without leaving their line of observation.
29    3,   16|           the island. Moreover, on leaving Melbourne, I kept our destination
30    3,   18|          is not impossible that on leaving Callao the BRITANNIA went
31    3,   21|           March, eleven days after leaving the island, the DUNCAN sighted
32    3,   21|  fifty-three days from the time of leaving Talcahuano, John Mangles
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