Book,  chapter

 1    1,    8|       fathoms of water before the town. The weather was frightful,
 2    1,    8|         in such torrents that the town was scarcely visible through
 3    1,   11|       some miles above the little town of Loja, and encamped for
 4    1,   16|          bound for any particular town, or village, or settlement.
 5    1,   20|     thousands, forming a complete town, about a foot high, and
 6    2,    1|         our stock of coal at Cape Town.”~“Well, then, give orders.”~“
 7    2,    2| regularity. Behind this miniature town there lay 1,500 hectares
 8    2,    3|                  CHAPTER III CAPE TOWN AND M. VIOT~As John Mangles
 9    2,    3|        anchor in the port of Cape Town. They sailed away next morning
10    2,    4|          his children in the good town of Dundee.”~“Poor father,”
11    2,    9|         Apsley, the most westerly town of Victoria.~The commencement
12    2,    9|       parish of Apsley, the first town in the Province of Victoria
13    2,   11|           for passing outside the town without going through it,
14    2,   11|        with him. His visit to the town was very short, but it sufficed
15    2,   11|          exactly alike. The whole town was laid out in squares,
16    2,   11|           less attractive. As the town grows, they lengthen the
17    2,   13|        Paganel; “that is the last town we come to in the province
18    2,   13|        well; let us get on to the town, for our fair travelers,
19    2,   13|         inhabitants of the little town. Ten minutesconversation
20    2,   19|      added Paganel, “and that’s a town where we shall find rapid
21    2,   19|          entirely cicatrized. The town of Delegete was not more
22    2,   19|        the bay, toward the little town of Eden, five miles distant.
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