Book,  chapter

 1    1,   14|   visibly. It was evidently some bird hovering above them.~“A
 2    1,   14|         condor. This magnificent bird is the king of the Southern
 3    1,   14|       eye immovably fixed on the bird. The enormous creature was
 4    1,   14|    Robert were still alive! That bird.”~But it was too late. The
 5    1,   14|         an age, and the enormous bird reappeared, carrying a heavy
 6    1,   14|         it was Robert Grant. The bird had seized him by his clothes,
 7    1,   14| motionless body, he aimed at the bird, now three hundred feet
 8    1,   14|        they reached the spot the bird was dead, and the body of
 9    1,   16|         in Patagonia which means bird, and he well deserved the
10    1,   18|          damp. He bounded like a bird over the dried-up CANADAS
11    1,   18|   skillfully, that he caught the bird round the legs and paralyzed
12    1,   20|         shed even the blood of a bird uselessly. The shot made
13    2,    2|       flew over the water like a bird, spreading all her sails
14    2,    9|         their aptness; where one bird serves for a clock, and
15    2,   10|  admiration was bestowed on this bird, and the Major’s spoil would
16    2,   14|   believe it was some Australian bird imitating the sounds of
17    2,   14|         the branches— the “satin bird,” with its silky plumage,
18    2,   14|         they saw here the “Lyre” bird, the tail of which resembles
19    2,   16|      feet high in the air. Not a bird built its nest in these
20    3,    8|         desire of obtaining some bird peculiar to New Zealand.
21    3,    8|    insects, worms or seeds. This bird is peculiar to the country.
22    3,   10|     Triune God, father, son, and bird, or spirit. The large, well
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