Book,  chapter

 1    1,   12|       the pass of Antuco, on the slope of the volcano, in latitude,
 2    1,   14|    lengthened declivities, which slope down almost insensibly to
 3    1,   16|          to do was to follow the slope right down to the sea.~Glenarvan
 4    2,    6|       and terminated in a gentle slope, and the boat glided easily
 5    2,   10|     shore, and the bank began to slope upward, so that the horses
 6    2,   11| unrecognizable bodies lay on the slope of the embankment, but from
 7    2,   19|      torrent. The whole southern slope of the Australian Alps poured
 8    3,    6|         a line with the northern slope of the mountain,” said John
 9    3,   11|  henceforth none dare ascend the slope of Maunganamu on pain of
10    3,   12|       the grotto.~After that the slope was practicable to the foot
11    3,   12|         the vertical wall to the slope below, and this would have
12    3,   12|        hollow at the foot of the slope where those who come down
13    3,   12|          wall met the top of the slope. Then Glenarvan going first
14    3,   12|        reached half-way down the slope, when a voice was heard
15    3,   12|          himself gently down the slope; soon Lady Helena and he
16    3,   13|      their flight on the eastern slope out of the view of their
17    3,   13|       clew.~They hastened up the slope, spurred on by the loud
18    3,   13|          to descend the opposite slope and enter the narrow gorges,
19    3,   13|        downward inclination. Its slope, narrow and jagged though
20    3,   13|      once more climbed the steep slope of the mountain, and then
21    3,   15|   halting along the far-reaching slope of the eastern side. Paganel
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