Book,  chapter

 1    1,    8|           You can go up the large rivers,” suggested Lady Helena.~“
 2    1,    9|     abundance of fresh water, and rivers abounding in fish, and forests
 3    1,   10|         Unless they flung it into rivers which ran into the sea,”
 4    1,   10|         Shall we find any lack of rivers and streams and currents?
 5    1,   10|           of these almost unknown rivers, those whom I may call my
 6    1,   11|           a mountainous district. Rivers were more numerous, and
 7    1,   18|         the Sierra Ventana, where rivers abound.”~“It is wise counsel,
 8    1,   18|        torrents and cascades, and rivers and ponds, and streams and
 9    1,   19|         haunt the neighborhood of rivers? Apparently it was the latter,
10    1,   24|      equilibrium of the Argentine rivers was not restored. Before
11    1,   26| throughout.~Neither mountains nor rivers had made the travelers change
12    2,    6|            Besides the Patagonian rivers, the Rio Colorado and the
13    2,    6|           contrary, the principal rivers of Australia—the Murray,
14    2,    7|    despairingly, through bogs and rivers, and across mountains, till
15    2,   10|          needed when they came to rivers. This was patiencepatience
16    2,   10|       rara avis of the Australian rivers soon disappeared among the
17    2,   10|          when wagons have to ford rivers, they have empty casks slung
18    2,   13|           Colban and the Caupespe rivers. The half of their journey
19    3,    7|     between the Waikato and Waipa Rivers. Potatau was an old man,
20    3,    8|           the confluence of these rivers.”~“Yes,” said the geographer, “
21    3,    8|         the confluence of the two rivers before the darkness overtook
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