Book,  chapter

 1    3,   10|       of the mountain stood a “pah,” or Maori fortress. The
 2    3,   10|      his party arrived at the “pah.”~The fortress was defended
 3    3,   10|    that is the plateau of the “pah,” on which were erected
 4    3,   10| Maories were assembled in the “pah,” old men, full grown men,
 5    3,   10|       at the other end of the “pah.” This hut rested against
 6    3,   10|       the whole extent of the “pah,” and as far as Kai-Koumou’
 7    3,   10|        rest walked across the “pah” and stopped before Kai-Koumou.
 8    3,   11|        Till February 15th the “pah” was deserted.~John Mangles,
 9    3,   11|     Maories, assembled in the “pah,” silent and calm.~Kai-Koumou
10    3,   11|      at various points of the “pah”; the smell of charred flesh
11    3,   11|        inner inclosure of the “pah”; then the chants and cries
12    3,   12|     irregular outlines of the “pah.” Some of the savages were
13    3,   12|      the plateau on which the “pah” was erected. On its two
14    3,   12|        which united it to the “pah” like a drawbridge. All
15    3,   12|  whistled by the sides of the “pah,” and the posts of the house
16    3,   12|  clinging to the sides of the “pah,” were cutting a passage
17    3,   12|    they might be seen from the pah. They were quite silent,
18    3,   12|      the air. It came from the pah, whose direction Glenarvan
19    3,   12|  Ware-Atoua, rushed out of the pah, and hastened by the shortest
20    3,   14|        Further off toward the “pah,” the lava had reached a
21    3,   14|      paths that led toward the pah.~“They are going!” exclaimed
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