Book,  chapter

 1    2,   16|       shall have time to make a canoe. This is the plan I submit
 2    2,   19|        price, and constructed a canoe in the Australian manner,
 3    2,   19|      set to work to construct a canoe of larger dimensions. Experience
 4    3,    9|        of the Waikato. It was a canoe seventy feet long, five
 5    3,    9|      chief who was steering the canoe, there could be no mistake.
 6    3,    9|         the center of this long canoe, with their feet tied together,
 7    3,    9|        and carried on board the canoe. They had not been ill-treated,
 8    3,    9|         quite so desperate.~The canoe was speeding rapidly up
 9    3,    9|        any craft but the native canoe. The most audacious tourist
10    3,   10|        with the warriors of his canoe. . . . . Oh! one of them
11    3,   10|      among them the Maori whose canoe joined that of the Kai-Koumou
12    3,   11| tattooed; when he is building a canoe, or a house; when he is
13    3,   15|      there, twenty paces off, a canoe with six oars lay on the
14    3,   15|         him. In ten minutes the canoe was a quarter of a mile
15    3,   15|       to drown if we must!”~The canoe went fast under her four
16    3,   15|      cursing their destiny.~The canoe was meantime standing still.
17    3,   15|        strokes then carried the canoe nearer to the DUNCAN.~The
18    3,   15|    shots were raining round the canoe, when suddenly a loud report
19    3,   16|         pointing it at the last canoe approaching the shore.~But
20    3,   20|        perils of the ocean in a canoe made out of the spars of
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