Book,  chapter

 1    1,   24|        the shirts of artists, and warriors, and merchants; but these
 2    3,    7|     commanded at the outset 2,500 warriors, afterward increased to
 3    3,    9|         Beside him sat nine armed warriors of inferior rank, ferocious-looking
 4    3,    9|      Maori chief, whose principal warriors had been picked off by the
 5    3,    9|         between the chief and his warriors. He consulted his map and
 6    3,   10|          conducted into it by the warriors. The path which led up to
 7    3,   10|       Waikato. Of the two hundred warriors who, under his orders, hastened
 8    3,   10|           and friends of deceased warriors, the women especially, lacerated
 9    3,   10|           his tribe! But will his warriors consent?”~“Yes! . . . They
10    3,   10| Kai-Koumou is left alone with the warriors of his canoe. . . . . Oh!
11    3,   10|       surrounded by the principal warriors of his tribe, and among
12    3,   11|           clearly impossible. Ten warriors, armed to the teeth, kept
13    3,   11|   survivors of his tribe; and his warriors, as they could not recall
14    3,   11|         the hands of six powerful warriors, felled the victims in the
15    3,   11|          the whole crowd, chiefs, warriors, old men, women, children,
16    3,   11|         were placed on them. Four warriors took up the litters on their
17    3,   12|     stopped Glenarvan.~One of the warriors on guard, startled by an
18    3,   13|          higher rank than all the warriors of his tribe. The chief
19    3,   14|    approached in the midst of his warriors, and Glenarvan recognized
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