Book,  chapter

 1    1,    1|    terrible creatures that are killed the better, at all events,”
 2    1,    4|      enough in his way to have killed an ordinary man. But Harry
 3    1,   13|   holding up the animal he had killed.~They all hastened eagerly
 4    1,   13|     good for eating when it is killed in a state of rest. If it
 5    1,   18|      they required. Robert had killed a curious animal belonging
 6    1,   19|     carbine for the last time, killed one more enormous monster,
 7    2,   10|        further on, and bravely killed it. It was a shapeless creature,
 8    2,   12|        Perhaps his parents are killed, and he is left alone in
 9    2,   12| unfortunately the poor man was killed.”~“And you did not know
10    2,   14|        During this BATTUE they killed certain animals peculiar
11    2,   16|  suppose him capable of having killed our horses and bullocks?
12    2,   18|         Do you want to have us killed one by one to diminish our
13    2,   19|      scant, if McNabbs had not killed a large rat, the mus conditor,
14    3,    2|       six companions four were killed; the other two and the quartermaster
15    3,   11|       of the Maori chief.~“You killed Kara-Tete,” said he to Glenarvan.~“
16    3,   11|       lie the ashes of a chief killed by an earthquake in 1846.~
17    3,   15|    That day McNabbs and Robert killed three kiwis, which filled
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