Book,  chapter

 1    2,   11| commanded by an inspector. The squatters and their “handslent their
 2    2,   13|        the inhabitants and the squatters prepared carefully against
 3    2,   13|     However, this bad habit of squatters or natives will end in the
 4    2,   13|        of towns, colonists and squatters at stations, are hereby
 5    2,   14|        came upon the traces of squatters going toward the north,
 6    2,   14|    stations, some belonging to squatters who rear cattle, and others
 7    2,   14|        The young men were both squatters and settlers. They managed
 8    2,   14|       was the joy of the young squatters in offering them this splendid
 9    2,   14|        had left the table. The squatters had heard of the catastrophe
10    2,   14|     agreed upon, and the young squatters sketched out a programme
11    2,   14|        took leave of the young squatters, with hearty thanks and
12    2,   15|     seldom saw any one but the squatters and rovers. He answered
13    2,   15|        as yet unknown, and the squatters, then five in number, could
14    2,   15|       walk, of course, as many squatters had done already; but if
15    2,   16|     everything is wanting, the squatters say; plains covered with
16    2,   19| frontier. Neither settlers nor squatters were to be met with; it
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