Book,  chapter

 1    1,   11|    rushing noisily down the slopes. Paganel consulted his maps,
 2    1,   12|  easier of descent than the slopes we shall find there. When
 3    1,   13|     mantle over the eastern slopes of the Andes. The western
 4    1,   14|    himself once more to the slopes of the Cordilleras, listening
 5    1,   16|  degrees the Argentine soil slopes eastward, and all the travelers
 6    1,   20|    were treading the grassy slopes of the first ridges of the
 7    1,   21| that take their rise on its slopes.~After making a short ascent
 8    1,   22|   was descending the grassy slopes of the Sierra.~Glenarvan,
 9    2,    2|   Apollo willingly left the slopes of Helicon and Parnassus
10    2,   14|      They originated in the slopes of the Buffalo Ranges, a
11    2,   15|   disks, came down the last slopes of the Alps, among great
12    3,    8|    in the evening the first slopes of the Hakarihoata Ranges
13    3,   12|  Lady Glenarvan climbed the slopes, supported, not to say carried,
14    3,   13| natives posted on the lower slopes. Already when they ventured
15    3,   13| crater of eruption in these slopes, which consisted merely
16    3,   14|   cautiously to descend the slopes of Maunganamu, John Mangles
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