Book,  chapter

 1    1,    1|         say, are always a little curious. Everything is an event
 2    1,    7|         Yes, I have to attempt a curious and important journey, the
 3    1,    8|     unhealthy; but everything is curious in the eyes of a geographer.
 4    1,   16|        for nothing could be more curious than to see the said water-spouts
 5    1,   18|    required. Robert had killed a curious animal belonging to the
 6    1,   20|   Indians however, and made this curious observation:~“I have read
 7    1,   25|        call it “tuco-tuco.” This curious specimen of the COLEOPTERA
 8    1,   25|         for though Arago, in his curious statistics, only cites two
 9    1,   25|      Major, sometimes the eager, curious glance of Paganel, or the
10    2,    9|   maintain that this is the most curious country on the earth. Its
11    2,   10| Glenarvan.~“Horrible enough, but curious, and, what’s more, peculiar
12    2,   13|          these trees presented a curious anomaly in the disposition
13    2,   14|          roused a troop of these curious marsupials. The little ones
14    2,   15|        clock they went through a curious forest of ferns, which would
15    3,    9|         DUrville has given some curious details as to this custom.
16    3,   10|      glanced at Glenarvan with a curious expression: then with one
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