Book,  chapter

 1    1,   15|     horses. They went from one prairie to another, always finding
 2    1,   17|     the nomadic Indians of the prairie, knowing their bandit propensities.
 3    1,   19|   animals lay stretched on the prairie.~The situation of the besieged
 4    1,   19|   shadows of night fell on the prairie, and the glaring eyes of
 5    1,   19|        silence spread over the prairie, and made Robert exclaim:~“
 6    1,   19|     said, pointing to the open prairie.~“You are going away?”~V.
 7    1,   19|     RAMADA, and showed him the prairie, making him understand that
 8    1,   22|     itself over the monotonous prairie beneath the horsestread.~
 9    1,   26|        would never forsake the prairie, where the bones of his
10    2,    2|  appeared to glide over a long prairie, which Paganel justly compared
11    2,   10|     visible but one stretch of prairie, enameled with flower, in
12    2,   11|    district. Long stretches of prairie, known as the “Low Level
13    2,   18|      to say, paths through the prairie, came out on the road to
14    3,    8| country looked like an immense prairie which faded into distance,
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