Book,  chapter

 1    1,    5|              seventeen miles an hour, a higher speed than any vessel had
 2    1,   12|        haphazard, though always getting higher up the mountains. At last
 3    1,   12|                 was to keep on climbing higher and higher. Paganel was
 4    1,   12|             keep on climbing higher and higher. Paganel was rather disconcerted
 5    1,   12|               shrubs and bushes, which, higher still, gave place to grasses
 6    1,   23|               but the waters might rise higher and higher, till the topmost
 7    1,   23|            waters might rise higher and higher, till the topmost branches
 8    1,   25|                 bar of cloud was rising higher and higher, and by degrees
 9    1,   25|             cloud was rising higher and higher, and by degrees extinguishing
10    1,   26|         Thalcave led them upward to the higher plains. Here the Argentine
11    2,   10|                qualities, there was one higher than all that he specially
12    2,   12|          standing, he could not get any higher, but he waited modestly
13    3,   13| intelligent-looking chief, evidently of higher rank than all the warriors
14    3,   14|           insensible degrees toward the higher table-land. John could not
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