Book,  chapter

 1    1,    9|    doubts about the name of the race there is none about their
 2    1,    9|     very well put.”~“Unless the race has no existence, that would
 3    1,   16| exclaimed:~“What an intelligent race! All my explanations would
 4    1,   17|      attribute to some gigantic race that lived in a past age.~
 5    1,   20|        characterized the Indian race.~But desolate as the country
 6    1,   24|      himself chief of the human race; but Mr. Jaguar is of a
 7    2,    2|        as if she were running a race with the Royal Thames Club
 8    2,    3|      his world. The whole human race is shut up in himself, and
 9    2,   12|  characteristic features of his race; the crisped hair, the nearly
10    2,   14|         last, worn out with the race, the troop stopped, and
11    3,    3|      intelligent and sanguinary race, cannibals greedy of human
12    3,    5|       Zealanders are a powerful race, who are rebelling against
13    3,    7|    prerogative. The men of this race are proud and brave, one
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