Part, chapter

1    1,    2|     dropped the cudgel, which broke off a dry twig in its fall.~
2    1,   11|    again the river, in anger, broke off the robes, and the trunk
3    1,   17| Torres in the bow of the raft broke off the conversation. Torres
4    1,   20|      his customary impudence, broke the painful silence.~“For
5    2,    4|  packet to the magistrate.~He broke the seal and drew a letter
6    2,    6|  without a word.~Torres first broke silence, and, in the impudent
7    2,   14|       unhitched the crank and broke the cord.~This time Bobo
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