Part, chapter

1    1,    3|    so gentle to others, so stern to himself, recognized the
2    1,    6| and heavy and broad in the stern, able to carry from one
3    1,    9|   the rear—or, let us say, stern of the craft—and formed
4    1,    9|    the bow, and not at the stern, where the helmsman is generally
5    1,   11|   gamboling at the bow and stern, and making the water alive
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