Part, chapter

  1    1,    1|                          s p p s u v j h d.”~THE MAN who held in his hand the
  2    1,    1|                         of the natural rights of man was to be free and to belong
  3    1,    1|                       wrong in assuming that the man with the cryptogram was
  4    1,    1|                       the Upper Amazon.~He was a man of about thirty years of
  5    1,    1|                       the Upper Amazon. But this man may quit America and go
  6    1,    1|                        been considered a wealthy man. He had a few of all the
  7    1,    1|                    Peruvian territory. To such a man the necessaries of life
  8    1,    2|                          perceived.~It was not a man at all, it was a “guariba.”~?
  9    1,    2|                          minutes he had seen the man at the foot of the tree,
 10    1,    2|                          crushed this motionless man at a single blow, and assuredly
 11    1,    2|                         so brave before a waking man as a sleeping one, performed
 12    1,    2|                         all the insults that one man can hurl at another in this
 13    1,    2|                          thicket. Like a prudent man, he did not wish to show
 14    1,    2|                         army,” replied the young man.~“If it was I who shot the
 15    1,    2|                        especially when the young man obligingly continued:~“My
 16    1,    3|                         which tells you that the man is genuine and of frank
 17    1,    3|                  permanent position that a young man ought to wish for.~The Portuguese
 18    1,    3|                        had, in this silent young man, so gentle to others, so
 19    1,    3|                         they are worth.”~The old man insisted. Death would not
 20    1,    3|                         make him a distinguished man. Nothing in literature,
 21    1,    3|                        Manoel Valdez. This young man, the son of a merchant in
 22    1,    3|                       became him well, the young man was treated by Joam and
 23    1,    3|                       remarking about this quiet man of vigorous health, with
 24    1,    3|                 happiness, why was not this just man more cheerful and less reserved?
 25    1,    3|                      centuries still unsolved by man.~Minha was twenty years
 26    1,    4|                        Joam Garral, then a young man, had arrived in the country,
 27    1,    4|                           in the presence of the man whose active kindness and
 28    1,    4|                        face in his hands, like a man who had to collect his thoughts
 29    1,    4|                        new expression, that of a man who had taken a last decision,
 30    1,    6|                        taken he had been another man, and when he busied himself
 31    1,    6|                     became the active, energetic man of his earlier years, and
 32    1,    7|                        Minha,” replied the young man, “you will be none the less
 33    1,    7|                       should!” replied the young man.~“Well then—no!” said Benito; “
 34    1,    7|                        to Humboldt, “accompanies man in the infancy of his civilization,”
 35    1,    7|                   adapted to gratify the eyes!~A man, hanging by the neck, struggled
 36    1,    7|              hunting-knife severed the cipo.~The man slipped on to the ground.
 37    1,    7|                          was not too late.~“Poor man!” murmured Minha.~“Mr. Manoel!
 38    1,    7|                       should finish by finding a man at the end of the cipo.”~“
 39    1,    9|                         then aged seventy, was a man of great worth, full of
 40    1,    9|                         evening before. He was a man about fifty, well up in
 41    1,   11|                         expression was that of a man resolved to do his duty
 42    1,   13|                       entered the loja.~He was a man about thirty-five years
 43    1,   13|                   somewhere!”~Torres was not the man to allow a conversation
 44    1,   14|                        interior of Brazil like a man who knew the country. But
 45    1,   15|                          cattle, and even attack man if he is imprudent enough
 46    1,   15|                      subjects to talk about. The man had certainly seen a great
 47    1,   16|                     taken a great dislike to the man and only waited for an opportunity
 48    1,   16|                         think, I do not like the man at all, Mr. Fragoso.”~“Neither
 49    1,   17|                   exasperates you against such a man?” said Benito quickly.~“
 50    1,   17|                          seen that this annoying man never keeps his eyes off
 51    1,   17|                        it only concerned me—this man who inspires us all with
 52    1,   17|                         the bank with a speed no man can equal.~It is on these
 53    1,   17|                        exist! It is not always a man’s worst enemy who wishes
 54    1,   17|                       stopped him, and the young man checked himself, though
 55    1,   19|                          the head from the young man was the only reply.~“And
 56    1,   19|                      realized enough to turn any man’s head! Have you heard tell
 57    1,   19|                        with the exception of one man, who, seriously wounded,
 58    1,   19|                         escape.”~“Has this young man been heard of since?” asked
 59    1,   19|                           whatever happens, this man must leave us tomorrow at
 60    1,   20|                          Tijuco, and you are the man who was sentenced to death
 61    1,   20|                    Manaos, and saying to him, ‘A man is there whose identity
 62    1,   20|                         yearsabsence, and this man was the instigator of the
 63    1,   20|                         of the escort; he is the man who escaped from execution;
 64    1,   20|                          attitude of this guilty man, whose life he held in his
 65    1,   20|                       tears. He had before him a man convicted of the most heinous
 66    1,   20|                       heinous of crimes, and the man never flinched.~At length,
 67    1,   20|                    expected anything from such a man, and was as quiet as before.~“
 68    1,   20|                     innocence.”~“And the unhappy man who committed the crime?”~“
 69    1,   20|                       repeated Torres; “but this man, whom I knew a long time
 70    1,   20|                     under what name the innocent man had again begun a new life.
 71    1,   20|                          him, and he died.”~“The man’s name?” exclaimed Joam
 72    1,   20|                    respect the wishes of a dying man, of a criminal tortured
 73    1,   20|                     father!” exclaimed the young man.~“Wait a little before you
 74    1,   20|                      have been borne by the same man—I arrest you!”~At these
 75    1,   20|                         Dacosta! I am the honest man whom a legal error unjustly
 76    1,   20|                    servants.~“Let the justice of man be done while we wait for
 77    2,    2|                     about it,” replied the young man. “The noble fazender did
 78    2,    2|                       have condemned an innocent man! Confess your errors and
 79    2,    2|                       she had led with the noble man who had been injured so
 80    2,    2|                         or later. He was not the man to abandon such a trail.
 81    2,    2|                     indignant reply of an honest man. He kicked Torres off the
 82    2,    2|                  curiosity against the condemned man, who was the principal author
 83    2,    3|                   diamond arrayal. The condemned man was lost. But during the
 84    2,    3|                     forward. Although the honest man suffered acutely, he might
 85    2,    3|                       been the existence of this man, who had no action to be
 86    2,    3|                         not to abandon this just man. The step he is taking is
 87    2,    3|                      victim, a martyr, an honest man to whom society owed a signal
 88    2,    4|                 presumption in his eyes that the man was quite ten times guilty.~
 89    2,    4|                           however, was not a bad man. Nervous, fidgety, talkative,
 90    2,    4|                        on the part of the doomed man of Tijuco, who was tired
 91    2,    4|                         shutting his eyes like a man who heard the story told
 92    2,    5|                          taken his place, like a man who considered he was perfectly
 93    2,    5|                      replied Joam quickly. “This man, whom I received with hospitality,
 94    2,    5|                        is the name of the guilty man?” asked Jarriquez, shaken
 95    2,    5|                       not avoid exclaiming, “The man who can furnish the proof
 96    2,    5|                       Yes, you are right, sir; a man cannot pay too dearly for
 97    2,    5|                    conclude, he had before him a man whose guilt had for him
 98    2,    5|                      Joam Dacosta, the condemned man of the diamond arrayal?”~“
 99    2,    6|                         expression was that of a man who had come to some unalterable
100    2,    6|                        he settled his bill, as a man would who has gone for good?”~“
101    2,    6|                        at length told him that a man, such as he described, had
102    2,    6|                         so.~As soon as the young man saw himself face to face
103    2,    6|                     Dacosta!” answered the young man.~“Quite so,” continued Torres. “
104    2,    6|                          you accused an innocent man, and with God’s help I am
105    2,    6|                        recollection of the young man’s insulting words, and the
106    2,    6|                        to act as second for that man?”~“So be it,” answered Fragoso, “
107    2,    7|                          the wishes of the dying man, had made the handing over
108    2,    7|                mentioning the name of the guilty man.~Unless he was saved by
109    2,    7|                          yourself together! Be a man again! Be a son again!”~“
110    2,    7|                          said Fragoso.~The young man, passing his hand over his
111    2,    8|                      could not have applied to a man who was more skillful or
112    2,    8|                      fazender of Iquitos—for the man whom they lvoed, for the
113    2,    9|                     first movement of a drowning man is to try and hold as much
114    2,    9|                         the other hand, when the man who falls into the water
115    2,    9|                          distinction between the man who falls into the water
116    2,    9|                         the water living and the man who falls into it dead.
117    2,    9|                     poles and drags like a blind man who only works by touch.
118    2,    9|                     dangerous than formerly. The man beneath the liquid mass
119    2,   10|                         the river bed.~The young man slowly made his way along
120    2,   10|              decompression.~As soon as the young man had set foot on the raft
121    2,   10|                    clothed, stretched out like a man asleep, with his arms folded
122    2,   10|                        The corpse of the drowned man which had been stretched
123    2,   11|                          The body of the drowned man had in the ordinary course
124    2,   11|                       the clothes of the drowned man, which came away in fragments.~
125    2,   11|                       been in our hands, and the man who gives it to you is he
126    2,   12|                      that of this one depended a man’s life. Its solution was
127    2,   12|                          would be thought—of the man who, after hours of obstinate
128    2,   13|                         was. Manoel was just the man.~“Wir,” said Manoel as he
129    2,   13|                        the document on which the man’s life depends.”~Manoel
130    2,   13|                    cipher?”~“Listen to me, young man,” replied the judge, “and
131    2,   13|                      Manoel.~“Yes, my dear young man, and I at once saw that
132    2,   13|                 impossible. In truth, a stronger man than I might have been deceived.”~“
133    2,   13| lxhihncuvktygclveplrihrkryupmpg.~“And now, young man, just look at it, and do
134    2,   13|                           For this reason, young man. I think we can assume that
135    2,   13|                           Do you not know, young man, that with the ordinary
136    2,   13|                    answered Manoel. “An innocent man has been branded as guilty,
137    2,   13|                          impossible!”~“Ah! young man!” exclaimed Jarriquez, “
138    2,   14|                        be suffered by the doomed man of Tijuco. And this miracle
139    2,   14|                       Tijuco. And this miracle a man attempted to perform! The
140    2,   14|                        attempted to perform! The man was Jarriquez, and he now
141    2,   14|                        his opinion. Was not this man, who had voluntarily abandoned
142    2,   14|                      which Dacosta, the innocent man he allowed to be sentenced
143    2,   15|                         could save the condemned man.~And so Benito considered
144    2,   15|                        undoubtedly! And the only man who could have furnished
145    2,   15|                       Such was what the wretched man continually repeated to
146    2,   15|                        this ordeal. That gallant man, that rigid Puritan, that
147    2,   15|                         he was certainly not the man to despise it. But if, on
148    2,   15|                       frontier—the position of a man who came to say, “Here is
149    2,   15|                        vindication of the doomed man. Every one had been given
150    2,   15|                        by the hand of the guilty man, and exonerated Joam Dacosta.
151    2,   15|                        justice, of pity toward a man suffering under an unjust
152    2,   15|                        for the unfortunate young man had hardly strength to support
153    2,   16|                     means by which the condemned man could escape the penalty
154    2,   16|                         the escape of the doomed man than to have hurried off
155    2,   16|                       removed, so as to permit a man to get through. Benito and
156    2,   17|                     attention of a less absorbed man.~Joam Dacosta continued
157    2,   17|                       answered, in the tone of a man whose resolution was unalterable, “
158    2,   17|                        which to struggle against man’s injustice! But to save
159    2,   17|                            Sir,” said the doomed man, “before to-morrow, before
160    2,   17|                         the soldiers.~The doomed man, who had now but a few hours
161    2,   18|                   morning of which the condemned man was to perish on the gallows.~
162    2,   18|                        to be suffered by a white man.~Such are the penal arrangements
163    2,   18|                          on the 31st of August a man was approaching Manaos with
164    2,   18|                       direction of the city.~The man came from the eastern provinces,
165    2,   18|                          Fragoso pushed back the man who guarded the entrance,
166    2,   18|                        be no doubt but that this man gave him the document he
167    2,   18|                        who dispose of the doomed man’s life. Leave me!”~Fragoso,
168    2,   18|                         come at which the doomed man was to start from the prison,
169    2,   18|                         were all that the doomed man had to live!~Fragoso, maddened
170    2,   18|                            Do not kill this just man! do not kill him!”~But already
171    2,   19|                         the death of an innocent man!~Yes! There could be no
172    2,   19|                        did not profit the guilty man in the long run, for, a
173    2,   19|                   subsequently that the innocent man had escaped from the last
174    2,   19|                    rehabilitation of an innocent man? If, in spite of all the
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License