Part, chapter

 1    1,    5|        sea the largest volume of water,” replied Manoel.~“A volume
 2    1,    5|         that it freshens the sea water for an immense distance
 3    1,    5|      millions of cubic meters of water every hour.”~“A river whose
 4    1,    8|          of this immense body of water, and more especially as
 5    1,    8|         but little below that of water.~The first layer was entirely
 6    1,    9|         and with the addition of water yields an excellent drink.~
 7    1,    9|         shouted “Hurrah!” as the water crept up.~“It will swim,
 8    1,    9|         clock in the evening the water had reached a level higher
 9    1,   10|      source of this huge body of water, the difference of level
10    1,   10|     addition, the surface of the water is far from being completely
11    1,   10|          the air, and struck the water with an automatic movement
12    1,   10|      fair size, and receives the water by a large strait. In the
13    1,   11|        and stern, and making the water alive with colored reflections
14    1,   11|     banks, but disappears like a water sprite as soon as you approach
15    1,   14|   harmless. Take a little of the water, Minha, and drink it; you
16    1,   14|          find it all right.”~The water is in truth limpid and fresh,
17    1,   15|         on the land or under the water. In this way they always
18    1,   15|      marks.~The Iça is a body of water coming from the east of
19    1,   15|         furrow on the top of the water, and then disappeared for
20    1,   16|          the rise or fall of the water the lake stretches away
21    1,   18|      black-watered lagoons. This water system marks the approach
22    1,   18|      arose from the clear, still water, in which every interlacement
23    1,   18|          this way, on this quiet water, shaded from the rays of
24    1,   18|       themselves in the pellucid water!”~“And the flowers half-opened
25    1,   18|         And along the top of the water glided long and swiftly-swimming
26    2,    7|         it!”~“But the paper! The water will have stained it, perhaps
27    2,    8|         should be got out of the water as quickly as possible so
28    2,    8| perpendicularly down it into the water; and there many a clot scattered
29    2,    9|     Manoel, “had fallen into the water living, and not mortally
30    2,    9|        body which falls into the water will float if equilibrium
31    2,    9|     mouth and nose away from the water, you are sure to float.
32    2,    9|         can of himself above the water; he holds up his head and
33    2,    9|       entire submersion, for the water makes its way to the lungs
34    2,    9|       the man who falls into the water is already dead the conditions
35    2,    9|       the man who falls into the water living and the man who falls
36    2,    9|           weighing less than the water it displaces, the body attains
37    2,    9|      live after he fell into the water, if the decomposition is
38    2,   10|      some ten or fifteen feet of water, at the base of the cliff,
39    2,   10|     depth of some twenty feet in water, the view becomes exceedingly
40    2,   10|           The undulations of the water lifted up the arms, and
41    2,   11|      risen to the surface of the water.~This well-known phenomenon
42    2,   11|      Indians. His sojourn in the water had not disfigured him very
43    2,   11|          from its sojourn in the water.~“The paper! Is the paper
44    2,   11|    thrown back the body into the water, and it was drifting away
45    2,   11|         with care, and which the water did not seem to have even
46    2,   14|      thorough sluicing with cold water:~“Let us try another way,”
47    2,   20|    precipitating its torrents of water into the sea. Following
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