Part, chapter

 1    1,    1|     Capitaes do Mato” are known in Brazil those individuals who are
 2    1,    1|         there were still slaves in Brazil, and as a natural consequence,
 3    1,    1|        moment was not, however, in Brazil. He had just passed the
 4    1,    1|         but that one could live in Brazil, in America, wherever one
 5    1,    1|       coarse and bitter tobacco of Brazil, of which the leaves belong
 6    1,    2|             which is also known in Brazil as the “barbado,” was of
 7    1,    2|    dagger-knife, which is known in Brazil as a “foca,” and which hunters
 8    1,    3|     obtained in the large towns of Brazil. There was nothing which
 9    1,    4|        there was no distinction in Brazil between the civil and religious
10    1,    4|           how I should like to see Brazil, and to journey down this
11    1,    4|           through the provinces of Brazil! Thanks, father!”~And the
12    1,    5|         name.~From the frontier of Brazil to Manaos, where the superb
13    1,    5|        disputes between France and Brazil, about the Guiana boundary,
14    1,    5|    practice harmonize with theory, Brazil entered into negotiations
15    1,    7|      treepeckers or woodpeckers of Brazil wagged their little heads,
16    1,    7|          tapirs, called “antas” in Brazil, diminutives of the elephant,
17    1,    7|          olive-trees, and of which Brazil had fifty-four varieties;
18    1,    8|           than the great artery of Brazil, the Nile and the Missouri-Mississippi,
19    1,    8|        rain falls. In the north of Brazil the rainy season is in September;
20    1,    9|        great quantities throughout Brazil; “candirus,” awkward to
21    1,    9|        sweet manioc; “beiju,” from Brazil, a sort of national brandy,
22    1,    9|             Tonquin bans, known in Brazil under the name of “cumarus,”
23    1,    9|         from the penal colonies of Brazil, England, Holland, or France,
24    1,   11|           made to replace bread in Brazil, composed of the flour of
25    1,   12|        been used to make the wordbrazil,” as descriptive of certain
26    1,   12|            this has come the nameBrazil,” given to that vast district
27    1,   12|           production, the name of “brazilstuck to them, and it has
28    1,   12|          rays of the tropical sun.~Brazil was from the first occupied
29    1,   12|     Portugo-Brazilian Empire, that Brazil proclaimed its independence
30    1,   12|        This was no easy matter.~If Brazil wished to extend to the
31    1,   12|           Ega.~But in the meantime Brazil had to interfere to hinder
32    1,   12|        here we are, on the soil of Brazil, which, according to all
33    1,   14|    excursions into the interior of Brazil like a man who knew the
34    1,   15|      throughout the whole north of Brazil afforded him numerous subjects
35    1,   19|           seaboard in the north of Brazil,” replied Fragoso.~“You
36    1,   19|         spot in the vast empire of Brazil, something like a park of
37    1,   19|          Torres. “He probably left Brazil, and now, in some distant
38    2,    1| tributaries of the great artery of Brazil, that the capital of the
39    2,    1|           mountains which separate Brazil from New Grenada, and it
40    2,    3|         asked him to take her into Brazil, and with her and her daughter
41    2,   18|      gallows.~The death penalty in Brazil is generally commuted except
42    2,   19|          provinces in the north of Brazil, to those districts of the
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