Part, chapter

 1    1,    2|      sleeping traveler ought not to leave himself exposed, lest a
 2    1,    3|             and he had come away on leave for some months to the fazenda,
 3    1,    4|            wish to marry my sister. Leave it to me! I will commence
 4    1,    4|      hunting in the woods, so as to leave Yaquita alone with her husband.~
 5    1,    4|             persuade her husband to leave the fazenda Yaquita felt
 6    1,    4|           had seen each year Benito leave after his holidays to return
 7    1,    4|      reproach he would answer:~“Why leave our home? Are we not comfortable
 8    1,    4|            from us, and is going to leave us! It is the first sorrow
 9    1,    6|            made up, he was going to leave to Benito all the detail
10    1,    6|            of forest would scarcely leave an appreciable void.~The
11    1,    7|            girls—for Lina could not leave her mistress-went prepared
12    1,    7|          But, after all, they could leave it when they liked.~The
13    1,    8|              That will be nice!”~“I leave everything to your good
14    1,   11|          visitors as do not care to leave much of their blood with
15    1,   11|             who had never wished to leave Madame des Odonais. The
16    1,   14|         guests of the fazender took leave of the Garral family toward
17    1,   16|           two young men prepared to leave the jangada.~Joam Garral,
18    1,   16|            ladies of his family, to leave his absorbing daily work
19    1,   16|            at Manaos, Torres should leave it, and that they would
20    1,   17|            must stop. There he will leave us, and we shall be relieved
21    1,   19|     whatever happens, this man must leave us tomorrow at Manaos.”~“
22    1,   20|           if you do not please, and leave the jangada at this very
23    1,   20|            the victim, so as not to leave on his daughter and son-in-law
24    2,    2|         away to their rooms. Do not leave them all day. No one here
25    2,    2|            of the prison, and never leave it until it was opened!~
26    2,    2|     hypothesis was it not better to leave the jangada moored near
27    2,    2|           is no necessity for us to leave the raft.”~“So be it! To-morrow!”
28    2,    4|                How long ago did you leave your fazenda?”~“About nine
29    2,    6|            to Fragoso. “We must not leave him alone for an instant.”~
30    2,    6|            by the shoulder—never to leave go again.~Torres, who was
31    2,   10| Notwithstanding that Benito did not leave a single point of the river
32    2,   14|         judge had resolved never to leave the document until he had
33    2,   16|        pirogue could pass up it and leave no trace of its passage,
34    2,   16|              and if Joam decided to leave his country he could procure
35    2,   18|       Fragoso did not reply.~“Come, leave me alone! leave me alone!”
36    2,   18|               Come, leave me alone! leave me alone!” shouted Jarriquez,
37    2,   18|           of the doomed man’s life. Leave me!”~Fragoso, repulsed,
38    2,   18|             he cried; “you will not leave him to die? It was not he
39    2,   19|          very day the convoy was to leave Tijuco.~During the attack
40    2,   19|            apprehension, would take leave of their host to go on board
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