Part, chapter

 1    1,    2|         for a missile. Had he the hope to seriously hurt the monkey?
 2    1,    2|      replied Benito. “At least we hope to make him decide so. Don’
 3    1,    3|         piastres a day, and could hope to become a master if he
 4    1,    4|       have got a proposal which I hope you will approve of. Two
 5    1,   12|   accompany you to Belem, where I hope at the least to be able
 6    2,    3|  condemned to death.~There was no hope left for the accused. No
 7    2,    5|            not wishing to raise a hope which might be destroyed.”~“
 8    2,    5|           so,” he said, “all your hope now rests on the declaration
 9    2,    5|        think in Manaos.”~“And you hope that he will speak—that
10    2,    5|           the price he asked?”~“I hope so, sir,” replied Joam Dacosta; “
11    2,    5| consequently he cannot retain any hope of resuming his bargaining
12    2,    6|          they have to give up all hope of coming across him?~In
13    2,    7|       Benito, who snatched at the hope—the only one that was left. “
14    2,    7|            who seized on the last hope, “you are right! The corpse
15    2,    7|           he added; “if this last hope fails it will kill them!”~“
16    2,    8|           the river unbent. Every hope then existed that Torres’
17    2,   12|             This was likewise the hope of Yaquita, of Benito, of
18    2,   12|      writing.~But if it was their hope—and there is no need to
19    2,   13|       Manoel, who felt the little hope vanishing on which he had
20    2,   13|           I will not renounce the hope of finding the number!”~“
21    2,   13|      caught a glimpse of one more hope.~“Nothing can be more simple,”
22    2,   14|          of Joam Dacosta; and the hope that it was written by the
23    2,   14|        and seventy-six letters! I hope the wretch may be blessed
24    2,   16|     wished to assure her that all hope was not lost, that the mystery
25    2,   16|   witnessing against the words of hope to which he had just given
26    2,   17|         them with a little of the hope of which so little now remained
27    2,   17|       recovered a little of their hope.~Once more had Joam spoken
28    2,   17|        you are mistaken! There is hope no longer! You must escape!
29    2,   18|         letters!”~It was the last hope.~And then, with a hand whose
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