Part, chapter

 1    1,    5|           half-breeds, Portuguese and natives, where a few years ago twenty-four
 2    1,    6|           strongly handled, which the natives wield with consummate address.
 3    1,    8| house-building or ship-building these natives are, it must be admitted,
 4    1,    9|         according to the fancy of the natives.~On board the jangada there
 5    1,    9|               part of the food of the natives; some of every one of these
 6    1,    9|            which usually contents the natives of the Amazonian basin.
 7    1,    9|              in the interior, and the natives, among whom were three or
 8    1,    9|             of the river, so that the natives are very careful to spare
 9    1,    9|          would have been useless. The natives of Central America are not
10    1,   10|             It is asserted that these natives are cannibals; but if that
11    1,   10|             between the islands.~Many natives, with shaved heads, tattooed
12    1,   11|               much appreciated by the natives. Neither did they care to
13    1,   11|               north of the river, are natives with ruddy skins, bushy
14    1,   11|              at every port, where the natives ornamented it with little
15    1,   12|            answered Joam. “As for the natives——”~“I beg pardon,” replied
16    1,   12|                particularly among the natives. Ah! although there is no
17    1,   12|        coquettish partners.~Among the natives it was quite the reverse.
18    1,   12|               and, on the part of the natives, the same wide-mouth astonishment,
19    1,   12|              dozen centimes each, the natives could get drinks of the
20    1,   12|              only coins for which the natives of the Amazon exchange their
21    1,   12|               not slow to get abroad; natives came to him from all sides:
22    1,   13|             in the mixed idiom of the natives.~“A compatriot?” he asked,
23    1,   13|      expostulation on the part of the natives who lost a turn.~Fragoso
24    1,   15|    destruction caused not only by the natives, but by the water-fowl from
25    1,   15|            floating wreckage, but the natives of Fonteboa were not to
26    1,   16|              primitive costume of the natives, converted Omaas or Muas,
27    2,    7|               coming and going of the natives, evidently excited by the
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