Part, chapter

 1    1,    6|     him, “the jangada must be built and ready to launch.”~“We’
 2    1,    8|    that the jangada was to be built; thence it was that the
 3    1,    8|     the jangada, after having built it in comfort on the river
 4    1,    8|      part of the jangada they built the master’s house. It was
 5    1,    9|      kept in a special stable built in the front, they consisted
 6    1,    9|    the truth, it was a better built and better peopled village
 7    1,    9|   chapel.~The chapel then was built in the center of the jangada,
 8    1,    9|       it would all have to be built over again. But as the fall
 9    1,   11|      impenetrable forest they built a few huts of foliage. The
10    1,   16|       A collection of houses, built of mud, whitewashed, and
11    1,   16|  thatch or palm-leaves; a few built of stone or wood, with verandas,
12    1,   16|     considerably dilapidated, built I the midst of a thick mass
13    1,   17|        by the way, are mostly built on piles. The price he gave
14    2,    1|      Rio Negro.~Manaos is not built on the Amazon. It is on
15    2,    1|     Manoa, a city of romance, built, it was reported, near the
16    2,    1|       Notre Dame des Remedes, built on a knoll which overlooks
17    2,    3| establishment of which he had built up the prosperity! Yes!
18    2,   16|      a house of detention was built, was traversed by them in
19    2,   20|        The village of Silves, built on the left of the Amazon,
20    2,   20|     whose nearest houses were built on the vast beach of white
21    2,   20|    same name, which, although built on the ground flooded for
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