Part, chapter

 1    1,    1|        Indian, nor negro. He was a white of Brazilian origin, and
 2    1,    2|      showed his sharp-edged teeth, white as ivory, and the cudgel
 3    1,    2|            mouth of a Brazilian of white descent, but “curiboca”—
 4    1,    6|          feet thick at their base; white chestnuts, which yield the
 5    1,    6|            its straight and smooth white stem. Among these magnificent
 6    1,    6|          yellow, purple, and snowy white of the parasitic plants.~
 7    1,    7|     displaying in the air the long white plumes of his tail, he in
 8    1,    7|     between the knots of the large white ipomas, under the fleshy
 9    1,    7|          about thirty years old, a white, clothed badly enough, much
10    1,   10|           yellow herons, or red or white ibises, which haunt the
11    1,   11|           as they mingled with the white stream of the Amazon. After
12    1,   14|            the American costume of white cotton trousers, and a cotton
13    1,   15| insurmountable obstacles among its white waters, which are fed by
14    2,    8|        nothing to keep them in the white waters when, a quarter of
15    2,   14|             his servants, black or white, dared not come near him.
16    2,   18|            was to be suffered by a white man.~Such are the penal
17    2,   20|         built on the vast beach of white sand.~After its departure
18    2,   20|           more commingled with the white population, and promise
19    2,   20|           its picturesque lines of white houses at many different
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