Part, chapter

 1    1,    2|     woods.~Unmistakably the sight of Torres did not inspire
 2    1,    2|   fingers at him, he caught sight of his precious case.~“The
 3    1,    2|   waited until he came into sight again, and at this game
 4    1,    2|  away, and when he had lost sight of them—~“Ah! he is about
 5    1,    4|    it for a day. Though the sight of the Amazon, with its
 6    1,    5|  all sides stretches out of sight, without a hill to give
 7    1,    7| tree; they all ran as well.~Sight the most unforeseen, and
 8    1,   10|    soon passed, and lost to sight behind a point on the left
 9    1,   15|     8th of July they caught sight of the village of San Antonio,
10    1,   16|    The stoppage was made in sight of the village of Coary,
11    1,   17|    my father comes into his sight.”~“Well, then,” exclaimed
12    1,   17|     promised to keep him in sight without doing anything to
13    2,    6|     ears.~Had Benito caught sight of Torres? What had he seen?
14    2,    7| never allowed to get out of sight; he was never left alone.
15    2,   10| unexplored, he never caught sight of the object of his search.
16    2,   10|     quite lost his power of sight and reason he became the
17    2,   20|  the river, Belem came into sight.~The arrival of the jangada
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