Part, chapter

 1    1,    1|         paper and shaking it with terrible meaning: “Before to-morrow
 2    1,   16|          with it.~“It is indeed a terrible poison,” said Manoel. “It
 3    1,   19|          about eight years old, a terrible drama happened at Tijuco,
 4    1,   20|       Garral made no start at the terrible accusations. Doubtless he
 5    1,   20|      son-in-law the weight of the terrible situation which he had had
 6    2,    3|     defend him!~Yes, the blow was terrible indeed. His lot was cast,
 7    2,    7|         revived the memory of the terrible crime of Tijuco, which had
 8    2,    7|        for an instant during this terrible night, attempted to distract
 9    2,   10|    descent of the river, and what terrible trials would have been avoided!~
10    2,   15|     arrest of his father, and the terrible events of which it had been
11    2,   15|      moment of weakness.~The most terrible blow which had struck him
12    2,   17| unflinchingly in the midst of his terrible trial, they recovered a
13    2,   17|          he had not confessed his terrible secret.~The chain of events
14    2,   19|       read from the document this terrible history.~And from that moment
15    2,   20|        bar of the prororoca, that terrible eddy which, for the three
16    2,   20|           the visitations of this terrible phenomenon, and its tides
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