Part, chapter

 1    1,    2|      could alone stop him as he ran or climbed, but Torres possessed
 2    1,    2|     himself up to the chase. He ran at top speed, entangling
 3    1,    3|         distance to the east it ran along the bank of the larger
 4    1,    7|         And then when the liana ran down again to the ground
 5    1,    7|         toward a tree; they all ran as well.~Sight the most
 6    1,    9|         he went and he came, he ran down the bank and ran up
 7    1,    9|        he ran down the bank and ran up the plateau, he noted
 8    1,   10|      speed of the current which ran past it. There are also
 9    1,   10|        The young girl smilingly ran off.~“You will have an amiable
10    1,   17|         Indians and the negroes ran into their huts and cabins.
11    1,   17| alligators made a half turn and ran toward them.~A doze of buckshot
12    1,   17|       with a sweep of his tail, ran at him with open jaws.~At
13    2,    8|         in its chalky part, and ran perpendicularly down it
14    2,   12|         taking the document, he ran through it from beginning
15    2,   15| increased in Manaos as the time ran on; the affair was discussed
16    2,   18|       crowd, which opened as he ran, to dash to the prison,
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