Part, chapter

 1    1,    5|         flowing out along its own canal into the Atlantic.”~“And
 2    1,   11|          or rather the “furo,” or canal, which communicates with
 3    1,   14|      properly speaking, is a true canal, for it discharges its waters
 4    1,   15|         Parana, a sort of natural canal, which goes off a little
 5    1,   16|         or is reduced to a narrow canal, scarcely deep enough to
 6    1,   16|      started at dawn, passing the canal of Yucura, belonging to
 7    2,   16|          into the Rio Negro. This canal afforded an easy way of
 8    2,   16|           foot of the wall to the canal side was hardly a hundred
 9    2,   16|          the Rio Negro, enter the canal, and, crossing the waste
10    2,   16|           the pirogue, follow the canal into the Rio Negro, descend
11    2,   16|   returned on board by way of the canal bank, which led along the
12    2,   16|           take the pirogue up the canal without attracting any notice,
13    2,   16|         men when they reached the canal at the appointed time and
14    2,   17|         is waiting for you on the canal not a hundred yards off.
15    2,   20|        lower branch, known as the Canal of Breves, which is the
16    2,   20| frequently rage along this Breves Canal.~A few days afterward the
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