Part, chapter

 1    1,    3|     powers.~Magalhaës had no cause to regret his generous action.
 2    1,    7|    and this time not without cause.~“Have we got to the end
 3    1,    9|  raft, Padre Passanha had no cause to regret the poverty-stricken
 4    1,    9|  belem, and he had never had cause to repent it.~It is as well
 5    1,    9|    through some inexplicable cause the waters of the Amazon
 6    1,   12|    fishing-nets, and are the cause of some trade. To conclude,
 7    1,   15|     to move their wings, and cause an agreeable freshness which
 8    1,   16|      girls there was another cause of wonderment, quite feminine
 9    1,   16|      blow-tubes arrows which cause incurable wounds, even at
10    2,    2|   were afraid to make common cause with him. We must go to
11    2,    3|    at the trial. He took the cause to heart and made it his
12    2,    4| doubted of the justice of my cause. He did all he could to
13    2,    6|     The defender of a sacred cause, his coolness was unruffled,
14    2,   19|   could I ever have been the cause of so much happiness?”~So
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