Part, chapter

 1    1,    5| gradient, without a mountain to bound the horizon?”~“And along
 2    1,    7| blackbirds, with orange plumage bound with brown; golden[-edged
 3    1,    8|     between them, and they were bound together by transverse beams,
 4    1,    8|       the fazenda. A huge liana bound all the parasites together;
 5    1,   10|        changes, which they were bound to follow, they had had
 6    1,   11|      clothed, with cotton bands bound round their things and stomachs.
 7    2,    6|         hardened as it was, was bound at the moment to trouble
 8    2,    7|         parting with it. He was bound to carry it always about
 9    2,    8|         of stones and old iron, bound round with a solid bar—were
10    2,   11|          The gunboat Santa Ana, bound for Manaos, had come up
11    2,   13|       the sense of the whole is bound to be summed up. Do you
12    2,   16|     ports; and if the ship were bound for one of the States of
13    2,   16|       excepting Manoel, who was bound to him by so many ties—would
14    2,   18|        the entrance, and with a bound threw himself into the judge
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