Part, chapter

 1    1,    3|               river which bounded the horizon of the farm. Coming as a
 2    1,    4|             or look, to go beyond the horizon which bounded his Eden.~
 3    1,    5|               a mountain to bound the horizon?”~“And along its whole extent,”
 4    1,    6|            most distant points of the horizon, that the felling of this
 5    1,   10|              the green forests on the horizon.~The jangada took the center
 6    1,   11|         setting of the sun on a clear horizon, free from all haze, announced
 7    1,   15| sheet-lightning was observable on the horizon, but it came from a distant
 8    1,   16|             as the sun rose above the horizon, there appeared a party
 9    1,   17|            sun was already low on the horizon, and with the rapidity peculiar
10    1,   19|                The sun was low on the horizon, but an hour had still to
11    2,    6|           ahead, hiding a part of the horizon, and bounding the view a
12    2,   20|               on the left bank, a new horizon appeared in view. In place
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