Part, chapter

 1    1,    5|        north or south, themselves fed by smaller affluents without
 2    1,    5|          Canada.”~“A river which, fed by its myriad tributaries,
 3    1,    5| tributaries, which are themselves fed by subsidiary streams. There
 4    1,    5|           the great artery which, fed by numerous affluents, descends
 5    1,   12|    perhaps, than at Iquitos to be fed upon by the native mosquitoes,
 6    1,   12|         Iquitos, lodged, clothed, fed—in a word, took me in so
 7    1,   15|           white waters, which are fed by a great number of petty
 8    1,   16|          morning, across the lake fed by the black waters of the
 9    1,   16|        Europe could be raised and fed. These sand banks are considered
10    1,   16|          at Lake Apoara, which is fed by the black waters of the
11    1,   18|        and Lake Manaori, which is fed by a confused series of
12    2,   16|            This tributary, which, fed by a hundred affluents,
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