Part, chapter

 1    1,    8|   was painted a light-ocher color, which reflected the heat
 2    1,    9|     chocolate so far as its color goes, which is reduced to
 3    1,   10|     went out to examine the color of the waters of this tributary,
 4    1,   14|    was a creature of a dark color, something like a large
 5    1,   14|   see that it is rather the color of sepia which pervades
 6    1,   15| storms. Large bats of ruddy color skimmed with their huge
 7    1,   15|   monkeys, sulphur-white in color, with cinnabar-red faces,
 8    1,   17|     and assume the brownish color with which we are familiar.
 9    1,   18|   and phenicopters of every color, enlivened the temporary
10    2,    1|  destroy every bit of local color in this central portion
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