Part, chapter

1    1,    1|      sols of Peru, worth, say, double; some Chilian escudos, worth
2    1,    3|   fazenda, and blacks to about double the number, who were not
3    1,    8|      the Old World.~Above this double row of trunks and beams
4    1,    8|  fellow—what one might call a “double right-hander”—that is to
5    1,    9|    kind of paste made from the double almond of the “paulliniasorbilis,”
6    2,   19| intended to terminate with the double marriage of Minha and Manoel
7    2,   20|     tell them the names of the double chain which gradually narrowed
8    2,   20|        duty of celebrating the double union which promised so
9    2,   20|      worthy family between the double ranks of the crew of the
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