Part, chapter

1    1,    3|       had succeeded in life, a depth of sadness which even the
2    2,    8|       force by its decrease in depth, had often given him trouble.
3    2,   10|      ordinary conditions, at a depth of some twenty feet in water,
4    2,   10|   could hardly touch it at the depth, which was already great,
5    2,   10|       certain spots, where the depth of the river necessitated
6    2,   10| haulage cord, that he was at a depth of some sixty-five or seventy
7    2,   10|        now he had arrived at a depth of from eighty to a hundred
8    2,   20|    vandyked across the distant depth of sky. Neither Yaquita,
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