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000-cabin | cabra-destr | detai-franz | fraud-jumbl | jumpi-pampe | panel-royal | rubbe-ticun | tide-zvdk
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1 2, 14| thirty-four contos, or about 2,500,000 francs, and so the formula 2 1, 17| clock on the evening of the 10th of August they put into 3 1, 10| Pevas on the evening of the 11th of June, and was moored 4 2, 19| 3425 134 3251 3432 513 4325 1343251 mvly fgsu zmqiz tlb qgyu 5 2, 19| les misérable 34325134325 13432513 4 3251 3432 513 43 251343251 6 1, 15| with a difficulty.~On the 13th of July, after having touched 7 1, 17| Four days later, on the 14th of August, the jangada passed 8 2, 20| Nhamundas, on which, in 1539, Orellana asserted he was 9 1, 5| arrived on the main river in 1540, ventured without a guide 10 2, 20| course of this day, the 15th of Octoberfour months and 11 1, 5| marvelous, reached the mouth.~In 1636 and 1637 the Portuguese 12 1, 5| reached the mouth.~In 1636 and 1637 the Portuguese Pedro Texeira 13 2, 1| the Spaniard Favella in 1645, rises in the very heart 14 2, 1| of a hill, on which, in 1669, a fortress, which has since 15 1, 14| Portuguese Carmelites about 1692, and afterward acquired 16 1, 1| The institution dates from 1722. At that period anti-slavery 17 1, 11| then,” said Manoel. “In 1741, at the time of the expedition 18 1, 5| forty-seven pirogues.~In 1743 La Condamine, after having 19 2, 1| Barra de Rio Negro. From 1757 to 1804 it was only part 20 1, 11| permission could be given. In 1765 Godin des Odonais, maddened 21 1, 11| earth and clay.~It was in 1770 that this mission was founded 22 1, 19| places in the world, for from 1807 to 1817 the annual return 23 1, 19| world, for from 1807 to 1817 the annual return was about 24 1, 12| civilizing advance.~It was in 1824, sixteen years after the 25 1, 5| been frequently visited.~In 1827 Lister-Maw, in 1834 and 26 1, 3| these circumstances that in 1830 Joam Garral became the new 27 1, 3| companions.~Manoel, born in 1832, was one year older than 28 1, 5| In 1827 Lister-Maw, in 1834 and 1835 Smyth, in 1844 29 1, 5| Lister-Maw, in 1834 and 1835 Smyth, in 1844 the French 30 1, 5| the Brazilian Valdez in 1840, the FrenchPaul Marcoy” 31 1, 5| 1834 and 1835 Smyth, in 1844 the French lieutenant in 32 2, 20| year, has become, since 1845, an important town of a 33 2, 1| Convent, burned down in 1850, of which only the ruins 34 2, 1| and a hospital erected in 1851. When with these is also 35 1, 5| that on the 31st of July, 1857, after numerous frontier 36 1, 5| whimsical painter Biard in 1859, Professor Agassiz in 1865 37 1, 5| Paul Marcoy” from 1848 to 1860, the whimsical painter Biard 38 1, 5| 1859, Professor Agassiz in 1865 and 1866, in 1967 the Brazilian 39 1, 5| Professor Agassiz in 1865 and 1866, in 1967 the Brazilian engineer 40 1, 5| Keller-Linzenger, and lastly, in 1879 Doctor Crevaux, have explored 41 1, 5| Agassiz in 1865 and 1866, in 1967 the Brazilian engineer Franz 42 1, 15| complete destruction.~On the 19th of July, at sunrise, the 43 1, 5| temperature does not drop below 25 degrees Centigrade, it never 44 2, 19| 432 513 4325 134 32513 43 251 3432 513 432513 syk rpl 45 2, 19| district diamantin, 3432513 43 251343251343251 34 32513432 513432513 hqsntzh 46 2, 1| south latitude, and 67° 27west longitude, reckoning 47 1, 5| mean temperature of from 28 degrees to 29 degrees, with 48 1, 5| temperature of from 28 degrees to 29 degrees, with a range of 49 2, 19| de 43 251343251 343251 34 325 134 32513432 51 34 Ph yjslyddf 50 2, 19| Ortega. 432 513 4325 134 32513 43 251 3432 513 432513 syk 51 1, 5| Centigrade, it never rises above 33 degrees, and this gives 52 2, 13| numbers 423, or 234, or 342.”~“Yes, that is it!” answered 53 2, 19| Joam Dacosta, 5134 3251 3425 134 3251 3432 513 4325 1343251 54 2, 19| diamants et de 43 251343251 343251 34 325 134 32513432 51 34 55 2, 19| cest moi, les misérable 34325134325 13432513 4 3251 3432 513 56 1, 14| following morning, that of the 3d of July, the jangada recommenced 57 2, 1| THE TOWN of Manaos is in 84south latitude, and 58 1, 1| from wild beasts.~On the 4th of May, 1852, it happened, 59 2, 14| thirty-four contos, or about 2,500,000 francs, and so the formula 60 2, 19| 343251 34 325 134 32513432 51 34 Ph yjslyddf dzxgas gz 61 2, 19| est donc pas Joam Dacosta, 5134 3251 3425 134 3251 3432 62 2, 19| convoi, 32513432513 432 5134325 134 32513432513 43 251343 63 2, 19| 251343251343251 34 32513432 513432513 hqsntzh hh nfepmqkyuuexkto 64 2, 1| 4south latitude, and 67° 27’ west longitude, reckoning 65 1, 15| existed.~In the morning of the 8th of July they caught sight 66 1, 17| imprudent! I repeat it, I am aafraid, though no positive fact 67 1, 5| and even delightful.”~The Abbé Durand has likewise testified 68 1, 3| there have made their way abgove the summits of the graceful 69 2, 13| up. Do you see anything abnormal?”~“Nothing.”~“There is, 70 2, 2| twenty-three years back for this abominable crime at Tijuco?”~“I do 71 2, 1| much of the precious metal abounding in this privileged locality 72 1, 10| June that the jangada was abreast the little island of Mango, 73 1, 10| cloudy greenish opal of absinthe. At the same time he corrected 74 2, 19| the adventurer, himself in absolute want, became his companion. 75 1, 10| Yes, my daughter; and I absolve you from your pride. Besides, 76 2, 14| combinations, which would absorb the life of a first-rate 77 1, 12| conducted without a large absorption of liquors drawn from the 78 2, 19| And so he also received abundant thanks.~Needless to say 79 1, 8| certain palm-tree growing very abundantly on the river banks, is in 80 1, 12| mixed race.~In place of accepting the breakfast of the sergeant, 81 1, 5| serves for its valley is accessible over its whole extent to 82 1, 2| accept as definite this accidental interruption to all his 83 1, 3| staff of the fazenda were accommodated—the servantsoffices, the 84 1, 6| different habitations for the accommodation of the crew, would become 85 1, 7| according to Humboldt, “accompanies man in the infancy of his 86 1, 20| robbery at Tijuco. He was the accomplice of the murderers of the 87 2, 19| bargain.~Torres died without accomplishing his work, and carried his 88 2, 19| who would not permit the accomplishment of that greatest of crimes, 89 2, 3| working, not at his trading accounts, but, without saying anything 90 1, 1| calculated with more or less accuracy, he could scarcely be supposed 91 1, 20| no start at the terrible accusations. Doubtless he wanted to 92 1, 20| Joam Garral. Everything accuses you in the proceedings that 93 1, 9| untrammeled, were not able to accustom themselves to the imprisonment 94 2, 15| discussed with unexampled acerbity. In the midst of this enthralment 95 1, 9| agreeable liquor of slightly acidulated taste, which is distilled 96 1, 3| bears the name of the Mar&acitc;non, and of which the bed 97 1, 3| did not wait so long to acknowledge what he owed to Joam Garral. 98 2, 3| was it? The official who acocmpanied the escort had perished 99 2, 18| he was in great haste to acquaint Judge Jarriquez with what 100 2, 17| at length pronounce his acquittal?~Yes, he still hoped. With 101 1, 2| agility of a clown who is acting the monkey, to hook on with 102 1, 6| never thought of.~Benito had actively assisted his father in the 103 1, 6| expedition he regained his former activity. His people rejoiced exceedingly 104 1, 4| the civil and religious acts, and the registers of the 105 1, 12| and a sergeant, who is the actual commandant of the place.~ 106 2, 3| the honest man suffered acutely, he might still have remained 107 2, 4| expression of surprising acuteness; his prominent nose, with 108 1, 14| who have become thorough adepts in its manufacture?~San 109 2, 19| them all. Touching were the adieus, but an engagement was made 110 1, 12| off with his gun into the adjoining woods. On this occasion 111 1, 5| short, the biggest and most admirable river system which we have 112 1, 18| ability was shown, and he was admirably seconded by his crew. The 113 1, 15| five hundred feet wide, and admired the legions of monkeys, 114 2, 12| extraordinary conditions, which the admirers of that strange genius can 115 1, 7| when his time comes, and he admires as much as we do all these 116 1, 18| branches, and the birds admiring themselves in the pellucid 117 2, 18| question had now become admissible. Nothing was more probable 118 1, 3| himself before an inclosure admitting of slight defense, and consisting 119 1, 14| blow-tube, have they not adopted the American costume of 120 1, 3| allowed, but who in return adore their mistresses. Quick, 121 1, 9| appearance of a small village got adrift, and, to tell the truth, 122 1, 1| formed a peculiar class of adventurers, principally composed of 123 1, 5| the descendants of the adventurous Orellana, whose vague but 124 2, 15| time in vain. It had been advertised that any solution should 125 1, 7| America, and to whom it is not advisable to get too near.~“After 126 1, 3| serious than her brother, affable, good-natured, and charitable, 127 2, 8| lips until I find it!”~This affirmation from the pilot was worth 128 1, 2| Manoel?”~Manoel nodded affirmatively.~“Well, gentlemen,” replied 129 1, 5| statements we are safe in affirming that the basin of the Amazon 130 2, 14| number of victims at the affray at Tijuco!~Nothing! All 131 1, 10| seem to you as if we were afloat on an island drifted quietly 132 1, 14| the climate, and without after-taste, and perfectly harmless. 133 2, 3| Joam Dacosta, convicted of aggravated and premeditated murder, 134 1, 9| to provide against their aggressions. The Indians along the river 135 1, 1| the rattlesnake (not an aggressive reptile, it is true, but 136 1, 7| last convulsions of his agony!~Benito threw himself on 137 1, 10| of the little place. An agouti and a cabiai, not to mention 138 1, 7| by lovers of venison, and agouties, which are the hares and 139 1, 1| brain, and the tobacco smoke agreeably mingled with the general 140 1, 7| striped with fringes of green, agrippina moths, ten inches long, 141 1, 11| and then threatened to run aground. Every one assisted in the 142 1, 7| opened his eyes and gave an “ahem!” so vigorous and unexpected 143 1, 15| They might have taken the Ahuaty Parana, a sort of natural 144 1, 4| without saying anything.~What ailed him? Why this hesitation 145 1, 16| island, playing several airs in a minor key. Another 146 1, 9| the imprisonment of the ajoupas, which agreed better with 147 2, 10| of the corpse still more alarming.~It was indeed the body 148 2, 3| relied entirely on Judge Albeiro, and his death was most 149 1, 17| Incisions are made into the alburnum of the seringueiras; below 150 2, 20| grew nearer.~On leaving Alemquer, situated on the left bank, 151 2, 12| composed of ciphers, letters, algebraic signs, asterisks, full-stops, 152 2, 4| WARRANT against Joam Dacosta, alias Joam Garral, had been issued 153 2, 12| analytical genius, Edgar Allan Poe?”~Judge Jarriquez herein 154 2, 1| perfect network of unpaved alleys, intersected every now and 155 1, 3| soon altered through the alliances which were entered into 156 2, 18| public interest, the law allows no appear to mercy.~Nothing 157 2, 12| Judge Jarriquez herein alluded to a story by the great 158 1, 7| a rusty weathercock the “alma de gato” or “soul of the 159 1, 7| come from the hand of the Almighty and belong to the world!”~“ 160 1, 9| paste made from the double almond of the “paulliniasorbilis,” 161 2, 12| men who think more easily aloud than to himself. “Let us 162 1, 16| get to Manaos, and vanish altogether when you reach Belem!”~“ 163 1, 12| of the sixteenth century, Alvarez Cabral, the pilot, took 164 1, 5| Manaos to the sea it is the Amasenas, or river of the Amazons, 165 1, 10| Omaguas and the mouth of the Ambiacu, the jangada arrived at 166 1, 10| enough to know them. The Americans are much more practical 167 2, 7| In this part of the two Americas, where executions under 168 1, 3| her from her father, were ample. What more could she have 169 2, 17| events, which had so cruelly amrred his life. And then, lost 170 1, 7| are absurd, if that will amuse you,” returned Minha. “Let 171 1, 2| humble quadruman, was simply amused at what would have revolted 172 1, 2| The jingling of the money amuses him. Oh, you thief! If I 173 2, 4| enigmas, charades, rebuses, anagrams, riddles, and such things, 174 2, 15| probably the most ingenious analysts in the world would have 175 2, 7| execution—all were remembered, analyzed, and commented on. An article 176 2, 1| extending to the islands of Anavilhanas; and in one of its indentations 177 1, 16| longer the courage of their ancestors.~At nightfall a five-holed 178 1, 15| Parani-Tapera, the raft was anchored at the entrance of the Lake 179 1, 11| three first tinklings of the Angelus escaped from the bell of 180 1, 5| will disappear. Before the Anglo-Saxon race Australians and Tasmanians 181 1, 2| was a proof of this. At an angular distance of more than eighty 182 2, 10| as if with some peculiar animation. Convulsive throbs made 183 1, 7| master-stroke in sporting annals, if within range there should 184 1, 9| principal habitation, with its annexeskitchen, offices, and cellars— 185 1, 20| confined himself, then, to announcing that he was going to Padre 186 1, 7| refuse; I will obey and annoy you. Come on!”~And so the 187 1, 19| for from 1807 to 1817 the annual return was about eighteen 188 1, 6| carpentry, and from them he annually drew considerable profits.~ 189 2, 12| of amusing problems, the answerer of charades, rebuses, logogryphs, 190 1, 14| which is plunged into the ant-hills whose insects form its principal 191 1, 7| across some tapirs, calledantas” in Brazil, diminutives 192 2, 18| he came from, and of his antecedents generally. Such information 193 1, 14| districts of peat, coal, and anthracite; or should we not rather 194 1, 1| from 1722. At that period anti-slavery ideas had entered the minds 195 2, 12| nor his people could have anticipated. In fact, as those who have 196 1, 16| functions, and besides no antidote is known to the poison, 197 1, 15| sight of the village of San Antonio, two or three little houses 198 1, 6| around him, Joam forgot the anxieties which appeared to trouble 199 2, 8| Manoel and Fragoso waited anxiously for Araujo’s reply.~The 200 | Anyhow 201 2, 4| other. It was from this apartment that Joam Dacosta, on this 202 1, 16| away from there at Lake Apoara, which is fed by the black 203 2, 17| document. Whether it were apocryphal or no, whether it were in 204 1, 2| fury, in his folly, Torres apostrophized the guariba. It would be 205 1, 20| The family, who were still appalled, respected the silence of 206 2, 18| neither g nor a.~And here appalling shouts arose in the streets; 207 1, 17| chatting and smoking with apparent indifference, walked about 208 1, 20| and I want to marry her!”~Apparently Joam Garral expected anything 209 1, 16| pirogue, and became, without appearing to be, the guard upon Torres.~ 210 1, 2| extremity of their caudal appendage possesses a perfect power 211 2, 20| with absolutely frantic applause. He gave his arm to Madame 212 1, 12| rapidly devoured between two applications of the curling-tongs.~But 213 2, 14| here.~The same observation applies to the words arrayal and 214 1, 6| would scarcely leave an appreciable void.~The superintendent 215 1, 7| Indians and Indian women, who appreciate them very much.~But poor 216 2, 19| constraint, and released from all apprehension, would take leave of their 217 1, 6| completion. He commenced his apprenticeship to the trade of a fazender, 218 1, 7| whose branches have been appropriately compared by Agassiz to long 219 2, 20| fellow, fully justified its appropriateness. “If it were not for the 220 2, 16| of the Atlantic.~Araujo’s approval was most welcome to the 221 2, 2| us go.”~Araujo, with an approving nod, began his preparations 222 1, 5| junction of the Paro and the Apurimac—an assertion which is now 223 1, 3| the son of a merchant in P:ara, was pursuing his studies 224 1, 12| contain the Archipelago of the Aramasa Islands. Hereabouts are 225 2, 12| arrived at the mission of Aranas at the moment that Torres, 226 1, 14| had passed the island of Araria, the Archipelago of the 227 1, 11| between the islands of Arava, Cuyari, and Urucutea. The 228 2, 12| which depend only on an arbitrary disposition of the letters, 229 1, 5| after having measured an arc of the meridian at the equator, 230 1, 6| high, buttressed by natural arches, which, starting from three 231 2, 1| carefully respected by the architects who out of the old city 232 1, 12| Fragoso were of every order of architecture—buckles, rings, clubs, tresses, 233 1, 4| about something which we ardently wish, and which will make 234 1, 16| the islands, in the Bay of Arenapo, the mouth of the Japura, 235 2, 4| of the examination or the arguments for the defense. Like a 236 1, 7| extremity, like the thread of Ariadne, as far almost as that which 237 1, 5| Chucuito, in the northeast of Arica.~Such are the principal 238 1, 13| Mr. Torres, if I remember aright; it was you who, in the 239 1, 9| bow regular warehouses had arisen, containing the goods which 240 1, 12| Don Juan, whom the French armies had chased from Portugal.~ 241 1, 9| juice of the palm, and the aromatic flavor of this “assais” 242 2, 12| desk—a kind of reveille to arouse his dormant faculties.~“ 243 2, 12| instinct of the analyst aroused. Here, before his very eyes, 244 1, 8| us, you must allow us to arrange our dwelling to please ourselves. 245 1, 19| enough to visit the diamond arraval?”~“Never,” dryly replied 246 1, 12| villages of the Javary.~A long array of anxious ones formed itself 247 2, 5| in time. Once the order arrives no delay will be possible, 248 1, 6| coffee-shrubs, sugar-canes, arrowroot, maize, and peanuts would 249 2, 20| entrance of a creek behind the arsenal. That was to be its last 250 2, 6| was strong, active, and artful, so that against an adversary 251 2, 4| verdict, neither to apply the articles of the penal code nor to 252 1, 12| the encouragements of the artist to the crowd!~“Look here! 253 1, 12| its head the intelligent artist-king Dom Pedro.~“What is your 254 1, 8| imagination and a little artistic feeling the result was highly 255 1, 3| in the sciences, in the arts, was a stranger to him. 256 1, 17| mouths of the rivers Camara, Aru, and Yuripari, whose waters 257 2, 2| he asked, “did Torres ascertain that my father had been 258 2, 3| who had no action to be ashamed of, and whom a great injustice 259 1, 5| heats of countries like Asia and Africa, which are crossed 260 1, 16| Are you going to Manaos?” askee he of the Indian who commanded 261 1, 7| should come a “tamandoa assa,” a kind of large and very 262 2, 6| would have better suited an assassin’s son!”~“Torres!” exclaimed 263 2, 19| zqq ehx gkfndrxu ju gi~lassassinat des soldats qui escortaient 264 2, 6| I should have thought an assassination would have better suited 265 2, 4| sir.”~“And you persist in asserting that you only left Iquitos 266 1, 18| family, and was even less assiduous toward Minha. There seemed 267 2, 14| sentence at the Villa Rica assizes, the date fixed for the 268 2, 15| to speak, to think, or to associate one idea with another.~Suddenly 269 2, 15| be pitied. By a natural association of ideas, he also joined 270 1, 17| immediately obtained; it assumes a grayish-yellow tinge and 271 1, 1| shall not be far wrong in assuming that the man with the cryptogram 272 2, 12| letters, algebraic signs, asterisks, full-stops, and commas, 273 1, 20| his hands, was enough to astonish him. He had expected a stormy 274 1, 8| are, it must be admitted, astonishing workmen. They have only 275 1, 11| by a very distinguished astronomer, Godin des Odonais. Godin 276 2, 14| work at it in a fury. He ate no more; he slept no more! 277 1, 5| whose whole extent the atmospheric currents can traverse unchecked.~ 278 2, 18| the document to tear it to atoms.~Fragoso seized his hands 279 1, 15| pools like fish-pools, or attaching them to a stake by a cord 280 1, 2| not hesitate to use when attacking the ounce and other wild 281 2, 9| water it displaces, the body attains the proper conditions for 282 1, 4| grand ceremonies and the attendance of the whole staff of the 283 1, 6| and to this matter he had attended entirely himself.~Yaquita 284 1, 20| Joam Garral and his family, attired for the ceremony, were coming 285 1, 14| They are particularly attractive to those animals,” replied 286 1, 3| himself? Was this disposition attributable to some secret grief? Herein 287 1, 14| or should we not rather attribute it to the enormous quantity 288 2, 1| employ. This fact is to be attributed to the number of its public 289 2, 4| tattooed a slightly more audible march, he made a sign with 290 2, 4| out of range of ordinary auditory apparatus; his fingers unceasingly 291 2, 9| cellular tissues, the volume augments and the weight decreases, 292 2, 1| extreme regret, for the auriferous deposits which had deceived 293 2, 15| that rigid Puritan, that austere worker, whose whole life 294 1, 5| Before the Anglo-Saxon race Australians and Tasmanians have vanished. 295 2, 19| document had been recognized as authentic. The handwriting was really 296 2, 4| my possession, and of the authenticity of which there can be no 297 2, 15| reproduced it in facsimile. Autograph copies were spread about 298 1, 10| struck the water with an automatic movement very curious to 299 1, 5| But the mouths of these auxiliary waters Joam Garral and his 300 1, 9| that of Joam Garral’s, had availed themselves enthusiastically 301 2, 6| it is for me alone to avenge my father, and as everyhthing 302 1, 10| then——”~“As they number the avenues and streets of their towns,” 303 1, 10| follows from this that the average speed of the current cannot 304 2, 14| the crime of Tijuco now averred that he was not guilty, 305 1, 11| asked Manoel. “I dare avow that they have not yet found 306 1, 7| fellow, who was now wide awake, was told about what had 307 1, 17| without doing anything to awaken his suspicions.~During the 308 1, 9| throughout Brazil; “candirus,” awkward to capture, but good to 309 1, 6| a few hours beneath the axes of the woodmen; but there 310 1, 11| at the extremity of the axis, which measures more than 311 1, 10| the mouths of the rivers Bacali, Chochio, Pucalppa, on the 312 1, 7| some of the wine palms, “baccabas,” whose branches have been 313 1, 1| provided his food, which in the backwoods cost him naught. A few reis 314 1, 10| Joam Garral and his people bade good-by to the superintendent 315 1, 5| globe. Its true source still baffles our explorers. Numbers of 316 2, 14| faculties would lose their balance. He jumped about, and twisted 317 1, 9| is extracted a precious balsam for wounds; bales of dyeing 318 1, 11| continued Manoel, “came to Rio Bamba, at the south of Quito, 319 1, 11| hang their nests on the bank-side reeds; “niambus,” a kind 320 1, 9| they gather them. Tonquin bans, known in Brazil under the 321 1, 9| children from birth; he had baptized them, educated them, and 322 1, 2| known in Brazil as the “barbado,” was of large size. The 323 1, 14| and is derived from the barbarous custom of the native mothers 324 1, 7| was one of those wandering barbers who travel on the banks 325 2, 5| any hope of resuming his bargaining under the previous conditions. 326 2, 20| brigantines, brigs, and barks, which form its commercial 327 1, 18| the right the island of Baroso, formed by a furo of that 328 2, 1| formerly called Moura, or Barra de Rio Negro. From 1757 329 2, 20| thousands. This immense barricade of Marajo is the natural 330 1, 16| domes, which served as the barriers of immense pasture grounds, 331 1, 6| for building purposes; “barrigudos,” measuring a couple of 332 1, 14| difficulty in doing a little bartering, and adding slightly to 333 1, 8| and imagination.~From the basement to the roof it was literally 334 1, 11| pincushion of the calves of the bather when he imprudently ventures 335 2, 20| mouth of the Rio Trombetas, bathing with its black waters the 336 1, 15| approaching storms. Large bats of ruddy color skimmed with 337 1, 6| it the Indians make their battle-axes; “jacarandas,” more precious 338 1, 3| mimosas, fig-sycamores, bauhinias, and paullinias, whose trunks 339 1, 1| most venomous); neither the bawling voice of the horned toad, 340 1, 9| to avoid, the creeks or bays which afforded favorable 341 1, 14| thousands those long strings of beads which are made from the 342 1, 7| shrieks and whistles. The long beak of the toucan stood out 343 2, 11| body, torn open by their beaks, gave forth the gases which 344 1, 2| three paces off.~On his bearded face was pictured a grin, 345 2, 14| who had no idea of being beaten, picked up the paper. What 346 1, 3| surroundings, in the midst of the beauteous nature of the tropics, the 347 1, 3| insensible to the merits and the beauty of this excellent girl, 348 1, 7| with brown; golden[-edged beccaficos; and “sabias,” black as 349 | becomes 350 1, 8| arranged to contain several bedrooms and a large dining-hall. 351 2, 18| Torres had watched at his bedside when he died.~This was all 352 1, 11| gayly chatted away till bedtime.~“Ah! our splendid river! 353 1, 7| their meat, superior far to beef, and above all for the protuberance 354 1, 7| leaves for wings, maribunda bees, like living emeralds set 355 1, 1| a better education than befitted his present condition. One 356 | beforehand 357 1, 2| his precious case.~“The beggar!” he said. “If he has not 358 2, 17| up his hands to him; he begged him:~“But this order, father,” 359 1, 11| always ready to intervene on behalf of Lina.~“The ‘trunk of 360 1, 6| the staff of the farm.~In beholding every one happy around him, 361 1, 3| the first place, then, it behooves us to name an old negress, 362 2, 17| the presence of the two beings whom Joam so dearly loved 363 1, 7| bridge of lianas, made of “bejucos,” twined together by their 364 1, 11| Never, Mr. Benito!”~“She believes it!” shouted Minha.~“There 365 2, 14| powerless!”~His hand seized a bell-pull hanging near his table. 366 1, 1| and sonorous croak of the bellowing frog, which, though it cannot 367 1, 10| traveling with all one’s belongings.”~“And without any fatigue,” 368 1, 3| and charitable, she was beloved by all. On this subject 369 1, 2| carried in addition, in their belts, a sort of dagger-knife, 370 2, 15| Tijuco, and that it had ben written by the hand of the 371 1, 20| fixedly at his accuser without bending his head.~“Will you reply?” 372 2, 2| cleverly profiting by the bendings of the current, which were 373 1, 10| stoppages occasioned by the bends in the river, the numerous 374 1, 3| the negroes coming from Benguela, the Congo, or the Gold 375 1, 11| their last evening notes—“bentivis,” who hang their nests on 376 1, 6| forest, with long bare stems, bereft of their crowns, through 377 1, 7| with panicles of whitish berries.~But the halts! the shouts 378 1, 7| gigantic chestnut, the “Bertholletia excelsa,” to some of the 379 1, 6| Garral had not even had to bestir himself in the demolition 380 2, 20| liana?” and he wound up by bestowing the name on the young mulatto 381 2, 20| but it would also have bet with the bar of the prororoca, 382 1, 14| appropriate for a stable of Bethlehem than for an edifice consecrated 383 2, 17| escape under conditions which betokened almost superhuman courage, 384 2, 14| foliage of a mimosa tree, betook themselves to flight. Then 385 2, 11| single exterior movement betraying that he still lived.~Was 386 1, 18| not any more couples to betroth on the raft?”~“I do not 387 1, 9| regularly indulged in.~For beverages they had a good store of 388 2, 6| bite, Benito Dacosta, and beware of the wounds!”~And then 389 2, 19| 32513432513 43 251343 ocytdxvksbx bhu ypohdvy rym huhpuydkjox 390 1, 5| 1860, the whimsical painter Biard in 1859, Professor Agassiz 391 2, 1| Europeanization in a way which bids fair to destroy every bit 392 1, 5| complete!”~“In short, the biggest and most admirable river 393 2, 6| But has he settled his bill, as a man would who has 394 1, 10| dive as to swim or fly; a bird with a disagreeable cry, 395 2, 6| answered Torres. “But I bite, Benito Dacosta, and beware 396 1, 2| stones at him again, and bits of roots and everything 397 1, 1| filled it with the coarse and bitter tobacco of Brazil, of which 398 1, 18| Huarandeina, and other black-watered lagoons. This water system 399 1, 7| blew from branch to branch; blackbirds, with orange plumage bound 400 2, 10| this cavity was also drawn blank, he would have to suspend 401 1, 15| instinct which leads them to bleed you in the places where 402 1, 12| which it bears the name, and bleonging to the parish of St. Paul, 403 1, 17| and left him defenseless.~Blinded by the blood, the animal 404 2, 10| and Benito recognized the bloated, ashy features of the scoundrel 405 1, 11| recognizable! I fancy these bloodthirsty diptera guard the Brazilian 406 1, 8| its enormous clusters of bloom.~As a delicate piece of 407 1, 7| though they had been genuine blossoms—nestors with blue wings 408 1, 14| macaw feathers, bow, and blow-tube, have they not adopted the 409 1, 15| Besides, very soon loud blowings indicated that the spouting 410 2, 10| view becomes exceedingly blurred, but here the waters seemed 411 2, 20| of reeds. Porto de Mos, Boa Vista, and Gurupa, whose 412 1, 8| walls remained bare. The boards were hidden beneath hangings 413 1, 12| with the leaves of the “boiassupalm placed round a central 414 2, 14| exploded like an overheated boiler under the tension of its 415 1, 8| weather-boarding, saturated with boiling resin, and thus rendered 416 1, 19| could gain a fortune by one bold stroke. But perhaps you 417 1, 11| resemble the tiger, whose boldness, strength, and cunning they 418 1, 8| pillows, mattresses, and bolsters filled with that fresh and 419 1, 18| attached to them by so many bonds of gratitude.~So Lina, who 420 1, 12| fish-bones, and some fine bone or copper ornaments, which 421 1, 5| years later Humboldt and Bonpland completed the valuable work 422 2, 10| it were in the dreadful booming which found an echo in the 423 1, 5| by high mountains which border its banks, but a huge plain, 424 1, 9| islands and in the forests bordering on the stream. The river 425 1, 5| to which the ebbs, the bores, and the eddies of other 426 2, 9| of a diving-dress. Let us borrow, or hire, or buy, at any 427 2, 1| large province of Amazones, borrowing its latest name from an 428 2, 14| and for the same reason.~“Bother the number!” exclaimed the 429 1, 2| that of all his hopes.~“Botheration!” said he.~And at the moment, 430 1, 9| commander-in-chief. Several hundred bottles of sherry, port, and letubal 431 1, 5| lieutenant in command of the “Boulonnaise,” the Brazilian Valdez in 432 2, 6| part of the horizon, and bounding the view a few hundred paces 433 1, 10| flows, which is almost a boundless plain, the gradient of the 434 1, 11| frontier!” murmured he, bowing his head by an involuntary 435 2, 1| diamond pins in their necktie bows; and women in loud, imposing 436 2, 14| gratifying as the others——~het    bph    pa.    ic.~“Confound 437 1, 8| tangled twigsturned over the brackets, under the ridges, on the 438 2, 12| not refuse to direct our brains to unravel it.”~Joam Dacosta 439 2, 1| seem to be merely the Upper Branco, a tributary of the Rio 440 2, 13| An innocent man has been branded as guilty, and Joam Dacosta 441 1, 2| noiselessly approached, brandishing a study cudgel, which, wielded 442 1, 12| warming in the corner in a brasier.~And then the encouragements 443 1, 19| who defended themselves bravely, but were all massacred, 444 1, 15| have a great reputation for bravery.”~The jangada continued 445 1, 12| pleasantly—before a circle of braves and squaws will have formed 446 2, 14| him at this moment, after braving the formal defenses which 447 1, 12| CHAPTER XII~FRAGOSO AT WORK~“BRAZA” (burning embers) is a word 448 1, 9| greatly appreciated by the Brazilans, and of it there were on 449 1, 11| so often made to replace bread in Brazil, composed of the 450 1, 7| parts, in places where the breaks were tolerably spacious, 451 2, 15| have plunged it into his breast had not the judge and Manoel 452 1, 7| coleopters, valagumas with breastplates of bronze, and green elytræ, 453 2, 11| distracted, called to him, breathed into him, and endeavored 454 1, 7| Manoel! cried Lina. “He breathes again! His heart beats; 455 1, 13| after the manner of his brethren, said:~“What can I do for 456 2, 20| most fascinating in her bride’s costume, and then came 457 2, 1| occasionally crossed by wooden bridges. In a few places these iguarapes 458 2, 20| and the flotilla of its brigantines, brigs, and barks, which 459 1, 16| and shutters painted a bright green, standing in the middle 460 2, 20| flotilla of its brigantines, brigs, and barks, which form its 461 1, 2| kind, a sort of huge almost brilliant all over, and with a kernel 462 1, 11| star, on the south the four brilliants of the Southern Cross.~The 463 1, 2| very thing,” said Torres briskly, catching hold of the case 464 2, 6| the clumps of reeds which bristled round its base.~There was, 465 1, 15| products of Normandy or Brittany, does not take less every 466 1, 6| constructed on a larger scale, of broader design, and leaving on each 467 1, 8| in large folds like the brocades and damasks and softest 468 1, 7| valagumas with breastplates of bronze, and green elytræ, with 469 1, 7| thickets, underwood, rocks, brooks, torrents, to let nothing 470 1, 4| fought under that thoughtful brow. Yaquita got anxious, and 471 1, 3| years old. A lovely girl, brunette, and with large blue eyes, 472 1, 6| ground of the creepers, brushwood, weeds, and arborescent 473 1, 8| little pasturage with the brutes! As for this liana, it is 474 1, 17| attack them at once, the bst thing they could do was 475 1, 14| manage the whole—“navigar de bubina,” as this kind of navigation 476 1, 2| waistcoats, or rather tunics, buckled in at the waist, and more 477 1, 12| every order of architecture—buckles, rings, clubs, tresses, 478 1, 17| ran toward them.~A doze of buckshot to the head, close to the 479 2, 20| vigilandas, pirogues of all builds, and small coasters from 480 1, 16| euphorbiaceæ and the juice of a bulbous strychnos, not to mention 481 1, 8| the load water-line. The bulk was enormous, as we must 482 1, 1| though it cannot equal the bull in size, can surpass him 483 1, 14| and no less than three bullets were necessary to bring 484 1, 18| powerful enough to crush a bullock. Have there not been met 485 1, 11| strong enough to lift the bunting.~At eight oclock the three 486 2, 11| to the bank to await its burial.~But at the same moment 487 1, 11| lost her shildren; she had buried them with her own hands! 488 1, 2| trunk, to disappear under a bush, might induce the guariba 489 1, 11| natives with ruddy skins, bushy hair, and striped designs 490 1, 9| In addition, the young butler had stored away certain 491 1, 7| shimmering watered silk, leilu butterflies reflexed with gold and striped 492 1, 10| trees, whose fantastic roots buttress them to the bank like the 493 1, 6| hundred and fifty feet high, buttressed by natural arches, which, 494 2, 6| their cabarets, and even the bystanders, without any one being able 495 2, 6| tavern-keepers in their cabarets, and even the bystanders, 496 1, 10| little place. An agouti and a cabiai, not to mention a dozen 497 1, 10| agoutis, peccaries, and cabiais, the birds flew in flocks 498 1, 6| species adapted for joinery, cabinet work, ship building, and 499 1, 6| either in carpentry or cabinet-work. There, shooting up like 500 2, 20| heads for natural history cabinets.~To what a superb size the


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