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1502 1, 19| also for the smugglers who fraudulently export it. But the work 1503 2, 14| two elapsed.~Bobo was a freed negro, who was the privileged 1504 1, 1| principally composed of freedmen and deserters—of not very 1505 1, 1| grasped and applied them. That freedom was a right, that the very 1506 1, 11| the expedition of the two Frenchmen, Bouguer and La Condamine, 1507 1, 5| added Benito, “that it freshens the sea water for an immense 1508 1, 3| uniting in the closest of friendships, and they became inseparable 1509 1, 18| quite recovered from her fright, and her eyes and smiles 1510 1, 7| leagues being not too long to frighten them.~Neither Joam Garral 1511 1, 7| and unexpected that Lina, frightened, replied to his cry with 1512 1, 7| with gold and striped with fringes of green, agrippina moths, 1513 1, 19| ninety leagues from Terro de Frio.”~“At a stroke their fortune 1514 1, 2| looking-glass. The monkey, with the frivolity peculiar to his species, 1515 1, 1| sonorous croak of the bellowing frog, which, though it cannot 1516 1, 7| lacework of the drooping fronds.~“Well, Manoel,” said Minha, “ 1517 1, 14| national fashion, with a frontlet of macaw feathers, bow, 1518 2, 2| stiff-stalked reeds calledfroxas,” of which the Indians make 1519 2, 8| that their search had been fruitless. However, she advanced toward 1520 2, 15| could discover the cipher so fruitlessly sought after—and read the 1521 2, 16| capture could be easily frustrated; they could reach the interior 1522 2, 4| which he had so worthily fulfilled. He laid stress only on 1523 2, 7| and that he, instead of fulfilling the wishes of the dying 1524 2, 12| algebraic signs, asterisks, full-stops, and commas, is submitted 1525 1, 17| of its peculiar resins, fumigate it over a fire of the nuts 1526 2, 14| his table. The bell rang furiously, and the magistrate strode 1527 1, 16| tangled system of lakes and furos of the Rio Zapura, and on 1528 1, 6| of the Amazon was not yet furrowed by the numberless steam 1529 1, 8| spots, and thick monkey furs of exquisite fleeciness. 1530 1, 2| Indians especially make more fuss about the monkey than any 1531 1, 1| regular features, and decided gait, his face was tanned with 1532 1, 19| To be sure, Miss Minha,” gallantly replied Fragoso; “rather 1533 2, 11| America they are known as gallinazos, and their voracity is unparalleled. 1534 1, 9| little more than half a gallon), which would probably be 1535 1, 9| demijohns, holding half a dozen gallons each, of excellenttafia,” 1536 1, 16| 1759, and which General Gama placed forever under Brazilian 1537 1, 11| the planks of the raft, gamboling at the bow and stern, and 1538 1, 15| who give themselves up to games, dancing, and drinking; 1539 1, 11| taken—“pacos,” “surubis,” “gamitanas,” of exquisite flavor, and 1540 1, 6| and leaving on each side a gangway for the rowers: or “jangada,” 1541 1, 7| felling-sword cut a deep gap, and the group passed in. 1542 1, 6| underwood, and opened large gaps into the densest portions 1543 1, 8| our raft into a floating garden?”~“Would you like a forest, 1544 1, 14| which forms an unbroken garland of green from one end of 1545 1, 7| round the trunks, sometimes garlanding the branches, here jumping 1546 1, 1| not over elaborately, his garments bore witness to long and 1547 1, 14| about the position of the Garrals at Iquitos, the sentiments 1548 2, 12| phy; further on the word gas. Halloo! ujugi. Does that 1549 2, 18| which opened one of the town gates.~There, in the midst of 1550 1, 9| spare the stems when they gather them. Tonquin bans, known 1551 1, 13| seeing all t his native gathering, advanced toward the inn.~ 1552 1, 7| weathercock the “alma de gato” or “soul of the cat,” a 1553 1, 9| the points of the river gauge, and shouted “Hurrah!” as 1554 1, 7| heights there appeared the “gaviao,” the large white-headed 1555 1, 14| Did he not owe to this gay companion the idea of taking 1556 1, 14| come to the knowledge of geographers.~On the 30th of June the 1557 1, 8| necessary in regard to the geography of this immense body of 1558 1, 18| From the province of Minas Geraes.”~“And you were born——”~“ 1559 2, 4| he would assuredly have gesticulated had it been movable; his 1560 1, 8| the edge of their tools gets absolutely jagged; yet they 1561 2, 19| dzxgas gz zqq ehx gkfndrxu ju gi~l’assassinat des soldats 1562 1, 16| lake as the setting sun gilded it with its rays; then they 1563 2, 4| of the past; his piercing gimlet-like eyes, with their expression 1564 1, 10| drooping leaves! And the girdle of reeds which encircles 1565 1, 18| forty-seven feet, and whose girth is that of a hogshead?~Had 1566 2, 12| in the first place on the gist of the cryptogram as contained 1567 2, 19| yjslyddf dzxgas gz zqq ehx gkfndrxu ju gi~l’assassinat des soldats 1568 2, 19| hqsntzh hh nfepmqkyuuexkto gz gkyuumfv ijdqdpzjq~out, moi seul, 1569 1, 6| GARRAL family were in high glee. The magnificent journey 1570 2, 10| pieces of a broken mirror glimmered through the waters. At the 1571 1, 2| between the branches just glinted on the case, the polished 1572 2, 10| grains could be counted glittering like luminous dust.~Benito 1573 1, 4| see the Amazon in all its glory throughout its course through 1574 1, 7| with slender, graceful, and glossy stems; and cacao-trees, 1575 1, 20| came out alone; his face glowed with generous resolution.~ 1576 1, 11| night comes on to dim their glowing colors.~On the jangada every 1577 2, 1| dome-like parasol above its gnarled branches.~The private houses 1578 2, 1| prevalent in these partsGod-the-Father Street, God-the-Son Street, 1579 2, 1| God-the-Son Street, and God-the-Holy Ghost Street!~In the west 1580 2, 1| the greedy scrutiny of the gold-seekers turned out to be only worthless 1581 2, 19| become of Fragoso?~Well, the good-hearted fellow was covered with 1582 1, 17| you.”~Benito, generally so good-humored, stopped as he looked at 1583 1, 8| straightforward, frank, and good-looking as she was. Their friendship 1584 2, 5| that he will consent to good-naturedly hand over to you the document 1585 1, 17| had come to bid the family good-night, had gone back to his cabin.~ 1586 1, 7| rarity, so appreciated by the gourmands for their meat, superior 1587 1, 16| Manoel, “with your simple gown and straw hat, you are better 1588 2, 20| rivers of the province of Goyaz, mingle with those of the 1589 1, 6| in its skin, and so close grained that of it the Indians make 1590 2, 10| reflector, and the very grains could be counted glittering 1591 1, 3| daughter. Benito and Minha, the grandchildren of the old Portuguese, became 1592 1, 18| described. Duplicates of grandeur, terminated above and below 1593 1, 3| became worthy of their grandfather, children worthy of Joam 1594 1, 15| Amazon appears under a truly grandiose aspect, but its course is 1595 2, 6| wounds!”~And then again grasping his manchetta, he put himself 1596 1, 10| with its carpet of russet grasses tinted by the sun, formed 1597 1, 7| unforeseen, and little adapted to gratify the eyes!~A man, hanging 1598 1, 18| them by so many bonds of gratitude.~So Lina, who was to remain 1599 1, 4| going to Belem!”~With a grave face, and without speaking 1600 2, 10| His heavy shoes made the gravel on the bed crunch beneath 1601 1, 17| already mine.”~“Manoel,” gravely answered Benito, “I share 1602 1, 11| the route were marked with graves! Madame des Odonais reached 1603 1, 11| thoroughly impregnated with the gravy of meat and tomato yelly; 1604 1, 2| sahuis, horned sapajous, gray-coated monos, sagouins which seem 1605 1, 17| immediately obtained; it assumes a grayish-yellow tinge and solidifies. The 1606 2, 20| risk of entanglement, it grazed the branches of the mangliers, 1607 1, 12| True, it was only a little grease, with which he had mixed 1608 1, 10| Minha. One single species of grebe, which is uneatable, found 1609 2, 20| tributary, the Tapajos, with its greenish-gray waters descending from the 1610 1, 7| shoots and branchlets of the grenadilla and the vine.~And when the 1611 1, 4| Minha does not wish to grieve Madame Valdez by getting 1612 1, 11| if I were not afraid of grieving you—for it is a very sad 1613 2, 19| the secret which had so grievously darkened his life. He gave 1614 1, 2| watching him with violent grimaces, as if he would like to 1615 1, 2| to wear a mask on their grimacing faces—the guariba is without 1616 1, 14| with his long tail and grizzly hair; with his pointed snout, 1617 1, 9| liquid covering.~A certain groaning arose among the planks of 1618 1, 9| ground.~For an hour the groanings increased. The joists grated 1619 2, 5| presumptions of my innocence grounded on the dignity, propriety, 1620 1, 16| there were no touchings or groundings.~The next day the jangada 1621 1, 8| ramicles of a certain palm-tree growing very abundantly on the river 1622 2, 14| and gave utterance to a growl, at the noise of which a 1623 1, 9| like a long black radish, grows in clumps like potatoes. 1624 1, 7| enough for the vegetable growth, whether it be large or 1625 2, 19| mvly fgsu zmqiz tlb qgyu gsqe uvb nrcc edgruzb~injustement 1626 1, 15| dedicated to Notre Dame de Guadaloupe, the Black Virgin of Mexico. 1627 1, 5| and the Pastuca; and the Guallaga comes in from the right 1628 1, 7| which produce caoutchouc, “gualtes,” noble palm-trees, with 1629 1, 7| panthers, leopards, jaguars, guepars, or cougars, called indifferently 1630 2, 8| nor the boats, she had guessed the search on which they 1631 2, 6| had lost; “you were the guest of my father, you threatened 1632 1, 5| France and Brazil, about the Guiana boundary, the course of 1633 1, 5| Venezuela, and the four GuianasEnglish, French, Dutch and 1634 2, 16| this tributary under the guidance of the pilot, reach the 1635 1, 11| the smallpox. Of several guides who offered their services, 1636 2, 14| the material proof of the guiltlessness of Joam Dacosta; and the 1637 1, 16| it were pouring into some gulf or ocean. But its waters 1638 1, 9| plants, cases of several gums, and a quantity of precious 1639 2, 11| is the explanation.~The gunboat Santa Ana, bound for Manaos, 1640 1, 2| away too far. A well-aimed gunshot could alone stop him as 1641 2, 20| Porto de Mos, Boa Vista, and Gurupa, whose prosperity is on 1642 1, 9| Central America.~The principal habitation, with its annexes—kitchen, 1643 1, 19| Yes,” said Torres. “Do you hail from that province?”~“No! 1644 1, 16| it is easy to see that hair-dressers would be in demand. Such 1645 1, 12| that a barber who is also a hairdresser—and I hardly like to say 1646 1, 11| between the gray mosquito, the hairy mosquito, the white-clawed 1647 2, 7| say to what excesses these half-barbarous men might be led?~The time, 1648 1, 12| and drunk from a “coui” or half-calabash in general use in this district 1649 2, 18| few more presumptions, a half-certainty that the adventurer had 1650 2, 20| Paracuarta, which curves in a half-circle to the south! To the left, 1651 2, 3| Had any confessions or half-confessions been brought forward? Joam 1652 1, 12| few minutes. There, on a half-cracked hill of clay, stand a dozen 1653 2, 10| unable to resist the blows, half-dropped upon the sand. His limbs 1654 1, 12| assai, a liquor half-sold, half-liquid, made of the fruit of the 1655 1, 18| with the stream.~Ibises half-lollingly posed on some old trunk, 1656 1, 18| water!”~“And the flowers half-opened on the surface,” replied 1657 1, 9| their sandy bed.~Toward half-past six cries of joy arose. 1658 1, 4| who had just come in, was half-reclining on a couch of plaited bamboos, 1659 1, 4| recollection. At the same time a half-smile came to her husband’s lips1660 1, 12| particularly assai, a liquor half-sold, half-liquid, made of the 1661 1, 10| and its two or three ubas half-stranded on the shore.~During the 1662 1, 8| bring down their floods at half-yearly intervals, and hence the 1663 2, 20| detained them at Manaos, halfway on their journey, could 1664 2, 4| which was the old common hall of the convent.~Judge Jarriquez 1665 2, 12| further on the word gas. Halloo! ujugi. Does that mean the 1666 1, 7| thirty feet with a sort of halo made of the dainty branches 1667 1, 7| whitish berries.~But the halts! the shouts of cheating! 1668 1, 9| constructions and swung the hammock suspended in the interior, 1669 1, 12| used in the fabrication of hammocks and fishing-nets, and are 1670 1, 9| quantity of the “presunto” hams of the district, which are 1671 1, 2| forest of the upper Amazon handle with success.~What had just 1672 1, 6| feet long, and strongly handled, which the natives wield 1673 1, 7| two strings, served for a handrail, and passed from one bank 1674 2, 20| large streets bordered with handsome habitations, and a great 1675 2, 13| cipher of the number should happen to be the first letter of 1676 1, 15| was deservedly due to the hard-working crew of the raft.~The night 1677 1, 7| agouties, which are the hares and rabbits of Central America; 1678 1, 11| fifer, the urtiquis, the harlequin, the big black, and the 1679 1, 2| them at him, but did no harm at such a distance.~But 1680 1, 14| after-taste, and perfectly harmless. Take a little of the water, 1681 1, 5| flags; and, to make practice harmonize with theory, Brazil entered 1682 1, 11| occasion the captain of a ship harpooned it and tried to tow it along. 1683 1, 15| The ubas approached, the harpoons were thrown at the same 1684 2, 6| insulting words, and the hate which he bore to all that 1685 1, 20| object of canceling the hateful proceedings of which he 1686 1, 16| they entertain a profound hatred toward the whites. They 1687 1, 3| beautiful, retained the haughty outline of the Portuguese 1688 2, 10| seen, by the length of the haulage cord, that he was at a depth 1689 1, 11| imprudently ventures into their haunts.~The rich waters of the 1690 1, 12| an Indian whom he met at Havre.~“The privilege of marching 1691 2, 14| of Joam Dacosta was most hazardous. If trhe document were not 1692 1, 11| clear horizon, free from all haze, announced one of those 1693 1, 1| mingled with the general haziness of his reverie.~Torres commenced, 1694 2, 13| good deal of trouble and a headache which extends from my occiput 1695 2, 12| magistrate had sent it off to headquarters, and therewith he thought 1696 1, 5| right to call themselves the healthiest of a country which is one 1697 1, 12| which seems like an immense heap of embers lighted by the 1698 2, 17| followed these words was heart-rending. Benito struggled with his 1699 1, 11| lying ill at Cocha, and he heartily thanked the hospitable family 1700 1, 5| has none of the burning heats of countries like Asia and 1701 1, 6| branches, sawing off the heavier boughs and cutting down 1702 1, 8| claimed to have contracted the heaviest obligation.~“A famous idea 1703 2, 10| the firm sand. When his heels touched the ground it could 1704 1, 7| flight when in the loftier heights there appeared the “gaviao,” 1705 1, 20| man convicted of the most heinous of crimes, and the man never 1706 1, 7| almost as that which the heiress of Minos used to lead her 1707 1, 7| of lycopods, large-leaved heliconias, rosy-tasseled calliandras, 1708 1, 9| at the stern, where the helmsman is generally found. In navigating 1709 1, 18| they seemed to form two hemispheres, inside which the jangada 1710 1, 15| unconsciously submitted to this hemorrhage for many hours, who have 1711 2, 19| recognized Joam Dacosta.~Henceforth he resolved to make all 1712 1, 2| had made him but a simple herbivore, and longed to devour the 1713 1, 15| this nature. Two of these herbivorous cetaceans had just been 1714 1, 3| fertile countries, where a herd doubles in four years, and 1715 | hereafter 1716 2, 20| reparation had made the hero of the day?~It was on the 1717 1, 7| virtue, and even genuine heroism, when he came across some 1718 2, 5| reflected for a minute as if hesitating to resume the order of his 1719 2, 14| gratifying as the others——~het    bph    pa.    ic.~“Confound 1720 1, 4| elbows. For a moment he hid his face in his hands, like 1721 1, 1| the horned toad, the most hideous of its kind, nor even the 1722 2, 12| short, they were just as hieroglyphic.~“Confound the thing!” exclaimed 1723 1, 1| which was covered with the hieroglyphics.~On what principle had these 1724 1, 12| the arrangement of these high-art coiffures, three and four 1725 1, 3| what he wanted. The noble, high-spirited look which Joam Garral bore 1726 2, 20| fifteen feet above ordinary high-water mark.~This is by far the 1727 2, 1| hats, patent-leather boots, highly-colored gloves, and diamond pins 1728 1, 5| worthy of itself, from the highways which penetrate Bolivia, 1729 1, 1| howling monkeys, which St. Hillaire has graphically compared 1730 1, 15| shore they saw the little hillocks which indicated the places 1731 1, 17| they all shouted at once:~“Himha! Minha!”~No reply.~“There 1732 1, 15| occupied in digging with their hind paddles a trench six hundred 1733 2, 10| organism not only being hindered from performing his functions 1734 2, 17| had never reckoned on the hindrances to escape coming from the 1735 2, 7| Manoel, “Torres never gave a hint to put us on the track of 1736 2, 10| promised to attend to these hints, of which he recognized 1737 2, 9| diving-dress. Let us borrow, or hire, or buy, at any price, this 1738 1, 3| the dozen Indians whom he hired, he showed himself much 1739 1, 12| much to the profit of the Hispano-Brazilian missions. There was no better 1740 2, 14| humbig! the rascal!” he hissed; “it will end by driving 1741 1, 11| them. But it has also its histories, which are worth something 1742 1, 4| take his place without any hitch in the fazenda. And yet 1743 2, 17| of the jerkings of a rope hitched on to a bar of his window, 1744 1, 2| conquered, but cheated and hoaxed by a dumb animal, was maddening. 1745 1, 18| whose girth is that of a hogshead?~Had one of these sucurijus, 1746 1, 2| from the ground, and to hoist himself to the top of the 1747 1, 19| sorted in a dozen sieves with holes of different dimensions. 1748 1, 6| from the trunk of a tree, hollowed out by fire, and finished 1749 2, 6| right track.~In a tavern in Holy Ghost Street, from the description 1750 1, 5| different nations had their homes.~Such is the law of progress. 1751 1, 3| for many years this farm, homestead, or, to use the expression 1752 1, 7| it is for me to do the honors of the forest; you are only 1753 1, 7| sparrow-hawk. If he proudly hooted, displaying in the air the 1754 1, 7| kind of clucking, chirping, hooting, whistling, and cooing.~ 1755 2, 8| good deal, and was of a hope-inspiring nature.~However, Benito, 1756 1, 6| stem of which supports a horizontal parasol; and “bombax” of 1757 1, 2| branches, which stretched away horizontally at forty feet from the ground, 1758 1, 9| ministry any longer. The horn of retreat for him had sounded; 1759 1, 11| an encampment of Tartar horsemen. The Brazilian flag hung 1760 2, 1| college founded in 1848, and a hospital erected in 1851. When with 1761 1, 14| himself at this period of the hot season. It seemed that in 1762 1, 16| they even breakfasted at an hotel—it was scarcely an inn—whose 1763 1, 19| execution in twenty-four hourse.”~“Was the fellow executed?” 1764 1, 8| everything connected with house-building or ship-building these natives 1765 1, 1| the constant cry of the howling monkeys, which St. Hillaire 1766 2, 19| 251343251343251 34 32513432 513432513 hqsntzh hh nfepmqkyuuexkto gz gkyuumfv 1767 1, 5| northeast; and on the right the Huallaga, which joins the main stream 1768 1, 5| Peru, in the district of Huaraco, in the department of Tarma, 1769 1, 18| much as those of Calderon, Huarandeina, and other black-watered 1770 2, 1| and flowers of startling hues, and here and there are 1771 2, 19| ocytdxvksbx bhu ypohdvy rym huhpuydkjox ph etozsl~commis dans la 1772 2, 19| hy ynojyggay meqynfu q1n~huit-cent vingt-six, nest donc pas 1773 2, 12| half a dozen paragraphs.~“Hum!” said the judge, after 1774 2, 14| turned it over and over.~“The humbig! the rascal!” he hissed; “ 1775 1, 3| fearlessly interrogate the humblest servants of the fazenda. 1776 1, 6| luxuriantly rayed on to the humid soil which perhaps its shots 1777 1, 7| of these gigantic trees; humming-birds in all their varieties, 1778 2, 14| noise of which a flock of hummingbirds, murmuring among the foliage 1779 1, 9| jangada also took fifty hundredweight of sarsaparilla, a smilax 1780 1, 15| poor cetaceans have been so hunted that they have become very 1781 1, 2| insults that one man can hurl at another in this equatorial 1782 1, 17| chock of the cayman, and was hurled back into the river, whose 1783 1, 9| river gauge, and shoutedHurrah!” as the water crept up.~“ 1784 2, 19| 432 etnpmv ffov pd pajx hy ynojyggay meqynfu q1n~huit-cent 1785 1, 14| the coloration due to the hydrocarbons which the waters hold in 1786 1, 5| how can we say that the hydrographical system of the Amazon is 1787 1, 15| network which renders the hydrography of this country so difficult.~ 1788 1, 1| secretion of certain of the hymenoptera, and is known as “ants’ 1789 1, 11| add, “What a magnificent hymn there is in the nights of 1790 1, 18| Torres had said.~This reply, hyperbolical and enigmatical at the time, 1791 1, 10| little archipelago of the Iatio and Cochiquinas islands, 1792 1, 12| Although correctly calledibirapitunga,” from the place of production, 1793 1, 6| and more particularly the “ibiriratea,” nearly black in its skin, 1794 2, 14| others——~het    bph    pa.    ic.~“Confound the document 1795 1, 13| Brazilian, and not in the mixed idiom of the natives.~“A compatriot?” 1796 1, 8| return it by one of the igariteos. Tables, bamboo easy-chairs, 1797 2, 7| innocence, when they were ignorant of all that his friends 1798 1, 20| Garral, and I will.”~“You ignore, then, that my daughter 1799 2, 19| nfepmqkyuuexkto gz gkyuumfv ijdqdpzjq~out, moi seul, qui signe 1800 1, 5| and that is (although some ill-informed travelers have stated to 1801 1, 11| of his departure a sudden illness stopped him, and he could 1802 1, 7| who, when the night comes, illuminate the forest with their many-colored 1803 1, 11| another. By a kind of optical illusion it appeared as though the 1804 2, 6| the most insolent smile imaginable. Perhaps at the moment the 1805 1, 9| better than when he had imbibed a few glasses of tafia; 1806 2, 12| quest. In this he was only imitating the American romancer, who, 1807 2, 9| they would do if completely immersed. Hence an excess of weight, 1808 2, 9| at work the raft remains immovable above him; when the diver 1809 2, 16| to my mother, ought we to impart the secret of an attempt 1810 2, 15| An irresistible influence impelled him to set out, although 1811 1, 19| at Manaos.”~“Yes!” it is imperative!” answered Manoel.~“And 1812 1, 9| direct from Villa Bella da Imperatriz—or, in other words, fro 1813 1, 13| his hair, a trifle long, imperiously required the good offices 1814 2, 6| little, pressed back by his implacable foe, who was more determined 1815 2, 1| bows; and women in loud, imposing toilets, with flounced dressed 1816 2, 15| and, what was worse, to impotent anger!~During the latter 1817 1, 2| after giving vent to a last imprecation, he was about to abandon 1818 1, 12| no anything whatever to impress the public, as they generally 1819 1, 9| silence reigned over the impressionable crowd.~Toward five oclock 1820 1, 17| lest in giving way to my impressions I may be injuring my object! 1821 2, 13| sighed Manoel, who, with this improbability, saw the last chance vanish.~“ 1822 2, 9| diving-dresses are now much improved, and are less dangerous 1823 1, 11| calves of the bather when he imprudently ventures into their haunts.~ 1824 1, 20| and with his customary impudence, broke the painful silence.~“ 1825 2, 4| innocence seemed to him à priori inadmissable. To be sure, he did not 1826 2, 4| death of Judge Ribeiro, inasmuch as his case would come before 1827 1, 15| the sands of the beach in incalculable quantities. However, on 1828 2, 18| the gallant creature fell, incapable of carrying him any further.~ 1829 1, 17| Indians are set to work.~Incisions are made into the alburnum 1830 1, 8| Father, now your care has inclosed and covered us, you must 1831 1, 3| finds himself before an inclosure admitting of slight defense, 1832 1, 6| The settlement of Iquitos included a part of those magnificent 1833 1, 8| to the discussion of all, including even the gallant Fragoso.~ 1834 1, 19| could not get much of an income out of that!”~“You, doubtless?” 1835 1, 20| the whole family a look of inconceivable insolence.~“So that is you 1836 2, 19| after for so long was the incontestable witness of the innocence 1837 2, 18| the document, which would incontestably prove the innocence of Joam 1838 1, 12| going to ask if you saw any inconvenience in my working at my profession 1839 1, 7| the river. It became less inconvenient to follow, seeing that they 1840 1, 17| natural ferocity, which increases with age. As Benito said, 1841 1, 13| illustrious Fragoso was increasing in the basin of the Upper 1842 2, 11| not restrain a smile of incredulity.~“There is the case, sir,” 1843 1, 16| blow-tubes arrows which cause incurable wounds, even at a range 1844 2, 1| Anavilhanas; and in one of its indentations the port of Manaos is situated. 1845 1, 12| that Brazil proclaimed its independence by the voice of Don Juan, 1846 2, 9| in a waterproof suit of India rubber, and his feet are 1847 1, 3| calm temperament seemed to indicate an interior fire, kept well 1848 1, 7| guepars, or cougars, called indifferently ounces in South America, 1849 2, 1| sarsaparilla, sugar-canes, indigo, muscado nuts, salt fish, 1850 1, 6| with a felling-sword, that indispensable tool of every one who desires 1851 2, 17| encouraging words to them. His indomitable energy was due not only 1852 1, 15| Garral family had to keep indoors. They had to occupy profitably 1853 2, 19| Jarriquez, whoo possessed this indubitable proof, arranged with the 1854 1, 2| disappear under a bush, might induce the guariba to pull up and 1855 1, 2| move, and this doubtless induced him to come and look at 1856 2, 12| as he was, had, by simple induction, been able to construct 1857 2, 4| thought but little of the indulgence of the jury, and when a 1858 1, 10| He is a great deal too indulgent to my little self.”~“Well, 1859 2, 20| Indians, whose principal industry consists in preparing their 1860 2, 11| there in a state of complete inertia, not a single exterior movement 1861 1, 5| not likely to escape the inevitable fate, and Peru, Ecuador, 1862 1, 6| America, are practically inexhaustible.~Joam Garral thoroughly 1863 1, 15| pinions of the lamantins.~Inexperienced fishermen would at first 1864 1, 3| in all his bearing that inexpressible something which tells you 1865 1, 15| lagoons, temporary lakes, an inextricable network which renders the 1866 2, 2| exclaimed Benito.~“To this infamous request, Benito, you saw 1867 1, 7| accompanies man in the infancy of his civilization,” the 1868 1, 11| all the new species which infest the banks of the Amazon 1869 1, 11| seemed to stretch into the infinite like a sea, and at the extremity 1870 1, 7| seriemas,” a sort of turkey, infinitely better from an edible point 1871 2, 11| gave forth the gases which inflated it, its density increased, 1872 2, 8| morning she would be able to inform him of their success.~But 1873 2, 5| speak in such a way of this—informer?”~“A scoundrel! Yes, sir!” 1874 2, 3| who had every facility for informing the scoundrels of the convoy’ 1875 1, 11| The Ticuma Indians, who inhabit the territories on the north 1876 1, 7| the great provider of the inhabitant of the torrid zones, a banana-tree, 1877 1, 14| Chico, Motachina; some inhabited, others deserted, but all 1878 2, 3| in the execution of the iniquitous judgment delivered at Villa 1879 1, 8| mulatto for having taken the initiative in his rescue, and Lina 1880 1, 17| my impressions I may be injuring my object! Something tells 1881 1, 17| forbid I should do such an injury to the girl who is to become 1882 2, 19| qgyu gsqe uvb nrcc edgruzb~injustement condamné à mort, cest moi, 1883 2, 10| pipes which served for the inlet and outlet of the air were 1884 1, 12| a great harvest for the innkeeper, as all the operations could 1885 1, 12| marching first to battle!” innocently answered the Indian.~War, 1886 2, 4| passed through the sieve of inquest, inquiry, and examination, 1887 2, 6| replied that the individual inquestion had put up at the loja the 1888 2, 4| simple. He had either to inquire nor to rule; he had not 1889 1, 16| anything suspicious?” she inquired.~“Nothing, Miss Lina,” he 1890 2, 3| again to look through the inquiries. He had to find out if any 1891 2, 6| principal streets of the town, inquiring of the tradesmen in their 1892 1, 2| The hunters looked at him inquiringly, not knowing what value 1893 1, 15| cinnabar-red faces, who are insatiable lovers of the nuts produced 1894 1, 13| All right!” said Fragoso, inserting his comb into the mass of 1895 1, 20| a look of inconceivable insolence.~“So that is you last word?” 1896 1, 2| sight of Torres did not inspire the guariba with friendly 1897 2, 17| comforted the two poor women and inspired them with a little of the 1898 1, 17| concerned me—this man who inspires us all with such aversion 1899 1, 17| themselves on the shore, and install themselves comfortably there 1900 1, 16| Joam Garral quitted for an instand the work which took up all 1901 2, 3| last penalty; he had even instigated and facilitated his flight! 1902 2, 5| been found guilty of the instigation of, and complicity in, the 1903 1, 20| absence, and this man was the instigator of the diamond robbery at 1904 1, 7| his arm the gun which had instinctively gone up to his shoulder.~“ 1905 2, 7| surrenders itself to its cruel instincts, and it was feared that 1906 1, 3| her by her mother, and the instruction received by her from her 1907 2, 9| afterward the raft and all the instruments necessary for the enterprise 1908 2, 6| recollection of the young man’s insulting words, and the hate which 1909 1, 15| Peru without encountering insurmountable obstacles among its white 1910 2, 12| He fully experienced the intellectual gratification—much greater 1911 2, 8| The work so carefully and intelligently conducted was not, however, 1912 1, 16| that your friend Torres intends to go with us to Ega.”~“ 1913 1, 9| the inhabitants of these inter-tropical countries. The root, very 1914 1, 7| flight.~Minha was right to intercede for the little winged world 1915 2, 10| floating above his head, intercepted the solar rays and made 1916 1, 16| Another flute answered. This interchange of musical phrases lasted 1917 2, 6| Several blows were then interchanged, but nothing decisive was 1918 1, 16| moored for the night.~His intercourse with the Garral family remained 1919 1, 7| the trees! And the same interdiction with regard to the smaller 1920 1, 16| after which the river, less interfered with, makes navigation much 1921 2, 1| with tiles, others with interlaced branches of the palm-tree, 1922 1, 18| still water, in which every interlacement of their boughs was reflected 1923 1, 5| and passes through the intermediary chain of the Andes. Hereabouts 1924 2, 10| as not to produce in his internal organs the dreadful effects 1925 2, 19| the number Judge Jarriquez interpreted the whole of the cryptogram.~ 1926 1, 3| subject you could fearlessly interrogate the humblest servants of 1927 2, 18| matters on which he was interrogated. In fact, three questions 1928 1, 2| definite this accidental interruption to all his plans, to be 1929 2, 1| canals, which so capriciously intersect the town, and give it its 1930 2, 1| network of unpaved alleys, intersected every now and then by four 1931 1, 8| their floods at half-yearly intervals, and hence the level of 1932 1, 8| had been completed, Minha intervened with:~“Father, now your 1933 1, 18| Before five days, if nothing intervered with their voyage, the raft 1934 2, 1| principal thoroughfares is interwoven a perfect network of unpaved 1935 1, 17| introduce himself into that intimacy with your family which is 1936 2, 3| under sentence of death, was intolerable to him. No! The wedding 1937 1, 11| thick and sugared milk, intoxicating as wine itself, and “vignaticos” 1938 1, 18| reserved. He did not seek to intrude on the family, and was even 1939 1, 16| disposed to put on shore the intruder who had been so unfortunately 1940 2, 19| him. He thought he could intrust to his friend the secret 1941 1, 3| was an excellent worker, inured to fatigue, but lacking 1942 1, 11| these wretched insects will invade us, and the jangada will 1943 2, 20| and soon the jangada was invaded by all those who wished 1944 1, 4| Para. Madame Valdez is an invalid; she cannot visit Iquitos, 1945 1, 2| us to tell the series of invectives in which he indulged. Not 1946 2, 14| All his time was passed in inventing combinations of numbers, 1947 2, 14| what this number was all investigation seemed powerless to discover.~ 1948 1, 6| the open air, under the invigorating influences of forests, fields, 1949 1, 3| paullinias, whose trunks were invisible beneath a network of scarlet-flowered 1950 2, 18| abandon him. He fell; his eyes involuntarily closed. He did not wish 1951 1, 11| he, bowing his head by an involuntary movement.~But an instant 1952 1, 7| knots of the large white ipomas, under the fleshy stems 1953 1, 3| year of the century the Iquito Indians, who then formed 1954 2, 10| along the bank. With his iron-shod spear he probed the plants 1955 1, 13| turn.~Fragoso put down the irons for the scissors, and, after 1956 1, 6| And besides there was the ironwood; and more particularly the “ 1957 1, 1| waited for sleep beneath the ironwood-tree.~Torres was not one of those 1958 1, 8| everywhere threw out its irregular branchlets, and allowed 1959 2, 1| thoroughfares of considerable irregularity run through the town, and 1960 1, 2| document, the loss of which was irreparable, as it carried with it that 1961 1, 4| decision, and with whom irresolution had ceased.~“You are right,” 1962 2, 2| subject his decision was irrevocable.~At this moment the pilot 1963 2, 6| friend Fragoso!”~At the irritating qualification thus accorded 1964 2, 8| river.~Not an island, not an islet, checked the course of the 1965 2, 12| would certainly be e, in Italian it would be i or a, in Portuguese 1966 1, 10| and those of the rivers Itinicari, Maniti, Moyoc, Tucuya, 1967 1, 6| make their battle-axes; “jacarandas,” more precious than mahogany; “ 1968 1, 8| their tools gets absolutely jagged; yet they square up trunks, 1969 1, 14| passed the mouth of the Jandiatuba, which brings its magnificent 1970 1, 6| mass, for such were the jangadas, or river rafts, which attained 1971 2, 19| dans la nuit du vingt-deux janvier mil 251343 2513 43 2513 1972 1, 7| under the name of the redjapicanga,” whose length sometimes 1973 1, 5| near the sources of the Japur there remained but the fragments 1974 1, 11| wings in the foliage of the “jaquetibas,” when night comes on to 1975 2, 11| reached the dwelling of Judge Jarriuez, and informed him, through 1976 2, 12| d.”~At the outset, Judge Jarrizuez noticed that the lines of 1977 1, 1| wear. On his head, stuck jauntily on one side, was a leather 1978 1, 17| It is not a feeling of jealousy, though, that exasperates 1979 2, 17| wall of the convent, of the jerkings of a rope hitched on to 1980 1, 7| the shakings came from the jerks into which he still agitated 1981 1, 15| little distance, and two jets of air mingled with vapor 1982 1, 1| the trees, nor the sharp jingle of the rings of the rattlesnake ( 1983 1, 2| of my case! But no! The jingling of the money amuses him. 1984 1, 5| near the mission of San Joachim dOmaguas, just where the 1985 1, 19| was recognized, and King John VI., of Portugal, had it 1986 1, 6| diverse species adapted for joinery, cabinet work, ship building, 1987 1, 18| feet above the ground, and joining one bank to the other formed 1988 2, 16| get near enough. The badly jointed stones in the wall, which 1989 1, 8| ready with some good-natured joke, he was not long in being 1990 1, 8| conversation generally took a joking turn, but at the bottom 1991 2, 7| the most widely circulated journal in these parts, after giving 1992 1, 2| holding Torrescase.~“By Jove!” he muttered, “that bullet 1993 1, 18| the task was worthy of a jovial repast. It was fitting to 1994 2, 12| here is rym and puy, and jox, and phetoz, and jyggay, 1995 2, 14| 834    834    834~phy    jsl    ydd    qfd~and this gave 1996 2, 19| dzxgas gz zqq ehx gkfndrxu ju gi~l’assassinat des soldats 1997 1, 12| independence by the voice of Don Juan, whom the French armies 1998 2, 13| letters different and I get:~Judgejarriquezhasaningeniousmind.~That done” said the magistrate, 1999 2, 12| etc., I will give up my judgeship if I do not read it. What 2000 1, 12| he had mixed some of the juices of a few flowers, but he 2001 1, 7| assuredly less easy in that jumble of knots, among which twisted 2002 2, 14| letters of which seemed all jumbled together and flying about


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