Part, Chapter
1 I, IV | Its northern banks are clothed with thick woods, shutting
2 I, IV | for all their wants; and clothed in the skins of foxes, martens,
3 I, VI | mosses and slender grasses clothed the rugged ground with their
4 I, VII | flanks of the hills were clothed not only with shrubs, but
5 I, VIII| groups of trees the soil was clothed with a sort of whitish weed,
6 I, X | composed of fine firm sand, and clothed in part with short dry herbage,
7 I, XIII| vegetation with which it was clothed.~In the afternoon of the
8 I, XIV | short fur with which it is clothed becomes almost black in
9 I, XV | males-creatures nearly four feet long, clothed with very short reddish
10 I, XVI | before, amongst some rocks clothed with scanty herbage and
11 I, XVII| and all were soon suitably clothed in the linen under vests,
12 I, XVII| of uniform thickness soon clothed the cape, the enceinte of
13 I, XXII| and a scanty vegetation clothed the soil. Tiny mosses and
14 II, I | apparently solid ground well clothed with vegetation. Connected
15 II, I | mosses with which it is clothed. Rain-water filled the lagoon,
16 II, IV | which time had not yet clothed with a kind of cement of
17 II, V | every one should be warmly clothed. They would have to face
18 II, XIX | fir, and pine trees were clothed with dark verdure; the sap—
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