Chapter
1 Note | geography, the inhabitants, the animals, and the features of the
2 III | unhealthy climates, nor wild animals, nor savage men, are to
3 XIII | ill-distinguishable masses; men and animals on the surface become absolutely
4 XIV | caravans; the bones of men and animals, that had been half-gnawed
5 XIV | families, but still, men and animals all live together in round
6 XIV | the nocturnal concert of animals driven from their hiding-places
7 XVI | western face of the country.~Animals with huge humps were feeding
8 XVI | see those packs of wild animals hurrying along close together.
9 XVII | of the Cape, that these animals have migrated to the equator,
10 XVII | indispensable barrier against wild animals, for the hyenas, cougars,
11 XIX | belonged to the skins of animals that they wore for clothing.”~“
12 XXI | that, in any case, men or animals, the creatures that he had
13 XXIII | be dug, so that the wild animals should not be able to disinter
14 XXIV | whitened bones of men and animals. But nothing of the kind
15 XXVIII | prove much, Dick, for those animals, when goaded by hunger or
16 XIX | the doctor.~“Here are some animals,” added Joe. “Men are not
17 XXXI | sportsman who sees all the animals in creation strutting along
18 XXXI | to strike down those poor animals when they can be of no use
19 XXXIII | single specimen of those animals.~At seven in the morning,
20 XXXVI | distance, a throng of men or animals moving. It is impossible
21 XXXVII | of one of those innocent animals and away we went galloping
22 XXXVIII| pointing to a long file of animals and men winding across the
23 XLIII | like huge ante-diluvian animals, petrified there amid the
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