Chapter
1 I | than Dr. Ferguson himself.~Numerous toasts were offered and
2 II | reasons for rejecting them.~Numerous inventors of mechanism applicable
3 V | themselves at the head of a numerous and well-equipped expedition;
4 VIII | by copious libations and numerous toasts. Healths were drunk,
5 XI | he had remained with the numerous phalanx of the incredulous.~“
6 XI | was held to the ground by numerous sacks of earth. The inflating
7 XV | Around these excavations are numerous native dwellings; wide,
8 XVI | the clearings dotted with numerous villages, and immense euphorbiae
9 XVIII| the environing mountains numerous torrents came plunging and
10 XVIII| revealing in their place numerous villages, and fields of
11 XVIII| from the west, from between numerous hills, in the midst of fertile
12 XVIII| spread out, dotted with numerous islands, which Dr. Ferguson
13 XX | now greatly varied, with numerous streams of water, bearing
14 XXII | around which swarmed a numerous tribe.~A hundred feet below
15 XIX | There were winding valleys, numerous and fertile, with their
16 XIX | in an unknown country.”~Numerous slaves were engaged in the
17 XIX | atrocious carnage, never cease.~Numerous and populous villages of
18 XXXII| spectacle. They could count the numerous islets of the lake, inhabited
19 XXXV | where reptiles are more numerous than in any other part of
20 XLIX | and the rest—were seen in numerous flocks hovering about the
21 XLI | of nature. It presented numerous inequalities, which would
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