Chapter
1 XII | together from their huddle of huts and followed the travellers
2 XIII | breeze.~Only a few scattered huts could be seen through the
3 XIV | all live together in round huts, without frames, that look
4 XV | within the “tembes” and the huts.~“My dear doctor,” said
5 XV | deposited in the fetich huts or mzimu. These gifts consisted
6 XVIII | some fifty or more circular huts, covered with a flowering
7 XX | scampered into their round huts, uttering shrill cries.~
8 XX | to a large collection of huts surrounding an open space.
9 XXII | some fifty low, conical huts, around which swarmed a
10 XXII | little by little in the huts, and there was complete
11 XXIV | even a collection of a few huts; and vegetation also was
12 XIX | populous villages of long low huts stretched away between broad
13 XIX | violet-colored blossoms. The huts, looking like huge beehives,
14 XXXIII | cotton-crop in front of their huts, constructed of woven reeds,
15 XXXV | the utmost care cabins, huts, hovels, and dens of every
16 XXXVII | fertility, in which the huts that compose the villages
17 XXXVIII| assemblage of miserable huts, which once was Goa, a great
18 XLIX | bricks dried in the sun, and huts of straw and reeds, the
19 XL | them stood some shepherds’ huts, but it had become impossible
20 XLIII | villages in ruins, those huts burned down—that is their
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