Chapter
1 III | adventure had at length died out, was perfectly enchanted.
2 III | country; from Oudney, who died at Murmur, and Clapperton,
3 IV | of Vaudey, who had just died, set out from Karthoum,
4 IV | ill-health to Karthoum, where he died in 1857.~Neither Dr. Penney—
5 XIII | beasts of burden would have died with fatigue. We should
6 XIII | Meanwhile the wind had suddenly died away.~“Now,” said Ferguson, “
7 XV | sign, and all the clamor died away into the profoundest
8 XVI | one, and the breeze has died away. One can feel that
9 XXI | resounded like a thunderbolt and died away into cries of rage
10 XXII | them all. The chief having died a few days before our travellers
11 XXIV | mountains they had left died away into the plain, like
12 XXVI | echo replied, and his voice died out in the empty vastness
13 XXX | as Sackatoo, and Oudney died of fatigue and exhaustion
14 XXX | the Wadai country when he died at Cairo, in 1855; and we
15 XXX | was there that poor Toole died, at the age of scarcely
16 XXX | diminished, and they, one by one, died out.~“Now we may sleep in
17 XXXIII | but at length the wind died away with the setting in
18 XXXV | already by the rising mire, died away feebly on the night.~
19 XXXVIII| what became of him?”~“He died at the age of thirty-nine,
20 XLIV | do believe that we’d have died of yawning.”~An English
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