Chapter
1 IV | was completely worn out, lay ill for several months,
2 XIII | himself in a blanket, and lay down under the awning.~“
3 XIV | among which a few villages lay half concealed.~Toward seven
4 XIV | at the bottom of which lay a half-eaten carcass.~He
5 XV | couch on which the sultan lay reclining. There he saw
6 XV | the imbruted carcass that lay before him. The sultan stirred,
7 XVII | and, there and then, to lay the foundation of a Robinson
8 XXI | obey you.”~“Let us, then, lay our heads together to devise
9 XXII | or stake, and at its foot lay a human being—a young man
10 XXII | is very weak; so let us lay him under the awning.”~And
11 XXII | extreme that they had to lay him again on the bed, where
12 XXIII | earth, and the missionary lay quietly asleep in utter
13 XXIII | that the missionary’s grave lay in twenty-two degrees twenty-three
14 XXVI | place beside Kennedy, who lay there plunged in silence
15 XXVII | while Ferguson and Kennedy lay there motionless, the resistless
16 XXXIII| at the conclusion that it lay on the north shore of Lake
17 XXXV | heaps of human bones that lay scattered around this sanctuary.
18 XXXVI | to do?” asked Kennedy.~“Lay aside your rifle,Dick.”~
19 XLIX | alligator, half concealed, lay silently in wait for them
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