Book, Chapter
1 I, XVIII| all, but a dense mass of birds packed as closely together
2 I, XVIII| thieves! those infernal birds! That’s what’s the matter.
3 I, XVIII| depredations of many thousands of birds; and although a goodly number
4 I, XVIII| that this clustered mass of birds, as representing the whole
5 I, XVIII| battle to those thieves of birds.”~Leaving little Nina and
6 I, XVIII| unsparing slaughter of the birds that hovered over and around
7 I, XVIII| now? Are your friends the birds at their pranks again?”
8 I, XVIII| captain.~“No, I don’t mean the birds: I mean those lazy beggars
9 I, XXI | left to the tenancy of such birds and beasts as had escaped
10 I, XXI | recent promiscuous slaughter. Birds, indeed, that had migrated
11 I, XXIII| the beaks of the strongest birds to penetrate, and accordingly
12 I, XXIII| hunger, several hundred birds ventured through the tunnel,
13 I, XXIII| warfare the bulk of the birds were all expelled, with
14 I, XXIII| it was found that these birds acted as a kind of police,
15 II, XI | two children, blithe as birds, flitted about, now singly,
16 II, XIII | which was still abundant.~Birds, subsisting only on scraps
17 II, XIII | in the temperature. Like birds, the population spent whole
18 II, XVII | foliage was tenanted by the birds which had flown back from
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