Book,  chapter

  1  Int      |          Thousand Leagues Under the Sea.” Thus this entire set of
  2    1,    1|            such exciting sport. The sea was splendid, and every
  3    1,    1|            for bottles found in the sea often contain precious documents.”~“
  4    1,    1|           Everything is an event at sea. For a moment they all sat
  5    1,    1|           who had flung it into the sea to amuse himself when he
  6    1,    1|          fished them up in the open sea. Then we might have found
  7    1,    2|        threw this document into the sea in 37 degrees 11latitude,
  8    1,    2|             one of these blanks the sea has made in the document
  9    1,    2|       thrown this document into the sea, in longitude and latitude
 10    1,    4|        letter and threw it into the sea, he committed it to the
 11    1,    6|            was a heavy swell in the sea, and toward evening the
 12    1,    6|            And how do you stand the sea, Miss Mary?” said Lord Glenarvan.~“
 13    1,    6|    presenting myself to you, but at sea it is well to relax the
 14    1,    8|              above the level of the sea.”~“That is not equal to
 15    1,    8|          bay was sheltered from the sea winds. The rain fell in
 16    1,    9|      nothing but a rock sunk in the sea in latitude 52 degrees.
 17    1,   10|           have been thrown into the sea just when the vessel went
 18    1,   10|          Paganel, that there was no sea, and therefore they could
 19    1,   10|           rivers which ran into the sea,” returned Paganel.~This
 20    1,   10|           has been carried into the sea on the bosom of some river,
 21    1,   11|       atmosphere so tempered by the sea breezes as to prevent any
 22    1,   16|             slope right down to the sea.~Glenarvan had supposed
 23    1,   16|              from this point to the sea, the foot of the traveler
 24    1,   16|            ridges like waves of the sea, and so extremely fine that
 25    1,   21|         feet above the level of the sea. It is a primordial chain—
 26    1,   21|           the Sierra Tandil and the sea, as Sergeant Manuel must
 27    1,   22|          plains which extend to the sea. Limpid RIOS intersected
 28    1,   26|          wind was very high and the sea rough. The clouds were scudding
 29    1,   26|   sand-banks which ran out into the sea, and were more dangerous
 30    1,   26|             the waves, and make the sea so particularly rough, that
 31    1,   26|          distant horizon across the sea, which he did most conscientiously
 32    1,   26|            in the morning mist. The sea was so violent that a vessel
 33    2,    1|         days had stood right out to sea, till the welcome signal-gun
 34    2,    1|              we cross an arm of the sea which extends to New Zealand.
 35    2,    2|       DUNCAN a fair field on a calm sea for displaying her incomparable
 36    2,    2|             them to the utmost. The sea was tranquil, and the wind
 37    2,    3|          900 miles, but with a good sea and favoring breeze, this
 38    2,    3|         help them forward.~“Ah! the sea! the sea!” exclaimed Paganel, “
 39    2,    3|          forward.~“Ah! the sea! the sea!” exclaimed Paganel, “it
 40    2,    3|             been attempted; but the sea was there ready to carry
 41    2,    3|      Fahrenheit. Fish caught in the sea a few yards off, cooked
 42    2,    4|          dozen days longer, and the sea remain favorable, the yacht
 43    2,    5|           side of the ship, and the sea might any moment sweep right
 44    2,    5|           and then the storm-driven sea would out-distance the yacht,
 45    2,    5|          all hope of keeping out at sea is over. You will let me
 46    2,    5|         means of calming this angry sea? A last expedient struck
 47    2,    5|             the smooth surface, the sea redoubles its violence,
 48    2,    5|            magic, the whole foaming sea seemed leveled, and the
 49    2,    6|           winds outside in the open sea.~Lord Glenarvan grasped
 50    2,    6|            the catastrophe, and the sea might, and indeed must,
 51    2,    6|       carried by a current into the sea. That was a plausible enough
 52    2,    6|            Rio Negro, flow into the sea along deserted solitudes,
 53    2,    6|            had been thrown into the sea on the western coast of
 54    2,    6|          ran out two miles into the sea, and terminated in a gentle
 55    2,    6|       beaten down, no doubt, by the sea in some equinoctial gale.
 56    2,    7|             have thrown it into the sea when I was no longer on
 57    2,    9|           perhaps, in its center, a sea partly evaporated, the waves
 58    2,   10|           more white than the Black Sea is black, or the Red Sea
 59    2,   10|            Sea is black, or the Red Sea red, or the Yellow River
 60    2,   11|        connects the Murray with the sea. Well, I must confess, a
 61    2,   15|             only have to get to the sea.~During the 18th the travelers
 62    2,   17|            Chief Officer, to get to sea without delay, and bring
 63    2,   17|        Order to Tom Austin to go to sea without delay; and take
 64    2,   18|           get you on board. Once at sea in a craft like the DUNCAN,
 65    2,   19|         Verne yacht could not go to sea; suppose there was a delay
 66    2,   19|             their arrival.~When the sea appeared, all eyes anxiously
 67    2,   19|             in Twofold Bay, for the sea was heavy, and a ship would
 68    3,    2|          The MACQUARIE stood out to sea on the larboard tack, under
 69    3,    2|           ship labored on the lumpy sea, and rolled heavily in the
 70    3,    2|             islands of the Southern Sea.~It was on the 13th of December,
 71    3,    2|            spear, and fell into the sea. Of his six companions four
 72    3,    3|           As long as we are on open sea, a careful lookout is enough;
 73    3,    3|             than the dangers of the sea.”~“You refer to the Maories,
 74    3,    4|           any way. The heavy, lumpy sea strained her cordage, her
 75    3,    4|      painfully in the trough of the sea. Her standing rigging was
 76    3,    4|         shaken at every roll of the sea.~Fortunately, Will Halley
 77    3,    4|         will put the ship’s head to sea again. So that, on that
 78    3,    4|         size.~Two hours passed; the sea was rising. The MACQUARIE
 79    3,    4|           have made no account of a sea like this; but with this
 80    3,    4|            about to regain the open sea. Whether she would be able
 81    3,    4| phosphorescence. The roaring of the sea was like the voice of those
 82    3,    4|             standstill. Whether the sea will devour us is another
 83    3,    4|         lower the boat?”~“In such a sea, and in the dark, it is
 84    3,    4|           now quite motionless. The sea became gradually calmer.
 85    3,    4|            swell still agitated the sea, but the more distant waves
 86    3,    4|           they have fallen into the sea?” asked Paganel.~“Everything
 87    3,    6|          coarse viands of the ship; sea biscuits of inferior quality,
 88    3,    6|        cases, staunch and safe from sea water, and then lowered
 89    3,    6|           from being carried out to sea. They made a good start.
 90    3,    6|            get too near it, for the sea will soon conceal it.”~“
 91    3,    6|           my part, in such a stormy sea I prefer our raft to that
 92    3,    6|        while she lay head on to the sea, was very severe and fatiguing.
 93    3,    7|          grotto hollowed out by the sea in the basaltic rocks. Here
 94    3,    8|              Its emergence from the sea is constantly increasing.
 95    3,   10|         feet above the level of the sea, and in view of an amphitheater
 96    3,   11|           victims in the midst of a sea of blood.~This was the signal
 97    3,   13|         career, and surged like the sea waves against an opposing
 98    3,   15|            park fountains, out of a sea of vapor; some of them continuous,
 99    3,   15|            as he drew nearer to the sea. He apparently lost sight
100    3,   15|         Glenarvan, hemmed in by the sea, could not fly, and summoning
101    3,   15|            mile from the shore. The sea was calm. The fugitives
102    3,   15|        about to give chase.~“Out to sea! Out to sea!” he exclaimed. “
103    3,   15|          chase.~“Out to sea! Out to sea!” he exclaimed. “Better
104    3,   16|            Tom Austin to put out to sea without delay, and to take
105    3,   16|           when we were right out at sea, and the Australian continent
106    3,   17|           toward Talcahuano, over a sea worthy of being called the
107    3,   17|             brave the perils of the sea for a long time still if
108    3,   18|       thrown this document into the sea in— longitude and 37 degrees
109    3,   19|       eternal ice-belt of the Polar Sea. No ship would come to reconnoiter
110    3,   19|             the surface of the calm sea, and the screw turned up
111    3,   19|           to throw herself into the sea.~“My LordLady Helena!”
112    3,   20|             bay exposed to the open sea.”~“And why, captain?” asked
113    3,   20|         rocks of Maria Theresa. The sea was mountains high, and
114    3,   20|             the distance far out at sea. During the whole period
115    3,   20|            night. I jumped into the sea, and attempted to make my
116    3,   21|          Channel, crossed the Irish Sea, and on the 10th of May
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