Book,  chapter

 1  Int      |        the searching party gives ground,—one is almost tempted to
 2    1,   11|      diversified, and the rising ground indicated their approach
 3    1,   12|     keeping their heads near the ground, as if scenting the track.
 4    1,   12|          the lead, and tried the ground with his feet. His companions
 5    1,   13|     throw themselves flat on the ground before they swept past like
 6    1,   13|       hunted, and gone over much ground before it is captured, it
 7    1,   13|        of artillery. He felt the ground giving way beneath him,
 8    1,   14|          the traveler’s eye.~The ground, moreover, had recovered
 9    1,   14|      Between that height and the ground is where we must search,
10    1,   14|         sank down with it on the ground, about ten paces from the
11    1,   16|       well and fast, finding the ground firm, and the temperature
12    1,   16|       The horses lay down on the ground, and the men stretched themselves
13    1,   16|          Paganel got down on the ground and traced a geographical
14    1,   18|  presented to the dry, burned-up ground gave the desert a most peculiar
15    1,   18|      them on; they tore over the ground as if mad, and in a few
16    1,   18| themselves at full length on the ground in the bright sunshine,
17    1,   18|       seconds it lay flat on the ground.~The Indian had not made
18    1,   19|    themselves full length on the ground, except Thaouka, who slept
19    1,   19|  Glenarvan sank prostrate on the ground, and clasped his hands despairingly.
20    1,   19|         and Robert leaped to the ground, and flung themselves into
21    1,   22|      among the tall grasses. The ground had once more become a dead
22    1,   22|     exude from every pore of the ground. Soon large ponds, some
23    1,   22|        The horns come out of the ground,” replied the Indian, “but
24    1,   22|          guide, had he found the ground in this soaking condition.
25    1,   22|      soon tired of treading over ground that gave way at every step.
26    1,   22|          water still covered the ground. Paganel, on consulting
27    1,   22|         over great cracks in the ground, or got entangled in the
28    1,   23|       and dining-room are on the ground floor,” said Paganel, “we
29    1,   26|      were beginning to graze the ground occasionally, and by sounding
30    1,   26|      they were getting on rising ground. Twenty minutes afterward,
31    1,   26|        low-lying tract of marshy ground, still under water, soon
32    2,    1|     ourselves full length on the ground, unless we sat astride on
33    2,    5|         John there must be solid ground before they could make such
34    2,    6|     light and airy, occupied the ground floor of the house, which
35    2,    6|     afterward commenced clearing ground on his own account.~The
36    2,    7|   falsehood has sometimes gained ground by being exceedingly particular
37    2,   11|   country, would have soaked the ground; but here the air absorbed
38    2,   11|          posts were lying on the ground, could not be worked. It
39    2,   13|     dried up the dampness of the ground. Horses, cattle, and wagon
40    2,   13|         sharply reflected on the ground, made up a whole, and constituted
41    2,   13|       rain seldom falls, and the ground is parched, the trees have
42    2,   14|         to settlers who farm the ground. Till the arrival of the
43    2,   14|   farming. Ten thousand acres of ground, admirably cultivated, produced
44    2,   14|     animal, which burrows in the ground like a badger. It is as
45    2,   15|    allowed the heat to reach the ground through a close veil of
46    2,   15|         these projections of the ground were like so many rocks,
47    2,   15|         grandiflorum covered the ground, with its bushes covered
48    2,   15|          McNabbs lay down on the ground, and, after a close scrutiny,
49    2,   15|         they were looking on the ground for recent marks.~The Major
50    2,   15|         along, lying flat on the ground, like a savage on the prairies,
51    2,   16|          was already in the soft ground. Mulrady, Ayrton and Mangles
52    2,   16|     indeed they were—covered the ground. A hot steam rose from the
53    2,   16|      horses lay stretched on the ground, struck down like the rest.
54    2,   17|        were lying smoking on the ground. The Major, like a prudent
55    2,   17|       men examining marks on the ground, and one of the three was
56    2,   17|     Zealand Gazette lying on the ground. The paper was so folded
57    2,   18|      make the least noise on the ground. The animal seemed tired,
58    2,   18|      after bough fell on the wet ground. More than one great tree,
59    2,   18|     toward the east, hung on the ground like rays of vapor, and
60    2,   18|        dragging itself along the ground and uttering mournful groans.
61    2,   18|        filled the sky still; the ground was strewn with broken branches;
62    2,   18|      Here two corpses lay on the ground, struck down by Mulrady’
63    2,   18|       side and was thrown to the ground.~Still he did not lose consciousness.
64    2,   19|      wood scattered all over the ground. But he found it would not
65    3,    8|          thick fog rose from the ground, and made it very difficult
66    3,   10|          subterranean fires. The ground vibrates from the agitation
67    3,   11|         chief, struck her to the ground; she fell senseless.~Horrible
68    3,   12|        and he put his ear to the ground; it sounded as if someone
69    3,   12|    scraping or hollowing out the ground outside.~As soon as he was
70    3,   12|       with stones taken from the ground, or with their nails, while
71    3,   12|     Mulrady, stretched along the ground, watched the native guard
72    3,   13|    another. In the interior, the ground was carpeted with green
73    3,   13|          rose six feet above the ground.~The steward fell back in
74    3,   13|         and then fire out of the ground! Upon my word, this mountain
75    3,   13|        nothing.”~“If it is solid ground,” said John Mangles.~“Well!
76    3,   13|       the inclosure, on the warm ground, still violating with the
77    3,   14|        Maories there seemed good ground for hope. But brilliant
78    3,   15|     powder, and scattered on the ground a white sediment like dazzling
79    3,   15|         came the solfataras. The ground looked as if covered with
80    3,   15|          of sulphurous acid. The ground was encrusted with sulphur
81    3,   15|        two hundred feet from the ground.~Some of these pines, still
82    3,   18|       newspaper was lying on the ground, folded in such a manner
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