Book,  chapter

 1    1,   24|      agreed to call the island the Australian Continent.”~V. IV Verne~“
 2    2,    1|            are not in favor of the Australian continent.”~“Evidently,”
 3    2,    2|        found themselves nearer the Australian coast. They began to talk
 4    2,    2|          you take a fancy to learn Australian, dont go and study it in
 5    2,    4|           was between them and the Australian coast but three thousand
 6    2,    4|            running straight to the Australian continent, and its action
 7    2,    4|          Captain Grant reached the Australian continent after his shipwreck?”~“
 8    2,    4|    unanimous in declaring that the Australian natives abhor shedding blood,
 9    2,    4|             of the croaking of the Australian frogs, that he raised his
10    2,    5|      Indian Ocean which washed the Australian continent, and in four days
11    2,    5|             and rushing toward the Australian coast with a speed which
12    2,    6|    determination to sail round the Australian coast, stopping at Cape
13    2,    6|         wind blowing right for the Australian shores.~Two hours afterward
14    2,    6|         This is the largest of the Australian islands, and a great hiding
15    2,    6|        could be seen anywhere. The Australian shores revealed no more
16    2,    6|          the southern point of the Australian coast. Even now they were
17    2,    6|       Paddy OMoore, “but now I am Australian. Come in, gentlemen, whoever
18    2,    6|            is alive, he is on this Australian continent.”~
19    2,    7|           you added, ‘he is on the Australian continent.’”~“And, indeed,
20    2,    7|           was running right on the Australian coast. She was not more
21    2,    7|       Grant is alive, he is on the Australian continent, and it is useless
22    2,    8|      interesting details about the Australian continent, which he knew
23    2,    9|    northern hemisphere; but on the Australian continent it might be called
24    2,    9|       after such an enumeration of Australian peculiarities, he might
25    2,   10|           as is seldom seen in the Australian desert. Reindeer hams, slices
26    2,   10|       swans. This rara avis of the Australian rivers soon disappeared
27    2,   11|          give him an exact idea of Australian towns. There was a bank,
28    2,   11|        change so characteristic of Australian scenery. Mount Simpson and
29    2,   11|            formula employed in the Australian colonies.~“I thought,” said
30    2,   12|          meansbark of a tree’ in Australian.”~Toline nodded, and looked
31    2,   12|        these replies of the little Australian savage that they all sat
32    2,   12|            neighboring tribes. The Australian aborigines are gentle and
33    2,   12|          had acted. They were true Australian savages living in the Lachlan,
34    2,   12|     Paganel was beside himself. An Australian well versed in geography.
35    2,   12|           it is frequent enough in Australian schools. The little savages
36    2,   12|      looked in vain for the little Australian. Toline had disappeared.
37    2,   13|            gold-fields deluged the Australian continent with the scum
38    2,   13|         tree par excellence of the Australian flora.~The reason of the
39    2,   13|            Glenarvan a copy of the Australian and New Zealand Gazette, “
40    2,   14|      easier to believe it was some Australian bird imitating the sounds
41    2,   14|    geographer to himself, “let the Australian birds be as queer as they
42    2,   14|           oasis, improvised in the Australian desert. He was listening
43    2,   15|          the southeast. It was the Australian Alps, a vast fortification,
44    2,   15|            very poor.”~“Then these Australian Alps,” said Lord Glenarvan, “
45    2,   15|       Since ever I set foot on the Australian continent, have I been once
46    2,   15|          animal to the ravens.~The Australian Alps are of no great thickness,
47    2,   15|       which lay at the foot of the Australian Alps were level, but slightly
48    2,   17|     catastrophe. He handed her the Australian and New Zealand Gazette
49    2,   17|          had never set foot on the Australian continent!~A second time
50    2,   17|         eye chanced to fall on the Australian and New Zealand Gazette
51    2,   19|         constructed a canoe in the Australian manner, with large sheets
52    2,   19|        whole southern slope of the Australian Alps poured its liquid masses
53    2,   19|          by Paganel in his list of Australian products.~They had to dispense
54    2,   19|          had been conquered on the Australian shore by the perversity
55    3,    1|           lost on this part of the Australian coast; on the east coast
56    3,    2|           clock in the evening the Australian coast and the lighthouse
57    3,    7| Maryborough and Seymour during our Australian journey. At that time the
58    3,    7|     inclined to surrender, but the Australian papers have not confirmed
59    3,    8|    travelers passed, so that their Australian vehicle was but slightly
60    3,   16|          wished to bring me to the Australian coast.”~“Ayrton!” cried
61    3,   16|          right out at sea, and the Australian continent was finally out
62    3,   17|           the quartermaster on the Australian continent a proof of Harry
63    3,   18|   supposing Harry Grant was on the Australian continent. Without the least
64    3,   18|        given her the number of the Australian and New Zealand Gazette
65    3,   18|        either on the Patagonian or Australian coasts, at the points where
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