Book,  chapter

 1    1,   10|              without deviating from it half a degree, and possibly in
 2    1,   12|               or, in other words, only half a degree out of our way.”~“
 3    1,   13|             clearing the opening after half an hour’s hard work, to
 4    1,   15|            like; you can’t laugh at me half as much as I laugh at myself!”~“
 5    1,   15|            good pace for an hour and a half, and had to make great strides
 6    1,   15|               to the camp in less than half an hour, and were hailed
 7    1,   16|   comprehending.~The lesson had lasted half an hour, when the geographer
 8    1,   18|         excellent eating.~In less than half an hour the hunters had
 9    1,   18|             and measuring a foot and a half long. It was very fat and
10    1,   22|               and more, till it seemed half under water.~They quickened
11    1,   22|              rest of his sentence with half a pint of muddy water. The
12    1,   25|   extinguishing the stars. Before long half the sky was overspread.
13    1,   26|            wind, which blows regularly half of the day and night, bent
14    1,   26|                beginning to close.~For half an hour he followed his
15    1,   26|        carefully reefed, and her steam half up. Her smoke was lost in
16    2,    6|        discover a natural breach about half a mile south. Part of the
17    2,    6|               and, after walking about half an hour, the country began
18    2,    6|             Several bullocks and about half a dozen horses were feeding
19    2,    8|          Jacques Paganel, for he spent half the night in arranging,
20    2,   10|              was a shapeless creature, half porcupine, half ant-eater,
21    2,   10|              creature, half porcupine, half ant-eater, a sort of unfinished
22    2,   10|              143d meridian.~The river, half a mile in width, wound its
23    2,   11|           without uttering four words.~Half an hour later, the travelers
24    2,   11|                murmured in their beds, half hidden among giant reeds.
25    2,   11|                of the train, the other half, drawn up to the opposite
26    2,   11|             noise was heard from about half a mile up the river. A crowd
27    2,   12|              many strangers. He seemed half frightened at first, but
28    2,   12|              offered his friend Toline half his bed, and the little
29    2,   13|               the Caupespe rivers. The half of their journey was now
30    2,   13|              the guard picked up about half a mile from Camden Bridge,
31    2,   14| repulsive-looking animal, a foot and a half long, but, as Paganel chanced
32    2,   15|                they had only gone over half a degree. They camped at
33    2,   15|             full of little rushes, and half covered up with orchids,
34    2,   15|        acceptable in such hot weather. Half a barrel of Scotch ale was
35    2,   15|           light illumined the distance half a mile, and McNabbs fancied
36    2,   16|                margin of the river. In half an hour they rejoined Paganel,
37    2,   17|           shadows he had noticed about half a mile away from the encampment.
38    2,   19|             middle of the river, about half a mile from the starting
39    2,   19|           after a passage of more than half an hour, struck against
40    2,   19|              his friends could only go half a mile an hour. Should this
41    3,    1|               deposit money?”~“Here is half of the passage-money, twenty-five
42    3,    2|             was worthy of the bear.~At half past twelve the anchor was
43    3,    4|               away from the reefs.~For half a minute the starboard side
44    3,    6|               place in the interstices half a dozen empty barrels, which
45    3,    6|              that steered the raft.~In half an hour they had made half
46    3,    6|             half an hour they had made half a mile. But, strange to
47    3,    6|          strained violently, and every half hour John had to take in
48    3,    6|           which Wilson had improvised.~Half an hour was lost in vain
49    3,   11|           crowd of natives formed in a half circle some distance off,
50    3,   11|                grew fainter. For about half an hour the funeral procession
51    3,   12|            still they worked on; after half an hour they had gone three
52    3,   12|           brought up the rear.~Another half an hour and the glorious
53    3,   12|              mists of the horizon. For half an hour the fugitives walked
54    3,   14|         principal dish was composed of half a dozen rats, caught by
55    3,   15|            other without interruption. Half the distance from Lake Taupo
56    3,   15|             under her four rowers. For half an hour she kept her distance;
57    3,   15|                energy, and for another half hour, keeping their distance,
58    3,   15|           speed, and was not more than half a mile off.~John Mangles,
59    3,   17|          engineer to get up the steam. Half an hour afterward the beak-head
60    3,   18|               life for two years and a half. This much, however, I must
61    3,   18|              the marshes, where it got half buried. At my instance—but
62    3,   20|             nature. In two years and a half, Harry Grant and his two
63    3,   20|           immediately. Two years and a half were spent in this manner.
64    3,   20|                two sailors received me half dead. It was a horrible
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