Book,  chapter

 1    1,   13|        like the mutter-ings of thunder before a storm. There surely
 2    1,   22|      Thalcave, in a voice like thunder.~“What is it, then?” asked
 3    1,   25| Paganel.~“You’re not afraid of thunder, are you, Robert?” asked
 4    1,   25|    down,” said Glenarvan; “the thunder will soon burst over us.”~
 5    1,   25|        after the first clap of thunder the wind would become unchained,
 6    1,   25|        eyes. The first peal of thunder found them wide awake. It
 7    1,   25|        in the Pampas, that the thunder has a particular affection
 8    1,   25|    beginning.”~Louder peals of thunder interrupted this inopportune
 9    1,   26|   sand-banks with a noise like thunder. Glenarvan could not rest,
10    2,    9|     his voice was drowned in a thunder of applause, and he managed
11    2,   17|        name was like a clap of thunder. Ayrton had started up quickly
12    3,   10|       news fell on them like a thunder clap.~Among the savages,
13    3,   14|        the horizon and distant thunder pealed through the darkened
14    3,   14|      New Zealanders think that thunder is the angry voice of Noui-Atoua,
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