Chapter
1 I | War of the Rebellion, a new and influential club was
2 I | Baltimore. The inventor of a new cannon associated himself
3 I | mere waste of time! The New World seems to have made
4 I | an opportunity to try my new mortars on a real field
5 II | enterprises; an essentially New Englander, a Northern colonist,
6 II | treatise, translated from the New York American, related how
7 III | and Statistical Society of New York, the Philosophical
8 VI | the center; that she is new when she is in conjunction
9 VI | that out of one thousand new moons that had been observed,
10 VI | take possession of this new continent of the sky, and
11 VII | velocities, we shall launch our new projectile with the rapidity
12 X | ever Barbicane invented a new shot, Nicholl invented a
13 X | shot, Nicholl invented a new plate; each followed a current
14 X | Nicholl had completed a new armor-plate of wrought steel.
15 XI | the different States. The New York Herald and the Tribune
16 XI | the honor and create us new enemies, while Florida has
17 XII | manufactory at Coldspring, near New York, which during the war
18 XIII | fellow-travelers arrived at New Orleans. There they immediately
19 XIV | on board the Tampico for New Orleans. His object was
20 XV | preferable to freight vessels at New York, and to load them with
21 XV | veritable fleet, which, quitting New York on the 3rd of May,
22 XV | have believed that some new crater was forming in the
23 XVIII | instituted regarding this new rival was quickly interrupted
24 XIX | up the idea, and let his new friend run the chances of
25 XIX | voyage from Liverpool to New York! Distance is but a
26 XIX | and began by asking his new friend whether he thought
27 XX | discussion, watched his new friend with some anxiety.
28 XXII | CHAPTER XXII~ THE NEW CITIZEN OF THE UNITED STATES~
29 XXII | 1399, sometimes during the new, sometimes during the full
30 XXII | month, at the epochs of new and full moon. In fact,
31 XXIII | adventurers into space.~The new plans had been sent to Breadwill
32 XXIV | Cambridge, the tube of the new reflector would require
33 XXIV | highest point of which, in New Hampshire, does not exceed
34 XXVI | were about to abandon for a new world.~How many persons
35 XXVI | Real mint-julep in the new style!” All these cries
36 XXVIII| CHAPTER XXVIII~ A NEW STAR~That very night, the
37 XXVIII| satellite.~The elements of this new star we have as yet been
38 XXVIII| our solar system with a new star.~ J. BELFAST.~ To how
39 XXVIII| that the elements of this new star had not yet been calculated;
40 I | to make the best of our new lodgings, and make ourselves
41 II | enough to traverse Paris or New York in a second? This was
42 II | thousand dollars. But a new hypothesis presents itself
43 II | seen, presented quite a new aspect, and one which the
44 II | reach it, the earth will be new, and will only appear to
45 III | continents and seas in a new light— the first resplendent
46 III | the moon would have been new; that is to say, invisible,
47 III | Selenites are! We inhabit a new world, peopled by ourselves—
48 III | Indeed the inhabitants of the new star could not live without
49 VI | midnight, the earth would be new, at the very moment when
50 VI | the lower glass. Nothing new to note!~When Michel Ardan
51 VII | unforseen incidents, and new phenomena; and nothing would
52 VII | incessantly observing this new world. They imagined themselves
53 VII | apartments in London, Paris, or New York, and many theaters,
54 VIII | desired perception of a new phenomenon. From the moment
55 IX | closely in their places.~This new work was finished about
56 X | their eyes when so near this new world? No! All their feelings
57 XI | the parceled-out land of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia,
58 XI | They were learning this new world by heart. They were
59 XII | the last quarter and the new moon, because then the shadows
60 XIII | the last quarter and the new moon, when the shadows fall
61 XIV | arrived here when the moon was new, that is to say fifteen
62 XIV | the earth when the moon is new.”~“But,” said Nicholl, “
63 XIV | it is because the moon is new; that is to say, she is
64 XIV | was gravitating, like a new star created by the hand
65 XV | up to that time, when a new incident recalled him briskly
66 XVI | parabolical trajectory— a new problem which tormented
67 XVI | which might throw some new light on their uranographic
68 XIX | but a day old, having been new the night before at twelve;
69 XX | do when they arrive in a new country, taking a walk!”~“
70 XXII | the Susquehanna for her new destination. Her powerful
71 XXIII | emotion both in the old and new world, with what enthusiasm
72 XXIII | given to the public. The New York Herald bought the manuscript
73 XXIII | Massachusetts, Vermont, Maine, and New Hampshire; the north and
74 XXIII | Hampshire; the north and west by New York, Ohio, Michigan, and
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