Chapter
1 I | inventions, in fact, left far in the rear the timid instruments
2 VII | in range, they have lost far more in weight. Now, if
3 VII | pounds, a weight evidently far too great. Still, as we
4 XI | States extend downward as far as the 28th parallel of
5 XI | natives; Florida, with a far smaller territory, boasted
6 XII | finance. The sum required was far too great for any individual,
7 XII | her devotion to science as far as 30,000 cruzados. It was
8 XV | pounds of iron, a quantity far too costly to send by railway.
9 XIX | whose ignorance goes so far that he cannot even understand
10 XIX | some day appear velocities far greater than these, of which
11 XIX | with which he was doubtless far less conversant. Barbicane,
12 XXI | the danger, and doubtless far enough from the bushman
13 XXII | for his projectile, and go far to annihilate altogether
14 XXIV | forests, fearful rapids, far from all centers of population,
15 XXV | bottom of the Columbiad. So far the operation had been successful!
16 XXVI | prairie which extends, as far as the eye can reach, round
17 XXVII | which unhappily extended as far as the Rocky Mountains.
18 XXVIII| the derision of the mass. Far better is it to wait; and
19 III | Michel; “Adam cannot be far off; he is there somewhere;
20 III | extends beyond the moon?”~“Far beyond it, if the atmospheric
21 IV | integral calculus is not yet far enough advanced.”~“Then,”
22 V | their dimensions, are as far removed from each other
23 VII | allow that they were not far behind him; and that, under
24 IX | the journey, at least as far as the projectile’s impulsive
25 XI | so often shipwrecked. Not far off lies the “Sea of Rains,”
26 XII | hemisphere. The travelers were far from the central point which
27 XII | answered Barbicane. “We are too far off to recognize its nature.
28 XV | describing was taking it far from the point indicated
29 XVII | prehistorical times. Not far from that, rose to a height
30 XVII | the surrounding plain was far from equaling the depth
31 XVII | height, the depths withdraw far below the lunar level.”~“
32 XVII | network of crests; then, as far as the eye could see, a
33 XVIII | of these jets extended as far as the circle of Neander,
34 XX | the coast of America as far as the Straits of Magellan.”~“
35 XXI | Central America, took them as far as St. Louis, where the
36 XXII | success of the operation was far from being certain. How
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