Chapter
1 VI | not be deranged in ages to come.~There remains but the third
2 VII | the domain of poetry and come direct to the question.”~“
3 IX | Just so.”~“We shall have to come then to my ideal of a cannon
4 XI | entire States threatening to come to blows about the question
5 XVII | Gun Club had now virtually come to an end; and two months
6 XX | of arguments in order to come to direct observations.
7 XX | with perfect coolness, “and come to one important fact. A
8 XX | in the moon, how will you come back?”~“I am not coming
9 XX | straight at his adversary.~“Come!” he said shortly.~The other
10 XX | thrown you in my way.”~“I am come for that purpose.”~“You
11 XXVIII| However, two hypotheses come here into our consideration.~
12 XXVIII| that, some day, they will come out all right.”~ROUND THE
13 I | canine race! If ever we do come down again, I will bring
14 I | to be allowed to pay.”~“Come, Nicholl. I see that you
15 III | with most gracious words.~“Come, Diana,” said he: “come,
16 III | Come, Diana,” said he: “come, my girl! thou whose destiny
17 III | Eve of all Selenite dogs! come, Diana, come here.”~Diana,
18 III | Selenite dogs! come, Diana, come here.”~Diana, flattered
19 VII | squirrels we should not come out safe and sound. So it
20 VII | Maston will be able to come to us.”~“Yes, he’ll come,”
21 VII | come to us.”~“Yes, he’ll come,” replied Barbicane; “he
22 VII | Michel, “yes, Maston will come, and with him our friends
23 VIII | in reality, a time must come when the projectile would
24 VIII | in proportion. There must come a point where these two
25 XIV | that of the moon, which has come and placed herself like
26 XX | for if so, it would have come up of itself.”~“Brook’s
27 XX | Commander, it is ‘they’ come back again!”~
28 XXI | MASTON RECALLED~“It is ‘they’ come back again!” the young midshipman
29 XXII | around him.~“What is it?”~“Come, speak!”~“It is, simpletons,”
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