Chapter
1 II | forty years of age, calm, cold, austere; of a singularly
2 IX | Now cotton, combined with cold nitric acid, become transformed
3 XIX | always either too hot or too cold; we are frozen in winter,
4 II | shall have to suffer intense cold.~“What!” said Michel Ardan. “
5 V | CHAPTER V~ THE COLD OF SPACE~This revelation
6 V | we must not let the outer cold, which is excessive, penetrate
7 V | same with darkness; it is cold where the sun’s rays do
8 V | Because the heat and cold would be equalized on our
9 V | compensation between the cold of the aphelion and the
10 VI | they must be perished with cold on their planets.”~“Thus,
11 XIII | Endymion, to the east of the “Cold Sea,” in the northern hemisphere,
12 XIII | darkness— no transition from cold to heat, the temperature
13 XIII | from boiling point to the cold of space.~Another consequence
14 XIV | watchings. This was an intense cold, which soon covered the
15 XIV | profound darkness, amid the cold, like the Esquimaux of the
16 XIV | exact.”~“In any case it is cold,” said Michel. “See! the
17 XIV | deformed by the frightful cold.”~“Really!”~“You will feel
18 XIV | to let in a most intense cold.~“The devil!” exclaimed
19 XIV | exclaimed Michel Ardan, “it is cold enough to freeze a white
20 XV | want of air, unless the cold had killed them first. Still,
21 XVI | some pieces of bread and cold meat, which were quickly
22 XVIII| of lava congealed by the cold; an opinion, however, which
23 XVIII| suddenly from excessive cold to intense heat. Nature
24 XVIII| sudden alternations of cold and heat, her days and nights
25 XXII | northeasterly wind, and rather sharp cold. The whole population of
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