Chapter
1 V | Similarly he would have observed these planets throw off
2 VI | new moons that had been observed, nine hundred and fifty
3 X | deplorable cannon. He also observed that if the projectile did
4 XX | Ardan; “Herschel, in 1787, observed a great number of luminous
5 XXII | during the full moon. Gall observed that insane persons underwent
6 XXVII| difficult after all to have observed, under such conditions,
7 III | the situation.~Barbicane observed with some interest that
8 V | the temperature which was observed in the polar regions, at
9 VI | decreasing speed.~Now when they observed the earth through the lower
10 VII | in its depths.~“Besides,” observed Michel Ardan, “a plain is
11 X | topographical details of the moon, observed without glasses, could not
12 XIII | with regard to it, as he observed it through space, and so
13 XIII | same shade had before been observed at the bottom of an isolated
14 XIII | Barbicane, through his glasses, observed these rifts with great attention.
15 XIII | observer and the object observed. And more, Barbicane found
16 XIV | 1@ Fahrenheit.~“Well!” observed Michel, “we cannot reasonably
17 XV | combine together the facts observed up to that time, when a
18 XVIII| would answer that we have observed the lunar continent at a
19 XVIII| argument on facts recently observed, decide unanimously upon
20 XIX | drew from facts already observed, a conviction which his
21 XXIII| satellite. These savants had observed de visu, and under particular
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