Chapter
1 I | of thought. Those fellows believe that one can’t become a
2 VII | replied Barbicane, “is, I believe, the maximum velocity ever
3 XVI | thousand dollars. One may believe that the captain’s wrath
4 XIX | habitable? For my own part I believe they are.”~“For myself,
5 XX | of the Americans not to believe that they will succeed in
6 XXII | friends in the moon. “Do you believe in the influence of the
7 III | excitability, and we beg you to believe that they were well represented.
8 V | calculation? Barbicane would not believe it. Nicholl revised his
9 V | What!” said Michel; “you believe that they have artists like
10 VI | tell me, Barbicane, do you believe that the moon is an old
11 X | reach it. No! he could not believe it; and this opinion he
12 XII | asked Michel; “for I cannot believe that savants would ever
13 XVI | Barbicane was inclined to believe that this curve would be
14 XVIII| confirm me in this opinion. I believe, indeed I affirm, that the
15 XVIII| had become habitable.”~“I believe it,” said Nicholl.~“Then,”
16 XVIII| Michel Ardan.~“I firmly believe that at the period when
17 XX | officer.~“I should like to believe it,” replied the lieutenant,
|