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Alphabetical    [«  »]
monument 2
monuments 1
mood 1
moon 45
moor 3
moored 1
moorings 4
Frequency    [«  »]
45 foot
45 light
45 look
45 moon
45 rest
45 thought
44 change
Jules Verne
The Fur country

IntraText - Concordances

moon

   Part,  Chapter
1 I, III | He is come to see the moon.”~At this reply, Captain 2 I, III | He is come to see the moon,” replied the courier, who 3 I, III | reply signify?— To see the moon! The moon could be seen 4 I, III | signify?— To see the moon! The moon could be seen anywhere; 5 I, III | total eclipse of the sun the moon is surrounded by a luminous 6 I, III | the sun’s rays near the moon? This is a question which 7 I, IV | and red prominences of the moon; he lived but to solve the 8 I, VI | but merely to look at the moon at the moment when her disc 9 I, VI | by any unlucky chance the moon should fail to keep her 10 I, VI | the astronomer, “if the moon were guilty of such a breach 11 I, XV | observed that when the sun and moon were in conjunction the 12 I, XVII | or flood, for the sun and moon being in conjunction, their 13 I, XVIII| red edge encircling the moon. This luminous meteor was 14 I, XVIII| quenching the light of the moon in their electric waves, 15 I, XIX | with masses of ice.~The moon, already in the last quarter, 16 I, XX | fifteen days-until the new moon, in fact.”~“Well, my brave 17 I, XXI | become of them all? The new moon had risen forty-eight hours 18 I, XXII | awaiting the moment when the moon, passing between the orb 19 I, XXIII| yesterday, madam, when the moon was full, and according 20 I, XXIII| have come so far to see the moon, and not to see it!” he 21 I, XXIII| being three days before new moon, she was accompanying the 22 I, XXIII| in size. The disc of the moon which is to intervene between 23 I, XXIII| unhappy for love of the moon.”~At last the great day-the 24 I, XXIII| shone brightly, and the moon, so soon to darken it, was 25 I, XXIII| commenced The disc of the moon seemed to graze that of 26 I, XXIII| that of the sun. But the moon’s shadow was not to fall 27 I, XXIII| eyes.~The brown disc of the moon gradually advanced, and 28 I, XXIII| each other, that of the moon completely hiding that of 29 I, XXIII| going! she is going! The moon, the moon is going! She 30 I, XXIII| is going! The moon, the moon is going! She is disappearing, 31 I, XXIII| True enough the disc of the moon was gliding away from that 32 II, I | at the time named, the moon had not completely eclipsed 33 II, I | noticed together at full moon a few days ago, no sensible 34 II, VI | impossible to see either sun, moon, or stars in this fog. Fancy 35 II, VI | safety. But without sun, moon, or stars, instruments were 36 II, VII | them to see their way. The moon, which was new the night 37 II, X | but to the east. The sun, moon, and stars rose and set 38 II, XII | an ominous sound. A pale moon, its light half quenched 39 II, XII | and hear no more. When the moon was for a moment veiled 40 II, XII | the red prominences of the moon had escaped him, he had 41 II, XIV | lunar halos appeared at full moon, and Thomas Black might 42 II, XIV | December the light of the moon revealed a long circular 43 II, XV | observations, neither sun, moon, nor stars could be seen 44 II, XVII | fine night, there was no moon, but the stars shone very 45 II, XXIII| gloomy night, without any moon, and Hobson, whose heroic


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