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Alphabetical    [«  »]
mass 24
massacres 1
massed 1
masses 33
mast 9
master 4
master-carpenter 1
Frequency    [«  »]
33 keep
33 kept
33 lagoon
33 masses
33 ought
33 raft
33 sight
Jules Verne
The Fur country

IntraText - Concordances

masses

   Part,  Chapter
1 I, IV | Reliance was surrounded with masses of verdure, refreshing to 2 I, VI | wandered amongst the ice masses, already beginning to break 3 I, VII | frequent occurrence; and masses of granite or half-thawed 4 I, VII | hollowed out of the frozen masses, or rather holes were to 5 I, VII | soon at work on the brittle masses of ice, and in three-quarters 6 I, VII | progress would be barred by the masses of debris accumulated between 7 I, VII | the ruins of the broken masses. The blocks of ice cracked 8 I, IX | and revealed low jagged masses of rain-cloud chased towards 9 I, XIX | along the coast, strewn with masses of ice.~The moon, already 10 I, XXI | and pointed to some moving masses indistinctly visible in 11 I, XXII | once more set free, huge masses rolled over with an awful 12 II, VI | giddy rapidity, and heavy masses of vapour were piled upon 13 II, VII | neither was insensible. Jagged masses of mist and ragged rain-clouds 14 II, IX | reach, were but two distant masses on the horizon.~Did she 15 II, X | half-liquid, half-solid masses. It was easy to see that 16 II, XIII | Ocean. Hence a confusion of masses of ice, which looked as 17 II, XIII | were capped with tottering masses of debris, which the slightest 18 II, XIII | currents the influence of the masses of permanent ice in the 19 II, XIV | the ice-wall, the frozen masses of which were piled up to 20 II, XV | violence with which the moving masses of ice crushed upon each 21 II, XV | now formed two separate masses, the larger of which seemed 22 II, XVII | pointed due north, and those masses of the old chain of icebergs 23 II, XVII | buried beneath the avalanche. Masses of ice were crowding upon 24 II, XVIII| approach the enceinte. The masses of ice were rolling down 25 II, XVIII| force with which the tossing masses, which seemed to be surging 26 II, XVIII| notice that another of these masses had rolled over, and there 27 II, XVIII| disappeared beneath the masses of earth and sand, upon 28 II, XVIII| shovels and pickaxes. The masses of ice, sand, and earth, 29 II, XVIII| the top of the accumulated masses, so as to roll down loose 30 II, XVIII| excavation, attacking the masses with iron and heat, as the 31 II, XVIII| to bore in the shifting masses of sand and earth, and it 32 II, XVIII| shaft from above, for the masses flung down by the avalanche, 33 II, XX | icebergs trembled, large masses broke away, and the icebergs,


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