Chapter
1 I | How many a well-employed hour he passed with that hero
2 I | who can fall asleep at any hour of the day or awake at any
3 I | the day or awake at any hour of the night.~Nothing, then,
4 III | morning.~Three-quarters of an hour later a cab deposited him
5 III | then,” he said, after an hour’s discussion, “if you are
6 VIII | swiftly to Greenwich. In an hour’s time all were asleep on
7 VIII | hundred and forty miles per hour.”~“You see, then, that with
8 X | expends 27 cubic feet per hour, with a flame at least six
9 X | than nine cubic feet per hour, so that my twenty-five
10 XI | one looked forward to the hour of arrival, and sought to
11 XII | speed of twelve miles per hour, and soon were passing in
12 XIII | rate of twenty miles an hour, but the aeronauts felt
13 XIV | same dust.~After half an hour’s walking, Dick and Joe
14 XIV | arid and stony, but in an hour’s journey, in a fertile
15 XIV | than three-quarters of an hour. He had seen nothing particular
16 XIV | rate of fourteen miles per hour, and the guidance of the
17 XV | feet.~Three-quarters of an hour later, through shady paths,
18 XV | and far beyond it.~Half an hour later, the doctor, seeing
19 XVI | to thirty-five miles an hour; the undulating and fertile
20 XVI | steadily ascended, and, ere the hour was over, it had passed
21 XVII | the team, lasted about an hour and a half; yet the animal
22 XVII | will go off and hunt for an hour or two; the doctor will
23 XVIII | rate of eighteen miles per hour.~The doctor had carefully
24 XVIII | approaching thirty miles per hour.~The waters of the Nyanza,
25 XVIII | should the wind hold another hour in our favor!”~The mountains
26 XVIII | only for a quarter of an hour. Without doing so I cannot
27 XX | at least thirty miles an hour. Lean over, and see how
28 XXI | purpose than to hasten the hour of his doom. We must act!”~“
29 XXIV | about nine cubic feet per hour. Consequently, they could
30 XXV | follow them, and in about an hour they disappeared in the
31 XXVI | take place in less than an hour.”~“But,” asked Kennedy, “
32 XIX | aloud:~“Land, ho! land!”~An hour later the continent spread
33 XXX | in descending.”~Half an hour later the balloon hung motionless
34 XXXII | hundred yards wide, at that hour crowded with horsemen and
35 XXXIII | speed of twenty miles per hour.~The doctor continued to
36 XXXIII | current.”~During more than an hour he searched at different
37 XXXV | and manfully.~In about an hour and a half the distance
38 XXXV | our exhausted traveller an hour of sleep. During all this
39 XXXVI | gaining on them. In half an hour we shall be near enough
40 XXXVI | rate of twenty miles per hour, and no horse can keep up
41 XXXVIII| more than two miles per hour, and always rest during
42 XLIX | women were visible at that hour of the day.~“Yet they are
43 XLIII | the Talabas; but, half an hour later, the balloon was again
44 XLIII | Another quarter of an hour,” said Ferguson, “and we
45 XLIII | balloon.~“We have at least an hour’s start of those banditti,”
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