Chapter
1 III | a face embrowned by the sun; eyes keen and black; a
2 XI | mischief was meant to the sun and the moon. Now, these
3 XII | he saw.~The rays of the sun coming to the aid of the
4 XII | the blazing rays of the sun pump up its poisonous vapors.
5 XII | the reflection of the sun on those red sands was getting
6 XIII | reflected the rays of the sun. The Victoria had attained
7 XIII | the world’s existence.~The sun shone at the zenith, and
8 XIV | weather, but under a fiery sun that devoured the least
9 XV | about three o’clock, and the sun was shining brilliantly.
10 XVI | permitted to see it.”~The sun, darting his last rays beneath
11 XVI | hot rays of the setting sun. From time to time, an elephant
12 XVII | the morning, Monday, the sun reappeared in the horizon;
13 XVIII | chimed in the hunter.~The sun was at the zenith as the
14 XIX | flowed directly from the sun; but we must come down from
15 XXII | out rays, as vivid as the sun’s, through this intense
16 XXII | the blaze of the noonday sun. When he heard the sound
17 XXIII | of furnace. The noonday sun poured down its rays perpendicularly
18 XXIV | the blazing rays of the sun; and, from the earliest
19 XXIV | upon it, as soon as the sun had disappeared behind the
20 XXIV | disappeared with the setting sun, whose horizontal rays stretched
21 XXV | under the same rays of the sun?”~“The why concerns me but
22 XXV | you fear the effect of the sun’s heat on our balloon?”
23 XXV | reached the height of the sun’s disk. The latter then
24 XXV | amazement.~“Can the hot sun have really affected the
25 XXV | by the baking heat of the sun, seemed to be nothing now
26 XXVI | perpendicular rays of the sun. The doctor searched vainly
27 XXVII | showers of heat which the sun poured down upon them, the
28 XXVII | with terrific velocity; the sun was disappearing behind
29 XXVIII| the morrow, May 7th, the sun shone with all his splendor,
30 XXVIII| forty-nine degrees in the sun, and a veritable rain of
31 XIX | banks, turning up toward the sun their rounded teats swollen
32 XXXI | in the broad blaze of the sun or plunging beneath the
33 XXXI | of Bornou once stood.~The sun shot his dazzling rays over
34 XXXII | the intense heat of the sun, and made thereon some pious
35 XXXV | first rays of the morning sun! Joe experienced a keen
36 XXXV | taking his bearings by the sun, he set off afoot toward
37 XLIX | built of bricks dried in the sun, and huts of straw and reeds,
38 XL | morning the first rays of the sun lighted up Sego, the capital
39 XLI | ridge, and the rays of the sun shone upon its uppermost
40 XLIII | coarse grass, scorched by the sun.~The Victoria touched the
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