Chapter
1 I | head and feet respectively being given, required the exact
2 II | very easily approached, being naturally the most affable
3 V | night he had visions of being swung aloft at immeasurable
4 VI | Pleiades, the remotest of them being only of the ninth magnitude.
5 VI | prevent Samuel even then from being guilty of such an act of
6 VII | of common air—the former being fourteen and a half times
7 VII | surface of the outside balloon being about eleven thousand six
8 VIII | he, above all things, of being permitted to accompany his
9 VIII | Bennet, had the name of being a very amiable person, and
10 XII | The Sources of the Nile; being a General Survey of the
11 XIII | straight line, the northernmost being the longest.~The Victoria
12 XIV | might encounter. Without being a rifleman, Joe could handle
13 XIV | gas, the country itself being at an average height of
14 XV | had some pretensions to being carved. Long lines of dark-red
15 XVI | machinery, men will end in being eaten up by it! I have always
16 XVI | only that I am afraid of being carried out of my course
17 XVI | uneasiness.~“If you are afraid of being carried away by the wind,
18 XVI | urged Kennedy.~“The risk of being struck would be just about
19 XVII | behold, and Joe, without being too proud, thought that
20 XVIII | course; he was afraid of being carried toward the east,
21 XVIII | mosquitoes, there’s not a living being to be seen on it.”~“The
22 XXI | necessary, without there being any need of resorting for
23 XXII | at its foot lay a human being—a young man of thirty years
24 XXIV | the spirits, the latter being more likely to produce than
25 XXV | See the advantage of being put on short allowance!”
26 XXVIII| the sand, at the risk of being torn to pieces. The doctor,
27 XIX | had to make up his mind to being borne farther to the northward
28 XXX | a marsh and a thick wood being the only channel of approach
29 XXXII | largest size, their bodies being more than three feet in
30 XXXIII| resumed the doctor, “it not being the practice of the natives
31 XXXIII| for he felt that he was being thrown back to the eastward,
32 XXXIV | hours, without Ferguson being able to check or guide her
33 XXXIV | sea, including the risk of being swallowed up, and added
34 XXXV | well-deserved reputation of being quite inoffensive.~But had
35 XXXVII| visited it.~The Victoria, not being seen in the obscurity of
36 XLI | brave fellow’s hand, without being able to utter a word.~The
37 XLIV | from us into the river, and being swept away by the current
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