Chapter
1 XVI | the masses of heaped-up cloud, adorned with a crest of
2 XVIII| banks, along with a perfect cloud of arrows, but without doing
3 XXI | flash between two masses of cloud, he distinctly made out
4 XXIV | country. But, there was not a cloud in the sky. At the close
5 XXV | A Little Philosophy.—A Cloud on the Horizon.—In the Midst
6 XXV | appear to have suffered.”~“A cloud! a real cloud!” shouted
7 XXV | suffered.”~“A cloud! a real cloud!” shouted Joe at this moment,
8 XXV | veil, and the lower belt of cloud, at the same moment, lifted
9 XXV | It’s only an isolated cloud,” remarked the doctor. “
10 XXV | for us!”~“I fear so; the cloud keeps at a great height.”~“
11 XXV | to go in pursuit of this cloud, since it refuses to burst
12 XXV | encountered an opaque mass of cloud, and entered a dense fog,
13 XXVI | of a furnace; and not a cloud in this sky of fire. It’
14 XXVII| behind an opaque veil of cloud whose enormous barrier extended
15 XXXIV| in the midst of a dense cloud of dust, and go whirling
16 XXXIV| that dusty and stifling cloud, and, from time to time,
17 XXXVI| they are raising a great cloud of dust.”~“May it not be
18 XL | Persistent Movement southward.—A Cloud of Grasshoppers.—A View
19 XL | if we’re to judge by yon cloud that’s coming up!”~“What!
20 XL | coming up!”~“What! another cloud?” asked Ferguson.~“Yes,
21 XL | spy-glass. “That’s not a cloud!”~“Not a cloud?” queried
22 XL | That’s not a cloud!”~“Not a cloud?” queried Joe, with surprise.~“
23 XL | Joe. In ten minutes that cloud will have arrived where
24 XL | The doctor was right. The cloud, thick, opaque, and several
25 XLIII| anxiously watching for the least cloud on the horizon. He feared,
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