Chapter
1 III | acceptation of the word—open, resolute, and headstrong.
2 VIII | mysterious country, now thrown open on all sides to the investigations
3 X | my cylinder, when fully open, expends 27 cubic feet per
4 XII | at last, for the keen, open air had mightily sharpened
5 XIV | Kanyeme.—A Night in the Open Air.—The Mabunguru.—Jihoue-la-Mkoa.—
6 XIV | clayey soil that cracked open with the heat, seemed, indeed,
7 XV | native dwellings; wide, open spaces for the markets;
8 XX | collection of huts surrounding an open space. In the middle of
9 XX | the car, they saw on the open plain below them an exciting
10 XXV | degree.~“We are right in the open desert,” said the doctor. “
11 XXV | they disappeared in the open sky.~The wind, which had
12 XXVII | exclaimed, in agony.~Joe did not open his lips. He was buried
13 XXVII | clinched fists, and ready to open his veins and drink his
14 XXX | to have their eyes wide open for every thing and at all
15 XXX | beating cloth stretched in the open air, on large trunks of
16 XXX | In the midst of a large open space there was a slave-market,
17 XXXII | school of sharks in the open ocean! For travellers in
18 XXXV | so long as he was in the open lake, he thought only of
19 XXXV | found himself—where? —in the open lake! Island there was none.
20 XXXVI | companions, who received him with open arms.~The Arabs uttered
21 XXXVIII| and men winding across the open desert, “we shall arrive
22 XLII | which he could scarcely keep open, calmly lit his pipe. He
23 XLIII | the balloon by cutting it open at the lower end. He then
24 XLIV | officers received them with open arms, and lavished upon
|