Chapter
1 I | resounded on all sides; the name of Ferguson was in every
2 IV | Karthoum, and, under the name of Yacoub the merchant,
3 VI | answered with alacrity to the name of Joe. He was an excellent
4 VI | Had the occasion arisen to name a professor of gymnastics
5 VIII | Captain Bennet, had the name of being a very amiable
6 XI | upon the island of the same name, and, on the 15th of April,
7 XI | us give our aerial ship a name that will bring her good
8 XII | over the Mrima country, the name of this part of the eastern
9 XIII | approaching Rubeho, the name of which signifies, in the
10 XV | door hardly deserved the name.~Dr. Ferguson was received
11 XVI | for it has retained the name that antiquity gave it,
12 XVIII | conviction. “The origin of its name, like the origin of its
13 XIX | The ancients gave it the name of an ocean, and were not
14 XIX | went through it under the name of Latif-Effendi. The tribes
15 XXVI | and richly merited the name of “tiger’s milk” applied
16 XXVIII | Certainly; that is the general name of all the neighboring tribes,
17 XIX | not be dignified with the name of mountains. There were
18 XXXVI | needless to pronounce the name.~“Yes! it is he! on horseback,
19 XXXVIII| in the country under the name of mehari.~Such were the
20 XXXVIII| another Frenchman, Imbert by name, and, in 1810, an Englishman,
21 XLI | Senegalese Fouta, Al-Hadji by name, declaring himself to be
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