Chapter
1 III | involves danger; it may even be dangerous to sit down at one’s own
2 VI | mind, one trip is just as dangerous as the other!”~“Dangerous!
3 VI | dangerous as the other!”~“Dangerous! What! with a man like Dr.
4 X | captain, “the thing may prove dangerous.”~“What matters that,” replied
5 XVI | doctor. “The clouds are dangerous for us; they contain opposing
6 XIX | has not seemed to me very dangerous, and I can see nothing to
7 XXII | dazzling cascades—a superb but dangerous spectacle, for the wind
8 XXVI | or even rest, would be dangerous to you, my friends; you
9 XIX | car sometimes extremely dangerous. Ferguson did not close
10 XXX | tropical heats, when making dangerous departures, and descents
11 XXX | and descents still more dangerous, it had, at all times and
12 XXX | beyond the reach of these dangerous assailants; and, for two
13 XXXII | and I should think them dangerous enough if they were armed
14 XXXII | ascend so as to escape this dangerous proximity. He therefore
15 XXXII | this situation is just as dangerous.”~“Are you speaking seriously,
16 XXXIII| Besides, they are not very dangerous; and the Africans bathe
17 XXXV | reenforced by the ajoub—a very dangerous species of lamantine —carried
18 XXXVII| bandage of cotton, like their dangerous neighbors, the Touaregs.~
19 XLI | Africa is marked down as dangerous. Dr. Ferguson knew it through
20 XLI | higher; it surmounted the dangerous ridge, and the rays of the
21 XLI | repeat that it would be dangerous for us to separate, and,
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