Chapter
1 II | enormous echo among scientific people. At first, it stirred up
2 VIII | details of the affair to people who did not even ask him,
3 IX | what can you expect? When people will stay in this world,
4 XV | commercial relations with the people hereabouts.”~“There’s one
5 XV | the hospitality of these people; so we might, at least,
6 XV | Undoubtedly so; these people appear well disposed; the
7 XIX | loses something thereby. People were fond of ascribing a
8 XX | custom in Abyssinia, these people have left them a prey to
9 XXVIII| subsisted upon raw meat, and people generally refused to credit
10 XXVIII| upon the sand.~“The next people who come this way,” he remarked, “
11 XIX | speaking; but there are no people to be seen yet.”~“It will
12 XIX | little walk,” said Joe, “for people who have to go on foot.”~“
13 XXX | Ferguson remarked, “those people take us for supernatural
14 XXX | like proud and intelligent people, with their high foreheads,
15 XXX | They are the careless people in the car! So, my friends,
16 XXXII | Sahara.~These estimable people were in readiness to receive
17 XXXV | submerged in this way; and the people living along the shores
18 XXXVI | THIRTY-SIXTH.~A Throng of People on the Horizon.—A Troop
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