Chapter
1 XI | They took it into their heads that some mischief was meant
2 XI | twenty feet above their heads.~“My friends!” exclaimed
3 XII | powder-magazine suspended over our heads.”~“Not precisely,” said
4 XIV | uneasy. Their beautiful heads could be seen between every
5 XV | goods, without troubling our heads about the merchants; we’
6 XV | stealthily, thrusting their heads out first. Several “waganga,”
7 XV | immense ants’ nest of black heads was again in motion.~“Now,
8 XVI | wildly enough to make their heads turn, and the aeronauts
9 XIX | of fable, like the dogs’ heads which the traveller, Brun-Rollet,
10 XIX | to other tribes.”~“Dogs’ heads, eh? Quite convenient for
11 XX | of which Joe spoke were heads freshly severed from the
12 XX | village and the bleeding heads were disappearing on the
13 XXI | their bodies.~Ere long, two heads appeared to the gaze of
14 XXI | Let us, then, lay our heads together to devise some
15 XXII | saw the balloon over their heads, like a huge comet with
16 XXXIV| stretching out their viper-like heads and necks along the sand,
17 XXXIV| rapidity that made their heads reel, while the car oscillated
18 XXXV | without troubling their heads about them. The amphibious
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