Chapter
1 Pre | vegetation upon which four thousand persons were partly dependent
2 II | speak fluently in the two thousand languages and twelve thousand
3 II | thousand languages and twelve thousand dialects which are spoken
4 V | millions, six hundred and forty thousand combinations. Now, here
5 VI | is. It is a mountain five thousand feet high, one of the most
6 VII | was all adrift amongst a thousand contradictory hypotheses,
7 IX | year there pass fifteen thousand ships of all nations.~The
8 X | Fridrikssen, “why we possess eight thousand volumes, many of them valuable
9 X | Where do you keep your eight thousand volumes? For my part —”~“
10 XV | we had ascended the two thousand steps of this grand staircase,
11 XV | proper of the crater.~Three thousand two hundred feet below us
12 XVI | an anxious one, at five thousand feet above the sea level.
13 XVI | appeared to be about two thousand feet. Imagine the aspect
14 XVI | pleasure in watching the thousand rills and cascades that
15 XVIII | came to wake us up. The thousand shining surfaces of lava
16 XVIII | attained a depth of six thousand feet beyond that hitherto
17 XXII | broke across each other in a thousand flashing coruscations.~About
18 XXIII | quarter, and descended two thousand feet.~Then I began to hear
19 XXIII | shattered the rock into a thousand fragments. Not so Hans.
20 XXIII | equal to the weight of a thousand atmospheres. But I have
21 XXV | this rate we shall be two thousand days, or nearly five years
22 XXV | follows that we must go eight thousand miles in a south-easterly
23 XXX | drew from Xenophon’s ten thousand Greeks, after their long
24 XXX | some of the two hundred thousand species of vegetables known
25 XXXII | grow at a depth of twelve thousand feet, reproduce themselves
26 XXXII | the fuci, three or four thousand feet long, undulating like
27 XXXII | mass of fourteen hundred thousand times the volume of the
28 XXXIII | They burdened this earth a thousand ages before man appeared,
29 XXXIV | seems to me a couple of thousand yards. What can be this
30 XXXVI | and in reality we were a thousand leagues asunder!~All these
31 XXXVII | museums of great cities. A thousand Cuviers could never have
32 XXXVIII| elephant; he lived a hundred thousand years ago, when, according
33 XLI | when. But one chance in a thousand, or ten thousand, is still
34 XLI | chance in a thousand, or ten thousand, is still a chance; whilst
35 XLIII | I pass rapidly over the thousand ideas which passed through
36 XLIV | of another more than two thousand miles from Snæfell and from
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