Chapter
1 I | complexion which took off a good ten years from the fifty he
2 VII | after her on the high road. Ten yards more, and I had joined
3 VII | shod sticks, enough to load ten men.~I spent an awful night.
4 VII | uncle decreed “we start.”~At ten o’clock I fell upon my bed,
5 VIII | about and grumbling, at last ten o’clock came.~The heavy
6 VIII | Liedenbrock’s madness!~At ten in the morning, at last,
7 IX | take?” my uncle asked.~“Ten days,” the captain replied, “
8 XVII | quarters of rest, making ten hours and a half. We had
9 XIX | a slight rise. But about ten this upward tendency became
10 XX | passages of the gallery.~After ten hours’ walking I observed
11 XXI | on the lava soil. It was ten in the morning.~Hans and
12 XXV | pressure of seven hundred and ten atmospheres.”~“And how,
13 XXIX | 8th of August, and it is ten at night. You must ask me
14 XXX | which drew from Xenophon’s ten thousand Greeks, after their
15 XXXI | the raft was made. It was ten feet by five; the planks
16 XXXV | from an electric eel.~At ten in the morning the symptoms
17 XXXVII | unanswerable reasons for ten minutes without interruption;
18 XXXVIII| of the body of Asterius, ten cubits long, of which Pausanias
19 XLI | fuse was calculated to burn ten minutes before setting fire
20 XLI | chance in a thousand, or ten thousand, is still a chance;
21 XLII | been, as I guessed, about ten at night. The first of my
22 XLII | fourteen feet in a second, or ten miles an hour. At this rate
23 XLIII | movement, which lasted about ten minutes, and then stopped
24 XLIII | good,” said my uncle; “in ten minutes more we shall be
25 XLIII | perfectly true. When the ten minutes were over we started
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