Chapter
1 VII | bold philosopher, a man of immense courage, and you must remember
2 VIII | before the museum, nor that immense cenotaph of Thorwaldsen’
3 IX | level, between two hills. An immense bed of lava bounds it on
4 XIII | means unpleasant, then an immense piece of dried fish floating
5 XIII | indefinitely prolonged like an immense system of natural fortifications,
6 XIII | sometimes contorted together; an immense torrent, once liquid, now
7 XIII | oak. We were rounding the immense base of the volcano. The
8 XV | down upon the plain. An immense column of pulverized pumice,
9 XX | the earth was clothed with immense vegetable forms, the product
10 XX | Thus were formed those immense coalfields, which nevertheless,
11 XXV | jokes.~The grotto was an immense apartment. Along its granite
12 XXX | convey any idea of this immense space; words of human tongue
13 XXX | extend much farther. The immense mammoth cave in Kentucky
14 XXX | to have preserved in this immense conservatory the antediluvian
15 XXXII | standing still.~About twelve, immense shoals of seaweeds came
16 XXXII | which we saw floating in immense waving lines upon the sea
17 XXXII | uppermost regions of the air immense birds, more powerful than
18 XXXII | support against the trunks of immense conifers; I lie in the shade
19 XXXVII | of the world. I also saw immense carapaces more than fifteen
20 XXXVII | that all this cavern or immense reservoir was filled in
21 XXXVII | before us. It seemed like an immense cemetery, where the remains
22 XXXVII | Here he stood facing an immense collection of scattered
23 XXXVIII| not the only one in this immense catacomb. We came upon other
24 XLI | its fall. A waterspout, an immense liquid column, was beating
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