Chapter
1 XIII | time we seemed to descry a human figure that fled at our
2 XX | great hollow into which human beings were now penetrating
3 XXII | the covetous eyes of the human race! These treasures have
4 XXVII | do was to despair.~What human power could restore me to
5 XXX | immense space; words of human tongue are inadequate to
6 XXXIII | needed to strike a spark of human. feeling out of him; but
7 XXXIII | monsters to my remembrance. No human eye has ever beheld them
8 XXXV | passed within which the human ear can distinguish one
9 XXXVII | excitement:~“Axel! Axel! a human head!”~“A human skull?”
10 XXXVII | Axel! a human head!”~“A human skull?” I cried, no less
11 XXXVIII| department of Somme, found a human jawbone fourteen feet beneath
12 XXXVIII| genuineness of a fossil human relic of the quaternary
13 XXXVIII| refused to admit that the human species could be contemporary
14 XXXVIII| geologists to refer back the human species to a higher antiquity
15 XXXVIII| that these remains were not human bones, but objects bearing
16 XXXVIII| a perfectly recognisable human body. Had some particular
17 XXXVIII| that this specimen of the human family is of the Japhetic
18 XXXIX | Come away, uncle — come! No human being may with safety dare
19 XXXIX | these monstrous beasts.”~“No human creature?” replied my uncle
20 XXXIX | gigantic kauri, stood a human being, the Proteus of those
21 XXXIX | we supposed they saw. No human being lives in this subterranean
22 XXXIX | structure resembled the human, some ape or baboon of the
23 XXXIX | it belong to any of those human beings who may or may not
24 XLI | rapidity of a movement which no human power could check.~Hours
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