Chapter
1 VI | May we not depend upon electric phenomena to give us light?
2 XI | apparatus, which, by means of an electric current, supplied a safe
3 XVIII | with the other he formed an electric communication with the coil
4 XVIII | and glistening coat. The electric light was here intensified
5 XX | more and more decided.~The electric light was reflected in sparkling
6 XXX | showed that it must be of electric origin. It was like an aurora
7 XXX | was fine.’ The play of the electric light produced singular
8 XXX | luminous vapours, its bursts of electric light, and a vast sea filling
9 XXXII | glistening bluish rays of electric light, here and there reflected
10 XXXIII| an apprehension lest the electric light should grow dim, or
11 XXXIV | the bright glare of the electric light. It is not there that
12 XXXIV | concentrated here. Sparks of electric fire mingle with the dazzling
13 XXXV | CHAPTER XXXV.~AN ELECTRIC STORM~Friday, August 21. —
14 XXXV | assume an olive hue. The electric light can scarcely penetrate
15 XXXV | shock like that from an electric eel.~At ten in the morning
16 XXXV | This frightful mask of electric sparks suggests to me, even
17 XXXV | the sea boils, and the electric fires are brought into violent
18 XXXV | emissions of lurid light; electric matter is in continual evolution
19 XXXV | upon our fated raft of this electric globe has magnetised every
20 XXXIX | silence, bathed in luminous electric fluid. By some phenomenon
21 XLI | impossible; and our last electric apparatus had been shattered
22 XLIII | thrown out of gear by the electric currents, confirmed me in
23 XLV | then, Axel.”~“During the electric storm on the Liedenbrock
24 XLV | laugh. “So it was just an electric joke!”~From that day forth
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