Chapter
1 V | the door; he heard not a sound, not even that excellent
2 VIII | discerned a stretch of sea.~“The Sound!” he cried.~At our left
3 VIII | bathed in sunlight. The Sound stretched away to Elsinore,
4 IX | We shall pass down the Sound full speed, with all sails
5 IX | doorkeeper of the straits of the Sound, before which every year
6 XIV | for a moment, uttered a sound no doubt understood between
7 XVII | more abrupt and deadened sound.~As I had taken care to
8 XXII | silence of the grave. No sound could reach us through walls,
9 XXII | became deeper, and the last sound died away in the far distance.~“
10 XXII | silence of the night caught a sound, a murmuring of something
11 XXIII | hear distinctly quite a new sound of something running within
12 XXIII | we all three fell into a sound sleep.~
13 XXV | you observed how intense sound is down here?”~“No doubt
14 XXVII | listened to hear if any sound from my companions could
15 XXVIII | a cry, a mere breath of sound, but nothing came. Some
16 XXVIII | which would conduct the sound of my voice just as wire
17 XXVIII | with the deepest anxiety. Sound does not travel with great
18 XXVIII | between the two words; so the sound takes twenty seconds in
19 XXVIII | the direction by which the sound came, of course I should
20 XXIX | You say that I am safe and sound?”~“No doubt you are.”~“And
21 XXXV | ear can distinguish one sound from another. If all the
22 XXXVIII| preserving their shape, sound teeth, abundant hair, and
23 XLI | him from hearing even the sound of my voice.~In spite of
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