Chapter
1 IX | resemble roofs placed on the ground. But then these roofs are
2 XII | legs nearly touched the ground he looked like a six-legged
3 XII | People like him get over the ground without a thought. There
4 XIII | upon hardened lava; this ground is called in the country ‘
5 XV | quietly as if he were on level ground; sometimes he disappeared
6 XVI | threw its shadow on the ground. Amongst them all, Scartaris
7 XVII | edge of our narrow standing ground, I observed that the bottom
8 XIX | hours’ walk over such easy ground.”~“It may be easy, but it
9 XXIII | at three feet from the ground.~I was stirred up with excitement.
10 XXIV | CANST THOU WORK I’ THE GROUND SO FAST?~By the next day
11 XXIV | to keep account of the ground gone over.~The gallery dipped
12 XXVII | Mechanically I swept the ground with my hands. How dry and
13 XXVIII | be thirty leagues under ground?”~I again began to listen.
14 XXVIII | myself.~Suddenly there was no ground under me. I felt myself
15 XXX | the bones scattered on the ground.”~“So there are!” I cried; “
16 XXXI | forty-five minutes, just as above ground. As for its dip, a curious
17 XXXI | frames, were covering the ground, enough almost for a little
18 XXXVI | there they all lay on the ground — ladders, ropes, picks,
19 XXXVII | sea must have covered the ground on which we were treading.
20 XXXVIII| geologists, had maintained his ground, disputed, and argued, until
21 XL | interior was level with the ground outside, so that we were
22 XL | has slipped down to the ground and blocked up the way.
23 XLIII | spatter the blood-stained ground.~
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