Chapter
1 II | lithoid minerals.~How well I knew all these bits of science!
2 II | spoken on the earth, but he knew at least his share of them.~
3 V | so on a hundred times.~I knew very well that if he succeeded
4 V | sentence would come out. But I knew also that twenty letters
5 VII | that.”~Night came. But I knew nothing about the lapse
6 XI | speaking, like a man who knew nothing or cared nothing
7 XI | custom, would go on foot. He knew all that part of the coast
8 XI | each other. I therefore knew not a single word of all
9 XIV | for the explosion which I knew must follow. But I was mistaken.~“
10 XVI | with asmuch wonder as they knew how to express, and perhaps
11 XVI | bounded.~My uncle’s rage knew no bounds. It was enough
12 XVII | manœuvres with the rope, which I knew that we had repeated fourteen
13 XX | vast open space; I then knew that the hand of man had
14 XXI | face.~“Yes, my poor boy, I knew that as soon as you arrived
15 XXVII | word of reproach, for I knew how much he must be suffering
16 XXX | the globe produced it? I knew of celebrated caverns from
17 XXX | a warm, moist climate. I knew that the Lycopodon giganteum
18 XXXIV | neither Cuvier nor Blumenbach knew anything about? It lies
19 XXXVIII| alone in his opinion.~We knew all these details, but we
20 XXXVIII| palæontological science, and what we knew of it was sufficient to
21 XLIII | giddy or intoxicated.~I knew quite well that according
22 XLIV | the people of the country knew anything about thieves,
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