Chapter
1 II | use in Iceland in former ages. They were invented, it
2 XVI | mouldered away with lapse of ages, this thrice-accursed name:~[
3 XIX | architects of the middle ages might have found studies
4 XXVIII | intensity. Seconds, which seemed ages, passed away, and at last
5 XXX | tall trees in the early ages. Look, Axel, and admire
6 XXXII | of the earth in the first ages of its formation, when,
7 XXXII | of the seas of primitive ages?”~“Yes; and you will observe
8 XXXII | huge mammals of the first ages of the world, the leptotherium (
9 XXXII | the scriptural periods or ages of the world, conventionally
10 XXXII | even farther still into the ages before the creation of living
11 XXXII | lycopods, a hundred feet high.~Ages seem no more than days!
12 XXXIII | forefathers of primitive ages.~I shudder as I recall these
13 XXXIII | burdened this earth a thousand ages before man appeared, but
14 XXXVII | existed in the earliest ages of the world. I also saw
15 XXXVII | of the waters of former ages. The Professor was carefully
16 XXXVII | where the remains of twenty ages mingled their dust together.
17 XXXVII | history of the animal life of ages, a history scarcely outlined
18 XXXVIII| into the history of the ages past; he was a predecessor
19 XXXVIII| preserved it thus for so many ages? It might be so. But this
20 XXXVIII| as it had lived countless ages ago. I stood mute before
21 XXXIX | of the early geological ages, some protopitheca, or some
22 XLIV | with the eternal snow of ages rising from the midst of
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