Chapter
1 IV | geologist as he is! He would start, he would, in spite of everything
2 VII | but I felt a desire to start at once, and not to lose
3 VII | knapsack to my shoulders and start.~But I must confess that
4 VII | refused to believe we should start. I drew Gräuben into the
5 VII | precisely,” my uncle decreed “we start.”~At ten o’clock I fell
6 VIII | steamer Ellenora, did not start until night. Thence sprang
7 XI | part of the engagement.~The start was fixed for the 16th of
8 XII | be pleased at our first start. I threw myself wholly into
9 XIII | and Hans signalled the start.~At a hundred yards from
10 XIII | straight as he was at our first start. I could not help admiring
11 XIX | and gave the signal for a start. I saw that his silence
12 XXI | his life. He was ready to start at a given signal, or to
13 XXI | to tempt fortune. Let us start!”~
14 XXIII | awhile; and then we will start again.”~I was forgetting
15 XXIV | was to descend.~“Let us start!” I cried, awakening by
16 XXV | preoccupation of an immediate start. Although we were in the
17 XXXVI | answered my uncle; “let us start from that point and count
18 XXXVII| of the sea.~“Now let us start upon fresh discoveries,”
19 XL | CENTRE OF THE EARTH~Since the start upon this marvellous pilgrimage
20 XL | that’s nothing. Let us start: march!”~All this crazy
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