Chapter
1 III | place them in succession in vertical columns, so as to group
2 III | together in five or six vertical lines.”~I caught his meaning,
3 VIII | SERIOUS PREPARATIONS FOR VERTICAL DESCENT~Altona, which is
4 XIV | composed of a series of vertical columns thirty feet high.
5 XVII | CHAPTER XVII.~VERTICAL DESCENT~Now began our real
6 XVIII | level of the island. long vertical tube, which terminates at
7 XVIII | was more horizontal than vertical. As for the exact depth
8 XIX | of inclined and sometimes vertical strata. We were passing
9 XX | either the appearance of a vertical well opening before his
10 XXIV | loved nothing better than a vertical path; but this way seemed
11 XXV | which will be in reality a vertical section of the globe, containing
12 XXV | reckoning, too, that if a vertical depth of sixteen leagues
13 XXVIII| craggy projections of a vertical gallery, quite a well; my
14 XXXIII| sweeps over the waters the vertical coils of its tail. Its jaw
15 XXXIV | Professor, because it is vertical; but for my part I prefer
16 XXXIX | yourself under the rays of a vertical sun in a tropical region
17 XLI | race, which seemed like a vertical descent. To judge by the
18 XLIII | lights began to penetrate the vertical gallery which widened as
19 XLIV | fierce light of his nearly vertical rays.~I could not believe
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