Chapter
1 II | primitive bed of granitic rock, or, settling together in
2 IV | vigorously attacked the rock. He went through the dark
3 V | searching, sounding the rock with a sharp blow, listening
4 V | suspicious-looking cleft in the rock, he thought he saw a shadow.
5 V | cut obliquely through the rock. He darted forward.~His
6 VI | more dismally than on the rock. Only sandstone and schist
7 VI | appeared along the face of the rock or on the embankment of
8 VI | sometimes found amongst the rock, it would soon have been
9 VI | even holes in which the rock had been blasted, near the
10 VI | near to the cracks in the rock. Harry has done it as well
11 VI | had seated himself on a rock. After critically inhaling
12 VI | different fissures in the rock; but he shook his head,
13 VI | was escaping through the rock.~“Nothing!” cried Ford,
14 VI | with lime, leaving on the rock a long whitish mark, badly
15 VI | propped himself up against the rock. Harry got upon his shoulders,
16 VI | outline, flickered over the rock like a Will-o’-the-Wisp.~
17 VII | with which to blast the rock. Harry, besides a large
18 VII | to-day!”~Madge, seated on a rock, carefully observed the
19 VII | repeated Ford; and soon the rock flew in splinters under
20 VIII | a fragment of the black rock.~“Look! look!” he repeated,
21 VIII | nearly straight through the rock up to the orifice opened
22 VIII | himself felt the schistous rock. A cry escaped him.~Either
23 VIII | narrow orifice, broken in the rock by the dynamite, had been
24 IX | stood on the top of a high rock, two miles from the town,
25 IX | fishermen, their backs against a rock, the better to resist the
26 X | it from the top of a huge rock, whose foot was laved by
27 XI | Aberfoyle, under the solid rock which supports Ben Lomond,
28 XII | girl enclosed in the solid rock, like one of those antediluvian
29 XII | branched off through the upper rock. To his great astonishment,
30 XIV | crowning its huge basaltic rock, and the Calton Hill, bearing
31 XVI | penetrating fissures in the solid rock, or to some underground
32 XVIII| in truth, the fall of the rock had made a passage of escape
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