Chapter
1 I | kept, which was extracted a hundred and fifty years ago from
2 II | carried to a depth of fifteen hundred or even of two thousand
3 III | gallery, a depth of fifteen hundred feet. This was the only
4 III | of the young miner.~“The Hundred Pipers!” cried Harry. “Well,
5 IV | cottage, buried fifteen hundred feet below Scottish soil.
6 IV | Though it is buried fifteen hundred feet under the earth, our
7 V | suddenly extinguished, some hundred feet before him, at the
8 VI | the river Forth, fifteen hundred feet above.~“So we are going
9 VI | perhaps even five to the hundred. When this mixture is lighted
10 VI | for whom I have watched a hundred times without being able
11 VII | was composed of several hundred divisions of all sizes and
12 VII | twenty miles, contain two hundred and twenty-six avenues,
13 VII | which are more than four hundred and fifty feet in height.
14 IX | through this space of fifteen hundred feet. He counted each landing
15 IX | and consequently had two hundred feet between him and the
16 IX | people, imprisoned fifteen hundred feet below the surface of
17 IX | distance of more than two hundred feet before them was now
18 IX | But before they had gone a hundred paces along this new gallery,
19 X | the workings, at fifteen hundred feet below the surface of
20 XIII| had lowered him about a hundred and fifty feet, when at
21 XIV | truth only a hill, seven hundred and fifty feet high, which
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