Chapter
1 I | was an aviform apparatus—a flying machine!”~What nonsense!~
2 II | apparatuses heavier than the air,” flying machines, aerial ships,
3 IV | never constructed anything flying, whether furnished with
4 IV | the future is for the flying machine. The air affords
5 IV | balloonists; progress is for flying machines. The bird flies,
6 IV | cause of the death of the Flying Saracen at Constantinople,
7 IV | go round the world—and a flying machine could do it in a
8 VII | contrivances heavier than air, to flying machines in imitation of
9 VII | and George Cauley with his flying machines driven by gas.
10 VII | constructed, perfected, their flying machines, ready to do their
11 VII | design and then to build this flying engine known as the “Albatross,”
12 VII | that as the weight of a flying animal increases, the less
13 VII | wings becomes slower.~A flying machine must therefore be
14 VII | for all the needs of his flying machine. One series could
15 VII | horizontally.~The whole of Robur’s flying apparatus depended on these
16 VII | despised in an apparatus flying at great heights— incombustible.
17 VIII | unless I am mistaken we are flying over Central Canada. That
18 VIII | against our will on board this flying machine?”~“And by what right,
19 VIII | States from Canada, and was flying over the vast territories
20 X | get a better view of the flying machine. Cheers came floating
21 XI | which the “Albatross” was flying at the height of seven hundred
22 XI | do to escape from their flying prison was to jump into
23 XIV | northern France. She was flying straight on to Paris, and
24 XV | A cloud of locusts came flying along, and there fell such
25 XV | When the “Albatross” came flying over Dahomey, the old King
26 XVI | hurled back at the risk of flying overboard. As she spun the “
27 XVI | Albatross” going? Here we are flying obliquely over the Atlantic,
28 XVII | be respected. But had the flying machine sufficient power
29 XXI | product of nature, it was a flying machine, the practical application
30 XXI | colleague carried away in a flying machine, and no one able
31 XXII | the aeronef, or any other flying machine.~Although the “Go-Ahead”
32 XXIII| And if the “Go-Ahead” was flying the American colors, did
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