Chapter
1 IV | a smith’s bellows; arms, hands, legs, feet, all worthy
2 IV | disappeared amid a sheaf of hands that were thrown about as
3 IV | tumult. Robur had put his hands into his pockets and now
4 V | they had fallen into the hands of people who intended to
5 VI | over each other, and his hands regained their usual freedom.~
6 VI | the two men, with their hands stretched out and their
7 VI | sonorous planks, while his hands sought to strangle an imaginary
8 XI | and grasped it with both hands, so as to make sure of his
9 XIII | overboard, when several pairs of hands seized them by the shoulders.~
10 XV | to sink the ship. But all hands set to work to clear the
11 XV | of the “Albatross” in the hands of the colleagues, as in
12 XV | the colleagues, as in the hands of the crew, began to rain
13 XVII | emaciation, they lifted their hands towards the “Albatross.”~“
14 XVIII| more. She was not in the hands of the helmsman, but in
15 XIX | seizing the cable with hands and feet slipped down it
16 XX | on.”~“Yes, Sir.”~“And all hands to work.”~“Yes, Sir.”~There
17 XX | was there working with his hands, excellent mechanic as he
18 XXI | vegetarian, had even shaken hands with the president and left
19 XXI | lament and stretch out their hands in despair to the skies.
20 XXI | president’s house, and shook hands with the president and secretary,
21 XXII | upright and placed their left hands on their hearts, to signify
22 XXII | they extended their right hands towards the zenith, to signify
23 XXII | domain.~A hundred thousand hands were placed in answer on
24 XXII | a hundred thousand other hands were lifted to the sky.~
25 XXII | hundred thousand more. All hands were stretched towards a
|