Chapter
1 I | voyager took it but a moderate height above the horizon. Now from
2 III | one in which he rose to a height of twelve thousand yards,
3 IV | he said he was. Of middle height and geometric breadth, his
4 VIII | Albatross” had attained the height of 8,700 feet, and extended
5 VIII | Albatross” thus returned to the height she seemed to prefer, and
6 IX | northwest, whose moderate height necessitated no rise in
7 X | before she had been at a height of 13,000 feet, and behind
8 X | Albatross” kept on at such a height that there was no chance
9 XI | Albatross” was flying at the height of seven hundred feet or
10 XII | level of the sea. At that height the temperature, although
11 XII | of the “Albatross,” at a height of twenty-nine thousand
12 XII | Schlagintweit traversed in 1856 at a height of twenty-two thousand feet.
13 XIV | French territory at a mean height of three thousand feet.~
14 XV | rose again to a moderate height, and passing over Whydah
15 XVI | Six months later, in the height of summer, with days from
16 XVII | themselves informed of the height at which they were traveling
17 XVII | imperceptible at such a height. If the sea had been solidified
18 XVIII| taken on account of the height of the aeronef above the
19 XVIII| the storm reached such a height that Robur thought it best
20 XIX | in the Pacific.~At this height—one hundred and, fifty feet—
21 XXII | her rising to the greatest height a balloon could attain;
22 XXII | Go-Ahead” had reached a height of fourteen thousand feet.
23 XXIII| aerostat had attained a height of sixteen thousand feet.~
24 XXIII| we see anyone fall from a height. An aerial combat was beginning
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