Chapter
1 IV | contradictor would dare to go?~Robur continued: “What?
2 IV | would take you ten years to go round the world—and a flying
3 V | city whence they had to go a long way round to get
4 VI | Evans. “We were wrong not to go straight home.”~“It is always
5 VI | voice, “you are now free to go and come as you like.”~“
6 XI | stopped. The whale was let go as he would, and the ship
7 XII | Anyhow, I defy him to go through them.”~“Indeed!”
8 XII | Robur did not intend to go over the top of these peaks;
9 XIV | seems to me we shall soon go to pieces!”~“Perhaps so;
10 XIV | Perhaps so; but we shall go so fast we shan’t have time
11 XIV | slackening speed or a halt to go out on deck and drop the
12 XVI | up there.”~“I shall not go! I refuse!” said the Negro,
13 XVI | Get into the Pacific, or go to the continent at the
14 XVIII| of her course; she would go where the hurricane took
15 XIX | under way tonight, even if I go with one screw, and put
16 XIX | the night comes we will go into our cabin, and you
17 XIX | the berth with “Now let us go aft, and wait.”~They then
18 XIX | wait any longer. Down you go.”~Without hesitation the
19 XX | and in a day or so I will go back! I will recapture them!
20 XX | think we had better not go down yet. Let us get into
21 XXI | Frycollin in attendance, go down Walnut Street towards
22 XXII | at half-past eleven. “Let go!” shouted Uncle Prudent;
23 XXIII| not yet fit for union.~“I go, then; and I take my secret
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