Chapter
1 I | form, and will form the immense majority of the world’s
2 I | from the sea, having an immense horizon and wonderfully
3 I | journal whose publicity is immense—the “New York Herald”—received
4 V | wide open tract where the immense prairie was broken every
5 VIII | then sweeping across the immense expanse of Lake Ontario.
6 IX | western Iowa and Nebraska—immense prairies extending all the
7 IX | truth these Bad Lands are an immense ossuary where lie bleaching
8 X | solar rays as if it were an immense mirror.~“That ought to be
9 XI | the abyss he had seen the immense ocean. His hair would have
10 XI | there lay below them an immense city, with palaces, villas,
11 XII | could see distinctly the immense city, the wall which divides
12 XII | Uncle Prudent. “On that immense territory we shall perhaps
13 XII | was now beneath them an immense plain stretching far and
14 XIII | they are, it contains an immense number of fish—such fish,
15 XV | oasis hidden beneath an immense forest of palm-trees. The
16 XV | clothed with giant trees, immense fields of manioc, magnificent
17 XVI | rapidity. The danger was immense, and perhaps impossible
18 XVII | cold, and converted into an immense icefield, its aspect could
19 XVIII| this season of the year an immense curtain of snow, an icy
20 XIX | Island, Robur, a man of immense wealth, had established
21 XXII | experiment.~The crowd was immense in Fairmount Park; trains
22 XXII | if she were a fixture. An immense bell had imprisoned the
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