Chapter
1 I | were old enough to know better.~So far as recording in
2 V | had the complaints been better founded, never had the intervention
3 VI | circumstances! So you had better not make yourself too obvious —”~“
4 VI | you will be able to see better.”~Phil Evans gave it a sharp
5 VII | Worlds.~Nothing, in fact, is better established, by experiment
6 VII | simpler his contrivance the better. And the screws—the Saint
7 IX | exclaimed the other.~“Robur had better take care! I am not the
8 X | climb on the roof to get a better view of the flying machine.
9 XI | If we are to fall, it is better to fall in the sea.”~“We
10 XIII| over Serinuggur, which is better known under the name of
11 XIII| river are, it may be, rather better than those from the sea;
12 XIV | seemed as though it would be better to wait for the night and
13 XIV | were obliged to wait for a better opportunity. And, as we
14 XVI | Phil Evans, “the sooner the better. It is almost time to end
15 XIX | the air!”~“The sooner the better,” said Phil Evans.~It will
16 XX | experiments, he found it better to keep his ship well up
17 XX | Perhaps so, but I think we had better not go down yet. Let us
18 XX | half-past three.”~“All the better. It would suit us best to
19 XXI | were not present? It were better, then, to wait.~And just
20 XXI | and shape could be much better appreciated, first in Canada,
21 XXI | could evidently have done better than to try it over the
22 XXII| inexhaustible numbers. A better day could not have been
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