Chapter
1 VII | it, it would probably be lost to humanity.~It need not
2 X | colleague!” Their shouts were lost in the thousand cheers with
3 XI | the puffs of his pipe were lost in the sky.~“Uncle Prudent,”
4 XII | there by several peaks, lost in the snows that bounded
5 XIV | it would then perhaps be lost. At the same time it was
6 XV | honor the sovereign it has lost and the sovereign who has
7 XV | bullets, of which not one was lost in the masses below. And
8 XV | and passing over Whydah lost to view this savage coast
9 XVI | would probably have been lost. But the “Albatross” played
10 XVI | build she would have been lost.~During this passage of
11 XVI | this Robur. We shall be lost in the end. It is thus a
12 XVII | thus help those who were lost at sea! What balloon, perfect
13 XVIII| electric effluences were lost in the Southern Cross, whose
14 XIX | this X? It was an island lost in the immensity of the
15 XIX | treading the earth they had lost for so long—at walking on
16 XX | chances that it would be lost in its fall; but now!~As
17 XXI | they might be considered lost for ever. At least until
18 XXI | its machinery, now it had lost its manager.~Nothing more
19 XXIII| with me. But it will not be lost to humanity. It will belong
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