Chapter
1 VI | lifeless. Then as the sense of sight was denied them they tried
2 VIII| mountains extending out of sight.~“And will you tell us where
3 VIII| decomposed the solar rays. The sight was sublime.~Before the
4 X | hour the express was out of sight. About one o’clock there
5 XI | 16th, the coast was out of sight. And as the coast curves
6 XI | Perhaps there was a whaler in sight! In that case all they had
7 XI | it.~There was no ship in sight—of that the two colleagues
8 XIII| which stretched away out of sight to the north and east.~The
9 XIII| Caspian.~There was no land in sight, either on the Asiatic or
10 XIII| There are several ships in sight. The “Albatross” is going
11 XIV | to give the Parisians the sight of a meteor quite unforeseen
12 XV | of Dahomey, did not lose sight of the men, women, and children
13 XVI | eagerly watched for the sight of land to the southward.
14 XVI | afternoon, there appeared in sight a large lake framed in a
15 XVI | gliding over it.~At the sight of the “Albatross,” the
16 XVII| a skeleton. As he caught sight of the “Albatross” he made
17 XX | moderate, she would be out of sight of the Chatham Islands before
18 XX | altitude he would still be in sight of the island.~Robur did
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