Chapter
1 VII | we are, already more than ten degrees south of the point
2 XVI | behind the clouds since ten o’clock, broke forth brightly.
3 XX | of Dutch Guiana, and in ten or twelve days, if the weather
4 XX | minutes past four, and at ten minutes before that time
5 XXI | over a surface measuring ten feet by six. An extra depth
6 XXI | An extra depth of nine or ten inches would give a sufficient
7 XXI | enough to contain about ten pounds of explosive matter.
8 XXI | The train was to burn for ten minutes, and at the end
9 XXIV | carpenter, Mr. Falsten, and ten sailors were told off to
10 XXVIII| main-top was already only ten feet above the water, whilst
11 XXXI | chance hope to make more than ten or twelve miles a day, so
12 XXXI | superintendence every morning at ten o’clock. Each person will
13 XXXI | given out twice a day—at ten in the morning and six in
14 L | lips. We do not exchange ten words in the course of the
15 LII | enumeration. Sometimes I counted ten, sometimes twelve, and although
16 LII | number would very soon be ten. I was convinced that I
17 LII | dreary as a desert.~It was ten o’clock in the morning.
18 LIII | us on board, there were ten chances to one in each one’
19 LIII | rest.~It was then half-past ten, and the boatswain, who
20 LV | with amazement.~“There are ten of you,” he went on. “My
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