Chapter
1 Pre | quitted the terrestrial globe, and launched into inter-planetary
2 II | atmosphere which surrounds the globe.”~“Just so,” replied Nicholl; “
3 II | said Barbicane; “our future globe is at its post, but we cannot
4 II | what is this portentous globe which nearly struck us?”~“
5 II | surface of the terrestrial globe.”~“More than two thousand
6 II | express trains of the pitiful globe called the earth.”~“I should
7 II | atmosphere of the terrestrial globe, shone through the glass,
8 II | attention to the vanishing globe.~“Yes,” said Michel Ardan, “
9 II | concentrically round the terrestrial globe.~While the travelers were
10 II | was all they saw of the globe lost in the solar world,
11 II | morning or evening star! This globe, where they had left all
12 III | given to the exterior of the globe. On sea, the vessels rocked
13 III | that is to say, when our globe was in opposition to the
14 III | consider at our leisure the globe on which our likenesses
15 III | cast by the terrestrial globe, and the rays of the radiant
16 IV | striking the terrestrial globe.~“And we shall fall back
17 V | distance of the terrestrial globe; then from the lower window
18 V | covers five-sixths of our globe. From that we may draw five
19 V | say, what the terrestrial globe would undergo if the sun
20 V | would be equalized on our globe. It has been calculated
21 VI | bulk to our terrestrial globe.”~“Good additional heat
22 VII | fall upon the terrestrial globe by virtue of the mere laws
23 VII | the rotary motion of the globe, our thread would have wound
24 VIII | to the density of their globe, they will be scarcely a
25 VIII | than on the surface of our globe, keeping everything in proportion,
26 XI | hemisphere of the lunar globe. These continents do not
27 XI | point of the terrestrial globe.~As to islands, they are
28 XI | the greater portion of the globe. But in point of fact, these
29 XII | ever see the terrestrial globe again. Nevertheless, let
30 XIII | could not distinguish on the globe a greater diversity of shades
31 XIII | which share the terrestrial globe between them, one alone
32 XIV | this designation to our globe) but on one side of her
33 XIV | countrymen of the terrestrial globe.”~“And which we should have
34 XIV | atmosphere, the terrestrial globe can appear as nothing but
35 XV | surface of the terrestrial globe like an aerolite.~“First
36 XV | expeditions on the lunar globe. So that the time of the
37 XV | from the bowels of this globe; and where heat exists,
38 XV | space?”~“Yes.”~This shooting globe suddenly appearing in shadow
39 XV | about to strike it, when the globe of fire burst like a bomb,
40 XV | enormous and much-dreaded globe there remained nothing but
41 XVII | considered the largest on the globe. What are these diameters
42 XVIII| appeared like an incandescent globe. They had passed suddenly
43 XVIII| interior of the terrestrial globe. The actual state of this
44 XVIII| uninhabitable, as the terrestrial globe will one day become by cooling.”~“
45 XXI | but a meteor, a shooting globe, which in its fall had smashed
46 XXI | meeting with the terrestrial globe could only take place on
47 XXIII| hurrying from all parts of the globe toward the American shores,
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