Chapter
1 Pre | Columbiad cast in iron, 900 feet long, and run perpendicularly
2 Pre | and reached the station of Long’s Peak, where the telescope
3 Pre | sent from the station of Long’s Peak by Joseph T. Maston
4 Pre | hypothesis of the observers of Long’s Peak could ever be realized,
5 I | bottom of a gun 900 feet long! And under this projectile
6 II | Still, Barbicane was a long time coming to himself,
7 II | than a fugitive crescent!~Long did the three friends look
8 III | lost. They had to hunt a long time before finding him
9 III | shall have time during the long lunar nights to consider
10 IV | repose it will remain so as long as no strange force displaces
11 VI | example, when I have run a long time, when I am swimming,
12 VII | have made a feigned monster long, for in spite of your diver’
13 VII | and do not forget this— as long as we float in space, all
14 VII | already entertained it too long. As to communicating with
15 VII | of a thread 250,000 miles long nothing?”~“As nothing. They
16 VII | Mountains, at the station of Long’s Peak, he was trying to
17 X | the powerful one set up at Long’s Peak, the orb of night,
18 XII | without an equal, those long luminous trains, so dazzling
19 XIII | president, when he noticed long white lines, vividly lighted
20 XIII | radiation of Copernicus not long before; they ran parallel
21 XIII | steep declivities; they were long parallel ramparts, and with
22 XIII | admitted the existence of long lines of fortifications,
23 XIII | circuit is forty-seven miles long and thirty-two broad.~Barbicane
24 XIII | impossible that, before long, the projectile would not
25 XIV | each point of the disc, a long night resulting from the
26 XIV | not even enjoy during its long night any view of the earth
27 XIV | silence of absolute space.~Long did the travelers stand
28 XV | scientific dispute lasted so long that it made Michel very
29 XVII | fortress, overlooking a long rift, which in former days
30 XVIII| no fool!” replied Michel.~Long did the travelers, whom
31 XVIII| actual state of the moon its long nights and long days created
32 XVIII| moon its long nights and long days created differences
33 XIX | AGAINST THE IMPOSSIBLE~For a long time Barbicane and his companions
34 XIX | It was describing a very long ellipse, which would most
35 XIX | opportune ideas.”~And with his long legs stretched out, and
36 XIX | arrived.~The day seemed long. However bold the travelers
37 XX | American coast, following that long peninsula which stretches
38 XX | means of the telescope at Long’s Peak. You know it brings
39 XX | write words three fathoms long, and sentences three miles
40 XX | and sentences three miles long, and then they can send
41 XXI | to the Hon. J. T. Maston, Long’s Peak, Rocky Mountains;
42 XXI | the gigantic reflector of Long’s Peak, and also that it
43 XXI | believed in the observations of Long’s Peak, concluded that the
44 XXI | quickly) for the station on Long’s Peak, in the Rocky Mountains,
45 XXII | they have enough for a long while. But air, air, that
46 XXII | Government of the Union, five long days (five centuries!) elapsed
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