Chapter
1 Pre | passage in ninety-seven hours, thirteen minutes, and twenty
2 I | a hundred and forty-four hours, or six days and six nights.
3 II | around the earth in three hours and twenty minutes, which
4 II | ought to attain ninety-six hours later. Her mountains, her
5 II | over-excitement of those last hours passed upon earth, reaction
6 III | the 2nd of December, eight hours after their departure.~This
7 III | In about eighty-eight hours,” replied the captain.~“
8 III | green peas in twenty-four hours. I have but one fear, which
9 III | During the last twelve hours the atmosphere of the projectile
10 III | correct) the lapse of twelve hours, which forms a day upon
11 V | already been gone thirty-two hours; more than half our passage
12 V | for the next forty-eight hours.”~“No! certainly not,” replied
13 VI | travelers awoke after fifty-four hours’ journey, the chronometer
14 VI | time it was just over five hours and forty minutes, half
15 VI | that the day lasts 360 hours!”~“And to compensate that,”
16 VII | twelve o’clock, in eighteen hours, exactly at the full moon,
17 VII | night, from which only a few hours separated them, to some
18 VIII | had breakfasted only two hours before, he felt a gnawing
19 VIII | weakened could for a few hours live a more active life.
20 IX | accomplished in ninety-seven hours thirteen minutes and twenty
21 IX | of his insoluble problem. Hours passed without any result.
22 X | distance which for three hours in the morning did not exceed
23 XIV | THREE HUNDRED AND FIFTY-FOUR HOURS AND A HALF~At the moment
24 XIV | three hundred and fifty-four hours and a half at each point
25 XIV | three hundred and fifty-four hours and a half, nearly fifteen
26 XIV | have dark nights of 354 hours, without one single ray
27 XIV | and the sun, can last two hours; during which time, by reason
28 XV | of shadow these last two hours, had the distance increased
29 XVIII| her days and nights of 354 hours— the moon does not seem
30 XVIII| its days and nights of 354 hours?”~“At the terrestrial poles
31 XVIII| and days did not last 354 hours!”~“And why?” asked Nicholl
32 XIX | points after twenty-four hours repasses the same lunar
33 XIX | from the dead point. The hours representing the time traveled
34 XIX | given point in twenty-two hours.~The rockets had primarily
35 XIX | Michel Ardan.~“It is forty hours since we closed our eyes,”
36 XIX | eyes,” said Nicholl. “Some hours of sleep will restore our
37 XIX | much occupied, and some hours after, about seven in the
38 XIX | Barbicane’s ends.~Seventeen hours more, and the moment for
39 XIX | orbit. They counted the hours as they passed too slow
40 XX | will be the work of some hours. In that time the engineer
41 XX | in six times twenty-four hours, without darkness, one would
42 XX | which would entail some hours’ work. According to the
43 XXI | Susquehanna. In thirty-six hours she had covered that distance;
44 XXII | excitement of the first hours, understood all the difficulty
45 XXIII| served alike. At certain hours, successively calculated,
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