Chapter
1 Pre | interest attached to this great enterprise a hundredfold.~
2 II | large one. She advanced with great speed, and seemed to describe
3 II | drew back. Their dread was great, but it did not last many
4 II | small, and its speed so great, that the inhabitants of
5 II | watched the orb of night, the great aim of their journey.~In
6 II | rising and setting to the great planets like a simple morning
7 III | unfortunate dog down with great care. Its skull had been
8 IV | make his calculations with great rapidity. Nicholl looked
9 V | the same time taking very great precautions.”~“Why?” asked
10 V | furnish the oxygen in too great a quantity; for an excess
11 VI | move slowly; but, at the great distance they were from
12 VI | would have raised a heat great enough to turn it into vapor
13 VII | s apparatus worked with great regularity. Not an atom
14 VII | departure, we should have had a great deal of trouble to bury
15 VII | none of them noticed this great tension of the mind.~“Now,”
16 VIII| nation they might make a great and strong one, and I know
17 VIII| do not venture into the great planets, Jupiter, Saturn,
18 VIII| Barbicane; “the attraction is so great on this enormous orb, that
19 VIII| at least we shall cut a great figure. We will see about
20 XII | said, work was begun with great exactness; and they faithfully
21 XII | order, in the division of great circles. Like Kepler and
22 XII | plains, Barbicane noticed a great number of less important
23 XIII| observed these rifts with great attention. He noticed that
24 XIII| they often cross craters of great elevation.~We must, however,
25 XIII| conditions for solving that great question of the habitability
26 XV | disc; but, to Barbicane’s great displeasure, the curve which
27 XVII| will bear witness to this great fact in his selenographic
28 XVII| summits of Tycho was not so great but that they could catch
29 XIX | was then endowed with too great a speed.”~“Very well reasoned,”
30 XIX | legs stretched out, and his great arms folded under his head,
31 XIX | this the denouement of this great enterprise?~But the day
32 XX | Bronsfield, there is a great depression,” said Captain
33 XX | Straits of Magellan.”~“These great depths,” continued the lieutenant, “
34 XX | corvette had not even felt the great tempest, which by sweeping
35 XX | coast of America.~It was a great undertaking, due to the
36 XXI | the Union had heard the great catastrophe; and after midnight,
37 XXI | Europe knew the result of the great American experiment. We
38 XXI | this delight succeeded a great deception, when, trusting
39 XXII| could draw it down into great depths. These apparatuses
40 XXII| from being certain. How great were the chances against
41 XXII| the water, and under such great pressure, they were exposed
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