Chapter
1 I | traveling prison; and, with the right of putting my nose to the
2 III | of departure.”~“You are right, Barbicane,” replied Captain
3 IV | life could not do addition right, and who defined the rule
4 V | become of us? We shall get right royally weary.”~Barbicane
5 V | space. The bolts of the right scuttle, the opening of
6 VII | would not be quite in the right place.”~“And,” added Captain
7 IX | the projectile had been right, would not have prevented
8 XI | present time. Michel Ardan was right when he compared this map
9 XI | the other masculine; the right hemisphere for woman, the
10 XI | friend was a little in the right. Judge for yourselves.~In
11 XI | in these four words?~The right hemisphere, “dedicated to
12 XI | not the fantastic Michel right in thus interpreting the
13 XII | hand, and the west to the right. But it is not so. If the
14 XII | left, and the west to the right, contrary to that which
15 XII | left, and the west to their right. To observers in the southern
16 XII | left, and the east to their right, as the south is behind
17 XII | neighboring volcanoes on its right, Ptolemy, Purbach, Arzachel.
18 XIII | Observation has proved that right was on their side, and not
19 XIII | in the full light. To the right, on the contrary, lay a
20 XIII | Fontenelle remained— one on the right, the other on the left.
21 XIV | receives its rays.”~“Quite right,” replied Nicholl.~“On the
22 XIV | No, indeed! we have no right to complain; nature does
23 XIV | zero.~ M. Pouillet was right and Fourier wrong. That
24 XXII | on the one hand that his right arm had been replaced by
25 XXIII| triumphal carriage, had the right of traveling for those four
|