Chapter
1 I | carbonized hydrogen, stored at high pressure, sufficed for the
2 II | projectile was singularly high. The president drew a thermometer
3 II | showed the presence of high mountains, often disappearing
4 V | on the contrary, a very high temperature. But, when we
5 VII | would have brought out the high mountains, which would have
6 VII | balloon which has risen too high. So do not regret it, and
7 VII | exclaimed Michel, jumping a yard high, “why? To take possession
8 VIII | where it should be kept at high pressure; what passion in
9 VIII | instead of jumping one yard high, you will rise eighteen
10 VIII | will rise eighteen feet high.”~“But we shall be regular
11 VIII | will be scarcely a foot high.”~“Lilliputians!” ejaculated
12 VIII | at least two hundred feet high.”~“By Jove!” exclaimed Michel; “
13 XII | that the projectile was as high as the tenth parallel, north
14 XII | mountain nine thousand feet high, and one of those circles
15 XIII | Mount Helicon, 1,520 feet high, and round about the left
16 XV | time it might strike some high point on the invisible hemisphere,
17 XVII | But the projectile was high above all this landscape,
18 XVII | overlooked by a peak 15,000 feet high.~Around the plain appeared
19 XVIII| Those speculations are too high,” said he; “problems utterly
20 XXI | Susquehanna, by putting on high pressure, could arrive in
21 XXIII| which must have been very high. Indeed, during the publication
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