Chapter
1 1 | at an end; and if it were impossible to determine their cause,
2 2 | Everyone reports that it is impossible to scale the precipices
3 2 | bring success.”~“Nothing is impossible, Mr. Ward; what we face
4 3 | will not be easy.”~“Perhaps impossible,” responded Bruck.~Their
5 4 | protests from all sides. It was impossible to permit the mad speed
6 7 | made any close supervision impossible; but these twin inventors
7 7 | Such boats are no longer impossible today. Some years ago, at
8 8 | and I will accomplish the impossible, in order to succeed. It
9 8 | Lake Kirdall, it has been impossible to find any trace of him
10 9 | is, and will be, utterly impossible. Whatever injury anyone
11 10| almost inadmissible, even impossible.”~“And that is?”~“That the
12 10| his material.”~“That is impossible!” cried I. “In what way
13 10| Ward, your suggestion is impossible.”~“Unless, Strock—”~“Unless
14 10| menace, against which it is impossible to guard, the said commander
15 11| Some damage which made it impossible for them to regain their
16 14| our bow toward Buffalo was impossible to understand!~At length
17 14| surrounded so that flight was impossible, she could submerge herself
18 14| great cataract! That seemed impossible! I resolved to await the
19 14| surface, and that it was impossible for her to escape them by
20 15| Continent; though where, it was impossible to surmise. Yet no matter
21 15| Eyrie!~But since it had been impossible for me to penetrate here,
22 15| would it not be equally impossible for me to get out again,
23 15| of its summit, was still impossible to see. I must wait until
24 17| dread catastrophes. It was impossible for me to escape from the
25 17| this outrageous sea was impossible.~Robur himself was on deck,
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