Chapter
1 1 | capable of overwhelming the land.~At length, the flight of
2 4 | supporting the chauffeurs of its land. Moreover, as this was the
3 4 | the water as well as the land.~Here, also, as all along
4 7 | the water, and also upon land. Built by an inventor named
5 8 | give to any nation, both on land and sea! Its destructive
6 8 | at such speed over both land and sea? How could we pursue
7 8 | so as to travel both on land and water.~“A proposition
8 10| was in his automobile on land or in his boat on the water.
9 11| most magnificent lakes. The land, though not situated far
10 12| from regaining either by land or by water her usual hiding-place,
11 12| the neighboring states by land; or it could retrace its
12 13| was not traveling upon land.~As to deciding whether
13 13| surprised that I could see no land, neither that of the United
14 13| unless indeed she crossed by land?~The sun passed the meridian.
15 13| horizon in the hope that land would soon appear. Yes,
16 14| this passage across the land, all hope of regaining my
17 14| he preferred to speed to land, and there continue his
18 14| return. Did she intend to land, and if so, could she hope
19 14| made no effort to reach land!~We could hear the hissing
20 15| we were not running upon land. Yet neither were we rushing
21 16| continued to descend, as if to land in the clearing at Fairmount
22 17| be when she crossed the land, and did so at some moderate
23 18| more or less success, by land and by sea, the American
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