Book, Chapter
1 I, I | Mostaganem at two o’clock that day; and the captain and the
2 I, II | included in the order of the day.~The following episode may
3 I, V | reversed! The length of day reduced one half! Surely
4 I, V | sea. Without any warning, day gave place to night, and
5 I, VI | nor for the length of the day being reduced to six hours.~“
6 I, VI | moon was new on that very day; naturally, therefore, it
7 I, VI | appearance in the west, and day once more had dawned. On
8 I, VI | and during the six-hours’ day accomplished a distance
9 I, VI | annihilated.~On the following day, the 6th of January, the
10 I, VII | in calling the following day the 6th of January. His
11 I, VII | books. After pondering one day, he said: “It seems to me,
12 I, VII | exemplary perseverance. Day and night, with the shortest
13 I, IX | transpired.~It was on the last day of January that the repairs
14 I, XI | bottom.~In the course of the day the schooner rounded the
15 I, XII | refuge on the schooner; day and night they perched fearlessly
16 I, XIII | the old calendar.~Another day elapsed before another move
17 I, XIII | diminution in the length of day and night. Three days after
18 I, XIII | stands good— four meals a day. England is too rich to
19 I, XIII | due. Yes; four meals a day.”~“Hurrah!” shouted the
20 I, XIII | prevent them from giving the day its due military honors.~
21 I, XV | had happened? Had not the day now dawned that should set
22 I, XV | the 15th. It was on that day we crossed the orbit of
23 I, XV | called Gallia. Perhaps some day we may have the honor of
24 I, XVI | the sky. Throughout the day the pale rays of the sun,
25 I, XVI | much inclined as to prolong day and night as at the poles
26 I, XVII | four and twenty hours.~Next day the direct progress of the
27 I, XVII | the landowners, when one day, all of a sudden, everything
28 I, XVII | probably continued from day to day, as to the motions
29 I, XVII | probably continued from day to day, as to the motions of the
30 I, XX | HORIZON~On the following day, without giving himself
31 I, XX | the soil. For the first day everything went on prosperously
32 I, XX | But still all in vain.~One day he suddenly came upon Ben
33 I, XXI | ages to come.~But not a day, not an hour, was to be
34 I, XXI | embark on the following day, and take up their residence
35 I, XXII | where he always promised one day to take them.~The end of
36 I, XXII | crystallization.~By ascending one day to the summit of the volcano,
37 I, XXII | Before the evening of this day closed in, a most important
38 I, XXIII| not been seen since the day of his arrival from Gourbi
39 I, XXIV | rate of twenty leagues a day, you would be exposed for
40 I, XXIV | continuously; by traveling day and night without intermission,
41 I, XXIV | that is to say, in a single day between the intervals of
42 I, XXIV | before the close of the day the yawl was furnished with
43 I, XXIV | sun had disappeared, and day had given place to night,
44 II, I | of the remainder of the day in starting and discussing
45 II, IV | many misgivings.~The next day or two were spent in providing
46 II, IV | carried on his calculations by day, his observations by night,
47 II, IV | clear; the sun shone by day and the stars by night without
48 II, IV | terrestrial month, and a Gallian day is only half as long as
49 II, IV | as long as a terrestrial day, there must be a hundred
50 II, IV | of March. It is the 266th day of the Gallian year. It
51 II, IV | corresponds with the 133d day of the terrestrial year.
52 II, V | rocks upon the shore, one day skating far away across
53 II, V | mother?” asked Pablo, one day.~“No,” she answered.~“No
54 II, V | was ready, and hoped that day to commence operations for
55 II, VI | the captain.~“Only for one day,” added the professor.~The
56 II, VI | the hire— the hire, one day?”~“You shall have twenty
57 II, VI | but never mind, for one day, you shall have it. Deposit
58 II, VI | you know. Ten francs a day, I think, would not be unreasonable,
59 II, VII | to his master, when next day they were alone together.~“
60 II, VIII | solitude.~The following day was the 1st of August, or,
61 II, VIII | the first takes only l day 18 hours 27 minutes; the
62 II, VIII | the conversation that was day by day reiterated during
63 II, VIII | conversation that was day by day reiterated during the whole
64 II, IX | known nothing. Since the day he had done his lucky stroke
65 II, IX | Ben Zoof, on the following day, had returned the steelyard
66 II, IX | should come again the next day, was about to quit the vessel.~“
67 II, IX | away.~All the rest of the day the Jew was muttering bitter
68 II, X | equally by night and by day he never seemed to quit
69 II, XI | CHAPTER XI~A FETE DAY~The temperature continued
70 II, XI | been stored. Here he lived day and night. He supplied himself
71 II, XI | not properly “New Year’s Day” in Gallia, but Captain
72 II, XI | fellow-creatures upon earth, a day that awakens afresh the
73 II, XI | the program for the great day as attractive as possible.~
74 II, XI | after sunrise on New Year’s Day, Frenchmen, Russians, Spaniards,
75 II, XI | followed the great toast of the day—“A happy return to our Mother
76 II, XI | the end of the New Year’s Day so happily begun.~
77 II, XII | intervals, by night and by day, he would endeavor to continue
78 II, XIII | Russians and Spaniards, day after day, might be seen
79 II, XIII | and Spaniards, day after day, might be seen gathered
80 II, XIII | passed wearily by; but day succeeded to day with such
81 II, XIII | by; but day succeeded to day with such gloomy sameness
82 II, XIII | more and more frequent.~One day an excursion was made to
83 II, XIII | all as distinct as on the day in which they had been imprinted,
84 II, XIII | Hope and courage revived as day by day the sun’s disc expanded
85 II, XIII | courage revived as day by day the sun’s disc expanded
86 II, XIII | You will, I hope, some day find out that it does,”
87 II, XIV | months,” said the orderly one day to his master; “but what
88 II, XIV | considerable agitation.~One day, as he was hurrying down
89 II, XIV | might all be falsified?~Day followed day, and still
90 II, XIV | falsified?~Day followed day, and still there was no
91 II, XIV | to his study.~From that day Rosette, for some reason
92 II, XIV | You will find out some day,” answered Ben Zoof, significantly.~
93 II, XV | professor had said. From the day that Isaac Hakkabut had
94 II, XV | sixty or seventy miles a day would be nothing, he said,
95 II, XV | temperature by night as well as by day was quite endurable, and
96 II, XVI | still to be determined.~The day following Servadac’s return,
97 II, XVII | shipwrecked vessels had to be used day by day for fuel. Hakkabut
98 II, XVII | vessels had to be used day by day for fuel. Hakkabut began
99 II, XVII | left behind.~By Christmas Day everything was in readiness
100 II, XVII | forward to spending New Year’s Day in another sphere altogether,
101 II, XVII | malcontent was Palmyrin Rosette. Day and night he persevered
102 II, XIX | their reserve.~The very next day the small community was
103 II, XIX | confiding friends than ever.~One day, in the environs of Montmartre,
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