Book, Chapter
1 0, Int | remembered when even “Round the World in Eighty Days” and “Michael
2 0, Int | This story, like “Round the World in Eighty Days” was first
3 0, Int | Underground City” with its cavern world, its secret, undiscoverable,
4 I, I | nearly every region in the world, causing serious interruption
5 I, II | of all the wonders of the world. In all his travels, and
6 I, VII | isn’t the fairest in the world, but you are not black yet.”~“
7 I, VII | in deluge back upon the world, could meteorological phenomena
8 I, VIII | fear that the terrestrial world would be carried onwards
9 I, VIII | churches! The end of the world approaching! the great climax
10 I, IX | to make a tour round the world.”~“A tour round the Mediterranean
11 I, IX | prove to be the tour of the world.”~Servadac made no reply,
12 I, XV | phenomena we witness. If our world has become so insignificant
13 I, XV | measurement of the new little world? At Gourbi Island the days
14 I, XV | their recently fashioned world must be about 350 miles
15 I, XV | communication from the outer world. Surely now they would find
16 I, XV | found a name for the new world we occupy.”~“But what I
17 I, XV | population of a young little world called Gallia. Perhaps some
18 I, XVI | Gallia as the name of the new world in which they became aware
19 I, XVI | reached the pole of our new world. There is—there must be—
20 I, XVI | however far our little world may be removed from the
21 I, XVI | waste. Nor did the animal world assert the feeblest sway.
22 I, XVI | continued the count—“Though the world be shattered, hope is unimpaired.”~
23 I, XVII | the only spot in their new world from which they could hope
24 I, XVII | surviving representatives of a world which it seemed exceedingly
25 I, XVII | caloric enough in our little world to supply the wants of its
26 I, XVIII| accomplished by the new little world.~Many a time during his
27 I, XVIII| Europe, nay, the whole world was more than eighty millions
28 I, XVIII| only spot upon the little world they occupied which could
29 I, XVIII| Timascheff asked, “But how in the world can you ever make those
30 I, XVIII| have only a fragment of a world, but it contains natives
31 I, XIX | surviving fragments of the Old World were four small islands:
32 I, XIX | that remains of the Old World.”~“Ha! ha!” laughed Ben
33 I, XIX | his old friends in the Old World.”~“But why should he want
34 I, XIX | fact, we have left the Old World entirely. Of the whole earth,
35 I, XXII | satellite of the new-born world?~“Impossible!” said Lieutenant
36 I, XXII | convexity of our little world curtails our view? See,
37 I, XXII | that ours is a very tiny world, and that Gourbi Island
38 II, I | the savant to the little world that had been so suddenly
39 II, I | has been that our little world has been split off and sent
40 II, I | more than in the new little world in which their strange lot
41 II, III | Europe, but almost the entire world.~Never failing to turn to
42 II, III | and the ignorance of the world as to the peril that threatened
43 II, VI | steelyard in all this new world of ours; it is worth more,
44 II, VII | satisfaction. “It would supply the world with about 246,000 trillions
45 II, VIII | But meanwhile, a marvelous world, never before so close within
46 II, VIII | sub-satellite, of that mighty world; thirdly, that it might
47 II, IX | of the money in the new world into his own possession.
48 II, X | during the month. Another world was now becoming a conspicuous
49 II, X | marvels of this strange world. After all, they were practically
50 II, XI | lose their interest in the world to which we are all hoping
51 II, XII | our sojourn in this lone world of ours; our preserved meat
52 II, XIII | he did perpetually in a world of figures, the winter days
53 II, XIII | steadily at the far-off world.~“You will, I hope, some
54 II, XIV | when you go back to the world.”~“What do you mean?” asked
55 II, XV | how on his return to the world he would be prosecuted for
56 II, XVI | of ever returning to the world of our fellow-creatures.”~“
57 II, XVII | desire to return to the world was quite equaled by Lieutenant
58 II, XIX | the Adam and Eve of a new world.~The career of the comet
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