Book, Chapter
1 I, I | little cape on the Algerian coast, between Mostaganem and
2 I, I | various projections of the coast with a dazzling brightness,
3 I, I | the exposed cliffs of this coast that had induced the owner
4 I, I | native hut, on the Mostaganem coast, between four and five miles
5 I, II | topographical work on the coast between Tenes and the Shelif.
6 I, V | portion of the Algerian coast which is bounded on the
7 I, V | waterspout has passed along the coast.”~He felt all over his body
8 I, V | circumstance along this coast, and not a sail nor a trail
9 I, V | must be peculiar to the coast of Algeria.”~Servadac was
10 I, V | or perhaps the Algerian coast had been transported beyond
11 I, VI | appear—we will explore the coast to the west and south, and
12 I, VI | mind was that the African coast might have been suddenly
13 I, VI | The sinuosities of the coast line, alternately gully
14 I, VI | about eighteen miles, a new coast line had come into existence;
15 I, VI | a forced march along the coast of the Mediterranean, which
16 I, VII | portion of the Algerian coast, and that our friends are
17 I, VIII | steamers that watched the coast, but vessels of all nations
18 I, IX | and began to explore the coast.~They were not long in ascertaining
19 I, IX | how much of the African coast still remained, and to carry
20 I, X | presumably occupied by the coast of Algeria; but no land
21 I, X | that we are not so near the coast of Algeria as you imagined.”~
22 I, XI | formerly represented the coast of Africa, until that coast
23 I, XI | coast of Africa, until that coast had been lost in boundless
24 I, XII | a futile search for the coast of Tunis, reached the latitude
25 I, XII | be? It could not be the coast of Tripoli; for not only
26 I, XII | a few days to be off the coast of Egypt, and from Alexandria
27 I, XII | contour of the inhospitable coast, of which the features would
28 I, XII | saying another word.~The coast, without deviation, still
29 I, XII | in the direction of the coast, and the danger incurred
30 I, XIV | sinuous irregularity of the coast had formed a kind of cove,
31 I, XIV | shock— along the Algerian coast, and had the pleasure of
32 I, XIV | the count, “was that a new coast had been upheaved right
33 I, XIV | right along in front of the coast of Tripoli, the geological
34 I, XIV | narrow opening in all the coast, and it is by following
35 I, XV | limit barely touched the coast of Provence, while the southernmost
36 I, XV | disappearance of the Spanish coast, from Gibraltar right away
37 I, XV | decided indentation on the coast; it ran up in an acute-angled
38 I, XV | perchance, upon some isolated coast.~“But, however interesting
39 I, XVI | of making a survey of the coast of the Mediterranean, and
40 I, XVI | convulsion had been the coast line of the department of
41 I, XVI | is characteristic of the coast of Provence. But the whole
42 I, XVI | formation as the entire coast, and had not hitherto been
43 I, XVII | of Cabes. It is the old coast, and not the new, that we
44 I, XVII | concentric with it. The rocky coast, its metallic surface reflecting
45 I, XVII | of the Eternal City; the coast making a wide sweep round
46 I, XVII | of March, and thence the coast was continuously followed,
47 I, XVIII| that he had approached the coast of the sole remaining fragment
48 I, XVIII| Ceuta, the point on the coast of Morocco exactly opposite
49 I, XIX | their steps towards the coast where the Hansa was moored.~
50 I, XIX | tomb of Saint Louis on the coast of Tunis. Around these there
51 II, III | Formentera to the Spanish coast by a triangle, one of the
52 II, III | him to a high peak on the coast of Spain, where he had to
53 II, III | assistant on the Spanish coast might look to the kindling
54 II, XI | First, the rocks of the coast were lost to view; then
55 II, XII | perpetually carried in from the coast, and it would be necessary
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