Book, Chapter
1 0, Int | convenience of its travelers, both air and water. Little, useful
2 I, II | ill-contrived; he loved the open air, and the independence of
3 I, III | turned out into the open air to smoke his pipe upon the
4 I, IV | innermost depths; that the air shrieked with all the fury
5 I, V | reached an altitude where the air has become less charged
6 I, V | it was evident that the air had become less capable
7 I, V | staring at the two men with an air of impudent defiance. This
8 I, V | hurled the stone into the air. It missed its aim; but
9 I, V | lengthened flight through the air, fell to the ground full
10 I, V | height of forty feet into the air. Fearful of the consequences
11 I, VII | struck him that perhaps the air, in its strangely modified
12 I, VII | evidence that the column of air above the earth’s surface
13 I, VIII | the captain.~“Plenty of air and water there, sir?” inquired
14 I, XII | European news.”~With his usual air of stately courtesy, Count
15 I, XII | useless speed in the vacant air; and thus, although the
16 I, XIV | nevertheless wore a general air of comfort. Major Oliphant
17 I, XIV | be carried on in the open air.” And hurriedly he left
18 I, XVI | our system where sky and air are not.” “And what temperature
19 I, XVI | recover their breath; for the air, becoming more and more
20 I, XVIII| head resolutely, with the air of a man determined, in
21 I, XVIII| of the Spanish patriotic air, but his attention was again
22 I, XVIII| thirty feet or more into the air, considerably above the
23 I, XX | of reverberation in the air.”~For some seconds the two
24 I, XXI | the want of a little fresh air. Accordingly the greater
25 I, XXIII| the utter stillness of the air at the time when the final
26 I, XXIII| vehemence of the current of air, the hurricane seemed rather
27 I, XXIII| momentary draught of cold air to penetrate the hall in
28 I, XXIV | being conveyed through the air in a balloon.~Lieutenant
29 II, II | glanced with a pre-occupied air, and proceeded to seat himself
30 II, II | around him with a perfect air of triumph.~
31 II, III | around him with a defiant air, as though he could not
32 II, III | assumed a pompous professional air, and appeared to be waiting
33 II, IV | the atmosphere; the very air seemed to be congealed;
34 II, IV | endurable even in the open air. The cause of so many of
35 II, IV | of calm weather, when the air has been absolutely still,
36 II, IV | to move about in the open air with perfect immunity. The
37 II, V | and were soon in the open air upon the rocks that overhung
38 II, VII | had left the hall with an air almost majestic, and was
39 II, XII | entirely exposed to the outer air, was rapidly falling, and
40 II, XII | ventilation. The great current of air that rushed into the aperture
41 II, XIII | that it was the want of air and exercise that was the
42 II, XV | but for the present the air was altogether too still
43 II, XV | waving his arms in the air,” said the orderly.~“Plague
44 II, XVI | globe, without a particle of air to breathe.”~“But would
45 II, XVI | asked the count.~“Hot air will be all that we shall
46 II, XVI | necessary supply of heated air.~The sails of the Dobryna,
47 II, XVI | disruption, rushed into the open air.~The first object that caught
48 II, XVII | freight, would be high in the air. The atmosphere was less
49 II, XVII | stately calmness into the air.~
50 II, XVIII| hay, served to keep the air in the interior at a proper
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