Book, Chapter
1 I, XI | doubtless been connected with Gibraltar.~Lieutenant Procope was
2 I, XII | and then make away for Gibraltar, where we should be sure
3 I, XII | Europe as they would at Gibraltar.~Intensely anxious as he
4 I, XIV | they asked.~“You are at Gibraltar,” replied the colonel.~Gibraltar!
5 I, XIV | Gibraltar,” replied the colonel.~Gibraltar! The word fell like a thunderclap
6 I, XIV | thunderclap upon their ears. Gibraltar! the western extremity of
7 I, XIV | sole remaining fragment of Gibraltar.~
8 I, XV | to be upon the site of Gibraltar, was four degrees; while
9 I, XV | four degrees; while from Gibraltar to Gourbi Island was seven
10 I, XV | Previously, to sail from Malta to Gibraltar by an eastward course would
11 I, XV | what had happened now? Why, Gibraltar had been reached as if it
12 I, XV | Mediterranean and its shores from Gibraltar to Malta, has been developed
13 I, XV | communication between her shores and Gibraltar was a virtual proof that
14 I, XV | the Spanish coast, from Gibraltar right away to Alicante.
15 I, XVII | strait that brought us to Gibraltar, nor have we followed the
16 I, XVII | the fragmentary relic of Gibraltar. Hence to the Gulf of Cabes
17 I, XVII | our way once more towards Gibraltar, what do you say to our
18 I, XVII | to the little garrison of Gibraltar was abandoned.~But even
19 I, XVIII| the thirteen Englishmen at Gibraltar, about whom he was not particularly
20 I, XVIII| Morocco exactly opposite Gibraltar. The mate and three sailors
21 I, XVIII| two English officers from Gibraltar. What passed between them
22 I, XVIII| colonel and the major from Gibraltar, about which they had been
23 I, XIX | small islands: the bit of Gibraltar occupied by the Englishmen;
24 I, XIX | were known to be inhabited: Gibraltar, where the thirteen Englishmen
25 I, XXIV | the remaining splinter of Gibraltar or Ceuta; otherwise, surely
26 II, II | continent at Tunis, Sardinia, Gibraltar, and now at Formentera;
27 II, XIII | Englishmen who had been left at Gibraltar, every living creature had
28 II, XIII | so it was. The party at Gibraltar, they all agreed, would
29 II, XIII | resource, betake themselves to Gibraltar, and there seek a refuge;
30 II, XV | communication with the Englishmen at Gibraltar. Not that any doubt was
31 II, XV | prospects of making its way to Gibraltar.~The only question remaining
32 II, XV | Servadac’s proposed visit to Gibraltar, it must be owned that another
33 II, XV | to occupy the fragment of Gibraltar, and their claim was indisputable.
34 II, XV | north, he could distinguish Gibraltar faintly visible in the extreme
35 II, XV | remembered to have seen before at Gibraltar.~“Can I speak to your commanding
36 II, XV | thither in the boat from Gibraltar before the sea had frozen,
37 II, XV | twelve miles distant from Gibraltar, the little garrison at
38 II, XV | fact that both Ceuta and Gibraltar have been traversing the
39 II, XV | two garrisons here and at Gibraltar?” asked Servadac, with one
40 II, XVI | either at Gourbi Island, Gibraltar, Ceuta, Madalena, or Formentera
41 II, XVI | fragment included Ceuta and Gibraltar, with the two English garrisons!~
42 II, XVIII| Gourbi Island. Ceuta and Gibraltar, which might have been expected
43 II, XIX | asseveration that a fragment of Gibraltar was still traversing the
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