Book, Chapter
1 I, I | Mostaganem coast, between four and five miles from the
2 I, I | reached the gourbi, the four lines still remained the
3 I, II | dedicating the rondo, the first four lines of which had just
4 I, V | had merely made a bound of four or five feet high.~Ben Zoof
5 I, VI | sufficed to carry them over the four or five miles that intervened
6 I, VI | yet to solve.~During the four hours of daylight that still
7 I, VI | had at first supposed; but four villages had entirely disappeared,
8 I, X | of Tiglew the engineer, four sailors named Niegoch, Tolstoy,
9 I, X | nearly uniform depth of from four to five fathoms; and although
10 I, X | remained invariable, still four, or at most five, fathoms;
11 I, XI | lowered and manned by the four sailors; Servadac, Timascheff
12 I, XIII | but two meals instead of four?”~The officers looked at
13 I, XIII | but the rule stands good— four meals a day. England is
14 I, XIII | her soldiers’ due. Yes; four meals a day.”~“Hurrah!”
15 I, XIII | cannon would carry about four miles. It was proposed,
16 I, XIV | accompanied them, and all four having taken their seats,
17 I, XV | the site of Gibraltar, was four degrees; while from Gibraltar
18 I, XV | an inscription written in four lines, which were remarkable
19 I, XVII | lasted scarcely more than four and twenty hours.~Next day
20 I, XVIII| was irresistibly comic. Four sturdy majos had dragged
21 I, XIX | fragments of the Old World were four small islands: the bit of
22 I, XXI | accordingly orders were given, four Russian sailors were sent
23 I, XXII | make a circuit of them in four and twenty hours; consequently
24 I, XXII | for a radius of three or four miles the adjacent district
25 I, XXIII| quarter. She had taken only four days to pass from syzygy
26 I, XXIII| in considerably less than four hours.~The temperature,
27 I, XXIII| after an absence of about four days, the new satellite,
28 II, V | 172,000,000 leagues, about four and a half times as great
29 II, VII | weight was one kilogramme and four hundred and thirty grammes.~“
30 II, VII | gentlemen; one kilogramme, four hundred and thirty grammes.
31 II, VIII | Jupiter has the benefit of four moons all shining at once?”
32 II, VIII | a prodigious clock with four hands.”~“I only hope that
33 II, X | their winter store. During four months or thereabouts, they
34 II, XIII | he reckoned that in about four months it would have entered
35 II, XV | But perhaps there are only four or five Englishmen to protect
36 II, XV | the soldier.~By this time four other men had made their
|