Book, Chapter
1 I, V | surveying the country to the south, as well as towards both
2 I, V | ferruginous hue. To the south—if south, in this inverted
3 I, V | ferruginous hue. To the south—if south, in this inverted order
4 I, V | curved line ran north and south, whilst the adjacent groves
5 I, VI | the coast to the west and south, and return to the gourbi.
6 I, VI | cannot get round by the south to Mostaganem, we must go
7 I, X | no land appeared to the south. The changed positions of
8 I, X | changed places, north and south continued to retain their
9 I, XI | rapid flight towards the south.~An old French prayer-book
10 I, XII | their flight towards the south, there sprang up a sanguine
11 I, XII | degrees at least still further south. It was soon observed that
12 I, XII | farther progress to the south is checked.”~“Westwards,
13 I, XII | it was presumed, for the south of Europe. A hundred miles,
14 I, XIII | convulsion that had shattered the south. The whole party throve
15 I, XIII | about twelve miles to the south there was another island,
16 I, XIV | violently from either west or south. Into this cove the Dobryna
17 I, XIV | pushed her way onwards to the south, and had reached the Gulf
18 I, XV | Antarctic about 350 miles to the south of the island. Compare these
19 I, XVI | the shores of the smiling south? Who shall reveal the burning
20 I, XVI | they look around. To the south there was nothing but the
21 I, XVII | there is no outlet to the south; as yet, we cannot assert
22 I, XVII | Another sixty leagues to the south, and the Dobryna sighted
23 I, XVII | desert, and, extending to the south of Gourbi Island, occupied
24 I, XX | centered on a point towards the south. “What is that?” he said,
25 I, XXI | made by the Dobryna to the south, and the repeated consignments
26 I, XXII | breath of wind. Towards the south there seemed no limit to
27 I, XXIV | and the keen wind from the south is making the temperature
28 I, XXIV | still blowing hard from the south, and assuming that the yawl
29 II, III | the earth somewhere to the south of Algeria, and as it had
30 II, VIII | Those immediately north and south of the equator were of a
31 II, X | latitude either north or south, the band will gradually
32 II, XVIII| utterly disappeared. On the south rose the volcano, the extremity
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