Book, Chapter
1 I, I | clock, upon the cliff at a spot about a mile and a half
2 I, V | framework to the whole. No spot could have been chosen more
3 I, VI | the land, and only in one spot had its integrity been impaired.
4 I, VI | investigations. At this spot the shore, that hitherto
5 I, VII | disc that was rising at a spot precisely opposite the place
6 I, X | degrees 25 min E., the very spot which ought to have been
7 I, XI | him of the sanctity of the spot upon which he stood.~“The
8 I, XI | was, in truth, the very spot on which tradition asserts
9 I, XI | canonized monarch came to die, a spot to which for six centuries
10 I, XI | tomb of St. Louis, the only spot that had survived the mysterious
11 I, XIII | artillery-wagon was on the spot, and the men lifted out
12 I, XV | coincided with the very spot upon which Madrid had stood.
13 I, XVII | was apparently the only spot in their new world from
14 I, XVII | they imagined, that the spot was devoid of living creature,
15 I, XVIII| meadows seemed to be the only spot from which they could get
16 I, XVIII| carried them to the only spot upon the little world they
17 I, XX | arrested their labors. The spot chosen for the excavation
18 I, XXII | Island is the sole productive spot upon its surface. We have
19 I, XXIII| uniform sheet of ice. One spot alone refused to freeze;
20 II, IV | revolutions, in the very same spot as before. What would be
21 II, V | had already reached the spot where the Hansa lay bound
22 II, VI | strangling the old miser upon the spot; but Servadac, rather amused
23 II, XII | lava-flow in this one particular spot, and he considered it more
24 II, XIII | so suddenly ceased in one spot had certainly broken out
25 II, XIX | earth at the very identical spot where they had quitted it.~
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