Book, Chapter
1 I, VIII | Senegal and other equatorial regions; not a cloud ever tempered
2 I, VIII | beams were refracted into regions of its surface where the
3 I, X | magnetic needle, which in these regions had pointed about 22 degrees
4 I, XV | independent orbit in the solar regions. Is not that your meaning?”~“
5 I, XVI | away across the planetary regions.~On the 24th of February,
6 I, XVI | very close to her Arctic regions; it is true that her axis
7 I, XVI | prevails in those outlying regions beyond our system where
8 I, XIX | carried away into unknown regions of space, and that this
9 I, XXII | for a while in the solar regions, I do not see why she should
10 I, XXIII| swept far away into the regions of another planetary sphere.
11 II, I | forever in the outlying regions of space; if the last, it
12 II, I | the remote inter-planetary regions. Palmyrin Rosette would
13 II, III | them far away into sidereal regions. Unfolded lay the past and
14 II, III | through untraversed solar regions. No, gentlemen, I repeat
15 II, IV | gravitating through remote solar regions. Captain Servadac became
16 II, IV | normal temperature of the regions of outlying space.~This
17 II, IV | often extend over the polar regions of the earth; the sky was
18 II, VIII | through the untraversed regions of the milky way. The rest
19 II, X | excursion through solar regions hitherto untraversed; but
20 II, XII | annually winter in Arctic regions. On board the whaling-vessels,
21 II, XII | be conducted to the lower regions, nothing would induce him
22 II, XV | been traversing the solar regions on the surface of a comet.”~
23 II, XVIII| and was traversing the regions of space, again far away!~
24 II, XIX | was still traversing the regions of space, carrying thirteen
25 II, XIX | could eliminate from the regions of doubt. Anyhow, they were
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