Book, Chapter
1 0, Int | the actual knowledge so hard won by our astronomers!
2 I, II | etymologists would find it hard to explain.~Born on the
3 I, III | choose this meter? It is as hard to find rhymes as to rally
4 I, V | must be dreaming. Pinch me hard; I must be either asleep
5 I, VII | of an hour.”~“Boil them hard! That will never do,” objected
6 I, VII | You will not find them hard, my good fellow. Trust me,
7 I, IX | orderly would have found it hard to part with Zephyr, and
8 I, XIV | sea, cruising in my yacht; hard by; and I look upon it as
9 I, XVI | in contact with something hard beneath the snow, and, stooping
10 I, XX | navvies came in contact with a hard surface, upon which all
11 I, XX | the same result; the rock, hard as adamant, never failed
12 I, XXI | requickened energies they labored hard at packing, anxious to reach
13 I, XXII | Throw, Nina, throw, as hard as you can.”~Nina balanced
14 I, XXIV | The wind was still blowing hard from the south, and assuming
15 II, III | comet, being excessively hard, has done exactly what a
16 II, IV | thoroughly ingrained into his hard nature ever to be eradicated,
17 II, V | series of footprints, frozen hard into the snow, marked the
18 II, VII | Ben Zoof, who was staring hard at him. “No!” said Ben Zoof.~“
19 II, IX | unfortunate Israelite tried hard to speak, but his agitation
20 II, X | than fifteen digits.~The hard numerical statement of these
21 II, XVI | pole. In any case, it seems hard to foresee whence there
22 II, XVII | long, and toiled for so hard?”~“It can’t be helped,”
23 II, XVIII| intensity, and it would be hard to describe the excitement
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