Book, Chapter
1 I, V | The weather, which on the previous evening had been very foggy,
2 I, V | that the count, as on the previous evening, might come by water,
3 I, V | right bank, which on the previous evening had bounded the
4 I, V | meadows all retained their previous positions. But the river-bank
5 I, VI | at a point which on the previous evening had faced the mouth
6 I, VII | after the example of all previous Crusoes, began to consider
7 I, XI | Servadac’s attention on the previous night.~“Must there not have
8 I, XII | to their continuing their previous direction. It was, of course,
9 I, XIII | that he had taken since the previous evening to consider.~“I
10 I, XIV | nothing that had transpired previous to the introduction felt
11 I, XIV | pleasure of meeting with my previous acquaintance, Captain Servadac,
12 I, XVI | supposed that Servadac’s previous experiences would have prepared
13 I, XXIV | had been a new moon on the previous evening; but, in the absence
14 I, XXIV | than she had done in the previous month; yet, in the same
15 II, I | the circumstances of his previous acquaintance with the Frenchman
16 II, III | were inaccuracies in the previous geodesic operations, he
17 II, IV | IV~A REVISED CALENDAR~All previous hypotheses, then, were now
18 II, IV | professor, quite unaware of his previous discourtesy, “whether, when
19 II, V | temperature was low beyond previous experience; but well muffled
20 II, VIII | in a spectacle which no previous astronomer had ever been
21 II, XVI | would attend the second. The previous escape was doubtless owing
22 II, XVIII| remained, and contrary to previous computation, the comet had
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