Book, Chapter
1 I, I | Algeria, where poetry in that form was all but unknown.~“I
2 I, VI | direction; no isthmus existed to form a connecting link with the
3 I, X | sailing, he was able to form an estimate of his position
4 I, XII | new orbit, which had the form of a very elongated ellipse.~
5 I, XII | three miles assuming the form of a simple arris, sharply
6 I, XV | about the aphelion? Can you form a judgment as to what distance
7 I, XVII | of Rome, the sea took the form of a deep gulf, extending
8 I, XVIII| scattered over the island, would form an ample reserve. There
9 I, XX | sunshine, ice was beginning to form in the crevices of the rocks,
10 I, XX | should so require, it would form a safe anchorage for both
11 I, XXII | level of the sea, in the form of a truncated cone, of
12 I, XXIII| reappearance in a crescent form, a circumstance that seemed
13 I, XXIV | extended on the bed a human form.~“Dead!” sighed Servadac; “
14 II, I | animation to that senseless form. Ben Zoof, after making
15 II, III | which settled the precise form of the parabola.~5. The
16 II, III | inquiries in a more categorical form, Servadac, thinking it advisable
17 II, IV | after the shock was the form of the retreating earth,
18 II, VI | determined to try another form of persuasion. “Come, Hakkabut,
19 II, VIII | describe as varying both in form and in extent.~The physiology
20 II, X | secure the crops that must form their winter store. During
21 II, X | mutually coalescing, would form additional satellites to
|