Book, Chapter
1 I, XII | Mediterranean, which had washed the shores alike of Europe, Asia, and
2 I, XII | attempt to reach the northern shores of the Mediterranean. On
3 I, XV | the Mediterranean and its shores from Gibraltar to Malta,
4 I, XV | account for the fertile shores, rich in vegetation, being
5 I, XV | communication between her shores and Gibraltar was a virtual
6 I, XV | land at all, and then, not shores such as the shores of Andalusia,
7 I, XV | not shores such as the shores of Andalusia, but a bluff
8 I, XVI | ought to be abreast of the shores of France. Yes, of France.~
9 I, XVI | feet— that had replaced the shores of the smiling south? Who
10 I, XVI | once had been the lovely shores of Provence, he was well-nigh
11 I, XVII | entire circuit of the new shores of the sea on which they
12 I, XX | same which composed the shores as well as the subsoil of
13 I, XXI | migrated in search of warmer shores, had returned, proving that
14 II, II | had come from the northern shores of the Mediterranean, and
15 II, V | they had never quitted the shores of their native land.~Happiest
16 II, X | standing on terrestrial shores, they had nothing to do
17 II, X | all their animals to the shores of Gourbi Island, where
18 II, XVIII| appeared to clutch the shores of Asia with the one claw,
19 II, XIX | perplexity to find that the shores of the Mediterranean had
20 II, XIX | despatched to their native shores. The leave taking was accompanied
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