Book, Chapter
1 I, II | up the breach by his own body, shouted, “March on!”~And
2 I, II | Zoof. Ben Zoof was devoted, body and soul, to his superior
3 I, V | coast.”~He felt all over his body to perceive what injuries
4 I, V | running him through the body,” added Ben Zoof.~If Servadac
5 I, VI | about an hour some luminous body, its disc evidently of gigantic
6 I, IX | by the proximity of the body of which the huge disc had
7 I, XV | attraction of some considerable body; but we must recollect that,
8 I, XIX | assume that position.~“Every body of men,” he observed, “must
9 I, XXIV| anxiously contemplated the body.~“No; he is alive!” he said,
10 II, I | assistance, to give the body such a vigorous rubbing
11 II, I | remarkably developed, and his body might not inaptly be compared
12 II, III | subsequently confirmed, as the body approached the sun, by the
13 II, X | await every other heavenly body? Why should it not roll
14 II, XII | the mountain was like the body of a dying man, that retains
15 II, XII | length it would admit a man’s body, and Ben Zoof, carrying
16 II, XIII| the same lassitude both of body and mind. Long fits of drowsiness,
17 II, XV | probably by some larger body, it was revolving in its
18 II, XIX | shock, they started off in a body and made their way to the
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