Book, Chapter
1 0, Int | the fact. Moreover several people from widely scattered places
2 I, VIII | Observatory. Are there not people living in the Observatory
3 I, XVII | remember that we are all one people now; no longer Russian,
4 I, XVIII| learn that the total of people on the island is double
5 I, XVIII| the captain; “twenty-two people on this island? What do
6 I, XXIV | capable of holding five or six people. The addition of a couple
7 II, I | as with many near-sighted people seems to have become a part
8 II, IV | special care to see that his people were all well fed and warmly
9 II, X | expending the strength of the people, during the short summer
10 II, XI | that we ought to allow our people to lose their interest in
11 II, XII | Servadac thus addressed his people. “My friends, except from
12 II, XII | confidence to many of his people, who were already yielding
13 II, XIII | of the lapse of time. The people seemed rather to vegetate
14 II, XV | that fellow Negrete and his people having such a lot of money.”~
15 II, XVI | swore that Servadac and his people were responsible for his
16 II, XVII | disruption, Servadac and his people hardly dared to think.~The
17 II, XIX | an ample dowry; the young people’s happiness in no way marred
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