Book, Chapter
1 I, VII | under the influence of internal heat, the waters rose in
2 I, XVII | Gallia, then, has some internal heat,” said Servadac.~“And
3 I, XX | seek some other refuge, the internal temperature of which would
4 I, XX | the moon, was fed by an internal supply of oxygen of her
5 I, XXI | as it were, by which the internal heat exuded from the heart
6 I, XXI | comfortable.~Such were the internal arrangements of Nina’s Hive,
7 I, XXI | however, approved of all the internal arrangements of Nina’s Hive,
8 II, II | the purpose of retaining internal warmth than for guarding
9 II, IV | ingenuity with which all the internal arrangements of Nina’s Hive
10 II, V | tartan that rendered the internal temperature endurable.~“
11 II, VIII | accumulation of vapor, or to some internal agency. It would not be
12 II, X | time might come when the internal fires of Gallia would lose
13 II, XII | eruption is only partial; the internal fire is not all extinct.
14 II, XII | it very unlikely that the internal heat will fail us now before
15 II, XII | dreading a failure of the internal heat, I am not quite sure
16 II, XVI | with the convulsions of internal disturbance, and Servadac
17 II, XVIII| was the fragment that the internal convulsion had rent from
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