Book, Chapter
1 I, VIII | acceptable shelter from the burning sun. The heat was becoming
2 I, XVI | south? Who shall reveal the burning anxiety with which he throbbed
3 I, XVII | as though spattered with burning hailstones, shone with a
4 I, XVII | by tongues of flame.~“A burning mountain!” they exclaimed.~“
5 I, XX | quarters; the stream of burning lava that is flowing there
6 I, XX | that on which a torrent of burning lava was descending to the
7 I, XXI | remarked, since it was the only burning mountain they had sighted,
8 I, XXI | of fissure) the stream of burning lava was diverted into several
9 I, XXII | with which the base of a burning mountain is generally strewn.~
10 I, XXIII| receptacle for the stream of burning lava. It was entirely enclosed
11 I, XXIII| rain. Its effect upon the burning curtain that covered the
12 II, VIII | from the sun, quitted his burning bosom 100,000,000 years
13 II, X | Palmyrin Rosette, with his burning thirst for astronomical
14 II, XI | In time the glow of the burning lava, reflected in the icy
15 II, XI | extinguished! The stream of burning lava had suddenly ceased
16 II, XIV | sole outlet by which the burning lava could escape.~“A wretched
17 II, XVII | he found that they were burning some of the spars of the
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