Book, Chapter
1 I, V | answer, he pushed aside the broken thatch, so that his head
2 I, V | by the query, “Any bones broken, sir?”~“None whatever,”
3 I, IX | thought.~After the silence was broken, they consulted as to what
4 I, XI | statues, and portions of broken stelae, all piled promiscuously
5 I, XIII | which a long silence was broken on the morning of the 17th
6 I, XIV | silence of bewilderment was broken at length by Count Timascheff
7 I, XIV | passed; and the cable is broken.”~“But do not the Italian
8 I, XIV | of the schooner, but had broken Panofka’s pipe, and, moreover,
9 I, XV | a certain mass had been broken off from the terrestrial
10 I, XVI | dropping the marble, which was broken into atoms by the fall.~
11 I, XIX | silence of a few moments was broken by Servadac saying, “Do
12 II, VIII | themselves were occasionally broken by spots, which the records
13 II, XIII | in one spot had certainly broken out in another.~February,
14 II, XVI | silence ensued, which was broken by the lieutenant himself. “
15 II, XVI | to Mother Earth had been broken; the ships were gone, and
16 II, XVIII| fallen upon them all was only broken by his order to replenish
17 II, XIX | the small community was broken up.~The Dobryna’s crew,
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