Book, Chapter
1 I, VI | the river mouth. To their vast surprise, they did not meet
2 I, IX | occupied the center of the vast cyclone, and consequently
3 I, X | discover what had become of the vast continent of Africa, of
4 I, X | has been swallowed in some vast abyss.”~Another circumstance
5 I, XI | disappeared, giving place to a vast waste of sea, the transparent
6 I, XII | it was certain that the vast basin of the Mediterranean,
7 I, XIV | survived; the rest of the vast continent disappeared as
8 I, XV | be carried away into the vast infinity of space? or, on
9 I, XVI | estimates that even in those vast unfathomable tracts, the
10 I, XVII | Boni-facio had been replaced by a vast expanse of water, which
11 I, XX | tunnel had opened into a vast cavern, and the gloom was
12 I, XXI | the mountain was like a vast bee-hive perforated with
13 I, XXIII| Here, on the contrary, the vast white plain was level as
14 I, XXIV | and had heard how in the vast prairies of the United States
15 I, XXIV | thus embarking upon the vast white plain. Ben Zoof’s
16 II, XVIII| earth’s disc seemed like a vast funnel, yawning to receive
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