Book, Chapter
1 I, V | inclined to receive these phenomena with philosophic indifference,
2 I, VI | ignorance of the cause of the phenomena which had been so startling
3 I, VII | on the lookout for fresh phenomena, Captain Servadac watched
4 I, VII | world, could meteorological phenomena have been developed with
5 I, IX | the cause of any of the phenomena.~“On the night of the 31st
6 I, X | need.~Happily the recent phenomena had no effect upon the compass;
7 I, X | naturally it would, to the phenomena which remained so inexplicable
8 I, XII | seemed to follow from these phenomena was that the earth had been
9 I, XV | for some of the strange phenomena we witness. If our world
10 I, XVII| number and in brilliancy, the phenomena which are commonly distinguished
11 I, XIX | significance.~None of the recent phenomena had escaped his notice,
12 I, XXII| more strange than the other phenomena which we have lately witnessed.
13 II, II | witness of all the abnormal phenomena that had occurred, and yet
14 II, X | present various strange phenomena. Sometimes they would appear
15 II, XV | unconnected with celestial phenomena, originating entirely in
16 II, XIX | subject of the inexplicable phenomena which had come within their
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