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Alphabetical    [«  »]
samoides 1
sanctified 1
sanctify 1
sand 82
sandbank 1
sandbanks 4
sands 5
Frequency    [«  »]
83 height
82 arrived
82 everything
82 sand
81 dog
81 indeed
80 added
Jules Verne
The Mysterious Island

IntraText - Concordances

sand

   Part,  Chapter
1 1,2| heaving out two bags of sand, and as he spoke letting 2 1,3| dry brambles; nothing but sand and stones were to be found. 3 1,3| tide is going down over the sand. Let us have patience, and 4 1,3| shell-fish with which the sand was strewn. It was a wretched 5 1,3| beach consisted first of sand, covered with black stones, 6 1,3| the greater part of the sand forming the bed of the channel 7 1,4| a mixture of stones and sand, the Chimneys could be rendered 8 1,4| and with great banks of sand, which the tide left uncovered. 9 1,5| which made it draughty. Sand, stones, twisted branches, 10 1,5| floor was covered with fine sand, and taking all in all they 11 1,5| followed by the boy. On the sand, among the rocks, near the 12 1,5| displaced; not a trace on the sand; not a human footstep on 13 1,5| laid himself down on the sand, at the foot of a rock. 14 1,5| crackling fire on the dry sand, what thanksgiving must 15 1,7| in cart-loads, while the sand raised by the wind added 16 1,7| the rain, blinded by the sand. ~Then, in a pause of the 17 1,7| even soiled with mud or sand!-Herbert had drawn him towards 18 1,7| their backs. The clouds of sand, which otherwise would have 19 1,7| a Switzerland modeled in sand, and only an amazing instinct 20 1,8| which filtered through the sand; but nothing in which to 21 1,8| among the rocks, on the sand, for the smallest trace 22 1,8| I saw footprints on the sand." ~"Footprints?" exclaimed 23 1,8| who had left them on the sand. ~"Come," said he, "I must 24 1,8| litter was placed on the sand; Cyrus Harding was sleeping 25 1,9| the passages on his bed of sand. Herbert, Neb, and Pencroft 26 1,1| in addition to the downs, sand, and aridity which contrasted 27 1,1| forests, yellow for the sand, blue for the water. They 28 1,2| been thrown at once on the sand out of reach of the waves. 29 1,2| rippling peacefully over the sand, there falling against the 30 1,3| enough to scour the clay with sand, then to mold the bricks 31 1,3| moss and dry leaves on the sand of the passages, and on 32 1,3| chalk or marble. Mixed with sand the lime made excellent 33 1,4| the pole two feet into the sand, and wedging it up carefully, 34 1,4| distance, when, lying on the sand, his eye glanced at the 35 1,4| whose length above the sand was exactly ten feet. ~The 36 1,4| pole was thrust into the sand. ~The second distance between 37 1,4| be seen crawling on the sand; seals, doubtless, who appeared 38 1,4| could be seen there but sand and shells, mingled with 39 1,4| level. This bed of fine sand was as smooth as ice, not 40 1,4| of the shadow cast on the sand by the stick, a way which, 41 1,4| Cyrus Harding knelt on the sand, and with little wooden 42 1,4| which he stuck into the sand, he began to mark the successive 43 1,5| seals, who were lying on the sand several cable lengths off. 44 1,5| they were stretched on the sand, when the sun, before long, 45 1,5| seals came to play on the sand. They could count half a 46 1,5| animals soon lay dead on the sand, but the rest regained the 47 1,6| mass of stones, earth, and sand, bound together by plants, 48 1,9| where it was stuck in the sand. Some rock pigeons were 49 1,2| half filling them with sand, while thick beds of seaweed 50 1,2| the first by the heaps of sand. ~The store of fuel had 51 2,1| they had turned over on the sand; but, two hours later, he 52 2,1| stones scattered on the sand. ~"Well, Pencroft will be 53 2,1| turtle could not do on the sand it might have been able 54 2,2| the beach and laid on the sand before Granite House, and 55 2,2| wreck half buried in the sand." ~"Ah!" cried Pencroft, " 56 2,2| there, half buried in the sand, but still firmly attached 57 2,2| and Neb then dug away the sand with their oars, so as to 58 2,2| and strewn about on the sand. At each new object Pencroft 59 2,4| extending a vast carpet of sand, or by grouping masses of 60 2,7| stakes securely fixed in the sand. Then the settlers, ascending 61 2,7| considerably enlarged, and the sand supported by means of stakes. ~ 62 2,9| of glass, they are simply sand, chalk, and soda, either 63 2,9| Now the beach supplied sand, lime supplied chalk, sea-weeds 64 2,9| heated. A hundred parts of sand, thirty-five of chalk, forty 65 2,0| the bows, lay along the sand. ~Cyrus Harding was not 66 2,2| anchor, which was fast in the sand near the mouth of the Mercy. 67 2,3| coast, equally formed by sand and rocks, the background 68 2,4| which was buried deep in the sand. ~Pencroft could not restrain 69 2,5| had time to leap on to the sand, Harding said: "We have 70 2,5| time she is stranded on the sand, and that works her. She 71 2,5| the islet, rippled on the sand. ~"This is only the sea," 72 2,8| the case stranded on the sand, Top's adventure, and lastly 73 2,8| Jup, who slid down to the sand. ~But the orang had not 74 2,9| the north coast is merely sand, very uninteresting to look 75 2,0| succeeded soon those capricious sand dunes, among which the engineer 76 2,0| Bonadventure" was buried in the sand at the mouth of the Mercy. ~ 77 3,4| hauling up the spars on to the sand, and then in spreading the 78 3,4| sank lower. But before the sand had swallowed the heavy 79 3,5| of Union Bay, struck the sand at a distance of four miles, 80 3,6| by hauling her up on the sand, to the foot of the Chimneys?" ~" 81 3,1| Chimneys and buried deep in the sand, so that they might be available 82 3,9| fallen upon the plain of sand and tufa stretching between


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