Book,  chapter

 1    1,    9|  constellations began to bestud the sky, and the Southern Cross
 2    1,    9|           aerial archipelago in the sky.~It is at Cape Froward that
 3    1,   10|          From November to March the sky is always cloudless, and
 4    1,   11|     splendid when they started, the sky a deep cloudless blue, and
 5    1,   12|            weather was calm and the sky clear, in addition to the
 6    1,   12|             The air was dry and the sky unclouded blue. At this
 7    1,   13|             deepened, and the whole sky became lighted up with a
 8    1,   16|         good friend; by sunrise the sky will be quite clear again.”~“
 9    1,   22|           been fine, but to-day the sky presented anything but a
10    1,   22|             beneath the threatening sky.~Next day the presence of
11    1,   22|          hours the cataracts of the sky opened and deluged the plain
12    1,   25|         stars. Before long half the sky was overspread. Evidently
13    1,   25|            last glance at the angry sky. The clouds now covered
14    1,   25|            perpendicularly from the sky five or six times in the
15    1,   25|   arborescent light.~Soon the whole sky from east to north seemed
16    1,   25|           long the cataracts of the sky burst forth, and came down
17    1,   26|     separated, and now streaked the sky in long bands.~The OMBU
18    1,   26|    SILHOUETTE stood out against the sky, through the white, dashing
19    2,    2|            black against the bright sky, which seemed all ablaze
20    2,    5|            Glenarvan, examining the sky, which from horizon to zenith
21    2,    5|            to the appearance of the sky. Nothing is more deceitful.
22    2,    5|        night, for though as yet the sky was still unclouded, he
23    2,    5|         suggest. About 11 P. M. the sky began to darken in the south,
24    2,    5|          gaze fixed on the troubled sky. The glass had fallen to
25    2,    9| sharply-defined horizon against the sky. McNabbs declared they had
26    2,   15|           of 4,000 feet.~The cloudy sky only allowed the heat to
27    2,   15|       distant storm, lighted up the sky with a fiery glare. Arrangements
28    2,   15|         clouds which overspread the sky. There was not a breath
29    2,   16|           his eye fixed on the gray sky, on which the smallest branch
30    2,   18|             Great clouds filled the sky still; the ground was strewn
31    2,   19|            coast? They saw nothing. Sky and earth mingled in the
32    3,    4|            intentionally blank] the sky was very threatening. The
33    3,    4|         little light from the murky sky, the ladies, relying on
34    3,    6|            shore. A tolerably clear sky allowed them to make out
35    3,    6|            monkey turned toward the sky. It was Pirongia, which
36    3,    6|          seen in that direction but sky and water, except one sharply-defined
37    3,    6|          masses, on a background of sky illumined by the rising
38    3,    8|            the rain had ceased. The sky was veiled with light gray
39    3,   12|           dawn whitened the eastern sky, stretched himself near
40    3,   14|         pealed through the darkened sky.~Paganel welcomed the storm,
41    3,   14|            portentous darkness. The sky would supply a black background
42    3,   14|        column of fire rushed to the sky with loud detonations, while
43    3,   14|            the tempest in the upper sky, the crater never ceased
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