Book,  chapter

 1    1,    8|     her route, steering to the west of the Canary group, and
 2    1,    8|   whether it is to the East or West.”~“What! it does not matter
 3    1,   16|      fashion of the route from west to east.~“Yes, yes, that’
 4    1,   19|       at full speed toward the west, in the line in which their
 5    1,   22|   Atlantic, and the prevailing west wind, made the climate of
 6    1,   25|     light shone faintly in the west. A dark shadow lay on the
 7    1,   25|        the flame ran along the west side of the OMBU; the dead
 8    1,   26|        scudding along from the west, and the spray of the waves
 9    2,    2|       degrees 44’ of longitude west of the meridian at Greenwich.
10    2,    4|    milesdistance. Should the west wind continue but a dozen
11    2,    7|  latitude 37 degrees.”~“On the west coast?”~“No, on the east
12    2,   12|   capital Capetown; and on the west the English settlements,
13    3,    1|       east coast if not on the west. It would not do to leave
14    3,    6| distant waves glittered in the west, and sparkled like sheets
15    3,    7|       mission-stations on this west coast, and we shall be able
16    3,   10|        2,400 feet high. On the west are rocky peaks of great
17    3,   13|     which stretched toward the west in its setting of picturesque
18    3,   17|     the coast which lay on the west, and affected profound indifference
19    3,   18|       he left me behind on the west coast of Australia.”~“Of
20    3,   18|     April you were left on the west coast of Australia?”~“On
21    3,   19|      orb of day sinking in the west, threw up its peculiar outlines
22    3,   20|      light smoke rising in the west. It increased, and soon
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