Chapter
1 I | made his way toward the north of the Indian Peninsula,
2 II | such an enterprise.~The North American Review could not,
3 IV | fifteenth and tenth degrees of north latitude; that is to say,
4 IV | little below nine degrees north latitude. This was the extreme
5 IV | stopped at four degrees north latitude and seventeen degrees
6 IV | fourth and fifth parallels of north latitude.~In 1855, Brun-Rollet,
7 VIII | investigations of science. On the north, the young Duveyrier was
8 VIII | which, descending from the north, and coming from the west,
9 XVI | like to ascend directly north of the equator.”~“Look there!”
10 XVII | explorers who came from the north.”~“And we shan’t set foot
11 XVII | three miles away, on the north of the prairie. So it became
12 XVIII | him directly toward the north, and at six o’clock in the
13 XVIII | favorable, we shall go due north, and we shall, perhaps,
14 XVIII | straight line toward the north.~Dr. Ferguson fairly clapped
15 XVIII | two degrees forty minutes north latitude. Lofty mountains
16 XVIII | discharged its waters toward the north, and this river exists,
17 XVIII | the travellers from the north?”~“We shall have certain,
18 XVIII | by the explorers from the north. Let us descend with great
19 XIX | deuce! but that’s not the north?”~“No, Dick; and I’m afraid
20 XIX | east with those from the north; and we must not complain.”~
21 XX | at one moment toward the north, at another toward the south,
22 XX | four degrees twenty minutes north latitude, after a day’s
23 XXII | degrees forty-two minutes north latitude, and four degrees
24 XXII | degrees forty-two minutes north latitude. In front of her
25 XXIII | degrees fifty-five minutes north latitude.~Then, casting
26 XXVI | degrees fifty-one minutes north latitude, or nearly five
27 XXVIII | degrees thirty-two minutes north latitude.~Kennedy had but
28 XIX | go a few degrees farther north to see them.”~“What a pity!”~“
29 XIX | I wanted to get to the north.”~After twelve hours of
30 XXXI | of water, and toward the north the two elements merged
31 XXXII | on a desert shore, on the north of the lake. The anchors
32 XXXIII | conclusion that it lay on the north shore of Lake Tchad, between
33 XXXIV | most unlooked-for calm; the north wind had abruptly got the
34 XXXV | pointing out the direction due north to everybody else, will,
35 XXXV | The wind blows from the north, and she should be carried
36 XXXVII | Anxieties.—The Route to the North.—A Night near Aghades.~During
37 XXXVII | shifted abruptly from south to north, but finally the Victoria
38 XXXVII | and away we went galloping north as fast as our legs could
39 XXXVII | Victoria, “we are going due north.”~“Due north, Dick.”~“And
40 XXXVII | are going due north.”~“Due north, Dick.”~“And don’t that
41 XXXVII | and eighteenth degrees of north latitude, and there we will
42 XXXVIII| the sixteenth degree of north latitude, and four degrees
43 XXXVIII| traversed Africa from west to north. Ah! had Callie been born
44 XLIX | angle directed toward the north and piercing a corner of
45 XLIII | its course extended from north to south. In the midst of
46 XLIV | a little farther to the north, but on the river.~There
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