Chapter
1 I | the session of the Royal Geographical Society, No. 3 Waterloo
2 I | explorers in the line of geographical discovery.” (General assent). “
3 I | oratorical success that the Royal Geographical Society of London had yet
4 I | Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society of London.”~Who,
5 I | membership in either of the Royal Geographical Societies of London, Paris,
6 II | at the rooms of the Royal Geographical Society, and the sum of
7 II | in the bulletins of the Geographical Society of Paris; a remarkable
8 IV | four hundred and thirty geographical miles below the equator.~
9 IV | three hundred and sixty geographical miles, were gained.~Many
10 IV | were sent by the London Geographical Society to explore the great
11 IV | reembarked for England; and the Geographical Society of Paris decreed
12 V | then, I’ll tell you. The Geographical Society regard as very important
13 VIII | and Kennedy by the Royal Geographical Society. Commander Bennet
14 VIII | sittings, with lectures on geographical science, in the officers’
15 VIII | could see nothing, make no geographical observations, or reconnoitre
16 XII | in the “Bulletins of the Geographical Society of London;” and
17 XIV | travelled nearly five hundred geographical miles. Captains Burton and
18 XVIII | of one hundred and sixty geographical miles. He swept along over
19 XXXVIII| decreeing him the prize of the Geographical Society in 1828; the highest
20 XLIV | the archives of the Royal Geographical Society of London:~“We,
21 XLIV | they got from the Royal Geographical Society, nor the intense
22 XLIV | public meeting of the Royal Geographical Society, gave a recital
23 XLIV | precise manner, the facts and geographical surveys reported by Messrs.
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