Chapter
1 VI | that knee bone?”~“Yes; a mountain rising out of the sea.”~“
2 VI | Snæfell?”~“It is. It is a mountain five thousand feet high,
3 VI | but one eruption of this mountain, that of 1219; from that
4 IX | of the bay at a distant mountain terminating in a double
5 X | going any further, that mountain in the horizon. That is
6 XII | climb a very remarkable mountain; at the worst we are going
7 XIII | the neighbourhood of the mountain, whose granite foundations
8 XIV | spend some days upon the mountain.~The preparations for our
9 XV | stands out distinctly in the mountain system of the island. From
10 XV | trachyte which was to form a mountain chain. No violence accompanied
11 XV | streaming down the sides of the mountain like flowing hair.~Such
12 XV | brought us to the base of the mountain. There Hans bid us come
13 XV | places the flanks of the mountain formed an angle with the
14 XV | formation of the sides of the mountain, it would have gone on to
15 XV | attained a bulge in the mountain, a kind of bed on which
16 XV | threw a deep shadow over the mountain. If that huge revolving
17 XV | dust storm fell upon the mountain, which quivered under the
18 XVI | within the recesses of the mountain.~Thus the first night in
19 XXXIII| was heaved up on a watery mountain and pitched down again,
20 XLIII | therefore, where could this mountain be, and in what part of
21 XLIV | on the sloping side of a mountain only two yards from a gaping
22 XLIV | sitting half-way down a mountain baked under the burning
23 XLIV | answered. “This is no northern mountain; here are no granite peaks
24 XLIV | feel the heaving of the mountain, which seemed to breathe
25 XLIV | hundred feet, giving the mountain a height of about 1,300
26 XLIV | feet. But the base of the mountain was hidden in a perfect
27 XLIV | surprise.~“Well, whatever mountain this may be,” he said at
28 XLIV | geschwind!”~(“What is this mountain called, my little friend?”)~
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