Chapter
1 VII | sextants for checking the course, thermometers for studying
2 IX | it is true, had given the course, and in doing so had taken
3 IX | slight deviation from the course became necessary.~Looking
4 IX | necessitated no rise in the course of the aeronef. Soon the
5 XI | end of the curve, if her course remained unchanged.~How
6 XI | in the spoil, resumed her course to the west.~In the morning
7 XI | it best to continue his course through the fog.~“Gentlemen,”
8 XI | gliding southeast, had her course changed four points, so
9 XII | The aeronef kept on her course to the southwest, thereby
10 XIII | Albatross” resumed her course to the west. During the
11 XIII | aeronef, and she resumed her course to the north.~During the
12 XIII | the storm.~Frycollin, of course, had a bath—though only
13 XIV | had it fair, her general course being a westerly one. But
14 XIV | had kept her southerly course, which took her over the
15 XV | the following hours the course lay southwesterly, cutting
16 XV | Phil Evans noticed that the course had been due south. If that
17 XVI | was busy laying out his course and marking it on his maps,
18 XVI | Albatross” resumed her course to the south. Passing between
19 XVI | still held her southerly course, crossing the Beagle Channel,
20 XVII | of the Antarctic Sea her course was to be changed. When
21 XVII | the boldest navigators. Of course, by increasing the speed
22 XVIII| no longer master of her course; she would go where the
23 XVIII| precise indication of the course pursued. Its inclination
24 XIX | could easily keep a proper course.~Meanwhile Uncle Prudent
25 XIX | aeronef would resume her course to the north, and that done
26 XIX | is nothing!”~“Nothing, of course, Phil Evans, and we should
27 XXI | no news. August ran its course, and the uncertainty on
28 XXI | member’s of the club!~Of course the balloonists were longing
29 XXII | or sink at his will. Of course there was a valve in the
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