Chapter
1 VII | when it became advisable to land.~Engines of suspension and
2 XI | themselves—nor was there any land to be seen to which they
3 XI | June, at about six o’clock, land was sighted on the horizon.
4 XIII | the Caspian.~There was no land in sight, either on the
5 XIII | with the telegraph wires on land during a storm, so was it
6 XV | buffaloes which wander over this land, whose fertility is simply
7 XVI | with the inhabitants of the land might be true, but with
8 XVI | earth met sky. Not a spot of land was insight in this huge
9 XVI | watched for the sight of land to the southward. At Uncle
10 XVI | the 23rd of July that the land reappeared in the southwest
11 XVI | Dawson Island, and the Land of Desolation, straits and
12 XVI | And now they were over the land of the Fuegians, Tierra
13 XVI | Fuegians, Tierra del Fuego, the land of fire. Six months later,
14 XVII | No, Tom; there is no land out there.”~“Then it must
15 XVII | knowing nothing of the nearest land, are perhaps dying of hunger
16 XVII | ten o’clock at night the land was sighted— or rather they
17 XVIII| on the coast of Discovery Land, though it could not be
18 XVIII| July, about seven o’clock, land was sighted to the north.
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