Chapter
1 V | anticipated. Beneath the waves there are madrepores, in
2 XIII | to reach its height; the waves appeared to us mountains
3 XIII | the huge and threatening waves; looks then at the boats.
4 XIV | could brave the tremendous waves that were raging around,
5 XV | admitting free passage for the waves. But how, when the water
6 XV | ebbing beneath us, and the waves were relaxing in their violence.
7 XV | instantly extinguished. The waves are doing what pumps and
8 XVI | has been rescued from the waves and lashed securely to the
9 XVI | otherwise the dashing of the waves against her sides, as she
10 XVII | the mercy of the wind and waves; and, although the rocky
11 XVIII | reach of all but the highest waves, whilst the prismatic shafts
12 XXII | rose buoyantly with the waves, but pitched and rolled
13 XXIII | yielded to the pressure of the waves, and this morning, after
14 XXIV | hardly rose at all to the waves, which consequently often
15 XXIV | he had to struggle with waves to which even the strongest
16 XXV | washed overboard by the waves; nothing could induce her
17 XXVI | rough, and as the heavy waves broke over the ship as though
18 XXVI | away by the violence of the waves from the partitions of the
19 XXVI | rift in the clouds, and the waves sparkled again as if illumined
20 XXVII | tightly to the purlin—for the waves made the masts tremble with
21 XXVIII | rose obliquely from the waves, was entirely covered.~The “
22 XXVIII | sides by the violence of the waves, and which had not drifted
23 XXIX | mast-tops projected from the waves.~But all was ready on the
24 XXIX | to combat the winds and waves. Escape was impossible;
25 XXIX | for life, sank below the waves and were seen no more. Curtis,
26 XXIX | was then to be lost. The waves were eddying like a whirlpool
27 XXX | kind that must surmount the waves. But it is questionable
28 XXXII | not very heavily laden the waves did not break over it at
29 XXXII | diminution in the swell of the waves would indicate that; the
30 XXXIII | the direct action of the waves. Our casks of food and water
31 XXXV | wind; but from the mighty waves now raised by the hurricane
32 XXXV | everything to dread. At first the waves had been crushed and flattened
33 XXXV | upwards from the crest of the waves, and mingle with those that
34 XXXV | increased, and the heavy waves, heated to a strange heat
35 XXXV | to shelter him from the waves. Miss Herbey stood upright
36 XXXV | larboard side, so that the waves dashed in without hindrance
37 XXXVII | no longer wetted by the waves. In fact, nothing has been
38 XXXVII | and tear of the wind and waves. But the dangers of wind
39 XXXVII | the dangers of wind and waves are not those which we have
40 XXXVIII| the mercy of the wind and waves. Whether we were approaching
41 XXXVIII| clean by the relentless waves, offer nothing to our eager
42 XLIII | rising breeze; but no, the waves were calm and torpid, and
43 XLIV | eyes flashing above the waves; and its gaping jaws, as
44 XLIV | writhing convulsively amidst waves that were stained with blood.~“
45 XLV | exposed to the action of the waves, that it had become thoroughly
46 XLIX | disappeared beneath the waves.~Falsten, Dowlas, and the
47 LI | labours hard against the waves, and Curtis, Falsten, and
48 LII | fall with any motion of the waves.~During the night I tried
49 LV | and every murmur of the waves, broke distinctly on my
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