Chapter
1 IV | breeze, leaving in her wake, far as the eye can reach, a
2 V | me that we could not be far off Cape Hatteras in the
3 VI | and we have been carried far to the south we can only
4 IX | case is rare, but it is far from unknown. Unless the
5 X | gone on as usual; and as far as the observation of the
6 XIII | however terrible, could far exceed the torture of our
7 XIV | memorandum-book, but I was far from sharing his, composure,
8 XIV | I could not suppress.~As far as we knew, Lieutenant Walter,
9 XV | the ship had heeled, as far as the flames would allow
10 XV | north-west wind had driven us far to the south; and he thought,
11 XVI | fifteen. It was remarkable how far she had been carried on
12 XVI | interior, yet its volume was far less than before. The first
13 XVI | the swell in the sea is far less heavy. On the whole
14 XVIII | west. We had not gone very far when a beautiful grotto,
15 XIX | mended from the interior. By far the best way of repairing
16 XX | Chancellor’ has sustained far greater injuries than we
17 XX | ship had been hauled as far as her sea-range would allow;
18 XXI | gun-cotton or of dynamite, but far greater than that of ordinary
19 XXI | gunpowder renders picrate far more effective in blasting
20 XXI | party will be reckoned as far from being the least happy
21 XXII | felt that she was labouring far too heavily, he clued up
22 XXII | circumstances, caution was far more important than speed.~
23 XXIII | that the time cannot be far distant when the pumps will
24 XXIV | only remaining boat was far too small to hold us all,
25 XXV | the boatswain were on the far end of the forecastle; the
26 XXV | to be seen. The sea was far too rough for the men to
27 XXVI | which we were to embark far away from land.~About eight
28 XXVIII| that the day could not be far distant when we must want
29 XXXI | of hunger and thirst.~As far as we can estimate, we have
30 XXXII | To say the truth, it was far better for us that the sea
31 XXXII | confess that our condition is far preferable to what it was
32 XXXIV | time illumined the horizon far and wide. There was, however,
33 XXXIV | that majestic rolling, far different to the sharp crash
34 XL | present the pangs of hunger far exceed the pain of thirst.
35 XL | remarked that extreme thirst is far less endurable than extreme
36 XLII | that we have been carried far to the south, and here,
37 XLIII | indifference which I was far from feeling, I cast an
38 XLIII | she was taking. Curtis was far more deliberate in his judgment.
39 XLIV | not, however, have gone far away, and it was not likely
40 XLIV | distinguished; but as the waters far below seemed somehow to
41 XLVII | provisions Hobart had been by far the strongest amongst us;
42 XLIX | were tormented by thirst far more than by hunger; and
43 LI | hang about our bodies goes far to aggravate the agonies
44 LII | looks as if land were not far off.”~But although Curtis
45 LVI | my friends, we are not far from land!”~It was not too
46 LVII | could find fresh water so far from land. Yet land, undoubtedly
47 LVII | we must have been carried far, far to the south, and in
48 LVII | must have been carried far, far to the south, and in that
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