Chapter
1 III | by the direct route, to sail for the port of Liverpool,
2 XII | and Curtis crowds on all sail and makes as speedily as
3 XIII | imperilled; but by crowding on sail the “Chancellor” in the
4 XX | ballast her sufficiently to sail.~The wind was blowing from
5 XX | doubtful stability at full sail to charge an obstacle that
6 XXI | was not in a condition to sail until she had been ballasted;
7 XXII | Curtis would not crowd on all sail lest the extra speed should
8 XXIII | captain carried all the sail he could, eager to take
9 XXIII | foundered beneath his feet. No sail, however, hove in sight;
10 XXV | further asked, “that she can sail with two feet of water over
11 XXV | Mr. Kazallon, she can’t sail, but she can drift with
12 XXV | a temporary awning of a sail. Mr. Kear has installed
13 XXXI | stretching the large royal sail on the yard that had been
14 XXXI | sides of the raft; then the sail was run up and trimmed to
15 XXXIII | with the tension of the sail. This done, the raft was
16 XXXIII | enough wind to fill the sail the raft lay motionless
17 XXXV | halliards that supported the sail, and instantly lowered the
18 XXXVII | readjusted the mast, the sail was once more hoisted, and
19 XXXVIII| deceived us; no land, no sail ever broke the grey line
20 XLII | though kept covered by a sail, became so warm that it
21 XLII | vision pronounce it to be a sail? A silence the most profound
22 XLIII | outline of a ship under sail.~Almost at the same moment
23 XLV | most exposed, and every sail was spread out to the fullest
24 XLV | of one of the folds of a sail into the tin pot, and put
25 XLVI | has since dropped, and the sail hangs idly against our mast.
26 L | north-east. It has filled our sail, and the white foam in our
27 LII | the unbroken horizon; if a sail or the outline of a coast
28 LIV | then, unless land or a sail appear, the horrible sacrifice
29 LIV | than that either land or sail, be they miles away, would
30 LV | sight of the longed-for sail, lying only a few cables’
|