Chapter
1 V | Antilles; and the fag- end of a storm is like the tail of a whale;
2 XXXIV | preliminary tokens of a coming storm. Until midnight we kept
3 XXXIV | alcohol.~“Are you afraid of a storm, Miss Herbey?” said Andre
4 XXXIV | she replied. “I consider a storm one of the sublimest phenomena
5 XXXIV | Andre” I said; “enjoy a storm when it comes, if you like,
6 XXXIV | And why not?” said he; “a storm will bring us wind, you
7 XXXIV | evidently wished to regard the storm from their own point of
8 XXXIV | terrible shocks, and the storm must ere long burst forth
9 XXXIV | the first warning of the storm which, in a couple of hours,
10 XXXIV | thunder, announced that the storm was rapidly approaching.
11 XXXV | composed as ever.~Then the storm began to rage indeed. Flash
12 XXXV | raft.~By two o’clock the storm had reached its height.
13 XXXVI | dispersed the clouds that the storm had left behind. The struggle
14 XXXVI | sailors who perished in the storm, one was Austin, a fine
15 XXXVII| DECEMBER 23rd to 30th—After the storm the wind settled back into
16 XLI | of the raft, and of the storm. All these things seemed
17 XLV | announce an approaching storm, but although the vapours
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