Chapter
1 5 | some two or three miles off shore, and go through rapid evolutions.
2 5 | from anywhere along the shore. Neither had it been seen
3 6 | road to Milwaukee and the shore of New England had been
4 7 | fifty feet deep close to shore. Sharp, pointed rocks form
5 7 | managed, however, to reach the shore before her decks were completely
6 7 | pumped out and hauled up on shore, an examination showed that
7 11| drove rapidly along the shore of Lake Erie, toward the
8 11| sometimes frozen over from shore to shore.~The principal
9 11| frozen over from shore to shore.~The principal cities on
10 11| villages are numerous along the shore. The traffic is naturally
11 11| and laid about upon the shore; and as well as I could
12 11| advance. The sand of the shore crunched beneath our steps.
13 12| Mr. Wells saw laid on the shore.”~“Let us wait awhile,”
14 12| the lake lapping on the shore beyond the creek, came to
15 12| once more heard upon the shore. The man with a lantern
16 12| galloping furiously along the shore!~They were our own, which,
17 12| mass of the boat toward shore. Could they cut the rope
18 13| expanse of waves! Not a shore in sight! Nothing but the
19 13| companions, left behind on the shore of Black Rock Creek. One
20 13| kept thus far away from the shore, or if she traveled beneath
21 13| Terror” could approach the shore unseen.~Toward two o’clock,
22 14| for night to return to the shore of the lake. There, the
23 14| away toward the western shore of the lake. Or else, I
24 14| watching the northeastern shore, made a sign to his companion.
25 14| Erie stands on the Canadian shore at the entrance of the river.
26 14| within easy reach of the shore, yet she shot ahead. Five
27 17| the end of the Gulf, the shore of Venezuela or Colombia.
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