Chapter
1 1 | began to remark that on some days when birds approached its
2 1 | precipices. In the first days of September of that memorable
3 1 | disaster.~During the first days of April of that year, these
4 2 | State of North Carolina.~Two days before, the head of the
5 3 | provisions for two or three days, beyond which our trip surely
6 3 | guides have food for two days in their knapsacks, besides
7 5 | of the report.~For some days the waters along the coast
8 5 | the ocean passage in five days. And the engineers had not
9 6 | been interrupted for four days by my exploration of the
10 6 | next century.~For several days the newspapers of America
11 6 | Europe would be but three days away from her, while she
12 6 | she would still be five days from Europe.~If our own
13 6 | postmark, dating from two days before, was stamped at the
14 7 | them as to this.~Several days passed quietly. There was
15 7 | when I returned.~For some days, she said, she had noticed
16 7 | heels.~The two following days, there was certainly no
17 8 | better assistants.~Several days passed, without news, either
18 11| have traversed in three days. Did he then intend to make
19 11| provisions sufficient for several days packed beneath the seat
20 11| had learned.~Less than two days before, on the afternoon
21 13| on board the “Terror” two days before,—or even more.~Happily
22 17| to keep me alive for many days.~What I studied particularly
23 18| extraordinary machine.~Five days later the Ottawa sighted
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