..."Yes, Neb; a boat in the Indian fashion...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...Neither in the forests of the Far West was anything to be seen...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...Neb took one of the oars, Herbert the other, and Pencroft remained inthe stern in order to use the skull...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...And the sailor, raising a heavy block, was about to break in one of thesides of the chest, when the engineer arrested his hand...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...They had no doubtwhatever, on examining it carefully, that it had not been long in thewater, and that its arrival on this coast was recent...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...But happily his fears were notrealised, and an hour and a half after they set out—all that time hadbeen taken up in going a distance of three miles—the boat touched thebeach below Granite House...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...The sailor began by detaching the two barrels, which, being in goodcondition, would of course be of use...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...This was alsoindicated by a second case of metal which had preserved them from damp,and which could not have been soldered in a moment of haste...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...Infact, things had so come about that the settlers in Lincoln Island nolonger needed help for themselves, but were even able to carry it toothers...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...A great part of the distance would thus betraversed without fatigue, and the explorers could transport theirprovisions and arms to an advanced point in the west of the island...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...At six in the morning the canoe put off from the shore; all hadembarked, including Top, and they proceeded to the mouth of the Mercy...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...It was ten o'clock in the morning when the canoereached a second angle of the Mercy, nearly five miles from its mouth...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...In no place, either in the depths of the forest or underthe trees on the banks of the Mercy, was the...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...If castaways hadlanded on the island, they could not have yet quitted the shore and itwas not in the woods that the survivors of the supposed shipwreck shouldbe sought...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...The exploration was therefore continued for another two miles in themidst of country covered with eucalypti, which predominated in the woodsof this portion of the island...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...Beyond that, the Mercy waslost in the brushwood, where it was fed from some hidden source...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...The bank was raised a little above the level of thesea, and on this luxuriant soil supported by a granite base, the fineforest trees seemed to be as firmly planted as in the interior of theisland...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
..."But I can tell you, if you are ignorant of it, that in India thesebamboos are eaten like asparagus...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...Herbert and the sailor had not to look long for a place in which to passthe night...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
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