img In Search of the Castaways; Or, The Children of Captain Grant  /  Chapter 3 ROLL OF NAVIGATORS | 14.29%
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Chapter 3 ROLL OF NAVIGATORS

Word Count: 764    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

took very little heed to the working of the ship; he let things take their chance. He seldom showed himself, for which no one was sorry. No one would h

no ship ever sailed more entirely depending on P

throw the ship on her beam-ends. Often Will Halley would interfere and abuse the two sailors with a volley of oaths. The latter, in their impatience, would have liked nothing better t

fear of alarming Glenarvan, he spoke only to Paganel or the Ma

itate to take the command of the vessel. When we get to Auckland the drunken imbecile ca

we are on open sea, a careful lookout is enough; my sailors and I are watching on the poop; bu

irect the course

d John. "Would you believe it tha

that

rade between Eden and Auckland, and Halley is so at

aughed John Mangles; "I do not believe in ships that steer themselves; and if

that the neighborhood of land

f needs were, you could not sa

lar and capricious as the fiords of Norway. There are many reefs, and it requires great experience to avoid them. The

board would have to tak

ere wa

not hospitable shores, and the dangers of the land

ries, Monsieur Pagane

imid or brutish Australians, but of an intelligent and sanguinary race, cannib

Grant had been wrecked on the coast of New Zeal

entures into these fatal districts falls into the hands of the Maories, and a prisoner in the hands of the Maories is a lost man. I have urged my friends to cross the Pampas, to toil over the

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