Читать книгу Graham's Magazine, Vol. XXXII No. 4, April 1848 - Various - Страница 11

THE CRUISE OF THE GENTILE.
BY FRANK BYRNE.
(Concluded from page 147.)

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CHAPTER V.
In which there is a Storm, a Wreck, and a Mutiny

When I came on deck the next morning, I found that the mate's prediction had proved true. A norther, as it is called in the Gulf, was blowing great guns, and the ship, heading westward, was rolling in the trough of the tremendous sea almost yard-arm under, with only close-reefed top-sails and storm foretopmast-staysail set. We wallowed along in this manner all day, for we were lying our course, and the skipper was in a hurry to bring our protracted voyage to an end. We made much more leeway than we reckoned, however, for just at sunset the high mountains of Cuba were to be seen faintly looming up on the southern horizon.

Graham's Magazine, Vol. XXXII No. 4, April 1848

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