...Twenty-five miles off the coastterminated in the Claw Cape, which loomed dimly through the morningmists, and which, by the phenomenon of the mirage, appeared as ifsuspended between land and water...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...No land nor even a sail was insight...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...Her under-ports were open before thehold-down clamps had gripped her; the mail would pour out in anavalanche of pouches where smaller mailships waited to distribute thecargo across the land...
Various 「Astounding Stories, August, 1931」
...Buck’srestlessness came back on him, and he was haunted by recollections of the wildbrother, and of the smiling land beyond the divide and the run side by sidethrough the wide forest stretches...
Jack London 「The Call of the Wild」
...A band of twenty moose had crossed over fromthe land of streams and timber, and chief among them was a great bull...
Jack London 「The Call of the Wild」
...He could feel a new stir inthe land...
Jack London 「The Call of the Wild」
...As the moose were coming into the land, other kinds of life werecoming in...
Jack London 「The Call of the Wild」
...As he held on he became more and more conscious of the new stir in the land...
Jack London 「The Call of the Wild」
...He crosses alone from the smiling timber land andcomes down into an open space among the trees...
Jack London 「The Call of the Wild」
...“The true Allah protect thee, Lady, and that blessed Marien who is thetrue mother of God, and who has put it into thy heart to go to the land ofthe Christians, because she loves thee...
Miguel de Cervantes 「The History of Don Quixote, Vol. I, Complete」
...We might have made about thirty miles when daybreak found us some threemusket-shots off the land, which seemed to us deserted, and without anyoneto see us...
Miguel de Cervantes 「The History of Don Quixote, Vol. I, Complete」
... at which they were filledwith amazement; but when we came to land Zoraida’s father...
Miguel de Cervantes 「The History of Don Quixote, Vol. I, Complete」
...His legends, with one or two exceptions, are genuinelySpanish in subject, though infused with a tender melancholythat recalls the northern ballads rather than the writings ofhis native land...
Gustavo Adolfo Becquer 「Legends, Tales and Poems」
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