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- Жюль Верн
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- Ледяной сфинкс
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- Стр. 205/237
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The
half
-
breed
was
not
mistaken
.
The
land
this
time
—
yes
!
—
it
was
land
!
Its
distant
heights
,
of
a
blackish
hue
,
rose
within
three
or
four
miles
of
us
.
86
°
12
’
south
latitude
.
114
°
17
’
east
longitude
.
The
iceberg
was
nearly
four
degrees
beyond
the
antarctic
pole
,
and
from
the
western
longitudes
that
our
schooner
had
followed
tracing
the
course
of
the
Jane
,
we
had
passed
into
the
eastern
longitudes
.
A
little
after
noon
,
the
iceberg
was
within
a
mile
of
the
land
.
After
their
dinner
,
the
crew
climbed
up
to
the
topmost
block
,
on
which
Dirk
Peters
was
stationed
.
On
our
approach
the
half
-
breed
descended
the
opposite
slope
and
when
I
reached
the
top
he
was
no
longer
to
be
seen
.
The
land
on
the
north
evidently
formed
a
continent
or
island
of
considerable
extent
.
On
the
west
there
was
a
sharply
projecting
cape
,
surmounted
by
a
sloping
height
which
resembled
an
enormous
seal
’
s
head
on
the
side
view
;
then
beyond
that
was
a
wide
stretch
of
sea
.
On
the
east
the
land
was
prolonged
out
of
sight
.
Each
one
of
us
took
in
the
position
.
It
depended
on
the
current
—
whether
it
would
carry
the
iceberg
into
an
eddy
which
might
drive
it
on
the
coast
,
or
continue
to
drift
it
towards
the
north
.
Which
was
the
more
admissible
hypothesis
?
Captain
Len
Guy
,
West
,
Hurliguerly
,
and
I
talked
over
the
matter
,
while
the
crew
discussed
it
among
themselves
.
Finally
,
it
was
agreed
that
the
current
tended
rather
to
carry
the
iceberg
towards
the
northern
point
of
land
.
“
After
all
,
”
said
Captain
Len
Guy
,
“
if
it
is
habitable
during
the
months
of
the
summer
season
,
it
does
not
look
like
being
inhabited
,
since
we
cannot
descry
a
human
being
on
the
shore
.
”