The Toilers of the Sea - Victor Hugo - Books - University of Michigan Library - 9781418146269 - June 2, 2010
In case cover and title do not match, the title is correct

The Toilers of the Sea

Victor Hugo

Price
€ 53.49

Ordered from remote warehouse

Expected delivery Dec 18 - 27
Christmas presents can be returned until 31 January
Add to your iMusic wish list

Also available as:

The Toilers of the Sea

Excerpt: ... apparatus were in the barge. He had placed them there mechanically and by habit; for he intended, if his enterprise continued, to sojourn for some time in an archipelago of rocks and breakers, where fishing nets and tackle are of little use. At the moment when Gilliatt was skirting the great rock the sea was retiring; a circumstance favourable to his purpose. The departing tide laid bare, at the foot of the smaller Douvre, one or two table-rocks, horizontal, or only slightly inclined, and bearing a fanciful resemblance to boards supported by crows. These table-rocks, sometimes narrow, sometimes broad, standing at unequal distances along the side of the great perpendicular column, were continued in the form of a thin cornice up to a spot just beneath the Durande, the hull of which stood swelling out between the two rocks. The wreck was held fast there as in a vice. This series of platforms was convenient for approaching and surveying the position. It was convenient also for disembarking the contents of the barge provisionally; but it was necessary to hasten, for it was only above water for a few hours. With the rising tide the table-rocks would be again beneath the foam. It was before these table-rocks, some level, some slanting, that Gilliatt pushed in and brought the barge to a stand. A thick mass of wet and slippery sea-wrack covered them, rendered more slippery here and there by their inclined surfaces. Pg 185 Gilliatt pulled off his shoes and sprang bare-footed on to the slimy weeds, and made fast the barge to a point of rock. Then he advanced as far as he could along the granite cornice, reached the rock immediately beneath the wreck, looked up, and examined it. The Durande had been caught suspended, and, as it were, fitted in between the two rocks, at about twenty feet above the water. It must have been a heavy sea which had cast her there. Such effects from furious seas have nothing surprising for those who are familiar with the ocean. To...

Media Books     Hardcover Book   (Book with hard spine and cover)
Released June 2, 2010
ISBN13 9781418146269
Publishers University of Michigan Library
Pages 162
Dimensions 152 × 229 × 13 mm   ·   381 g
Language English  

Show all

More by Victor Hugo

Others have also bought

More from this series