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    Chapter 4

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    CHAPTER 4

    All at once the reporter sprang up, and telling the sailor that he would
    rejoin them at that same place, he climbed the cliff in the direction which
    the Negro Neb had taken a few hours before. Anxiety hastened his steps, for
    he longed to obtain news of his friend, and he soon disappeared round an
    angle of the cliff. Herbert wished to accompany him.

    "Stop here, my boy," said the sailor; "we have to prepare an encampment,
    and to try and find rather better grub than these shell-fish. Our friends
    will want something when they come back. There is work for everybody."

    "I am ready," replied Herbert.

    "All right," said the sailor; "that will do. We must set about it
    regularly. We are tired, cold, and hungry; therefore we must have shelter,
    fire, and food. There is wood in the forest, and eggs in nests; we have
    only to find a house."

    "Very well," returned Herbert, "I will look for a cove among the rocks,
    and I shall be sure to discover some hole into which we can creep."

    "All right," said Pencroft; "go on, my boy."

    They both walked to the foot of the enormous wall over the beach, far
    from which the tide had now retreated; but instead of going towards the
    north, they went southward. Pencroft had remarked, several hundred feet
    from the place at which they landed, a narrow cutting, out of which he
    thought a river or stream might issue. Now, on the one hand it was
    important to settle themselves in the neighborhood of a good stream of
    water, and on the other it was possible that the current had thrown Cyrus
    Harding on the shore there.

    The cliff, as has been said, rose to a height of three hundred feet, but
    the mass was unbroken throughout, and even at its base, scarcely washed by
    the sea, it did not offer the smallest fissure which would serve as a
    dwelling. It was a perpendicular wall of very hard granite, which even the
    waves had not worn away. Towards the summit fluttered myriads of sea-fowl,
    and especially those of the web-footed species with long, flat, pointed
    beaks--a clamorous tribe, bold in the presence of man, who probably for the

    first time thus invaded their domains. Pencroft recognized the skua and
    other gulls among them, the voracious little sea-mew, which in great
    numbers nestled in the crevices of the granite. A shot fired among this
    swarm would have killed a great number, but to fire a shot a gun was
    needed, and neither Pencroft nor Herbert had one; besides this, gulls and
    sea-mews are scarcely eatable, and even their eggs have a detestable taste.
    However, Herbert, who had gone forward a little more to the left, soon came
    upon rocks covered with sea-weed, which, some hours later, would be hidden
    by the high tide. On these rocks, in the midst of slippery
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