[Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea by Jules Verne]@TWC D-Link bookTwenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea CHAPTER I 3/10
15' N.lat.and 60 deg.
35' W.long. In these simultaneous observations they thought themselves justified in estimating the minimum length of the mammal at more than three hundred and fifty feet, as the Shannon and Helvetia were of smaller dimensions than it, though they measured three hundred feet over all. Now the largest whales, those which frequent those parts of the sea round the Aleutian, Kulammak, and Umgullich islands, have never exceeded the length of sixty yards, if they attain that. In every place of great resort the monster was the fashion.
They sang of it in the cafes, ridiculed it in the papers, and represented it on the stage.
All kinds of stories were circulated regarding it.
There appeared in the papers caricatures of every gigantic and imaginary creature, from the white whale, the terrible "Moby Dick" of sub-arctic regions, to the immense kraken, whose tentacles could entangle a ship of five hundred tons and hurry it into the abyss of the ocean.
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