[The Coral Island by R. M. Ballantyne]@TWC D-Link book
The Coral Island

CHAPTER VI
12/16

We were exceedingly perplexed at this discovery, and stayed a long time at the place conjecturing what these marks could have been, but without avail; so, as the day was advancing, we left it and quickly reached the top of the mountain.
We found this to be the highest point of the island, and from it we saw our kingdom lying, as it were, like a map around us.

As I have always thought it impossible to get a thing properly into one's understanding without comprehending it, I shall beg the reader's patience for a little while I describe our island, thus, shortly:-- It consisted of two mountains; the one we guessed at 500 feet; the other, on which we stood, at 1000.

Between these lay a rich, beautiful valley, as already said.

This valley crossed the island from one end to the other, being high in the middle and sloping on each side towards the sea.
The large mountain sloped, on the side farthest from where we had been wrecked, gradually towards the sea; but although, when viewed at a glance, it had thus a regular sloping appearance, a more careful observation showed that it was broken up into a multitude of very small vales, or rather dells and glens, intermingled with little rugged spots and small but abrupt precipices here and there, with rivulets tumbling over their edges and wandering down the slopes in little white streams, sometimes glistening among the broad leaves of the bread-fruit and cocoa- nut trees, or hid altogether beneath the rich underwood.

At the base of this mountain lay a narrow bright green plain or meadow, which terminated abruptly at the shore.


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