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Chapter 9                      Page 154
Chapter 9                      Page 154
I left Charleston at midday.It was a cold day, but there was no ice in the town. A few miles out of the town, on the Augusta Railway, it was freezing sharply, the railway [[unclear]] were coated with ice, the ground was white with hoar frost wherever the sun had not touched it. I supposed that the warmer air from the bay had kept the front out of the town. All through that day in traveling  as far as Augusta & for the next two days I found the front in the frost
I left Charleston at midday.It was a cold day, but there was no ice in the town. A few miles out of the town, on the Augusta Railway, it was freezing sharply, the railway [[unclear]] were coated with ice, the ground was white with hoar frost wherever the sun had not touched it. I supposed that the warmer air from the bay had kept the front out of the town. All through that day in traveling  as far as Augusta & for the next two days I found the frost (in the frost) (struck out) in the country between Augusta and Atlanta, very severe. We [[unclear]] would have considered them unusually cold days in England; [[unclear]] (struck out) and yet there was not a cloud to intercept a ray of the Southern Sun. To my sensations it was colder than I found it on any other occasion during my tour in the United States. I mention this because it is satisfactory to collect indications of large

Revision as of 18:14, 26 March 2020

Chapter 9 Page 154 I left Charleston at midday.It was a cold day, but there was no ice in the town. A few miles out of the town, on the Augusta Railway, it was freezing sharply, the railway unclear were coated with ice, the ground was white with hoar frost wherever the sun had not touched it. I supposed that the warmer air from the bay had kept the front out of the town. All through that day in traveling as far as Augusta & for the next two days I found the frost (in the frost) (struck out) in the country between Augusta and Atlanta, very severe. We unclear would have considered them unusually cold days in England; unclear (struck out) and yet there was not a cloud to intercept a ray of the Southern Sun. To my sensations it was colder than I found it on any other occasion during my tour in the United States. I mention this because it is satisfactory to collect indications of large