Dreamers of The Sea Preview Chapter
DREAMERS OF THE SEA By Louis Williams (available on Amazon: [https://a.co/d/cGQTJT9](https://a.co/d/cGQTJT9)) ©2024 Louis Williams CHAPTER ONE The sun had...
To Hold Him Like a Spell
The effort was complicated by the steamship's incessant rolling, and the stateroom's occupant gave him a wry, understanding smile.
On this New Sea
Some of them seemed to be quite experienced -- old hands, although there could not be that many _truly_ old hands with steamships.
Light Bane: Chapter 5
She could easily freeze them like she froze a steamship much bigger than her. it was simply suicide.
Mickey Mouse in the Public Domain - Chapter 18
Faint flickering lights illuminated pipes and boilers, moving pieces of engines, or whatever else were the makings of a steamship; it hadn't been just her head that was swimming, she knew this place, she was aboard- "the s.s. willie," minnie breathed.
For Always Roaming
They'd met on the storm-tossed deck of a stricken steamship, when she'd joined him in volunteering for a rescue mission.
Inside the Nebula (Story Commission)
But, despite being a lot closer, the distance from his bulge and the ground was still so enormous even the best steamships of the empire couldn't even dream of reaching that high.
Light Bane: Chapter 7
Due to the efforts of the engineering team, the steamship was up and running faster than expected.
Beyond the Sunset
To stern, though, the steamship's wake pointed towards a darkening bubble, pierced at ever-faster intervals by arcing, twisting pulses of radiant light.
Dreaming of Skies to Conquer
The steamship had twelve, each of them with a big furnace whose exhaust was sucked through a dense lattice of hollow pipes immersed in the boiler's water.
Raptor Den: Chapter 1
The main room had a clear place for dancing at the front near the stage, the bar was a teak wood and bronze art deco masterpiece in the style of an old steamship purser's office.
Red sky at morning
._ "red sky at morning" by rob baird --- most of the _clarion adamant_'s crew were sailors by trade; they had no knowledge of steamships.