| By horse, by rail, by land, by sea, our journey starts
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| Two men incensed by one man’s journey from the past
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| In Iceland, where the mountain stood with pride
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| They set off with their guide
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| To reach the mountain side
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| Roped as one for safety through the long descent
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| Into the crater of volcanic rock they went
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| Look up from our telescopic lens,
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| One star for us to share,
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| We continue on our prayer.
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| Crystals of opaque quartz, studded limpid tears,
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| Forming magic chandeliers, lighting blistered galleries.
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| Narration 1
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| Admiring shades of lava which imperceptibly passed from reddish
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| brown to bright yellow, their way lit by crystals appearing as
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| lighted globes, they continued through the lava gallery, which
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| gently sloped until they reached the inter section of two roads.
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| Without hesitation Professor Lidenbrook chose the eastern tunnel.
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| And the journey continued through a succession of arches, appearing
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| before them as if they were the aisles of a gothic cathedral; |
| the
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| walls were enhanced with impressions of Rock weeds and mosses from
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| the Silurian epoch.
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| Narration 2
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| The Eastern route they had taken had come to a dead end. |
| With three
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| days’walk back to the fork to find Arne Saknussemm’s original
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| route, they found their water rations were limited to one day.
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| Knowing their only change of finding water was on that route, they
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| set off for the fork and there finally they fell almost lifeless on
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| the third day. |
| After sleep, they continued down the other tunnel in
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| their quest for water, and whilst searching on his own, Hans, the
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| guide, heard the sound of water thundering behind a granite wall,
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| and, with a pick axe, attacked the wall so as to allow a stream of
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| boiling water to enter and cool in their tunnel. |
| Not only had they
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| found life in the water but they had also found a flowing guide to
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| the Centre of the Earth. |
| They called the stream the Hansbach.
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| Narration 3
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| Replenished with the water the journey continued with haste, but
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| somehow they find themselves separated. |
| Professor Lidenbrook’s
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| nephew Axel found himself alone. |
| His mind was seized with
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| unparalleled fear and he saw memories of home flashing before him.
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| His fiancee Grauben, his house and friends in Hamburg. |
| He saw
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| hallucinations of all the incidents of the journey. |
| And, unworthy
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| as he felt, he knelt in fervent prayer and then, in panic, he ran
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| blindly through a tunnel only to reach a dead end, where he fell
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| panting for breath. |
| In the darkness he cried… voices…
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| voices… voices… He heard voices. |
| He heard his uncle’s voice.
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| Due to the shape of the gallery and the conducting power of the
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| rocks, his uncle’s voice was uncannily travelling around the
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| walls. |
| By means of their chronometers they discovered they were
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| four miles apart, so Axel set about the task of rejoining the
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| Professor and their guide.
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| Recollection
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| Memories of a life on earth go flashing past,
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| Of home of Grauben, friends of whom he’s seen his last
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| Contemplating what his life’s been worth,
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| While trapped beneath the earth,
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| An embryo at birth
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| Pain and fear destroy the beauty I have seen,
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| Of caverns, where no other man has ever been
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| Silurian epoch hosts me as my grave,
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| My final blow I wave,
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| A life too late to save
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| Crystals of opaque quartz, studded limpid tears,
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| Forming magic chandeliers, lighting blistered galleries.
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| Narration 4
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| Suddenly the ground disappeared from beneath his feet. |
| He fell down
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| a vertical shaft, his head hitting a sharp rock. |
| He lost
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| consciousness. |
| On opening his eyes, he found himself with the
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| Professor and the guide, and, looking around him, he saw an ocean
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| stretching as faras the eye could see, a giant forest of
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| mushrooms, a line of huge cliffs, and strange clouds hung
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| overhead, as he lay on a deeply indented shore of golden sand
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| strewn with shells. |
| For a moment, he thought he was back on the
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| surface of the earth, but he soon realised that they had reached a
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| world within a world.
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| THE BATTLE / THE FOREST
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| Narration 5
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| Having made a raft from wood taken from the giant mushroom forest,
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| with rigging consisting of a mast made of two staves lashed |
| together, a yard made of a third, and a sail borrowed from their
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| stock of rugs, they set sail from the harbour — Port Grauben,
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| named after Axel’s fiancee. |
| With a north-westerly wind propelling
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| them along at about three miles an hour, silvery beams of light,
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| reflected here and there by drops of spray, produced luminous
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| points in the eddy created by the raft. |
| Soon all land was lost to
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| view. |
| Five days out to sea, they witnessed a terrifying battle
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| between two sea monsters. |
| One having the snout of a porpoise, the
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| head of a lizard, and teeth of a crocodile — an Ichthyosaurus. |
| And
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| the other, the mortal enemy of the first, a serpent with a
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| turtle’s shell, the Plesiosaurus.
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| The Battle
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| Five days out on an infinite sea, they prayed for calm on an ocean free,
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| But the surface of the water ws indicating some disturbance.
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| The raft was hurled by an unseen source, two hundred feet, with
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| frightening force
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| And a dark mass rising showed to be a giant porpoise
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| Rising out of the angry sea, towered the creatures' enemy,
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| And so the two sea monsters closed for battle
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| Crocodile teeth, lizard’s head, bloodshot eye, stained ocean red
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| Moving close to their raft’s side, the two men prayed as one and cried
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| «Save me, save me, save me, save me»
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| The serpents' fight went on for hours, two monsters soaring up like towers
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| And driving down to the depths in a single motion
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| Suddenly, the serpent’s head, shot out of the water bathed in red
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| And the serpentine form lay lifeless on the ocean
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| Crocodile teeth, lizard’s head, bloodshot eye stained ocean read
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| Battle won, a victor’s pride, the three men thanked the Lord and cried
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| «Praise God, praise God, praise God, praise God.»
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| Narration 6
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| Cumulus clouds formed heavily in the south, like huge wool packs
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| heaped up in picturesque disorder. |
| Under the influence of the
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| breezes they merged together, growing darker, forming a single
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| menacing mass. |
| The raft lay motionless on the sluggish waveless
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| sea and in silence they waited for the storm.
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| Narration 7
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| For four days the storm had raged as they clung to the mast of
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| their raft for safety. |
| Finally, with their raft wrecked after
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| being bashed against the reefs, they lay sheltered from the
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| pouring rain beneath a few overhanging rocks where they ate and
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| slept. |
| The next day all trace of the storm had disappeared and
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| what remained of their stock seemed intact. |
| Checking the compass
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| brought only heartbreak as it showed that a chance of wind during
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| the storm had returned them to just a few miles north of Port
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| Grauben. |
| So, deciding to try and find the original route they
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| advanced with difficulty over granite fragments mingled with
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| flint, quartz, and alluvial deposits, eventually reaching a plain
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| covered with bones. |
| like a huge cemetery. |
| A mile further on, they
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| reached the edge of a huge forest made up of vegetation of the
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| Tertiary period. |
| Tall palms were linked by a network of
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| inextricable creepers, a carpet of moss covering the ground and
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| the leaves were colourless, everything having a brownish hue.
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| Exploring the forest they discovered a heard of gigantic animals,
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| Mastadons, which were being marshalled by a primitive human being,
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| a Proteus. |
| He stood over twelve foot high and brandished an
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| enormous bough, a crook worthy of this antediluvian shepherd.
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| The Forest
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| Journey on through ages gone, to the centre of the earth
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| Past rocks of quartz and granite, which gave mother nature birth
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| Burial ground of ancient man, his life no more is seen,
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| A journey through his time unknown, I wonder where he’s been
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| Wonder where he’s been, wonder where he’s been, wonder where he’s been
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| The shore now gone behind the hills, a forest in our sight,
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| Rocks and distant mountains, bathed in waves of blinding light
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| Forests from far gone time, no living man has seen,
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| A private prehistoric world, for you and I a dream
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| Brownish hue dicates my eye, no colour hides their fear,
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| Flowers faded, dull and cold, now bleached by atmosphere
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| Creatures twisting under trees, huge monsters soaked with rage
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| Hidden deep below our earth, a frightening, bygone age |
| Their shepherd came, now long extinct, a huge primeval man
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| The three men filled with disbelief, just turned as one and ran.
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| Narration 8
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| Dumb with astonishment and amazement which bordered on
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| stupefaction, they fled the forest. |
| Instinctively, they made
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| towards the Lidenbrook Sea. |
| Discovering a rusty dagger on the
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| beach, and the carved initials of the explorer before them on a
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| slab of granite, they realised that thay were once again treading
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| the route of Arne Saknussemm. |
| Following a short sea journey around
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| a cape, they came ashore where a dark tunnel plunged deep into
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| rock. |
| Venturing down, their progress was halted by a piece of rock
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| blocking their way. |
| After deciding to blow their way through, and
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| setting the charge, they put out to sea for safety. |
| With the
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| explosion, the rocks before them opened like a curtain, and a
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| bottomless pit appeared in the shore. |
| The explosion had caused an
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| earthquake, the abyss had opened up, and the sea was pouring into
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| it. |
| Down and down they plunged into the huge gallery, but on
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| regaining their senses found their raft rising at tremendous
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| speed. |
| Trapped in the shaft of an active volcano they rose through
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| the ages of man to be finally expelled out on a mountain-side
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| riddled with tiny lava streams. |
| Their journey was completed and
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| they found themselves 3000 miles from their original starting
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| point in Iceland. |
| They had entered by one volcano and they had
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| come out by another. |
| With the blue mountains of Calabria in the
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| east they walked away from the mountain that had returned them.
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| The frightening Mount Etna. |