The settlers could see nothing, but they heard a singular yelping noise away in the darkness.
After 1840 the settlers saw themselves as a free people and demanded the same rights they would have had in Britain.
For the next two weeks, the settlers did not see any members of the local tribe.
These settlers saw a slightly different "Topography as the study of place".
They were unlike any aurorae that the settlers had ever seen.
After a few years of stock raising and farming the settlers could see there was not enough farmland along the creek.
After having turned the point, the settlers saw a long beach washed by the open sea.
The settlers gazed around them, but saw nothing, neither under the bushes nor among the trees.
But it was no such thing, and when day began to dawn the settlers could see a confused mass through the morning mist.
During the first two and a half years, the settlers had never seen a Malay.