Part, Chapter
1 I, II | only that portion of its land which appeared to be incapable
2 I, IV | inaptly called the “Cursed Land.” The southern regions,
3 I, IV | independence of their native land, and when the agents and
4 I, VI | the Aurora Borealis. This land is the land of the night,
5 I, VI | Borealis. This land is the land of the night, not of the
6 I, VI | enthusiasm for my native land. Cold is my element, and
7 I, VII | included in the “Cursed Land,” was, besides, completely
8 I, VIII | bank at which they were to land. The Indian encampment was
9 I, IX | and fog. All trace of the land had disappeared, and so
10 I, X | a terrible death in the land his own intrepidity had
11 I, X | discovered King William’s Land, where Franklin met his
12 I, X | first discovered Victoria Land? It is my opinion that the
13 I, XI | exception, perhaps, of the land of Boothia, crossed by the
14 I, XI | unoccupied country, a deserted land, suitable as a refuge for
15 I, XII | reach Recent atlases give no land beyond the north American
16 I, XIII | gave the name of Victoria Land, was a large peninsula about
17 I, XIV | throughout the whole “Cursed Land; “but now and then a solitary
18 I, XIV | used for food, this barren land yielded but few; and Mrs
19 I, XV | Mrs Barnett, “that this land is not flooded when it is
20 I, XV | be found in Jan Mayen’s Land, the Aleutian Isles, Kamtchatka,
21 I, XV | their retreat to the sea.~On land these creatures are clumsy
22 I, XVII | country had disappeared; the land was metamorphosed, a new
23 I, XVII | there like some volcanic land torn and convulsed by earthquakes
24 I, XXIII| gone astray in the strange land; moreover, vague apprehensions
25 I, XXIII| irregular distribution of land and the narrowness of the
26 II, I | that is to say, the neck of land which connected the peninsula
27 II, II | might get to the nearest land—the coast of Russian America
28 II, II | great distance from any land. At that point it will have
29 II, II | we should have had some land in sight by this time, and
30 II, II | disappearance of the neck of land would inevitably have betrayed
31 II, II | catch a glimpse of some land, no matter what, in the
32 II, IV | cold night air.~“In the land of the Esquimaux,” he said, “
33 II, V | a corner of a privileged land, the like of which was not
34 II, VI | said Mrs Barnett. “Whatever land we approach will be welcome.
35 II, VI | opening of Bearing Strait and land us on the shores of Siberia?”~“
36 II, VI | stillness fell upon the land, and the only sounds were
37 II, VI | And the south-west meant land—hope—safety! Yes, for his
38 II, VI | him of the proximity of land.~The Lieutenant hurried
39 II, VI | they were approaching the land, they would only know it
40 II, VI | would only know it when the land came in sight, and Hobson’
41 II, VI | our comrades know if any land is in sight; and besides
42 II, VI | a signal if necessary—if land is in sight in the south,
43 II, VII | either a large portion of our land has been broken off and
44 II, VII | driven them within sight of land, they would not be able
45 II, VII | Sergeant, a fire; there is land there!”~“Unless it is a
46 II, VII | impossible! No, no, there is land there, land I tell you,
47 II, VII | no, there is land there, land I tell you, a few miles
48 II, VII | examined.~But there was no land in sight, sea and sky were
49 II, VIII | in the least resembling land within sight. Might they
50 II, VIII | along by the wind from the land, were large enough to have
51 II, IX | the close vicinity of the land. She ran to her hut, seized
52 II, IX | she did not recognise the land with which she had once
53 II, X | distance farther from the land and nearer to the north.
54 II, X | Bathurst, and beyond which no land of any kind was to be met
55 II, X | and farther away from all land. Hobson did not even yet
56 II, X | getting back to our own land!”~This went on throughout
57 II, XII | it back within sight of land, how it had again been carried
58 II, XII | six hundred miles from all land.~He ended by saying that
59 II, XII | it luck within sight of land, how it had again been carried
60 II, XII | six hundred miles from all land.~He ended by saying that
61 II, XIII | little colony to an inhabited land, before the setting in of
62 II, XV | would easily make her way to land, even from the widest part
63 II, XVII | that it nowhere touched any land.~The fatal moment was approaching.
64 II, XVII | the whole colony to the land.~During the 7th May the
65 II, XVII | Prince of Wales, so that land was now at a comparatively
66 II, XIX | up all hope of making the land of the continent then!”
67 II, XIX | if we cannot make the land of either continent, might
68 II, XIX | entertained of thus making the land. It is true the network
69 II, XIX | shocks it would receive if on land when the inevitable break-up
70 II, XIX | drifted away from the last land in Behring Sea!~
71 II, XX | hundred miles from the nearest land, which was on the east.
72 II, XX | the island away from all land, even out of sight of the
73 II, XX | it along had avoided all land, sheering clear of islands,
74 II, XX | try to reach the nearest land, or to wait yet a little
75 II, XX | the offing away from all land. They must still wait then,
76 II, XXI | hundred miles from the nearest land, namely, the Aleutian Islands.~
77 II, XXI | trained for service on land. Their island was fragile,
78 II, XXI | one more quiet night on land, and Hobson yielded against
79 II, XXIII| until they came in sight of land of some sort.~Mrs Barnett
80 II, XXIII| that they might be nearer land than they thought. If only
81 II, XXIII| and in several hours the land might come in sight, or,
82 II, XXIII| in sight, or, if not the land, some coasting or fishing
83 II, XXIII| had they been told that no land could be sighted, they would
84 II, XXIII| the south-east, cried—~“Land!”~Every one started up as
85 II, XXIII| if struck by lightning. Land there was indeed, on the
86 II, XXIII| safety was at hand, on the land they were rapidly nearing.
87 II, XXIII| ice was much nearer the land, but it was visibly melting,
88 II, XXIII| no sign that any one on land had seen the signal. In
89 II, XXIII| hours, they might reach the land, which was now but three
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