Part, Chapter
1 I, VII | therefore granted a few hours of rest to his little party,
2 I, VII | or hunger~For forty-eight hours the fury of the tempest
3 I, VIII | your service, and in a few hours you will be in the Indian
4 I, VIII | After a walk of three hours the visitors returned to
5 I, IX | hold back for three or four hours, and by that time we shall
6 I, IX | were still only about two hours’ distance from the Indian
7 I, IX | latitudes night only lasts a few hours at this time of year, fell
8 I, X | reach the river in a few hours.~In the afternoon of the
9 I, X | accomplish; so that the long hours, lightened by pleasant conversation,
10 I, X | true night only lasted two hours, and the dawn succeeded
11 I, XII | heavy avalanches in a few hours. There was plenty of room
12 I, XIII | obtained in the space of a few hours. It would perhaps be too
13 I, XV | beginning to disappear for some hours during the night, a circumstance
14 I, XV | accomplished in a couple of hours.~The merciful Lieutenant
15 I, XVII | and visible but for a few hours a day, whilst the sea horizon,
16 I, XVII | which only lasted for a few hours, and were often interrupted
17 I, XVII | above the horizon for a few hours and the actual winter, implying
18 I, XVIII| burning through the long hours of the sleepless night.~
19 I, XVIII| smothered, and, probably twelve hours after the commencement of
20 I, XVIII| fill in the ditch a few hours.~Whilst the Lieutenant was
21 I, XVIII| by astronomers.~Fifteen hours later the heavens were lit
22 I, XIX | December, or rather nine hours before midday, Sergeant
23 I, XIX | days. The men passed twelve hours out of every twenty-four
24 I, XIX | everything, and talked for hours together with Mrs Barnett,
25 I, XXI | dreadfully, and several hours elapsed before he could
26 I, XXI | moon had risen forty-eight hours ago, and there was no sign
27 I, XXII | disappearing for forty-eight hours. They had lost their way,
28 II, III | below the horizon for a few hours.~There were no wild animals
29 II, III | intended to pass the few short hours of the night at Walruses’
30 II, III | hoped to reach In a few hours. They breakfasted seated
31 II, III | the Polar regions.”~Two hours’ rest were all the explorers
32 II, IV | accomplished. After a few hours’ repose he meant to return
33 II, IV | disappeared for the few hours of the night a crackling
34 II, IV | the explorers slept a few hours. At daybreak they breakfasted,
35 II, V | for the last twenty-four hours, but, as subsequently appeared,
36 II, V | Fahrenheit, and during the few hours of the night the column
37 II, V | Craventy’s detachment. The long hours of the Arctic night might
38 II, VII | may be away forty eight hours. If, however, we can get
39 II, VII | however, last but a few hours longer.~The wind and rain
40 II, VII | and gave place to the two hours of real darkness.~Bent almost
41 II, VIII | took the latitude, and two hours later a calculation of hour-angles
42 II, VIII | venture on a walk of a few hours without an escort.~Madge
43 II, VIII | within the last nine or ten hours, or the last fall of snow
44 II, IX | nothing for forty-eight hours. Some pieces of cold venison
45 II, IX | hundred miles in thirty-six hours, and assisted by the current
46 II, IX | wield her paddle.~For some hours she struggled on, and seemed
47 II, IX | Kalumah had then been seventy hours at sea since she embarked!~
48 II, X | disappearing for eleven hours out of every twenty four.~
49 II, X | He knew that twenty four hours would suffice to make the
50 II, X | removed in the next twelve hours, and the island was carried
51 II, X | above the horizon for a few hours at a time. Yes, winter had
52 II, XII | a few days or even a few hours, would suffice to level
53 II, XII | a few days or even a few hours, would suffice to level
54 II, XIII | weather moderated. In a few hours the storm suddenly ceased.
55 II, XIII | miles long.~For two whole hours the party skirted along
56 II, XIII | amongst the icebergs.~A few hours later the Lieutenant reached
57 II, XIV | lamps to be lit for a few hours every day. He tried using
58 II, XIV | tedious did the long dark hours appear.~Some Auroræ Borealis
59 II, XV | for more than forty-eight hours.~A good stock of provisions
60 II, XV | horizon for seven or eight hours a day, and its oblique rays
61 II, XV | but it had taken three hours to get over three miles.~
62 II, XV | is more than twenty-four hours since we left the fort.
63 II, XV | longer than forty-eight hours, I think it is time to retrace
64 II, XV | ice. This would be a few hours after the time fixed, but
65 II, XV | ice-wall, after a walk of three hours. The night had now fallen,
66 II, XV | them think so?~Twenty-four hours before, the immense ice-field
67 II, XV | BREAK-UP OF THE ICE~Two hours later all had returned to
68 II, XV | warm rain fell for several hours, and accelerated the dissolution
69 II, XV | now be decided in a few hours, and if they should be drifted
70 II, XVII | Hope and rest for a few hours.~They had gone some hundred
71 II, XVIII| beneath the avalanche for six hours.~We have already said that
72 II, XVIII| had been buried for thirty hours in air necessarily very
73 II, XVIII| avalanche.~It was now fifty-four hours since Mrs Barnett and her
74 II, XVIII| It was now seventy-six hours since the avalanche fell
75 II, XIX | history of the seventy-four hours spent in the house now in
76 II, XIX | there they remained for many hours. Kalumah devoted herself
77 II, XIX | carbonic acid.... A few hours later Hobson would only
78 II, XXI | BECOMES AN ISLET.~Three hours later the last relics of
79 II, XXI | greatest care and twenty-four hours later it was found that
80 II, XXIII| The ice had still several hours to float, and in several
81 II, XXIII| to float, and in several hours the land might come in sight,
82 II, XXIII| along on the waves for three hours in the centre of an absolutely
83 II, XXIII| inevitable catastrophe by a few hours. My friends, you must decide
84 II, XXIII| ice last longer? In three hours, three short hours, they
85 II, XXIII| three hours, three short hours, they might reach the land,
86 II, XXIII| This went on for several hours, and the colonists, buoyed
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