Part, Chapter
1 I, II | leaving his glass unfinished, left the room.~
2 I, V | adverse circumstances, and left a means of communication
3 I, V | horizon. They had already left behind them the hills of
4 I, VI | traversed since the expedition left Fort Reliance. The travellers,
5 I, VI | mistaken. These traces were left by deer, the deer we hunters
6 I, VII | persons each. The dogs were left to themselves, their own
7 I, IX | Not a shred of canvas was left to aid in navigating the
8 I, X | November 6, 1769, this agent left Fort Prince of Wales, on
9 I, XI | mistake as to the footprints left by the reindeer, as, like
10 I, XI | every trace, every object left behind, every mark on the
11 I, XI | wandered a little way to the left.~All hurried towards the
12 I, XI | these footprints were left by a dancer.”~She was right,
13 I, XI | proved. They were the marks left by a dancer, and a dancer
14 I, XIII | draped in mist; whilst on the left stretched apparently boundless
15 I, XIII | door was to open at the left corner, instead of in the
16 I, XIII | faithful Madge, who never left her. Then the fourth compartment
17 I, XIV | regions, and nothing must be left to chance where a single
18 I, XIV | opposite this kennel on the left, while the store and powder
19 I, XIV | close at hand, they never left the country even in the
20 I, XV | unharnessed the teams, they were left behind lest they should
21 I, XVII | October 10th not one had left its warm and valuable fur
22 I, XVII | St Louis Fur Company had left the country. No traces were,
23 I, XVIII| thick, so that the apertures left in the walls had not been
24 I, XVIII| home. There was nothing left to be done outside, the
25 I, XVIII| found to his cost when he left the skin of his fingers
26 I, XIX | English, and that she had left Greenland to follow her
27 I, XIX | feel no regret at having left the governor of Upper Navik,
28 I, XXI | morning they seemed to have left the court-at any rate, they
29 I, XXI | their breath froze as it left their lips and floated about
30 I, XXI | about fifty steps on the left, behind, the principal house.
31 I, XXII | low; and if the party had left the fort in the beginning
32 I, XXIII| observation. What was there left to fear?~Nothing, unless
33 I, XXIII| not a cloud, not a vapour left upon the sky from the zenith
34 II, I | address him.~All had now left the cape except Mrs Barnett,
35 II, II | island has drifted since it left the mainland,” said Sergeant
36 II, III | Lieutenant and his two companions left the fort by the postern
37 II, III | Cape Bathurst before he left, that he might judge of
38 II, III | continent, which was now left several hundred miles behind,
39 II, V | be ready to hand. On the left side of the house, opposite
40 II, VII | the sea is farther to the left, we have not yet passed
41 II, VIII | its four feet would have left impressions very different
42 II, VIII | the soldiers or women have left the fort, and we are on
43 II, IX | to fulfil her pledge. She left Russian America, where she
44 II, IX | at last there was nothing left for her to do but to return
45 II, IX | She and her brother-in-law left Walruses’ Bay at the end
46 II, IX | There was but one thing left to do. To get to the island
47 II, IX | women found the footprints left by Kalumah in the snow not
48 II, X | experience, and the chips left from the boat-building added
49 II, X | even the wolves would have left early in September for the
50 II, X | drifting.~The only hope left consisted, as Mrs Barnett
51 II, X | wolves, &c., would have left the island had it been possible
52 II, X | and turning on his heel left the room without a word.~
53 II, X | Barnett and Hobson were left alone, but neither of them
54 II, XII | would have been lost if left at the factory.~It was of
55 II, XIII | none of the animals had left the vicinity of the fort,
56 II, XIV | growl, and turning away left the enceinte, as Hobson
57 II, XV | contingency, the little party left Fort Hope on the morning
58 II, XV | twenty-four hours since we left the fort. We now know the
59 II, XV | have made a mistake when we left the ice cavern this morning,”
60 II, XV | ought to have turned to the left instead of to the right.”~“
61 II, XV | must come to the island we left there.”~Marbre, struck dumb
62 II, XV | but they were not long left in doubt.~At about a hundred
63 II, XV | torpor. The poor fellows left on the island had been in
64 II, XVII | Fahrenheit. The colonists had left off their winter garments
65 II, XVII | event.~There was now nothing left to do but to wait till the
66 II, XVII | clock when the two explorers left the fort and turned towards
67 II, XVII | the men and women they had left asleep hurrying away in
68 II, XVII | ice-wall, which, when he left, was two or three miles
69 II, XVIII| plenty of provisions had been left in the house.~“Oh, yes,”
70 II, XVIII| free. Some tools had been left in the house, and Kellet,
71 II, XIX | the centre, would still be left. It would not do, however,
72 II, XIX | regions were the relics left by the ice-wall on the northern
73 II, XX | storm, the hunter Sabine left the house in the thick fog,
74 II, XX | above; there is nothing left for us to try.”~“I know,
75 II, XX | of the current, would be left floating helplessly on the
76 II, XXII | engulfed; not a tree was left. There was no wood remaining
77 II, XXIII| which was all that was left of Victoria Island, rose
78 II, XXIII| fortunately a few tools had been left there, with the air pumps
79 II, XXIII| breeze, and by the wake it left, it was evident that the
80 II, XXIII| in, and there was nothing left for the poor colonists to
81 II, XXIII| wretches, with the few animals left alive, huddled together,
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