Part, Chapter
1 I, II | countries of the north, and so open a communication with the
2 I, III | court. The Sergeant pushed open the door, and plunging into
3 I, III | a temperature as this!”~“Open! open! open!” they shouted
4 I, III | temperature as this!”~“Open! open! open!” they shouted from
5 I, III | temperature as this!”~“Open! open! open!” they shouted from without.~“
6 I, III | At last the door swung open, and the Sergeant was almost
7 I, V | with their fellow-creatures open to the Lieutenant and his
8 I, VII | sea? was the Arctic Ocean open at this time of year? These
9 I, VII | travellers. We hear of the open sea, of which certain explorers
10 I, VII | For my part, I think an open sea would increase rather
11 I, VIII | little vessel was but an open fishing-boat, six feet long,
12 I, VIII | Polar Sea, and that it was open at this time of year. About
13 I, IX | hurricane rages as if upon the open Atlantic Ocean. This sudden
14 I, IX | Suddenly the mist was torn open, and revealed low jagged
15 I, IX | billows surged as if upon an open sea. The waters of the lake
16 I, IX | bow of the boat was split open, and the water poured into
17 I, X | own account, he saw the open sea, and in any case he
18 I, XI | Company. There the sea, open for a great part of the
19 I, XII | the free navigation of the open sea from Behring Strait
20 I, XII | behind them, and the sea open for four or five months
21 I, XIII | lagoon. The door was to open at the left corner, instead
22 I, XIII | windows were sure to be always open in fine weather; while during,
23 I, XV | Lieutenant, “two conclusions are open to us, either of which I
24 I, XV | Cape Bathurst would, be open to the Company’s ships.
25 I, XV | safety-valves are forced open by the pressure of subterranean
26 I, XVIII| as the ice-fields split open, crushed by the falling
27 I, XVIII| matter. It was easy enough to open the window from inside,
28 I, XVIII| plenty of exercise in the open air; and we must own that
29 I, XVIII| the heated rooms for the open air, the difference between
30 I, XVIII| agree that the sea is there open. From certain peculiarities
31 I, XIX | ice which they always keep open.~But Long, pointing to a
32 I, XX | from sudden exposure to the open air, but they spoke from
33 I, XXI | friends, two courses only are open to us, we can risk our lives
34 I, XXI | would be very difficult to open it, or the bears might come
35 I, XXI | door of the passage was open, and in spite of the thick
36 I, XXI | the second door was pushed open, they recoiled for an instant,
37 I, XXI | been able to get the door open.~When the Sergeant was fairly
38 I, XXI | dreadful creatures in the open air I No, it would be madness,
39 I, XXII | knew that the earth might open and swallow up the little
40 I, XXII | towards the lake, and burst open its walls. Immediately after
41 I, XXII | the 15th April the sea was open, and a vessel from the Pacific
42 I, XXIII| across the sea, which was now open, and stretched away as far
43 II, I | when the sea at last became open, the whole peninsula drifted
44 II, II | drawn by the currents of the open sea to the high Polar latitudes,
45 II, II | and the sea would not be open when it was finished. It
46 II, II | keep that communication open for a few mouths in the
47 II, II | which the sea will remain open in this part of the Arctic
48 II, IV | of sleeping beneath the open sky, although Mrs Barnett
49 II, IV | not allow. A night in the open air would do her no harm;
50 II, IV | day its hull will burst open, and finally, if I knew
51 II, IX | had driven them into the open sea, and not towards the
52 II, X | the mainland back to the open sea, and it was again in
53 II, X | than Asia, if a choice is open to us.”~“Kalumah will be
54 II, XII | quickly than those of the open sea, which were not yet
55 II, XII | quickly than those of the open sea, which were not yet
56 II, XIV | not use until the sea was open, which would not be for
57 II, XIV | They were the holes kept open by seals imprisoned beneath
58 II, XIV | unfastened, quietly pushed open the door, looked in, carefully
59 II, XV | the ice-field would soon open right across, and that in
60 II, XV | steer his boat into the open sea. He was determined to
61 II, XV | wind from the south rent it open and dispersed it.~The sun
62 II, XVIII| thing to be done was to open a communication with the
63 II, XVIII| side had made any effort to open a communication with the
64 II, XVIII| prisoners might have broken open one of the doors and begun
65 II, XVIII| ground with ropes, where the open air gradually restored them
66 II, XVIII| wandering island, the sea was open at last, and a true sea-horizon
67 II, XIX | quitting it, as the sea was open and their boat destroyed.
68 II, XIX | of 68° Fahrenheit—burst open the young buds; in a word,
69 II, XX | long? Might it not burst open at any moment, subject as
70 II, XX | made in sounding were kept open, so that the amount of diminution
71 II, XXII | the abyss beneath might open at any moment?—who but the
72 II, XXIII| every one remained in the open air, feeling that it would
73 II, XXIII| better to be drowned in the open sea than in a narrow wooden
74 II, XXIII| anxious watchers, and might open at any moment. But they
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