Part, Chapter
1 I, I | equal of which could not be seen in the more favoured regions
2 I, III | moon! The moon could be seen anywhere; there was no need
3 I, V | country, and we have as yet seen none of the wonders it contains.
4 I, VI | cause difficulties. This was seen when the party set out again
5 I, VI | this species is rarely seen beyond 57° N. lat. We generally
6 I, VII | a fierce polar bear was seen, and Mrs Paulina Barnett
7 I, VIII | Americans or Europeans had been seen oil the confines of the
8 I, IX | wandering about by the lake, had seen the boat in danger, and
9 I, XI | several. Some were even seen and tracked; but, as a rule,
10 I, XI | several thousand animals, are seen running wild in certain
11 I, XIII | flint or a pebble, to be seen. The shore was strewn with
12 I, XIII | description we shall have seen that the future house was
13 I, XIII | Certainly an artist who had once seen it would not soon forget
14 I, XIV | distant pack of wolves was seen, which receded like a wave
15 I, XIV | Thomas Black, had ever before seen. It was a carnivorous creature
16 I, XV | to seek were as yet to be seen, and the proper time for
17 I, XVI | few ermines or stoats were seen, and Jaspar Hobson ordered
18 I, XVII | several of these animals being seen. At night they would come
19 I, XIX | mistaken, and that what he had seen were morses, who had returned
20 I, XX | Cape Bathurst, could not be seen; but the sheaf of flame
21 I, XX | Polar regions. They had seen strong men fall fainting
22 I, XXI | but before it could be seen through it had to be washed
23 I, XXI | they were nowhere to be seen.~But about seven o’clock
24 I, XXI | there was not a vapour to be seen above the endless succession
25 I, XXII | objects could be distinctly seen to a distance of two miles;
26 I, XXII | Thomas Black, after having seen his eclipse, will return
27 I, XXII | and winter hawks were also seen. But the ground was still
28 I, XXII | colonists, not a trace was to be seen of their old enemies the
29 I, XXII | the cliff, and could be seen at a considerable distance.
30 I, XXII | Reliance as soon as he had seen his eclipse; and should
31 I, XXIII| of the cape could not be seen from the court of the fort.~
32 I, XXIII| anxious. But he might often be seen standing motionless and
33 I, XXIII| Phoebe was nowhere to be seen; for it being three days
34 II, III | a single white bear was seen! Once the Sergeant thought
35 II, IV | earthquake. Not a trace was to be seen of the American continent,
36 II, IV | direction, but nothing was to be seen.~The cries were now redoubled,
37 II, VII | answering fire—nothing was to be seen. For ten minutes they watched,
38 II, VIII | no sign of a wreck to be seen either in the offing or
39 II, VIII | edge of the gulf they had seen the night before without
40 II, VIII | The fire had really been seen, the cry had really been
41 II, VIII | absolutely nothing, to be seen. At the foot of the cape,
42 II, IX | beat. The blood they had seen came from a slight wound
43 II, IX | there was nothing to be seen. The coast suddenly sank
44 II, IX | which Hobson and Long had seen when crouching on Cape Michael
45 II, X | board ship which they had seen, or the cry of a shipwrecked
46 II, X | lump such as is generally seen in intense cold. Icebergs
47 II, XIII | this was all that could be seen of Fort Hope, now useless
48 II, XIV | Lieutenant of what she had seen, feeling sure that where
49 II, XV | overturned, as could be seen from the clearly cut fractures
50 II, XV | corners. Not a sign was to be seen of any living creature,
51 II, XV | places trunks of trees were seen embedded in the ice, all,
52 II, XV | bird, not an animal to be seen.~Mrs Barnett climbed to
53 II, XV | icebergs, no sign was to be seen of Victoria Island, which
54 II, XV | sex, and now she was to be seen every day braving fatigue,
55 II, XV | moon, nor stars could be seen through the heavy mists,
56 II, XVII | excursions, bands of wolves were seen scudding across parts of
57 II, XVII | Kalumah’s preserver was seen several times. This worthy
58 II, XVIII| palisade not a post was to be seen, and it was from beneath
59 II, XIX | hemisphere. Icebergs have been seen off the Cape of Good Hope,
60 II, XX | slid under the island, were seen floating about in the offing
61 II, XXII | the raft was nowhere to be seen.~Presently a gust of wind
62 II, XXII | fire large enough to be seen at a considerable distance,
63 II, XXII | north. A sailor would have seen at a glance that it was
64 II, XXII | vain—either they were not seen, or the vessel was anxious
65 II, XXIII| that any one on land had seen the signal. In less than
66 II, XXIV | the will of God. We have seen Mrs Barnett cheering every
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