Part, Chapter
1 I, I | and musk oxen, falling beneath their bullets, and pole-cats
2 I, IV | like a skate, was fixed beneath the sledge, enabling it
3 I, V | heat, when we are freezing beneath our bearskins; you recall
4 I, VI | breaking of the brittle snow beneath our feet, or the falling
5 I, VI | side, the forest trees fell beneath the axe of the pioneer of
6 I, VII | the unfortunate travellers beneath the ruins of the broken
7 I, VII | tempest ceased suddenly beneath the influence of intense
8 I, VIII | in every direction, and beneath the trees strutted ospreys
9 I, VIII | are vast, and there’s room beneath the sun for everybody. As
10 I, VIII | long as we have firm ground beneath our feet, and God be with
11 I, IX | his companion, smothered beneath the liquid mass.~They thought
12 I, IX | heartrending cry and disappeared beneath the waves.~It was, however,
13 I, XII | completely bury large buildings beneath their heavy avalanches in
14 I, XII | horizon without dipping beneath it.~For the first time they
15 I, XVI | mixed with chestnut brown. Beneath the long fur, the beavers
16 I, XVIII| enceinte would have disappeared beneath a bed of snow of uniform
17 I, XVIII| outside, the traps buried beneath ten feet of snow could not
18 I, XIX | little surprised at finding beneath some five feet of earth
19 I, XIX | house was all but hidden beneath the white mass which covered
20 I, XXI | in the laths of the roof beneath the ice, and there was some
21 II, I | when the ice fields, melted beneath the rays of the sun, and
22 II, I | appearance of the ground; but beneath the lake, beneath the soil
23 II, I | ground; but beneath the lake, beneath the soil of earth and sand—
24 II, I | earth and sand—in a word, beneath our feet is a foundation
25 II, II | gradually melt and go to pieces beneath the feet of its inhabitants.~
26 II, III | half worn away and hidden beneath his thick white fur. What
27 II, IV | had no idea of sleeping beneath the open sky, although Mrs
28 II, IV | ice had given way suddenly beneath him, and he was plunged
29 II, IV | Might not the earth give way beneath their feet at any minute?
30 II, V | pines, and firs which fell beneath the axe of Mac-Nab, and
31 II, VII | a risk of being crushed beneath a falling tree, or they
32 II, VII | shook the weakened ground beneath their feet. Holding each
33 II, VII | the trees above them bent beneath the wind, and their branches
34 II, VII | felt the sand giving way beneath them, and the pines cracking
35 II, VIII | already melting here and there beneath their influence.~The coast
36 II, VIII | danger; the brittle ground beneath our feet, which may at any
37 II, IX | against something, it opened beneath her, and she was plunged
38 II, X | have had an inch of water beneath their keels. In my opinion
39 II, XII | island. The ice gave way beneath its weight, and it had often
40 II, XIII | ground still remained firm beneath their feet.~On the 24th
41 II, XIV | open by seals imprisoned beneath the solid crust of ice,
42 II, XV | inevitably have been crushed beneath it.~It will be easily understood
43 II, XV | horizontal avalanche, or crushed beneath the huge blocks of ice driven
44 II, XV | winter, it was doomed to melt beneath the sunbeams, and it contained
45 II, XV | conflict of spirit going on beneath her quiet exterior demeanour.
46 II, XVII | fancied he felt the ice beneath his feet trembling, which
47 II, XVII | on the north were buried beneath the avalanche. Masses of
48 II, XVII | crash, crushing everything beneath them. It was like an army
49 II, XVII | escaped in time, gave way beneath an immense block of ice
50 II, XVII | of sand, earth, and ice, beneath which the principal house
51 II, XVII | Thomas Black, were buried beneath the avalanche which had
52 II, XVIII| that the island would sink beneath the weight thrown upon it.
53 II, XVIII| of its volume being sunk beneath the surface of the sea—was
54 II, XVIII| had already been buried beneath the avalanche for six hours.~
55 II, XVIII| principal house next disappeared beneath the masses of earth and
56 II, XVIII| be seen, and it was from beneath this accumulation of earth,
57 II, XIX | for the island was now beneath the same parallel of latitude
58 II, XX | quarters submerged, and buried beneath a mass of earth and sand,
59 II, XX | remained fixed in the ice-crust beneath the island; but now the
60 II, XXII | which must quickly melt beneath their feet! The wooded hills
61 II, XXII | knowledge that the abyss beneath might open at any moment?—
62 II, XXIII| everywhere; it trembled beneath the feet of the anxious
63 II, XXIV | strip of ice was melting beneath the combined influence of
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