Part, Chapter
1 I, I | 61° 47’ N. Lat., at least four degrees from the Polar circle.~
2 I, IV | pointed roof at each of the four corners of the parallelogram
3 I, IV | of powder,~~~~1 “~~~~~~“ four pounds of shot,~~~~1 “~~~~~~“
4 I, V | the whip with its thong four feet longer than the sledge;
5 I, VI | this in mind, madam: of the four elements of the old creation,
6 I, VI | capable of flight.”~The four now descended the hill,
7 I, VIII | there are generally three or four bitter days in May; and
8 I, IX | may hold back for three or four hours, and by that time
9 I, IX | But at about half-past four the storm broke. The shrill
10 I, X | latitude.~On the 5th June, four days after leaving Fort
11 I, XII | them, and the sea open for four or five months in the warm
12 I, XII | the long winter night of four months when the ice-mountains
13 I, XIII | miles. On the right, about four miles off, towered icebergs
14 I, XIII | was to be situated, and four windows on the side of the
15 I, XIII | master-carpenter, there were to be four compartments in the house:
16 I, XIII | three cabins, instead of four; for to avoid corners as
17 I, XV | larger males-creatures nearly four feet long, clothed with
18 I, XVI | joined by twelve comrades, four of whom were like himself “
19 I, XVI | settlers in the fort. The other four Canadians wore a costume
20 I, XVII | of them, handsome birds, four or five feet in entire length,
21 I, XVIII| almost suddenly to less than four degrees below zero. These
22 I, XVIII| round them was not more than four feet thick, so that the
23 I, XIX | nomads were encamped about four miles from the fort, near
24 I, XIX | kind of passage three or four feet long, which is about
25 I, XIX | had gone to hunt morses four or five miles from their
26 I, XXI | BEARS.~The only one of the four windows through which it
27 I, XXI | was kept all night, and at four o’clock in the morning they
28 I, XXII | convoy of a few men and four or five sledges should leave
29 I, XXIII| military obedience. The four soldiers elected to accompany
30 I, XXIII| their readiness to start.~Four sledges and their teams
31 I, XXIII| total eclipse was to last four minutes thirty-seven seconds-that
32 I, XXIII| I And for how long? For four short minutes! After that,
33 I, XXIII| be succeeded during the four minutes of totality by absolute
34 I, XXIII| completely overcome. The four minutes were past. The luminous
35 II, III | upon the wide ocean.~At four o’clock P.M., the angle
36 II, IV | above the water, there are four below it. It must, however,
37 II, IV | concluded it to be about four or five feet thick below
38 II, IV | to Fort Hope, and before four o’clock P.M the shouts of
39 II, VI | to accompany him.~About four o’clock P.M., on the 31st
40 II, VII | mist, so that for about four miles they did not suffer
41 II, VIII | by the way, and towards four o’clock they crossed the
42 II, VIII | abreast of Behring Strait, but four hundred miles at least north
43 II, VIII | the two women had walked four miles. They were often obliged
44 II, VIII | quadruped certainly, for its four feet would have left impressions
45 II, VIII | like ourselves for three or four months perhaps. Or some
46 II, X | hours out of every twenty four.~At last, on the night of
47 II, X | attention. He knew that twenty four hours would suffice to make
48 II, X | would be in another three or four weeks. Meanwhile the Lieutenant
49 II, X | day, and fell to three or four degrees below in the night.
50 II, XIII | ruins. Some towered three or four hundred feet above the level
51 II, XIII | imagined!~It took no less than four days and four nights to
52 II, XIII | less than four days and four nights to get back to the
53 II, XIV | height of some three or four hundred feet. Two-thirds
54 II, XV | rising as it did more than four hundred feet above the ice-field.
55 II, XV | of things continued for four days. The frost-rime did
56 II, XVII | separated at the most by four degrees of latitude, towards
57 II, XVIII| the chief danger of the four victims. By prompt measures,
58 II, XVIII| would not leave his work.~At four o’clock the shaft was fifty
59 II, XXII | CHAPTER XXII.~ THE FOUR FOLLOWING DAYS.~The night
60 II, XXIII| which was of value.~At about four o’clock P.M., the soldier
61 II, XXIII| planks. The coast was still four miles to windward.~It was
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