Part, Chapter
1 I, I | hair, already touched with white, was full of energy. She
2 I, III | and staring at the sledge, white with snow, which had just
3 I, III | unfortunate man was covered with white frost-bitten patches. It
4 I, IV | streets of New York are still white with snow, yet the latitude
5 I, V | undistinguishable from the vast white plains around. A uniform
6 I, V | their otter-skin caps and white bear-skin mantles, gazed
7 I, V | around them, and at the white outlines of the huge glaciers
8 I, V | of swans, with plumage so white that the keenest sight could
9 I, VI | complete thaw set in, the vast white sheet of snow resolved itself
10 I, VI | undulating plains were still white with snow, but its dazzling
11 I, VI | the females by their fine white antlers, the latter being
12 I, VII | and I suspect that the white bears we are liable to meet
13 I, VII | fertile region, and the long white plains stretching between
14 I, VII | soon covered with a thick white carpet. In less than an
15 I, IX | dead body floated in the white foam. The old sailor had
16 I, IX | wind, disappeared like a white cloud. The boat sped rapidly
17 I, IX | long, sped rapidly over the white foam.~Half an hour afterwards,
18 I, XI | snow buntings with pure white plumage, wild geese, which
19 I, XIII | hidden by icicles, draped in white from roof to foundation,
20 I, XIII | of salmon and shoals of white bait and smelts. The supply
21 I, XIV | might be aptly described as white partridges with long black-spotted
22 I, XIV | tails, whose fur becomes white in the winter. They abounded
23 I, XVI | and the under yellowish white, so that, as Sabine expressed
24 I, XVI | coal-black fur tipped with white at the extreme end of the
25 I, XVII | called drifts, but a vast white carpet of uniform thickness
26 I, XVII | had already assumed their white winter robes. About a hundred
27 I, XVII | feet in entire length, with white plumage, touched with copper
28 I, XVII | their piercing cries; huge white bears roamed about amongst
29 I, XVIII| Everything around them was white, the walls of the enceinte,
30 I, XVIII| alone appeared above the white mass, the surface of which
31 I, XVIII| Borealis.~The lunar halo was a white corona with a pale red edge
32 I, XIX | the gloom like a pile of white fur with two glittering
33 I, XIX | belonged to the sub-order of white bears, and had the flattened
34 I, XIX | narrow muzzle, and smooth white fur characteristic of the
35 I, XIX | southern edges of the long white plains were touched with
36 I, XIX | all but hidden beneath the white mass which covered the ground.
37 I, XX | light of all the stars. The white ground became dashed with
38 I, XXI | breath shrouded his face in a white cloud, and he was standing
39 I, XXI | blood was restored. The white blotches with which parts
40 II, III | caught some hundreds of white foxes in traps, rivetted
41 II, III | hidden beneath his thick white fur. What we cannot do with
42 II, III | unrepresented. Not a single white bear was seen! Once the
43 II, III | thought he saw an enormous white mass moving about on the
44 II, IV | was working away like a white ant, Hobson communicated
45 II, VIII | so that the next day the white carpet was two inches thick.
46 II, VIII | Cape Esquimaux, a large white mass was moving about and
47 II, XII | Hobson pointed to the vast white plain, with strange irregular
48 II, XII | Hobson pointed to the vast white plain, with strange irregular
49 II, XII | where they stood.~It was a white monster of immense size,
50 II, XIII | the Aurora Borealis, a few white lines marked the boundaries
51 II, XIII | enceinte of the factory, a—white mass here and there, a few
52 II, XIV | violet hue, then it became white and fell off in scales.~
53 II, XV | months before. Flocks of white trumpeter swans also reappeared,
54 II, XV | soil was covered with a white crust, totally distinct
55 II, XX | washed away, leaving the white foundations bare. These
56 II, XXII | and the man pointed to a white vapour on the horizon. Not
57 II, XXII | northeast.~In another hour a white vapour was all that was
58 II, XXIII| bear, looking like a great white snowball, cowered motionless
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