Part, Chapter
1 I, I | seen in the more favoured regions of Regent Street or the
2 I, I | lives, in these hyberborean regions, was joyfully welcomed by
3 I, I | entire fauna of the Arctic regions would scarcely supply game
4 I, I | crossed the equinoctial regions, she was doubtless anxious
5 I, III | come to the hyperborean regions to look at it!~Such were
6 I, III | journey across the Arctic regions, and arriving at Fort Reliance
7 I, IV | Cursed Land.” The southern regions, on the other band, are
8 I, IV | expedition for crossing the Polar regions. Everything had to betaken
9 I, IV | of reindeer in the Polar regions. Whole tribes of Indians,
10 I, IV | a terrible form in these regions.~All the men had been chosen
11 I, V | impressive in the Arctic regions than in any other portion
12 I, V | difference between these Polar regions and the green prairies of
13 I, V | beauty in these deserted regions, with their rigorous climate.
14 I, VI | the Flora of the Arctic regions were welcomed with delight.~
15 I, VI | gives even in the Polar regions !”~“Ah, madam,” replied
16 I, VI | are de trop in the Arctic regions.”~Of course the Lieutenant
17 I, VII | to visit the hyperborean regions, for they are then far easier
18 I, VII | had wintered in the Arctic regions.~“Wait for the winter, madam,”
19 I, VII | into such totally different regions. Some, so to speak, have
20 I, VII | a passion for the Arctic regions, still so little known.
21 I, VII | of the unhealthy torrid regions, or the attacks of the fierce
22 I, VII | I think the hyperborean regions will longer resist thorough
23 I, VII | chief obstacle in tropical regions, and I am well aware how
24 I, VII | discoverers of the Arctic regions - Parry, Penny, Franklin,
25 I, VII | so frequent in the Arctic regions took place; the tempest
26 I, VIII | latitudes, to the ice-bound regions frequented by the Esquimaux,
27 I, X | final conquest of the Arctic regions. Gradually its factories
28 I, XI | and migrate to the Arctic regions in the summer; snow buntings
29 I, XI | the echoes of the Arctic regions, fell victims by hundreds
30 I, XII | the maps of these northern regions. This promontory is, in
31 I, XIV | am a native of the Polar regions, madam,” he often said to
32 I, XIV | pass a winter in the Arctic regions, and nothing must be left
33 I, XIV | its Fauna; but in those regions vegetation, has necessarily
34 I, XVII | conquest of the northern regions by the cold. All trace of
35 I, XVII | they wait in the Arctic regions until the commencement of
36 I, XVIII| so frequent in the Polar regions, &c., &c. Then the house
37 I, XVIII| awful beauty of the Polar regions in a snow-storm, a beauty
38 I, XX | residence in the rigorous Polar regions. They had seen strong men
39 I, XXII | from the map of the Arctic regions,” observed Hobson to his
40 I, XXIII| the coast of the Arctic regions as to account for it-but
41 II, II | excursions in the Arctic regions. It would be necessary,
42 II, II | Current to the deserted regions of the north-west, or it
43 II, II | chart of the fearful Polar regions, towards which they were
44 II, III | a traveller in the Polar regions should never be without.~
45 II, III | removed from maps of the Polar regions.”~Two hours’ rest were all
46 II, V | found in the whole Arctic regions? Truly Hobson was a favourite
47 II, VIII | of the remote hyperborean regions.~Hobson was painfully moved
48 II, X | from these remote northern regions? Had the boat been finished,
49 II, X | distance from the northern regions became daily less, and nothing
50 II, X | lost in the hyperborean regions, to their friends.~As Hobson
51 II, X | in the capricious Polar regions.~The colonists therefore
52 II, X | ordinary temperature of these regions does not assist us.”~“It
53 II, XII | weather peculiar to the Polar regions, which so obstinately resist
54 II, XV | evidently been brought to Arctic regions by the Gulf Stream, and
55 II, XV | the phenomena of the Polar regions. On board a whaler she might
56 II, XV | phenomenon peculiar to the Polar regions, which rendered it still
57 II, XV | the spring in the Polar regions.~“It is not a mist or fog,”
58 II, XIX | bitter cold of the Polar regions were the relics left by
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