Part, Chapter
1 I, I | a musical soirée with a fine orchestra. Captain Craventy’
2 I, IV | astonished at meeting with such fine vegetation in this remote
3 I, IV | on the lake produced very fine willows. Game was abundant
4 I, V | FORT ENTERPRISE.~The first fine days came at last. The green
5 I, V | surface.~The weather was fine, but still very cold. The
6 I, V | trains, and as long as this fine weather lasts we shall get
7 I, V | with me. It’s really a very fine country !”~“Yes, Madge;
8 I, V | Yes, Madge; it is a fine country, and we have as
9 I, VI | group of wapitis. They were fine specimens of the family
10 I, VI | from the females by their fine white antlers, the latter
11 I, VI | Whatever the cause, all but two fine creatures fled a towards
12 I, X | Its banks, composed of fine firm sand, and clothed in
13 I, X | immediately. The weather was fine; the sky clear, although
14 I, XI | The weather continued very fine and the temperature moderate,
15 I, XI | Footprints were also found of the fine blue and silver foxes, which
16 I, XII | position.~The weather remained fine, and it was quite warm enough.
17 I, XIII | The soil, a mixture of fine earth and sand, had been
18 I, XIII | sure to be always open in fine weather; while during, the
19 I, XIV | season was almost always fine, and might be expected to
20 I, XV | brought back. The weather was fine, but the fog which lay low
21 I, XVI | for the remainder of the fine weather, intending to set
22 I, XVI | by bringing down a very fine silver fox.~Several other
23 I, XVI | off the retreat of another fine animal hiding behind some
24 I, XVI | leader was a tall man-a fine specimen of his class-those
25 I, XVII | consoled him by promising him fine cold nights admirably suited
26 I, XVII | by another route.~The few fine days were soon over, and
27 I, XVII | was safely confined of a fine healthy boy, of whom the
28 I, XIX | permitting.~The next day was fine, and accompanied by Madge,
29 I, XXI | walls and the floor with fine snow.~The weather outside
30 I, XXI | barometer remained at “ fine dry weather; “and there
31 I, XXII | can be put right when the fine weather comes, and you will
32 I, XXII | abrupt transitions from fine to bad weather. The fine
33 I, XXII | fine to bad weather. The fine days were so cold that the
34 I, XXII | last, and with it really fine warm weather. The colonists
35 I, XXII | readily understood. The fine season was rapidly passing
36 I, XXIII| you so much feared in the fine season, have never appeared.”~“
37 I, XXIII| anxious; for one day it was fine and another wet, now mists
38 I, XXIII| him that they were in the fine season.~The fine season !”
39 I, XXIII| in the fine season.~The fine season !” cried the poor
40 I, XXIII| shoulders. “Who can speak of a fine season in such a country
41 I, XXIII| ill-natured trick.~It was very fine on the 16th July, but the
42 II, IV | the camp.~Long had now a fine opportunity of drying his
43 II, V | health, the weather was fine, and the climate pleasant
44 II, V | several hundred miles in the fine season. The carpenter had
45 II, V | garden. There was now a fine crop of sorrel and scurvy-grass—
46 II, V | August. The weather continued fine, and any mists which gathered
47 II, VI | August the weather continued fine, and the temperature moderate.
48 II, VIII | The night was colder and a fine snow fell, which quickly
49 II, IX | at Fort Hope again in the fine season of the next year.
50 II, IX | visit her friends in the fine season. Her arrival would
51 II, X | congratulated by everybody on her fine boy. Why Corporal Joliffe
52 II, XII | the snow which fell was fine and intermittent. Hobson,
53 II, XV | west, but the weather was fine, and the orb of day, already
54 II, XVII | The weather was now pretty fine, and the column of mercury
55 II, XVII | assigned to them.~It was a fine night, there was no moon,
56 II, XIX | and Port Barnett. It was a fine warm day, and there had
57 II, XXI | waves. Even in tolerably fine weather seas would be shipped
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