Part, Chapter
1 I, I | given.~Jaspar Hobson was a man of forty years of age. He
2 I, I | strictly, and he became a man in self-control and courage
3 I, I | a good soldier. He was a man of fifty years of age, with
4 I, I | reprimanded. In a word, he was a man born to obey, and this self-annihilation
5 I, II | the Captain, “all that a man can do, will be done by
6 I, III | drawn up in front of them.~A man completely enveloped in
7 I, III | Craventy said to himself the man must be a fool. But there
8 I, III | removed, and revealed a man of about fifty. He was short
9 I, III | body of the unfortunate man was covered with white frost-bitten
10 I, III | exhausting efforts, when the poor man sighed several times.~“He
11 I, IV | supporting the weight of a man on the most brittle snow,
12 I, V | escaped the rapacity of man.~On the morning of the 16th
13 I, VII | will ever be reached by man?” inquired Mrs Paulina Barnett.~“
14 I, VII | adding with a smile, “by man or woman. But I think other
15 I, VII | gain will always carry a man further than zeal for science.”~“
16 I, VIII | like a cutter, which one man could easily manage The
17 I, IX | Lieutenant, feeling that the old man, accustomed as he was to
18 I, IX | reach it,” replied the old man. “But tempests lasting fifteen
19 I, IX | his empty place.~“Unhappy man !” murmured Mrs Barnett;
20 I, X | the fort a disappointed man. But he did not even yet
21 I, X | America!”~“He was indeed a man of energy,” added Mrs Barnett; “
22 I, XI | trace of the presence of man, and the animals had chosen
23 I, XVI | tools.~Hobson was right. The man before him was a Frenchman,
24 I, XVII | sustains the weight of a man; but when it is soft and
25 I, XVIII| woman with the energy of a man, and she consequently became
26 I, XXI | the bears. He spoke like a man well up in his subject,
27 I, XXI | Barnett pressed the brave man’s hand with ill-concealed
28 I, XXII | we well know, was not a man to yield to misfortune without
29 I, XXII | and became once more the man of one idea, awaiting the
30 II, III | continent before the creation of man!”~“Well,” cried Long, “it
31 II, V | Hobson, in the tone of a man who attached no importance
32 II, VI | the shrubs like a drowning man at a spar, lashed by the
33 II, VIII | He is a brave, energetic man, for all that,” replied
34 II, VIII | if it be in the power of man to save us, he will do it.”~
35 II, X | to bear the weight of a man He therefore expected that
36 II, X | ever more powerful than man. It will understand that
37 II, X | of the most far-sighted man, and it will know that it
38 II, X | to seek the vicinity of man. The wolves came actually
39 II, XII | into which the boldest man would scarcely dare to venture,
40 II, XII | that he was a scientific man, and since he had been deceived
41 II, XIII | impracticable, adding—~“Perhaps one man on foot without a sledge
42 II, XIII | Well,” said Long, “if one man could cross, ought not one
43 II, XIII | have found that I am not a man to turn back from difficulties.
44 II, XV | he shook his head like a man who had no reply to make.~
45 II, XV | footprints told of the passage of man or beast, and the very birds
46 II, XV | the Corporal, and the poor man was in despair, for whilst
47 II, XIX | the hope, like a drowning man at a plank. There are plenty
48 II, XIX | nearer to their old enemy man, as if man could save them.
49 II, XIX | their old enemy man, as if man could save them. It was
50 II, XXI | fresh, not salt water.~The man replied that he had brought
51 II, XXII | him inquiringly, and the man pointed to a white vapour
52 II, XXIII| Mrs Barnett, taking the man’s hand and looking into
53 II, XXIII| to dissuade the unhappy man from carrying out his purpose,
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