Part, Chapter
1 I, I | himself aware of this. So he called himself the “ Corporal in
2 I, IV | the 61st parallel is that called the Great Slave Lake; it
3 I, IV | district beyond, not inaptly called the “Cursed Land.” The southern
4 I, IV | sort of charr or grayling called “ blue fish,” and countless
5 I, IV | winter.~The fort, properly so called, consisted of a wooden house
6 I, V | postern gate. Captain Craventy called the men of the party together
7 I, V | the perils they might be called upon to meet; reminded them
8 I, VI | of the elk, properly so called makes very valuable leather.
9 I, VII | purely geographical question called you to the Pole, I feel
10 I, VIII | guests that this plant was called the “ herb of incense “
11 I, VIII | Cape Bathurst, properly so called, the point for which he
12 I, XI | east a long narrow creek called Bathurst Inlet ran into
13 I, XI | exploration, properly so called, which was to enable the
14 I, XI | had to solve, and which called for immediate attention.
15 I, XI | arrived.~Game, properly so called, of the kind for which Corporal
16 I, XI | the woods might even be called forests, and would constitute
17 I, XI | the end of a narrow creek called Darnley Bay, of which Cape
18 I, XI | small circle.~Jaspar Hobson called the attention of the rest
19 I, XII | intermarrying with them. The natives called them the ‘Canadian travellers,’
20 I, XII | skirted round another deep bay called Washburn Bay, and reached
21 I, XIV | this strange quadruped is called by zoologists, lives in
22 I, XV | morses or walruses, sometimes called sea-cows. They resemble
23 I, XVI | destination, the Lieutenant called Mrs Barnett’s attention
24 I, XVI | to build the round buts .called houses or lodges, the tops
25 I, XVI | North America, sometimes called the Taxel badger.~Another
26 I, XVI | polecats and pine-martens, called “ Canada- martens,” which
27 I, XVII | violent whirlpools of snow called drifts, but a vast white
28 I, XVIII| round. It is, therefore, called the ‘pole of cold.’ “~“But,”
29 I, XIX | way. These snow-houses, called igloos in the language of
30 I, XIX | reindeer skins, which are called tupics.~It was no easy matter
31 I, XXI | was to look out, suddenly called the Sergeant, and pointed
32 I, XXI | which could scarcely be called sleep.~At three o’clock
33 I, XXI | something must be done !” and he called together Long, Mac-Nab,
34 I, XXI | imposed caution, and being called upon to decide which of
35 I, XXIII| down in it. I have already called your attention to certain
36 II, II | imperfectly known zone, called the North-West Passage since
37 II, II | marine surveyors.~One is called the Kamtchatka Current.
38 II, II | season.~The other current, called Behring Current, flows just
39 II, III | Walruses’ Bay, and Hobson called Mrs Barnett’s attention
40 II, IV | yet night, nor could it be called twilight, as the sun had
41 II, IV | the ice-field properly so called, was only about one foot
42 II, IV | which could scarcely be called a wood. Towards ten o’clock
43 II, V | should it not more truly be called “Fort Despair?”~These various
44 II, V | given way.~Hobson at once called the Sergeant, and having
45 II, VII | North America, which is called New Georgia, and there are
46 II, IX | that her “prey,” so she called the floating island, was
47 II, XIII | the island, properly so called, for the ice-field.~The
48 II, XV | this valley, as it might be called, they were able to examine
49 II, XVIII| beginning to work Hobson called the head carpenter to him,
50 II, XIX | like the sunbeams which called them forth. The arbutus,
51 II, XXI | Islands.~Hobson once more called his comrades together, and
52 II, XXI | found that it was salt. She called Hope, and said she wanted
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