Part, Chapter
1 I, I | plans were laid for next season! The entire fauna of the
2 I, IV | underwood, even during the bad season. Further south the hunters
3 I, V | manufactured goods. The season had been bad. There were
4 I, VI | becomes darker in the warmer season. The fierce males are easily
5 I, VIII | Indians and soldiers. The last season had not been good, costly
6 I, VIII | intersected by streams, at this season of the year free from ice.
7 I, XI | At this time of the warm season all these trees were covered
8 I, XII | five months in the warm season, and giving access to the
9 I, XII | outlines exactly. At this season of the year, too, it had
10 I, XIII | rain and damp of the winter season.~The door and windows in
11 I, XIV | expedition.~The weather at this season was almost always fine,
12 I, XIV | finished before the cold season set in.~In the meantime
13 I, XIV | off for a more convenient season, the sportsmen prepared
14 I, XIV | consumption during the bad season.~Accordingly Marbre and
15 I, XIV | foxes. During the temperate season, when they could get as
16 I, XIV | as it must brave every season of the year, whereas the
17 I, XIV | off just at the flowering season, turned out to be a wild
18 I, XIV | good crop in the ensuing season.~The dispensary of the new
19 I, XV | intervene before the bad season set in and interrupted the
20 I, XV | and that during the summer season the North-West Passage to
21 I, XVII | into heavy rain. The bad season was approaching.~Before
22 I, XXII | readily understood. The fine season was rapidly passing away.
23 I, XXIII| much feared in the fine season, have never appeared.”~“
24 I, XXIII| that they were in the fine season.~The fine season !” cried
25 I, XXIII| the fine season.~The fine season !” cried the poor astronomer”
26 I, XXIII| Who can speak of a fine season in such a country as this?”~“
27 II, II | events would happen. The season was already considerably
28 II, II | a few mouths in the warm season.~The other current, called
29 II, II | gave as reasons that the season was too far advanced to
30 II, V | hundred miles in the fine season. The carpenter had been
31 II, V | of the kind occurred this season—none fell victims but the
32 II, V | the approach of the cold season. The thermometer maintained
33 II, IX | Fort Hope again in the fine season of the next year. The long
34 II, IX | such a spot.~Had a word in season been spoken to Hobson he
35 II, IX | her friends in the fine season. Her arrival would tend
36 II, X | fort for the winter, the season being too far advanced for
37 II, X | of the last in the warm season. The ground had been prepared
38 II, X | first symptoms of the cold season were appearing, even as
39 II, X | shut in the horizon.~“This season would have been just the
40 II, XII | great severity of last cold season; now it has been noticed
41 II, XII | great severity of last cold season; now it has been noticed
42 II, XIII | been during the last cold season, when the column of mercury
43 II, XIV | the factory. Although the season was now far advanced, the
44 II, XIV | thanks to the mildness of the season, and did not therefore live
45 II, XV | the approaching change of season. The temperature varied
46 II, XIX | early springs.~Now the warm season of 1861 had set in very
47 II, XIX | vessels now that the whaling season had commenced, and Mac-Nab
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