Part, Chapter
1 I, I | youth were spent at the foot of the Rocky Mountains.
2 I, III | into the snow, already a foot deep; he waded through it,
3 I, VI | party had now reached the foot of a little hill, and as
4 I, VII | than an hour the snow was a foot deep, and as it did not
5 I, VII | soldiers could scarcely set foot outside. Fortunately, all
6 I, VIII | and Jaspar Hobson were on foot at five A.M. The Lieutenant
7 I, VIII | aground on a low bank at the foot of a cliff of moderate height.
8 I, XI | landscape. The ground at the foot of the hills was carpeted
9 I, XI | westernmost point. There at the foot of a little hill were the
10 I, XI | evidently made by a human foot, a shod foot; but, strange
11 I, XI | by a human foot, a shod foot; but, strange to say, the
12 I, XII | plenty of room between the foot of the promontory and the
13 I, XIII | house on the plateau at the foot of Cape Bathurst. From this
14 I, XIV | doghouse was built at the very foot of the promontory, against
15 I, XV | have not varied more than a foot, and I feel certain, that
16 I, XV | will not rise more than a foot and a half all along the
17 I, XV | the party soon reached the foot of the cliff, and Petersen,
18 I, XVI | head and body are about a foot long and its tail ten inches.
19 I, XVI | stept forward and placed his foot upon the fox just as the
20 I, XXIII| sea did not even rise one foot, as it did before-it did
21 I, XXIII| year before the sea rose a foot, there was now no tide whatever.~
22 II, III | fixed upon the beach at the foot of Cape Bathurst as his
23 II, III | finding a big a factory at the foot of Cape Bathurst.”~“Oh yes,
24 II, III | that she would never set foot on America again. Her agitation
25 II, IV | Mrs Barnett rested at the foot of a low fir tree, and Sergeant
26 II, IV | ice was not more than one foot above the sea-level. In
27 II, IV | called, was only about one foot above the sea-level! We
28 II, IV | always submerged. For one foot of an iceberg or ice-field
29 II, V | upon the dockyard at the foot of Cape Bathurst.~Whilst
30 II, V | companions, to the beach at the foot of Cape Bathurst, where
31 II, V | cried Hobson, stamping his foot upon the ground.~But as
32 II, VI | and set out.~He got to the foot of the cape without much
33 II, VII | the sand climbed to the foot of the thicket of firs,
34 II, VIII | nothing, to be seen. At the foot of the cape, where the slight
35 II, IX | founded by Hobson at the foot of the cape. But with the
36 II, IX | recognised Cape Esquimaux, at the foot of which she and her people
37 II, XIII | adding—~“Perhaps one man on foot without a sledge or any
38 II, XV | they might then hope to set foot on the continent before
39 II, XV | were driven to the very foot of the palisaded enceinte;
40 II, XV | ice-masses with a swiftness of foot and an absence of hesitation
41 II, XV | decomposition had advanced. No foot was surer than hers upon
42 II, XVII | ground, especially at the foot of Cape Bathurst, and on
43 II, XVII | which had been built at the foot of the cape was completely
44 II, XVIII| stood watching them from the foot of a hill, saying little,
45 II, XVIII| and was not more than a foot above the floor. There was
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