Part, Chapter
1 I, III | inexhaustible; he could watch for months for a cosmical phenomenon.
2 I, V | through the strange long six months’ night, and then indeed
3 I, VI | Esquimaux. I can live for months together in a snow hut.”~“
4 I, X | after a struggle of nineteen months, he discovered the Coppermine
5 I, XI | provisions in the summer months at least? Such were the
6 I, XI | to say, before the winter months, when their furs become
7 I, XII | sea open for four or five months in the warm season, and
8 I, XII | long winter night of four months when the ice-mountains became
9 I, XIV | almost black in the winter months, and forms a large item
10 I, XVII | unchanging brightness of several months of daylight.~We know that
11 I, XVII | to appear again for two months. The Polar night had commenced!~
12 I, XIX | in the long dreary dark months. Some human beings still
13 I, XX | had still to last three months. The sun would doubtless
14 I, XXII | CHAPTER XXII.~ FIVE MONTHS MORE.~A violent earthquake
15 I, XXII | passing away. Another two months and the Arctic winter, with
16 I, XXIII| return the next summer. Eight months at least! It is true either
17 I, XXIII| It will only be seventeen months !”~“I can console myself,
18 I, XXIII| have to wait not seventeen months but thirty-six years !”~“
19 II, I | currents for the last three months!~Yes, Fort Hope was built
20 II, I | eruption of the volcano some months before. As long as the northern
21 II, I | which nothing was known. For months this drifting had been going
22 II, II | and in less than three months the sea would again be rendered
23 II, II | It would take about three months to build a thirty or thirty-five
24 II, II | been following it for three months, we should have had some
25 II, II | changed in the last three months, which is certainly not
26 II, II | mainland was visible a few months before. The disappearance
27 II, II | be taken during the two months in which the sea will remain
28 II, III | patience, in another two months the waves will no longer
29 II, V | occupy them for several months. But as their vessel would
30 II, VIII | ourselves for three or four months perhaps. Or some shipwrecked
31 II, X | build up, in the bitterest months of the Arctic winter.~It
32 II, X | the circumstances, three months would scarcely be long enough
33 II, XIII | rate, it will take us three months to get to the American continent!”~“
34 II, XIII | American continent in three months’ time; if so, we shall never
35 II, XIII | journey would last several months, the provisions, &c., could
36 II, XIV | CHAPTER XIV.~THE WINTER MONTHS.~The party did not arrive
37 II, XIV | which would not be for six months.~Preparations for another
38 II, XV | We shall still have two months to wait then?”~“Yes, two
39 II, XV | to wait then?”~“Yes, two months, for it would not be prudent
40 II, XV | hold together for several months to come.~There was then
41 II, XV | that had been made five months before. Once more she saw
42 II, XV | by the Lieutenant several months before. Flocks of white
43 II, XVII | across the ice-field a few months ago; we ought to be very
44 II, XX | free in Behring Strait two months before.~This great speed
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