Part, Chapter
1 I, IX | were lying on the sandy beach three miles above Fort Providence.~
2 I, XV | sprinkled on the unfrequented beach, with grey and yellow pummice-stone,
3 I, XV | can enjoy the view.”~The beach was soon reached, and some
4 I, XV | congregate where the slope of the beach is gradual enough to allow
5 I, XV | absence of morses on the beach of our cape.”~
6 I, XXII | had been flung upon the beach. The whole mass of the cape
7 I, XXII | upper layer of ice on the beach rapidly dissolved, whilst
8 I, XXII | the soil. That part of the beach which stretched away from
9 I, XXIII| walking with him along the beach, she pleaded the cause of
10 I, XXIII| beach-marks made on the beach, ascertained beyond all
11 II, III | wood, and fixed upon the beach at the foot of Cape Bathurst
12 II, III | the waves broke upon the beach with a deafening roar. Liquid
13 II, III | the sun struck upon the beach, and touched it with many
14 II, III | as they do upon a sloping beach. It was to be feared that
15 II, IV | covered the rest of the beach, and altogether the state
16 II, IV | some thirty yards from the beach, to a rising ground on which
17 II, IV | which died away upon the beach with a faint rippling sound.
18 II, IV | made bench marks along the beach, that any future change
19 II, V | their companions, to the beach at the foot of Cape Bathurst,
20 II, VI | huge waves broke upon the beach. The storm had become a
21 II, VI | breaking of the surf upon the beach and the roaring of the angry
22 II, VI | cape, but going down to the beach. What was his joy at noticing
23 II, VII | to pieces, along the new beach, the foam sometimes bathing
24 II, VIII | in the offing or on the beach, and the waves, now driven
25 II, VIII | as Hobson approached the beach, he saw a large piece of
26 II, VIII | waves washed along a level beach when the perpendicular shores
27 II, VIII | she was stepping on to the beach, Madge, who had been following
28 II, VIII | mistress’s hand.~On the beach, about fifty paces from
29 II, VIII | hold, she rushed to the beach, never thinking of the danger
30 II, IX | Kalumah to venture down to the beach, and, braving the wind and
31 II, IX | lit it and waved it on the beach at the summit of Icy Cape.~
32 II, IX | quarter of a mile from the beach.~It was then that she uttered
33 II, IX | struggled to advance; the beach before her appeared endless,
34 II, IX | had scarcely reached the beach when her forces entirely
35 II, X | he was walking along the beach with the lady, listening
36 II, XIV | the women remained on the beach, the men made their way
37 II, XVII | which was waiting on the beach. A good many provisions
38 II, XVII | Michael. They followed the beach for about two miles, and
39 II, XIX | would wander about on the beach, either alone or with Mrs
40 II, XXI | walking together on the beach.~“There is plenty of food
41 II, XXII | the ice crust of the steep beach fell off into the sea, and
42 II, XXIII| remained motionless upon the beach, pondering whether there
43 II, XXIII| the ice ran aground upon a beach, and the few animals still
|