Part, Chapter
1 I, I | stove contained a roaring fire constantly fed with fresh
2 I, VI | the air; the other three, fire, earth, and water, are de
3 I, VI | directly it is taken from the fire, and sticks to the teeth.
4 I, XIII | had been hardened in the fire; and were slightly hollowed
5 I, XIV | slightly before a quick clear fire they proved delicious.~Then
6 I, XIV | shrivel vegetation like a fire, that there was every chance
7 I, XVIII| converting it into a vast dome of fire, but after the magnificent
8 I, XIX | which the smoke from the fire inside made its way. These
9 I, XIX | The room was heated by a fire, on which the bones of morses
10 I, XX | other in astonishment.~“A fire !” cried several.~But unless
11 I, XX | burning, there could not be a fire anywhere near Cape Bathurst.~
12 I, XX | Bay the horizon was on fire. The summits of the igneous
13 I, XX | by those who came to the fire. Opening doors or windows
14 I, XX | had to be melted at the fire, for it- would have been
15 I, XXI | walls of the house, and fire at them. But it was decided
16 I, XXI | through the kitchen, where the fire had just gone out, and into
17 I, XXI | their worst. Whilst the fire became lower and lower,
18 II, IV | of the night a crackling fire of dead branches was blazing
19 II, VII | CHAPTER VII.~ A FIRE AND A CRY.~The Lieutenant
20 II, VII | horizon we should see a fire, which is not unlikely this
21 II, VII | until daylight, unless a fire should be lighted on the
22 II, VII | I see it!”~“What?”~“A fire!”~“A fire?”~“Yes, there—
23 II, VII | it!”~“What?”~“A fire!”~“A fire?”~“Yes, there—over there!”~
24 II, VII | cried, “yes, Sergeant, a fire; there is land there!”~“
25 II, VII | there!”~“Unless it is a fire on board ship,” replied
26 II, VII | Sergeant, we will reply to the fire on the mainland by a fire
27 II, VII | fire on the mainland by a fire on our island!”~Of course
28 II, VII | stems of the trees, set fire to it, and soon, the wind
29 II, VII | Hobson, “as we saw their fire, they will see ours!”~The
30 II, VII | in vain for an answering fire—nothing was to be seen.
31 II, VIII | during the night, that the fire and cry were alike signals
32 II, VIII | of the exploration: the fire and the cry. Hobson was
33 II, VIII | Sergeant were mistaken. The fire had really been seen, the
34 II, VIII | storm. You remember the fire and the cry of which Sergeant
35 II, IX | of Icy Cape.~This was the fire which Hobson and Long had
36 II, IX | hers, when she saw the huge fire lit by Lieutenant Hobson,
37 II, X | continent. It had not been a fire on board ship which they
38 II, XIII | smoke from the expiring fire never to be rekindled; this
39 II, XVIII| with the aid of a large fire of resinous wood, and every
40 II, XXII | it was brought near the fire. Thin pieces of the ice
41 II, XXII | remaining shed might have made a fire large enough to be seen
42 II, XXIII| planks and a beam. It was set fire to, and bright flames soon
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