Part, Chapter
1 I, II | the Earl of Shaftesbury, &c. Its capital was then only £
2 I, II | and Assiniboin rivers, &c. Fort York, commanding the
3 I, III | Struve, Petit, Baily, &c.—endeavoured to solve the
4 I, IV | Mackenzie, the Athabasca, &c.; and several important
5 I, IV | inflated when required, &c., &c.~The party might have
6 I, IV | inflated when required, &c., &c.~The party might have relied
7 I, V | swans, bald-headed eagles, &c.—passed through the warmer
8 I, VI | wolves, foxes, bears, &c. No artifice was unknown
9 I, VI | grey elks and red elks, &c. These graceful creatures
10 I, VII | Speke, Douglas, Stuart, &c. Others, on the contrary,
11 I, VII | Penny, Kane, Parry, Rae, &c., preceded us on our present
12 I, X | beavers, ermines, foxes, &c., did not trouble the Lieutenant
13 I, X | encampments, extinguished fires, &c., told of the more or less
14 I, XI | wolverenes, sables, polecats, &c., frequented these districts,
15 I, XI | scoters or black divers, &c. &c., whose mingled cries
16 I, XI | scoters or black divers, &c. &c., whose mingled cries awake
17 I, XIII | mallets, hammers, chisels, &c. &c. Rae was most skilful
18 I, XIII | hammers, chisels, &c. &c. Rae was most skilful at
19 I, XVI | of stick, clay, roots, &c., are two feet thick., They
20 I, XVIII| frequent in the Polar regions, &c., &c. Then the house had
21 I, XVIII| the Polar regions, &c., &c. Then the house had to be
22 I, XXIII| caribous, Polar hares, &c., which, strange to say,
23 I, XXIII| lynxes, musk-rats, gluttons, &c., all contributed to the
24 II, II | Reliance were not needed. &c., &c. But about all these
25 II, II | Reliance were not needed. &c., &c. But about all these matters
26 II, III | martens, polecats, ermines, &c., crouching behind some
27 II, IV | s house, garden, park, &c.? A wandering island, with
28 II, X | animals, reindeer, wolves, &c., would have left the island
29 II, XII | for making warm drinks, &c. &c. Hobson would have been
30 II, XII | making warm drinks, &c. &c. Hobson would have been
31 II, XII | Borealis, halos, parhelia, &c.~During the last few days
32 II, XIII | months, the provisions, &c., could not be dispensed
33 II, XIV | the clothes, arms, furs, &c., in the magazines. The
34 II, XIV | upon the magnetic needle, &c. But the astronomer did
35 II, XV | ptarmigans, puffins, ducks, &c., which had deserted the
36 II, XV | musk-rats, shrews, martens, &c., braved all the threatening
37 II, XVII | Everywhere the furred animals, &c., still abounded, for even
38 II, XIX | St Paul, George island, &c. The wandering island was
39 II, XIX | pumps, and the air vessel, &c.~On the 13th May all hope
40 II, XX | of a sail with clothes, &c., and try to reach the nearest
41 II, XXI | long-sustained flight—such as swans, &c, migrated towards the Aleutian
42 II, XXI | embarkation of provisions, &c., had to be put off.~Every
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