Part, Chapter
1 I, IV | and there were plenty of reindeer in the Polar regions. Whole
2 I, XI | Esquimaux. We allude to the reindeer; and Corporal Joliffe announced
3 I, XI | the footprints left by the reindeer, as, like the camel, they
4 I, XI | devoured with avidity by the reindeer, and forming their only
5 I, XIII | capture of a few couples of reindeer, which they intended to
6 I, XIV | provisioning Fort Hope. Reindeer, elk, - and any wapitis
7 I, XIV | their prey-particularly the reindeer, which are exceedingly wary.
8 I, XIV | child.~When about fifty reindeer, or, to give them their
9 I, XIV | followed the trail of a reindeer or wapiti. These creatures
10 I, XVIII| exclaimed:~“And our dogs! our reindeer!”~It was indeed time to
11 I, XVIII| dog-house, others to the reindeer stable, and all fears were
12 I, XIX | of Marbre the hunter, a reindeer trap was constructed iii
13 I, XIX | the worse for that, the reindeer will find a slippery wall,
14 I, XIX | still and listened.~“It’s no reindeer making that noise, “said
15 I, XIX | in tents made of seal and reindeer skins, which are called
16 I, XXII | barking with delight. One reindeer had died, but the others,
17 I, XXII | and delighted. :Martens, reindeer, hares, caribous, foxes,
18 II, I | surface when we dug the reindeer pit—this, in short, is why
19 II, V | were eagerly hunting the reindeer and Polar hares, which abounded
20 II, V | hundreds.~The taming of the reindeer had been quite successful;
21 II, V | and forwards. A good many reindeer, still wild, now fell into
22 II, V | none fell victims but the reindeer, whose flesh was salted
23 II, V | have caught a couple of reindeer,” replied Hobson.~“No, sir,
24 II, V | to the house by the tamed reindeer. The carpenter did not spare
25 II, X | and they were fed on raw reindeer venison, plenty of which
26 II, X | easily attainable.~The tame reindeer also prospered, their stable
27 II, X | enabled them to economise the reindeer venison.~All was now prepared
28 II, X | ordinary circumstances the reindeer, Polar hares, and even the
29 II, X | island, the furred animals, reindeer, wolves, &c., would have
30 II, X | only food. The famished reindeer having neither moss nor
31 II, XII | ago. The filling of the reindeer trap with salt water, the
32 II, XII | to be drawn by the tamed reindeer, which had been well trained
33 II, XIII | sledges, and three couple of reindeer to the waggon sledges. Silently
34 II, XIII | sledges, drawn by dogs and reindeer, could not possibly get
35 II, XIV | their dog-house, and the reindeer to their stable.~Great was
36 II, XIV | every day. He tried using reindeer fat for lighting the house,
37 II, XIV | useless to kill them, and a reindeer was only occasionally slaughtered
38 II, XIV | around him, went towards the reindeer stable and dog-house, listened
39 II, XIV | uneasy noises made by the reindeer, then continued his walk
40 II, XV | siege to his territory; reindeer, Polar hares, musk-rats,
41 II, XXI | supplied them with food. A few reindeer and hares were slaughtered
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