Part, Chapter
1 I, I | dignity. Madge was about five years older than Mrs Barnett,
2 I, VIII | Jaspar Hobson were on foot at five A.M. The Lieutenant intended
3 I, IX | the lake.~It was half-past five. Neither Norman nor the
4 I, X | Franklin explored no less than five thousand five hundred and
5 I, X | less than five thousand five hundred and fifty miles
6 I, XII | the sea open for four or five months in the warm season,
7 I, XIV | expected to continue so for five weeks longer, when the snow
8 I, XV | victory was an easy one; the five victims were very large
9 I, XVII | handsome birds, four or five feet in entire length, with
10 I, XVII | chain of icebergs, some five hundred feet high, barred
11 I, XVII | their true proportions, five or six yards of ice looked
12 I, XVIII| Thomas Black, for in another five minutes he would have been
13 I, XIX | at finding beneath some five feet of earth and sand a
14 I, XIX | and two children, about five or six years old, poor little
15 I, XIX | extended her visit over five long minutes!-five centuries!
16 I, XIX | over five long minutes!-five centuries! The two children
17 I, XIX | gone to hunt morses four or five miles from their camp.~Once
18 I, XXI | given to drag in the sledge.~Five minutes more. The cord remained
19 I, XXII | CHAPTER XXII.~ FIVE MONTHS MORE.~A violent earthquake
20 I, XXII | of the lake had receded five hundred paces on the eastern
21 I, XXII | of a few men and four or five sledges should leave the
22 I, XXIII| returned Black; “there will be five more total eclipses of the
23 II, I | an immense piece of ice, five hundred square miles in
24 II, II | a few minutes later the five conspirators were seated
25 II, IV | concluded it to be about four or five feet thick below the sea-level.
26 II, IV | was not immersed more than five feet.~This made Hobson very
27 II, IV | Hobson very anxious. Only five feet! Setting aside the
28 II, IV | the ice was not more than five feet thick.~Long set to
29 II, V | sea level was estimated at five feet; related the accident
30 II, IX | towards the east, and before five o’clock in the afternoon
31 II, XIII | America after travelling five or six hundred miles out
32 II, XV | the splinters.~From two to five o’clock the explorers followed
33 II, XV | in its chill embrace.~At five o’clock it became too dark
34 II, XV | escape that had been made five months before. Once more
35 II, XVII | had to undergo in crossing five hundred miles of ice in
36 II, XVIII| volume below the water being five times that of the projecting
37 II, XVIII| covered a space more than five hundred feet in diameter.
38 II, XXII | like a caged animal.~About five o’clock in the evening the
39 II, XXIII| at its base, and scarcely five hundred in its greatest
40 II, XXIII| now its mean height was five or six feet above the sea
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