Part, Chapter
1 I, I | would have felt no more fear than the stormy petrels
2 I, V | no, you have nothing to fear. A sledge is not more difficult
3 I, VII | great difficulty.”~“That I fear is doubtful,” said the Lieutenant,
4 I, VII | and Jaspar Hobson began to fear that his further progress
5 I, IX | sail, and if it were, I fear it comes from the wrong
6 I, XVIII| squall, and Mac-Nabs only fear was for the chimneys, which
7 I, XIX | could mistake.~There was no fear of visits from Indian hunters
8 I, XX | of the cold. He began to fear that the furred animals
9 I, XXI | ourselves have nothing to fear, as they can’t get into
10 I, XXI | ice-fields. There was reason to fear that the intense cold would
11 I, XXI | so that there was little fear that they would get on to
12 I, XXII | and toss, I shall have no fear of being sea-sick.”~“What
13 I, XXII | fort on it, there was no fear of the reinforcements failing
14 I, XXII | wrapped in fogs. He began to fear that the agents might lose
15 I, XXIII| danger, I should have no fear; but a vague uncertain peril
16 I, XXIII| Cape Bathurst, nor do I fear men; these districts are
17 I, XXIII| said earnestly, “if you fear neither men nor animals,
18 I, XXIII| What was there left to fear?~Nothing, unless it was
19 II, II | inured to danger, showed no fear; she even joked the Lieutenant
20 II, III | that they had nothing to fear. Hobson caught a glimpse
21 II, III | there was every reason to fear that, when famished with
22 II, IV | they will have nothing to fear from storms, and perhaps
23 II, V | the reasons there were to fear the breaking up or sinking
24 II, VIII | There was really nothing to fear, the only formidable animals,
25 II, VIII | we shall have nothing to fear from them; all the martens,
26 II, VIII | affected by the mysterious fear which had tamed all the
27 II, X | thermometer, there was no fear that they would again be
28 II, XII | had worn it away, and his fear that it might be carried
29 II, XII | had worn it away, and his fear that it might be carried
30 II, XIII | encampment, and could not but fear that the vast ice-field
31 II, XIV | alternations of hope and fear. The situation of Victoria
32 II, XIV | and Sergeant Long began to fear he had let the joke go too
33 II, XV | although she could not fail to fear for the safety of all, and
34 II, XV | and again, “there is no fear of that, the breaking up
35 II, XVII | well that he had nothing to fear from them.~On the 20th April
36 II, XVIII| alternated between hope and fear when some obstacle delayed
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