Part, Chapter
1 I, IV | small bastion with a pointed roof at each of the four corners
2 I, XIII | merely of a ground-floor. The roof was to be high, and its
3 I, XIII | icicles, draped in white from roof to foundation, its walls
4 I, XIII | the high trusses of the roof, which overhung the walls
5 I, XIII | chimneys soon adorned the roof, to the great satisfaction
6 I, XVIII| of the house even to the roof were completely covered
7 I, XVIII| completely filled up. The roof of the house alone appeared
8 I, XXI | were walking about on the roof.~Hobson, the Sergeant, Mac-Nab,
9 I, XXI | the bears were all on the roof, and the sound of their
10 I, XXI | caught in the laths of the roof beneath the ice, and there
11 I, XXI | said, “are now upon the roof. We ourselves have nothing
12 I, XXI | lift up the rafters of .the roof. In some places the laths
13 I, XXI | when he constructed the roof, and expected to see it
14 I, XXI | might come down from the roof and prowl about the court.
15 I, XXI | bears were still on the roof. The moment for action had
16 I, XXI | one of the rafters of the roof, and got into the loft.~“
17 I, XXI | they had the rafters of the roof, so that there was little
18 II, III | hailstones rattled on the roof, whilst a few distant claps
19 II, VI | were hurled down upon the roof with a noise like the pattering
20 II, X | with wood up to the very roof. Winter might come as soon
21 II, XV | of the ceiling, and the roof was strengthened so that
22 II, XVIII| and sand with which the roof was first covered must have
23 II, XVIII| that it did not reach the roof of the house.~When the morning
24 II, XVIII| bored through before the roof of the house could be reached,
25 II, XVIII| had expected to reach the roof of the house, if it had
26 II, XVIII| looking at his companion.~“No roof then?” inquired the hunter.~“
27 II, XVIII| but let us work on, the roof has bent of course, but
28 II, XVIII| one of the rafters of the roof. The carpenter flung himself
29 II, XVIII| pickaxe sent the laths of the roof flying on every side. In
30 II, XVIII| water. Strange to say, the roof had not given way, but as
31 II, XIX | of ice abutting from the roof saved it from being immediately
32 II, XIX | short of a miracle, the roof of the house, with its strong
33 II, XIX | amongst the rafters of the roof, and there they remained
34 II, XXIII| once formed part of the roof of the barracks, was sunk
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