Part, Chapter
1 I, III | Thomas Black.”~“But he is frozen.”~“Well, he must be thawed.”~
2 I, III | his hand.~It was literally frozen. The wrappers and furred
3 I, III | What do you mean by getting frozen like this. Now, don’t be
4 I, IV | shutting out the barren frozen district beyond, not inaptly
5 I, V | which was, however, still frozen so hard as to be undistinguishable
6 I, VII | and as they were no longer frozen over, the sledges could
7 I, VII | to be hollowed out of the frozen masses, or rather holes
8 I, VIII | its waters, which being frozen over in winter, and navigable
9 I, XIII | to distinguish from the frozen surface of the lagoon or
10 I, XV | Had it been covered with frozen snow the distance would
11 I, XVII | the rest of the party. The frozen lake as well as the coast
12 I, XVII | India or Australia!~The frozen ocean was firm enough to
13 I, XVIII| clearing away a mass of frozen snow ten feet thick, extending
14 I, XVIII| minutes he would have been frozen where he stood !~
15 I, XIX | made their way over the frozen snow along the coast, strewn
16 I, XX | December, the mercury was all frozen hard , in the cistern of
17 I, XXI | walrus oil to be burnt was frozen so hard that it had to be
18 I, XXII | 15° above zero, and to the frozen colonists it was like the
19 I, XXII | covered with thick layers of frozen snow, and the sun was powerless
20 II, I | northern winter continued, the frozen sea maintained things as
21 II, II | soon as ever the sea is frozen over.”~Hobson was right.
22 II, IV | the column of mercury were frozen in its cistern! Nothing
23 II, X | by venturing across the frozen ice fields we might perhaps
24 II, X | hand of winter, and became frozen as far as the eye could
25 II, X | the sea was quite firmly frozen over, which at the most
26 II, XII | looked, the imperfectly frozen surface cracking every now
27 II, XIII | the cold had imperfectly frozen over. Thus far the difficulties
28 II, XIII | were last year over the frozen plains between Fort Reliance
29 II, XIII | and deep crevasses not yet frozen over. The temperature here
30 II, XIII | Ocean was most imperfectly frozen, and a warm rain was falling,
31 II, XIV | This was the ice-wall, the frozen masses of which were piled
32 II, XIV | Victoria Island was never frozen hard. Fissures of more or
33 II, XV | in the darkness of these frozen solitudes, or struggling
34 II, XV | But whether a fog or a frozen mist this phenomenon was
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