Part, Chapter
1 I, VII | very boisterous. The snow, driven before it, was flung upon
2 I, IX | buoys upon the waves, and driven towards the south of the
3 I, X | supposed that they had been driven further north by over-zealous
4 I, XI | In the winter, however, driven by famine from higher latitudes,
5 I, XXII | his men. The piles, well driven into the earth, had not
6 II, I | and the huge icebergs, driven out into the offing, drew
7 II, II | contingency, Victoria Island, driven by the currents to the western
8 II, II | coast of Asia if it were driven to the west.~“For,” added
9 II, III | guillemots, puffins, and petrels, driven away by the storm, were
10 II, VI | against us If we should be driven on to the coast, the shock
11 II, VI | held together, it must be driven to the south-west by this
12 II, VI | whether Victoria Island, driven by the north-west wind out
13 II, VI | this wind has, as I hope, driven it near to the American
14 II, VII | the hurricane had indeed driven them within sight of land,
15 II, VII | Victoria Island had been driven towards the coast?~“Yes,
16 II, VII | west, we must have been driven out of it, and towards the
17 II, VIII | beach, and the waves, now driven along by the wind from the
18 II, IX | thought she saw a huge mass driven along by the hurricane parallel
19 II, IX | and that it would not be driven on to the shore. She saw
20 II, IX | the wind and current had driven them into the open sea,
21 II, X | north-east hurricane had driven the island out of the current.
22 II, X | fatal, a terrible wind had driven the island away from the
23 II, XII | current, how the hurricane had driven it back within sight of
24 II, XII | current, how the hurricane had driven it luck within sight of
25 II, XIII | upon another, doubtless driven along by the irresistible
26 II, XIV | enceinte, and they were not driven away. The martens and foxes
27 II, XV | spite of their weight, were driven to the very foot of the
28 II, XV | beneath the huge blocks of ice driven inland from the offing,
29 II, XVIII| Victoria Island, which, driven along by this mighty propelling
30 II, XVIII| save their companions, and driven from the enceinte by the
31 II, XVIII| a gallery could only be driven in a horizontal direction,
32 II, XIX | BEHRING SEA.~The island, driven by the ice-wall, had then
33 II, XX | pace of the island, still driven towards the south by the
34 II, XX | size, which till then had driven the island before them.
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