Part, Chapter
1 I, I | walls, huge blocks of wood cut with the axe, and two tables
2 I, II | details, had not an incident cut short his harangue.~Corporal
3 I, V | on his dogs with a fresh cut of the whip, dashed along
4 I, V | part, that they can even cut out a bit of one of their
5 I, IX | of the waves into foam.~“Cut it! cut it!” screamed Norman
6 I, IX | waves into foam.~“Cut it! cut it!” screamed Norman above
7 I, IX | seized Norman’s knife and cut the halliard like a harp-string;
8 I, X | for which they were bound, cut across though they were
9 I, XI | surprised by winter, and cut off from all communication
10 I, XIV | the guns, the flesh was cut into long strips for food,
11 I, XIV | period of bad weather might cut off the communication between
12 I, XV | if their summits had been cut off, and with jagged tremulous
13 I, XV | within easy range of them and cut off their retreat to the
14 I, XVI | the Sergeant, trying to cut off the retreat of another
15 I, XVII | horizon, no longer clearly cut against the sky, was hidden
16 I, XVIII| perhaps been completely cut off. Some hurried to the
17 I, XVIII| if an invisible hand had cut off the supply of electricity
18 II, I | to blame. The earthquake cut off our communication with
19 II, IV | jagged or broken, but clear cut, as if the division had
20 II, IV | Beg pardon, sir; I hadn’t cut through fifteen inches of
21 II, IV | made, and by taking a short cut they arrived at noon at
22 II, V | good deal of timber was cut in the woods clothing the
23 II, V | little forest, although he cut his wood judiciously; for
24 II, VII | its fury. His idea was to cut across in a straight line
25 II, VII | island would be found to be cut off. Presently, however,
26 II, VIII | and if so they would be cut off from their friends.~
27 II, X | seventieth degree which once cut across the extremity of
28 II, XIII | that a path could not be cut through them with the hatchet
29 II, XIII | added the Lieutenant, “cut off from all communication
30 II, XIV | many circular holes neatly cut in the ice, the use of which
31 II, XV | be seen from the clearly cut fractures and sharp corners.
32 II, XVIII| least before they could cut through the last layer of
33 II, XX | ground might at any moment cut off the explorers from the
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