Part, Chapter
1 I, XVII | building up that impenetrable ice-wall, which Nature has set up
2 II, X | few and scattered, and no ice-wall as yet shut in the horizon.~“
3 II, XIII | irresistible force of the ice-wall into the vast funnel of
4 II, XIV | Victoria Island. This was the ice-wall, the frozen masses of which
5 II, XV | has a descending and the ice-wall a horizontal motion. Between
6 II, XV | advance towards the mighty ice-wall, Kalumah generally leading
7 II, XV | About noon the base of the ice-wall was reached, but it had
8 II, XV | opaque, half transparent ice-wall, and no description could
9 II, XV | it went right through the ice-wall. The direction of the pass,
10 II, XV | know the thickness of the ice-wall, and as we promised not
11 II, XV | island with regard to the ice-wall, is it on the east or west?”~“
12 II, XV | had counted on leaving the ice-wall before noon, and it was
13 II, XV | on the other side of the ice-wall, after a walk of three hours.
14 II, XV | but on the east of the ice-wall!~
15 II, XV | to the continent, and the ice-wall, through which our boat
16 II, XV | the same direction as the ice-wall. It therefore seemed probable
17 II, XV | themselves upon each other. The ice-wall had broken up into numerous
18 II, XVII | All that remained of the ice-wall, that is to say, the southern
19 II, XVII | The last remains of the ice-wall now shut in the northern
20 II, XVII | and saw that part of the ice-wall, which, when he left, was
21 II, XVIII| catastrophe had occurred. The ice-wall had been flung upon the
22 II, XVIII| icebergs, and some parts of the ice-wall still towered amongst the
23 II, XVIII| least. The ruins of the ice-wall were at rest, and it was
24 II, XIX | The island, driven by the ice-wall, had then drifted at a great
25 II, XIX | truth; she knew that the ice-wall had heeled over and fallen
26 II, XIX | alone remained of the mighty ice-wall, the upper portion of which
27 II, XIX | decrease considerably when the ice-wall which was driving it along
28 II, XIX | were the relics left by the ice-wall on the northern part of
29 II, XX | south by the remains of the ice-wall. The wind generally blew
30 II, XX | still remaining of the huge ice-wall, which had shut in the northern
31 II, XXI | later the last relics of the ice-wall had disappeared, proving
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