Part, Chapter
1 I, I | Sergeant Long was rather hard upon his men, as he was
2 I, V | however, still frozen so hard as to be undistinguishable
3 I, VI | very nice; the fat becomes hard directly it is taken from
4 I, VII | inequalities of the ground made it hard work for the dogs to get
5 I, IX | north it would probably go hard with the light boat, which,
6 I, IX | and if it doesn’t blow too hard, I hope to succeed.”~But
7 I, XIII | his men were working so hard, the foraging party, with
8 I, XIV | vegetation, has necessarily a hard struggle for existence,
9 I, XV | and the poor dogs found it hard work to drag the heavily-laden
10 I, XVI | for the winter, and were hard at work constructing their
11 I, XVII | here and there, signs of a hard frost setting in, favoured
12 I, XVIII| off its hinges, and the hard mass of snow was then attacked
13 I, XIX | and sand a bed of snow, as hard as a rock, which appeared
14 I, XX | the mercury was all frozen hard , in the cistern of the
15 I, XXI | to be burnt was frozen so hard that it had to be broken
16 I, XXII | was powerless to melt the hard surface of the lake and
17 II, IV | shells; and the lower of hard, compact, and, if we may
18 II, VII | breaking of water against a hard body; they heard the reverberating
19 II, IX | once.~After about an hour’s hard work, Kalumah could see
20 II, X | the north-east wind blown hard for another hour Victoria
21 II, X | would have to work terribly hard in the journey across the
22 II, X | required for the sea to freeze hard.~Had proof been needed that
23 II, XII | Polar night. It will be hard work, my friends, but you
24 II, XII | Polar night. It will be hard work, my friends but you
25 II, XII | days every one worked so hard that all was ready for the
26 II, XIV | and some of his men worked hard in the darkness outside,
27 II, XIV | Island was never frozen hard. Fissures of more or less
28 II, XV | mild that unless a very hard frost should now set in,
29 II, XVIII| difficulty, but the ice was so hard that the progress was but
30 II, XVIII| struck against something hard, which gave out a ringing
31 II, XVIII| than twenty minutes the hard body which Kellet had struck
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