Part, Chapter
1 I, V | ground, rose into view in the clear blue atmosphere and pursued
2 I, VIII | standing out against the clear blue air, formed the background
3 I, VIII | starboard, shot across the clear waters of the lake.~The
4 I, X | now free from ice, and its clear and rapid waters flowed
5 I, X | wide; its waters were very clear, and being fed by the melted
6 I, X | weather was fine; the sky clear, although somewhat misty
7 I, XII | sky; but, of course, the clear blue air of temperate and
8 I, XIV | slightly before a quick clear fire they proved delicious.~
9 I, XVI | arrogate to itself, it is very clear that in the extreme north
10 I, XVIII| charm when read out in her clear earnest voice; her gestures
11 I, XVIII| through the window, and clear away the fresh accumulation
12 I, XVIII| took about half-an-hour to clear a passage, and then every
13 I, XVIII| now that the sky was so clear, that he braved the rigour
14 I, XIX | softer, ordered his men to clear it away from the outer approaches
15 I, XX | The atmosphere is very clear, the wind is still in the
16 I, XXIII| sky, leaving it bright and clear!~A cry of gratitude burst
17 II, II | All that Hobson said was clear, concise, and to the point.
18 II, II | July 18th, the sky was very clear, and at ten o’clock in the
19 II, IV | not jagged or broken, but clear cut, as if the division
20 II, VIII | Lieutenant’s? The air was now clear, and they could look round
21 II, VIII | But its oblique rays were clear and powerful, and the snow
22 II, VIII | suddenly, and pointed to some clear and regular impressions
23 II, X | snow, which stained the clear surface of the water As
24 II, X | betrayed by nature to the least clear sighted. Of course the rotation
25 II, XIII | departure. The sky was grey but clear, and lighted up from the
26 II, XIII | every direction.~It was clear that a caravan of sledges,
27 II, XIII | blocks; and it was equally clear that a path could not be
28 II, XIII | any great pressure. It was clear that in consequence of the
29 II, XIV | more complete.~The sky was clear for the first week of January.
30 II, XX | avoided all land, sheering clear of islands, and never touching
31 II, XXII | he was waiting for it to clear away, when he was joined
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