Part, Chapter
1 I, III | Sergeant was almost upset by a sledge, drawn by six dogs, which
2 I, III | cold, and staring at the sledge, white with snow, which
3 I, III | taken an inert mass from the sledge, a kind of bag covered with
4 I, III | on from fort to fort in a sledge, under the escort of a courier
5 I, IV | skate, was fixed beneath the sledge, enabling it to cleave the
6 I, IV | seventieth parallel.~The sledge provided for Mrs Barnett
7 I, IV | all stored away in this sledge, and Thomas Black relied
8 I, V | one took his place in the sledge assigned to him. Jaspar
9 I, V | Petersen, occupied the third sledge ;and the others followed,
10 I, V | distance from the preceding sledge, so as to avoid all confusion—
11 I, V | stretch my arm out of this sledge to pick up a handful of
12 I, V | different was the talk in the sledge occupied by Mr and Mrs Joliffe.
13 I, V | have nothing to fear. A sledge is not more difficult to
14 I, V | fact, pretty steep; the sledge dashed along at a reckless
15 I, V | against each other and the sledge, and were horribly bruised
16 I, V | four feet longer than the sledge; for it unrolled with an
17 I, V | themselves on one side, the sledge was overturned, and the
18 I, V | of Lieutenant Hobson!~The sledge was picked up, but it was
19 I, VII | Long whilst the dogs of his sledge were laboriously preparing
20 I, VII | idea, never got out of his sledge, and indeed be was so corpulent
21 I, X | Each pair got into the sledge assigned to them; but this
22 I, XIX | which they packed in their sledge; and after a few words of
23 I, XXI | would be the signal that the sledge was filled with fuel at
24 I, XXI | be given to drag in the sledge.~Five minutes more. The
25 I, XXIII| accompany the Sergeant, and one sledge was to convoy his precious
26 II, XII | the caravan. One waggon sledge was therefore packed with
27 II, XII | attended to nothing but the sledge which was to carry his person,
28 II, XIII | one man on foot without a sledge or any encumbrances might
29 II, XIII | really be of more use than a sledge if we wish to reach the
30 II, XV | climbed. It was evident that a sledge could not have got over
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