Part, Chapter
1 I, V | ordered you to go to the North Pole?”~“Lieutenant, I should
2 I, V | the most from the North Pole.~And indeed the most robust
3 I, V | he had not to reach the pole itself, or to follow in
4 I, VI | thirty degrees from the North Pole. The true sky of this country
5 I, VII | 23° 27’ 57” from the North Pole, forms the mathematical
6 I, VII | seven degrees from the pole — whereas Australia has
7 I, VII | Do you think that the Pole itself will ever be reached
8 I, VII | it extends to the North Pole. For my part, I think an
9 I, VII | nearer and nearer to the Pole; and so, with plenty of
10 I, VII | Union Jack at the North Pole. But that is not our present
11 I, VII | hunted, take refuge at the Pole, we should have to follow
12 I, VII | first discoverer of the Pole will have been led thither
13 I, VII | question called you to the Pole, I feel sure you would not
14 I, X | fort will be erected on the Pole itself, that mathematical
15 I, XII | from Behring Strait to the Pole itself.~On the 4th July
16 I, XVI | Hope been situated at the Pole itself, that is to say,
17 I, XVI | of Magellan to the North Pole !”~“I do not agree with
18 I, XVII | Nature has set up between the Pole and the bold explorers who
19 I, XVIII| at the zenith shone the Pole star. Although in both hemispheres
20 I, XVIII| it be if we were at the Pole itself?”~“The Pole, madam,
21 I, XVIII| at the Pole itself?”~“The Pole, madam, is probably not
22 I, XVIII| therefore, called the ‘pole of cold.’ “~“But,” said
23 I, XVIII| I only tell you of the ‘pole of cold,’ that you may not
24 I, XVIII| not confound it with the Pole properly so-called when
25 I, XXIII| rarely been watched near the Pole, where the sun, being very
26 II, II | conveyance for going to the North Pole. “With a favourable current
27 II, X | the seekers of the North Pole,” repeated Sergeant Long
28 II, XV | neighbourhood of the magnetic pole, the compasses are sometimes
29 II, XXIII| fastened on to a strong pole for a yard, was hoisted
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