Part, Chapter
1 I, III | scattered houses outside the enceinte.~The next day Thomas Black
2 I, IV | parallelogram formed by the enceinte. The fort was thus protected
3 I, X | order at the door of the enceinte, and awaiting the travellers.~
4 I, XVII | soon clothed the cape, the enceinte of fort, and the coast.
5 I, XVII | when they went beyond the enceinte of the fort.~The bears were
6 I, XVIII| house, kennel, shed, and enceinte would have disappeared beneath
7 I, XVIII| white, the walls of the enceinte, and the whole of the house
8 I, XVIII| had wandered as far as the enceinte. The snow was as bard as
9 I, XVIII| away the ice inside the enceinte, so as to form a kind of
10 I, XIX | outer approaches of the enceinte. Mac-Nab and his subordinates
11 I, XIX | that the approaches to the enceinte had been cleared of snow,
12 I, XIX | however:~Arrived at the enceinte, the native woman, seeing
13 I, XXII | forbidden to go beyond the enceinte of the fort, in case of
14 I, XXII | stretched away from the enceinte of the fort, and was bounded
15 II, V | proceeded. The palisaded enceinte was repaired with new stakes,
16 II, V | did not go far from the enceinte. Some of them were used
17 II, VI | impossible to go beyond the enceinte of the fort.~“What do you
18 II, X | set some traps outside the enceinte. He did not like to refuse
19 II, X | within musket-range of the enceinte to devour the martens and
20 II, XIII | marked the boundaries of the enceinte of the factory, a—white
21 II, XIV | animals even ventured into the enceinte, and they were not driven
22 II, XIV | on guard in front of the enceinte in the morning, saw a huge
23 II, XIV | intends coming into the enceinte?” said Long, who had his
24 II, XIV | and finally entered the enceinte. Having reached the centre,
25 II, XIV | and turning away left the enceinte, as Hobson had prophesied,
26 II, XV | very foot of the palisaded enceinte; but fortunately for the
27 II, XVII | before they reached the enceinte they saw the men and women
28 II, XVIII| impossible to approach the enceinte. The masses of ice were
29 II, XVIII| companions, and driven from the enceinte by the crashing avalanches,
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