Part, Chapter
1 I, I | completely transformed. The rough walls, constructed of roughly-hewn
2 I, I | who entered. The floor, of rough joists of wood laid parallel
3 I, I | fifty years of age, with a rough beard that looked as if
4 I, VI | that the ground will become rough and uneven; that our panting
5 I, X | map, which merely gave a rough outline of the configuration
6 I, XIII | would be put. For in the rough and ready style of habitation
7 I, XIII | isinglass, which, though rough, yellow, and almost opaque,
8 I, XV | their tusks, though slightly rough, of the best quality. They
9 I, XV | heavily-laden sledges over the rough ground. Had it been covered
10 I, XVII | traps consisted merely of rough joists supported on a square,
11 I, XVIII| consequently became the idol of the rough soldiers, who would have
12 I, XIX | one might have taken the rough shaggy figures for seals
13 II, IV | the surface? Might not a rough sea or a gale of wind cause
14 II, VI | violent, and the sea so rough, that there was really a
15 II, VI | sir.”~“We shall have a rough journey, Sergeant.”~“What
16 II, VIII | sea should again become rough in a fresh storm, this gulf
17 II, XII | surface, making it very rough, so that if our sledges
18 II, XII | surface, making it very rough, so that if our sledges
19 II, XII | examined and repaired. The rough surface of the ice-field
20 II, XIII | arrested by a crevasse full of rough water strewn with small
21 II, XIV | surface of the floe, though rough, was perfectly firm everywhere.
22 II, XV | could not have got over the rough distorted surface, which
23 II, XX | not to wander far, as a rough sea would be enough to bring
24 II, XXI | favourable, and the sea not too rough, this rude assortment of
25 II, XXI | rudder was fixed to this rough structure, the fittings
26 II, XXI | The sea was, however, very rough, and the waters of the former
27 II, XXII | remaining but the planks of the rough lodging, which would not
28 II, XXII | in gloomy silence in the rough shelter still remaining
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