Part, Chapter
1 I, II | the matter.”~And at his chief’s order, the Sergeant, leaving
2 I, IV | Jaspar Hobson, were one chief and two subordinate officers,
3 I, V | never differed from his chief.~“Like myself, Sergeant,
4 I, VI | cause to complain.”~The chief hunters of the expedition
5 I, VII | exploration. The natives are the chief obstacle in tropical regions,
6 I, VIII | them in the absence of his chief. The boat was let loose
7 I, VIII | three Indians, with their chief, wearing gorgeous plumes,
8 I, VIII | tell him nothing. Their chief said, however, that the
9 I, VIII | Hobson thanked the Indian chief, and took leave after giving
10 I, X | the advice of the Indian chief, Hobson determined to get
11 I, XIV | wolf for its spoils. Its chief characteristics are great
12 I, XVIII| together. Reading was the chief amusement. The Bible and
13 I, XIX | to the large room in the chief building.~They removed their
14 I, XIX | soon discovered that the chief difficulty was not getting
15 I, XIX | amphibious animals which form the chief article of an Esquimaux’
16 I, XXI | earnestly, “You are our chief; you ]nave no right to expose
17 II, V | Madge differed from their chief on the subject. They thought
18 II, V | into execution, with his chief’s approval, a plan he had
19 II, V | before he had given his chief a searching glance.~Hobson
20 II, VI | him in astonishment. Their chief officer really seemed to
21 II, VI | remember that he was the chief officer, that his life was
22 II, VIII | Madge were told of the two chief events of the exploration:
23 II, X | perhaps not so much. It is the chief work of my life; I have
24 II, XII | add to the cares of their chief, they had pretended to know
25 II, XIII | appeared. How could he, the chief of the expedition, think
26 II, XIII | The men trusted their chief implicitly. They knew his
27 II, XV | drifted north or south was the chief subject of the discussions
28 II, XVIII| want of air would be the chief danger of the four victims.
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