Part, Chapter
1 I, I | dearly for its cheering heat, so terribly cold was it
2 I, III | to restore the lost vital heat than to give him a bath
3 I, IV | lines, or belts of equal heat, along which heat is distributed
4 I, IV | equal heat, along which heat is distributed in equal
5 I, V | snow, gave more light than heat. Fortunately not a breath
6 I, V | how we suffered from the heat on the shores of the Gulf
7 I, V | have forgotten the tropical heat of India arid Australia?
8 I, V | to which you allude—the heat, the agonies of thirst—when
9 I, V | snow? You talk to me of heat, when we are freezing beneath
10 I, VI | Hobson?”~“I mean that the heat will soon have changed the
11 I, VI | they always do when the heat of the Polar sun inflames
12 I, VI | together.~In fact, in the heat of the combat the antlers
13 I, XIII | dining-room, which was to heat it and the compartment containing
14 I, XVII | emptied twice a week. The heat of the stove was regulated
15 I, XVIII| the sudden introduction of heat into an animate body, and
16 I, XX | in the large room, its heat could not be felt at all.
17 I, XX | resisted the introduction of heat as if they were petrified.
18 I, XXI | felt that their own vital heat must soon become exhausted,
19 I, XXI | able to take his share. The heat from the stoves warmed the
20 II, IV | which would keep in the heat, and therefore serve well
21 II, V | walls have melted with the heat of the sun, and then “——~“
22 II, IX | Madge, who felt the vital heat and pulsation returning
23 II, XVIII| the masses with iron and heat, as the one or the other
24 II, XIX | unprotected as it was from the heat of the sun by any covering
25 II, XXIII| must dissolve with the heat of the sun!~This piece of
26 II, XXIII| being bad conductors of heat. But it was all of no avail;
27 II, XXIII| expanding abstracted the heat from the thawed surface,
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