Part, Chapter
1 I, VI | resolute as you. If so, God helping us, we shall indeed
2 I, VIII | ground beneath our feet, and God be with us!”~After a walk
3 I, IX | it were in the hands of God.~But neither yielded to
4 I, IX | commending themselves to God, who alone could save them.~
5 I, X | will even yet be saved.”~“God grant it, Lieutenant!” replied
6 I, XX | colonists returned thanks to God for preserving them through
7 I, XXI | house, and leave the rest to God !”~And the poor half-frozen
8 II, I | reuniting it to a continent. No; God alone could decide the future
9 II, II | of earnest conviction; “God would never permit that.”~“
10 II, IV | perilous position.~“Good God! Sergeant!” exclaimed Mrs
11 II, VII | the wind helps us or not, God will not forsake us. It
12 II, VIII | beginning to accumulate, and God will send it us in time,
13 II, IX | she murmured her thanks to God for her own preservation
14 II, IX | come to my rescue, and that God would save me by your means.”~
15 II, X | to meet it. In any case God’s will be done!” “My friends,”
16 II, XIII | Let us return then, and God be with us!”~The rest of
17 II, XIV | and all felt sure that God would not take him from
18 II, XVIII| ice from the icebergs.” “God grant you may be right,
19 II, XX | days are in the hands of God,” replied Lieutenant Hobson
20 II, XXIII| We have, madam.”~“Then God’s will be done!”~One last
21 II, XXIII| knees, returned thanks to God for their miraculous deliverance.~
22 II, XXIV | submitted to the will of God. We have seen Mrs Barnett
23 II, XXIV | with considerable emotion—~“God bless you, madam, for all
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