Part, Chapter
1 I, I | on his journey early in April.~If the lieutenant was the
2 I, IV | much colder than Europe. In April the streets of New York
3 I, IV | extended until the 16th April. Many a long talk did she
4 I, V | the morning of the 16th April Lieutenant Jaspar Hobson
5 I, V | companions in exile.~On the 16th April dogs and sledges were awaiting
6 I, V | rays of the sun when its April beams cannot melt the icicles
7 I, XXII | commence until early in April. The ice burst with a noise
8 I, XXII | the horizon. On the 15th April the sea was open, and a
9 I, XXIII| Asia; a fourth on the 9th April 1896, visible in Greenland,
10 II, II | likely towards the end of April; the ice-field broke up
11 II, IX | first half of the month of April; but towards the end the
12 II, XV | commence at the beginning of April. At least that is my opinion.” “
13 II, XV | were completed early in April, and their utility, or rather
14 II, XV | from the 2nd to the 5th April. The weather was warm but
15 II, XV | on the night of the 7th April that the actual breaking
16 II, XV | of the 8th, 9th, and 10th April, seemed, however, to prove
17 II, XV | the morning of the 11th April, Hobson showed Kalumah the
18 II, XV | disappear until the 15th April, but on the morning of that
19 II, XVII | altitudes, and the next day, April 16th, after ascertaining
20 II, XVII | fear from them.~On the 20th April Lieutenant Hobson ascertained
21 II, XVII | Pacific.~About the 25th April the bearing of the island
22 II, XVII | ice-field. On the 30th of April, both were together drifting
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