Part, Chapter
1 I, XII | observation was taken.~All watched in anxious silence.~“Noon!”
2 I, XII | from the inhabited world, watched the mighty luminary of day
3 I, XIX | greater refinement, and watched Mrs Barnett and the women
4 I, XX | bears, whose movements were watched with great interest.~On
5 I, XX | the soldiers rose as they watched the flickering illumination,
6 I, XXI | the bears were attentively watched. Every now and then one
7 I, XXI | and Mrs Barnett and Madge watched by him until the next morning.~
8 I, XXII | the cape were carefully watched. The British flag waved
9 I, XXIII| Eclipses have very rarely been watched near the Pole, where the
10 I, XXIII| pointed it upon the sun; he watched the orb of day pass the
11 II, V | the Lieutenant have once watched the progress of his establishment!
12 II, V | what delight would he have watched the houses, sheds, and magazines
13 II, VII | seen. For ten minutes they watched, hoping against hope, and
14 II, VIII | bear, and the two women watched it with beating hearts.
15 II, X | free, and their captors watched them wing their way to the
16 II, X | combined to any extent.~Hobson watched the appearance of the “young
17 II, XIV | movements of the visitor were watched. The bear, finding the postern
18 II, XV | its movements ought to be watched with the greatest care,
19 II, XVIII| and Hobson and Mac-Nab watched them at work without a moment’
20 II, XXII | word was spoken, but all watched in breathless silence as
21 II, XXIII| dissolution could actually be watched at the edges, for as the
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