Part, Chapter
1 I, II | match in hand, awaited the order of his Captain, as if he
2 I, II | matter.”~And at his chief’s order, the Sergeant, leaving his
3 I, V | I gave you an impossible order— “~“Lieutenant, there is
4 I, V | such thing as an impossible order.”~“What? Suppose now I ordered
5 I, VII | Sergeant Long, gave the order to halt. It was now necessary
6 I, X | storm having abated, the order was given to start.~Sergeant
7 I, X | sledges drawn up in good order at the door of the enceinte,
8 I, X | resolutely resisted fatigue in order to reach the Arctic Ocean
9 I, XII | for some twenty miles, in order the more easily to pass
10 I, XII | surrounding district in order to ascertain its resources.
11 I, XIII | them except at the ends, in order to form the tenons and mortises
12 I, XIV | dogs.”~The Lieutenant loved order, and determined to do everything
13 I, XVI | have to be surmounted in order to obtain them, they might
14 I, XVII | were hung with skins, in order to prevent the formation
15 I, XVIII| house had to be kept in order, the rooms must be swept,
16 I, XIX | obedience to the Lieutenant’s order, Joliffe brought some reindeer-venison,
17 II, VI | necessary to keep in good order. With the roaring of the
18 II, VI | summit of Cape Bathurst, in order to examine the state of
19 II, X | encircling the island, in order to ascertain its thickness,
20 II, X | have felt it my duty, in order to spare you useless anxiety,
21 II, XXII | the Lieutenant resolved to order the embarkation of everything
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