Part, Chapter
1 I, III | the snow, already a foot deep; he waded through it, although
2 I, VII | hour the snow was a foot deep, and as it did not freeze
3 I, IX | the lake not being very deep, struck against the bottom
4 I, X | eighty-five or ninety miles. The deep hollow formed by the gulf
5 I, X | the Coppermine was both deep and wide; its waters were
6 I, XI | were neither clumsy nor deep.~But who could the light-hearted
7 I, XII | travellers skirted round another deep bay called Washburn Bay,
8 I, XV | water three hundred fathoms deep. It is probable that ages
9 I, XVI | across the stream, which was deep and rapid enough not to
10 I, XIX | trench was dug twelve feet deep, and of a uniform width
11 II, V | eventually be swallowed up by the deep, and it was no wonder that
12 II, V | sound the trench, to see how deep the water was, and to my
13 II, VII | to be swallowed up by the deep, leaving no trace behind
14 II, X | might be swallowed up by the deep, and the only thing which
15 II, XIII | intersected with wide and deep crevasses not yet frozen
16 II, XVIII| be more than fifty feet deep. It would be easy enough
17 II, XVIII| although only sixty feet deep, covered a space more than
18 II, XVIII| the shaft was fifty feet deep altogether, having been
19 II, XX | whilst Victoria Island, not deep enough in the water to come
20 II, XXI | force of the current was deep down below the waves, not
21 II, XXIII| of the barracks, was sunk deep into the earth and sand
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