Part, Chapter
1 I, III | got up without a murmur, closed the gate, and returned to
2 I, III | untrimmed, his eyes were closed, and his lips pressed together
3 I, VIII | birds whose beak is never closed, skimmed the surface of
4 I, XIII | so to speak, hermetically closed, and the inside temperature
5 I, XIII | useless, and have to be kept closed and defended by heavy shutters
6 I, XVIII| shutters were hermetically closed, and the lamps were kept
7 I, XVIII| and the window was again closed; but after that the snow
8 I, XVIII| in the walls had not been closed up. The animals were all
9 I, XVIII| the house, the window, was closed, and the party sat down
10 I, XXI | outside shutters had not been closed; but before it could be
11 I, XXI | was, therefore, quickly closed up with bars, which the
12 I, XXI | back to the passage and closed the second door, behind
13 II, III | Long’s most sensible remark closed the conversation, and the
14 II, VII | was opened, Mrs Barnett closed it behind the Lieutenant
15 II, VII | neither spoke. With eyes half closed they lay in a kind of torpor,
16 II, VII | to pierce the gloom which closed them in on every side; but
17 II, XIV | large room, the windows were closed, but not the shutters.~Through
18 II, XVII | Michael during the storm had closed in the winter, and there
19 II, XX | Michael, which the winter had closed, had reopened gradually,
20 II, XXII | next night. Who could have closed his eyes with the knowledge
21 II, XXIII| the cover of which was closed and bolted. The pumps were
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