Part, Chapter
1 I, III | hurried to do the same for the inside, and hastily fetched a few
2 I, XIII | hermetically closed, and the inside temperature would be kept
3 I, XIII | of the house-outside and inside walls, flooring, ceiling,
4 I, XIII | at the extremities of the inside walls, to form the skeleton
5 I, XIII | The timbers, both in the inside and outside walls, were
6 I, XIII | being quickly fitted up inside. By means of a double door
7 I, XVIII| to open the window from inside, but the shutter outside
8 I, XVIII| between the temperature inside and outside being some fifty-four
9 I, XVIII| would be to dig away the ice inside the enceinte, so as to form
10 I, XIX | the smoke from the fire inside made its way. These snow-houses,
11 I, XIX | with paying their respects inside.~And Mrs Barnett soon discovered
12 I, XX | was no disagreeable smell inside, although for a long distance
13 I, XX | difficult enough to endure the inside temperature, even with the
14 I, XXI | passage to be barricaded inside; it was the only unprotected
15 I, XXI | access to the outer air; the inside temperature being already
16 II, V | a door of communication inside, so that there would be
17 II, V | that the soft hair was both inside and outside of the clothes;
18 II, VI | They went on improving the inside of the various buildings,
19 II, X | condensers were again set up inside the house, the air vessel
20 II, XV | vertical props were placed inside the rooms to afford additional
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