Part, Chapter
1 I, III | arrived in so strange a manner showed no signs of returning
2 I, VI | icebergs, which assumed all manner of picturesque forms, and
3 I, VI | ice, touched them with all manner of colours. One might have
4 I, XI | would not encamp in the same manner.”~Mrs Barnett was right;
5 I, XII | were populated in the same manner.~The ocean which bathed
6 I, XIV | everything in the most methodical manner, feeling confident that
7 I, XIV | in his usual sententious manner—~“A Scotchman would call
8 I, XVI | courtesy and kindliness of manner, that it would have seemed
9 I, XVII | howling in a threatening manner. Although not dangerous
10 I, XVIII| week passed in a similar manner; fortunately the rein-deer
11 I, XIX | another animal in the same manner. Once in, there was no getting
12 I, XIX | before her mouth in the manner enjoined by the first rules
13 I, XX | country in a weird, unearthly manner.~“It is more beautiful than
14 II, VI | long time and cause all manner of havoc. Yet Hobson, who
15 II, VI | announced these tidings with the manner of one bringing good news,
16 II, XXII | in an absent indifferent manner, as if nothing could ever
17 II, XXIII| Barnett, terrified at his manner, threw herself upon him
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