Part, Chapter
1 I, I | Hearne, Mackenzie, Rae, Franklin, and others. What fatigues,
2 I, II | of the Coppermine River; Franklin, in 1819 to 1822, along
3 I, V | must still remember that Franklin and his unfortunate companions
4 I, VII | little known. Mackenzie, Franklin, Penny, Kane, Parry, Rae, &
5 I, VII | regions - Parry, Penny, Franklin, M’Clure, Dane, and Morton —
6 I, VIII| afforded easy access to Fort Franklin, on the southern shores,
7 I, IX | south, “we may see Fort Franklin before Fort Confidence.”~“
8 I, IX | get back even from Fort Franklin?”~“Yes, madam, if we ever
9 I, X | 1815 to 1818, Ross, Parry, Franklin, and others have attempted
10 I, X | thanks to it that Captain Franklin was able to accomplish his
11 I, X | his sufferings, Captain Franklin explored no less than five
12 I, X | King William’s Land, where Franklin met his fate? Was it not
13 I, XII | more easily to pass round Franklin Bay. The country was still
14 I, XV | navigators, such as Parry, Franklin, the two Rosses, M’Clure,
15 I, XV | to believe; such men as Franklin, Parry, Ross, and others,
16 II, III | acquaint the survivors of the Franklin expedition with the presence
17 II, V | navigators. Parry, Penny, and Franklin had met with ice-fields
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