Part, Chapter
1 I, VII | how many travellers have fallen victims to savages. But
2 I, IX | thick mist, the wind had fallen, but - an ominous moaning
3 I, XIX | enough what creature has fallen into our pit.”~“A bear?”
4 I, XXI | reached the shed. He had fallen fainting to the ground,
5 I, XXIII| it !~The astronomer had fallen backwards, completely overcome.
6 II, III | the messengers may have fallen into the hands of the shipwrecked
7 II, V | sir; and if any animal had fallen in, it would certainly have
8 II, VII | the spot on which they had fallen, and it was only after many
9 II, VIII | a woman or a child has fallen here exhausted, and risen
10 II, XII | Although the thermometer had fallen slightly, the cold had not
11 II, XV | hours. The night had now fallen, and it was too dark to
12 II, XVII | miles off in the offing, had fallen upon the coast of the island.
13 II, XVIII| broken ice-masses, it had fallen bodily upon Victoria Island,
14 II, XVIII| by a huge iceberg it had fallen bodily upon the factory,
15 II, XIX | ice-wall had heeled over and fallen upon the island, and concluded
16 II, XXIII| stores of Fort Hope, had fallen into a kind of torpor, with
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