Part, Chapter
1 I, VII | their energies with the bitter cold !”~“You think, then,
2 I, VIII | generally three or four bitter days in May; and they were
3 I, XIII | the winter, with its first bitter frosts and long nights,
4 I, XX | hurried out, in spite of the bitter gale and biting cold, to
5 I, XXII | protected them through the bitter winter; but they had still
6 I, XXII | Arctic winter, with its bitter winds, its whirlpools of
7 II, II | could be no doubt that the bitter cold of winter would solder
8 II, IV | of the winter, with its bitter cold! Would that the column
9 II, V | hold together until the bitter cold of winter should thicken
10 II, X | them was the winter, the bitter winter which was fortunately
11 II, XII | been noticed that two long bitter winters seldom succeed each
12 II, XII | northern seas know it well. A bitter winter when we should have
13 II, XII | been noticed that two long bitter winters seldom succeed each
14 II, XII | northern seas know it well. A bitter winter when we should have
15 II, XIX | time; all that recalled the bitter cold of the Polar regions
16 II, XXIII| considerable thickness. The long bitter Polar winters must have “
|