The realm of the ice king. By the author of 'Saved from the wreck'.London, 1874 |
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Página 21
... command of Sir Hugh Willoughby . It consisted of three vessels , the largest of which was only of a hundred and sixty tons burden , and sailed from the Thames on the 10th of May . The ships of those days , with their broad bows and ...
... command of Sir Hugh Willoughby . It consisted of three vessels , the largest of which was only of a hundred and sixty tons burden , and sailed from the Thames on the 10th of May . The ships of those days , with their broad bows and ...
Página 29
... command , and sailed from the Thames on the 26th of May , 1577 , taking the same course as before . Greenland was sighted on the 4th of July , and the explorers coasted along its desolate shores for four days , passing many gigantic ...
... command , and sailed from the Thames on the 26th of May , 1577 , taking the same course as before . Greenland was sighted on the 4th of July , and the explorers coasted along its desolate shores for four days , passing many gigantic ...
Página 43
... command was given to Henry Hudson , and the little bark left the Thames on the 1st of May . Steering northward until the sixty - fifth parallel was reached , they ran to the westward until , on the 13th of June , they were enveloped in ...
... command was given to Henry Hudson , and the little bark left the Thames on the 1st of May . Steering northward until the sixty - fifth parallel was reached , they ran to the westward until , on the 13th of June , they were enveloped in ...
Página 47
... command of Thomas Button , to discover Hudson and his unfortunate com- panions , should they yet be living . Bylot and another of the mutineers accompanied Button , who reached Hudson Bay without any mischance , and wintered there , but ...
... command of Thomas Button , to discover Hudson and his unfortunate com- panions , should they yet be living . Bylot and another of the mutineers accompanied Button , who reached Hudson Bay without any mischance , and wintered there , but ...
Página 63
... command of Captain Middleton , to search for such a passage westward of Hudson Bay . Middleton sailed in the spring of 1741 , reached the designated scene of his explo- rations without any mischance , and , doubling Cape Southamp- ton ...
... command of Captain Middleton , to search for such a passage westward of Hudson Bay . Middleton sailed in the spring of 1741 , reached the designated scene of his explo- rations without any mischance , and , doubling Cape Southamp- ton ...
Términos y frases comunes
afterwards anchored August Baffin Bay barrier of ice Barrow Strait bear became Beechey Behring Strait Bellot bergs boats broken Captain Kellett Chamisso Island channel cliffs coast of Greenland command crew crossed deer discovered discovery distance drifted east eastward encountered explorers farther feet floe following day Franklin expedition gale Greenland harbour headland Hecla Hudson Strait hundred icebergs journey July June Kolima Kotzebue Sound Lancaster Sound land latitude Lieutenant loose ice Maclintock Maclure masses of ice Melville Melville Island Melville Peninsula miles mountains mouth Muscovy Company named navigation night north-east north-west passage northern northward Nova Zembla open water parallel Parry party of Esquimaux reached Regent Inlet region Repulse Bay returned river rocks sailed seamen seen September ship shore Sir James Ross Sir John sledges Smith Sound southward Spitzbergen steered Tchuktche vessel voyage weather Wellington Channel westward Whale wind Winter Island Wrangell
Pasajes populares
Página 32 - He giveth snow like wool : he scattereth the hoar-frost like ashes. He casteth forth his ice like morsels : who can stand before his cold ? He sendeth out his word, and melteth them : he causeth his wind to blow, and the waters flow.
Página 14 - countless herds of reindeer, elks, black bears, foxes, sables, and gray squirrels, fill the upland forests ; stone foxes and wolves roam over the low grounds. Enormous flights of swans, geese, and ducks arrive in spring, and seek deserts where they may moult and build their nests in safety. Eagles, owls, and gulls pursue their prey along the seacoast; ptarmigan run in troops among the bushes ; little snipes are busy along the brooks and in the morasses ; the social crows seek the neighbourhood of...
Página 20 - Henry the 7. who then raigned, insomuch that all men with great admiration affirmed it to be a thing more divine than humane, to saile by the West into the East where spices growe, by a way that was never knowen before, by this fame and report there increased in my heart a great flame of desire to attempt some notable thing.
Página 133 - When all is ice, and all one dazzling mass of white — when the surface of the sea itself is tossed up and fixed into rocks, w^hile the land is, on the contrary, very often flat, it is not always so easy a problem as it might seem on a superficial view, to determine a fact which appears in words to be extremely simple.
Página 34 - And never more, on sea or shore, Should Sir Humphrey see the light. He sat upon the deck, The Book was in his hand ; " Do not fear ! Heaven is as near...
Página 135 - I thanked every one for their excellent conduct, and cautioned them, as we should, in all probability, soon appear before our Maker, to enter his presence as men resigned to their fate.
Página 134 - As soon as I had satisfied my own mind, I made known to the party the gratifying result of all our joint labor ; and it was then that, amidst mutual congratulations, we fixed the British flag on the spot and took possession of the North Magnetic Pole and its adjoining territory in the name of Great Britain and King William the Fourth.
Página 114 - ... it was evident that the portion of ice which still divided the channel from the open ocean, would soon be completely destroyed. Had we attempted to...
Página 20 - I began therefore to sail toward the north-west, not thinking to find any other land than that of Cathay, and from thence to turn toward India...
Página 128 - As we traveled by far the greater part of our distance on the ice three and not infrequently five times over, we may safely multiply the length of the road by two and a half, so that our whole distance, on a very moderate calculation, amounted to 580 geographical or 668 statute miles, being nearly sufficient to have reached the pole in a direct line.