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" ... breaking up round us, as well as to attend to the drying of the clothes, each man alternately taking this duty for one hour. We then concluded our day with prayers, and, having put on our fur dresses, lay down to sleep with a degree of comfort which... "
Voyages of Discovery & Research Within the Arctic Regions, from the Year ... - Página 293
por Sir John Barrow - 1846 - 359 páginas
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Quarterly Review, Volumen37,Tema 73

1828 - 598 páginas
...down to sleep with a degree of comfort, which perhaps few persons would imagine possible under such circumstances ; our chief inconvenience being, that...60" to 66*, obliging us to throw off a part of our fur-dress. After we had slept seven hours, the man appointed to boil the cocoa roused us, when it was...
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The Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal: Exhibiting a View of the ..., Volumen4

1828 - 450 páginas
...down to sleep, with a degree of comfort which perhaps few persons would imagine possible under such circumstances ; our chief inconvenience being, that...rose as high as 60° to 66°, obliging us to throw oft' a part of our fur dress. After we had slept seven hours, the man appointed to boil the cocoa roused...
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The Quarterly Review, Volumen37

William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1828 - 608 páginas
...down to sleep with a degree of comfort, which perhaps few persons would imagine possible under such circumstances ; our chief inconvenience being, that...occasions, in calm and warm weather, it rose as high as 00° to <if>°, obliging us to throw off a part of our fur-dress. After we had slept seven hours, the...
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The Quarterly Review, Volumen37

William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1828 - 608 páginas
...down to sleep with a degree of comfort, which perhaps few persons would imagine possible under such circumstances ; our chief inconvenience being, that...temperature, while we slept, was usually from 36° to 4o°, according to the state of the external atmosphere ; but on one or two occasions, in calm and...
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The Quarterly Review, Volumen37

William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1828 - 626 páginas
...down to sleep with a degree of comfort, which perhaps few persons would imagine possible under such circumstances ; our chief inconvenience being, that...The temperature, while we slept, was usually from 30° to 45°, according to the state of the external atmosphere ; but on one or two occasions, in calm...
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The London encyclopaedia, or, Universal dictionary of ..., Parte2,Volumen17

Thomas Curtis (of Grove house sch, Islington) - 426 páginas
...down to sleep with a degree of comfort which perhaps few persons would imagine possible under such circumstances ; our chief inconvenience being that...60* to 66°, obliging us to throw off a part of our furdress. After we had slept seven hours, the man appointed to boil the cocoa roused us, when it was...
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The Quarterly review, Volumen37

1828 - 608 páginas
...down to sleep with a degree of comfort, which perhaps few persons ivoulc1 imagine possible under such circumstances :; our chief inconvenience' being, that...according to .the state of the external atmosphere ; but on.oneor two occasions, in calm and warm weather, it rose, as high as 00° to 00°, obliging us to...
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Chambers's papers for the people, Partes1-6

Chambers W. and R., ltd - 1850 - 794 páginas
...would imagine possible under such circumstances ; our chief inconvenience being, that we were somewhst pinched for room, and therefore obliged to stow rather...external atmosphere ; but on one or two occasions it rose as high as 60° to 66°, obliging us to throw off a part of our fur dress. After we liad slept...
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Sir John Franklin and the Arctic Regions ...

Peter Lund Simmonds - 1852 - 424 páginas
...down to sleep with a degree of comfort which perhaps few persons would imagine possible under such circumstances, our chief inconvenience being, that...obliged to stow rather closer than was quite agreeable. 5 ; This close stowage may be imagined when it is remembered that thirteen persons had to sleep in...
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The Travels and Adventures of Celebrated Travelers in the Principal ...

Henry Howe - 1854 - 740 páginas
...down to sleep with a degree of comfort which perhaps few persons would imagine possible under such circumstances ; our chief inconvenience being, that...closer than was quite agreeable. The temperature, «virile we slept, was usually from 36° to 46°, according to the state of the external atmosphere...
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