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The Field of Ice

The Field of Ice

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Chapter 1 The Doctor's Inventory

Word Count: 1659    |    Released on: 19/11/2017

n human power now, and, after having struggled for nine months against currents and tempests, shattering icebergs and breaking through almost insurmountable barrie

g spirits among them had left him and his little band of men in a terrible situation - helpless in an icy d

e three men which were left him were the best on board h

e was to look their prospects fairly in the face, and know the exact state of things. Ac

l smouldering, and here and there in the distance spiral wreaths of smoke, met his eye on all sides. His cabin and all his precious treasures were gone, his books, and instru

ome of us?" as

" was the old

nny, "do not let us d

ime to show our mettle. We are in a bad plight,

grown so attached to her. I loved her as one

old those planks and beams

- is that burnt?"

Shandon and his gang

he pir

op. Do you see those bits of sheet-i

nothing but th

l, thanks to your idea

much," sai

exclaimed Johnson. "Heaven

they have been tried. Only the best remain good in the evil day; few ca

re silent, and then Johnson aske

ut a mile off,"

rge of

n is dead,

son d

gave way entirely,

who knows if he isn't

have left behind, we have

ying

ptain Al

he informed Johnson

d Johnson, as the

But I wonder what the Porpoise was,

e rest of foolhardy adventurers; b

shook his

d not even get as far as the place

fuel whatever?" s

N

o prov

N

make our way b

hese gloomy realities, but, after a

he first thing to be done now is to make a hut, fo

e Doctor. "Then we must go and find the sledge, and bring

always forgetting his own tr

into space, but his face had recovered its calm, self-possessed expression. His faithful dog stood beside hi

on had to take vigorous measures to rouse him, but at last,

eed a place to put our heads in. Come and help me, Bell. You haven't forgotten how to make a snow hut, have you? There is an

p his comrade, while Mr. Clawbonny underto

th him, captain

ke the task. Before the day ends I must come to some resolution, and I need to be al

ack to the Doc

ms quite to have got over his anger. I

lawbonny. "Believe me, Johns

d as possible, the Doctor seized his iron-tip

of ice; but it was not easy work, owing to the extreme hardness of the material. However, this very hardness

d stood motionless, evidently shrinking fr

lds of the tent. The poor dogs were so exhausted from starvation that they could scarcely draw it along, a

time the hut was completed, had filled it with wood and got it lighted. Before long it was roaring, and diffusing a genial warmth on all sides. The American was brought in and laid on blankets, and the four Engli

octor rose and went out, maki

off, and our treasures are scattered in all directions; so we had better begin, and pick them up as fast a

n," replied Johnson. "Fire and f

ll take the other, and we'll search

50 lbs. of pemmican, three sacks of biscuits, a small stock of chocolate, five or

, nor clothing - all had been

y last three weeks, and they had wood enough

ill, and before long returned bringing the few but precious treasures found among the débris of the brig. These were safely deposite

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The Field of Ice
The Field of Ice
“Jules Gabriel Verne (1828-1905) was a French author who pioneered the science-fiction genre. He is best known for novels such as Journey to the Centre of the Earth (1864), Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (1870), and Around the World in Eighty Days (1873). Verne wrote about space, air and underwater travel before air travel and practical submarines were invented, and before practical means of space travel had been devised. He is the third most translated author in the world, according to Index Translationum. Some of his books have been made into films. Verne, along with Hugo Gernsback and H. G. Wells, is often popularly referred to as the "Father of Science Fiction." Amongst his other works are From the Earth to the Moon (1867), Five Weeks in a Balloon (1869), The Fur Country; or, Seventy Degrees North Latitude (1873), The Blockade Runners (1874), The Field of Ice (1875), The Mysterious Island (1875), Facing the Flag (1879), and An Antarctic Mystery (1899).”
1 Chapter 1 The Doctor's Inventory2 Chapter 2 First Words of Altamont3 Chapter 3 A Seventeen Days' March4 Chapter 4 The Last Charge of Powder5 Chapter 5 The Seal and the Bear6 Chapter 6 The Porpoise7 Chapter 7 An Important Discussion8 Chapter 8 An Excursion to the North of Victoria Bay9 Chapter 9 Cold and Heat10 Chapter 10 Winter Pleasures 11 Chapter 11 Traces of Bears12 Chapter 12 Imprisoned in Doctor's House13 Chapter 13 The Mine14 Chapter 14 An Arctic Spring15 Chapter 15 The North-West Passage16 Chapter 16 Arctic Arcadia17 Chapter 17 Altamont's Revenge18 Chapter 18 Final Preparations19 Chapter 19 March to the North20 Chapter 20 Footprints in the Snow21 Chapter 21 The Open Sea22 Chapter 22 Getting Near the Pole23 Chapter 23 The English Flag24 Chapter 24 Mount Hatteras25 Chapter 25 Return South26 Chapter 26 Conclusion