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+<html>
+<head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1">
+ <title>The Project Gutenberg e-Book of The English at the North Pole, by Jules Verne</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+ <!--
+ body {margin:10%; text-align:justify}
+ h1 {text-align:center}
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+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The English at the North Pole, by Jules Verne
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The English at the North Pole
+ Part I of the Adventures of Captain Hatteras
+
+Author: Jules Verne
+
+Release Date: September 24, 2007 [EBook #22759]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ENGLISH AT THE NORTH POLE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Ron Swanson
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+[Transcriber's note: This book contains many references to geographic features which may
+differ from modern maps. The attached <a href="images/map.jpg">map</a>, although not
+a part of this edition of <i>The English at the North Pole</i>, may be helpful to readers who
+wish to follow the geographic course of the narrative. (Map obtained from Wikipedia.)]
+<br><br>
+<br><br>
+<br><br>
+<br><br>
+<h1>THE ENGLISH AT THE NORTH POLE</h1>
+<br>
+<h4>PART I</h4>
+<center><small>OF</small></center>
+<h3>THE ADVENTURES OF CAPTAIN HATTERAS</h3>
+<br><br>
+<center>BY</center>
+<br>
+<h2>JULES VERNE</h2>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h3>CONTENTS</h3>
+
+<table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="3" summary="table of contents">
+ <tr>
+ <td width="10%" align="right"><small><small>CHAP.</small></small></td>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">I.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap1">THE "FORWARD"</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">II.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap2">AN UNEXPECTED LETTER</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">III.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap3">DR. CLAWBONNY</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">IV.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap4">DOG-CAPTAIN</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">V.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap5">OUT AT SEA</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">VI.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap6">THE GREAT POLAR CURRENT</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">VII.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap7">DAVIS'S STRAITS</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">VIII.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap8">GOSSIP OF THE CREW</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">IX.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap9">NEWS</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">X.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap10">DANGEROUS NAVIGATION</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XI.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap11">THE DEVIL'S THUMB</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XII.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap12">CAPTAIN HATTERAS</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XIII.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap13">THE PROJECTS OF HATTERAS</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XIV.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap14">EXPEDITION IN SEARCH OF FRANKLIN</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XV.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap15">THE "FORWARD" DRIVEN BACK SOUTH</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XVI.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap16">THE MAGNETIC POLE</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XVII.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap17">THE FATE OF SIR JOHN FRANKLIN</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XVIII.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap18">THE NORTHERN ROUTE</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XIX.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap19">A WHALE IN SIGHT</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XX.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap20">BEECHEY ISLAND</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XXI.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap21">THE DEATH OF BELLOT</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XXII.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap22">BEGINNING OF REVOLT</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XXIII.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap23">ATTACKED BY ICEBERGS</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XXIV.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap24">PREPARATIONS FOR WINTERING</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XXV.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap25">AN OLD FOX</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XXVI.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap26">THE LAST LUMP OF COAL</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XXVII.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap27">CHRISTMAS</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XXVIII.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap28">PREPARATIONS FOR DEPARTURE</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XXIX.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap29">ACROSS THE ICE</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XXX.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap30">THE CAIRN</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XXXI.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap31">THE DEATH OF SIMPSON</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="right">XXXII.</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#chap32">THE RETURN</a></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap1"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
+
+<center>THE "FORWARD"</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>"To-morrow, at low tide, the brig <i>Forward</i>, Captain K. Z&mdash;&mdash;, Richard
+Shandon mate, will start from New Prince's Docks for an unknown
+destination."</p>
+
+<p>The foregoing might have been read in the <i>Liverpool Herald</i> of April
+5th, 1860. The departure of a brig is an event of little importance
+for the most commercial port in England. Who would notice it in the
+midst of vessels of all sorts of tonnage and nationality that six
+miles of docks can hardly contain? However, from daybreak on the 6th
+of April a considerable crowd covered the wharfs of New Prince's
+Docks&mdash;the innumerable companies of sailors of the town seemed to
+have met there. Workmen from the neighbouring wharfs had left their
+work, merchants their dark counting-houses, tradesmen their shops.
+The different-coloured omnibuses that ran along the exterior wall
+of the docks brought cargoes of spectators at every moment; the town
+seemed to have but one pre-occupation, and that was to see the
+<i>Forward</i> go out.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Forward</i> was a vessel of a hundred and seventy tons, charged
+with a screw and steam-engine of a hundred and twenty horse-power.
+It might easily have been confounded with the other brigs in the port.
+But though it offered nothing curious to the eyes of the public,
+connoisseurs remarked certain peculiarities in it that a sailor
+cannot mistake. On board the <i>Nautilus</i>, anchored at a little distance,
+a group of sailors were hazarding a thousand conjectures about the
+destination of the <i>Forward</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know what to think about its masting," said one; "it isn't
+usual for steamboats to have so much sail."</p>
+
+<p>"That ship," said a quartermaster with a big red face&mdash;"that ship
+will have to depend more on her masts than her engine, and the topsails
+are the biggest because the others will be often useless. I haven't
+got the slightest doubt that the <i>Forward</i> is destined for the Arctic
+or Antarctic seas, where the icebergs stop the wind more than is good
+for a brave and solid ship."</p>
+
+<p>"You must be right, Mr. Cornhill," said a third sailor. "Have you
+noticed her stern, how straight it falls into the sea?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the quartermaster, "and it is furnished with a steel
+cutter as sharp as a razor and capable of cutting a three-decker in
+two if the <i>Forward</i> were thrown across her at top speed."</p>
+
+<p>"That's certain," said a Mersey pilot; "for that 'ere vessel runs
+her fourteen knots an hour with her screw. It was marvellous to see
+her cutting the tide when she made her trial trip. I believe you,
+she's a quick un."</p>
+
+<p>"The canvas isn't intricate either," answered Mr. Cornhill; "it goes
+straight before the wind, and can be managed by hand. That ship is
+going to try the Polar seas, or my name isn't what it is. There's
+something else&mdash;do you see the wide helm-port that the head of her
+helm goes through?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's there, sure enough," answered one; "but what does that prove?"</p>
+
+<p>"That proves, my boys," said Mr. Cornhill with disdainful
+satisfaction, "that you don't know how to put two and two together
+and make it four; it proves that they want to be able to take off
+the helm when they like, and you know it's a manoeuvre that's often
+necessary when you have ice to deal with."</p>
+
+<p>"That's certain," answered the crew of the <i>Nautilus</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Besides," said one of them, "the way she's loaded confirms Mr.
+Cornhill's opinion. Clifton told me. The <i>Forward</i> is victualled and
+carries coal enough for five or six years. Coals and victuals are
+all its cargo, with a stock of woollen garments and sealskins."</p>
+
+<p>"Then," said the quartermaster, "there is no more doubt on the matter;
+but you, who know Clifton, didn't he tell you anything about her
+destination?"</p>
+
+<p>"He couldn't tell me; he doesn't know; the crew was engaged without
+knowing. He'll only know where he's going when he gets there."</p>
+
+<p>"I shouldn't wonder if they were going to the devil," said an
+unbeliever: "it looks like it."</p>
+
+<p>"And such pay," said Clifton's friend, getting warm&mdash;"five times more
+than the ordinary pay. If it hadn't been for that, Richard Shandon
+wouldn't have found a soul to go with him. A ship with a queer shape,
+going nobody knows where, and looking more like not coming back than
+anything else, it wouldn't have suited this child."</p>
+
+<p>"Whether it would have suited you or not," answered Cornhill, "you
+couldn't have been one of the crew of the <i>Forward</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"And why, pray?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because you don't fulfil the required conditions. I read that all
+married men were excluded, and you are in the category, so you needn't
+talk. Even the very name of the ship is a bold one. The
+<i>Forward</i>&mdash;where is it to be forwarded to? Besides, nobody knows who
+the captain is."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, they do," said a simple-faced young sailor.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, you don't mean to say that you think Shandon is the captain
+of the <i>Forward</i>?" said Cornhill.</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;&mdash;" answered the young sailor&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Shandon is commander, and nothing else; he's a brave and bold
+sailor, an experienced whaler, and a jolly fellow worthy in every
+respect to be the captain, but he isn't any more captain than you
+or I. As to who is going to command after God on board he doesn't
+know any more than we do. When the moment has come the true captain
+will appear, no one knows how nor where, for Richard Shandon has not
+said and hasn't been allowed to say to what quarter of the globe he
+is going to direct his ship."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Mr. Cornhill," continued the young sailor, "I assure you that
+there is someone on board who was announced in the letter, and that
+Mr. Shandon was offered the place of second to."</p>
+
+<p>"What!" said Cornhill, frowning, "do you mean to maintain that the
+<i>Forward</i> has a captain on board?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Mr. Cornhill."</p>
+
+<p>"Where did you get your precious information from?"</p>
+
+<p>"From Johnson, the boatswain."</p>
+
+<p>"From Johnson?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Johnson told you so?"</p>
+
+<p>"He not only told me so, but he showed me the captain."</p>
+
+<p>"He showed him to you!" said Cornhill, stupefied. "And who is it,
+pray?"</p>
+
+<p>"A dog."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean by a dog?"</p>
+
+<p>"A dog on four legs."</p>
+
+<p>Stupefaction reigned amongst the crew of the <i>Nautilus</i>. Under any
+other circumstances they would have burst out laughing. A dog captain
+of a vessel of a hundred and seventy tons burden! It was enough to
+make them laugh. But really the <i>Forward</i> was such an extraordinary
+ship that they felt it might be no laughing matter, and they must
+be sure before they denied it. Besides, Cornhill himself didn't laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"So Johnson showed you the new sort of captain, did he?" added he,
+addressing the young sailor, "and you saw him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, as plainly as I see you now."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and what do you think about it?" asked the sailors of the
+quartermaster.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think anything," he answered shortly. "I don't think anything,
+except that the <i>Forward</i> is a ship belonging to the devil, or madmen
+fit for nothing but Bedlam."</p>
+
+<p>The sailors continued silently watching the <i>Forward</i>, whose
+preparations for departure were drawing to an end; there was not one
+of them who pretended that Johnson had only been laughing at the young
+sailor. The history of the dog had already made the round of the town,
+and amongst the crowd of spectators many a one looked out for the
+dog-captain and believed him to be a supernatural animal. Besides,
+the <i>Forward</i> had been attracting public attention for some months
+past. Everything about her was marvellous; her peculiar shape, the
+mystery which surrounded her, the incognito kept by the captain, the
+way Richard Shandon had received the proposition to direct her, the
+careful selection of the crew, her unknown destination, suspected
+only by a few&mdash;all about her was strange.</p>
+
+<p>To a thinker, dreamer, or philosopher nothing is more affecting than
+the departure of a ship; his imagination plays round the sails, sees
+her struggles with the sea and the wind in the adventurous journey
+which does not always end in port; when in addition to the ordinary
+incidents of departure there are extraordinary ones, even minds
+little given to credulity let their imagination run wild.</p>
+
+<p>So it was with the <i>Forward</i>, and though the generality of people
+could not make the knowing remarks of Quartermaster Cornhill, it did
+not prevent the ship forming the subject of Liverpool gossip for three
+long months. The ship had been put in dock at Birkenhead, on the
+opposite side of the Mersey. The builders, Scott and Co., amongst
+the first in England, had received an estimate and detailed plan from
+Richard Shandon; it informed them of the exact tonnage, dimensions,
+and store room that the brig was to have. They saw by the details
+given that they had to do with a consummate seaman. As Shandon had
+considerable funds at his disposal, the work advanced rapidly,
+according to the recommendation of the owner. The brig was constructed
+of a solidity to withstand all tests; it was evident that she was
+destined to resist enormous pressure, for her ribs were built of
+teak-wood, a sort of Indian oak, remarkable for its extreme hardness,
+and were, besides, plated with iron. Sailors asked why the hull of
+a vessel made so evidently for resistance was not built of sheet-iron
+like other steamboats, and were told it was because the mysterious
+engineer had his own reasons for what he did.</p>
+
+<p>Little by little the brig grew on the stocks, and her qualities of
+strength and delicacy struck connoisseurs. As the sailors of the
+<i>Nautilus</i> had remarked, her stern formed a right angle with her keel;
+her steel prow, cast in the workshop of R. Hawthorn, of Newcastle,
+shone in the sun and gave a peculiar look to the brig, though otherwise
+she had nothing particularly warlike about her. However, a 16-pounder
+cannon was installed on the forecastle; it was mounted on a pivot,
+so that it might easily be turned in any direction; but neither the
+cannon nor the stern, steel-clad as they were, succeeded in looking
+warlike.</p>
+
+<p>On the 5th of February, 1860, this strange vessel was launched in
+the midst of an immense concourse of spectators, and the trial trip
+was perfectly successful. But if the brig was neither a man-of-war,
+a merchant vessel, nor a pleasure yacht&mdash;for a pleasure trip is not
+made with six years' provisions in the hold&mdash;what was it? Was it a
+vessel destined for another Franklin expedition? It could not be,
+because in 1859, the preceding year, Captain McClintock had returned
+from the Arctic seas, bringing the certain proof of the loss of the
+unfortunate expedition. Was the <i>Forward</i> going to attempt the famous
+North-West passage? What would be the use? Captain McClure had
+discovered it in 1853, and his lieutenant, Creswell, was the first
+who had the honour of rounding the American continent from Behring's
+Straits to Davis's Straits. Still it was certain to competent judges
+that the <i>Forward</i> was prepared to face the ice regions. Was it going
+to the South Pole, farther than the whaler Weddell or Captain James
+Ross? But, if so, what for?</p>
+
+<p>The day after the brig was floated her engine was sent from Hawthorn's
+foundry at Newcastle. It was of a hundred and twenty horse-power,
+with oscillating cylinders, taking up little room; its power was
+considerable for a hundred-and-seventy-ton brig, with so much sail,
+too, and of such fleetness. Her trial trips had left no doubt on that
+subject, and even the boatswain, Johnson, had thought right to express
+his opinion to Clifton's friend&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"When the <i>Forward</i> uses her engine and sails at the same time, her
+sails will make her go the quickest."</p>
+
+<p>Clifton's friend did not understand him, but he thought anything
+possible of a ship commanded by a dog. After the engine was installed
+on board, the stowage of provisions began. This was no slight work,
+for the vessel was to carry enough for six years. They consisted of
+dry and salted meat, smoked fish, biscuit, and flour; mountains of
+tea and coffee were thrown down the shafts in perfect avalanches.
+Richard Shandon presided over the management of this precious cargo
+like a man who knows what he is about; all was stowed away, ticketed,
+and numbered in perfect order; a very large provision of the Indian
+preparation called pemmican, which contains many nutritive elements
+in a small volume, was also embarked. The nature of the provisions
+left no doubt about the length of the cruise, and the sight of the
+barrels of lime-juice, lime-drops, packets of mustard, grains of
+sorrel and <i>cochlearia</i>, all antiscorbutic, confirmed the opinion
+on the destination of the brig for the ice regions; their influence
+is so necessary in Polar navigation. Shandon had doubtless received
+particular instructions about this part of the cargo, which, along
+with the medicine-chest, he attended to particularly.</p>
+
+<p>Although arms were not numerous on board, the powder-magazine
+overflowed. The one cannon could not pretend to use the contents.
+That gave people more to think about. There were also gigantic saws
+and powerful instruments, such as levers, leaden maces, handsaws,
+enormous axes, etc., without counting a considerable quantity of
+blasting cylinders, enough to blow up the Liverpool Customs&mdash;all that
+was strange, not to say fearful, without mentioning rockets, signals,
+powder-chests, and beacons of a thousand different sorts. The
+numerous spectators on the wharfs of Prince's Docks admired likewise
+a long mahogany whaler, a tin <i>pirogue</i> covered with gutta-percha,
+and a certain quantity of halkett-boats, a sort of indiarubber cloaks
+that can be transformed into canoes by blowing in their lining.
+Expectation was on the <i>qui vive</i>, for the <i>Forward</i> was going out
+with the tide.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap2"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER II</h3>
+
+<center>AN UNEXPECTED LETTER</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The letter received by Richard Shandon, eight months before, ran as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+<br>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"A<small>BERDEEN</small>,</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"August 2nd, 1859.</p>
+
+<p>"To Mr. Richard Shandon,</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"Liverpool.</p>
+
+<p>"S<small>IR</small>,&mdash;I beg to advise you that the sum of sixteen thousand pounds
+sterling has been placed in the hands of Messrs. Marcuart and Co.,
+bankers, of Liverpool. I join herewith a series of cheques, signed
+by me, which will allow you to draw upon the said Messrs. Marcuart
+for the above-mentioned sum. You do not know me, but that is of no
+consequence. I know you: that is sufficient. I offer you the place
+of second on board the brig <i>Forward</i> for a voyage that may be long
+and perilous. If you agree to my conditions you will receive a salary
+of &pound;500, and all through the voyage it will be augmented
+one-tenth at the end of each year. The <i>Forward</i> is not yet in
+existence. You must have it built so as to be ready for sea at the
+beginning of April, 1860, at the latest. Herewith is a detailed plan
+and estimate. You will take care that it is scrupulously followed.
+The ship is to be built by Messrs. Scott and Co., who will settle
+with you. I particularly recommend you the choice of the <i>Forward's</i>
+crew; it will be composed of a captain, myself, of a second, you,
+of a third officer, a boatswain, two engineers, an ice pilot, eight
+sailors, and two others, eighteen men in all, comprising Dr. Clawbonny,
+of this town, who will introduce himself to you when necessary. The
+<i>Forward's</i> crew must be composed of Englishmen without incumbrance;
+they should be all bachelors and sober&mdash;for no spirits, nor even beer,
+will be allowed on board&mdash;ready to undertake anything, and to bear
+with anything. You will give the preference to men of a sanguine
+constitution, as they carry a greater amount of animal heat. Offer
+them five times the usual pay, with an increase of one-tenth for each
+year of service. At the end of the voyage five hundred pounds will
+be placed at the disposition of each, and two thousand at yours. These
+funds will be placed with Messrs. Marcuart and Co. The voyage will
+be long and difficult, but honourable, so you need not hesitate to
+accept my conditions. Be good enough to send your answer to K. Z.,
+Poste Restante, Goteborg, Sweden.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S.&mdash;On the 15th of February next you will receive a large Danish
+dog, with hanging lips, and tawny coat with black stripes. You will
+take it on board and have it fed with oaten bread, mixed with tallow
+grease. You will acknowledge the reception of the said dog to me under
+the same initials as above, Poste Restante, Leghorn, Italy.</p>
+
+<p>"The captain of the <i>Forward</i> will introduce himself to you when
+necessary. When you are ready to start you will receive further
+instructions.</p>
+
+<div align="right">"T<small>HE</small> C<small>APTAIN OF THE</small> 'F<small>ORWARD</small>,'
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br><br>"K. Z."
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</div>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap3"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER III</h3>
+
+<center>DR. CLAWBONNY</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Richard Shandon was a good sailor; he had been commander of whalers
+in the Arctic seas for many years, and had a wide reputation for skill.
+He might well be astonished at such a letter, and so he was, but
+astonished like a man used to astonishments. He fulfilled, too, all
+the required conditions: he had no wife, children, or relations; he
+was as free as a man could be. Having no one to consult, he went straight
+to Messrs. Marcuart's bank.</p>
+
+<p>"If the money is there," he said to himself, "I'll undertake the rest."</p>
+
+<p>He was received by the firm with all the attention due to a man with
+sixteen thousand pounds in their safes. Sure of that fact, Shandon
+asked for a sheet of letter-paper, and sent his acceptance in a large
+sailor's hand to the address indicated. The same day he put himself
+in communication with the Birkenhead shipbuilders, and twenty-four
+hours later the keel of the <i>Forward</i> lay on the stocks in the
+dockyard.</p>
+
+<p>Richard Shandon was a bachelor of forty, robust, energetic, and brave,
+three sailor-like qualities, giving their possessor confidence,
+vigour, and <i>sang-froid</i>. He was reputed jealous and hard to be
+pleased, so he was more feared than loved by his sailors. But this
+reputation did not increase the difficulty of finding a crew, for
+he was known to be a clever commander. He was afraid that the mystery
+of the enterprise would embarrass his movements, and he said to
+himself, "The best thing I can do is to say nothing at all; there
+are sea-dogs who will want to know the why and the wherefore of the
+business, and as I know nothing myself, I can't tell them. K. Z. is
+a queer fish, but after all he knows me, and has confidence in me;
+that's enough. As to the ship, she will be a handsome lass, and my
+name isn't Richard Shandon if she is not destined for the Frozen Seas.
+But I shall keep that to myself and my officers."</p>
+
+<p>Upon which Richard Shandon set about recruiting his crew upon the
+conditions of family and health exacted by the captain. He knew a
+brave fellow and capital sailor, named James Wall. Wall was about
+thirty, and had made more than one trip to the North Seas. Shandon
+offered him the post of third officer, and he accepted blindly; all
+he cared for was to sail, as he was devoted to his profession. Shandon
+told him and Johnson (whom he engaged as boatswain) all he knew about
+the business.</p>
+
+<p>"Just as soon go there as anywhere else," answered Wall. "If it's
+to seek the North-West passage, many have been and come back."</p>
+
+<p>"Been, yes; but come back I don't answer for," said Johnson; "but
+that's no reason for not going."</p>
+
+<p>"Besides, if we are not mistaken in our conjectures," said Shandon,
+"the voyage will be undertaken under good conditions. The <i>Forward's</i>
+a bonny lass, with a good engine, and will stand wear and tear.
+Eighteen men are all the crew we want."</p>
+
+<p>"Eighteen men?" said Johnson. "That's just the number that the
+American, Kane, had on board when he made his famous voyage towards
+the North Pole."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a singular fact that there's always some private individual
+trying to cross the sea from Davis's Straits to Behring's Straits.
+The Franklin expeditions have already cost England more than seven
+hundred and sixty thousand pounds without producing any practical
+result. Who the devil means to risk his fortune in such an enterprise?"</p>
+
+<p>"We are reasoning now on a simple hypothesis," said Shandon. "I don't
+know if we are really going to the Northern or Southern Seas. Perhaps
+we are going on a voyage of discovery. We shall know more when Dr.
+Clawbonny comes; I daresay he will tell us all about it."</p>
+
+<p>"There's nothing for it but to wait," answered Johnson; "I'll go and
+hunt up some solid subjects, captain; and as to their animal heat,
+I guarantee beforehand you can trust me for that."</p>
+
+<p>Johnson was a valuable acquisition; he understood the navigation of
+these high latitudes. He was quartermaster on board the <i>Phoenix</i>,
+one of the vessels of the Franklin expedition of 1853. He was witness
+of the death of the French lieutenant Bellot, whom he had accompanied
+in his expedition across the ice. Johnson knew the maritime population
+of Liverpool, and started at once on his recruiting expedition.
+Shandon, Wall, and he did their work so well that the crew was complete
+in the beginning of December. It had been a difficult task; many,
+tempted by the high pay, felt frightened at the risk, and more than
+one enlisted boldly who came afterwards to take back his word and
+enlistment money, dissuaded by his friends from undertaking such an
+enterprise. All of them tried to pierce the mystery, and worried
+Shandon with questions; he sent them to Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't tell you what I don't know," he answered invariably; "you'll
+be in good company, that's all I can tell you. You can take it or
+leave it alone."</p>
+
+<p>And the greater number took it.</p>
+
+<p>"I have only to choose," added the boatswain; "such salary has never
+been heard of in the memory of sailors, and then the certainty of
+finding a handsome capital when we come back. Only think: it's
+tempting enough."</p>
+
+<p>"The fact is," answered the sailor, "it is tempting; enough to live
+on till the end of one's days."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't hide from you," continued Johnson, "that the cruise will
+be long, painful, and perilous; that is formally stated in our
+instructions, and you ought to know what you undertake; you will very
+likely be required to attempt all that it is possible for human beings
+to do, and perhaps more. If you are the least bit frightened, if you
+don't think you may just as well finish yonder as here, you'd better
+not enlist, but give way to a bolder man."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Mr. Johnson," continued the sailor, for the want of something
+better to say, "at least you know the captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"The captain is Richard Shandon till another comes."</p>
+
+<p>Richard Shandon, in his secret heart, hoped that the command would
+remain with him, and that at the last moment he should receive precise
+instructions as to the destination of the <i>Forward</i>. He did all he
+could to spread the report in his conversations with his officers,
+or when following the construction of the brig as it grew in the
+Birkenhead dockyard, looking like the ribs of a whale turned upside
+down. Shandon and Johnson kept strictly to their instructions
+touching the health of the sailors who were to form the crew; they
+all looked hale and hearty, and had enough heat in their bodies to
+suffice for the engine of the <i>Forward</i>; their supple limbs, their
+clear and florid complexions were fit to react against the action
+of intense cold. They were confident and resolute men, energetically
+and solidly constituted. Of course they were not all equally vigorous;
+Shandon had even hesitated about taking some of them, such as the
+sailors Gripper and Garry, and the harpooner Simpson, because they
+looked rather thin; but, on the whole, their build was good; they
+were a warm-hearted lot, and their engagement was signed.</p>
+
+<p>All the crew belonged to the same sect of the Protestant religion;
+during these long campaigns prayer in common and the reading of the
+Bible have a good influence over the men and sustain them in the hour
+of discouragement; it was therefore important that they should be
+all of the same way of thinking. Shandon knew by experience the utility
+of these practices, and their influence on the mind of the crew; they
+are always employed on board ships that are intended to winter in
+the Polar Seas. The crew once got together, Shandon and his two
+officers set about the provisions; they strictly followed the
+instructions of the captain; these instructions were clear, precise,
+and detailed, and the least articles were put down with their quality
+and quantity. Thanks to the cheques at the commander's disposition,
+every article was paid for at once with a discount of 8 per cent,
+which Richard carefully placed to the credit of K. Z.</p>
+
+<p>Crew, provisions, and cargo were ready by January, 1860; the <i>Forward</i>
+began to look shipshape, and Shandon went daily to Birkenhead. On
+the morning of the 23rd of January he was, as usual, on board one
+of the Mersey ferry-boats with a helm at either end to prevent having
+to turn it; there was a thick fog, and the sailors of the river were
+obliged to direct their course by means of the compass, though the
+passage lasts scarcely ten minutes. But the thickness of the fog did
+not prevent Shandon seeing a man of short stature, rather fat, with
+an intelligent and merry face and an amiable look, who came up to
+him, took him by the two hands, and shook them with an ardour, a
+petulance, and a familiarity "quite meridional," as a Frenchman would
+have said. But if this person did not come from the South, he had
+got his temperament there; he talked and gesticulated with
+volubility; his thought must come out or the machine would burst.
+His eyes, small as those of witty men generally are, his mouth, large
+and mobile, were safety-pipes which allowed him to give passage to
+his overflowing thoughts; he talked, and talked, and talked so much
+and so fast that Shandon couldn't understand a word he said. However,
+this did not prevent the <i>Forward's</i> mate from recognising the little
+man he had never seen before; a lightning flash traversed his mind,
+and when the other paused to take breath, Shandon made haste to get
+out the words, "Doctor Clawbonny!"</p>
+
+<p>"Himself in person, commander! I've been at least half a quarter of
+an hour looking for you, asking everybody everywhere! Just think how
+impatient I got; five minutes more and I should have lost my head!
+And so you are the commander Richard? You really exist? You are not
+a myth? Your hand, your hand! I want to shake it again. It is Richard
+Shandon's hand, and if there is a commander Shandon, there's a brig
+<i>Forward</i> to command; and if he commands he will start, and if he
+starts he'll take Dr. Clawbonny on board."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, yes, doctor, I am Richard Shandon; there is a brig <i>Forward</i>,
+and it will start."</p>
+
+<p>"That's logic," answered the doctor, after taking in a large provision
+of breathing air&mdash;"that's logic. And I am ready to jump for joy at
+having my dearest wishes gratified. I've wanted to undertake such
+a voyage. Now with you, commander&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't&mdash;&mdash;" began Shandon.</p>
+
+<p>"With you," continued Clawbonny, without hearing him, "we are sure
+to go far and not to draw back for a trifle."</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;&mdash;" began Shandon again.</p>
+
+<p>"For you have shown what you are made of, commander; I know your deeds
+of service. You are a fine sailor!"</p>
+
+<p>"If you will allow me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I won't have your bravery, audacity, and skill put an instant
+in doubt, even by you! The captain who chose you for his mate is a
+man who knows what he's about, I can tell you."</p>
+
+<p>"But that's nothing to do with it," said Shandon, impatient.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it, then? Don't keep me in suspense another minute."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't give me time to speak. Tell me, if you please, doctor,
+how it comes that you are to take part in the expedition of the
+<i>Forward</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Read this letter, this worthy letter, the letter of a brave
+captain&mdash;very laconic, but quite sufficient."</p>
+
+<p>Saying which the doctor held out the following letter to Shandon:&mdash;</p>
+<br>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+
+"I<small>NVERNESS</small>,</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"Jan. 22nd, 1860.</p>
+
+<p>"To Dr. Clawbonny.</p>
+
+<p>"If Dr. Clawbonny wishes to embark on board the <i>Forward</i> for a long
+cruise, he may introduce himself to the commander, Richard Shandon,
+who has received orders concerning him.</p>
+
+<div align="right">"T<small>HE</small> C<small>APTAIN OF THE</small> 'F<small>ORWARD</small>,'
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br><br>"K. Z."
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</div>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>"This letter reached me this morning, and here I am, ready to embark."</p>
+
+<p>"But, doctor, do you know where we are going to?"</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't the slightest idea, and I do not care so that it is somewhere.
+They pretend that I am learned; they are mistaken, commander. I know
+nothing, and if I have published a few books that don't sell badly,
+I ought not to have done it; the public is silly for buying them.
+I know nothing, I tell you. I am only an ignorant man. When I have
+the offer of completing, or rather of going over again, my knowledge
+of medicine, surgery, history, geography, botany, mineralogy,
+conchology, geodesy, chemistry, natural philosophy, mechanics, and
+hydrography, why I accept, of course."</p>
+
+<p>"Then," said Shandon, disappointed, "you do not know where the
+<i>Forward</i> is bound for?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do; it is bound for where there is something to learn, to
+discover, and to compare&mdash;where we shall meet with other customs,
+other countries, other nations, to study in the exercise of their
+functions; it is going, in short, where I have never been."</p>
+
+<p>"But I want to know something more definite than that," cried Shandon.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I have heard that we are bound for the Northern Seas."</p>
+
+<p>"At least," asked Shandon, "you know the captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not the least bit in the world! But he is an honest fellow, you may
+believe me."</p>
+
+<p>The commander and the doctor disembarked at Birkenhead; the former
+told the doctor all he knew about the situation of things, and the
+mystery inflamed the imagination of the doctor. The sight of the brig
+caused him transports of joy. From that day he stopped with Shandon,
+and went every day to pay a visit to the shell of the <i>Forward</i>. Besides,
+he was specially appointed to overlook the installation of the ship's
+medicine-chest. For Dr. Clawbonny was a doctor, and a good one, though
+practising little. At the age of twenty-five he was an ordinary
+practitioner; at the age of forty he was a <i>savant</i>, well known in
+the town; he was an influential member of all the literary and
+scientific institutions of Liverpool. His fortune allowed him to
+distribute counsels which were none the worse for being gratuitous;
+beloved as a man eminently lovable must always be, he had never wronged
+any one, not even himself; lively and talkative, he carried his heart
+in his hand, and put his hand into that of everybody. When it was
+known in Liverpool that he was going to embark on board the <i>Forward</i>
+his friends did all they could to dissuade him, and only fixed him
+more completely in his determination, and when the doctor was
+determined to do anything no one could prevent him. From that time
+the suppositions and apprehensions increased, but did not prevent
+the <i>Forward</i> being launched on the 5th of February, 1860. Two months
+later she was ready to put to sea. On the 15th of March, as the letter
+of the captain had announced, a dog of Danish breed was sent by railway
+from Edinburgh to Liverpool, addressed to Richard Shandon. The animal
+seemed surly, peevish, and even sinister, with quite a singular look
+in his eyes. The name of the <i>Forward</i> was engraved on his brass collar.
+The commander installed it on board the same day, and acknowledged
+its reception to K. Z. at Leghorn. Thus, with the exception of the
+captain, the crew was complete. It was composed as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1. K. Z., captain; 2. Richard Shandon, commander; 3. James Wall, third
+officer; 4. Dr. Clawbonny; 5. Johnson, boatswain; 6. Simpson,
+harpooner; 7. Bell, carpenter; 8. Brunton, chief engineer; 9. Plover,
+second engineer; 10. Strong (negro), cook; 11. Foker, ice-master;
+12. Wolsten, smith; 13. Bolton, sailor; 14. Garry, sailor; 15. Clifton,
+sailor; 16. Gripper, sailor; 17. Pen, sailor; 18. Warren, stoker.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap4"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER IV</h3>
+
+<center>DOG-CAPTAIN</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The day of departure arrived with the 5th of April. The admission
+of the doctor on board had given the crew more confidence. They knew
+that where the worthy doctor went they could follow. However, the
+sailors were still uneasy, and Shandon, fearing that some of them
+would desert, wished to be off. With the coast out of sight, they
+would make up their mind to the inevitable.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Clawbonny's cabin was situated at the end of the poop, and occupied
+all the stern of the vessel. The captain's and mate's cabins gave
+upon deck. The captain's remained hermetically closed, after being
+furnished with different instruments, furniture, travelling
+garments, books, clothes for changing, and utensils, indicated in
+a detailed list. According to the wish of the captain, the key of
+the cabin was sent to Lubeck; he alone could enter his room.</p>
+
+<p>This detail vexed Shandon, and took away all chance of the chief
+command. As to his own cabin, he had perfectly appropriated it to
+the needs of the presumed voyage, for he thoroughly understood the
+needs of a Polar expedition. The room of the third officer was placed
+under the lower deck, which formed a vast sleeping-room for the
+sailors' use; the men were very comfortably lodged, and would not
+have found anything like the same convenience on board any other ship;
+they were cared for like the most priceless cargo: a vast stove
+occupied all the centre of the common room. Dr. Clawbonny was in his
+element; he had taken possession of his cabin on the 6th of February,
+the day after the <i>Forward</i> was launched.</p>
+
+<p>"The happiest of animals," he used to say, "is a snail, for it can
+make a shell exactly to fit it; I shall try to be an intelligent snail."</p>
+
+<p>And considering that the shell was to be his lodging for a considerable
+time, the cabin began to look like home; the doctor had a <i>savant's</i>
+or a child's pleasure in arranging his scientific traps. His books,
+his herbals, his set of pigeon-holes, his instruments of precision,
+his chemical apparatus, his collection of thermometers, barometers,
+hygrometers, rain-gauges, spectacles, compasses, sextants, maps,
+plans, flasks, powders, bottles for medicine-chest, were all classed
+in an order that would have shamed the British Museum. The space of
+six square feet contained incalculable riches: the doctor had only
+to stretch out his hand without moving to become instantaneously a
+doctor, a mathematician, an astronomer, a geographer, a botanist,
+or a conchologist. It must be acknowledged that he was proud of his
+management and happy in his floating sanctuary, which three of his
+thinnest friends would have sufficed to fill. His friends came to
+it in such numbers that even a man as easy-going as the doctor might
+have said with Socrates, "My house is small, but may it please Heaven
+never to fill it with friends!"</p>
+
+<p>To complete the description of the <i>Forward</i> it is sufficient to say
+that the kennel of the large Danish dog was constructed under the
+window of the mysterious cabin but its savage inhabitant preferred
+wandering between decks and in the hold; it seemed impossible to tame
+him, and no one had been able to become his master; during the night
+he howled lamentably, making the hollows of the ship ring in a sinister
+fashion. Was it regret for his absent master? Was it the instinct
+of knowing that he was starting for a perilous voyage? Was it a
+presentiment of dangers to come? The sailors decided that it was for
+the latter reason, and more than one pretended to joke who believed
+seriously that the dog was of a diabolical kind. Pen, who was a brutal
+man, was going to strike him once, when he fell, unfortunately,
+against the angle of the capstan, and made a frightful wound in his
+head. Of course this accident was placed to the account of the
+fantastic animal. Clifton, the most superstitious of the crew, made
+the singular observation that when the dog was on the poop he always
+walked on the windward side, and afterwards, when the brig was out
+at sea, and altered its tack, the surprising animal changed its
+direction with the wind the same as the captain of the <i>Forward</i> would
+have done in his place. Dr. Clawbonny, whose kindness and caresses
+would have tamed a tiger, tried in vain to win the good graces of
+the dog; he lost his time and his pains. The animal did not answer
+to any name ever written in the dog calendar, and the crew ended by
+calling him Captain, for he appeared perfectly conversant with ship
+customs; it was evident that it was not his first trip. From such
+facts it is easy to understand the boatswain's answer to Clifton's
+friend, and the credulity of those who heard it; more than one repeated
+jokingly that he expected one day to see the dog take human shape
+and command the manoeuvres with a resounding voice.</p>
+
+<p>If Richard Shandon did not feel the same apprehensions he was not
+without anxiety, and the day before the departure, in the evening
+of April 5th, he had a conversation on the subject with the doctor,
+Wall, and Johnson in the poop cabin. These four persons were tasting
+their tenth grog, and probably their last, for the letter from
+Aberdeen had ordered that all the crew, from the captain to the stoker,
+should be teetotallers, and that there should be no wine, beer, nor
+spirits on board except those given by the doctor's orders. The
+conversation had been going on about the departure for the last hour.
+If the instructions of the captain were realised to the end, Shandon
+would receive his last instructions the next day.</p>
+
+<p>"If the letter," said the commander, "does not tell me the captain's
+name, it must at least tell me the destination of the brig, or I shall
+not know where to take her to."</p>
+
+<p>"If I were you," said the impatient doctor, "I should start whether
+I get a letter or no; they'll know how to send after you, you may
+depend."</p>
+
+<p>"You are ready for anything, doctor; but if so, to what quarter of
+the globe should you set sail?"</p>
+
+<p>"To the North Pole, of course; there's not the slightest doubt about
+that."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should it not be the South Pole?" asked Wall.</p>
+
+<p>"The South Pole is out of the question. No one with any sense would
+send a brig across the whole of the Atlantic. Just reflect a minute,
+and you'll see the impossibility."</p>
+
+<p>"The doctor has an answer to everything," said Wall.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we'll say north," continued Shandon. "But where north? To
+Spitzbergen or Greenland? Labrador or Hudson's Bay? Although all
+directions end in insuperable icebergs, I am not less puzzled as to
+which to take. Have you an answer to that, doctor?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," he answered, vexed at having nothing to say; "but if you don't
+get a letter what shall you do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall do nothing; I shall wait."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to say you won't start?" cried Dr. Clawbonny, agitating
+his glass in despair.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly I do."</p>
+
+<p>"And that would be the wisest plan," said Johnson tranquilly, while
+the doctor began marching round the table, for he could not keep still;
+"but still, if we wait too long, the consequences may be deplorable;
+the season is good now if we are really going north, as we ought to
+profit by the breaking up of the ice to cross Davis's Straits; besides,
+the crew gets more and more uneasy; the friends and companions of
+our men do all they can to persuade them to leave the <i>Forward</i>, and
+their influence may be pernicious for us."</p>
+
+<p>"Besides," added Wall, "if one of them deserted they all would, and
+then I don't know how you would get another crew together."</p>
+
+<p>"But what can I do?" cried Shandon.</p>
+
+<p>"What you said you would do," replied the doctor; "wait and wait till
+to-morrow before you despair. The captain's promises have all been
+fulfilled up to now with the greatest regularity, and there's no
+reason to believe we shan't be made acquainted with our destination
+when the proper time comes. I haven't the slightest doubt that
+to-morrow we shall be sailing in the Irish Channel, and I propose
+we drink a last grog to our pleasant voyage. It begins in an
+unaccountable fashion, but with sailors like you there are a thousand
+chances that it will end well."</p>
+
+<p>And all four drank to their safe return.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, commander," continued Johnson, "if you will allow me to advise
+you, you will prepare everything to start; the crew must think that
+you know what you are about. If you don't get a letter to-morrow,
+set sail; do not get up the steam, the wind looks like holding out,
+and it will be easy enough to sail; let the pilot come on board; go
+out of the docks with the tide, and anchor below Birkenhead; our men
+won't be able to communicate with land, and if the devil of a letter
+comes it will find us as easily there as elsewhere."</p>
+
+<p>"By heavens! you are right, Johnson!" cried the doctor, holding out
+his hand to the old sailor.</p>
+
+<p>"So be it," answered Shandon.</p>
+
+<p>Then each one entered his cabin, and waited in feverish sleep for
+the rising of the sun. The next day the first distribution of letters
+took place in the town, and not one bore the address of the commander,
+Richard Shandon. Nevertheless, he made his preparations for
+departure, and the news spread at once all over Liverpool, and, as
+we have already seen, an extraordinary affluence of spectators
+crowded the wharfs of New Prince's Docks. Many of them came on board
+to shake hands for the last time with a comrade, or to try and dissuade
+a friend, or to take a look at the brig, and to know its destination;
+they were disappointed at finding the commander more taciturn and
+reserved than ever. He had his reasons for that.</p>
+
+<p>Ten o'clock struck. Eleven followed. The tide began to go out that
+day at about one o'clock in the afternoon. Shandon from the top of
+the poop was looking at the crowd with uneasy eyes, trying to read
+the secret of his destiny on one of the faces. But in vain. The sailors
+of the <i>Forward</i> executed his orders in silence, looking at him all
+the time, waiting for orders which did not come. Johnson went on
+preparing for departure. The weather was cloudy and the sea rough;
+a south-easter blew with violence, but it was easy to get out of the
+Mersey.</p>
+
+<p>At twelve o'clock nothing had yet been received. Dr. Clawbonny marched
+up and down in agitation, looking through his telescope,
+gesticulating, impatient for the sea, as he said. He felt moved,
+though he struggled against it. Shandon bit his lips till the blood
+came. Johnson came up to him and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Commander, if we want to profit by the tide, there is no time to
+be lost; we shall not be clear of the docks for at least an hour."</p>
+
+<p>Shandon looked round him once more and consulted his watch. The twelve
+o'clock letters had been distributed. In despair he told Johnson to
+start. The boatswain ordered the deck to be cleared of spectators,
+and the crowd made a general movement to regain the wharves while
+the last moorings were unloosed. Amidst the confusion a dog's bark
+was distinctly heard, and all at once the animal broke through the
+compact mass, jumped on to the poop, and, as a thousand spectators
+can testify, dropped a letter at Shandon's feet.</p>
+
+<p>"A letter!" cried Shandon. "<i>He</i> is on board, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"He was, that's certain, but he isn't now," said Johnson, pointing
+to the deserted deck.</p>
+
+<p>Shandon held the letter without opening it in his astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>"But read it, read it, I say," said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>Shandon looked at it. The envelope had no postmark or date; it was
+addressed simply to:</p>
+<br>
+<center>"RICHARD SHANDON,<br>
+<br>
+"Commander on board the brig<br>
+<br>
+"<i>Forward</i>."</center>
+<br><br>
+<p>Shandon opened the letter and read as follows:&mdash;</p>
+<br>
+
+<p>"Sail for Cape Farewell. You will reach it by the 20th of April. If
+the captain does not appear on board, cross Davis's Straits, and sail
+up Baffin's Sea to Melville Bay.</p>
+
+<div align="right">"T<small>HE</small> C<small>APTAIN OF THE</small> 'F<small>ORWARD</small>,'
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br><br>"K. Z."
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</div>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Shandon carefully folded this laconic epistle, put it in his pocket,
+and gave the order for departure. His voice, which rang above the
+east wind, had something solemn in it.</p>
+
+<p>Soon the <i>Forward</i> had passed the docks, and directed by a Liverpool
+pilot whose little cutter followed, went down the Mersey with the
+current. The crowd precipitated itself on to the exterior wharf along
+the Victoria Docks in order to get a last glimpse of the strange brig.
+The two topsails, the foresail and the brigantine sail were rapidly
+set up, and the <i>Forward</i>, worthy of its name, after having rounded
+Birkenhead Point, sailed with extraordinary fleetness into the Irish
+Sea.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap5"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER V</h3>
+
+<center>OUT AT SEA</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The wind was favourable, though it blew in April gales. The <i>Forward</i>
+cut through the waves, and towards three o'clock crossed the mail
+steamer between Liverpool and the Isle of Man. The captain hailed
+from his deck the last adieu that the <i>Forward</i> was destined to hear.</p>
+
+<p>At five o'clock the pilot left the command in the hands of Richard
+Shandon, the commander of the brig, and regained his cutter, which,
+turning round, soon disappeared on the south-west. Towards evening
+the brig doubled the Calf of Man at the southern extremity of the
+island. During the night the sea was very rough, but the <i>Forward</i>
+behaved well, left the point of Ayr to the north-west, and directed
+its course for the Northern Channel. Johnson was right; once out at
+sea the maritime instinct of the sailors gained the upper hand. Life
+on board went on with regularity.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor breathed in the sea air with delight; he walked about
+vigorously in the squalls, and for a <i>savant</i> he was not a bad sailor.</p>
+
+<p>"The sea is splendid," said he to Johnson, coming up on deck after
+breakfast. "I have made its acquaintance rather late, but I shall
+make up for lost time."</p>
+
+<p>"You are right, Mr. Clawbonny. I would give all the continents of
+the world for a corner of the ocean. They pretend that sailors soon
+get tired of their profession, but I've been forty years on the sea
+and I love it as much as the first day."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a great pleasure to feel a good ship under one's feet, and
+if I'm not a bad judge the <i>Forward</i> behaves herself well."</p>
+
+<p>"You judge rightly, doctor," answered Shandon, who had joined the
+talkers; "she is a good ship, and I acknowledge that a vessel destined
+for navigation amongst ice has never been better equipped. That
+reminds me that thirty years ago Captain James Ross, sailing for the
+North-West passage&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"In the <i>Victory</i>," added the doctor quickly, "a brig about the same
+tonnage as ours, with a steam-engine too."</p>
+
+<p>"What! you know about that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Judge if I do," answered the doctor. "Machines were then in their
+infancy, and the <i>Victory's</i> kept her back; the captain, James Ross,
+after having vainly repaired it bit by bit, finished by taking it
+down, and abandoned it at his first winter quarters."</p>
+
+<p>"The devil!" said Shandon. "You know all about it, I see."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I've read the works of Parry, Ross, and Franklin, and the reports
+of McClure, Kennedy, Kane, and McClintock, and I remember something
+of what I've read. I can tell you, too, that this same McClintock,
+on board the <i>Fox</i>, a screw brig in the style of ours, went easier
+to his destination than any of the men who preceded him."</p>
+
+<p>"That's perfectly true," answered Shandon; "he was a bold sailor was
+McClintock; I saw him at work. You may add that, like him, we shall
+find ourselves in Davis's Straits in April, and if we succeed in
+passing the ice our voyage will be considerably advanced."</p>
+
+<p>"Unless," added the doctor, "it happens to us like it did to the <i>Fox</i>
+in 1857, to be caught the very first year by the ice in Baffin's Sea,
+and have to winter in the midst of the icebergs."</p>
+
+<p>"We must hope for better luck," answered Johnson. "If a ship like
+the <i>Forward</i> can't take us where we want to go, we must renounce
+all hope for ever."</p>
+
+<p>"Besides," said the doctor, "if the captain is on board he will know
+better than we do what must be done. We know nothing as yet; his letter
+says nothing about what our voyage is for."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a good deal to know which way to go," answered Shandon quickly.
+"We can do without the captain and his instructions for another month
+at least. Besides, you know what I think about it."</p>
+
+<p>"A short time ago," said the doctor, "I thought like you that the
+captain would never appear, and that you would remain commander of
+the ship; but now&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Now what?" replied Shandon in an impatient tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Since the arrival of the second letter I have modified that opinion."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, doctor?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because the letter tells you the route to follow, but leaves you
+ignorant of the <i>Forward's</i> destination; and we must know where we
+are going to. How the deuce are you to get a letter now we are out
+at sea? On the coast of Greenland the service of the post must leave
+much to wish for. I believe that our gentleman is waiting for us in
+some Danish settlement&mdash;at Holsteinborg or Uppernawik; he has
+evidently gone there to complete his cargo of sealskins, buy his
+sledges and dog, and, in short, get together all the tackle wanted
+for a voyage in the Arctic Seas. I shouldn't be at all surprised to
+see him come out of his cabin one of these fine mornings and begin
+commanding the ship in anything but a supernatural way."</p>
+
+<p>"It's possible," answered Shandon drily; "but in the meantime the
+wind is getting up, and I can't risk my gallant sails in such weather."</p>
+
+<p>Shandon left the doctor and gave the order to reef the topsails.</p>
+
+<p>"He takes it to heart," said the doctor to the boatswain.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered the latter, "and it's a great pity, for you may be
+right, Mr. Clawbonny."</p>
+
+<p>In the evening of Saturday the <i>Forward</i> doubled the Mull of Galloway,
+whose lighthouse shone to the north-east; during the night they left
+the Mull of Cantyre to the north, and Cape Fair, on the coast of Ireland,
+to the east. Towards three o'clock in the morning, the brig, leaving
+Rathlin Island on her starboard side, disembogued by the Northern
+Channel into the ocean. It was Sunday, the 8th of April, and the doctor
+read some chapters of the Bible to the assembled seamen. The wind
+then became a perfect hurricane, and tended to throw the brig on to
+the Irish coast; she pitched, and rolled, and tossed, and if the doctor
+was not seasick it was because he would not be, for nothing was easier.
+At noon Cape Malinhead disappeared towards the south; it was the last
+European ground that these bold sailors were to perceive, and more
+than one watched it out of sight, destined never to see it again.
+They were then in 55&deg; 57' latitude and 7&deg; 40'
+longitude by the Greenwich meridian.</p>
+
+<p>The storm spent itself out about nine o'clock in the evening; the
+<i>Forward</i>, like a good sailor, maintained her route north-west. She
+showed by her behaviour during the day what her sailing capacities
+were, and as the Liverpool connoisseurs had remarked, she was above
+all, a sailing vessel. During the following days the <i>Forward</i> gained
+the north-west with rapidity; the wind veered round south, and the
+sea had a tremendous swell on; the brig was then going along under
+full sail. Some petrels and puffins came sailing over the poop; the
+doctor skilfully shot one of the latter, and it fell, fortunately,
+on the deck. The harpooner, Simpson, picked it up and brought it to
+its owner.</p>
+
+<p>"Nasty game that, Mr. Clawbonny," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"It will make an excellent meal, on the contrary," said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't mean to say you are going to eat that thing?"</p>
+
+<p>"And so are you, old fellow," said the doctor, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"Poh!" replied Simpson, "but it's oily and rancid, like all other
+sea birds."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind!" answered the doctor, "I have a peculiar way of cooking
+that game, and if you recognise it for a sea bird I'll consent never
+to kill another in my life."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know how to cook, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"A <i>savant</i> ought to know how to do a little of everything."</p>
+
+<p>"You'd better take care, Simpson," said the boatswain; "the doctor's
+a clever man, and he'll make you take this puffin for a grouse."</p>
+
+<p>The fact is that the doctor was quite right about his fowl; he took
+off all the fat, which all lies under the skin, principally on the
+thighs, and with it disappeared the rancidity and taste of fish which
+is so disagreeable in a sea bird. Thus prepared the puffin was declared
+excellent, and Simpson acknowledged it the first.</p>
+
+<p>During the late storm Richard Shandon had been able to judge of the
+qualities of his crew; he had watched each man narrowly, and knew
+how much each was to be depended upon.</p>
+
+<p>James Wall was devoted to Richard, understood quickly and executed
+well, but he might fail in initiative; he placed him in the third
+rank. Johnson was used to struggle with the sea; he was an old stager
+in the Arctic Ocean, and had nothing to learn either in audacity or
+<i>sang-froid</i>. The harpooner, Simpson, and the carpenter, Bell, were
+sure men, faithful to duty and discipline. The ice-master, Foker,
+was an experienced sailor, and, like Johnson, was capable of rendering
+important service. Of the other sailors Garry and Bolton seemed to
+be the best; Bolton was a gay and talkative fellow; Garry was
+thirty-five, with an energetic face, but rather pale and sad-looking.
+The three sailors, Clifton, Gripper, and Pen, seemed less ardent and
+resolute; they easily grumbled. Gripper wanted to break his
+engagement even before the departure of the <i>Forward</i>; a sort of shame
+kept him on board. If things went on all right, if there were not
+too many risks to run, no dangers to encounter, these three men might
+be depended upon; but they must be well fed, for it might be said
+that they were led by their stomachs. Although warned beforehand,
+they grumbled at having to be teetotallers; at their meals they
+regretted the brandy and gin; it did not, however, make them spare
+the tea and coffee, which was prodigally given out on board. As to
+the two engineers, Brunton and Plover, and the stoker, Warren, there
+had been nothing for them to do as yet, and Shandon could not tell
+anything about their capabilities.</p>
+
+<p>On the 14th of April the <i>Forward</i> got into the grand current of the
+Gulf Stream, which, after ascending the eastern coast of America to
+Newfoundland, inclines to the north-east along the coast of Norway.
+They were then in 57&deg; 37' latitude by 22&deg; 58'
+longitude, at two hundred miles from the point of Greenland.
+The weather grew colder, and the thermometer descended to thirty-two
+degrees, that is to say to freezing point.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor had not yet begun to wear the garments he destined for
+the Arctic Seas, but he had donned a sailor's dress like the rest;
+he was a queer sight with his top-boots, in which his legs disappeared,
+his vast oilcloth hat, his jacket and trousers of the same; when
+drenched with heavy rains or enormous waves the doctor looked like
+a sort of sea-animal, and was proud of the comparison.</p>
+
+<p>During two days the sea was extremely rough; the wind veered round
+to the north-west, and delayed the progress of the <i>Forward</i>. From
+the 14th to the 16th of April the swell was great, but on the Monday
+there came such a torrent of rain that the sea became calm immediately.
+Shandon spoke to the doctor about this phenomenon.</p>
+
+<p>"It confirms the curious observations of the whaler Scoresby, who
+laid it before the Royal Society of Edinburgh, of which I have the
+honour to be an honorary member. You see that when it rains the waves
+are not very high, even under the influence of a violent wind, and
+when the weather is dry the sea is more agitated, even when there
+is less wind."</p>
+
+<p>"But how is this phenomenon accounted for?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very simply; it is not accounted for at all."</p>
+
+<p>Just then the ice-master, who was keeping watch on the crossbars of
+the topsails, signalled a floating mass on the starboard, at about
+fifteen miles distance before the wind.</p>
+
+<p>"An iceberg here!" cried the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>Shandon pointed his telescope in the direction indicated, and
+confirmed the pilot's announcement.</p>
+
+<p>"That is curious!" said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"What! you are astonished at last!" said the commander, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"I am surprised, but not astonished," answered the doctor, laughing;
+"for the brig <i>Ann</i>, of Poole, from Greenspond, was caught in 1813
+in perfect ice-fields, in the forty-fourth degree of north latitude,
+and her captain, Dayernent, counted them by hundreds!"</p>
+
+<p>"I see you can teach us something, even upon that subject."</p>
+
+<p>"Very little," answered Clawbonny modestly; "it is only that ice has
+been met with in even lower latitudes."</p>
+
+<p>"I knew that already, doctor, for when I was cabinboy on board the
+war-sloop <i>Fly</i>&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"In 1818," continued the doctor, "at the end of March, almost in April,
+you passed between two large islands of floating ice under the
+forty-second degree of latitude."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I declare you astonish me!" cried Shandon.</p>
+
+<p>"But the iceberg doesn't astonish me, as we are two degrees further
+north."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a well, doctor," answered the commander, "and all we have
+to do is to be water-buckets."</p>
+
+<p>"You will draw me dry sooner than you think for; and now, Shandon,
+if we could get a nearer look at this phenomenon, I should be the
+happiest of doctors."</p>
+
+<p>"Just so, Johnson," said Shandon, calling his boatswain. "It seems
+to me that the breeze is getting up."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, commander," answered Johnson; "we are making very little way,
+and the currents of Davis's Straits will soon be against us."</p>
+
+<p>"You are right, Johnson, and if we wish to be in sight of Cape Farewell
+on the 20th of April we must put the steam on, or we shall be thrown
+on the coasts of Labrador. Mr. Wall, will you give orders to light
+the fires?"</p>
+
+<p>The commander's orders were executed, an hour afterwards the steam
+was up, the sails were furled, and the screw cutting the waves sent
+the <i>Forward</i> against the north-west wind.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap6"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER VI</h3>
+
+<center>THE GREAT POLAR CURRENT</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>A short time after the flights of birds became more and more numerous.
+Petrels, puffins, and mates, inhabitants of those desolate quarters,
+signalled the approach of Greenland. The <i>Forward</i> was rapidly
+nearing the north, leaving to her leeward a long line of black smoke.</p>
+
+<p>On Tuesday the 17th of April, about eleven o'clock in the morning,
+the ice-master signalled the first sight of the ice-blink; it was
+about twenty miles to the N.N.W. This glaring white strip was
+brilliantly lighted up, in spite of the presence of thick clouds in
+the neighbouring parts of the sky. Experienced people on board could
+make no mistake about this phenomenon, and declared, from its
+whiteness, that the blink was owing to a large ice-field, situated
+at about thirty miles out of sight, and that it proceeded from the
+reflection of luminous rays. Towards evening the wind turned round
+to the south, and became favourable; Shandon put on all sail, and
+for economy's sake caused the fires to be put out. The <i>Forward</i>,
+under her topsails and foresails, glided on towards Cape Farewell.</p>
+
+<p>At three o'clock on the 18th they came across the ice-stream, and
+a white thick line of a glaring colour cut brilliantly the lines of
+the sea and sky. It was evidently drifting from the eastern coast
+of Greenland more than from Davis's Straits, for ice generally keeps
+to the west coast of Baffin's Sea. An hour afterwards the <i>Forward</i>
+passed in the midst of isolated portions of the ice-stream, and in
+the most compact parts, the icebergs, though welded together, obeyed
+the movements of the swell. The next day the man at the masthead
+signalled a vessel. It was the <i>Valkirien</i>, a Danish corvette, running
+alongside the <i>Forward</i>, and making for the bank of Newfoundland.
+The current of the Strait began to make itself felt, and Shandon had
+to put on sail to go up it. At this moment the commander, the doctor,
+James Wall, and Johnson were assembled on the poop examining the
+direction and strength of the current. The doctor wanted to know if
+the current existed also in Baffin's Sea.</p>
+
+<p>"Without the least doubt," answered Shandon, "and the sailing vessels
+have much trouble to stem it."</p>
+
+<p>"Besides there," added Wall, "you meet with it on the eastern coast
+of America, as well as on the western coast of Greenland."</p>
+
+<p>"There," said the doctor, "that is what gives very singular reason
+to the seekers of the North-West passage! That current runs about
+five miles an hour, and it is a little difficult to suppose that it
+springs from the bottom of a gulf."</p>
+
+<p>"It is so much the more probable, doctor," replied Shandon, "that
+if this current runs from north to south we find in Behring's Straits
+a contrary current which runs from south to north, and which must
+be the origin of this one."</p>
+
+<p>"According to that," replied the doctor, "we must admit that America
+is totally unconnected with the Polar lands, and that the waters of
+the Pacific run round the coasts of America into the Atlantic. On
+the other hand, the greater elevation of the waters of the Pacific
+gives reason to the supposition that they fall into the European
+seas."</p>
+
+<p>"But," sharply replied Shandon, "there must be facts to establish
+that theory, and if there are any," added he with irony, "our
+universally well-informed doctor ought to know them."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," replied the above-mentioned, with amiable satisfaction, "if
+it interests you, I can tell you that whales, wounded in Davis's
+Straits, are caught some time afterwards in the neighbourhood of
+Tartary with the European harpoon still in their flanks."</p>
+
+<p>"And unless they have been able to double Cape Horn or the Cape of
+Good Hope," replied Shandon, "they must necessarily have rounded the
+septentrional coasts of America&mdash;that's what I call indisputable,
+doctor."</p>
+
+<p>"However, if you were not convinced, my dear fellow," said the doctor,
+smiling, "I could still produce other facts, such as drift-wood, of
+which Davis's Straits are full, larch, aspen, and other tropical trees.
+Now we know that the Gulf Stream hinders those woods from entering
+the Straits. If, then, they come out of it they can only get in from
+Behring's Straits."</p>
+
+<p>"I am convinced, doctor, and I avow that it would be difficult to
+remain incredulous with you."</p>
+
+<p>"Upon my honour," said Johnson, "there's something that comes just
+in time to help our discussion. I perceive in the distance a lump
+of wood of certain dimensions; if the commander permits it we'll haul
+it in, and ask it the name of its country."</p>
+
+<p>"That's it," said the doctor, "the example after the rule."</p>
+
+<p>Shandon gave the necessary orders; the brig was directed towards the
+piece of wood signalled, and soon afterwards, not without trouble,
+the crew hoisted it on deck. It was the trunk of a mahogany tree,
+gnawed right into the centre by worms, but for which circumstance
+it would not have floated.</p>
+
+<p>"This is glorious," said the doctor enthusiastically, "for as the
+currents of the Atlantic could not carry it to Davis's Straits, and
+as it has not been driven into the Polar basin by the streams of
+septentrional America, seeing that this tree grew under the Equator,
+it is evident that it comes in a straight line from Behring; and look
+here, you see those sea-worms which have eaten it, they belong to
+a hot-country species."</p>
+
+<p>"It is evident," replied Wall, "that the people who do not believe
+in the famous passage are wrong."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, this circumstance alone ought to convince them," said the
+doctor; "I will just trace you out the itinerary of that mahogany;
+it has been floated towards the Pacific by some river of the Isthmus
+of Panama or Guatemala, from thence the current has dragged it along
+the American coast as far as Behring's Straits, and in spite of
+everything it was obliged to enter the Polar Seas. It is neither so
+old nor so soaked that we need fear to assign a recent date to its
+setting out; it has had the good luck to get clear of the obstacles
+in that long suite of straits which lead out of Baffin's Bay, and
+quickly seized by the boreal current came by Davis's Straits to be
+made prisoner by the <i>Forward</i> to the great joy of Dr. Clawbonny,
+who asks the commander's permission to keep a sample of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Do so," said Shandon, "but allow me to tell you that you will not
+be the only proprietor of such a wreck. The Danish governor of the
+Isle of Disko&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"On the coast of Greenland," continued the doctor, "possesses a
+mahogany table made from a trunk fished up under the same
+circumstances. I know it, but I don't envy him his table, for if it
+were not for the bother, I should have enough there for a whole
+bedroom."</p>
+
+<p>During the night, from Wednesday to Thursday, the wind blew with
+extreme violence, and driftwood was seen more frequently. Nearing
+the coast offered many dangers at an epoch in which icebergs were
+so numerous; the commander caused some of the sails to be furled,
+and the <i>Forward</i> glided away under her foresail and foremast only.
+The thermometer sank below freezing-point. Shandon distributed
+suitable clothing to the crew, a woollen jacket and trousers, a
+flannel shirt, wadmel stockings, the same as those the Norwegian
+country-people wear, and a pair of perfectly waterproof sea-boots.
+As to the captain, he contented himself with his natural fur, and
+appeared little sensible to the change in the temperature; he had,
+no doubt, gone through more than one trial of this kind, and besides,
+a Dane had no right to be difficult. He was seen very little, as he
+kept himself concealed in the darkest parts of the vessel.</p>
+
+<p>Towards evening the coast of Greenland peeped out through an opening
+in the fog. The doctor, armed with his glass, could distinguish for
+an instant a line of peaks, ridged with large blocks of ice; but the
+fog closed rapidly on this vision, like the curtain of a theatre
+falling in the most interesting moment of the piece.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of the 20th of April the <i>Forward</i> was in sight of
+an iceberg a hundred and fifty feet high, stranded there from time
+immemorial; the thaws had taken no effect on it, and had respected
+its strange forms. Snow saw it; James Ross took an exact sketch of
+it in 1829; and in 1851 the French lieutenant Bellot saw it from the
+deck of the <i>Prince Albert</i>. Of course the doctor wished to keep a
+memento of the celebrated mountain, and made a clever sketch of it.
+It is not surprising that such masses should be stranded and adhere
+to the land, for to each foot above water they have two feet below,
+giving, therefore, to this one about eighty fathoms of depth.</p>
+
+<p>At last, under a temperature which at noon was only 12&deg;, under
+a snowy and foggy sky, Cape Farewell was perceived. The <i>Forward</i>
+arrived on the day fixed; if it pleased the unknown captain to come
+and occupy his position in such diabolical weather he would have no
+cause to complain.</p>
+
+<p>"There you are, then," said the doctor to himself, "cape so celebrated
+and so well named! Many have cleared it like us who were destined
+never to see it again. Is it, then, an eternal adieu said to one's
+European friends? You have all passed it. Frobisher, Knight, Barlow,
+Vaughan, Scroggs, Barentz, Hudson, Blosseville, Franklin, Crozier,
+Bellot, never to come back to your domestic hearth, and that cape
+has been really for you the cape of adieus."</p>
+
+<p>It was about the year 970 that some navigators left Iceland and
+discovered Greenland. Sebastian Cabot forced his way as far as
+latitude 56&deg; in 1498. Gaspard and Michel Cotreal, in 1500 and
+1502, went as far north as 60&deg;; and Martin Frobisher, in 1576,
+arrived as far as the bay that bears his name. To John Davis belongs
+the honour of having discovered the Straits in 1585; and two years
+later, in a third voyage, that bold navigator and great whaler reached
+the sixty-third parallel, twenty-seven degrees from the Pole.</p>
+
+<p>Barentz in 1596, Weymouth in 1602, James Hall in 1605 and 1607, Hudson,
+whose name was given to that vast bay which hollows out so profoundly
+the continent of America, James Poole, in 1611, advanced far into
+the Strait in search of that North-West passage the discovery of which
+would have considerably shortened the track of communication between
+the two worlds. Baffin, in 1616, found the Straits of Lancaster in
+the sea that bears his own name; he was followed, in 1619, by James
+Munk, and in 1719 by Knight, Barlow, Vaughan, and Scroggs, of whom
+no news has ever been heard. In 1776 Lieutenant Pickersgill, sent
+out to meet Captain Cook, who tried to go up Behring's Straits, reached
+the sixty-eighth degree; the following year Young, for the same
+purpose, went as far north as Woman's Island.</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards came Captain James Ross, who, in 1818, rounded the coasts
+of Baffin's Sea, and corrected the hydrographic errors of his
+predecessors. Lastly, in 1819 and 1820, the celebrated Parry passed
+through Lancaster Straits, and penetrated, in spite of unnumbered
+difficulties, as far as Melville Island, and won the prize of &pound;5,000
+promised by Act of Parliament to the English sailors who would
+reach the hundred and seventeenth meridian by a higher latitude than
+the seventy-seventh parallel.</p>
+
+<p>In 1826 Beechey touched Chamisso Island; James Ross wintered from
+1829 to 1833 in Prince Regent Straits, and amongst other important
+works discovered the magnetic pole. During this time Franklin, by
+an overland route, traversed the septentrional coasts of America from
+the River Mackenzie to Turnagain Point. Captain Back followed in his
+steps from 1823 to 1835, and these explorations were completed in
+1839 by Messrs. Dease and Simpson and Dr. Rae.</p>
+
+<p>Lastly, Sir John Franklin, wishing to discover the North-West passage,
+left England in 1845 on board the <i>Erebus</i> and the <i>Terror</i>; he
+penetrated into Baffin's Sea, and since his passage across Disko
+Island no news had been heard of his expedition.</p>
+
+<p>That disappearance determined the numerous investigations which have
+brought about the discovery of the passage, and the survey of these
+Polar continents, with such indented coast lines. The most daring
+English, French, and American sailors made voyages towards these
+terrible countries, and, thanks to their efforts, the maps of that
+country, so difficult to make, figured in the list of the Royal
+Geographical Society of London. The curious history of these
+countries was thus presented to the doctor's imagination as he leaned
+on the rail, and followed with his eyes the long track left by the
+brig. Thoughts of the bold navigators weighed upon his mind, and he
+fancied he could perceive under the frozen arches of the icebergs
+the pale ghosts of those who were no more.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap7"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER VII</h3>
+
+<center>DAVIS'S STRAITS</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>During that day the <i>Forward</i> cut out an easy road amongst the
+half-broken ice; the wind was good, but the temperature very low;
+the currents of air blowing across the ice-fields brought with them
+their penetrating cold. The night required the severest attention;
+the floating icebergs drew together in that narrow pass; a hundred
+at once were often counted on the horizon; they broke off from the
+elevated coasts under the teeth of the grinding waves and the
+influence of the spring season, in order to go and melt or to be
+swallowed up in the depths of the ocean. Long rafts of wood, with
+which it was necessary to escape collision, kept the crew on the alert;
+the crow's nest was put in its place on the mizenmast; it consisted
+of a cask, in which the ice-master was partly hidden to protect him
+from the cold winds while he kept watch over the sea and the icebergs
+in view, and from which he signalled danger and sometimes gave orders
+to the crew. The nights were short; the sun had reappeared since the
+31st of January in consequence of the refraction, and seemed to get
+higher and higher above the horizon. But the snow impeded the view,
+and if it did not cause complete obscurity it rendered navigation
+laborious.</p>
+
+<p>On the 21st of April Desolation Cape appeared in the midst of thick
+mists; the crew were tired out with the constant strain on their
+energies rendered necessary ever since they had got amongst the
+icebergs; the sailors had not had a minute's rest; it was soon
+necessary to have recourse to steam to cut a way through the heaped-up
+blocks. The doctor and Johnson were talking together on the stern,
+whilst Shandon was snatching a few hours' sleep in his cabin.
+Clawbonny was getting information from the old sailor, whose numerous
+voyages had given him an interesting and sensible education. The
+doctor felt much friendship for him, and the boatswain repaid it with
+interest.</p>
+
+<p>"You see, Mr. Clawbonny," Johnson used to say, "this country is not
+like all others; they call it <i>Green</i>land, but there are very few
+weeks in the year when it justifies its name."</p>
+
+<p>"Who knows if in the tenth century this land did not justify its name?"
+added the doctor. "More than one revolution of this kind has been
+produced upon our globe, and I daresay I should astonish you if I
+were to tell you that according to Icelandic chronicles two thousand
+villages flourished upon this continent about eight or nine hundred
+years ago."</p>
+
+<p>"You would so much astonish me, Mr. Clawbonny, that I should have
+some difficulty in believing you, for it is a miserable country."</p>
+
+<p>"However miserable it may be, it still offers a sufficient retreat
+to its inhabitants, and even to civilised Europeans."</p>
+
+<p>"Without doubt! We met men at Disko and Uppernawik who consented to
+live in such climates; but my ideas upon the matter were that they
+lived there by compulsion and not by choice."</p>
+
+<p>"I daresay you are right, though men get accustomed to everything,
+and the Greenlanders do not appear to me so unfortunate as the workmen
+of our large towns; they may be unfortunate, but they are certainly
+not unhappy. I say unhappy, but the word does not translate my thought,
+for if these people have not the comforts of temperate countries,
+they are formed for a rude climate, and find pleasures in it which
+we are not able to conceive."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose we must think so, as Heaven is just. Many, many voyages
+have brought me upon these coasts, and my heart always shrinks at
+the sight of these wretched solitudes; but they ought to have cheered
+up these capes, promontories, and bays with more engaging names, for
+Farewell Cape and Desolation Cape are not names made to attract
+navigators."</p>
+
+<p>"I have also remarked that," replied the doctor, "but these names
+have a geographical interest that we must not overlook. They describe
+the adventures of those who gave them those names. Next to the names
+of Davis, Baffin, Hudson, Ross, Parry, Franklin, and Bellot, if I
+meet with Cape Desolation I soon find Mercy Bay; Cape Providence is
+a companion to Port Anxiety; Repulsion Bay brings me back to Cape
+Eden, and leaving Turnagain Point I take refuge in Refuge Bay. I have
+there under my eyes an unceasing succession of perils, misfortunes,
+obstacles, successes, despairs, and issues, mixed with great names
+of my country, and, like a series of old-fashioned medals, that
+nomenclature retraces in my mind the whole history of these seas."</p>
+
+<p>"You are quite right, Mr. Clawbonny, and I hope we shall meet with
+more Success Bays than Despair Capes in our voyage."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope so too, Johnson; but, I say, is the crew come round a little
+from its terrors?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, a little; but since we got into the Straits they have begun
+to talk about the fantastic captain; more than one of them expected
+to see him appear at the extremity of Greenland; but between you and
+me, doctor, doesn't it astonish you a little too?"</p>
+
+<p>"It does indeed, Johnson."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you believe in the captain's existence?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I do."</p>
+
+<p>"But what can be his reasons for acting in that manner?"</p>
+
+<p>"If I really must tell you the whole of my thoughts, Johnson, I believe
+that the captain wished to entice the crew far enough out to prevent
+them being able to come back. Now if he had been on board when we
+started they would all have wanted to know our destination, and he
+might have been embarrassed."</p>
+
+<p>"But why so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose he should wish to attempt some superhuman enterprise, and
+to penetrate where others have never been able to reach, do you believe
+if the crew knew it they would ever have enlisted? As it is, having
+got so far, going farther becomes a necessity."</p>
+
+<p>"That's very probable, Mr. Clawbonny. I have known more than one
+intrepid adventurer whose name alone was a terror, and who would never
+have found any one to accompany him in his perilous expeditions&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Excepting me," ventured the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"And me, after you," answered Johnson, "and to follow you; I can
+venture to affirm that our captain is amongst the number of such
+adventurers. No matter, we shall soon see; I suppose the unknown will
+come as captain on board from the coast of Uppernawik or Melville
+Bay, and will tell us at last where it is his good pleasure to conduct
+the ship."</p>
+
+<p>"I am of your opinion, Johnson, but the difficulty will be to get
+as far as Melville Bay. See how the icebergs encircle us from every
+point! They scarcely leave a passage for the <i>Forward</i>. Just examine
+that immense plain over there."</p>
+
+<p>"The whalers call that in our language an ice-field, that is to say
+a continued surface of ice the limits of which cannot be perceived."</p>
+
+<p>"And on that side, that broken field, those long pieces of ice more
+or less joined at their edges?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is a pack; if it was of a circular form we should call it a
+patch; and, if the form was longer, a stream."</p>
+
+<p>"And there, those floating icebergs?"</p>
+
+<p>"Those are drift-ice; if they were a little higher they would be
+icebergs or hills; their contact with vessels is dangerous, and must
+be carefully avoided. Here, look over there: on that ice-field there
+is a protuberance produced by the pressure of the icebergs; we call
+that a hummock; if that protuberance was submerged to its base we
+should call it a calf. It was very necessary to give names to all
+those forms in order to recognise them."</p>
+
+<p>"It is truly a marvellous spectacle!" exclaimed the doctor,
+contemplating the wonders of the Boreal Seas; "there is a field for
+the imagination in such pictures!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered Johnson, "ice often takes fantastic shapes, and our
+men are not behindhand in explaining them according to their own
+notions."</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't that assemblage of ice-blocks admirable? Doesn't it look like
+a foreign town, an Eastern town, with its minarets and mosques under
+the pale glare of the moon? Further on there is a long series of Gothic
+vaults, reminding one of Henry the Seventh's chapel or the Houses
+of Parliament."</p>
+
+<p>"They would be houses and towns very dangerous to inhabit, and we
+must not sail too close to them. Some of those minarets yonder totter
+on their base, and the least of them would crush a vessel like the
+<i>Forward</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet sailors dared to venture into these seas before they had
+steam at their command! How ever could a sailing vessel be steered
+amongst these moving rocks?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nevertheless, it has been accomplished, Mr. Clawbonny. When the wind
+became contrary&mdash;and that has happened to me more than once&mdash;we
+quietly anchored to one of those blocks, and we drifted more or less
+with it and waited for a favourable moment to set sail again. I must
+acknowledge that such a manner of voyaging required months, whilst
+with a little good fortune we shall only want a few days."</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to me," said the doctor, "that the temperature has a tendency
+to get lower."</p>
+
+<p>"That would be a pity," answered Johnson, "for a thaw is necessary
+to break up these masses and drive them away into the Atlantic; besides,
+they are more numerous in Davis's Straits, for the sea gets narrower
+between Capes Walsingham and Holsteinborg; but on the other side of
+the 67th degree we shall find the seas more navigable during the months
+of May and June."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but first of all we must get to the other side."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, we must get there, Mr. Clawbonny. In June and July we should
+have found an open passage, like the whalers do, but our orders were
+precise; we were to be here in April. I am very much mistaken if our
+captain has not his reasons for getting us out here so early."</p>
+
+<p>The doctor was right in stating that the temperature was lowering;
+the thermometer at noon only indicated 6 degrees, and a north-west
+breeze was getting up, which, although it cleared the sky, assisted
+the current in precipitating the floating masses of ice into the path
+of the <i>Forward</i>. All of them did not obey the same impulsion, and
+it was not uncommon to encounter some of the highest masses drifting
+in an opposite direction, seized at their base by an undercurrent.</p>
+
+<p>It is easy to understand the difficulties of this kind of navigation;
+the engineers had not a minute's rest; the engines were worked from
+the deck by means of levers, which opened, stopped, and reversed them
+according to the orders of the officers on watch. Sometimes the brig
+had to hasten through an opening in the ice-fields, sometimes to
+struggle against the swiftness of an iceberg which threatened to close
+the only practicable issue, or, again, some block, suddenly
+overthrown, compelled the brig to back quickly so as not to be crushed
+to pieces. This mass of ice, carried along, broken up and amalgamated
+by the northern current, crushed up the passage, and if seized by
+the frost would oppose an impassable barrier to the passage of the
+<i>Forward</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Birds were found in innumerable quantities on these coasts, petrels
+and other sea-birds fluttered about here and there with deafening
+cries, a great number of big-headed, short-necked sea-gulls were
+amongst them; they spread out their long wings and braved in their
+play the snow whipped by the hurricane. This animation of the winged
+tribe made the landscape more lively.</p>
+
+<p>Numerous pieces of wood were floating to leeway, clashing with noise;
+a few enormous, bloated-headed sharks approached the vessel, but
+there was no question of chasing them, although Simpson, the harpooner,
+was longing to have a hit at them. Towards evening several seals made
+their appearance, nose above water, swimming between the blocks.</p>
+
+<p>On the 22nd the temperature again lowered; the <i>Forward</i> put on all
+steam to catch the favourable passes: the wind was decidedly fixed
+in the north-west; all sails were furled.</p>
+
+<p>During that day, which was Sunday, the sailors had little to do. After
+the reading of Divine service, which was conducted by Shandon, the
+crew gave chase to sea-birds, of which they caught a great number.
+They were suitably prepared according to the doctor's method, and
+furnished an agreeable increase of provisions to the tables of the
+officers and crew.</p>
+
+<p>At three o'clock in the afternoon the <i>Forward</i> had attained Thin
+de Sael, Sukkertop Mountain; the sea was very rough; from time to time
+a vast and inopportune fog fell from the grey sky; however, at noon
+an exact observation could be taken. The vessel was in 65&deg;
+20' latitude by 54&deg; 22' longitude. It was
+necessary to attain two degrees more in order to meet with freer and
+more favourable navigation.</p>
+
+<p>During the three following days, the 24th, 25th, and 26th of April,
+the <i>Forward</i> had a continual struggle with the ice; the working of
+the machines became very fatiguing. The steam was turned off quickly
+or got up again at a moment's notice, and escaped whistling from its
+valves. During the thick mist the nearing of icebergs was only known
+by dull thundering produced by the avalanches; the brig was instantly
+veered; it ran the risk of being crushed against the heaps of
+fresh-water ice, remarkable for its crystal transparency, and as hard
+as a rock.</p>
+
+<p>Richard Shandon never missed completing his provision of water by
+embarking several tons of ice every day. The doctor could not accustom
+himself to the optical delusions that refraction produces on these
+coasts. An iceberg sometimes appeared to him like a small white lump
+within reach, when it was at least at ten or twelve miles' distance.
+He endeavoured to accustom his eyesight to this singular phenomenon,
+so that he might be able to correct its errors rapidly.</p>
+
+<p>At last the crew were completely worn out by their labours in hauling
+the vessel alongside of the ice-fields and by keeping it free from
+the most menacing blocks by the aid of long perches. Nevertheless,
+the <i>Forward</i> was still held back in the impassable limits of the
+Polar Circle on Friday, the 27th of April.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap8"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER VIII</h3>
+
+<center>GOSSIP OF THE CREW</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>However, the <i>Forward</i> managed, by cunningly slipping into narrow
+passages, to gain a few more minutes north; but instead of avoiding
+the enemy, it was soon necessary to attack it. The ice-fields, several
+miles in extent, were getting nearer, and as these moving heaps often
+represent a pressure of more than ten millions of tons, it was
+necessary to give a wide berth to their embraces. The ice-saws were
+at once installed in the interior of the vessel, in such a manner
+as to facilitate immediate use of them. Part of the crew
+philosophically accepted their hard work, but the other complained
+of it, if it did not refuse to obey. At the same time that they assisted
+in the installation of the instruments, Garry, Bolton, Pen and Gripper
+exchanged their opinions.</p>
+
+<p>"By Jingo!" said Bolton gaily, "I don't know why the thought strikes
+me that there's a very jolly tavern in Water-street where it's
+comfortable to be between a glass of gin and a bottle of porter. Can't
+you imagine it, Gripper?"</p>
+
+<p>"To tell you the truth," quickly answered the questioned sailor, who
+generally professed to be in a bad temper, "I don't imagine it here."</p>
+
+<p>"It's for the sake of talking, Gripper; it's evident that the snow
+towns Dr. Clawbonny admires so don't contain the least public where
+a poor sailor can get a half-pint of brandy."</p>
+
+<p>"That's sure enough, Bolton; and you may as well add that there's
+nothing worth drinking here. It's a nice idea to deprive men of their
+grog when they are in the Northern Seas."</p>
+
+<p>"But you know," said Garry, "that the doctor told us it was to prevent
+us getting the scurvy. It's the only way to make us go far."</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't want to go far, Garry; it's pretty well to have come
+this far without trying to go where the devil is determined we shan't."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we shan't go, that's all," replied Pen. "I declare I've almost
+forgotten the taste of gin."</p>
+
+<p>"But remember what the doctor says," replied Bolton.</p>
+
+<p>"It's all very fine for them to talk. It remains to be seen if it
+isn't an excuse for being skinny with the drink."</p>
+
+<p>"Pen may be right, after all," said Gripper.</p>
+
+<p>"His nose is too red for that," answered Bolton. "Pen needn't grumble
+if it loses a little of its colour in the voyage."</p>
+
+<p>"What's my nose got to do with you?" sharply replied the sailor,
+attacked in the most sensitive place. "My nose doesn't need any of
+your remarks; take care of your own."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, then, don't get angry, Pen; I didn't know your nose was so touchy.
+I like a glass of whisky as well as anybody, especially in such a
+temperature; but if I know it'll do me more harm than good, I go
+without."</p>
+
+<p>"You go without," said Warren, the stoker; "but everyone don't go
+without."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean, Warren?" asked Garry, looking fixedly at him.</p>
+
+<p>"I mean that for some reason or other there are spirits on board,
+and I know they don't go without in the stern."</p>
+
+<p>"And how do you know that?" asked Garry.</p>
+
+<p>Warren did not know what to say: he talked for the sake of talking.</p>
+
+<p>"You see Warren don't know anything about it, Garry," said Bolton.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Pen, "we'll ask the commander for a ration of gin; we've
+earned it well and we'll see what he says."</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't if I were you," answered Garry.</p>
+
+<p>"Why?" cried Pen and Gripper.</p>
+
+<p>"Because he'll refuse. You knew you weren't to have any when you
+enlisted; you should have thought of it then."</p>
+
+<p>"Besides," replied Bolton, who took Garry's part because he liked
+his character, "Richard Shandon isn't master on board; he obeys, like
+us."</p>
+
+<p>"Who is master if he isn't?"</p>
+
+<p>"The captain."</p>
+
+<p>"Always that unfortunate captain!" exclaimed Pen. "Don't you see that
+on these ice-banks there's no more a captain than there is a public?
+It's a polite way of refusing us what we've a right to claim."</p>
+
+<p>"But if there's a captain," replied Bolton, "I'll bet two months'
+pay we shall see him before long."</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to tell the captain a bit of my mind," said Pen.</p>
+
+<p>"Who's talking about the captain?" said a new-comer. It was Clifton,
+the sailor, a superstitious and envious man. "Is anything new known
+about the captain?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"No," they all answered at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I believe we shall find him one fine morning installed in his
+cabin, and no one will know how he got there."</p>
+
+<p>"Get along, do!" replied Bolton. "Why, Clifton, you imagine that he's
+a hobgoblin&mdash;a sort of wild child of the Highlands."</p>
+
+<p>"Laugh as much as you like, Bolton, you won't change my opinion. Every
+day as I pass his cabin I look through the keyhole. One of these fine
+mornings I shall come and tell you what he's like."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, he'll be like everyone else," said Pen, "and if he thinks he'll
+be able to do what he likes with us, he'll find himself mistaken,
+that's all!"</p>
+
+<p>"Pen don't know him yet," said Bolton, "and he's beginning to quarrel
+with him already."</p>
+
+<p>"Who doesn't know him?" said Clifton, looking knowing; "I don't know
+that he don't!"</p>
+
+<p>"What the devil do you mean?" asked Gripper.</p>
+
+<p>"I know very well what I mean."</p>
+
+<p>"But we don't."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Pen has quarrelled with him before."</p>
+
+<p>"With the captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, the dog-captain&mdash;it's all one."</p>
+
+<p>The sailors looked at one another, afraid to say anything.</p>
+
+<p>"Man or dog," muttered Pen, "I declare that that animal will have
+his account one of these days."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Clifton," asked Bolton seriously, "you don't mean to say that
+you believe the dog is the real captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed I do," answered Clifton with conviction. "If you noticed
+things like I do, you would have noticed what a queer beast it is."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, tell us what you've noticed."</p>
+
+<p>"Haven't you noticed the way he walks on the poop with such an air
+of authority, looking up at the sails as if he were on watch?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's true enough," added Gripper, "and one evening I actually found
+him with his paws on the paddle-wheel."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't mean it!" said Bolton.</p>
+
+<p>"And now what do you think he does but go for a walk on the ice-fields,
+minding neither the bears nor the cold?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's true enough," said Bolton.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you ever see that 'ere animal, like an honest dog, seek men's
+company, sneak about the kitchen, and set his eyes on Mr. Strong when's
+he taking something good to the commander? Don't you hear him in the
+night when he goes away two or three miles from the vessel, howling
+fit to make your blood run cold, as if it weren't easy enough to feel
+that sensation in such a temperature as this? Again, have you ever
+seen him feed? He takes nothing from any one. His food is always
+untouched and unless a secret hand feeds him on board, I may say that
+he lives without eating, and if he's not unearthly, I'm a fool!"</p>
+
+<p>"Upon my word," said Bell, the carpenter, who had heard all Clifton's
+reasoning, "I shouldn't be surprised if such was the case." The other
+sailors were silenced.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, at any rate, where's the <i>Forward</i> going to?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know anything about it," replied Bell. "Richard Shandon will
+receive the rest of his instructions in due time."</p>
+
+<p>"But from whom?"</p>
+
+<p>"From whom?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, how?" asked Bolton, becoming pressing.</p>
+
+<p>"Now then, answer, Bell!" chimed in all the other sailors.</p>
+
+<p>"By whom? how? Why, I don't know," said the carpenter, embarrassed
+in his turn.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, by the dog-captain," exclaimed Clifton. "He has written once
+already; why shouldn't he again? If I only knew half of what that
+'ere animal knows, I shouldn't be embarrassed at being First Lord
+of the Admiralty!"</p>
+
+<p>"So then you stick to your opinion that the dog is the captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Pen in a hoarse voice, "if that 'ere animal don't want
+to turn up his toes in a dog's skin, he's only got to make haste and
+become a man, or I'm hanged if I don't settle him."</p>
+
+<p>"What for?" asked Garry.</p>
+
+<p>"Because I choose," replied Pen brutally; "besides, it's no business
+of any one."</p>
+
+<p>"Enough talking, my boys," called out Mr. Johnson, interfering just
+in time, for the conversation was getting hot. "Get on with your work,
+and set up your saws quicker than that. We must clear the iceberg."</p>
+
+<p>"What! on a Friday?" replied Clifton, shrugging his shoulders.
+"You'll see she won't get over the Polar circle as easily as you
+think."</p>
+
+<p>The efforts of the crew were almost powerless during the whole day.
+The <i>Forward</i> could not separate the ice-fields even by going against
+them full speed, and they were obliged to anchor for the night. On
+Saturday the temperature lowered again under the influence of an
+easterly wind. The weather cleared up, and the eye could sweep over
+the white plains in the distance, which the reflection of the sun's
+rays rendered dazzling. At seven in the morning the thermometer marked
+eight degrees below zero. The doctor was tempted to stay quietly in
+his cabin, and read the Arctic voyages over again; but, according
+to his custom, he asked himself what would be the most disagreeable
+thing he could do, which he settled was to go on deck and assist the
+men to work in such a temperature. Faithful to the line of conduct
+he had traced out for himself, he left his well-warmed cabin and came
+to help in hauling the vessel. His was a pleasant face, in spite of
+the green spectacles by which he preserved his eyes from the biting
+of the reflected rays; in his future observations he was always
+careful in making use of his snow spectacles, in order to avoid
+ophthalmia, very frequent in these high latitudes.</p>
+
+<p>Towards evening the <i>Forward</i> had made several miles further north,
+thanks to the activity of the men and Shandon's skill, which made
+him take advantage of every favourable circumstance; at midnight he
+had got beyond the sixty-sixth parallel, and the fathom line declared
+twenty-three fathoms of water; Shandon discovered that he was on the
+shoal where Her Majesty's ship <i>Victoria</i> struck, and that land was
+drawing near, thirty miles to the east. But now the heaps of ice,
+which up till now had been motionless, divided and began to move;
+icebergs seemed coming from every point of the horizon; the brig was
+entangled in a series of moving rocks, the crushing force of which
+it was impossible to resist. Moving became so difficult that Garry,
+the best helmsman, took the wheel; the mountains had a tendency to
+close up behind the brig; it then became essential to cut through
+the floating ice, and prudence as well as duty ordered them to go
+ahead. Difficulties became greater from the impossibility that
+Shandon found in establishing the direction of the vessel amongst
+such changing points, which kept moving without offering one firm
+perspective. The crew was divided into two tacks, larboard and
+starboard; each one, armed with a long perch with an iron point, drove
+back the two threatening blocks. Soon the <i>Forward</i> entered into a
+pass so narrow, between two high blocks, that the extremity of her
+yards struck against the walls, hard as rock; by degrees she entangled
+herself in the midst of a winding valley, filled up with eddies of
+snow, whilst the floating ice was crashing and splitting with sinister
+cracklings. But it soon became certain that there was no egress from
+this gullet. An enormous block, caught in the channel, was driving
+rapidly on to the <i>Forward</i>! It seemed impossible to avoid it, and
+equally impossible to back out along a road already obstructed.</p>
+
+<p>Shandon and Johnson, standing on the prow, were contemplating the
+position. Shandon was pointing with his right hand at the direction
+the helmsman was to take, and with his left was conveying to James
+Wall, posted near the engineer, his orders for the working of the
+machine.</p>
+
+<p>"How will this end?" asked the doctor of Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>"As it may please God," replied the boatswain.</p>
+
+<p>The block of ice, at least a hundred feet high, was only about a cable's
+length from the <i>Forward</i>, and threatened to pound her under it.</p>
+
+<p>"Cursed luck!" exclaimed Pen, swearing frightfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Silence!" exclaimed a voice which it was impossible to recognise
+in the midst of the storm.</p>
+
+<p>The block seemed to be precipitating itself upon the brig; there was
+a moment of undefinable anguish; the men forsook their poles and
+flocked to the stern in spite of Shandon's orders.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly a frightful sound was heard; a genuine waterspout fell upon
+deck, heaved up by an enormous wave. A cry of terror rang out from
+the crew whilst Garry, at the helm, held the <i>Forward</i> in a straight
+line in spite of the frightful incumbrance. When their frightened
+looks were drawn towards the mountain of ice it had disappeared; the
+pass was free, and further on a long channel, illuminated by the oblique
+rays of the sun, allowed the brig to pursue her track.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Mr. Clawbonny," said Johnson, "can you explain to me the cause
+of that phenomenon?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is a very simple one," answered the doctor, "and happens very
+often. When those floating bodies are disengaged from each other by
+the thaw, they sail away separately, maintaining their balance; but
+by degrees, as they near the south, where the water is relatively
+warmer, their base, shaken by the collision with other icebergs,
+begins to melt and weaken; it then happens that their centre of gravity
+is displaced, and, naturally, they overturn. Only, if that one had
+turned over two minutes later, it would have crushed our vessel to
+pieces."</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap9"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER IX</h3>
+
+<center>NEWS</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The Polar circle was cleared at last. On the 30th of April, at midday,
+the <i>Forward</i> passed abreast of Holsteinborg; picturesque mountains
+rose up on the eastern horizon. The sea appeared almost free from
+icebergs, and the few there were could easily be avoided. The wind
+veered round to the south-east, and the brig, under her mizensail,
+brigantine, topsails, and her topgallant sail, sailed up Baffin's
+Sea. It had been a particularly calm day, and the crew were able to
+take a little rest. Numerous birds were swimming and fluttering about
+round the vessel; amongst others, the doctor observed some
+<i>alca-alla</i>, very much like the teal, with black neck, wings and back,
+and white breast; they plunged with vivacity, and their immersion
+often lasted forty seconds.</p>
+
+<p>The day would not have been remarkable if the following fact, however
+extraordinary it may appear, had not occurred on board. At six o'clock
+in the morning Richard Shandon, re-entering his cabin after having
+been relieved, found upon the table a letter with this address:</p>
+<br>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"To the Commander,<br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"R<small>ICHARD</small> S<small>HANDON</small>,<br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"On board the 'F<small>ORWARD</small>,'<br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"Baffin's Sea."</p>
+<br>
+
+<p>Shandon could not believe his own eyes, and before reading such a
+strange epistle he caused the doctor, James Wall and Johnson to be
+called, and showed them the letter.</p>
+
+<p>"That grows very strange," said Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>"It's delightful!" thought the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"At last," cried Shandon, "we shall know the secret."</p>
+
+<p>With a quick hand he tore the envelope and read as follows:</p>
+<br>
+
+<p>"C<small>OMMANDER</small>,&mdash;The captain of the <i>Forward</i> is pleased with the
+coolness, skill, and courage that your men, your officers, and
+yourself have shown on the late occasions, and begs you to give
+evidence of his gratitude to the crew.</p>
+
+<p>"Have the goodness to take a northerly direction towards Melville
+Bay, and from thence try and penetrate into Smith's Straits.</p>
+
+<div align="right">"T<small>HE</small> C<small>APTAIN OF THE</small> <i>Forward</i>,
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br><br>"K. Z."
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</div>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"Monday, April 30th,<br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+"Abreast of Cape Walsingham."<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>"Is that all?" cried the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all," replied Shandon, and the letter fell from his hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Wall, "this chimerical captain doesn't even mention
+coming on board, so I conclude that he never will come."</p>
+
+<p>"But how did this letter get here?" said Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>Shandon was silent.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Wall is right," replied the doctor, after picking up the letter
+and turning it over in every direction; "the captain won't come on
+board for an excellent reason&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And what's that?" asked Shandon quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"Because he is here already," replied the doctor simply.</p>
+
+<p>"Already!" said Shandon. "What do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"How do you explain the arrival of this letter if such is not the
+case?"</p>
+
+<p>Johnson nodded his head in sign of approbation.</p>
+
+<p>"It is not possible!" said Shandon energetically. "I know every man
+of the crew. We should have to believe, in that case, that the captain
+has been with us ever since we set sail. It is not possible, I tell
+you. There isn't one of them that I haven't seen for more than two
+years in Liverpool; doctor, your supposition is inadmissible."</p>
+
+<p>"Then what do you admit, Shandon?"</p>
+
+<p>"Everything but that! I admit that the captain, or one of his men,
+has profited by the darkness, the fog, or anything you like, in order
+to slip on board; we are not very far from land; there are Esquimaux
+ka&iuml;aks that pass unperceived between the icebergs; someone may have
+come on board and left the letter; the fog was intense enough to favour
+their design."</p>
+
+<p>"And to hinder them from seeing the brig," replied the doctor; "if
+we were not able to perceive an intruder slip on board, how could
+<i>he</i> have discovered the <i>Forward</i> in the midst of a fog?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is evident," exclaimed Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>"I come back, then," said the doctor, "to my first hypothesis. What
+do you think about it, Shandon?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think what you please," replied Shandon fiercely, "with the
+exception of supposing that this man is on board my vessel."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," added Wall, "there may be amongst the crew a man of his
+who has received instructions from him."</p>
+
+<p>"That's very likely," added the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"But which man?" asked Shandon. "I tell you I have known all my men
+a long time."</p>
+
+<p>"Anyhow," replied Johnson, "if this captain shows himself, let him
+be man or devil, we'll receive him; but we have another piece of
+information to draw from this letter."</p>
+
+<p>"What's that?" asked Shandon.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, that we are to direct our path not only towards Melville Bay,
+but again into Smith's Straits."</p>
+
+<p>"You are right," answered the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Smith's Straits?" echoed Shandon mechanically.</p>
+
+<p>"It is evident," replied Johnson, "that the destination of the
+<i>Forward</i> is not to seek a North-West passage, as we shall leave to
+our left the only track that leads to it&mdash;that is to say, Lancaster
+Straits; that's what forebodes us difficult navigation in unknown
+seas."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Smith's Straits," replied Shandon, "that's the route the
+American Kane followed in 1853, and at the price of what dangers!
+For a long time he was thought to be lost in those dreadful latitudes!
+However, as we must go, go we must. But where? how far? To the Pole?"</p>
+
+<p>"And why not?" cried the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>The idea of such an insane attempt made the boatswain shrug his
+shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"After all," resumed James Wall, "to come back to the captain, if
+he exists, I see nowhere on the coast of Greenland except Disko or
+Uppernawik where he can be waiting for us; in a few days we shall
+know what we may depend upon."</p>
+
+<p>"But," asked the doctor of Shandon, "aren't you going to make known
+the contents of that letter to the crew?"</p>
+
+<p>"With the commander's permission," replied Johnson, "I should do
+nothing of the kind."</p>
+
+<p>"And why so?" asked Shandon.</p>
+
+<p>"Because all that mystery tends to discourage the men: they are
+already very anxious about the fate of our expedition, and if the
+supernatural side of it is increased it may produce very serious
+results, and in a critical moment we could not rely upon them. What
+do you say about it, commander?"</p>
+
+<p>"And you, doctor&mdash;what do you think?" asked Shandon.</p>
+
+<p>"I think Johnson's reasoning is just."</p>
+
+<p>"And you, Wall?"</p>
+
+<p>"Unless there's better advice forthcoming, I shall stick to the
+opinion of these gentlemen."</p>
+
+<p>Shandon reflected seriously during a few minutes, and read the letter
+over again carefully.</p>
+
+<p>"Gentlemen," said he, "your opinion on this subject is certainly
+excellent, but I cannot adopt it."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not, Shandon?" asked the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Because the instructions of this letter are formal: they command
+me to give the captain's congratulations to the crew, and up till
+to-day I have always blindly obeyed his orders in whatever manner
+they have been transmitted to me, and I cannot&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;&mdash;" said Johnson, who rightly dreaded the effect of such a
+communication upon the minds of the sailors.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Johnson," answered Shandon, "your reasons are excellent,
+but read&mdash;'he begs you to give evidence of his gratitude to the crew.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Act as you think best," replied Johnson, who was besides a very strict
+observer of discipline. "Are we to muster the crew on deck?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do so," replied Shandon.</p>
+
+<p>The news of a communication having been received from the captain
+spread like wildfire on deck; the sailors quickly arrived at their
+post, and the commander read out the contents of the mysterious letter.
+The reading of it was received in a dead silence; the crew dispersed,
+a prey to a thousand suppositions. Clifton had heard enough to give
+himself up to all the wanderings of his superstitious imagination;
+he attributed a considerable share in this incident to the dog-captain,
+and when by chance he met him in his passage he never failed to salute
+him. "I told you the animal could write," he used to say to the sailors.
+No one said anything in answer to this observation, and even Bell,
+the carpenter himself, would not have known what to answer.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless it was certain to all that, in default of the captain,
+his spirit or his shadow watched on board; and henceforward the wisest
+of the crew abstained from exchanging their opinions about him.</p>
+
+<p>On the 1st of May, at noon, they were in 68&deg; latitude and 56&deg;
+32' longitude. The temperature was higher and the
+thermometer marked twenty-five degrees above zero. The doctor was
+amusing himself with watching the antics of a white bear and two cubs
+on the brink of a pack that lengthened out the land. Accompanied by
+Wall and Simpson, he tried to give chase to them by means of the canoe;
+but the animal, of a rather warlike disposition, rapidly led away
+its offspring, and consequently the doctor was compelled to renounce
+following them up.</p>
+
+<p>Chilly Cape was doubled during the night under the influence of a
+favourable wind, and soon the high mountains of Disko rose in the
+horizon. Godhavn Bay, the residence of the Governor-General of the
+Danish Settlements, was left to the right. Shandon did not consider
+it worth while to stop, and soon outran the Esquimaux pirogues who
+were endeavouring to reach his ship.</p>
+
+<p>The Island of Disko is also called Whale Island. It was from this
+point that on the 12th of July, 1845, Sir John Franklin wrote to the
+Admiralty for the last time. It was also on that island on the 27th
+of August, 1859, that Captain McClintock set foot on his return,
+bringing back, alas! proofs too complete of the loss of the expedition.
+The coincidence of these two facts were noted by the doctor; that
+melancholy conjunction was prolific in memories, but soon the heights
+of Disko disappeared from his view.</p>
+
+<p>There were, at that time, numerous icebergs on the coasts, some of
+those which the strongest thaws are unable to detach; the continual
+series of ridges showed themselves under the strangest forms.</p>
+
+<p>The next day, towards three o'clock, they were bearing on to Sanderson
+Hope to the north-east. Land was left on the starboard at a distance
+of about fifteen miles; the mountains seemed tinged with a
+red-coloured bistre. During the evening, several whales of the
+finners species, which have fins on their backs, came playing about
+in the midst of the ice-trails, throwing out air and water from their
+blow-holes. It was during the night between the 3rd and 4th of May
+that the doctor saw for the first time the sun graze the horizon
+without dipping his luminous disc into it. Since the 31st of January
+the days had been getting longer and longer till the sun went down
+no more. To strangers not accustomed to the persistence of this
+perpetual light it was a constant subject of astonishment, and even
+of fatigue; it is almost impossible to understand to what extent
+obscurity is requisite for the well-being of our eyes. The doctor
+experienced real pain in getting accustomed to this light, rendered
+still more acute by the reflection of the sun's rays upon the plains
+of ice.</p>
+
+<p>On May 5th the <i>Forward</i> headed the seventy-second parallel; two
+months later they would have met with numerous whalers under these
+high latitudes, but at present the straits were not sufficiently open
+to allow them to penetrate into Baffin's Bay. The following day the
+brig, after having headed Woman's Island, came in sight of Uppernawik,
+the most northerly settlement that Denmark possesses on these coasts.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap10"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER X</h3>
+
+<center>DANGEROUS NAVIGATION</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Shandon, Dr. Clawbonny, Johnson, Foker, and Strong, the cook, went
+on shore in the small boat. The governor, his wife, and five children,
+all of the Esquimaux race, came politely to meet the visitors. The
+doctor knew enough Danish to enable him to establish a very agreeable
+acquaintance with them; besides, Foker, who was interpreter of the
+expedition, as well as ice-master, knew about twenty words of the
+Greenland language, and if not ambitious, twenty words will carry
+you far. The governor was born on the island, and had never left his
+native country. He did the honours of the town, which is composed
+of three wooden huts, for himself and the Lutheran minister, of a
+school, and magazines stored with the produce of wrecks. The remainder
+consists of snow-huts, the entrance to which is attained by creeping
+through a hole.</p>
+
+<p>The greater part of the population came down to greet the <i>Forward</i>,
+and more than one native advanced as far as the middle of the bay
+in his ka&iuml;ak, fifteen feet long and scarcely two wide. The doctor
+knew that the word Esquimaux signified raw-fish-eater, and he
+likewise knew that the name was considered an insult in the country,
+for which reason he did not fail to address them by the title of
+Greenlanders, and nevertheless only by the look of their oily sealskin
+clothing, their boots of the same material, and all their greasy
+tainted appearance, it was easy to discover their accustomed food.
+Like all Ichthyophagans, they were half-eaten up with leprosy; and
+yet, for all that, were in no worse health.</p>
+
+<p>The Lutheran minister and his wife, with whom the doctor promised
+himself a private chat, were on a journey towards Proven on the south
+of Uppernawik; he was therefore reduced to getting information out
+of the governor. This chief magistrate did not seem to be very learned;
+a little less and he would have been an ass, a little more and he
+would have known how to read. The doctor, however, questioned him
+upon the commercial affairs, the customs and manners of the Esquimaux,
+and learnt by signs that seals were worth about &pound;40 delivered
+in Copenhagen, a bearskin forty Danish dollars, a blue foxskin four,
+and a white one two or three dollars. The doctor also wished, with
+an eye to completing his personal education, to visit one of the
+Esquimaux huts; it is almost impossible to imagine of what a learned
+man who is desirous of knowledge is capable. Happily the opening of
+those hovels was too narrow, and the enthusiastic fellow was not able
+to crawl in; it was very lucky for him, for there is nothing more
+repulsive than that accumulation of things living and dead, seal flesh
+or Esquimaux flesh, rotten fish and infectious wearing apparel, which
+constitute a Greenland hovel; no window to revive the unbreathable
+air, only a hole at the top of the hut, which gives free passage to
+the smoke, but does not allow the stench to go out.</p>
+
+<p>Foker gave these details to the doctor, who did not curse his
+corpulence the less for that. He wished to judge for himself about
+these emanations, <i>sui generis</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure," said he, "one gets used to it in the long run."</p>
+
+<p><i>In the long run</i> depicts Dr. Clawbonny in a single phrase. During
+the ethnographical studies of the worthy doctor, Shandon, according
+to his instructions, was occupied in procuring means of transport
+to cross the ice. He had to pay &pound;4 for a sledge and six dogs,
+and even then he had great difficulty in persuading the natives to
+part with them. Shandon wanted also to engage Hans Christian, the
+clever dog-driver, who made one of the party of Captain McClintock's
+expedition; but, unfortunately, Hans was at that time in Southern
+Greenland. Then came the grand question, the topic of the day, was
+there in Uppernawik a European waiting for the passage of the
+<i>Forward</i>? Did the governor know if any foreigner, an Englishman
+probably, had settled in those countries? To what epoch could he trace
+his last relations with whale or other ships? To these questions the
+governor replied that not one single foreigner had landed on that
+side of the coast for more than ten months.</p>
+
+<p>Shandon asked for the names of the last whalers seen there; he knew
+none of them. He was in despair.</p>
+
+<p>"You must acknowledge, doctor, that all this is quite inconceivable.
+Nothing at Cape Farewell, nothing at Disko Island, nothing at
+Uppernawik."</p>
+
+<p>"If when we get there you repeat 'Nothing in Melville Bay,' I shall
+greet you as the only captain of the <i>Forward</i>."</p>
+
+<p>The small boat came back to the brig towards evening, bringing back
+the visitors. Strong, in order to change the food a little, had
+procured several dozens of eider-duck eggs, twice as big as hens'
+eggs, and of greenish colour. It was not much, but the change was
+refreshing to a crew fed on salted meat. The wind became favourable
+the next day, but, however, Shandon did not command them to get under
+sail; he still wished to stay another day, and for conscience' sake
+to give any human being time to join the <i>Forward</i>. He even caused
+the 16-pounder to be fired from hour to hour; it thundered out with
+a great crash amidst the icebergs, but the noise only frightened the
+swarms of molly-mokes and rotches. During the night several rockets
+were sent up, but in vain. And thus they were obliged to set sail.</p>
+
+<p>On the 8th of May, at six o'clock in the morning, the <i>Forward</i> under
+her topsails, foresails, and topgallant, lost sight of the Uppernawik
+settlement, and the hideous stakes to which were hung seal-guts and
+deer-paunches. The wind was blowing from the south-east, and the
+temperature went up to thirty-two degrees. The sun pierced through
+the fog, and the ice was getting a little loosened under its dissolving
+action. But the reflection of the white rays produced a sad effect
+on the eyesight of several of the crew. Wolsten, the gunsmith, Gripper,
+Clifton, and Bell were struck with snow blindness, a kind of weakness
+in the eyes very frequent in spring, and which determines, amongst
+the Esquimaux, numerous cases of blindness. The doctor advised those
+who were so afflicted and their companions in general to cover their
+faces with green gauze, and he was the first to put his own
+prescription into execution.</p>
+
+<p>The dogs bought by Shandon at Uppernawik were of a rather savage nature,
+but in the end they became accustomed to the ship; the captain did
+not take the arrival of these new comrades too much to heart, and
+he seemed to know their habits. Clifton was not the last to remark
+the fact that the captain must already have been in communication
+with his Greenland brethren, as on land they were always famished
+and reduced by incomplete nourishment; they only thought of
+recruiting themselves by the diet on board.</p>
+
+<p>On the 9th of May the <i>Forward</i> touched within a few cables' length
+the most westerly of the Baffin Isles. The doctor noticed several
+rocks in the bay between the islands and the continent, those called
+Crimson Cliffs; they were covered over with snow as red as carmine,
+to which Dr. Kane gives a purely vegetable origin. Clawbonny wanted
+to consider this phenomenon nearer, but the ice prevented them
+approaching the coast; although the temperature had a tendency to
+rise, it was easy enough to see that the icebergs and ice-streams
+were accumulating to the north of Baffin's Sea. The land offered a
+very different aspect from that of Uppernawik; immense glaciers were
+outlined on the horizon against a greyish sky. On the 10th the
+<i>Forward</i> left Hingston Bay on the right, near to the seventy-fourth
+degree of latitude. Several hundred miles westward the Lancaster
+Channel opened out into the sea.</p>
+
+<p>But afterwards that immense extent of water disappeared under
+enormous fields of ice, upon which hummocks rose up as regularly as
+a crystallisation of the same substance. Shandon had the steam put
+on, and up to the 11th of May the <i>Forward</i> wound amongst the sinuous
+rocks, leaving the print of a track on the sky, caused by the black
+smoke from her funnels. But new obstacles were soon encountered; the
+paths were getting closed up in consequence of the incessant
+displacement of the floating masses; at every minute a failure of
+water in front of the <i>Forward's</i> prow became imminent, and if she
+had been nipped it would have been difficult to extricate her. They
+all knew it, and thought about it.</p>
+
+<p>On board this vessel, without aim or known destination, foolishly
+seeking to advance towards the north, some symptoms of hesitation
+were manifested amongst those men, accustomed to an existence of
+danger; many, forgetting the advantages offered, regretted having
+ventured so far, and already a certain demoralisation prevailed in
+their minds, still more increased by Clifton's fears, and the idle
+talk of two or three of the leaders, such as Pen, Gripper, Warren,
+and Wolston.</p>
+
+<p>To the uneasiness of the crew were joined overwhelming fatigues, for
+on the 12th of May the brig was closed in on every side; her steam
+was powerless, and it was necessary to force a road through the
+ice-fields. The working of the saws was very difficult in the floes,
+which measured from six to seven feet in thickness. When two parallel
+grooves divided the ice for the length of a hundred feet, they had
+to break the interior part with hatchets or handspikes; then took
+place the elongation of the anchors, fixed in a hole by means of a
+thick auger; afterwards the working of the capstan began, and in this
+way the vessel was hauled over. The greatest difficulty consisted
+in driving the smashed pieces under the floes in order to open up
+a free passage for the ship, and to thrust them away they were
+compelled to use long iron-spiked poles.</p>
+
+<p>At last, what with the working of the saws, the hauling, the capstan
+and poles, incessant, dangerous, and forced work, in the midst of
+fogs or thick snow, the temperature relatively low, ophthalmic
+suffering and moral uneasiness, all contributed to discourage the
+crew, and react on the men's imagination. When sailors have an
+energetic, audacious, and convinced man to do with, who knows what
+he wants, where he is bound for, and what end he has in view, confidence
+sustains them in spite of everything. They make one with their chief,
+feeling strong in his strength, and quiet in his tranquillity; but
+on the brig it was felt that the commander was not sure of himself,
+that he hesitated before his unknown end and destination. In spite
+of his energetic nature, his weakness showed itself in his changing
+orders, incomplete manoeuvres, stormy reflections, and a thousand
+details which could not escape the notice of the crew.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, Shandon was not captain of the ship, a sufficient reason
+for argument about his orders; from argument to a refusal to obey
+the step is easy. The discontented soon added to their number the
+first engineer, who up to now had remained a slave to his duty.</p>
+
+<p>On May 16th, six days after the <i>Forward's</i> arrival at the icebergs,
+Shandon had not gained two miles northward, and the ice threatened
+to freeze in the brig till the following season. This was becoming
+dangerous. Towards eight in the evening Shandon and the doctor,
+accompanied by Garry, went on a voyage of discovery in the midst of
+the immense plains; they took care not to go too far away from the
+vessel, as it was difficult to fix any landmarks in those white
+solitudes, the aspects of which changed constantly.</p>
+
+<p>The refraction produced strange effects; they still astonished the
+doctor; where he thought he had only one foot to leap he found it
+was five or six, or the contrary; and in both cases the result was
+a fall, if not dangerous, at least painful, on the frozen ice as hard
+as glass.</p>
+
+<p>Shandon and his two companions went in search of a practicable passage.
+Three miles from the ship they succeeded, not without trouble, in
+climbing the iceberg, which was perhaps three hundred feet high.</p>
+
+<p>From this point their view extended over that desolated mass which
+looked like the ruins of a gigantic town with its beaten-down obelisks,
+its overthrown steeples and palaces turned upside down all in a
+lump&mdash;in fact, a genuine chaos. The sun threw long oblique rays of
+a light without warmth, as if heat-absorbing substances were placed
+between it and that gloomy country. The sea seemed to be frozen to
+the remotest limits of view.</p>
+
+<p>"How shall we get through?" exclaimed the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not the least idea," replied Shandon; "but we will get through,
+even if we are obliged to employ powder to blow up those mountains,
+for I certainly won't let that ice shut me up till next spring."</p>
+
+<p>"Nevertheless, such was the fate of the <i>Fox</i>, almost in these same
+quarters. Never mind," continued the doctor, "we shall get through
+with a little philosophy. Believe me, that is worth all the engines
+in the world."</p>
+
+<p>"You must acknowledge," replied Shandon, "that the year doesn't begin
+under very favourable auspices."</p>
+
+<p>"That is incontestable, and I notice that Baffin's Sea has a tendency
+to return to the same state in which it was before 1817."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you think, doctor, that the present state of things has not
+always existed?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; from time to time there are vast breakings up which scientific
+men can scarcely explain; thus, up to 1817 this sea was constantly
+obstructed, when suddenly an immense cataclysm took place which drove
+back these icebergs into the ocean, the great part of which were
+stranded on Newfoundland Bank. From that time Baffin's Bay has been
+almost free, and has become the haunt of numerous whalers."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, since that epoch, voyages to the north have been easier?"</p>
+
+<p>"Incomparably so; but for the last few years it has been observed
+that the bay has a tendency to be closed up again, and according to
+investigations made by navigators, it may probably be so for a long
+time&mdash;a still greater reason for us to go on as far as possible. Just
+now we look like people who get into unknown galleries, the doors
+of which are always shut behind them."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you advise me to back out?" asked Shandon, endeavouring to read
+the answer in the doctor's eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"I! I have never known how to take a step backward, and should we
+never return, I say 'Go ahead.' However, I should like to make known
+to you that if we do anything imprudent, we know very well what we
+are exposed to."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Garry, what do you think about it?" asked Shandon of the sailor.</p>
+
+<p>"I? Commander, I should go on; I'm of the same opinion as Mr.
+Clawbonny; but you do as you please; command, and we will obey."</p>
+
+<p>"They don't all speak like you, Garry," replied Shandon. "They aren't
+all in an obedient humour! Suppose they were to refuse to execute
+my orders?"</p>
+
+<p>"Commander," replied Garry coldly, "I have given you my advice because
+you asked me for it; but you are not obliged to act upon it."</p>
+
+<p>Shandon did not reply; he attentively examined the horizon, and
+descended with his two companions on to the ice-field.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap11"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XI</h3>
+
+<center>THE DEVIL'S THUMB</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>During the commander's absence the men had gone through divers works
+in order to make the ship fit to avoid the pressure of the ice-fields.
+Pen, Clifton, Gripper, Bolton, and Simpson were occupied in this
+laborious work; the stoker and the two engineers were even obliged
+to come to the aid of their comrades, for, from the instant they were
+not wanted at the engine, they again became sailors, and, as such,
+they could be employed in all kinds of work on board. But this was
+not accomplished without a great deal of grumbling.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll tell you what," said Pen, "I've had enough of it, and if in
+three days the breaking up isn't come, I'll swear to God that I'll
+chuck up!"</p>
+
+<p>"You'll chuck up?" replied Gripper; "you'd do better to help us to
+back out. Do you think we are in the humour to winter here till next
+year?"</p>
+
+<p>"To tell you the truth, it would be a dreary winter," said Plover,
+"for the ship is exposed from every quarter."</p>
+
+<p>"And who knows," added Brunton, "if even next spring we should find
+the sea freer than it is now?"</p>
+
+<p>"We aren't talking about next spring," said Pen; "to-day's Thursday;
+if next Sunday morning the road ain't clear, we'll back out south."</p>
+
+<p>"That's the ticket!" cried Clifton.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you all agreed?" said Pen.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered all his comrades.</p>
+
+<p>"That's right enough," answered Warren, "for if we are obliged to
+work like this, hauling the ship by the strength of our arms, my advice
+is to backwater."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll see about that on Sunday," answered Wolsten.</p>
+
+<p>"As soon as I get the order," said Brunton, "I'll soon get my steam
+up."</p>
+
+<p>"Or we'd manage to get it up ourselves," said Clifton.</p>
+
+<p>"If any of the officers," said Pen, "wants to have the pleasure of
+wintering here, we'll let him. He can build himself a snow-hut like
+the Esquimaux."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing of the kind, Pen," replied Brunton; "we won't leave anybody.
+You understand that, you others. Besides, I don't think it would be
+difficult to persuade the commander; he already seems very uncertain,
+and if we were quietly to propose it&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know that," said Plover; "Richard Shandon is a hard,
+headstrong man, and we should have to sound him carefully."</p>
+
+<p>"When I think," replied Bolton, with a covetous sigh, "that in a month
+we might be back in Liverpool; we could soon clear the southern
+ice-line. The pass in Davis's Straits will be open in the beginning
+of June, and we shall only have to let ourselves drift into the
+Atlantic."</p>
+
+<p>"Besides," said the prudent Clifton, "if we bring back the commander
+with us, acting under his responsibility, our pay and bounty money
+will be sure; whilst if we return alone it won't be so certain."</p>
+
+<p>"That's certain!" said Plover; "that devil of a Clifton speaks like
+a book. Let us try to have nothing to explain to the Admiralty; it's
+much safer to leave no one behind us."</p>
+
+<p>"But if the officers refuse to follow us?" replied Pen, who wished
+to push his comrades to an extremity.</p>
+
+<p>To such a question they were puzzled to reply.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall see about it when the time comes," replied Bolton; "besides,
+it would be enough to win Richard Shandon over to our side. We shall
+have no difficulty about that."</p>
+
+<p>"Anyhow," said Pen, swearing, "there's something I'll leave here if
+I get an arm eaten in the attempt."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! you mean the dog," said Plover.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, the dog; and before long I'll settle his hash!"</p>
+
+<p>"The more so," replied Clifton, coming back to his favourite theme,
+"that the dog is the cause of all our misfortunes."</p>
+
+<p>"He's cast an evil spell over us," said Plover.</p>
+
+<p>"It's through him we're in an iceberg," said Gripper.</p>
+
+<p>"He's the cause that we've had more ice against us than has ever been
+seen at this time of year," said Wolsten.</p>
+
+<p>"He's the cause of my bad eyes," said Brunton.</p>
+
+<p>"He's cut off the gin and brandy," added Pen.</p>
+
+<p>"He's the cause of everything," said the assembly, getting excited.</p>
+
+<p>"And he's captain into the bargain!" cried Clifton.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, captain of ill-luck," said Pen, whose unreasonable fury grew
+stronger at every word; "you wanted to come here, and here you'll
+stay."</p>
+
+<p>"But how are we to nap him?" said Plover.</p>
+
+<p>"We've a good opportunity," replied Clifton; "the commander isn't
+on deck, the lieutenant is asleep in his cabin, and the fog's thick
+enough to stop Johnson seeing us."</p>
+
+<p>"But where's the dog?" cried Pen.</p>
+
+<p>"He's asleep near the coalhole," replied Clifton, "and if anybody
+wants&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll take charge of him," answered Pen furiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Look out, Pen, he's got teeth that could snap an iron bar in two."</p>
+
+<p>"If he moves I'll cut him open," cried Pen, taking his knife in one
+hand. He bounced in between decks, followed by Warren, who wanted
+to help him in his undertaking. They quickly came back, carrying the
+animal in their arms, strongly muzzled, with his paws bound tightly
+together. They had taken him by surprise whilst he slept, so that
+the unfortunate dog could not escape them.</p>
+
+<p>"Hurrah for Pen!" cried Plover.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean to do with him now you've got him?" asked Clifton.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, drown him, and if ever he gets over it&mdash;&mdash;" replied Pen, with
+a fearful smile of satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>About two hundred steps from the vessel there was a seal-hole, a kind
+of circular crevice cut out by the teeth of that amphibious animal,
+hollowed out from underneath, and through which the seal comes up
+to breathe on to the surface of the ice. To keep this aperture from
+closing up he has to be very careful because the formation of his
+jaws would not enable him to bore through the hole again from the
+outside, and in a moment of danger he would fall a prey to his enemies.
+Pen and Warren directed their steps towards this crevice, and there,
+in spite of the dog's energetic efforts, he was unmercifully
+precipitated into the sea. An enormous lump of ice was then placed
+over the opening, thus closing all possible issue to the poor animal,
+walled up in a watery prison.</p>
+
+<p>"Good luck to you, captain," cried the brutal sailor.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly afterwards Pen and Warren returned on deck. Johnson had seen
+nothing of this performance. The fog thickened round about the ship,
+and snow began to fall with violence. An hour later, Richard Shandon,
+the doctor, and Garry rejoined the <i>Forward</i>. Shandon had noticed
+a pass in a north-eastern direction of which he was resolved to take
+advantage, and gave his orders in consequence. The crew obeyed with
+a certain activity, not without hinting to Shandon that it was
+impossible to go further on, and that they only gave him three more
+days' obedience. During a part of the night and the following day
+the working of the saws and the hauling were actively kept up; the
+<i>Forward</i> gained about two miles further north. On the 18th she was
+in sight of land, and at five or six cable-lengths from a peculiar
+peak, called from its strange shape the Devil's Thumb.</p>
+
+<p>It was there that the <i>Prince Albert</i> in 1851, and the <i>Advance</i> with
+Kane, in 1853, were kept prisoners by the ice for several weeks. The
+odd form of the Devil's Thumb, the dreary deserts in its vicinity,
+the vast circus of icebergs&mdash;some of them more than three hundred
+feet high&mdash;the cracking of the ice, reproduced by the echo in so
+sinister a manner, rendered the position of the <i>Forward</i> horribly
+dreary. Shandon understood the necessity of getting out of it and
+going further ahead. Twenty-four hours later, according to his
+estimation, he had been able to clear the fatal coast for about two
+miles, but this was not enough. Shandon, overwhelmed with fear, and
+the false situation in which he was placed, lost both courage and
+energy; in order to obey his instructions and get further north, he
+had thrown his vessel into an excessively perilous situation. The
+men were worn out by the hauling; it required more than three hours
+to hollow out a channel twenty feet long, through ice that was usually
+from four to five feet thick. The health of the crew threatened to
+break down. Shandon was astonished at the silence of his men and their
+unaccustomed obedience, but he feared that it was the calm before
+the storm. Who can judge, then, of his painful disappointment,
+surprise, and despair when he perceived that in consequence of an
+insensible movement of the ice-field the <i>Forward</i> had, during the
+night from the 18th to the 19th, lost all the advantage she had gained
+with so much toil? On the Saturday morning they were once more opposite
+the ever-threatening Devil's Thumb, and in a still more critical
+position. The icebergs became more numerous, and drifted by in the
+fog like phantoms. Shandon was in a state of complete demoralisation,
+for fright had taken possession of the dauntless man and his crew.
+Shandon had heard the dog's disappearance spoken about, but dared
+not punish those who were guilty of it. He feared that a rebellion
+might be the consequence. The weather was fearful during the whole
+day; the snow rose up in thick whirlpools, wrapping up the <i>Forward</i>
+in an impenetrable cloak. Sometimes, under the action of the storm,
+the fog was torn asunder, and displayed towards land, raised up like
+a spectre, the Devil's Thumb.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Forward</i> was anchored to an immense block of ice; it was all that
+could be done; there was nothing more to attempt; the obscurity became
+denser, and the man at the helm could not see James Wall, who was
+on duty in the bow. Shandon withdrew to his cabin, a prey to
+unremitting uneasiness; the doctor was putting his voyage notes in
+order; one half the crew remained on deck, the other half stayed in
+the common cabin. At one moment, when the storm increased in fury,
+the Devil's Thumb seemed to rise up out of all proportion in the midst
+of the fog.</p>
+
+<p>"Good God!" cried Simpson, drawing back with fright.</p>
+
+<p>"What the devil's that?" said Foker, and exclamations rose up in every
+direction.</p>
+
+<p>"It is going to smash us!"</p>
+
+<p>"We are lost!"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Wall! Mr. Wall!"</p>
+
+<p>"It's all over with us!"</p>
+
+<p>"Commander! Commander!"</p>
+
+<p>These cries were simultaneously uttered by the men on watch. Wall
+fled to the quarter-deck, and Shandon, followed by the doctor, rushed
+on deck to look. In the midst of the fog the Devil's Thumb seemed
+to have suddenly neared the brig, and seemed to have grown in a most
+fantastic manner. At its summit rose up a second cone, turned upside
+down and spindled on its point; its enormous mass threatened to crush
+the ship, as it was oscillating and ready to fall. It was a most fearful
+sight; every one instinctively drew back, and several sailors,
+leaping on to the ice, abandoned the ship.</p>
+
+<p>"Let no one move!" cried the commander in a severe voice. "Every one
+to his post!"</p>
+
+<p>"How now, my friends? There's nothing to be frightened at!" said the
+doctor. "There's no danger! Look, commander, look ahead, Mr. Wall;
+it's only an effect of the mirage, nothing else."</p>
+
+<p>"You are quite right, Mr. Clawbonny," answered Johnson; "those fools
+were frightened at a shadow."</p>
+
+<p>After the doctor had spoken most of the sailors drew near, and their
+fear changed to admiration at the wonderful phenomenon, which shortly
+disappeared from sight.</p>
+
+<p>"They call that a mirage?" said Clifton. "Well, you may believe me
+that the devil has something to do with it."</p>
+
+<p>"That's certain!" replied Gripper.</p>
+
+<p>But when the fog cleared away it disclosed to the eyes of the commander
+an immense free and unexpected passage; it seemed to run away from
+the coast, and he therefore determined to seize such a favourable
+hazard. Men were placed on each side of the creek, hawsers were lowered
+down to them, and they began to tow the vessel in a northerly direction.
+During long hours this work was actively executed in silence. Shandon
+caused the steam to be got up, in order to take advantage of the
+fortunate discovery of this channel.</p>
+
+<p>"This," said he to Johnson, "is a most providential hazard, and if
+we can only get a few miles ahead, we shall probably get to the end
+of our misfortunes."</p>
+
+<p>"Brunton! stir up the fires, and as soon as there's enough pressure
+let me know. In the meantime our men will pluck up their courage&mdash;that
+will be so much gained. They are in a hurry to run away from the Devil's
+Thumb; we'll take advantage of their good inclinations!"</p>
+
+<p>All at once the progress of the <i>Forward</i> was abruptly arrested.</p>
+
+<p>"What's up?" cried Shandon. "I say, Wall! have we broken our
+tow-ropes?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all, commander," answered Wall, looking over the side. "Hallo!
+Here are the men coming back again. They are climbing the ship's side
+as if the devil was at their heels."</p>
+
+<p>"What the deuce can it be?" cried Shandon, rushing forward.</p>
+
+<p>"On board! On board!" cried the terrified sailors.</p>
+
+<p>Shandon looked in a northerly direction, and shuddered in spite of
+himself. A strange animal, with appalling movements, whose foaming
+tongue emerged from enormous jaws, was leaping about at a cable's
+length from the ship. In appearance he seemed to be about twenty feet
+high, with hair like bristles; he was following up the sailors, whilst
+his formidable tail, ten feet long, was sweeping the snow and throwing
+it up in thick whirlwinds. The sight of such a monster riveted the
+most daring to the spot.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a bear!" said one.</p>
+
+<p>"It's the Gevaudan beast!"</p>
+
+<p>"It's the lion of the Apocalypse!"</p>
+
+<p>Shandon ran to his cabin for a gun he always kept loaded. The doctor
+armed himself, and held himself in readiness to fire upon an animal
+which, by its dimensions, recalled the antediluvian quadrupeds. He
+neared the ship in immense leaps; Shandon and the doctor fired at
+the same time, when, suddenly, the report of their firearms, shaking
+the atmospheric stratum, produced an unexpected effect. The doctor
+looked attentively, and burst out laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"It's the refraction!" he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>"Only the refraction!" repeated Shandon. But a fearful exclamation
+from the crew interrupted them.</p>
+
+<p>"The dog!" said Clifton.</p>
+
+<p>"The dog, captain!" repeated all his comrades.</p>
+
+<p>"Himself!" cried Pen; "always that cursed brute."</p>
+
+<p>They were not mistaken&mdash;it was the dog. Having got loose from his
+shackles, he had regained the surface by another crevice. At that
+instant the refraction, through a phenomenon common to these
+latitudes, caused him to appear under formidable dimensions, which
+the shaking of the air had dispersed; but the vexatious effect was
+none the less produced upon the minds of the sailors, who were very
+little disposed to admit an explanation of the fact by purely physical
+reasons. The adventure of the Devil's Thumb, the reappearance of the
+dog under such fantastic circumstances, gave the finishing touch to
+their mental faculties, and murmurs broke out on all sides.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap12"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XII</h3>
+
+<center>CAPTAIN HATTERAS</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The <i>Forward</i>, under steam, rapidly made its way between the
+ice-mountains and the icebergs. Johnson was at the wheel. Shandon,
+with his snow spectacles, was examining the horizon, but his joy was
+of short duration, for he soon discovered that the passage ended in
+a circus of mountains. However, he preferred going on, in spite of
+the difficulty, to going back. The dog followed the brig at a long
+distance, running along the plain, but if he lagged too far behind
+a singular whistle could be distinguished, which he immediately
+obeyed. The first time this whistle was heard the sailors looked round
+about them; they were alone on deck all together, and no stranger
+was to be seen; and yet the whistle was again heard from time to time.
+Clifton was the first alarmed.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you hear?" said he. "Just look how that animal answers when he
+hears the whistle."</p>
+
+<p>"I can scarcely believe my eyes," answered Gripper.</p>
+
+<p>"It's all over!" cried Pen. "I don't go any further."</p>
+
+<p>"Pen's right!" replied Brunton; "it's tempting God!"</p>
+
+<p>"Tempting the devil!" replied Clifton. "I'd sooner lose my bounty
+money than go a step further."</p>
+
+<p>"We shall never get back!" said Bolton in despair.</p>
+
+<p>The crew had arrived at the highest pitch of insubordination.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a step further!" cried Wolsten. "Are you all of the same mind?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ay! ay!" answered all the sailors.</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, then," said Bolton; "let's go and find the commander; I'll
+undertake the talking."</p>
+
+<p>The sailors in a tight group swayed away towards the poop. The
+<i>Forward</i> at the time was penetrating into a vast circus, which
+measured perhaps 800 feet in diameter, and with the exception of
+one entrance&mdash;that by which the vessel had come&mdash;was entirely closed
+up.</p>
+
+<p>Shandon said that he had just imprisoned himself; but what was he
+to do? How were they to retrace their steps? He felt his responsibility,
+and his hand grasped the telescope. The doctor, with folded arms,
+kept silent; he was contemplating the walls of ice, the medium
+altitude of which was over 300 feet. A foggy dome remained suspended
+above the gulf. It was at this instant that Bolton addressed his speech
+to the commander.</p>
+
+<p>"Commander!" said he in a trembling voice, "we can't go any further."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you say?" replied Shandon, whose consciousness of
+disregarded authority made the blood rise to the roots of his hair.</p>
+
+<p>"Commander," replied Bolton, "we say that we've done enough for that
+invisible captain, and we are decided to go no further ahead."</p>
+
+<p>"You are decided?" cried Shandon. "You talk thus, Bolton? Take care!"</p>
+
+<p>"Your threats are all the same to us," brutally replied Pen; "we won't
+go an inch further."</p>
+
+<p>Shandon advanced towards the mutineers; at the same time the mate
+came up and said in a whisper: "Commander, if you wish to get out
+of here we haven't a minute to lose; there's an iceberg drifting up
+the pass, and it is very likely to cork up all issue and keep us
+prisoners."</p>
+
+<p>Shandon examined the situation.</p>
+
+<p>"You will give an account of your conduct later on, you fellows,"
+said he. "Now heave aboard!"</p>
+
+<p>The sailors rushed to their posts, and the <i>Forward</i> quickly veered
+round; the fires were stuffed with coals; the great question was to
+outrun the floating mountain. It was a struggle between the brig and
+the iceberg. The former, in order to get through, was running south;
+the latter was drifting north, ready to close up every passage.</p>
+
+<p>"Steam up! steam up!" cried Shandon. "Do you hear, Brunton?"</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Forward</i> glided like a bird amidst the struggling icebergs, which
+her prow sent to the right-about; the brig's hull shivered under the
+action of the screw, and the manometer indicated a prodigious tension
+of steam, for it whistled with a deafening noise.</p>
+
+<p>"Load the valves!" cried Shandon, and the engineer obeyed at the risk
+of blowing up the ship; but his despairing efforts were in vain. The
+iceberg, caught up by an undercurrent, rapidly approached the pass.
+The brig was still about three cables' length from it, when the
+mountain, entering like a corner-stone into the open space, strongly
+adhered to its neighbours and closed up all issue.</p>
+
+<p>"We are lost!" cried Shandon, who could not retain the imprudent
+words.</p>
+
+<p>"Lost!" repeated the crew.</p>
+
+<p>"Let them escape who can!" said some.</p>
+
+<p>"Lower the shore boats!" said others.</p>
+
+<p>"To the steward's room!" cried Pen and several of his band, "and if
+we are to be drowned, let's drown ourselves in gin!"</p>
+
+<p>Disorder among the men was at its height. Shandon felt himself
+overcome; when he wished to command, he stammered and hesitated. His
+thought was unable to make way through his words. The doctor was
+walking about in agitation. Johnson stoically folded his arms and
+said nothing. All at once a strong, imperious, and energetic voice
+was heard to pronounce these words:</p>
+
+<p>"Every man to his post and tack about!"</p>
+
+<p>Johnson started, and, hardly knowing what he did, turned the wheel
+rapidly. He was just in time, for the brig, launched at full speed,
+was about to crush herself against her prison walls. But while Johnson
+was instinctively obeying, Shandon, Clawbonny, the crew, and all down
+to the stoker Warren, who had abandoned his fires, even black Strong,
+who had left his cooking, were all mustered on deck, and saw emerge
+from that cabin the only man who was in possession of the key, and
+that man was Garry, the sailor.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir!" cried Shandon, becoming pale. "Garry&mdash;you&mdash;by what right do
+you command here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dick," called out Garry, reproducing that whistle which had so much
+surprised the crew. The dog, at the sound of his right name, jumped
+with one bound on to the poop and lay quietly down at his master's
+feet. The crew did not say a word. The key which the captain of the
+<i>Forward</i> alone possessed, the dog sent by him, and who came thus
+to verify his identity, that commanding accent which it was impossible
+to mistake&mdash;all this acted strongly on the minds of the sailors, and
+was sufficient to establish Garry's authority.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, Garry was no longer recognisable; he had cut off the long
+whiskers which had covered his face, which made it look more energetic
+and imperious than ever; dressed in the clothes of his rank which
+had been deposited in the cabin, he appeared in the insignia of
+commander.</p>
+
+<p>Then immediately, with that mobility which characterised them, the
+crew of the <i>Forward</i> cried out&mdash;"Three cheers for the captain!"</p>
+
+<p>"Shandon!" said the latter to his second, "muster the crew; I am going
+to inspect it!"</p>
+
+<p>Shandon obeyed and gave orders with an altered voice. The captain
+advanced to meet his officers and men, saying something suitable to
+each, and treating each according to his past conduct. When he had
+finished the inspection, he returned on to the poop, and with a calm
+voice pronounced the following words:</p>
+
+<p>"Officers and sailors, like you, I am English, and my motto is that
+of Nelson, 'England expects that every man will do his duty.' As an
+Englishman I am resolved, we are resolved, that no bolder men shall
+go further than we have been. As an Englishman I will not allow, we
+will not allow, other people to have the glory of pushing further
+north themselves. If ever human foot can step upon the land of the
+North Pole, it shall be the foot of an Englishman. Here is our
+country's flag. I have equipped this vessel, and consecrated my
+fortune to this enterprise, and, if necessary, I shall consecrate
+to it my life and yours; for I am determined that these colours shall
+float on the North Pole. Take courage. From this day, for every degree
+we can gain northwards the sum of a thousand pounds will be awarded
+to you. There are ninety, for we are now in the seventy-second. Count
+them. Besides, my name is enough. It means energy and patriotism.
+I am Captain Hatteras!"</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Hatteras!" exclaimed Shandon, and that name, well known to
+English sailors, was whispered amongst the crew.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," continued Hatteras, "anchor the brig to the ice, put out the
+fires, and each of you return to your usual work. Shandon, I wish
+to hold a council with you relative to affairs on board. Join me with
+the doctor, Wall, and the boatswain in my cabin. Johnson, disperse
+the men."</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras, calm and haughty, quietly left the poop. In the meantime
+Shandon was anchoring the brig.</p>
+
+<p>Who, then, was this Hatteras, and for what reason did his name make
+such a profound impression upon the crew? John Hatteras was the only
+son of a London brewer, who died in 1852 worth six millions of money.
+Still young, he embraced the maritime career in spite of the splendid
+fortune awaiting him. Not that he felt any vocation for commerce,
+but the instinct of geographical discoveries was dear to him. He had
+always dreamt of placing his foot where no mortal foot had yet soiled
+the ground.</p>
+
+<p>At the age of twenty he was already in possession of the vigorous
+constitution of a thin and sanguine man; an energetic face, with lines
+geometrically traced; a high and perpendicular forehead; cold but
+handsome eyes; thin lips, which set off a mouth from which words rarely
+issued; a middle stature; solidly-jointed limbs, put in motion by
+iron muscles; the whole forming a man endowed with a temperament fit
+for anything. When you saw him you felt he was daring; when you heard
+him you knew he was coldly determined; his was a character that never
+drew back, ready to stake the lives of others as well as his own.
+It was well to think twice before following him in his expeditions.</p>
+
+<p>John Hatteras was proud of being an Englishman. A Frenchman once said
+to him, with what he thought was refined politeness and amiability:</p>
+
+<p>"If I were not a Frenchman I should like to be an Englishman."</p>
+
+<p>"And if I were not an Englishman," answered Hatteras, "I should like
+to be an Englishman."</p>
+
+<p>That answer revealed the character of the man. It was a great grief
+to him that Englishmen had not the monopoly of geographical
+discoveries, and were, in fact, rather behind other nations in that
+field.</p>
+
+<p>Christopher Columbus, the discoverer of America, was a Genoese; Vasco
+da Gama, a Portuguese, discovered India; another Portuguese,
+Fernando de Andrada, China; and a third, Magellan, the Terra del Fuego.
+Canada was discovered by Jacques Cartier, a Frenchman; Labrador,
+Brazil, the Cape of Good Hope, the Azores, Madeira, Newfoundland,
+Guinea, Congo, Mexico, Cape Blanco, Greenland, Iceland, the South Seas,
+California, Japan, Cambodia, Peru, Kamtchatka, the Philippines,
+Spitzbergen, Cape Horn, Behring's Straits, Tasmania, New Zealand,
+New Brittany, New Holland, Louisiana, Jean Mayen Island, were
+discovered by Icelanders, Scandinavians, French, Russians, Portuguese,
+Danes, Spaniards, Genoese, and Dutch, but not one by an Englishman.
+Captain Hatteras could not reconcile himself to the fact that
+Englishmen were excluded from the glorious list of navigators who
+made the great discoveries of the 15th and 16th centuries.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras consoled himself a little when he turned to more modern times.
+Then Englishmen had the best of it with Sturt, Burke, Wills, King,
+and Grey in Australia; with Palliser in America; with Cyril Graham,
+Wadington, and Cummingham in India; with Burton, Speke, Grant, and
+Livingstone in Africa.</p>
+
+<p>But for a man like Hatteras this was not enough; from his point of
+view these bold travellers were <i>improvers</i> rather than <i>inventors</i>;
+and he was determined to do something better, and he would have
+invented a country if he could, only to have the honour of discovering
+it. Now he had noticed that, although Englishmen did not form a
+majority amongst ancient discoverers, and that he had to go back to
+Cook in 1774 to obtain New Caledonia and the Sandwich Isles, where
+the unfortunate captain perished in 1778, yet there existed,
+nevertheless, a corner of the globe where they seemed to have united
+all their efforts. This corner was precisely the boreal lands and
+seas of North America. The list of Polar discoveries may be thus
+written:</p>
+
+<p>Nova Zembla, discovered by Willoughby, in 1553; Weigatz Island, by
+Barrough, in 1556; the West Coast of Greenland, by Davis, in 1585;
+Davis's Straits, by Davis, in 1587; Spitzbergen, by Willoughby, in
+1596; Hudson's Bay, by Hudson, in 1610; Baffin's Bay, by Baffin, in
+1616.</p>
+
+<p>In more modern times, Hearne, Mackenzie, John Ross, Parry, Franklin,
+Richardson, Beechey, James Ross, Back, Dease, Simpson, Rae,
+Inglefield, Belcher, Austin, Kellett, Moore, McClure, Kennedy, and
+McClintock have continually searched those unknown lands.</p>
+
+<p>The limits of the northern coasts of America had been fixed, and the
+North-West passage almost discovered, but this was not enough; there
+was something better still to be done, and John Hatteras had twice
+attempted it by equipping two ships at his own expense. He wanted
+to reach the North Pole, and thus crown the series of English
+discoveries by one of the most illustrious attempts. To attain the
+Pole was the aim of his life.</p>
+
+<p>After a few successful cruises in the Southern seas, Hatteras
+endeavoured for the first time, in 1846, to go north by Baffin's Sea;
+but he could not get beyond the seventy-fourth degree of latitude;
+he was then commanding the sloop <i>Halifax</i>. His crew suffered
+atrocious torments, and John Hatteras pushed his adventurous
+rashness so far, that, afterwards, sailors were little tempted to
+re-commence similar expeditions under such a chief.</p>
+
+<p>However, in 1850 Hatteras succeeded in enrolling on the schooner
+<i>Farewell</i> about twenty determined men, tempted principally by the
+high prize offered for their audacity. It was upon that occasion that
+Dr. Clawbonny entered into correspondence with John Hatteras, whom
+he did not know, requesting to join the expedition, but happily for
+the doctor the post was already filled up. The <i>Farewell</i>, following
+the track taken in 1817 by the <i>Neptune</i> from Aberdeen, got up to
+the north of Spitzbergen as far as the seventy-sixth degree of
+latitude. There the expedition was compelled to winter. But the
+sufferings of the crew from the intense cold were so great that not
+a single man saw England again, with the exception of Hatteras himself,
+who was brought back to his own country by a Danish whaler after a
+walk of more than two hundred miles across the ice.</p>
+
+<p>The sensation produced by the return of this one man was immense.
+Who in future would dare to follow Hatteras in his mad attempts?
+However, he did not despair of beginning again. His father, the brewer,
+died, and he became possessor of a nabob's fortune. Soon after a
+geographical fact bitterly stirred up John Hatteras. A brig, the
+<i>Advance</i>, manned by seventeen men, equipped by a merchant named
+Grinnell, under the command of Dr. Kane, and sent in search of Sir
+John Franklin, advanced in 1853 through Baffin's Sea and Smith's
+Strait, beyond the eighty-second degree of boreal latitude, much
+nearer the Pole than any of his predecessors. Now, this vessel was
+American, Grinnell was American, and Kane was American. The
+Englishman's disdain for the Yankee will be easily understood; in
+the heart of Hatteras it changed to hatred; he was resolved to outdo
+his audacious competitor and reach the Pole itself.</p>
+
+<p>For two years he had been living incognito in Liverpool, passing
+himself off as a sailor; he recognised in Richard Shandon the man
+he wanted; he sent him an offer by an anonymous letter, and one to
+Dr. Clawbonny at the same time. The <i>Forward</i> was built, armed, and
+equipped. Hatteras took great care to conceal his name, for had it
+been known he would not have found a single man to accompany him.
+He was determined not to take the command of the brig except in a
+moment of danger, and when his crew had gone too far to draw back.
+He had in reserve, as we have seen, such offers of money to make to
+the men that not one of them would refuse to follow him to the other
+end of the world; and, in fact, it was right to the other end of the
+world that he meant to go. Circumstances had become critical, and
+John Hatteras had made himself known. His dog, the faithful Dick,
+the companion of his voyages, was the first to recognise him. Luckily
+for the brave and unfortunately for the timid, it was well and duly
+established that John Hatteras was the captain of the <i>Forward</i>.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap13"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XIII</h3>
+
+<center>THE PROJECTS OF HATTERAS</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The appearance of this bold personage was appreciated in different
+ways by the crew; part of them completely rallied round him, either
+from love of money or daring; others submitted because they could
+not help themselves, reserving their right to protest later on;
+besides, resistance to such a man seemed, for the present, difficult.
+Each man went back to his post. The 20th of May fell on a Sunday,
+and was consequently a day of rest for the crew. A council was held
+by the captain, composed of the officers, Shandon, Wall, Johnson,
+and the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Gentlemen," said the captain in that voice at the same time soft
+and imperious which characterised him, "you are aware that I intend
+to go as far as the Pole. I wish to know your opinion about this
+enterprise. Shandon, what do you think about it?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is not for me to think, captain," coldly replied Shandon; "I have
+only to obey."</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras was not surprised at the answer.</p>
+
+<p>"Richard Shandon," continued he, not less coldly, "I beg you will
+say what you think about our chance of success."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, captain," answered Shandon, "facts are there, and answer
+for me; attempts of the same kind up till now have always failed;
+I hope we shall be more fortunate."</p>
+
+<p>"We shall be. What do you think, gentlemen?"</p>
+
+<p>"As far as I am concerned," replied the doctor, "I consider your plan
+practicable, as it is certain that some day navigators will attain
+the boreal Pole. I don't see why the honour should not fall to our
+lot."</p>
+
+<p>"There are many things in our favour," answered Hatteras; "our
+measures are taken in consequence, and we shall profit by the
+experience of those who have gone before us. And thereupon, Shandon,
+accept my thanks for the care you have taken in fitting out this ship;
+there are a few evil-disposed fellows amongst the crew that I shall
+have to bring to reason, but on the whole I have only praises to give
+you."</p>
+
+<p>Shandon bowed coldly. His position on the <i>Forward</i>, which he thought
+to command, was a false one. Hatteras understood this, and did not
+insist further.</p>
+
+<p>"As to you, gentlemen," he continued, turning to Wall and Johnson,
+"I could not have secured officers more distinguished for courage
+and experience."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, captain, I'm your man," answered Johnson, "and although your
+enterprise seems to me rather daring, you may rely upon me till the
+end."</p>
+
+<p>"And on me too," said James Wall.</p>
+
+<p>"As to you, doctor, I know what you are worth."</p>
+
+<p>"You know more than I do, then," quickly replied the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, gentlemen," continued Hatteras, "it is well you should learn
+upon what undeniable facts my pretension to arrive at the Pole is
+founded. In 1817 the <i>Neptune</i> got up to the north of Spitzbergen,
+as far as the eighty-second degree. In 1826 the celebrated Parry,
+after his third voyage to the Polar Seas, started also from
+Spitzbergen Point, and by the aid of sledge-boats went a hundred and
+fifty miles northward. In 1852 Captain Inglefield penetrated into
+Smith's Inlet as far as seventy-eight degrees thirty-five minutes
+latitude. All these vessels were English, and Englishmen, our
+countrymen, commanded them." Here Hatteras paused. "I ought to add,"
+he continued, with a constrained look, and as though the words were
+unable to leave his lips&mdash;"I must add that, in 1854, Kane, the American,
+commanding the brig <i>Advance</i>, went still higher, and that his
+lieutenant, Morton, going across the ice-fields, hoisted the United
+States standard on the other side of the eighty-second degree. This
+said, I shall not return to the subject. Now what remains to be known
+is this, that the captains of the <i>Neptune</i>, the <i>Enterprise</i>, the
+<i>Isabel</i>, and the <i>Advance</i> ascertained that proceeding from the
+highest latitudes there existed a Polar basin entirely free from ice."</p>
+
+<p>"Free from ice!" exclaimed Shandon, interrupting the captain, "that
+is impossible!"</p>
+
+<p>"You will notice, Shandon," quietly replied Hatteras, whose eye shone
+for an instant, "that I quote names and facts as a proof. I may even
+add that during Captain Parry's station on the border of Wellington
+Channel, in 1851, his lieutenant, Stewart, also found himself in the
+presence of open sea, and this peculiarity was confirmed during Sir
+Edward Beecher's wintering in 1853, in Northumberland Bay, in 76&deg;
+52' N. latitude, and 99&deg; 20' longitude.
+The reports are incontestable, and it would be most unjust not to
+admit them."</p>
+
+<p>"However, captain," continued Shandon, "those reports are so
+contradictory."</p>
+
+<p>"You are mistaken, Shandon," cried Dr. Clawbonny. "These reports do
+not contradict any scientific assertion, the captain will allow me
+to tell you."</p>
+
+<p>"Go on, doctor," answered Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, listen, Shandon; it evidently follows from geographical facts,
+and from the study of isotherm lines, that the coldest point of the
+globe is not at the Pole itself; like the magnetic point, it deviates
+several degrees from the Pole. The calculations of Brewster, Bergham,
+and several other natural philosophers show us that in our hemisphere
+there are two cold Poles; one is situated in Asia at 79&deg; 30'
+N. latitude, and by 120&deg; E. longitude, and the other
+in America at 78&deg; N. latitude, and 97&deg; W. longitude.
+It is with the latter that we have to do, and you see, Shandon, we
+have met with it at more than twelve degrees below the Pole. Well,
+why should not the Polar Sea be as equally disengaged from ice as
+the sixty-sixth parallel is in summer&mdash;that is to say, the south of
+Baffin's Bay?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's what I call well pleaded," replied Johnson. "Mr. Clawbonny
+speaks upon these matters like a professional man."</p>
+
+<p>"It appears very probable," chimed in James Wall.</p>
+
+<p>"All guess-work," answered Shandon obstinately.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Shandon," said Hatteras, "let us take into consideration
+either case; either the sea is free from ice or it is not so, and
+neither of these suppositions can hinder us from attaining the Pole.
+If the sea is free the <i>Forward</i> will take us there without trouble;
+if it is frozen we will attempt the adventure upon our sledges. This,
+you will allow, is not impracticable. When once our brig has attained
+the eighty-third degree we shall only have six hundred miles to
+traverse before reaching the Pole."</p>
+
+<p>"And what are six hundred miles?" quickly answered the doctor, "when
+it is known that a Cossack, Alexis Markoff, went over the ice sea
+along the northern coast of the Russian Empire, in sledges drawn by
+dogs, for the space of eight hundred miles in twenty-four days?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you hear that, Shandon?" said Hatteras; "can't Englishmen do as
+much as a Cossack?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course they can," cried the impetuous doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," added the boatswain.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Shandon?" said the captain.</p>
+
+<p>"I can only repeat what I said before, captain," said Shandon&mdash;"I
+will obey."</p>
+
+<p>"Very good. And now," continued Hatteras, "let us consider our present
+situation. We are caught by the ice, and it seems to me impossible,
+for this year at least, to get into Smith's Strait. Well, here, then,
+this is what I propose."</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras laid open upon the table one of the excellent maps published
+in 1859 by the order of the Admiralty.</p>
+
+<p>"Be kind enough to follow me. If Smith's Strait is closed up from
+us, Lancaster Strait, on the west coast of Baffin's Sea, is not. I
+think we ought to ascend that strait as far as Barrow Strait, and
+from there sail to Beechey Island; the same track has been gone over
+a hundred times by sailing vessels; consequently with a screw we can
+do it easily. Once at Beechey Island we will go north as far as possible,
+by Wellington Channel, up to the outlet of the creek which joins
+Wellington's and Queen's Channels, at the very point where the open
+sea was perceived. It is now only the 20th of May; in a month, if
+circumstances favour us, we shall have attained that point, and from
+there we'll drive forward towards the Pole. What do you think about
+it, gentlemen?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is evidently the only track to follow," replied Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, we will take it from to-morrow. I shall let them rest
+to-day as it is Sunday. Shandon, you will take care that religious
+service be attended to; it has a beneficial effect on the minds of
+men, and a sailor above all needs to place confidence in the Almighty."</p>
+
+<p>"It shall be attended to, captain," answered Shandon, who went out
+with the lieutenant and the boatswain.</p>
+
+<p>"Doctor!" said Hatteras, pointing towards Shandon, "there's a man
+whose pride is wounded; I can no longer rely upon him."</p>
+
+<p>Early the following day the captain caused the pirogue to be lowered
+in order to reconnoitre the icebergs in the vicinity, the breadth
+of which did not exceed 200 yards. He remarked that through a slow
+pressure of the ice the basin threatened to become narrower. It became
+urgent, therefore, to make an aperture to prevent the ship being
+crushed in a vice of the mountains. By the means employed by John
+Hatteras, it is easy to observe that he was an energetic man.</p>
+
+<p>He first had steps cut out in the walls of ice, and by their means
+climbed to the summit of an iceberg. From that point he saw that it
+was easy for him to cut out a road towards the south-west. By his
+orders a blasting furnace was hollowed nearly in the heart of the
+mountain. This work, rapidly put into execution, was terminated by
+noon on Monday. Hatteras could not rely on his eight or ten pound
+blasting cylinders, which would have had no effect on such masses
+as those. They were only sufficient to shatter ice-fields. He
+therefore had a thousand pounds of powder placed in the blasting
+furnace, of which the diffusive direction was carefully calculated.
+This mine was provided with a long wick, bound in gutta-percha, the
+end of which was outside. The gallery conducting to the mine was filled
+up with snow and lumps of ice, which the cold of the following night
+made as hard as granite. The temperature, under the influence of an
+easterly wind, came down to twelve degrees.</p>
+
+<p>At seven the next morning the <i>Forward</i> was held under steam, ready
+to profit by the smallest issue. Johnson was charged with setting
+fire to the wick, which, according to calculation, would burn for
+half an hour before setting fire to the mine. Johnson had, therefore,
+plenty of time to regain the brig; ten minutes after having executed
+Hatteras's order he was again at his post. The crew remained on deck,
+for the weather was dry and bright; it had left off snowing.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras was on the poop, chronometer in hand, counting the minutes;
+Shandon and the doctor were with him. At eight thirty-five a dull
+explosion was heard, much less loud than any one would have supposed.
+The outline of the mountains was changed all at once as if by an
+earthquake; thick white smoke rose up to a considerable height in
+the sky, leaving long crevices in the iceberg, the top part of which
+fell in pieces all round the <i>Forward</i>. But the path was not yet free;
+large blocks of ice remained suspended above the pass on the adjacent
+mountains, and there was every reason to fear that they would fall
+and close up the passage. Hatteras took in the situation at one glance.</p>
+
+<p>"Wolsten!" cried he.</p>
+
+<p>The gunsmith hastened up.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, captain?" cried he.</p>
+
+<p>"Load the gun in the bow with a triple charge," said Hatteras, "and
+wad it as hard as possible."</p>
+
+<p>"Are we going to attack the mountain with cannon-balls?" asked the
+doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"No," answered Hatteras, "that would be useless. No bullet, Wolsten,
+but a triple charge of powder. Look sharp!"</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes after the gun was loaded.</p>
+
+<p>"What does he mean to do without a bullet?" muttered Shandon between
+his teeth.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall soon see," answered the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Ready, captain!" called out Wolsten.</p>
+
+<p>"All right!" replied Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"Brunton!" he called out to the engineer, "a few turns ahead."</p>
+
+<p>Brunton opened the sliders, and the screw being put in movement, the
+<i>Forward</i> neared the mined mountain.</p>
+
+<p>"Aim at the pass!" cried the captain to the gunsmith. The latter obeyed,
+and when the brig was only half a cable's length from it, Hatteras
+called out:</p>
+
+<p>"Fire!"</p>
+
+<p>A formidable report followed his order, and the blocks, shaken by
+the atmospheric commotion, were suddenly precipitated into the sea;
+the disturbance amongst the strata of the air had been sufficient
+to accomplish this.</p>
+
+<p>"All steam on, Brunton! Straight for the pass, Johnson!"</p>
+
+<p>The latter was at the helm; the brig, driven along by her screw, which
+turned in the foaming waves, dashed into the middle of the then opened
+pass; it was time, for scarcely had the <i>Forward</i> cleared the opening
+than her prison closed up again behind her. It was a thrilling moment,
+and on board there was only one stout and undisturbed heart&mdash;that
+of the captain. The crew, astonished at the manoeuvre, cried out:</p>
+
+<p>"Hurrah for the captain!"</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap14"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XIV</h3>
+
+<center>EXPEDITION IN SEARCH OF FRANKLIN</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>On Wednesday, the 23rd of May, the <i>Forward</i> had again taken up her
+adventurous navigation, cleverly tacking amongst the packs and
+icebergs. Thanks to steam, that obedient force which so many of our
+Polar sea navigators have had to do without, she appeared to be playing
+in the midst of the moving rocks. She seemed to recognise the hand
+of an experienced master, and like a horse under an able rider, she
+obeyed the thought of her captain. The temperature rose. At six
+o'clock in the morning the thermometer marked twenty-six degrees,
+at six in the evening twenty-nine degrees, and at midnight twenty-five
+degrees; the wind was lightly blowing from the south-east.</p>
+
+<p>On Thursday, towards three in the morning, the <i>Forward</i> was in sight
+of Possession Bay, on the coast of America. At the entrance to
+Lancaster Strait, shortly after, the crew caught a glimpse of Burney
+Cape. A few Esquimaux pulled off towards the vessel, but Hatteras
+did not take the trouble to wait for them. The Byam-Martin peaks,
+which overlook Cape Liverpool, were sighted to the left, and soon
+disappeared in the evening mists, which also prevented any
+observation being taken from Cape Hay. This cape is so low that it
+gets confounded with the ice on the coast, a circumstance which often
+renders the hydrographic determination of the Polar seas extremely
+difficult.</p>
+
+<p>Puffins, ducks, and white sea-gulls showed up in very great numbers.
+The <i>Forward</i> was then in latitude 74&deg; 1', and in
+longitude 77&deg; 15'. The snowy hoods of the two mountains,
+Catherine and Elizabeth, rose up above the clouds.</p>
+
+<p>On Friday, at six o'clock, Cape Warender was passed on the right side
+of the strait, and on the left Admiralty Inlet, a bay that has been
+little explored by navigators, who are generally in a hurry to sail
+away west. The sea became rather rough, and the waves often swept
+the deck of the brig, throwing up pieces of ice. The land on the north
+coast, with its high table lands almost level, and which reverberated
+the sun's rays, offered a very curious appearance.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras wanted to run along the north coast, in order to reach Beechey
+Island and the entrance to Wellington Channel sooner; but continual
+icebergs compelled him, to his great annoyance, to follow the southern
+passes. That was why, on the 26th of May, the <i>Forward</i> was abreast
+of Cape York in a thick fog interspersed with snow; a very high
+mountain, almost perpendicular, caused it to be recognised. The
+weather cleared up a little, and the sun, towards noon, appeared for
+an instant, allowing a tolerably good observation to be taken; 74&deg;
+4' latitude and 84&deg; 23' longitude. The
+<i>Forward</i> was then at the extremity of Lancaster Strait.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras pointed out to the doctor on his map the route already taken,
+and the one he meant to follow. The position of the brig at the time
+was very interesting.</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to have been further north," said he, "but no one can
+do the impossible; see, this is our exact situation."</p>
+
+<p>And the captain pricked his map at a short distance from Cape York.</p>
+
+<p>"We are in the centre of this four-road way, open to every wind, fenced
+by the outlets of Lancaster Strait, Barrow Strait, Wellington Channel,
+and Regent's Passage; it is a point that all navigators in these seas
+have been obliged to come to."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," replied the doctor, "it must have puzzled them greatly; four
+cross-roads with no sign-posts to tell them which to take. How did
+Parry, Ross, and Franklin manage?"</p>
+
+<p>"They did not manage at all, they were managed; they had no choice,
+I can assure you; sometimes Barrow Strait was closed to one of them,
+and the next year another found it open; sometimes the vessel was
+irresistibly drawn towards Regent's Passage, so that we have ended
+by becoming acquainted with these inextricable seas."</p>
+
+<p>"What a singular country!" said the doctor, examining the map. "It
+is all in pieces, and they seem to have no logical connection. It
+seems as if the land in the vicinity of the North Pole had been cut
+up like this on purpose to make access to it more difficult, whilst
+that in the other hemisphere quietly terminates in tapered-out points
+like those of Cape Horn, the Cape of Good Hope, and the Indian
+Peninsula. Is it the greater rapidity of the equator which has thus
+modified matters, whilst the land at the extremities, yet fluid from
+the creation, has not been able to get condensed or agglomerated
+together, for want of a sufficiently rapid rotation?"</p>
+
+<p>"That must be the case, for everything on earth is logical, and
+'nothing is that errs from law,' and God often allows men to discover
+His laws; make use of His permission, doctor."</p>
+
+<p>"Unfortunately, I shall not be able to take much advantage of it,"
+said the doctor, "but the wind here is something dreadful," added
+he, muffling himself up as well as he could.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, we are quite exposed to the north wind, and it is turning us
+out of our road."</p>
+
+<p>"Anyhow it ought to drive the ice down south, and level a clear road."</p>
+
+<p>"It ought to do so, doctor, but the wind does not always do what it
+ought. Look, that ice-bank seems impenetrable. Never mind, we will
+try to reach Griffith Island, sail round Cornwallis Island, and get
+into Queen's Channel without going by Wellington Channel.
+Nevertheless I positively desire to touch at Beechey Island in order
+to renew my coal provision."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?" asked the astonished doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"I mean that, according to orders from the Admiralty, large provisions
+have been deposited on that island in order to provide for future
+expeditions, and although Captain McClintock took some in 1859, I
+assure you that there will be some left for us."</p>
+
+<p>"By-the-bye," said the doctor, "these parts have been explored for
+the last fifteen years, and since the day when the proof of the loss
+of Franklin was acquired, the Admiralty has always kept five or six
+cruisers in these seas. If I am not mistaken, Griffith Island, which
+I see there on the map, almost in the middle of the cross-roads, has
+become a general meeting-place for navigators."</p>
+
+<p>"It is so, doctor; and Franklin's unfortunate expedition resulted
+in making known these distant countries to us."</p>
+
+<p>"That is true, captain, for since 1845 expeditions have been very
+numerous. It was not until 1848 that we began to be uneasy about the
+disappearance of the <i>Erebus</i> and the <i>Terror</i>, Franklin's two
+vessels. It was then that we saw the admiral's old friend, Dr.
+Richardson, at the age of seventy, go to Canada, and ascend Coppermine
+River as far as the Polar Sea; and James Ross, commanding the
+<i>Enterprise</i> and <i>Investigation</i>, set out from Uppernawik in 1848
+and arrived at Cape York, where we now are. Every day he threw a tub
+containing papers into the sea, for the purpose of making known his
+whereabouts. During the mists he caused the cannon to be fired, and
+had sky-rockets sent up at night along with Bengal lights, and kept
+under sail continually. He wintered in Port Leopold from 1848 to 1849,
+where he took possession of a great number of white foxes, and caused
+brass collars, upon which was engraved the indication of the
+whereabouts of ships and the store depots, to be riveted on their
+necks. Afterwards they were dispersed in all directions; in the
+following spring he began to search the coasts of North Somerset on
+sledges in the midst of dangers and privations from which almost all
+his men fell ill or lame. He built up cairns in which he inclosed
+brass cylinders with the necessary memoranda for rallying the lost
+expedition. While he was away his lieutenant McClure explored the
+northern coasts of Barrow Strait, but without result. James Ross had
+under his orders two officers who, later on, were destined to become
+celebrities&mdash;McClure, who cleared the North-West passage, and
+McClintock, who discovered the remains of Sir John Franklin."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; they are now two good and brave English captains. You know the
+history of these seas well, doctor, and you will benefit us by telling
+us about it. There is always something to be gained by hearing about
+such daring attempts."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, to finish all I know about James Ross: he tried to reach
+Melville Island by a more westerly direction, but he nearly lost his
+two vessels, for he was caught by the ice and driven back into Baffin's
+Sea."</p>
+
+<p>"Driven back?" repeated Hatteras, contracting his brows; "forced
+back in spite of himself?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and without having discovered anything," continued the doctor;
+"and ever since that year, 1850, English vessels have never ceased
+to plough these seas, and a reward of twenty thousand pounds was
+offered to any one who might find the crews of the <i>Erebus</i> and
+<i>Terror</i>. Captains Kellett and Moore had already, in 1848, attempted
+to get through Behring's Strait. In 1850 and 1851 Captain Austin
+wintered in Cornwallis Island; Captain Parry, on board the
+<i>Assistance</i> and the <i>Resolute</i>, explored Wellington Channel; John
+Ross, the venerable hero of the magnetic pole, set out again with
+his yacht, the <i>Felix</i>, in search of his friend; the brig <i>Prince
+Albert</i> went on a first cruise at the expense of Lady Franklin; and,
+lastly, two American ships, sent out by Grinnell with Captain Haven,
+were drifted out of Wellington Channel and thrown back into Lancaster
+Strait. It was during this year that McClintock, who was then Austin's
+lieutenant, pushed on as far as Melville Island and Cape Dundas, the
+extreme points attained by Parry in 1819; it was then that he found
+traces of Franklin's wintering on Beechey Island in 1845."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered Hatteras, "three of his sailors had been buried
+there&mdash;three men more fortunate than the others!"</p>
+
+<p>The doctor nodded in approval of Hatteras's remark, and continued:</p>
+
+<p>"During 1851 and 1852 the <i>Prince Albert</i> went on a second voyage
+under the French lieutenant, Bellot; he wintered at Batty Bay, in
+Prince Regent Strait, explored the south-west of Somerset, and
+reconnoitred the coast as far as Cape Walker. During that time the
+<i>Enterprise</i> and the <i>Investigator</i> returned to England and passed
+under the command of Collinson and McClure for the purpose of
+rejoining Kellett and Moore in Behring's Straits; whilst Collinson
+came back to winter at Hong-Kong, McClure made the best of his way
+onward, and after being obliged to winter three times&mdash;from 1850 to
+'51; from 1851 to '52; and from 1852 to '53&mdash;he discovered the
+North-West passage without learning anything of Franklin's fate.
+During 1852 and '53 a new expedition composed of three sailing vessels,
+the <i>Resolute</i>, the <i>Assistance</i>, the <i>North Star</i>, and two steamers,
+the <i>Pioneer</i> and <i>Intrepid</i>, set sail under the command of Sir Edward
+Belcher, with Captain Kellett under him; Sir Edward visited
+Wellington Channel, wintered in Northumberland Bay, and went over
+the coast, whilst Kellett, pushing on to Bridport in Melville Island,
+explored, without success, that part of the boreal land. It was at
+this time that news was spread in England that two ships, abandoned
+in the midst of icebergs, had been descried near the coast of New
+Scotland. Lady Franklin immediately had prepared the little screw
+<i>Isabelle</i>, and Captain Inglefield, after having steamed up Baffin's
+Bay as far as Victoria Point on the eightieth parallel, came back
+to Beechey Island no more successful than his predecessors. At the
+beginning of 1855, Grinnell, an American, fitted up a fresh expedition,
+and Captain Kane tried to penetrate to the Pole&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But he didn't do it," cried Hatteras violently; "and what he didn't
+do we will, with God's help!"</p>
+
+<p>"I know, captain," answered the doctor, "and I mention it because
+this expedition is of necessity connected with the search for Franklin.
+But it had no result. I was almost forgetting to tell you that the
+Admiralty, considering Beechey Island as the general rendezvous of
+expeditions, charged Captain Inglefield, who then commanded the
+steamer <i>Phoenix</i>, to transport provisions there in 1853; Inglefield
+set out with Lieutenant Bellot, and lost the brave officer who for
+the second time had devoted his services to England; we can have more
+precise details upon this catastrophe, as our boatswain, Johnson,
+was witness to the misfortune."</p>
+
+<p>"Lieutenant Bellot was a brave Frenchman," said Hatteras, "and his
+memory is honoured in England."</p>
+
+<p>"By that time," continued the doctor, "Belcher's fleet began to come
+back little by little; not all of it, for Sir Edward had been obliged
+to abandon the <i>Assistance</i> in 1854, as McClure had done with the
+<i>Investigator</i> in 1853. In the meantime, Dr. Rae, in a letter dated
+the 29th of July, 1854, and addressed from Repulse Bay, which he had
+succeeded in reaching through America, sent word that the Esquimaux
+of King William's Land were in possession of different objects taken
+from the wrecks of the <i>Erebus</i> and <i>Terror</i>; there was then not the
+least doubt about the fate of the expedition; the <i>Phoenix</i>, the
+<i>North Star</i>, and Collinson's vessel then came back to England,
+leaving the Arctic Seas completely abandoned by English ships. But
+if the Government seemed to have lost all hope it was not so with
+Lady Franklin, and with the remnants of her fortune she fitted out
+the <i>Fox</i>, commanded by McClintock, who set sail in 1857, and wintered
+in the quarters where you made your apparition; he reached Beechey
+Island on the 11th of August, 1858, wintered a second time in Bellot's
+Strait, began his search again in February, 1859, and on the 6th of
+May found the document which cleared away all doubt about the fate
+of the <i>Erebus</i> and the <i>Terror</i>, and returned to England at the end
+of the year. That is all that has happened for fifteen years in these
+fateful countries, and since the return of the <i>Fox</i> not a single
+vessel has returned to attempt success in the midst of these dangerous
+seas."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," replied Hatteras, "we will attempt it."</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap15"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XV</h3>
+
+<center>THE "FORWARD" DRIVEN BACK SOUTH</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The weather cleared up towards evening, and land was clearly
+distinguished between Cape Sepping and Cape Clarence, which runs east,
+then south, and is joined to the coast on the west by a rather low
+neck of land. The sea at the entrance to Regent Strait was free from
+ice, with the exception of an impenetrable ice-bank, a little further
+than Port Leopold, which threatened to stop the <i>Forward</i> in her
+north-westerly course. Hatteras was greatly vexed, but he did not
+show it; he was obliged to have recourse to petards in order to force
+an entrance to Port Leopold; he reached it on Sunday, the 27th of
+May; the brig was solidly anchored to the enormous icebergs, which
+were as upright, hard, and solid as rocks.</p>
+
+<p>The captain, followed by the doctor, Johnson, and his dog Dick,
+immediately leaped upon the ice, and soon reached land. Dick leaped
+with joy, for since he had recognised the captain he had become more
+sociable, keeping his grudge against certain men of the crew for whom
+his master had no more friendship than he. The port was not then
+blocked up with ice that the east winds generally heaped up there;
+the earth, intersected with peaks, offered at their summits graceful
+undulations of snow. The house and lantern erected by James Ross were
+still in a tolerable state of preservation; but the provisions seemed
+to have been ransacked by foxes and bears, the recent traces of which
+were easily distinguished. Men, too, had had something to do with
+the devastation, for a few remains of Esquimaux huts remained upon
+the shores of the Bay. The six graves inclosing the remains of the
+six sailors of the <i>Enterprise</i> and the <i>Investigator</i> were
+recognisable by a slight swelling of the ground; they had been
+respected both by men and animals. In placing his foot for the first
+time on boreal land, the doctor experienced much emotion. It is
+impossible to imagine the feelings with which the heart is assailed
+at the sight of the remains of houses, tents, huts, and magazines
+that Nature so marvellously preserves in those cold countries.</p>
+
+<p>"There is that residence," he said to his companions, "which James
+Ross himself called the Camp of Refuge; if Franklin's expedition had
+reached this spot, it would have been saved. There is the engine which
+was abandoned here, and the stove at which the crew of the <i>Prince
+Albert</i> warmed themselves in 1851. Things have remained just as they
+were, and any one would think that Captain Kennedy had only left
+yesterday. Here is the long boat which sheltered him and his for a
+few days, for this Kennedy, separated from his ship, was in reality
+saved by Lieutenant Bellot, who braved the October temperature in
+order to go to his assistance."</p>
+
+<p>"I knew that brave and worthy officer," said Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst the doctor was examining with all an antiquarian's enthusiasm
+the vestiges of previous winterings, Hatteras was occupied in piling
+together the various provisions and articles of fuel, which were only
+to be found in very small quantities. The following day was employed
+in transporting them on board. The doctor, without going too far from
+the ship, surveyed the country, and took sketches of the most
+remarkable points of view. The temperature rose by degrees, and the
+heaped-up snow began to melt. The doctor made an almost complete
+collection of northern birds, such as gulls, divers, eider-down ducks,
+which are very much like common ducks, with white breasts and backs,
+blue bellies, the top of the head blue, and the remainder of the
+plumage white, shaded with green; several of them had already their
+breasts stripped of that beautiful down with which the male and female
+line their nests. The doctor also perceived large seals taking breath
+on the surface of the ice, but could not shoot one. In his excursions
+he discovered the high water mark, a stone upon which the following
+signs are engraved:</p>
+<center>(E. I.)<br>
+1849,</center>
+<br>
+<p>and which indicate the passage of the <i>Enterprise</i> and
+<i>Investigator</i>; he pushed forward as far as Cape Clarence to the spot
+where John and James Ross, in 1833, waited with so much impatience
+for the breaking up of the ice. The land was strewn with skulls and
+bones of animals, and traces of Esquimaux habitations could be still
+distinguished.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor wanted to raise up a cairn on Port Leopold, and deposit
+in it a note indicating the passage of the <i>Forward</i>, and the aim
+of the expedition. But Hatteras would not hear of it; he did not want
+to leave traces behind of which a competitor might take advantage.
+In spite of his good motives the doctor was forced to yield to the
+captain's will. Shandon blamed the captain's obstinacy, which
+prevented any ships following the trace of the <i>Forward</i> in case of
+accident. Hatteras would not give way. His lading was finished on
+Monday night, and he attempted once more to gain the north by breaking
+open the ice-bank; but after dangerous efforts he was forced to resign
+himself, and to go down Regent's Channel again; he would not stop
+at Port Leopold, which, open to-day, might be closed again to-morrow
+by an unexpected displacement of ice-fields, a very frequent
+phenomenon in these seas, and which navigators ought particularly
+to take into consideration.</p>
+
+<p>If Hatteras did not allow his uneasiness to be outwardly perceived,
+it did not prevent him feeling it inwardly. His desire was to push
+northward, whilst, on the contrary, he found himself constrained to
+put back southward. Where should he get to in that case? Should he
+be obliged to put back to Victoria Harbour, in Boothia Gulf, where
+Sir John Ross wintered in 1833? Would he find Bellot Strait open at
+that epoch, and could he ascend Peel Strait by rounding North
+Somerset? Or, again, should he, like his predecessors, find himself
+captured during several winters, and be compelled to exhaust his
+strength and provisions? These fears were fermenting in his brain;
+he must decide one way or other. He heaved about, and struck out south.
+The width of Prince Regent's Channel is about the same from Port Leopold
+to Adelaide Bay. The <i>Forward</i>, more favoured than the ships
+which had preceded her, and of which the greater number had required
+more than a month to descend the channel, even in a more favourable
+season, made her way rapidly amongst the icebergs; it is true that
+other ships, with the exception of the <i>Fox</i>, had no steam at their
+disposal, and had to endure the caprices of an uncertain and often
+foul wind.</p>
+
+<p>In general the crew showed little wish to push on with the enterprising
+Hatteras; the men were only too glad to perceive that the vessel was
+taking a southerly direction. Hatteras would have liked to go on
+regardless of consequences.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Forward</i> rushed along under the pressure of her engines, the
+smoke from which twisted round the shining points of the icebergs;
+the weather was constantly changing from dry cold to snowy fogs. The
+brig, which drew little water, sailed along the west coast; Hatteras
+did not wish to miss the entrance to Bellot Strait, as the only outlet
+to the Gulf of Boothia on the south was the strait, only partially
+known to the <i>Fury</i> and the <i>Hecla</i>; if he missed the Bellot Strait,
+he might be shut up without possibility of egress.</p>
+
+<p>In the evening the <i>Forward</i> was in sight of Elwin Bay, known by its
+high perpendicular rocks; on the Tuesday morning Batty Bay was sighted,
+where the <i>Prince Albert</i> anchored for its long wintering on the 10th
+of September, 1851. The doctor swept the whole coast with his
+telescope. It was from this point that the expeditions radiated that
+established the geographical configuration of North Somerset. The
+weather was clear, and the profound ravines by which the bay is
+surrounded could be clearly distinguished.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor and Johnson were perhaps the only beings on board who took
+any interest in these deserted countries. Hatteras was always intent
+upon his maps, and said little; his taciturnity increased as the brig
+got more and more south; he often mounted the poop, and there with
+folded arms, and eyes lost in vacancy, he stood for hours. His orders,
+when he gave any, were curt and rough. Shandon kept a cold silence,
+and kept himself so much aloof by degrees that at last he had no
+relations with Hatteras except those exacted by the service; James
+Wall remained devoted to Shandon, and regulated his conduct
+accordingly. The remainder of the crew waited for something to turn
+up, ready to take any advantage in their own interest. There was no
+longer that unity of thought and communion of ideas on board which
+are so necessary for the accomplishment of anything great, and this
+Hatteras knew to his sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>During the day two whales were perceived rushing towards the south;
+a white bear was also seen, and was shot at without any apparent
+success. The captain knew the value of an hour under the circumstances,
+and would not allow the animal to be chased.</p>
+
+<p>On Wednesday morning the extremity of Regent's Channel was passed;
+the angle on the west coast was followed by a deep curve in the land.
+By consulting his map the doctor recognised the point of Somerset
+House, or Fury Point.</p>
+
+<p>"There," said he to his habitual companion&mdash;"there is the very spot
+where the first English ship, sent into these seas in 1815, was lost,
+during the third of Parry's voyages to the Pole; the <i>Fury</i> was so
+damaged by the ice on her second wintering, that her crew were obliged
+to desert her and return to England on board her companion ship the
+<i>Hecla</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"That shows the advantage of having a second ship," answered Johnson.
+"It is a precaution that Polar navigators ought not to neglect, but
+Captain Hatteras wasn't the sort of man to trouble himself with
+another ship."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think he is imprudent, Johnson?" asked the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"I? I think nothing, Mr. Clawbonny. Do you see those stakes over there
+with some rotten tent-rags still hanging to them?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; that's where Parry disembarked his provisions from his ship,
+and, if I remember rightly, the roof of his tent was a topsail."</p>
+
+<p>"Everything must be greatly changed since 1825!"</p>
+
+<p>"Not so much as any one might think. John Ross owed the health and
+safety of his crew to that fragile habitation in 1829. When the <i>Prince
+Albert</i> sent an expedition there in 1851, it was still existing;
+Captain Kennedy had it repaired, nine years ago now. It would be
+interesting to visit it, but Hatteras isn't in the humour to stop!"</p>
+
+<p>"I daresay he is right, Mr. Clawbonny; if time is money in England,
+here it is life, and a day's or even an hour's delay might make all
+the difference."</p>
+
+<p>During the day of Thursday, the 1st of June, the <i>Forward</i> cut across
+Creswell Bay; from Fury Point the coast rose towards the north in
+perpendicular rocks three hundred feet high; it began to get lower
+towards the south; some snow summits looked like neatly-cut tables,
+whilst others were shaped like pyramids, and had other strange forms.</p>
+
+<p>The weather grew milder during that day, but was not so clear; land
+was lost to sight, and the thermometer went up to thirty-two degrees;
+seafowl fluttered about, the flocks of wild ducks were seen flying
+north; the crew could divest themselves of some of their garments,
+and the influence of the Arctic summer began to be felt. Towards
+evening the <i>Forward</i> doubled Cape Garry at a quarter of a mile from
+the shore, where the soundings gave from ten to twelve fathoms; from
+thence she kept near the coast as far as Brentford Bay. It was under
+this latitude that Bellot Strait was to be met with; a strait the
+existence of which Sir John Ross did not even guess at during his
+expedition in 1828; his maps indicated an uninterrupted coast-line,
+whose irregularities he noted with the utmost care; the entrance to
+the strait must therefore have been blocked up by ice at the time.
+It was really discovered by Kennedy in April, 1852, and he gave it
+the name of his lieutenant, Bellot, as "a just tribute," he said,
+"to the important services rendered to our expedition by the French
+officer."</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap16"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XVI</h3>
+
+<center>THE MAGNETIC POLE</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Hatteras felt his anxiety increase as he neared the strait; the fate
+of his voyage depended upon it; up till now he had done more than
+his predecessors, the most fortunate of whom, McClintock, had taken
+fifteen months to reach this part of the Polar Seas; but it was little
+or nothing if he did not succeed in clearing Bellot Strait; he could
+not retrace his steps, and would be blocked up till the following
+year.</p>
+
+<p>He trusted the care of examining the coast to no one but himself;
+he mounted the crow's nest and passed several hours there during the
+morning of Saturday. The crew perfectly understood the ship's
+position; profound silence reigned on board; the engine slackened
+steam, and the <i>Forward</i> kept as near land as possible; the coast
+bristled with icebergs, which the warmest summers do not melt; an
+experienced eye alone could distinguish an opening between them.
+Hatteras compared his maps with the land. As the sun showed himself
+for an instant towards noon, he caused Shandon and Wall to take a
+pretty exact observation, which was shouted to him. All the crew
+suffered the tortures of anxiety for half the day, but towards two
+o'clock these words were shouted from the top of the mizenmast:</p>
+
+<p>"Veer to the west, all steam on."</p>
+
+<p>The brig instantly obeyed; her prow was directed towards the point
+indicated; the sea foamed under the screws, and the <i>Forward</i>, with
+all speed on, entered between two ice-streams. The road was found,
+Hatteras descended upon deck, and the ice-master took his place.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, captain," said the doctor, "we are in the famous strait at
+last."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered Hatteras, lowering his voice; "but getting in isn't
+everything; we must get out too," and so saying he regained his cabin.</p>
+
+<p>"He's right," said the doctor; "we are here in a sort of mousetrap,
+with scarcely enough space for working the brig, and if we are forced
+to winter in the strait!... Well, we shan't be the first that have
+had to do it, and they got over it, and so shall we."</p>
+
+<p>The doctor was not mistaken. It was in that very place, in a little
+sheltered harbour called Kennedy Harbour by McClintock himself, that
+the <i>Fox</i> wintered in 1858. The high granite chain and the steep cliffs
+of the two banks were clearly discernible.</p>
+
+<p>Bellot Strait is seventeen miles long and a mile wide, and about six
+or seven fathoms deep. It lies between mountains whose height is
+estimated at 1,600 feet. It separates North Somerset from Boothia
+Land.</p>
+
+<p>It is easy to understand that there is not much elbow-room for vessels
+in such a strait. The <i>Forward</i> advanced slowly, but it did advance;
+tempests are frequent in the strait, and the brig did not escape them;
+by Hatteras's order all sails were furled; but, notwithstanding all
+precautions, the brig was much knocked about; the waves dashed over
+her, and her smoke fled towards the east with astonishing rapidity;
+her course was not certain amongst the moving ice; the barometer fell;
+it was difficult to stop on deck, and most of the men stayed below
+to avoid useless suffering.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras, Johnson, and Shandon remained on the poop in spite of the
+gales of snow and rain; as usual the doctor had asked himself what
+would be the most disagreeable thing he could do, and answered himself
+by going on deck at once; it was impossible to hear and difficult
+to see one another, so that he kept his reflections to himself.
+Hatteras tried to see through the fog; he calculated that they would
+be at the mouth of the strait at six o'clock, but when the time came
+all issue seemed closed up; he was obliged to wait and anchor the
+brig to an iceberg; but he stopped under pressure all night.</p>
+
+<p>The weather was frightful. The <i>Forward</i> threatened to break her
+chains at every instant; it was feared that the iceberg to which they
+were anchored, torn away at its base under the violent west wind,
+would float away with the brig. The officers were constantly on the
+look-out and under extreme apprehension; along with the snow there
+fell a perfect hail of ice torn off from the surface of the icebergs
+by the strength of the wind; it was like a shower of arrows bristling
+in the atmosphere. The temperature rose singularly during this
+terrible night; the thermometer marked fifty-seven degrees, and the
+doctor, to his great astonishment, thought he saw flashes of lightning
+in the south, followed by the roar of far-off thunder that seemed
+to corroborate the testimony of the whaler Scoresby, who observed
+a similar phenomenon above the sixty-fifth parallel. Captain Parry
+was also witness to a similar meteorological wonder in 1821.</p>
+
+<p>Towards five o'clock in the morning the weather changed with
+astonishing rapidity; the temperature went down to freezing point,
+the wind turned north, and became calmer. The western opening to the
+strait was in sight, but entirely obstructed. Hatteras looked eagerly
+at the coast, asking himself if the passage really existed. However,
+the brig got under way, and glided slowly amongst the ice-streams,
+whilst the icebergs pressed noisily against her planks, the packs
+at that epoch were still from six to seven feet thick; they were
+obliged carefully to avoid their pressure, for if the brig had
+resisted them she would have run the risk of being lifted up and turned
+over on her side. At noon, for the first time, they could admire a
+magnificent solar phenomenon, a halo with two parhelia; the doctor
+observed it, and took its exact dimensions; the exterior bow was only
+visible over an extent of thirty degrees on each side of its horizontal
+diameter; the two images of the sun were remarkably clear; the colours
+of the luminous bows proceeded from inside to outside, and were red,
+yellow, green, and very light blue&mdash;in short, white light without
+any assignable exterior limit. The doctor remembered the ingenious
+theory of Thomas Young about these meteors; this natural philosopher
+supposed that certain clouds composed of prisms of ice are suspended
+in the atmosphere; the rays of the sun that fall on the prisms are
+decomposed at angles of sixty and ninety degrees. Halos cannot,
+therefore, exist in a calm atmosphere. The doctor thought this theory
+very probable. Sailors accustomed to the boreal seas generally
+consider this phenomenon as the precursor of abundant snow. If their
+observation was just, the position of the <i>Forward</i> became very
+difficult. Hatteras, therefore, resolved to go on fast; during the
+remainder of the day and following night he did not take a minute's
+rest, sweeping the horizon with his telescope, taking advantage of
+the least opening, and losing no occasion of getting out of the strait.</p>
+
+<p>But in the morning he was obliged to stop before the insuperable
+ice-bank. The doctor joined him on the poop. Hatteras went with him
+apart where they could talk without fear of being overheard.</p>
+
+<p>"We are in for it," began Hatteras; "it is impossible to go any
+further."</p>
+
+<p>"Is there no means of getting out?" asked the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"None. All the powder in the <i>Forward</i> would not make us gain half
+a mile!"</p>
+
+<p>"What shall we do, then?" said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know. This cursed year has been unfavourable from the
+beginning."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," answered the doctor, "if we must winter here, we must. One
+place is as good as another."</p>
+
+<p>"But," said Hatteras, lowering his voice, "we must not winter here,
+especially in the month of June. Wintering is full of physical and
+moral danger. The crew would be unmanageable during a long inaction
+in the midst of real suffering. I thought I should be able to stop
+much nearer the Pole than this!"</p>
+
+<p>"Luck would have it so, or Baffin's Bay wouldn't have been closed."</p>
+
+<p>"It was open enough for that American!" cried Hatteras in a rage.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Hatteras," said the doctor, interrupting him on purpose,
+"to-day is only the 5th of June; don't despair; a passage may suddenly
+open up before us; you know that the ice has a tendency to break up
+into several blocks, even in the calmest weather, as if a force of
+repulsion acted upon the different parts of it; we may find the sea
+free at any minute."</p>
+
+<p>"If that minute comes we shall take advantage of it. It is quite
+possible that, once out of Bellot Strait, we shall be able to go north
+by Peel Strait or McClintock Channel, and then&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Captain," said James Wall, who had come up while Hatteras was
+speaking, "the ice nearly carries off our rudder."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," answered Hatteras, "we must risk it. We must be ready day
+and night. You must do all you can to protect it, Mr. Wall, but I
+can't have it removed."</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;&mdash;" added Wall.</p>
+
+<p>"That is my business," said Hatteras severely, and Wall went back
+to his post.</p>
+
+<p>"I would give five years of my life," said Hatteras, in a rage, "to
+be up north. I know no more dangerous passage. To add to the difficulty,
+the compass is no guide at this distance from the magnetic pole: the
+needle is constantly shifting its direction."</p>
+
+<p>"I acknowledge," answered the doctor, "that navigation is difficult,
+but we knew what we had to expect when we began our enterprise, and
+we ought not to be surprised at it."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, doctor, my crew is no longer what it was; the officers are
+spoiling the men. I could make them do what I want by offering them
+a pecuniary reward, but I am not seconded by my officers, but they
+shall pay dearly for it!"</p>
+
+<p>"You are exaggerating, Hatteras."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I am not. Do you think the crew is sorry for the obstacles that
+I meet with? On the contrary, they hope they will make me abandon
+my projects. They do not complain now, and they won't as long as the
+<i>Forward</i> is making for the south. The fools! They think they are
+getting nearer England! But once let me go north and you'll see how
+they'll change! I swear, though, that no living being will make me
+deviate from my line of conduct. Only let me find a passage, that's
+all!"</p>
+
+<p>One of the captain's wishes was fulfilled soon enough. There was a
+sudden change during the evening; under some influence of the wind,
+the current, or the temperature, the ice-fields were separated; the
+<i>Forward</i> went along boldly, breaking up the ice with her steel prow;
+she sailed along all night, and the next morning about six cleared
+Bellot Strait. But that was all; the northern passage was completely
+obstructed&mdash;to the great disgust of Hatteras. However, he had
+sufficient strength of character to hide his disappointment, and as
+if the only passage open was the one he preferred, he let the <i>Forward</i>
+sail down Franklin Strait again; not being able to get up Peel Strait,
+he resolved to go round Prince of Wales's Land to get into McClintock
+Channel. But he felt he could not deceive Shandon and Wall as to the
+extent of his disappointment. The day of the 6th of June was
+uneventful; the sky was full of snow, and the prognostics of the halo
+were fulfilled.</p>
+
+<p>During thirty-six hours the <i>Forward</i> followed the windings of
+Boothia Land, unable to approach Prince of Wales's Land; the captain
+counted upon getting supplies at Beechey Island; he arrived on the
+Thursday at the extremity of Franklin Strait, where he again found
+the road to the north blocked up. It was enough to make him despair;
+he could not even retrace his steps; the icebergs pushed him onwards,
+and he saw the passages close up behind him as if there never had
+existed open sea where he had passed an hour before. The <i>Forward</i>
+was, therefore, not only prevented from going northwards, but could
+not stop still an instant for fear of being caught, and she fled before
+the ice as a ship flies before a storm.</p>
+
+<p>On Friday, the 8th of June, they arrived near the shore of Boothia,
+at the entrance to James Ross Strait, which they were obliged to avoid,
+as its only issue is on the west, near the American coasts.</p>
+
+<p>Observations taken at noon from this point gave 70&deg; 5'
+17" latitude, and 96&deg; 46' 45" longitude;
+when the doctor heard that he consulted his map, and saw they were
+at the magnetic pole, at the very place where James Ross, the nephew
+of Sir John, had fixed it. The land was low near the coast, and at
+about a mile's distance became slightly elevated, sixty feet only.
+The <i>Forward's</i> boiler wanted cleaning, and the captain caused the
+brig to be anchored to an ice-field, and allowed the doctor and the
+boatswain to land. He himself cared for nothing but his pet project,
+and stayed in his cabin, consulting his map of the Pole.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor and his companion easily succeeded in reaching land; the
+doctor took a compass to make experiments with. He wished to try if
+James Ross's conclusions hold good. He easily discovered the
+limestone heap raised by Ross; he ran to it; an opening allowed him
+to see, in the interior, the tin case in which James Ross had placed
+the official report of his discoveries. No living being seemed to
+have visited this desolate coast for the last thirty years. In this
+spot a loadstone needle, suspended as delicately as possible,
+immediately moved into an almost vertical position under the magnetic
+influence; if the centre of attraction was not immediately under the
+needle, it could only be at a trifling distance. The doctor made the
+experiment carefully, and found that the imperfect instruments of
+James Ross had given his vertical needle an inclination of 89&deg;
+59', making the real magnetic point at a minute's distance
+from the spot, but that his own at a little distance gave him an
+inclination of 90&deg;.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is the exact spot of the world's magnetic pole," said the doctor,
+rapping the earth.</p>
+
+<p>"Then," said the boatswain, "there's no loadstone mountain, after
+all."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course not; that mountain was only a credulous hypothesis. As
+you see, there isn't the least mountain capable of attracting ships,
+of attracting their iron anchor after anchor and nail after nail,
+and you see it respects your shoes as much as any other land on the
+globe."</p>
+
+<p>"Then how do you explain&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing is explained, Johnson; we don't know enough for that yet.
+But it is certain, exact, mathematical, that the magnetic pole is
+in this very spot!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Mr. Clawbonny! how happy the captain would be to say as much
+of the boreal pole!"</p>
+
+<p>"He will some day, Johnson, you will see."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope he will," answered the boatswain.</p>
+
+<p>He and the doctor elevated a cairn on the exact spot where the
+experiment had been made, and returned on board at five o'clock in
+the evening.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap17"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XVII</h3>
+
+<center>THE FATE OF SIR JOHN FRANKLIN</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The <i>Forward</i> succeeded in cutting straight across James Ross Strait,
+but not without difficulty; the crew were obliged to work the saws
+and use petards, and they were worn out with fatigue. Happily the
+temperature was bearable, and thirty degrees higher than that
+experienced by James Ross at the same epoch. The thermometer marked
+thirty-four degrees.</p>
+
+<p>On Saturday they doubled Cape Felix at the northern extremity of King
+William's Land, one of the middle-sized isles of the northern seas.
+The crew there experienced a strong and painful sensation, and many
+a sad look was turned towards the island as they sailed by the coast.
+This island had been the theatre of the most terrible tragedy of modern
+times. Some miles to the west the <i>Erebus</i> and the <i>Terror</i> had been
+lost for ever. The sailors knew about the attempts made to find Admiral
+Franklin and the results, but they were ignorant of the affecting
+details of the catastrophe. While the doctor was following the
+progress of the ship on his map, several of them, Bell, Bolton, and
+Simpson, approached and entered into conversation with him. Their
+comrades, animated by curiosity, soon followed them; while the brig
+flew along with extreme rapidity, and the coast with its bays, capes,
+and promontories passed before their eyes like a gigantic panorama.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras was marching up and down the poop with quick steps. The doctor,
+on the deck, looked round, and saw himself surrounded by almost the
+whole crew. He saw how powerful a recital would be in such a situation,
+and he continued the conversation begun with Johnson as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You know how Franklin began, my friends; he was a cabin-boy like
+Cook and Nelson; after having employed his youth in great maritime
+expeditions, he resolved in 1845 to launch out in search of the
+North-West passage; he commanded the <i>Erebus</i> and the <i>Terror</i>, two
+vessels, already famous, that had just made an Antarctic campaign
+under James Ross, in 1840. The <i>Erebus</i>, equipped by Franklin, carried
+a crew of seventy men, officers and sailors, with Fitz-James as
+captain; Gore and Le Vesconte, lieutenants; Des Voeux, Sargent, and
+Couch, boatswains; and Stanley as surgeon. The <i>Terror</i> had
+sixty-eight men, Captain Crozier; Lieutenants Little, Hodgson, and
+Irving; Horesby and Thomas were the boatswains, and Peddie the surgeon.
+In the names on the map of the capes, straits, points, and channels,
+you may read those of these unfortunate men, not one of whom was
+destined ever again to see his native land. There were a hundred and
+thirty-eight men in all! We know that Franklin's last letters were
+addressed from Disko Island, and were dated July 12th, 1845. 'I hope,'
+he said, 'to get under way to-night for Lancaster Strait.' What
+happened after his departure from Disko Bay? The captains of two
+whalers, the <i>Prince of Wales</i> and the <i>Enterprise</i>, perceived the
+two ships in Melville Bay for the last time, and after that day nothing
+was heard of them. However, we can follow Franklin in his westerly
+course: he passed through Lancaster and Barrow Straits, and arrived
+at Beechey Island, where he passed the winter of 1845 and '46."</p>
+
+<p>"But how do you know all this?" asked Bell, the carpenter.</p>
+
+<p>"By three tombs which Austin discovered on that island in 1850. Three
+of Franklin's sailors were buried there, and by a document which was
+found by Lieutenant Hobson, of the <i>Fox</i>, which bears the date of
+April 25th, 1848, we know that after their wintering the <i>Erebus</i>
+and the <i>Terror</i> went up Wellington Strait as far as the
+seventy-seventh parallel; but instead of continuing their route
+northwards, which was, probably, not practicable, they returned
+south."</p>
+
+<p>"And that was their ruin!" said a grave voice. "Safety lay to the
+north."</p>
+
+<p>Every one turned round. Hatteras, leaning on the rail of the poop,
+had just uttered that terrible observation.</p>
+
+<p>"There is not a doubt," continued the doctor, "that Franklin's
+intention was to get back to the American coast; but tempests stopped
+him, and on the 12th September, 1846, the two ships were seized by
+the ice, at a few miles from here, to the north-west of Cape Felix;
+they were dragged along N.N.W. to Victoria Point over there," said
+the doctor, pointing to a part of the sea. "Now," he continued, "the
+ships were not abandoned till the 22nd of April, 1848. What happened
+during these nineteen months? What did the poor unfortunate men do?
+They, doubtless, explored the surrounding land, attempting any
+chance of safety, for the admiral was an energetic man, and if he
+did not succeed&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Very likely his crew betrayed him," added Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>The sailors dared not raise their eyes; these words pricked their
+conscience.</p>
+
+<p>"To end my tale, the fatal document informs us also that John Franklin
+succumbed to fatigue on the 11th of June, 1847. Honour to his memory!"
+said the doctor, taking off his hat. His audience imitated him in
+silence.</p>
+
+<p>"What became of the poor fellows for the next ten months after they
+had lost their chief? They remained on board their vessels, and only
+resolved to abandon them in April, 1848; a hundred and five men out
+of a hundred and thirty-eight were still living; thirty-three were
+dead! Then Captain Crozier and Captain Fitz-James raised a cairn on
+Victory Point, and there deposited their last document. See, my
+friends, we are passing the point now! You can still see the remains
+of the cairn placed on the extreme point, reached by John Ross in
+1831. There is Jane Franklin Cape. There is Franklin Point. There
+is Le Vesconte Point. There is Erebus Bay, where the boat made out
+of the <i>d&eacute;bris</i> of one of the vessels was found on a sledge. Silver
+spoons, provisions in abundance, chocolate, tea, and religious books
+were found there too. The hundred and five survivors, under Captain
+Crozier, started for Great Fish River. Where did they get to? Did
+they succeed in reaching Hudson's Bay? Did any survive? What became
+of them after this last departure?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you what became of them," said John Hatteras in a firm
+voice. "Yes, they did try to reach Hudson's Bay, and they split up
+into several parties! Yes, they did make for the south! A letter from
+Dr. Rae in 1854 contained the information that in 1850 the Esquimaux
+had met on King William's Land a detachment of forty men travelling
+on the ice, and dragging a boat, thin, emaciated, worn out by fatigue
+and suffering! Later on they discovered thirty corpses on the
+continent and five on a neighbouring island, some half-buried, some
+left without burial, some under a boat turned upside down, others
+under the remains of a tent; here an officer with his telescope on
+his shoulder and a loaded gun at his side, further on a boiler with
+the remnants of a horrible meal! When the Admiralty received these
+tidings it begged the Hudson's Bay Company to send its most
+experienced agents to the scene. They descended Back River to its
+mouth. They visited the islands of Montreal, Maconochie, and Ogle
+Point. But they discovered nothing. All the poor wretches had died
+from misery, suffering, and hunger, whilst trying to prolong their
+existence by the dreadful resource of cannibalism. That is what became
+of them on the southern route. Well! Do you still wish to march in
+their footsteps?"</p>
+
+<p>His trembling voice, his passionate gestures and beaming face,
+produced an indescribable effect. The crew, excited by its emotion
+before this fatal land, cried out with one voice: "To the north! To
+the north!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, to the north! Safety and glory lie to the north. Heaven is for
+us! The wind is changing; the pass is free!"</p>
+
+<p>So saying, Hatteras gave orders to turn the vessel; the sailors went
+to work with alacrity; the ice streams got clear little by little;
+the <i>Forward</i>, with all steam on, made for McClintock Channel.
+Hatteras was right when he counted upon a more open sea; he followed
+up the supposed route taken by Franklin, sailing along the western
+coast of Prince of Wales's Land, then pretty well known, whilst the
+opposite shore is still unknown. It was evident that the breaking
+up of the ice had taken place in the eastern locks, for this strait
+appeared entirely free; the <i>Forward</i> made up for lost time; she fled
+along so quickly that she passed Osborne Bay on the 14th of June,
+and the extreme points attained by the expeditions of 1851. Icebergs
+were still numerous, but the sea did not threaten to quit the keel
+of the <i>Forward</i>.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap18"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XVIII</h3>
+
+<center>THE NORTHERN ROUTE</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The crew seemed to have returned to its habits of discipline and
+obedience. There was little fatiguing work to do, and they had a good
+deal of leisure. The temperature kept above freezing point, and it
+seemed as if the thaw had removed the great obstacles to navigation.</p>
+
+<p>Dick, now sociable and familiar, had made great friends with Dr.
+Clawbonny. But as in most friendships one friend has to give way to
+the other, it must be acknowledged it was not the dog. Dick did what
+he liked with the doctor, who obeyed him as if he were the dog. He
+was amiable with most of the sailors and officers on board, only by
+instinct, doubtless, he shunned Shandon's society; he also kept up
+a grudge against Pen and Foker; he vented his hatred of them by
+growling at their approach. But they dare not now attack the captain's
+dog&mdash;his "familiar," as Clifton called him. On the whole the crew
+had plucked up courage again and worked well.</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to me," said James Wall one day to Richard Shandon, "that
+our men took the captain's speech seriously; they no longer seem to
+be doubtful of success."</p>
+
+<p>"The more fools they!" answered Shandon. "If they reflected, if they
+examined the situation, they would see that we are going out of one
+imprudence into another."</p>
+
+<p>"But," continued Wall, "the sea is open now, and we are getting back
+into well-known tracks; aren't you exaggerating a bit, Shandon?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I am not exaggerating; the dislike I feel to Hatteras is not
+blinding me. Have you seen the coal-holes lately?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," answered Wall.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, go and examine them: you will see how much there's left.
+He ought to have navigated under sail, and have kept the engine for
+currents and contrary winds; he ought only to have used his coal where
+he was obliged; who can tell where we shall be kept, and for how many
+years? But Hatteras only thinks about getting north. Whether the wind
+is contrary or not, he goes along at full steam, and if things go
+on as they are doing now, we shall soon be in a pretty pickle."</p>
+
+<p>"If what you say is true, it is very serious."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it is, because of the wintering. What shall we do without coal
+in a country where even the thermometer freezes?"</p>
+
+<p>"But, if I am not mistaken, the captain counts upon renewing his stock
+of coal at Beechey Island. It appears there is a large provision
+there."</p>
+
+<p>"And suppose we can't reach Beechey Island, what will become of us
+then?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are right, Shandon; Hatteras seems to me very imprudent; but
+why don't you expostulate with him on the subject?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Shandon, with ill-concealed bitterness, "I won't say a
+word. It is nothing to do with me now. I shall wait to see what turns
+up; I shall obey orders, and not give my opinion where it isn't
+wanted."</p>
+
+<p>"Allow me to tell you that you are in the wrong, Shandon; you have
+as much interest in setting yourself against the captain's imprudence
+as we have."</p>
+
+<p>"He wouldn't listen to me if I were to speak; do you think he would?"</p>
+
+<p>Wall dared not answer in the affirmative, and he added&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"But perhaps he would listen to the crew."</p>
+
+<p>"The crew!" answered Shandon, shrugging his shoulders; "you don't
+know the crew. The men know they are nearing the 72nd parallel, and
+that they will earn a thousand pounds for every degree above that."</p>
+
+<p>"The captain knew what he was doing when he offered them that."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course he did, and for the present he can do what he likes with
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean that while they have nothing to do, and there is an open sea,
+they will go on right enough; but wait till difficulty and danger
+come, and you will see how much they'll think about the money!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then you don't think Hatteras will succeed?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, he will not; to succeed in such an enterprise there must be a
+good understanding between him and his officers, and that does not
+exist. Hatteras is a madman; all his past career proves it. Well,
+we shall see; perhaps circumstances will force them to give the
+command to a less adventurous captain."</p>
+
+<p>"Still," said Wall, shaking his head, "he will always have on his
+side&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Dr. Clawbonny, a man who only cares for science, and Johnson, a sailor
+who only cares to obey, and perhaps two more men like Bell, the
+carpenter; four at the most, and we are eighteen on board! No, Wall,
+Hatteras has not got the confidence of his men, and he knows it, so
+he bribes them; he profited cleverly by the Franklin affair, but that
+won't last, I tell you, and if he doesn't reach Beechey Island he's
+a lost man!"</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose the crew should take it into its head&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't tell the crew what I think," answered Shandon quickly; "the
+men will soon see for themselves. Besides, just now we must go north.
+Who knows if Hatteras won't find that way will bring us back sooner?
+At the end of McClintock Channel lies Melville Bay, and from thence
+go the straits that lead to Baffin's Bay. Hatteras must take care!
+The way to the east is easier than the road to the north!"</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras was not mistaken in his opinion that Shandon would betray
+him if he could. Besides, Shandon was right in attributing the
+contentment of the men to the hope of gain. Clifton had counted exactly
+how much each man would have. Without reckoning the captain and the
+doctor, who would not expect a share in the bounty-money, there
+remained sixteen men to divide it amongst. If ever they succeeded
+in reaching the Pole, each man would have &pound;1,125&mdash;that is to
+say, a fortune. It would cost the captain &pound;18,000, but he could
+afford it. The thoughts of the money inflamed the minds of the crew,
+and they were now as anxious to go north as before they had been eager
+to turn south. The <i>Forward</i> during the day of June 16th passed Cape
+Aworth. Mount Rawlinson raised its white peaks towards the sky; the
+snow and fog made it appear colossal, as they exaggerated its
+distance; the temperature still kept some degrees above freezing
+point; improvised cascades and cataracts showed themselves on the
+sides of the mountains, and avalanches roared down with the noise
+of artillery discharges. The glaciers, spread out in long white sheets,
+projected an immense reverberation into space. Boreal nature, in its
+struggle with the frost, presented a splendid spectacle. The brig
+went very near the coast; on some sheltered rocks rare heaths were
+to be seen, the pink flowers lifting their heads timidly out of the
+snows, and some meagre lichens of a reddish colour and the shoots
+of a dwarf willow.</p>
+
+<p>At last, on the 19th of June, at the famous seventy-third parallel,
+they doubled Cape Minto, which forms one of the extremities of Ommaney
+Bay; the brig entered Melville Bay, surnamed by Bolton Money Bay;
+the merry sailors joked about the name, and made Dr. Clawbonny laugh
+heartily. Notwithstanding a strong breeze from the northeast, the
+<i>Forward</i> made considerable progress, and on the 23rd of June she
+passed the 74th degree of latitude. She was in the midst of Melville
+Bay, one of the most considerable seas in these regions. This sea
+was crossed for the first time by Captain Parry in his great expedition
+of 1819, and it was then that his crew earned the prize of &pound;5,000
+promised by Act of Parliament. Clifton remarked that there were two
+degrees from the 72nd to the 74th; that already placed &pound;125
+to his credit. But they told him that a fortune was not worth much
+there, and that it was of no use being rich if he could not drink
+his riches, and he had better wait till he could roll under a Liverpool
+table before he rejoiced and rubbed his hands.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap19"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XIX</h3>
+
+<center>A WHALE IN SIGHT</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Melville Bay, though easily navigable, was not free from ice;
+ice-fields lay as far as the utmost limits of the horizon; a few
+icebergs appeared here and there, but they were immovable, as if
+anchored in the midst of the frozen fields. The <i>Forward</i>, with all
+steam on, followed the wide passes where it was easy to work her.
+The wind changed frequently from one point of the compass to another.
+The variability of the wind in the Arctic Seas is a remarkable fact;
+sometimes a dead calm is followed in a few minutes by a violent tempest,
+as the <i>Forward</i> found to her cost on the 23rd of June in the midst
+of the immense bay. The more constant winds blow from off the ice-bank
+on to the open sea, and are intensely cold. On that day the thermometer
+fell several degrees; the wind veered round to the south, and violent
+gusts, sweeping over the ice-fields, brought a thick snow along with
+them. Hatteras immediately caused the sails that helped the screw
+to be furled, but not quickly enough to prevent his little foresail
+being carried away in the twinkling of an eye. Hatteras worked his
+ship with the greatest composure, and did not leave the deck during
+the tempest; he was obliged to fly before the weather and to turn
+westward. The wind raised up enormous waves, in the midst of which
+blocks of ice balanced themselves; these blocks were of all sizes
+and shapes, and had been struck off the surrounding ice-fields; the
+brig was tossed about like a child's plaything, and morsels of the
+packs were thrown over her hull; at one instant she was lying
+perpendicularly along the side of a liquid mountain; her steel prow
+concentrated the light, and shone like a melting metal bar; at another
+she was down an abyss, plunging her head into whirlwinds of snow,
+whilst her screws, out of the water, turned in space with a sinister
+noise, striking the air with their paddles. Rain mixed with the snow
+and fell in torrents.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor could not miss such an occasion of getting wet to the skin;
+he remained on deck, a prey to that emotional admiration which a
+scientific man must necessarily feel during such a spectacle. His
+nearest neighbour could not have heard him speak, so he said nothing
+and watched; but whilst watching he was witness to an odd phenomenon,
+peculiar to hyperborean regions. The tempest was confined to a
+restricted area, and only extended for about three or four miles;
+the wind that passes over ice-fields loses much of its strength and
+cannot carry its violence far out; the doctor perceived from time
+to time, through an opening in the tempest, a calm sky and a quiet
+sea beyond some ice-fields. The <i>Forward</i> would therefore only have
+to take advantage of some channels left by the ice to find a peaceful
+navigation again, but she ran the risk of being thrown on to one of
+the moving banks which followed the movement of the swell. However,
+in a few hours Hatteras succeeded in getting his ship into a calm
+sea, whilst the violence of the hurricane spent itself at a few cables'
+length from the <i>Forward</i>. Melville Bay no longer presented the same
+aspect; under the influence of the winds and the waves a great number
+of icebergs, detached from the coast, floated northward, running
+against one another in every direction. There were several hundreds
+of them, but the bay is very wide, and the brig easily avoided them.
+The spectacle of these floating masses was magnificent; they seemed
+to be having a grand race for it on the open sea. The doctor was getting
+quite excited with watching them, when the harpooner, Simpson, came
+up and made him look at the changing tints in the sea; they varied
+from a deep blue to olive green; long stripes stretched north and
+south in such decided lines that the eye could follow each shade out
+of sight. Sometimes a transparent sheet of water would follow a
+perfectly opaque sheet.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Mr. Clawbonny, what do you think of that?" said Simpson.</p>
+
+<p>"I am of the same opinion as the whaler Scoresby on the nature of
+the different coloured waters; blue water has no animalcul&aelig;, and
+green water is full of them. Scoresby has made several experiments
+on this subject, and I think he is right."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, I know something else about the colours in the sea, and
+if I were a whaler I should be precious glad to see them."</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't see any whales," answered the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"You won't be long before you do, though, I can tell you. A whaler
+is lucky when he meets with those green stripes under this latitude."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?" asked the doctor, who always liked to get information from
+anybody who understood what they were talking about.</p>
+
+<p>"Because whales are always found in great quantities in green water."</p>
+
+<p>"What's the reason of that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because they find plenty of food in them."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you sure of that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I've seen it a hundred times, at least, in Baffin Sea; why shouldn't
+it be the same in Melville Bay? Besides, look there, Mr. Clawbonny,"
+added Simpson, leaning over the barricading.</p>
+
+<p>"Why any one would think it was the wake of a ship!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is an oily substance that the whale leaves behind. The animal
+can't be far off!"</p>
+
+<p>The atmosphere was impregnated with a strong oily odour, and the
+doctor attentively watched the surface of the water. The prediction
+of the harpooner was soon accomplished. Foker called out from the
+masthead&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"A whale alee!"</p>
+
+<p>All looks turned to the direction indicated. A small spout was
+perceived coming up out of the sea about a mile from the brig.</p>
+
+<p>"There she spouts!" cried Simpson, who knew what that meant.</p>
+
+<p>"She has disappeared!" answered the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we could find her again easily enough if necessary!" said Simpson,
+with an accent of regret. To his great astonishment, and although
+no one dared ask for it, Hatteras gave orders to man the whaler.
+Johnson went aft to the stern, while Simpson, harpoon in hand, stood
+in the bow. They could not prevent the doctor joining the expedition.
+The sea was pretty calm. The whaler soon got off, and in ten minutes
+was a mile from the brig. The whale had taken in another provision
+of air, and had plunged again; but she soon returned to the surface
+and spouted out that mixture of gas and mucus that escapes from her
+air-holes.</p>
+
+<p>"There! There!" said Simpson, pointing to a spot about eight hundred
+yards from the boat. It was soon alongside the animal, and as they
+had seen her from the brig too, she came nearer, keeping little steam
+on. The enormous cetacean disappeared and reappeared as the waves
+rose and fell, showing its black back like a rock in open sea. Whales
+do not swim quickly unless they are pursued, and this one only rocked
+itself in the waves. The boat silently approached along the green
+water; its opacity prevented the animal seeing the enemy. It is always
+an agitating spectacle when a fragile boat attacks one of these
+monsters; this one was about 130 feet long, and it is not rare, between
+the 72nd and the 80th degree, to meet with whales more than 180 feet
+long. Ancient writers have described animals more than 700 feet long,
+but they drew upon their imagination for their facts. The boat soon
+neared the whale; on a sign from Simpson the men rested on their oars,
+and brandishing his harpoon, the experienced sailor threw it with
+all his strength; it went deep into the thick covering of fat. The
+wounded whale struck the sea with its tail and plunged. The four oars
+were immediately raised perpendicularly; the cord fastened to the
+harpoon, and attached to the bow, rolled rapidly out and dragged the
+boat along, steered cleverly by Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>The whale got away from the brig and made for the moving icebergs;
+she kept on for more than half-an-hour; they were obliged to wet the
+cord fastened to the harpoon to prevent it catching fire by rubbing
+against the boat. When the whale seemed to be going along a little
+more slowly, the cord was pulled in little by little and rolled up;
+the whale soon reappeared on the surface of the sea, which she beat
+with her formidable tail: veritable waterspouts fell in a violent
+rain on to the boat. It was getting nearer. Simpson had seized a long
+lance, and was preparing to give close battle to the animal, when
+all at once the whale glided into a pass between two mountainous
+icebergs. The pursuit then became really dangerous.</p>
+
+<p>"The devil!" said Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>"Go ahead," cried Simpson; "we've got her!"</p>
+
+<p>"But we can't follow her into the icebergs!" said Johnson, steering
+steadily.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes we can!" cried Simpson.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no!" cried some of the sailors.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes!" said others.</p>
+
+<p>During the discussion the whale had got between two floating mountains
+which the swell was bringing close together. The boat was being
+dragged into this dangerous part when Johnson rushed to the fore,
+an axe in his hand, and cut the cord. He was just in time; the two
+mountains came together with a tremendous crash, crushing the
+unfortunate animal.</p>
+
+<p>"The whale's lost!" cried Simpson.</p>
+
+<p>"But we are saved!" answered Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said the doctor, who had not moved, "that was worth seeing!"</p>
+
+<p>The crushing force of these ice-mountains is enormous. The whale was
+victim to an accident that often happens in these seas. Scoresby
+relates that in the course of a single summer thirty whales perished
+in the same way in Baffin's Sea; he saw a three-master flattened in
+a minute between two immense walls of ice. Other vessels were split
+through, as if with a lance, by pointed icicles a hundred feet long,
+meeting through the planks. A few minutes afterwards the boat hailed
+the brig, and was soon in its accustomed place on deck.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a lesson for those who are imprudent enough to adventure into
+the channels amongst the ice!" said Shandon in a loud voice.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap20"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XX</h3>
+
+<center>BEECHEY ISLAND</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>On the 25th of June the <i>Forward</i> arrived in sight of Cape Dundas
+at the north-western extremity of Prince of Wales's Land. There the
+difficulty of navigating amongst the ice grew greater. The sea is
+narrower there, and the line made by Crozier, Young, Day, Lowther,
+and Garret Islands, like a chain of forts before a roadstead, forced
+the ice-streams to accumulate in this strait. The brig took from the
+25th to the 30th of June to make as much way as she would have done
+in one day under any other circumstances; she stopped, retraced her
+steps, waiting for a favourable occasion so as not to miss Beechey
+Island, using a great deal of coal, as the fires were only moderated
+when she had to halt, but were never put out, so that she might be
+under pressure day and night. Hatteras knew the extent of his coal
+provision as well as Shandon, but as he was certain of getting his
+provision renewed at Beechey Island he would not lose a minute for
+the sake of economy; he had been much delayed by his forced march
+southward, and although he had taken the precaution of leaving England
+before the month of April, he did not find himself more advanced than
+preceding expeditions had been at the same epoch. On the 30th they
+sighted Cape Walker at the north-eastern extremity of Prince of
+Wales's Land; it was the extreme point that Kennedy and Bellot
+perceived on the 3rd of May, 1852, after an excursion across the whole
+of North Somerset. Before that, in 1851, Captain Ommaney, of the
+Austin expedition, had the good luck to revictual his detachments
+there. This cape is very high, and remarkable for its reddish-brown
+colour; from there, when the weather is clear, the view stretches
+as far as the entrance to Wellington Channel. Towards evening they
+saw Cape Bellot, separated from Cape Walker by McLeon Bay. Cape Bellot
+was so named in the presence of the young French officer, for whom
+the English expedition gave three cheers. At this spot the coast is
+made of yellowish limestone, presenting a very rugged outline; it
+is defended by enormous icebergs which the north winds pile up there
+in a most imposing way. It was soon lost to sight by the <i>Forward</i>
+as she opened a passage amongst the ice to get to Beechey Island
+through Barrow Strait. Hatteras resolved to go straight on, and, so
+as not to be drifted further than the island, scarcely quitted his
+post during the following days; he often went to the masthead to look
+out for the most advantageous channels. All that pluck, skill, and
+genius could do he did while they were crossing the strait. Fortune
+did not favour him, for the sea is generally more open at this epoch.
+But at last, by dint of sparing neither his steam, his crew, nor
+himself, he attained his end.</p>
+
+<p>On the 3rd of July, at 11 o'clock in the morning, the ice-master
+signalled land to the north. After taking an observation Hatteras
+recognised Beechey Island, that general meeting-place of Arctic
+navigators. Almost all ships that adventure in these seas stop there.
+Franklin wintered there for the first time before getting into
+Wellington Strait, and Creswell, with Lieutenant McClure, after
+having cleared 170 miles on the ice, rejoined the <i>Phoenix</i> and
+returned to England. The last ship which anchored at Beechey Island
+before the <i>Forward</i> was the <i>Fox</i>; McClintock revictualled there
+the 11th of August, 1858, and repaired the habitations and magazines;
+only two years had elapsed since then, and Hatteras knew all these
+details. The boatswain's heart beat with emotion at the sight of this
+island; when he had visited it he was quartermaster on board the
+<i>Phoenix</i>; Hatteras questioned him about the coast line, the
+facilities for anchoring, how far they could go inland, &amp;c.; the
+weather was magnificent, and the temperature kept at 57&deg;.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Johnson," said the captain, "do you know where you are?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, that is Beechey Island; only you must let us get further
+north&mdash;the coast is more easy of access."</p>
+
+<p>"But where are the habitations and the magazines?" said Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you can't see them till you land; they are sheltered behind those
+little hills you see yonder."</p>
+
+<p>"And is that where you transported a considerable quantity of
+provisions?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir; the Admiralty sent us here in 1853, under the command of
+Captain Inglefield, with the steamer <i>Phoenix</i> and a transport ship,
+the <i>Breadalbane</i>, loaded with provisions; we brought enough with
+us to revictual a whole expedition."</p>
+
+<p>"But the commander of the <i>Fox</i> took a lot of them in 1858," said
+Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"That doesn't matter, sir; there'll be plenty left for you; the cold
+preserves them wonderfully, and we shall find them as fresh and in
+as good a state of preservation as the first day."</p>
+
+<p>"What I want is coal," said Hatteras; "I have enough provisions for
+several years."</p>
+
+<p>"We left more than a thousand tons there, so you can make your mind
+easy."</p>
+
+<p>"Are we getting near?" said Hatteras, who, telescope in hand, was
+watching the coast.</p>
+
+<p>"You see that point?" continued Johnson. "When we have doubled it
+we shall be very near where we drop anchor. It was from that place
+that we started for England with Lieutenant Creswell and the twelve
+invalids from the <i>Investigator</i>. We were fortunate enough to bring
+back McClure's lieutenant, but the officer Bellot, who accompanied
+us on board the <i>Phoenix</i>, never saw his country again! It is a painful
+thing to think about. But, captain, I think we ought to drop anchor
+here."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," answered Hatteras, and he gave his orders in consequence.
+The <i>Forward</i> was in a little bay naturally sheltered on the north,
+east, and south, and at about a cable's length from the coast.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Wall," said Hatteras, "have the long boat got ready to transport
+the coal on board. I shall land in the pirogue with the doctor and
+the boatswain. Will you accompany us, Mr. Shandon?"</p>
+
+<p>"As you please," answered Shandon.</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes later the doctor, armed as a sportsman and a <i>savant</i>,
+took his place in the pirogue along with his companions; in ten minutes
+they landed on a low and rocky coast.</p>
+
+<p>"Lead the way, Johnson," said Hatteras. "You know it, I suppose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perfectly, sir; only there's a monument here that I did not expect
+to find!"</p>
+
+<p>"That!" cried the doctor; "I know what it is; let us go up to it;
+the stone itself will tell us."</p>
+
+<p>The four men advanced, and the doctor said, after taking off his hat&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"This, my friends, is a monument in memory of Franklin and his
+companions."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Franklin had, in 1855, confided a black marble tablet to Doctor
+Kane, and in 1858 she gave a second to McClintock to be raised on
+Beechey Island. McClintock accomplished this duty religiously, and
+placed the stone near a funeral monument erected to the memory of
+Bellot by Sir John Barrow.</p>
+
+<p>The tablet bore the following inscription:</p>
+<br>
+<center>"TO THE MEMORY OF<br>
+FRANKLIN, CROZIER, FITZ-JAMES,<br>
+AND ALL THEIR VALIANT BRETHREN<br>
+OFFICERS AND FAITHFUL COMPANIONS<br>
+who suffered for the cause of science and for their country's glory.</center>
+
+<blockquote>"This stone is erected near the place where they passed their first
+Arctic winter, and from whence they departed to conquer obstacles
+or to die.</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote>"It perpetuates the regret of their countrymen and friends who admire
+them, and the anguish, conquered by Faith, of her who lost in the
+chief of the expedition the most devoted and most affectionate of
+husbands.</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote>"It is thus that He led them to the supreme haven where all men take
+their rest.</blockquote>
+
+<center>"1855."</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>This stone, on a forlorn coast of these far-off regions, appealed
+mournfully to the heart; the doctor, in presence of these touching
+regrets, felt his eyes fill with tears. At the very same place which
+Franklin and his companions passed full of energy and hope, there
+only remained a block of marble in remembrance! And notwithstanding
+this sombre warning of destiny, the <i>Forward</i> was going to follow
+in the track of the <i>Erebus</i> and the <i>Terror</i>. Hatteras was the first
+to rouse himself from the perilous contemplation, and quickly climbed
+a rather steep hill, almost entirely bare of snow.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain," said Johnson, following him, "we shall see the magazines
+from here."</p>
+
+<p>Shandon and the doctor joined them on the summit. But from there the
+eye contemplated the vast plains, on which there remained no vestige
+of a habitation.</p>
+
+<p>"That is singular!" cried the boatswain.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and where are the magazines?" said Hatteras quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know&mdash;I don't see&mdash;&mdash;" stammered Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>"You have mistaken the way," said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"It seemed to me that this was the very place," continued Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Hatteras, impatiently "where are we to go now?"</p>
+
+<p>"We had better go down, for I may be mistaken. I may have forgotten
+the exact locality in seven years!"</p>
+
+<p>"Especially when the country is so uniformly monotonous!" added the
+doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"And yet&mdash;&mdash;" murmured Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>Shandon had not spoken a word. After walking for a few minutes, Johnson
+stopped.</p>
+
+<p>"But no," he cried, "I am not mistaken!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" said Hatteras, looking round him.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you see that swell of the ground?" asked the boatswain, pointing
+to a sort of mound with three distinct swells on it.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you conclude from that?" asked the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Those are the three graves of Franklin's sailors. I am sure now that
+I am not mistaken; the habitations ought to be about a hundred feet
+from here, and if they are not, they&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He dared not finish his sentence; Hatteras had rushed forward, a prey
+to violent despair. There, where the wished-for stores on which he
+had counted ought to have been, there ruin, pillage and destruction
+had been before him. Who had done it? Animals would only have attacked
+the provisions, and there did not remain a single rag from the tent,
+a piece of wood or iron, and, more terrible still, not a fragment
+of coal! It was evident that the Esquimaux had learnt the value of
+these objects from their frequent relations with Europeans; since
+the departure of the <i>Fox</i> they had fetched everything away, and had
+not left a trace even of their passage. A slight coating of snow
+covered the ground. Hatteras was confounded. The doctor looked and
+shook his head. Shandon still said nothing, but an attentive observer
+would have noticed his lips curl with a cruel smile. At this moment
+the men sent by Lieutenant Wall came up; they soon saw the state of
+affairs. Shandon advanced towards the captain, and said:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Hatteras, we need not despair; happily we are near the entrance
+to Barrow Strait, which will take us back to Baffin's Sea!"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Shandon," answered Hatteras, "happily we are near the entrance
+to Wellington Strait, and that will take us north!"</p>
+
+<p>"But how shall we get along, captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"With the sails, sir. We have two months' firing left, and that is
+enough for our wintering."</p>
+
+<p>"But allow me to tell you&mdash;&mdash;" added Shandon.</p>
+
+<p>"I will allow you to follow me on board my ship, sir," answered
+Hatteras, and turning his back on his second, he returned to the brig
+and shut himself up in his cabin. For the next two days the wind was
+contrary, and the captain did not show up on deck. The doctor profited
+by the forced sojourn to go over Beechey Island; he gathered some
+plants, which the temperature, relatively high, allowed to grow here
+and there on the rocks that the snow had left, some heaths, a few
+lichens, a sort of yellow ranunculus, a sort of plant something like
+sorrel, with wider leaves and more veins, and some pretty vigorous
+saxifrages. He found the fauna of this country much richer than the
+flora; he perceived long flocks of geese and cranes going northward,
+partridges, eider ducks of a bluish black, sandpipers, a sort of
+wading bird of the scolopax class, northern divers, plungers with
+very long bodies, numerous ptarmites, a sort of bird very good to
+eat, dovekies with black bodies, wings spotted with white, feet and
+beak red as coral; noisy bands of kittywakes and fat loons with white
+breasts, represented the ornithology of the island. The doctor was
+fortunate enough to kill a few grey hares, which had not yet put on
+their white winter fur, and a blue fox which Dick ran down skilfully.
+Some bears, evidently accustomed to dread the presence of men, would
+not allow themselves to be got at, and the seals were extremely timid,
+doubtless for the same reason as their enemies the bears. The class
+of articulated animals was represented by a single mosquito, which
+the doctor caught to his great delight, though not till it had stung
+him. As a conchologist he was less favoured, and only found a sort
+of mussel and some bivalve shells.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap21"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XXI</h3>
+
+<center>THE DEATH OF BELLOT</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The temperature during the days of the 3rd and 4th of July kept up
+to 57&deg;; this was the highest thermometric point observed during
+the campaign. But on Thursday, the 5th, the wind turned to the
+south-east, and was accompanied by violent snow-storms. The
+thermometer fell during the preceding night to 23&deg;. Hatteras
+took no notice of the murmurs of the crew, and gave orders to get
+under way. For the last thirteen days, from Cape Dundas, the <i>Forward</i>
+had not been able to gain one more degree north, so the party
+represented by Clifton was no longer satisfied, but wished like
+Hatteras to get into Wellington Channel, and worked away with a will.
+The brig had some difficulty in getting under sail; but Hatteras
+having set his mizensail, his topsails, and his gallantsails during
+the night, advanced boldly in the midst of fields of ice which the
+current was drifting south. The crew were tired out with this winding
+navigation, which kept them constantly at work at the sails.
+Wellington Channel is not very wide; it is bounded by North Devon
+on the east and Cornwallis Island on the west; this island was long
+believed to be a peninsula. It was Sir John Franklin who first sailed
+round it in 1846, starting west, and coming back to the same point
+to the north of the channel. The exploration of Wellington Channel
+was made in 1851 by Captain Penny in the whalers <i>Lady Franklin</i> and
+<i>Sophia</i>; one of his lieutenants, Stewart, reached Cape Beecher in
+latitude 76&deg; 20', and discovered the open sea&mdash;that
+open sea which was Hatteras's dream!</p>
+
+<p>"What Stewart found I shall find," said he to the doctor; "then I
+shall be able to set sail to the Pole."</p>
+
+<p>"But aren't you afraid that your crew&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"My crew!" said Hatteras severely. Then in a low tone&mdash;"Poor fellows!"
+murmured he, to the great astonishment of the doctor. It was the first
+expression of feeling he had heard the captain deliver.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he repeated with energy, "they must follow me! They shall follow
+me!"</p>
+
+<p>However, although the <i>Forward</i> had nothing to fear from the collision
+of the ice-streams, which were still pretty far apart, they made very
+little progress northward, for contrary winds often forced them to
+stop. They passed Capes Spencer and Innis slowly, and on Tuesday,
+the 10th, cleared 75&deg; to the great delight of Clifton. The
+<i>Forward</i> was then at the very place where the American ships, the
+<i>Rescue</i> and the <i>Advance</i>, encountered such terrible dangers.
+Doctor Kane formed part of this expedition; towards the end of
+September, 1850, these ships got caught in an ice-bank, and were
+forcibly driven into Lancaster Strait. It was Shandon who related
+this catastrophe to James Wall before some of the brig's crew.</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>Advance</i> and the <i>Rescue</i>," he said to them, "were so knocked
+about by the ice, that they were obliged to leave off fires on board;
+but that did not prevent the temperature sinking 18&deg; below
+zero. During the whole winter the unfortunate crews were kept
+prisoners in the ice-bank, ready to abandon their ships at any moment;
+for three weeks they did not even change their clothes. They floated
+along in that dreadful situation for more than a thousand miles, when
+at last they were thrown into the middle of Baffin's Sea."</p>
+
+<p>The effect of this speech upon a crew already badly disposed can be
+well imagined. During this conversation Johnson was talking to the
+doctor about an event that had taken place in those very quarters;
+he asked the doctor to tell him when the brig was in latitude 75&deg;
+30', and when they passed it he cried:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it was just there!" in saying which tears filled his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean that Lieutenant Bellot died there?" said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Mr. Clawbonny. He was as good and brave a fellow as ever lived!
+It was upon this very North Devon coast! It was to be, I suppose,
+but if Captain Pullen had returned on board sooner it would not have
+happened."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean, Johnson?"</p>
+
+<p>"Listen to me, Mr. Clawbonny, and you will see on what a slight thread
+existence often hangs. You know that Lieutenant Bellot went his first
+campaign in search of Franklin in 1850?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, on the <i>Prince Albert</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, when he got back to France he obtained permission to embark
+on board the <i>Phoenix</i> under Captain Inglefield; I was a sailor on
+board. We came with the <i>Breadalbane</i> to transport provisions to
+Beechey Island!"</p>
+
+<p>"Those provisions we, unfortunately, did not find. Well?"</p>
+
+<p>"We reached Beechey Island in the beginning of August; on the 10th
+Captain Inglefield left the <i>Phoenix</i> to rejoin Captain Pullen, who
+had been separated from his ship, the <i>North Star</i>, for a month. When
+he came back he thought of sending his Admiralty despatches to Sir
+Edward Belcher, who was wintering in Wellington Channel. A little
+while after the departure of our captain, Captain Pullen got back
+to his ship. Why did he not arrive before the departure of Captain
+Inglefield? Lieutenant Bellot, fearing that our captain would be long
+away, and knowing that the Admiralty despatches ought to be sent at
+once, offered to take them himself. He left the command of the two
+ships to Captain Pullen, and set out on the 12th of August with a
+sledge and an indiarubber boat. He took the boatswain of the <i>North
+Star</i> (Harvey) with him, and three sailors, Madden, David Hook, and
+me. We supposed that Sir Edward Belcher was to be found in the
+neighbourhood of Beecher Cape, to the north of the channel; we made
+for it with our sledge along the eastern coast. The first day we
+encamped about three miles from Cape Innis; the next day we stopped
+on a block of ice about three miles from Cape Bowden. As land lay
+at about three miles' distance, Lieutenant Bellot resolved to go and
+encamp there during the night, which was as light as the day; he tried
+to get to it in his indiarubber canoe; he was twice repulsed by a
+violent breeze from the south-east; Harvey and Madden attempted the
+passage in their turn, and were more fortunate; they took a cord with
+them, and established a communication between the coast and the
+sledge; three objects were transported by means of the cord, but at
+the fourth attempt we felt our block of ice move; Mr. Bellot called
+out to his companions to drop the cord, and we were dragged to a great
+distance from the coast. The wind blew from the south-east, and it
+was snowing; but we were not in much danger, and the lieutenant might
+have come back as we did."</p>
+
+<p>Here Johnson stopped an instant to take a glance at the fatal coast,
+and continued:</p>
+
+<p>"After our companions were lost to sight we tried to shelter ourselves
+under the tent of our sledge, but in vain; then, with our knives,
+we began to cut out a house in the ice. Mr. Bellot helped us for half
+an hour, and talked to us about the danger of our situation. I told
+him I was not afraid. 'By God's help,' he answered, 'we shall not
+lose a hair of our heads.' I asked him what o'clock it was, and he
+answered, 'About a quarter-past six.' It was a quarter-past six in
+the morning of Thursday, August 18th. Then Mr. Bellot tied up his
+books, and said he would go and see how the ice floated; he had only
+been gone four minutes when I went round the block of ice to look
+for him; I saw his stick on the opposite side of a crevice, about
+five fathoms wide, where the ice was broken, but I could not see him
+anywhere. I called out, but no one answered. The wind was blowing
+great guns. I looked all round the block of ice, but found no trace
+of the poor lieutenant."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you think had become of him?" said the doctor, much moved.</p>
+
+<p>"I think that when Mr. Bellot got out of shelter the wind blew him
+into the crevice, and, as his greatcoat was buttoned up he could not
+swim. Oh! Mr. Clawbonny, I never was more grieved in my life! I could
+not believe it! He was a victim to duty, for it was in order to obey
+Captain Pullen's instructions that he tried to get to land. He was
+a good fellow, everybody liked him; even the Esquimaux, when they
+learnt his fate from Captain Inglefield on his return from Pound Bay,
+cried while they wept, as I am doing now, 'Poor Bellot! poor Bellot!'"</p>
+
+<p>"But you and your companion, Johnson," said the doctor, "how did you
+manage to reach land?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! we stayed twenty-four hours more on the block of ice, without
+food or firing; but at last we met with an ice-field; we jumped on
+to it, and with the help of an oar we fastened ourselves to an iceberg
+that we could guide like a raft, and we got to land, but without our
+brave officer."</p>
+
+<p>By the time Johnson had finished his story the <i>Forward</i> had passed
+the fatal coast, and Johnson lost sight of the place of the painful
+catastrophe. The next day they left Griffin Bay to the starboard,
+and, two days after, Capes Grinnell and Helpmann; at last, on the
+14th of July, they doubled Osborn Point, and on the 15th the brig
+anchored in Baring Bay, at the extremity of the channel. Navigation
+had not been very difficult; Hatteras met with a sea almost as free
+as that of which Belcher profited to go and winter with the <i>Pioneer</i>
+and the <i>Assistance</i> as far north as 77&deg;. It was in 1852 and
+1853, during his first wintering, for he passed the winter of 1853
+to 1854 in Baring Bay, where the <i>Forward</i> was now at anchor. He
+suffered so much that he was obliged to leave the <i>Assistance</i> in
+the midst of the ice. Shandon told all these details to the already
+discontented sailors. Did Hatteras know how he was betrayed by his
+first officer? It is impossible to say; if he did, he said nothing
+about it.</p>
+
+<p>At the top of Baring Bay there is a narrow channel which puts
+Wellington and Queen's Channel into communication with each other.
+There the rafts of ice lie closely packed. Hatteras tried, in vain,
+to clear the passes to the north of Hamilton Island; the wind was
+contrary; five precious days were lost in useless efforts. The
+temperature still lowered, and, on the 19th of July, fell to 26&deg;;
+it got higher the following day; but this foretaste of winter
+made Hatteras afraid of waiting any longer. The wind seemed to be
+going to keep in the west, and to stop the progress of the ship. However,
+he was in a hurry to gain the point where Stewart had met with the
+open sea. On the 19th he resolved to get into the Channel at any price;
+the wind blew right on the brig, which might, with her screw, have
+stood against it, had not Hatteras been obliged to economise his fuel;
+on the other hand, the Channel was too wide to allow the men to haul
+the brig along. Hatteras, not considering the men's fatigue, resolved
+to have recourse to means often employed by whalers under similar
+circumstances. The men took it in turns to row, so as to push the
+brig on against the wind. The <i>Forward</i> advanced slowly up the Channel.
+The men were worn out and murmured loudly. They went on in that manner
+till the 23rd of July, when they reached Baring Island in Queen's
+Channel. The wind was still against them. The doctor thought the
+health of the men much shaken, and perceived the first symptoms of
+scurvy amongst them; he did all he could to prevent the spread of
+the wretched malady, and distributed lime-juice to the men.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras saw that he could no longer count upon his crew; reasoning
+and kindness were ineffectual, so he resolved to employ severity for
+the future; he suspected Shandon and Wall, though they dare not speak
+out openly. Hatteras had the doctor, Johnson, Bell, and Simpson for
+him; they were devoted to him body and soul; amongst the undecided
+were Foker, Bolton, Wolsten the gunsmith, and Brunton the first
+engineer; and they might turn against the captain at any moment; as
+to Pen, Gripper, Clifton, and Warren, they were in open revolt; they
+wished to persuade their comrades to force the captain to return to
+England. Hatteras soon saw that he could not continue to work his
+ship with such a crew. He remained twenty-four hours at Baring Island
+without taking a step forward. The weather grew cooler still, for
+winter begins to be felt in July in these high latitudes. On the 24th
+the thermometer fell to 22&deg;. Young ice formed during the night,
+and if snow fell it would soon be thick enough to bear the weight
+of a man. The sea began already to have that dirty colour which
+precedes the formation of the first crystals. Hatteras could not
+mistake these alarming symptoms; if the channels got blocked up, he
+should be obliged to winter there at a great distance from the point
+he had undertaken the voyage in order to reach, without having caught
+a glimpse of that open sea which his predecessors made out was so
+near. He resolved, then, to gain several degrees further north, at
+whatever cost; seeing that he could not employ oars without the rowers
+were willing, nor sail in a contrary wind, he gave orders to put steam
+on again.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap22"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XXII</h3>
+
+<center>BEGINNING OF REVOLT</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>At this unexpected command, the surprise was great on board the
+<i>Forward</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Light the fires!" exclaimed some.</p>
+
+<p>"What with?" asked others.</p>
+
+<p>"When we've only two months' coal in the hold!" said Pen.</p>
+
+<p>"What shall we warm ourselves with in the winter?" asked Clifton.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall be obliged to burn the brig down to her water-line," answered
+Gripper.</p>
+
+<p>"And stuff the stove with the masts," added Warren. Shandon looked
+at Wall. The stupefied engineers hesitated to go down to the
+machine-room.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you hear me?" cried the captain in an irritated tone.</p>
+
+<p>Brunton made for the hatchway, but before going down he stopped.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't go, Brunton!" called out a voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Who spoke?" cried Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"I did," said Pen, advancing towards the captain.</p>
+
+<p>"And what did you say?" asked Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"I say," answered Pen with an oath&mdash;"I say, we've had enough of it,
+and we won't go any further. You shan't kill us with hunger and work
+in the winter, and they shan't light the fires!"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Shandon," answered Hatteras calmly, "have that man put in irons!"</p>
+
+<p>"But, captain," replied Shandon, "what the man says&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"If you repeat what the man says," answered Hatteras, "I'll have you
+shut up in your cabin and guarded! Seize that man! Do you hear?"
+Johnson, Bell, and Simpson advanced towards the sailor, who was in
+a terrible passion.</p>
+
+<p>"The first who touches me&mdash;&mdash;" he said, brandishing a handspike.
+Hatteras approached him.</p>
+
+<p>"Pen," said he tranquilly, "if you move, I shall blow out your brains!"
+So speaking, he cocked a pistol and aimed it at the sailor. A murmur
+was heard.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a word, men," said Hatteras, "or that man falls dead!" Johnson
+and Bell disarmed Pen, who no longer made any resistance, and placed
+him in the hold.</p>
+
+<p>"Go, Brunton," said Hatteras. The engineer, followed by Plover and
+Warren, went down to his post. Hatteras returned to the poop.</p>
+
+<p>"That Pen is a wretched fellow!" said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"No man has ever been nearer death!" answered the captain, simply.</p>
+
+<p>The steam was soon got up, the anchors were weighed, and the <i>Forward</i>
+veered away east, cutting the young ice with her steel prow. Between
+Baring Island and Beecher Point there are a considerable quantity
+of islands in the midst of ice-fields; the streams crowd together
+in the little channels which cut up this part of the sea; they had
+a tendency to agglomerate under the relatively low temperature;
+hummocks were formed here and there, and these masses, already more
+compact, denser, and closer together, would soon form an impenetrable
+mass. The <i>Forward</i> made its way with great difficulty amidst the
+snowstorms. However, with the mobility that characterises the
+climate of these regions, the sun appeared from time to time, the
+temperature went up several degrees, obstacles melted as if by magic,
+and a fine sheet of water lay where icebergs bristled all the passes.
+The horizon glowed with those magnificent orange shades which rest
+the eye, tired with the eternal white of the snow.</p>
+
+<p>On the 26th of July the <i>Forward</i> passed Dundas Island, and veered
+afterwards more to the north; but there Hatteras found himself
+opposite an ice-bank eight or nine feet high, formed of little
+icebergs detached from the coast; he was obliged to turn west. The
+uninterrupted cracking of the ice, added to the noise of the steamer,
+was like sighs or groans. At last the brig found a channel, and
+advanced painfully along it; often an enormous iceberg hindered her
+course for hours; the fog hindered the pilot's look-out; as long as
+he can see for a mile in front of him, he can easily avoid obstacles;
+but in the midst of the fog it was often impossible to see a cable's
+length, and the swell was very strong. Sometimes the clouds looked
+smooth and white as though they were reflections of the ice-banks;
+but there were entire days when the yellow rays of the sun could not
+pierce the tenacious fog. Birds were still very numerous, and their
+cries were deafening; seals, lying idle on the floating ice, raised
+their heads, very little frightened, and moved their long necks as
+the brig passed. Pieces from the ship's sheathing were often rubbed
+off in her contact with the ice. At last, after six days of slow
+navigation, Point Beecher was sighted to the north on the 1st of August.
+Hatteras passed the last few hours at his masthead; the open sea that
+Stewart had perceived on May 30th, 1851, about latitude 76&deg;
+20', could not be far off; but as far as the eye could reach,
+Hatteras saw no indication of it. He came down without saying a word.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you believe in an open sea?" asked Shandon of the lieutenant.</p>
+
+<p>"I am beginning not to," answered Wall.</p>
+
+<p>"Wasn't I right to say the pretended discovery was purely imagination?
+But they would not believe me, and even you were against me, Wall."</p>
+
+<p>"We shall believe in you for the future, Shandon."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said he, "when it's too late," and so saying he went back to
+his cabin, where he had stopped almost ever since his dispute with
+the captain. The wind veered round south towards evening; Hatteras
+ordered the brig to be put under sail and the fires to be put out;
+the crew had to work very hard for the next few days; they were more
+than a week getting to Barrow Point. The <i>Forward</i> had only made thirty
+miles in ten days. There the wind turned north again, and the screw
+was set to work. Hatteras still hoped to find an open sea beyond the
+77th parallel, as Sir Edward Belcher had done. Ought he to treat these
+accounts as apocryphal? or had the winter come upon him earlier? On
+the 15th of August Mount Percy raised its peak, covered with eternal
+snow, through the mist. The next day the sun set for the first time,
+ending thus the long series of days with twenty-four hours in them.
+The men had ended by getting accustomed to the continual daylight,
+but it had never made any difference to the animals; the Greenland
+dogs went to their rest at their accustomed hour, and Dick slept as
+regularly every evening as though darkness had covered the sky. Still,
+during the nights which followed the 15th of August, darkness was
+never profound; although the sun set, he still gave sufficient light
+by refraction. On the 19th of August, after a pretty good observation,
+they sighted Cape Franklin on the east coast and Cape Lady Franklin
+on the west coast; the gratitude of the English people had given these
+names to the two opposite points&mdash;probably the last reached by
+Franklin: the name of the devoted wife, opposite to that of her husband,
+is a touching emblem of the sympathy which always united them.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor, by following Johnson's advice, accustomed himself to
+support the low temperature; he almost always stayed on deck braving
+the cold, the wind, and the snow. He got rather thinner, but his
+constitution did not suffer. Besides, he expected to be much worse
+off, and joyfully prepared for the approaching winter.</p>
+
+<p>"Look at those birds," he said to Johnson one day; "they are emigrating
+south in flocks! They are shrieking out their good-byes!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Mr. Clawbonny, some instinct tells them they must go, and they
+set out."</p>
+
+<p>"There's more than one amongst us who would like to imitate them,
+I think."</p>
+
+<p>"They are cowards, Mr. Clawbonny; those animals have no provisions
+as we have, and are obliged to seek their food where it is to be found.
+But sailors, with a good ship under their feet, ought to go to the
+world's end."</p>
+
+<p>"You hope that Hatteras will succeed, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"He certainly will, Mr. Clawbonny."</p>
+
+<p>"I am of the same opinion as you, Johnson, and if he only wanted one
+faithful companion&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"He'll have two!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Johnson," answered the doctor, shaking hands with the brave
+sailor.</p>
+
+<p>Prince Albert Land, which the <i>Forward</i> was then coasting, bears also
+the name of Grinnell Land, and though Hatteras, from his hatred to
+the Yankees, would never call it by its American name, it is the one
+it generally goes by. It owes its double appellation to the following
+circumstances: At the same time that Penny, an Englishman, gave it
+the name of Prince Albert, Lieutenant Haven, commander of the <i>Rescue</i>,
+called it Grinnell Land in honour of the American merchant who had
+fitted out the expedition from New York at his own expense. Whilst
+the brig was coasting it, she experienced a series of unheard-of
+difficulties, navigating sometimes under sail, sometimes by steam.
+On the 18th of August they sighted Britannia Mountain, scarcely
+visible through the mist, and the <i>Forward</i> weighed anchor the next
+day in Northumberland Bay. She was hemmed in on all sides.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap23"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XXIII</h3>
+
+<center>ATTACKED BY ICEBERGS</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Hatteras, after seeing to the anchoring of his ship, re-entered his
+cabin and examined his map attentively. He found himself in latitude
+76&deg; 57' and longitude 99&deg; 20'&mdash;that is
+to say, at only three minutes from the 77th parallel. It was at this
+very spot that Sir Edward Belcher passed his first winter with the
+<i>Pioneer</i> and the <i>Assistance</i>. It was thence that he organised his
+sledge and boat excursions. He discovered Table Isle, North Cornwall,
+Victoria Archipelago, and Belcher Channel. He reached the 78th
+parallel, and saw that the coast was depressed on the south-east.
+It seemed to go down to Jones's Strait, the entrance to which lies
+in Baffin's Bay. But to the north-west, on the contrary, says his
+report, an open sea lay as far as the eye could reach.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras considered attentively the white part of the map, which
+represented the Polar basin free from ice.</p>
+
+<p>"After such testimony as that of Stewart, Penny, and Belcher, I can't
+have a doubt about it," he said to himself. "They saw it with their
+own eyes. But if the winter has already frozen it! But no; they made
+their discoveries at intervals of several years. It exists, and I
+shall find it! I shall see it."</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras went on to the poop. An intense fog enveloped the <i>Forward</i>;
+the masthead could scarcely be distinguished from the deck. However,
+Hatteras called down the ice-master from his crow's nest, and took
+his place. He wished to profit by the shortest clear interval to
+examine the north-western horizon. Shandon did not let the occasion
+slip for saying to the lieutenant:</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Wall, where is the open sea?"</p>
+
+<p>"You were right, Shandon, and we have only six weeks' coal in the
+hold."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps the doctor will find us some scientific fuel to warm us in
+the place of coal," answered Shandon. "I have heard say you can turn
+fire to ice; perhaps he'll turn ice to fire." And he entered his cabin,
+shrugging his shoulders. The next day was the 20th of August, and
+the fog cleared away for several minutes. They saw Hatteras look
+eagerly at the horizon, and then come down without speaking; but it
+was easy to see that his hopes had again been crushed. The <i>Forward</i>
+weighed anchor, and took up her uncertain march northward. As the
+<i>Forward</i> began to be weather-worn, the masts were unreeved, for they
+could no longer rely on the variable wind, and the sails were nearly
+useless in the winding channels. Large white marks appeared here and
+there on the sea like oil spots; they presaged an approaching frost;
+as soon as the breeze dropped the sea began to freeze immediately;
+but as soon as the wind got up again, the young ice was broken up
+and dispersed. Towards evening the thermometer went down to 17&deg;.</p>
+
+<p>When the brig came to a closed-up pass she acted as a battering ram,
+and ran at full steam against the obstacle, which she sunk. Sometimes
+they thought she was stopped for good; but an unexpected movement
+of the streams opened her a new passage, and she took advantage of
+it boldly. When the brig stopped, the steam which escaped from the
+safety-pipes was condensed by the cold air and fell in snow on to
+the deck. Another impediment came in the way; the ice-blocks sometimes
+got entangled in the paddles, and they were so hard that all the
+strength of the machine was not sufficient to break them; it was then
+necessary to back the engine and send men to clear the screws with
+their handspikes. All this delayed the brig; it lasted thirteen days.
+The <i>Forward</i> dragged herself painfully along Penny Strait; the crew
+grumbled, but obeyed: the men saw now that it was impossible to go
+back. Keeping north was less dangerous than retreating south. They
+were obliged to think about wintering. The sailors talked together
+about their present position, and one day they mentioned it to Richard
+Shandon, who, they knew, was on their side. The second officer forgot
+his duty as an officer, and allowed them to discuss the authority
+of the captain before him.</p>
+
+<p>"You say, then, Mr. Shandon, that we can't go back now?" said Gripper.</p>
+
+<p>"No, it's too late now," answered Shandon.</p>
+
+<p>"Then we must think about wintering," said another sailor.</p>
+
+<p>"It's the only thing we can do. They wouldn't believe me."</p>
+
+<p>"Another time," said Pen, who had been released, "we shall believe
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"But as I am not the master&mdash;&mdash;" replied Shandon.</p>
+
+<p>"Who says you mayn't be?" answered Pen. "John Hatteras may go as far
+as he likes, but we aren't obliged to follow him."</p>
+
+<p>"You all know what became of the crew that did follow him in his first
+cruise to Baffin's Sea?" said Gripper.</p>
+
+<p>"And the cruise of the <i>Farewell</i> under him that got lost in the
+Spitzbergen seas!" said Clifton.</p>
+
+<p>"He was the only man that came back," continued Gripper.</p>
+
+<p>"He and his dog," answered Clifton.</p>
+
+<p>"We won't die for his pleasure," added Pen.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor lose the bounty we've been at so much trouble to earn," cried
+Clifton. "When we've passed the 78th degree&mdash;and we aren't far off
+it, I know&mdash;that will make just the &pound;375 each."</p>
+
+<p>"But," answered Gripper, "shan't we lose it if we go back without
+the captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not if we prove that we were obliged to," answered Clifton.</p>
+
+<p>"But it's the captain&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You never mind, Gripper," answered Pen; "we'll have a captain and
+a good one&mdash;that Mr. Shandon knows. When one commander goes mad, folks
+have done with him, and they take another; don't they, Mr. Shandon?"</p>
+
+<p>Shandon answered evasively that they could reckon upon him, but that
+they must wait to see what turned up. Difficulties were getting thick
+round Hatteras, but he was as firm, calm, energetic, and confident
+as ever. After all, he had done in five months what other navigators
+had taken two or three years to do! He should be obliged to winter
+now, but there was nothing to frighten brave sailors in that. Sir
+John Ross and McClure had passed three successive winters in the
+Arctic regions. What they had done he could do too!</p>
+
+<p>"If I had only been able to get up Smith Strait at the north of Baffin's
+Sea, I should be at the Pole by now!" he said to the doctor regretfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind, captain!" answered the doctor, "we shall get at it by
+the 99th meridian instead of by the 75th; if all roads lead to Rome,
+it's more certain still that all meridians lead to the Pole."</p>
+
+<p>On the 31st of August the thermometer marked 13&deg;. The end of
+the navigable season was approaching; the <i>Forward</i> left Exmouth
+Island to the starboard, and three days after passed Table Island
+in the middle of Belcher Channel. At an earlier period it would perhaps
+have been possible to regain Baffin's Sea by this channel, but it
+was not to be dreamt of then; this arm of the sea was entirely
+barricaded by ice; ice-fields extended as far as the eye could reach,
+and would do so for eight months longer. Happily they could still
+gain a few minutes further north on the condition of breaking up the
+ice with huge clubs and petards. Now the temperature was so low, any
+wind, even a contrary one, was welcome, for in a calm the sea froze
+in a single night. The <i>Forward</i> could not winter in her present
+situation, exposed to winds, icebergs, and the drift from the channel;
+a shelter was the first thing to find; Hatteras hoped to gain the
+coast of New Cornwall, and to find above Albert Point a bay of refuge
+sufficiently sheltered. He therefore pursued his course northward
+with perseverance. But on the 8th an impenetrable ice-bank lay in
+front of him, and the temperature was at 10&deg;. Hatteras did
+all he could to force a passage, continually risking his ship and
+getting out of danger by force of skill. He could be accused of
+imprudence, want of reflection, folly, blindness, but he was a good
+sailor, and one of the best! The situation of the <i>Forward</i> became
+really dangerous; the sea closed up behind her, and in a few hours
+the ice got so hard that the men could run along it and tow the ship
+in all security.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras found he could not get round the obstacle, so he resolved
+to attack it in front; he used his strongest blasting cylinders of
+eight to ten pounds of powder; they began by making a hole in the
+thick of the ice, and filled it with snow, taking care to place the
+cylinder in a horizontal position, so that a greater portion of the
+ice might be submitted to the explosion; lastly, they lighted the
+wick, which was protected by a gutta-percha tube. They worked at the
+blasting, as they could not saw, for the saws stuck immediately in
+the ice. Hatteras hoped to pass the next day. But during the night
+a violent wind raged, and the sea rose under her crust of ice as if
+shaken by some submarine commotion, and the terrified voice of the
+pilot was heard crying:</p>
+
+<p>"Look out aft!"</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras turned to the direction indicated, and what he saw by the
+dim twilight was frightful. A high iceberg, driven back north, was
+rushing on to the ship with the rapidity of an avalanche.</p>
+
+<p>"All hands on deck!" cried the captain.</p>
+
+<p>The rolling mountain was hardly half a mile off; the blocks of ice
+were driven about like so many huge grains of sand; the tempest raged
+with fury.</p>
+
+<p>"There, Mr. Clawbonny," said Johnson to the doctor, "we are in
+something like danger now."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered the doctor tranquilly, "it looks frightful enough."</p>
+
+<p>"It's an assault we shall have to repulse," replied the boatswain.</p>
+
+<p>"It looks like a troop of antediluvian animals, those that were
+supposed to inhabit the Pole. They are trying which shall get here
+first!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," added Johnson, "I hope we shan't get one of their spikes into
+us!"</p>
+
+<p>"It's a siege&mdash;let's run to the ramparts!"</p>
+
+<p>And they made haste aft, where the crew, armed with poles, bars of
+iron, and handspikes, were getting ready to repulse the formidable
+enemy. The avalanche came nearer, and got bigger by the addition of
+the blocks of ice which it caught in its passage; Hatteras gave orders
+to fire the cannon in the bow to break the threatening line. But it
+arrived and rushed on to the brig; a great crackling noise was heard,
+and as it struck on the brig's starboard a part of her barricading
+was broken. Hatteras gave his men orders to keep steady and prepare
+for the ice. It came along in blocks; some of them weighing several
+hundredweight came over the ship's side; the smaller ones, thrown
+up as high as the topsails, fell in little spikes, breaking the shrouds
+and cutting the rigging. The ship was boarded by these innumerable
+enemies, which in a block would have crushed a hundred ships like
+the <i>Forward</i>. Some of the sailors were badly wounded whilst trying
+to keep off the ice, and Bolton had his left shoulder torn open. The
+noise was deafening. Dick barked with rage at this new kind of enemy.
+The obscurity of the night came to add to the horror of the situation,
+but did not hide the threatening blocks, their white surface reflected
+the last gleams of light. Hatteras's orders were heard in the midst
+of the crew's strange struggle with the icebergs. The ship giving
+way to the tremendous pressure, bent to the larboard, and the
+extremity of her mainyard leaned like a buttress against the iceberg
+and threatened to break her mast.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras saw the danger; it was a terrible moment; the brig threatened
+to turn completely over, and the masting might be carried away. An
+enormous block, as big as the steamer itself, came up alongside her
+hull; it rose higher and higher on the waves; it was already above
+the poop; it fell over the <i>Forward</i>. All was lost; it was now upright,
+higher than the gallant yards, and it shook on its foundation. A cry
+of terror escaped the crew. Everyone fled to starboard. But at this
+moment the steamer was lifted completely up, and for a little while
+she seemed to be suspended in the air, and fell again on to the
+ice-blocks; then she rolled over till her planks cracked again. After
+a minute, which appeared a century, she found herself again in her
+natural element, having been turned over the ice-bank that blocked
+her passage by the rising of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>"She's cleared the ice-bank!" shouted Johnson, who had rushed to the
+fore of the brig.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God!" answered Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>The brig was now in the midst of a pond of ice, which hemmed her in
+on every side, and though her keel was in the water, she could not
+move; she was immovable, but the ice-field moved for her.</p>
+
+<p>"We are drifting, captain!" cried Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>"We must drift," answered Hatteras; "we can't help ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>When daylight came, it was seen that the brig was drifting rapidly
+northward, along with a submarine current. The floating mass carried
+the <i>Forward</i> along with it. In case of accident, when the brig might
+be thrown on her side, or crushed by the pressure of the ice, Hatteras
+had a quantity of provisions brought up on deck, along with materials
+for encamping, the clothes and blankets of the crew. Taking example
+from Captain McClure under similar circumstances, he caused the brig
+to be surrounded by a belt of hammocks, filled with air, so as to
+shield her from the thick of the damage; the ice soon accumulated
+under a temperature of 7&deg;, and the ship was surrounded by a
+wall of ice, above which her masts only were to be seen. They navigated
+thus for seven days; Point Albert, the western extremity of New
+Cornwall, was sighted on the 10th of September, but soon disappeared;
+from thence the ice-field drifted east. Where would it take them to?
+Where should they stop? Who could tell? The crew waited, and the men
+folded their arms. At last, on the 15th of September, about three
+o'clock in the afternoon, the ice-field, stopped, probably, by
+collision with another field, gave a violent shake to the brig, and
+stood still. Hatteras found himself out of sight of land in latitude
+78&deg; 15' and longitude 95&deg; 35' in the midst
+of the unknown sea, where geographers have placed the Frozen Pole.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap24"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XXIV</h3>
+
+<center>PREPARATIONS FOR WINTERING</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The southern hemisphere is colder in parallel latitudes than the
+northern hemisphere; but the temperature of the new continent is still
+15&deg; below that of the other parts of the world; and in America
+the countries known under the name of the Frozen Pole are the most
+formidable. The average temperature of the year is 2&deg; below
+zero. Scientific men, and Dr. Clawbonny amongst them, explain the
+fact in the following way. According to them, the prevailing winds
+of the northern regions of America blow from the south-west; they
+come from the Pacific Ocean with an equal and bearable temperature;
+but in order to reach the Arctic Seas they have to cross the immense
+American territory, covered with snow, they get cold by contact with
+it, and then cover the hyperborean regions with their frigid violence.
+Hatteras found himself at the Frozen Pole beyond the countries seen
+by his predecessors; he, therefore, expected a terrible winter on
+a ship lost in the midst of the ice with a crew nearly in revolt.
+He resolved to face these dangers with his accustomed energy. He began
+by taking, with the help of Johnson's experience, all the measures
+necessary for wintering. According to his calculations he had been
+dragged two hundred and fifty miles beyond New Cornwall, the last
+country discovered; he was clasped in an ice-field as securely as
+in a bed of granite, and no power on earth could extricate him.</p>
+
+<p>There no longer existed a drop of water in the vast seas over which
+the Arctic winter reigned. Ice-fields extended as far as the eye could
+reach, bristling with icebergs, and the <i>Forward</i> was sheltered by
+three of the highest on three points of the compass; the south-east
+wind alone could reach her. If instead of icebergs there had been
+rocks, verdure instead of snow, and the sea in its liquid state again,
+the brig would have been safely anchored in a pretty bay sheltered
+from the worst winds. But in such a latitude it was a miserable state
+of things. They were obliged to fasten the brig by means of her anchors,
+notwithstanding her immovability; they were obliged to prepare for
+the submarine currents and the breaking up of the ice. When Johnson
+heard where they were, he took the greatest precautions in getting
+everything ready for wintering.</p>
+
+<p>"It's the captain's usual luck," said he to the doctor; "we've got
+nipped in the most disagreeable point of the whole glove! Never mind;
+we'll get out of it!"</p>
+
+<p>As to the doctor, he was delighted at the situation. He would not
+have changed it for any other! A winter at the Frozen Pole seemed
+to him desirable. The crew were set to work at the sails, which were
+not taken down, and put into the hold, as the first people who wintered
+in these regions had thought prudent; they were folded up in their
+cases, and the ice soon made them an impervious envelope. The crow's
+nest, too, remained in its place, serving as a nautical observatory;
+the rigging alone was taken away. It became necessary to cut away
+the part of the field that surrounded the brig, which began to suffer
+from the pressure. It was a long and painful work. In a few days the
+keel was cleared, and on examination was found to have suffered little,
+thanks to the solidity of its construction, only its copper plating
+was almost all torn off. When the ship was once liberated she rose
+at least nine inches; the crew then bevelled the ice in the shape
+of the keel, and the field formed again under the brig, and offered
+sufficient opposition to pressure from without. The doctor helped
+in all this work; he used the ice-knife skilfully; he incited the
+sailors by his happy disposition. He instructed himself and others,
+and was delighted to find the ice under the ship.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a very good precaution!" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"We couldn't do without it, Mr. Clawbonny," said Johnson. "Now we
+can raise a snow-wall as high as the gunwale, and if we like we can
+make it ten feet thick, for we've plenty of materials."</p>
+
+<p>"That's an excellent idea," answered the doctor. "Snow is a bad
+conductor of heat; it reflects it instead of absorbing it, and the
+heat of the interior does not escape."</p>
+
+<p>"That's true," said Johnson. "We shall raise a fortification against
+the cold, and against animals too, if they take it into their heads
+to pay us a visit; when the work is done it will answer, I can tell
+you. We shall make two flights of steps in the snow, one from the
+ship and the other from outside; when once we've cut out the steps
+we shall pour water over them, and it will make them as hard as rock.
+We shall have a royal staircase."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a good thing that cold makes ice and snow, and so gives us the
+means of protecting ourselves against it. I don't know what we should
+do if it did not."</p>
+
+<p>A roofing of tarred cloth was spread over the deck and descended to
+the sides of the brig. It was thus sheltered from all outside
+impression, and made a capital promenade; it was covered with two
+feet and a-half of snow, which was beaten down till it became very
+hard, and above that they put a layer of sand, completely macadamising
+it.</p>
+
+<p>"With a few trees I should imagine myself in Hyde Park," said the
+doctor, "or in one of the hanging gardens of Babylon."</p>
+
+<p>They made a hole at a short distance from the brig; it was round,
+like a well; they broke the ice every morning. This well was useful
+in case of fire or for the frequent baths ordered to keep the crew
+in health. In order to spare their fuel, they drew the water from
+a greater depth by means of an apparatus invented by a Frenchman,
+Fran&ccedil;ois Arago. Generally, when a ship is wintering, all the objects
+which encumber her are placed in magazines on the coast, but it was
+impossible to do this in the midst of an ice-field. Every precaution
+was taken against cold and damp; men have been known to resist the
+cold and succumb to damp; therefore both had to be guarded against.
+The <i>Forward</i> had been built expressly for these regions, and the
+common room was wisely arranged. They had made war on the corners,
+where damp takes refuge at first. If it had been quite circular it
+would have done better, but warmed by a vast stove and well ventilated,
+it was very comfortable; the walls were lined with buckskins and not
+with woollen materials, for wool condenses the vapours and
+impregnates the atmosphere with damp. The partitions were taken down
+in the poop, and the officers had a large comfortable room, warmed
+by a stove. Both this room and that of the crew had a sort of antechamber,
+which prevented all direct communication with the exterior, and
+prevented the heat going out; it also made the crew pass more gradually
+from one temperature to another. They left their snow-covered
+garments in these antechambers, and scraped their feet on scrapers
+put there on purpose to prevent any unhealthy element getting in.</p>
+
+<p>Canvas hose let in the air necessary to make the stoves draw; other
+hose served for escape-pipes for the steam. Two condensers were fixed
+in the two rooms; they gathered the vapour instead of letting it escape,
+and were emptied twice a week; sometimes they contained several
+bushels of ice. By means of the air-pipes the fires could be easily
+regulated, and it was found that very little fuel was necessary to
+keep up a temperature of 50 degrees in the rooms. But Hatteras saw
+with grief that he had only enough coal left for two months' firing.
+A drying-room was prepared for the garments that were obliged to be
+washed, as they could not be hung in the air or they would have been
+frozen and spoiled. The delicate parts of the machine were taken to
+pieces carefully, and the room where they were placed was closed up
+hermetically. The rules for life on board were drawn up by Hatteras
+and hung up in the common room. The men got up at six in the morning,
+and their hammocks were exposed to the air three times a week; the
+floors of the two rooms were rubbed with warm sand every morning;
+boiling tea was served out at every meal, and the food varied as much
+as possible, according to the different days of the week; it consisted
+of bread, flour, beef suet and raisins for puddings, sugar, cocoa,
+tea, rice, lemon-juice, preserved meat, salted beef and pork, pickled
+cabbage and other vegetables; the kitchen was outside the common rooms,
+and the men were thus deprived of its heat, but cooking is a constant
+source of evaporation and humidity.</p>
+
+<p>The health of men depends a great deal on the food they eat; under
+these high latitudes it is of great importance to consume as much
+animal food as possible. The doctor presided at the drawing up of
+the bill of fare.</p>
+
+<p>"We must take example from the Esquimaux," said he; "they have
+received their lessons from nature, and are our teachers here;
+although Arabians and Africans can live on a few dates and a handful
+of rice, it is very different here, where we must eat a great deal
+and often. The Esquimaux absorb as much as ten and fifteen pounds
+of oil in a day. If you do not like oil, you must have recourse to
+things rich in sugar and fat. In a word, you want carbon in the stove
+inside you as much as the stove there wants coal."</p>
+
+<p>Every man was forced to take a bath in the half-frozen water condensed
+from the fire. The doctor set the example; he did it at first as we
+do all disagreeable things that we feel obliged to do, but he soon
+began to take extreme pleasure in it. When the men had to go out either
+to hunt or work they had to take great care not to get frost-bitten;
+and if by accident it happened, they made haste to rub the part
+attacked with snow to bring back the circulation of the blood. Besides
+being carefully clothed in wool from head to foot, the men wore hoods
+of buckskin and sealskin trousers, through which it is impossible
+for the wind to penetrate. All these preparations took about three
+weeks, and the 10th of October came round without anything remarkable
+happening.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap25"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XXV</h3>
+
+<center>AN OLD FOX</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>That day the thermometer went down to 3&deg; below zero. The weather
+was pretty calm, and the cold without breeze was bearable. Hatteras
+profited by the clearness of the atmosphere to reconnoitre the
+surrounding plains; he climbed one of the highest icebergs to the
+north, and could see nothing, as far as his telescope would let him,
+but ice-fields and icebergs. No land anywhere, but the image of chaos
+in its saddest aspect. He came back on board trying to calculate the
+probable duration of his captivity. The hunters, and amongst them
+the doctor, James Wall, Simpson, Johnson, and Bell, did not fail to
+supply the ship with fresh meat. Birds had disappeared; they were
+gone to less rigorous southern climates. The ptarmigans, a sort of
+partridge, alone stay the winter in these latitudes; they are easily
+killed, and their great number promised an abundant supply of game.
+There were plenty of hares, foxes, wolves, ermine, and bears; there
+were enough for any sportsman, English, French, or Norwegian; but
+they were difficult to get at, and difficult to distinguish on the
+white plains from the whiteness of their fur; when the intense cold
+comes their fur changes colour, and white is their winter colour.
+The doctor found that this change of fur is not caused by the change
+of temperature, for it takes place in the month of October, and is
+simply a precaution of Providence to guard them from the rigour of
+a boreal winter.</p>
+
+<p>Seals were abundant in all their varieties, and were particularly
+sought after by the hunters for the sake, not only of their skins,
+but their fat, which is very warming; besides which, the liver of
+these animals makes excellent fuel: hundreds of them were to be seen,
+and two or three miles to the north of the brig the ice was literally
+perforated all over with the holes these enormous amphibians make;
+only they smelt the hunters from afar, and many were wounded that
+escaped by plunging under the ice. However, on the 19th, Simpson
+managed to catch one at about a hundred yards from the ship; he had
+taken the precaution to block up its hole of refuge so that it was
+at the mercy of the hunters. It took several bullets to kill the animal,
+which measured nine feet in length; its bulldog head, the sixteen
+teeth in its jaws, its large pectoral fins in the shape of pinions,
+and its little tail, furnished with another pair of fins, made it
+a good specimen of the family of dog-hound fish. The doctor, wishing
+to preserve the head for his natural history collection, and its skin
+for his future use, had them prepared by a rapid and inexpensive
+process. He plunged the body of the animal into the hole in the ice,
+and thousands of little prawns soon ate off all the flesh; in half
+a day the work was accomplished, and the most skilful of the honourable
+corporation of Liverpool tanners could not have succeeded better.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the sun had passed the autumnal equinox&mdash;that is to say,
+on the 23rd of September&mdash;winter may be said to begin in the Arctic
+regions. The sun disappears entirely on the 23rd of October, lighting
+up with its oblique rays the summits of the frozen mountains. The
+doctor wished him a traveller's farewell; he was not going to see
+him again till February. But obscurity is not complete during this
+long absence of the sun; the moon comes each month to take its place
+as well as she can; starlight is very bright, and there is besides
+frequent aurora borealis, and a refraction peculiar to the snowy
+horizons; besides, the sun at the very moment of his greatest austral
+declination, the 21st of December, is still only 13&deg; from the
+Polar horizon, so that there is twilight for a few hours; only fogs,
+mists, and snowstorms often plunge these regions into complete
+obscurity. However, at this epoch the weather was pretty favourable;
+the partridges and the hares were the only animals that had a right
+to complain, for the sportsmen did not give them a moment's peace;
+they set several fox-traps, but the suspicious animals did not let
+themselves be caught so easily; they would often come and eat the
+snare by scratching out the snow from under the trap; the doctor wished
+them at the devil, as he could not get them himself. On the 25th of
+October the thermometer marked more than 4&deg; below zero. A
+violent tempest set in; the air was thick with snow, which prevented
+a ray of light reaching the <i>Forward</i>. During several hours they were
+very uneasy about Bell and Simpson, who had gone too far whilst
+hunting; they did not reach the ship till the next day, after having
+lain for a whole day in their buckskins, whilst the tempest swept
+the air about them, and buried them under five feet of snow. They
+were nearly frozen, and the doctor had some trouble to restore their
+circulation.</p>
+
+<p>The tempest lasted a week without interruption. It was impossible
+to stir out. In a single day the temperature varied fifteen and twenty
+degrees. During their forced idleness each one lived to himself; some
+slept, others smoked, or talked in whispers, stopping when they saw
+the doctor or Johnson approach; there was no moral union between the
+men; they only met for evening prayers, and on Sunday for Divine
+service. Clifton had counted that once the 78th parallel cleared,
+his share in the bounty would amount to &pound;375; he thought that
+enough, and his ambition did not go beyond. The others were of the
+same opinion, and only thought of enjoying the fortune acquired at
+such a price. Hatteras was hardly ever seen. He neither took part
+in the hunting nor other excursions. He felt no interest in the
+meteorological phenomena which excited the doctor's admiration. He
+lived for one idea; it was comprehended in three words&mdash;the North
+Pole. He was constantly looking forward to the moment when the
+<i>Forward</i>, once more free, would begin her adventurous voyage again.</p>
+
+<p>In short, it was a melancholy life; the brig, made for movement, seemed
+quite out of place as a stationary dwelling; her original form could
+not be distinguished amidst the ice and snow that covered her, and
+she was anything but a lively spectacle. During these unoccupied hours
+the doctor put his travelling notes in order&mdash;the notes from which
+this history is taken; he was never idle, and the evenness of his
+humour remained the same, only he was very glad to see the tempest
+clearing off so as to allow him to set off hunting once more. On the
+3rd of November, at six in the morning, with a temperature at 5&deg;
+below zero, he started, accompanied by Johnson and Bell; the plains
+of ice were level; the snow, which covered the ground thickly,
+solidified by the frost, made the ground good for walking; a dry and
+keen cold lightened the atmosphere; the moon shone in all her
+splendour, and threw an astonishing light on all the asperities of
+the field; their footsteps left marks on the snow, and the moon lighted
+up their edges, so that they looked like a luminous track behind the
+hunters whose shadows fell on the ice with astonishing outlines.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor had taken his friend Dick with him; he preferred him to
+the Greenland dogs to run down the game for a good reason; the latter
+do not seem to have the scent of their brethren of more temperate
+climates. Dick ran on and often pointed out the track of a bear, but
+in spite of his skill the hunters had not even killed a hare after
+two hours' walking.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think the game has gone south too?" asked the doctor, halting
+at the foot of a hummock.</p>
+
+<p>"It looks like it, Mr. Clawbonny," answered the carpenter.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think so," answered Johnson; "hares, foxes, and bears are
+accustomed to the climate; I believe the late tempest is the cause
+of their disappearance; but with the south winds they'll soon come
+back. Ah! if you said reindeers or musk-oxen it would be a different
+thing."</p>
+
+<p>"But it appears those, too, are found in troops in Melville Island,"
+replied the doctor; "that is much further south, I grant you; when
+Parry wintered there he always had as much game as he wanted."</p>
+
+<p>"We are not so well off," said Bell; "if we could only get plenty
+of bear's flesh I should not complain."</p>
+
+<p>"Bears are very difficult to get at," answered the doctor; "it seems
+to me they want civilising."</p>
+
+<p>"Bell talks about the bear's flesh, but we want its fat more than
+its flesh or its skin," said Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>"You are right, Johnson; you are always thinking about the fuel."</p>
+
+<p>"How can I help thinking about it? I know if we are ever so careful
+of it we've only enough left for three weeks."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied the doctor, "that is our greatest danger, for we are
+only at the beginning of November, and February is the coldest month
+of the year in the Frozen Zone; however, if we can't get bear's grease
+we can rely on that of the seals."</p>
+
+<p>"Not for long, Mr. Clawbonny," answered Johnson. "They'll soon desert
+us too; either through cold or fright, they'll soon leave off coming
+on to the surface of the ice."</p>
+
+<p>"Then we must get at the bears," said the doctor; "they are the most
+useful animals in these countries: they furnish food, clothes, light,
+and fuel. Do you hear, Dick?" continued he, caressing his friend;
+"we must have a bear, so look out."</p>
+
+<p>Dick, who was smelling the ice as the doctor spoke, started off all
+at once, quick as an arrow. He barked loudly, and, notwithstanding
+his distance, the sportsmen heard him distinctly. The extreme
+distance to which sound is carried in these low temperatures is
+astonishing; it is only equalled by the brilliancy of the
+constellations in the boreal sky.</p>
+
+<p>The sportsmen, guided by Dick's barking, rushed on his traces; they
+had to run about a mile, and arrived quite out of breath, for the
+lungs are rapidly suffocated in such an atmosphere. Dick was pointing
+at about fifty paces from an enormous mass at the top of a mound of
+ice.</p>
+
+<p>"We've got him," said the doctor, taking aim.</p>
+
+<p>"And a fine one," added Bell, imitating the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a queer bear," said Johnson, waiting to fire after his two
+companions.</p>
+
+<p>Dick barked furiously. Bell advanced to within twenty feet and fired,
+but the animal did not seem to be touched. Johnson advanced in his
+turn, and after taking a careful aim, pulled the trigger.</p>
+
+<p>"What," cried the doctor, "not touched yet? Why, it's that cursed
+refraction. The bear is at least a thousand paces off."</p>
+
+<p>The three sportsmen ran rapidly towards the animal, whom the firing
+had not disturbed; he seemed to be enormous, and without calculating
+the dangers of the attack, they began to rejoice in their conquest.
+Arrived within reasonable distance they fired again; the bear,
+mortally wounded, gave a great jump and fell at the foot of the mound.
+Dick threw himself upon it.</p>
+
+<p>"That bear wasn't difficult to kill," said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Only three shots," added Bell in a tone of disdain, "and he's down."</p>
+
+<p>"It's very singular," said Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>"Unless we arrived at the very moment when it was dying of old age,"
+said the doctor, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>So speaking, the sportsmen reached the foot of the mound, and, to
+their great stupefaction, they found Dick with his fangs in the body
+of a white fox.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I never!" cried Bell.</p>
+
+<p>"We kill a bear and a fox falls," added the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>Johnson did not know what to say.</p>
+
+<p>"Why!" said the doctor, with a roar of laughter, "it's the refraction
+again!"</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean, Mr. Clawbonny?" asked the carpenter.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, it deceived us about the size as it did about the distance.
+It made us see a bear in a fox's skin."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," answered Johnson, "now we've got him, we'll eat him."</p>
+
+<p>Johnson was going to lift the fox on to his shoulders, when he cried
+like Bell&mdash;"Well, I never!"</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" asked the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Look, Mr. Clawbonny&mdash;look what the animal's got on its neck; it's
+a collar, sure enough."</p>
+
+<p>"A collar?" echoed the doctor, leaning over the animal. A half
+worn-out collar encircled the fox's neck, and the doctor thought he
+saw something engraved on it; he took it off and examined it.</p>
+
+<p>"That bear is more than twelve years old, my friends," said the doctor;
+"it's one of James Ross's foxes, and the collar has been round its
+neck ever since 1848."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it possible?" cried Bell.</p>
+
+<p>"There isn't a doubt about it, and I'm sorry we've shot the poor animal.
+During his wintering James Ross took a lot of white foxes in his traps,
+and had brass collars put round their necks on which were engraved
+the whereabouts of his ships, the <i>Enterprise</i> and the <i>Investigator</i>,
+and the store magazines. He hoped one of them might fall into the
+hands of some of the men belonging to Franklin's expedition. The poor
+animal might have saved the lives of the ship's crews, and it has
+fallen under our balls."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we won't eat him," said Johnson, "especially as he's twelve
+years old. Anyway, we'll keep his skin for curiosity sake." So saying
+he lifted the animal on his shoulders, and they made their way to
+the ship, guided by the stars; still their expedition was not quite
+fruitless: they bagged several brace of ptarmigans. An hour before
+they reached the <i>Forward</i>, a phenomenon occurred which excited the
+astonishment of the doctor; it was a very rain of shooting stars;
+they could be counted by thousands, like rockets in a display of
+fireworks. They paled the light of the moon, and the admirable
+spectacle lasted several hours. A like meteor was observed at
+Greenland by the Moravian brothers in 1799. The doctor passed the
+whole night watching it, till it ceased, at seven in the morning,
+amidst the profound silence of the atmosphere.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap26"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XXVI</h3>
+
+<center>THE LAST LUMP OF COAL</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>It seemed certain that no bears were to be had; several seals were
+killed during the days of the 4th, 5th, and 6th of November; then
+the wind changed, and the thermometer went up several degrees; but
+the snow-drifts began again with great violence. It became impossible
+to leave the vessel, and the greatest precaution was needed to keep
+out the damp. At the end of the week there were several bushels of
+ice in the condensers. The weather changed again on the 15th of
+November, and the thermometer, under the influence of certain
+atmospherical conditions, went down to 24&deg; below zero. It was
+the lowest temperature observed up till then. This cold would have
+been bearable in a quiet atmosphere, but there was a strong wind which
+seemed to fill the atmosphere with sharp blades. The doctor was vexed
+at being kept prisoner, for the ground was covered with snow, made
+hard by the wind, and was easy to walk upon; he wanted to attempt
+some long excursion.</p>
+
+<p>It is very difficult to work when it is so cold, because of the
+shortness of breath it causes. A man can only do a quarter of his
+accustomed work; iron implements become impossible to touch; if one
+is taken up without precaution, it causes a pain as bad as a burn,
+and pieces of skin are left on it. The crew, confined to the ship,
+were obliged to walk for two hours on the covered deck, where they
+were allowed to smoke, which was not allowed in the common room. There,
+directly the fire got low, the ice invaded the walls and the joins
+in the flooring; every bolt, nail, or metal plate became immediately
+covered with a layer of ice. The doctor was amazed at the instantaneity
+of the phenomenon. The breath of the men condensed in the air, and
+passing quickly from a fluid to a solid state, fell round them in
+snow. At a few feet only from the stoves the cold was intense, and
+the men stood near the fire in a compact group. The doctor advised
+them to accustom their skin to the temperature, which would certainly
+get worse, and he himself set the example; but most of them were too
+idle or too benumbed to follow his advice, and preferred remaining
+in the unhealthy heat. However, according to the doctor, there was
+no danger in the abrupt changes of temperature in going from the warm
+room into the cold. It is only dangerous for people in perspiration;
+but the doctor's lessons were thrown away on the greater part of the
+crew.</p>
+
+<p>As to Hatteras, he did not seem to feel the influence of the
+temperature. He walked silently about at his ordinary pace. Had the
+cold no empire over his strong constitution, or did he possess in
+a supreme degree the natural heat he wished his sailors to have? Was
+he so armed in his one idea as to be insensible to exterior
+impressions? His men were profoundly astonished at seeing him facing
+the 24&deg; below zero; he left the ship for hours, and came back
+without his face betraying the slightest mark of cold.</p>
+
+<p>"He is a strange man," said the doctor to Johnson; "he even astonishes
+me. He is one of the most powerful natures I have ever studied in
+my life."</p>
+
+<p>"The fact is," answered Johnson, "that he comes and goes in the open
+air without clothing himself more warmly than in the month of June."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! the question of clothes is not of much consequence," replied
+the doctor; "it is of no use clothing people who do not produce heat
+naturally. It is the same as if we tried to warm a piece of ice by
+wrapping it up in a blanket! Hatteras does not want that; he is
+constituted so, and I should not be surprised if being by his side
+were as good as being beside a stove."</p>
+
+<p>Johnson had the job of clearing the water-hole the next day, and
+remarked that the ice was more than ten feet thick. The doctor could
+observe magnificent aurora borealis almost every night; from four
+till eight p.m. the sky became slightly coloured in the north; then
+this colouring took the regular form of a pale yellow border, whose
+extremities seemed to buttress on to the ice-field. Little by little
+the brilliant zone rose in the sky, following the magnetic meridian,
+and appeared striated with blackish bands; jets of some luminous
+matter, augmenting and diminishing, shot out lengthways; the meteor,
+arrived at its zenith, was often composed of several bows, bathed
+in floods of red, yellow, or green light. It was a dazzling spectacle.
+Soon the different curves all joined in one point, and formed boreal
+crowns of a heavenly richness. At last the bows joined, the splendid
+aurora faded, the intense rays melted into pale, vague, undetermined
+shades, and the marvellous phenomenon, feeble, and almost
+extinguished, fainted insensibly into the dark southern clouds.
+Nothing can equal the wonders of such a spectacle under the high
+latitudes less than eight degrees from the Pole; the aurora borealis
+perceived in temperate regions gives no idea of them&mdash;not even a
+feeble one; it seems as if Providence wished to reserve its most
+astonishing marvels for these climates.</p>
+
+<p>During the duration of the moon several images of her are seen in
+the sky, increasing her brilliancy; often simple lunar halos surround
+her, and she shines from the centre of her luminous circle with a
+splendid intensity.</p>
+
+<p>On the 26th of November there was a high tide, and the water escaped
+with violence from the water-hole; the thick layer of ice was shaken
+by the rising of the sea, and sinister crackings announced the
+submarine struggle; happily the ship kept firm in her bed, and her
+chains only were disturbed. Hatteras had had them fastened in
+anticipation of the event. The following days were still colder; there
+was a penetrating fog, and the wind scattered the piled-up snow; it
+became difficult to see whether the whirlwinds began in the air or
+on the ice-fields; confusion reigned.</p>
+
+<p>The crew were occupied in different works on board, the principal
+of which consisted in preparing the grease and oil produced by the
+seals; they had become blocks of ice, which had to be broken with
+axes into little bits, and ten barrels were thus preserved.</p>
+
+<p>All sorts of vessels were useless, and the liquid they contained would
+only have broken them when the temperature changed. On the 28th the
+thermometer went down to 32&deg; below zero; there was only coal
+enough left for ten days, and everyone looked forward to its
+disappearance with dread. Hatteras had the poop stove put out for
+economy's sake, and from that time Shandon, the doctor, and he stayed
+in the common room. Hatteras was thus brought into closer contact
+with the men, who threw ferocious and stupefied looks at him. He heard
+their reproaches, their recriminations, and even their threats, and
+he could not punish them. But he seemed to be deaf to everything.
+He did not claim the place nearest the fire, but stopped in a corner,
+his arms folded, never speaking.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of the doctor's recommendations, Pen and his friends refused
+to take the least exercise; they passed whole days leaning against
+the stove or lying under the blankets of their hammocks. Their health
+soon began to suffer; they could not bear up against the fatal
+influence of the climate, and the terrible scurvy made its appearance
+on board. The doctor had, however, begun, some time ago, to distribute
+limejuice and lime pastilles every morning; but these preservatives,
+generally so efficacious, had very little effect on the malady, which
+soon presented the most horrible symptoms. The sight of the poor
+fellows, whose nerves and muscles contracted with pain, was pitiable.
+Their legs swelled in an extraordinary fashion, and were covered with
+large blackish blue spots; their bloody gums and ulcerated lips only
+gave passage to inarticulate sounds; the vitiated blood no longer
+went to the extremities.</p>
+
+<p>Clifton was the first attacked; then Gripper, Brunton, and Strong
+took to their hammocks. Those that the malady still spared could not
+lose sight of their sufferings; they were obliged to stay there, and
+it was soon transformed into a hospital, for out of eighteen sailors
+of the <i>Forward</i>, thirteen were attacked in a few days. Pen seemed
+destined to escape contagion; his vigorous nature preserved him from
+it. Shandon felt the first symptoms, but they did not go further,
+and exercise kept the two in pretty good health.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor nursed the invalids with the greatest care, and it made
+him miserable to see the sufferings he could not alleviate. He did
+all he could to keep his companions in good spirits; he talked to
+them, read to them, and told them tales, which his astonishing memory
+made it easy for him to do. He was often interrupted by the complaints
+and groans of the invalids, and he stopped his talk to become once
+more the attentive and devoted doctor. His health kept up well; he
+did not get thinner, and he used to say that it was a good thing for
+him that he was dressed like a seal or a whale, who, thanks to its
+thick layer of fat, easily supports the Arctic atmosphere. Hatteras
+felt nothing, either physically or morally. Even the sufferings of
+his crew did not seem to touch him. Perhaps it was because he would
+not let his face betray his emotions; but an attentive observer would
+have remarked that a man's heart beat beneath the iron envelope. The
+doctor analysed him, studied him, but did not succeed in classifying
+so strange an organisation, a temperament so supernatural. The
+thermometer lowered again; the walk on deck was deserted; the
+Esquimaux dogs alone frequented it, howling lamentably.</p>
+
+<p>There was always one man on guard near the stove to keep up the fire;
+it was important not to let it go out. As soon as the fire got lower,
+the cold glided into the room; ice covered the walls, and the humidity,
+rapidly condensed, fell in snow on the unfortunate inhabitants of
+the brig. It was in the midst of these unutterable tortures that the
+8th of December was reached. That morning the doctor went as usual
+to consult the exterior thermometer. He found the mercury completely
+frozen.</p>
+
+<p>"Forty-four degrees below zero!" he cried with terror. And that day
+they threw the last lump of coal into the stove.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap27"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XXVII</h3>
+
+<center>CHRISTMAS</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>There was then a movement of despair. The thought of death, and death
+from cold, appeared in all its horror; the last piece of coal burnt
+away as quickly as the rest, and the temperature of the room lowered
+sensibly. But Johnson went to fetch some lumps of the new fuel which
+the marine animals had furnished him with, and he stuffed it into
+the stove; he added some oakum, impregnated with frozen oil, and soon
+obtained enough heat. The smell of the grease was abominable, but
+how could they get rid of it? They were obliged to get used to it.
+Johnson agreed that his expedient left much to wish for, and would
+have no success in a Liverpool house.</p>
+
+<p>"However," added he, "the smell may have one good result."</p>
+
+<p>"What's that?" asked the carpenter.</p>
+
+<p>"It will attract the bears; they are very fond of the stink."</p>
+
+<p>"And what do we want with bears?" added Bell.</p>
+
+<p>"You know, Bell, we can't depend on the seals; they've disappeared
+for a good while to come; if the bears don't come to be turned into
+fuel too, I don't know what will become of us."</p>
+
+<p>"There would be only one thing left; but I don't see how&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The captain would never consent; but perhaps we shall be obliged."</p>
+
+<p>Johnson shook his head sadly, and fell into a silent reverie, which
+Bell did not interrupt. He knew that their stock of grease would not
+last more than a week with the strictest economy.</p>
+
+<p>The boatswain was not mistaken. Several bears, attracted by the fetid
+exhalations, were signalled to the windward; the healthy men gave
+chase to them, but they are extraordinarily quick, and did not allow
+themselves to be approached, and the most skilful shots could not
+touch them. The ship's crew was seriously menaced with death from
+cold; it was impossible to resist such a temperature more than
+forty-eight hours, and every one feared the end of the fuel. The
+dreaded moment arrived at three o'clock p.m. on the 20th of December.
+The fire went out; the sailors looked at each other with haggard eyes.
+Hatteras remained immovable in his corner. The doctor as usual marched
+up and down in agitation; he was at his wits' end. The temperature
+of the room fell suddenly to 7&deg; below zero. But if the doctor
+did not know what to do, some of the others did. Shandon, calm and
+resolute, and Pen with anger in his eyes, and two or three of their
+comrades, who could still walk, went up to Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain!" said Shandon.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras, absorbed in thought, did not hear him.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain!" repeated Shandon, touching his hand.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras drew himself up.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Our fire is out!"</p>
+
+<p>"What then?" answered Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"If you mean to kill us with cold, you had better say so," said Shandon
+ironically.</p>
+
+<p>"I mean," said Hatteras gravely, "to require every man to do his duty
+to the end."</p>
+
+<p>"There's something higher than duty, captain&mdash;there's the right to
+one's own preservation. I repeat that the fire is out, and if it is
+not relighted, not one of us will be alive in two days."</p>
+
+<p>"I have no fuel," answered Hatteras, with a hollow voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," cried Pen violently, "if you have no fuel, we must take
+it where we can!"</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras grew pale with anger.</p>
+
+<p>"Where?" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"On board," answered the sailor insolently.</p>
+
+<p>"On board!" echoed the captain, his fists closed, his eyes sparkling.</p>
+
+<p>He had seized an axe, and he now raised it over Pen's head.</p>
+
+<p>"Wretch!" he cried.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor rushed between the captain and Pen; the axe fell to the
+ground, its sharp edge sinking into the flooring. Johnson, Bell, and
+Simpson were grouped round Hatteras, and appeared determined to give
+him their support. But lamentable and plaintive voices came from the
+beds.</p>
+
+<p>"Some fire! Give us some fire!" cried the poor fellows.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras made an effort, and said calmly:</p>
+
+<p>"If we destroy the brig, how shall we get back to England?"</p>
+
+<p>"We might burn some of the rigging and the gunwale, sir," said Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>"Besides, we should still have the boats left," answered Shandon;
+"and we could build a smaller vessel with the remains of the old one!"</p>
+
+<p>"Never!" answered Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;&mdash;" began several sailors, raising their voices.</p>
+
+<p>"We have a great quantity of spirits of wine," answered Hatteras;
+"burn that to the last drop."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, we didn't think of that!" said Johnson, with affected
+cheerfulness, and by the help of large wicks steeped in spirits he
+succeeded in raising the temperature a few degrees.</p>
+
+<p>During the days that followed this melancholy scene the wind went
+round to the south, and the thermometer went up. Some of the men could
+leave the vessel during the least damp part of the day; but ophthalmia
+and scurvy kept the greater number on board; besides, neither fishing
+nor hunting was practicable. But it was only a short respite from
+the dreadful cold, and on the 25th, after an unexpected change in
+the wind, the mercury again froze; they were then obliged to have
+recourse to the spirits of wine thermometer, which never freezes.
+The doctor found, to his horror, that it marked 66&deg; below zero;
+men had never been able to support such a temperature. The ice spread
+itself in long tarnished mirrors on the floor; a thick fog invaded
+the common room; the damp fell in thick snow; they could no longer
+see one another; the extremities became blue as the heat of the body
+left them; a circle of iron seemed to be clasping their heads, and
+made them nearly delirious. A still more fearful symptom was that
+their tongues could no longer articulate a word.</p>
+
+<p>From the day they had threatened to burn his ship, Hatteras paced
+the deck for hours. He was guarding his treasures; the wood of the
+ship was his own flesh, and whoever cut a piece off cut off one of
+his limbs. He was armed, and mounted guard, insensible to the cold,
+the snow, and the ice, which stiffened his garments and enveloped
+him in granite armour. His faithful Dick accompanied him, and seemed
+to understand why he was there.</p>
+
+<p>However, on Christmas Day he went down to the common room. The doctor,
+taking advantage of what energy he had left, went straight to him,
+and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Hatteras, we shall all die if we get no fuel."</p>
+
+<p>"Never!" said Hatteras, knowing what was coming.</p>
+
+<p>"We must," said the doctor gently.</p>
+
+<p>"Never!" repeated Hatteras with more emphasis still. "I will never
+consent! They can disobey me if they like!"</p>
+
+<p>Johnson and Bell took advantage of the half-permission, and rushed
+on deck. Hatteras heard the wood crack under the axe. He wept. What
+a Christmas Day for Englishmen was that on board the <i>Forward</i>! The
+thought of the great difference between their position and that of
+the happy English families who rejoiced in their roast beef, plum
+pudding, and mince pies added another pang to the miseries of the
+unfortunate crew. However, the fire put a little hope and confidence
+into the men; the boiling of coffee and tea did them good, and the
+next week passed less miserably, ending the dreadful year 1860; its
+early winter had defeated all Hatteras's plans.</p>
+
+<p>On the 1st of January, 1861, the doctor made a discovery. It was not
+quite so cold, and he had resumed his interrupted studies; he was
+reading Sir Edward Belcher's account of his expedition to the Polar
+Seas; all at once a passage struck him; he read it again and again.
+It was where Sir Edward Belcher relates that after reaching the
+extremity of Queen's Channel he had discovered important traces of
+the passage and residence of men. "They were," said he, "very superior
+habitations to those which might be attributed to the wandering
+Esquimaux. The walls had foundations, the floors of the interior had
+been covered with a thick layer of fine gravel, and were paved.
+Reindeer, seal, and walrus bones were seen in great quantities. <i>We
+found some coal.</i>" At the last words the doctor was struck with an
+idea; he carried the book to Hatteras and showed him the passage.</p>
+
+<p>"They could not have found coal on this deserted coast," said
+Hatteras; "it is not possible!"</p>
+
+<p>"Why should we doubt what Belcher says? He would not have recorded
+such a fact unless he had been certain and had seen it with his own
+eyes."</p>
+
+<p>"And what then, doctor?"</p>
+
+<p>"We aren't a hundred miles from the coast where Belcher saw the coal,
+and what is a hundred miles' excursion? Nothing. Longer ones than
+that have often been made across the ice."</p>
+
+<p>"We will go," said Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>Johnson was immediately told of their resolution, of which he strongly
+approved; he told his companions about it: some were glad, others
+indifferent.</p>
+
+<p>"Coal on these coasts!" said Wall, stretched on his bed of pain.</p>
+
+<p>"Let them go," answered Shandon mysteriously.</p>
+
+<p>But before Hatteras began his preparations for the journey, he wished
+to be exactly certain of the <i>Forward's</i> position. He was obliged
+to be mathematically accurate as to her whereabouts, because of
+finding her again. His task was very difficult; he went upon deck
+and took at different moments several lunar distances and the meridian
+heights of the principal stars. These observations were hard to make,
+for the glass and mirrors of the instrument were covered with ice
+from Hatteras's breath; he burnt his eyelashes more than once by
+touching the brass of the glasses. However, he obtained exact bases
+for his calculations, and came down to make them in the room. When
+his work was over, he raised his head in astonishment, took his map,
+pricked it, and looked at the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" asked the latter.</p>
+
+<p>"In what latitude were we at the beginning of our wintering?"</p>
+
+<p>"We were in latitude 78&deg; 15', by longitude 95&deg;
+35'; exactly at the Frozen Pole."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Hatteras, in a low tone, "our ice-field has been
+drifting! We are two degrees farther north and farther west, and three
+hundred miles at least from your store of coal!"</p>
+
+<p>"And those poor fellows don't know," said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush!" said Hatteras, putting his finger on his lips.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap28"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XXVIII</h3>
+
+<center>PREPARATIONS FOR DEPARTURE</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>Hatteras would not inform his crew of their situation, for if they
+had known that they had been dragged farther north they would very
+likely have given themselves up to the madness of despair. The captain
+had hidden his own emotions at his discovery. It was his first happy
+moment during the long months passed in struggling with the elements.
+He was a hundred and fifty miles farther north, scarcely eight degrees
+from the Pole! But he hid his delight so profoundly that even the
+doctor did not suspect it; he wondered at seeing an unwonted
+brilliancy in the captain's eyes; but that was all, and he never once
+thought of the reason.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Forward</i>, by getting nearer the Pole, had got farther away from
+the coal repository observed by Sir Edward Belcher; instead of one
+hundred, it lay at two hundred and fifty miles farther south. However,
+after a short discussion about it between Hatteras and Clawbonny,
+the journey was persisted in. If Belcher had written the truth&mdash;and
+there was no reason for doubting his veracity&mdash;they should find things
+exactly in the same state as he had left them, for no new expedition
+had gone to these extreme continents since 1853. There were few or
+no Esquimaux to be met with in that latitude. They could not be
+disappointed on the coast of New Cornwall as they had been on Beechey
+Island. The low temperature preserves the objects abandoned to its
+influence for any length of time. All probabilities were therefore
+in favour of this excursion across the ice. It was calculated that
+the expedition would take, at the most, forty days, and Johnson's
+preparations were made in consequence.</p>
+
+<p>The sledge was his first care; it was in the Greenland style,
+thirty-five inches wide and twenty-four feet long. The Esquimaux
+often make them more than fifty feet long. This one was made of long
+planks, bent up front and back, and kept bent like a bow by two thick
+cords; the form thus given to it gave it increased resistance to
+shocks; it ran easily on the ice, but when the snow was soft on the
+ground it was put upon a frame; to make it glide more easily it was
+rubbed, Esquimaux fashion, with sulphur and snow. Six dogs drew it;
+notwithstanding their leanness these animals did not appear to suffer
+from the cold; their buckskin harness was in good condition, and they
+could draw a weight of two thousand pounds without fatigue. The
+materials for encampment consisted of a tent, should the construction
+of a snow-house be impossible, a large piece of mackintosh to spread
+over the snow, to prevent it melting in contact with the human body,
+and lastly, several blankets and buffalo-skins. They took the halkett
+boat too.</p>
+
+<p>The provisions consisted of five cases of pemmican, weighing about
+four hundred and fifty pounds; they counted one pound of pemmican
+for each man and each dog; there were seven dogs including Dick, and
+four men. They also took twelve gallons of spirits of wine&mdash;that is
+to say, about one hundred fifty pounds weight&mdash;a sufficient quantity of tea and
+biscuit, a portable kitchen with plenty of wicks, oakum, powder,
+ammunition, and two double-barrelled guns. They also used Captain
+Parry's invention of indiarubber belts, in which the warmth of the
+body and the movement of walking keeps coffee, tea, and water in a
+liquid state. Johnson was very careful about the snow-shoes; they
+are a sort of wooden patten, fastened on with leather straps; when
+the ground was quite hard and frozen they could be replaced by buckskin
+moccasins; each traveller had two pairs of both.</p>
+
+<p>These preparations were important, for any detail omitted might
+occasion the loss of an expedition; they took four whole days. Each
+day at noon Hatteras took care to set the position of his ship; they
+had ceased to drift; he was obliged to be certain in order to get
+back. He next set about choosing the men he should take with him;
+some of them were not fit either to take or leave, but the captain
+decided to take none but sure companions, as the common safety
+depended upon the success of the excursion. Shandon was, therefore,
+excluded, which he did not seem to regret. James Wall was ill in bed.
+The state of the sick got no worse, however, and as the only thing
+to do for them was to rub them with lime-juice, and give them doses
+of it, the doctor was not obliged to stop, and he made one of the
+travellers. Johnson very much wished to accompany the captain in his
+perilous enterprise, but Hatteras took him aside, and said, in an
+affectionate tone:</p>
+
+<p>"Johnson, I have confidence in you alone. You are the only officer
+in whose hands I can leave my ship. I must know that you are there
+to overlook Shandon and the others. They are kept prisoners here by
+the winter, but I believe them capable of anything. You will be
+furnished with my formal instructions, which, in case of need, will
+give you the command. You will take my place entirely. Our absence
+will last four or five weeks at the most. I shall not be anxious,
+knowing you are where I cannot be. You must have wood, Johnson, I
+know, but, as far as possible, spare my poor ship. Do you understand
+me, Johnson?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," answered the old sailor, "I'll stop if you wish."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said Hatteras, shaking his boatswain's hand; "and if
+we don't come back, wait for the next breaking-up time, and try to
+push forward towards the Pole. But if the others won't go, don't mind
+us, and take the <i>Forward</i> back to England."</p>
+
+<p>"Are those your last commands, captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my express commands," answered Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, sir, they shall be carried out," said Johnson simply.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor regretted his friend, but he thought Hatteras had acted
+wisely in leaving him. Their other two travelling companions were
+Bell the carpenter and Simpson. The former was in good health, brave
+and devoted, and was the right man to render service during the
+encampments on the snow; Simpson was not so sure, but he accepted
+a share in the expedition, and his hunting and fishing capabilities
+might be of the greatest use. The expedition consisted, therefore,
+of four men, Hatteras, Clawbonny, Bell, and Simpson, and seven dogs.
+The provisions had been calculated in consequence. During the first
+days of January the temperature kept at an average of 33&deg; below
+zero. Hatteras was very anxious for the weather to change; he often
+consulted the barometer, but it is of little use in such high latitudes.
+A clear sky in these regions does not always bring cold, and the snow
+does not make the temperature rise; the barometer is uncertain; it
+goes down with the north and east winds; low, it brought fine weather;
+high, snow or rain. Its indications could not, therefore, be relied
+upon.</p>
+
+<p>At last, on January 5th, the mercury rose to 18&deg; below zero,
+and Hatteras resolved to start the next day; he could not bear to
+see his ship burnt piece by piece before his eyes; all the poop had
+gone into the stove. On the 6th, then, in the midst of whirlwinds
+of snow, the order for departure was given. The doctor gave his last
+orders about the sick; Bell and Simpson shook hands silently with
+their companions. Hatteras wished to say his good-byes aloud, but
+he saw himself surrounded by evil looks and thought he saw Shandon
+smile ironically. He was silent, and perhaps hesitated for an instant
+about leaving the <i>Forward</i>, but it was too late to turn back; the
+loaded sledge, with the dogs harnessed to it, awaited him on the
+ice-field. Bell started the first; the others followed.</p>
+
+<p>Johnson accompanied the travellers for a quarter of a mile, then
+Hatteras begged him to return on board, and the old sailor went back
+after making a long farewell gesture. At that moment Hatteras turned
+a last look towards the brig, and saw the extremity of her masts
+disappear in the dark clouds of the sky.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap29"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XXIX</h3>
+
+<center>ACROSS THE ICE</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The little troop descended towards the south-east. Simpson drove the
+sledge. Dick helped him with zeal, and did not seem astonished at
+the new occupation of his companions. Hatteras and the doctor walked
+behind, whilst Bell went on in front, sounding the ice with his
+iron-tipped stick. The rising of the thermometer indicated
+approaching snow; it soon fell in thick flakes, and made the journey
+difficult for the travellers; it made them deviate from the straight
+line, and obliged them to walk slower; but, on an average, they made
+three miles an hour. The surface of the ice was unequal, and the sledge
+was often in danger of being overturned, but by great care it was
+kept upright.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras and his companions were clothed in skins more useful than
+elegant. Their heads and faces were covered with hoods, their mouths,
+eyes, and noses alone coming into contact with the air. If they had
+not been exposed the breath would have frozen their coverings, and
+they would have been obliged to take them off with the help of an
+axe&mdash;an awkward way of undressing. The interminable plain kept on
+with fatiguing monotony; icebergs of uniform aspect and hummocks
+whose irregularity ended by seeming always the same; blocks cast in
+the same mould, and icebergs between which tortuous valleys wound.
+The travellers spoke little, and marched on, compass in hand. It is
+painful to open one's mouth in such an atmosphere; sharp icicles form
+immediately between one's lips, and the breath is not warm enough
+to melt them. Bell's steps were marked in the soft ground, and they
+followed them attentively, certain of being able to go where he had
+been before.</p>
+
+<p>Numerous traces of bears and foxes crossed their path, but not an
+animal was seen that day. It would have been dangerous and useless
+to hunt them, as the sledge was sufficiently freighted. Generally
+in this sort of excursion travellers leave provision-stores along
+their route; they place them in hiding-places of snow, out of reach
+of animals; unload during the journey, and take up the provisions
+on their return. But Hatteras could not venture to do this on moveable
+ice-fields, and the uncertainty of the route made the return the same
+way exceedingly problematic. At noon Hatteras caused his little troop
+to halt under shelter of an ice-wall. Their breakfast consisted of
+pemmican and boiling tea; the latter beverage comforted the cold
+wayfarers. They set out again after an hour's rest. The first day
+they walked about twenty miles, and in the evening both men and dogs
+were exhausted. However, notwithstanding their fatigue, they were
+obliged to construct a snow-house in which to pass the night. It took
+about an hour and a half to build. Bell showed himself very skilful.
+The ice-blocks were cut out and placed above one another in the form
+of a dome; a large block at the top made the vault. Snow served for
+mortar and filled up the chinks. It soon hardened and made a single
+block of the entire structure. It was reached by a narrow opening,
+through which the doctor squeezed himself painfully, and the others
+followed him. The supper was rapidly prepared with spirits of wine.
+The interior temperature of the snow-house was bearable, as the wind
+which raged outside could not penetrate. When their repast, which
+was always the same, was over, they began to think of sleep. A
+mackintosh was spread over the floor and kept them from the damp.
+Their stockings and shoes were dried by the portable grate, and then
+three of the travellers wrapped themselves up in their blankets,
+leaving the fourth to keep watch; he watched over the common safety,
+and prevented the opening getting blocked up, for if it did they would
+be buried alive.</p>
+
+<p>Dick shared the snow-house; the other dogs remained outside, and after
+their supper they squatted down in the snow, which made them a blanket.
+The men were tired out with their day's walk, and soon slept. The
+doctor took his turn on guard at three o'clock in the morning. There
+was a tempest during the night, the gusts of which thickened the walls
+of the snow-house. The next day, at six o'clock, they set out again
+on their monotonous march. The temperature lowered several degrees,
+and hardened the ground so that walking was easier. They often met
+with mounds or cairns something like the Esquimaux hiding-places.
+The doctor had one demolished, and found nothing but a block of ice.</p>
+
+<p>"What did you expect, Clawbonny?" said Hatteras. "Are we not the first
+men who have set foot here?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's very likely we are, but who knows?" answered the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not want to lose my time in useless search," continued the
+captain; "I want to be quick back to my ship, even if we don't find
+the fuel."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe we are certain of doing that," said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"I often wish I had not left the <i>Forward</i>," said Hatteras; "a
+captain's place is on board."</p>
+
+<p>"Johnson is there."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but&mdash;well, we must make haste, that's all."</p>
+
+<p>The procession marched along rapidly; Simpson excited the dogs by
+calling to them; in consequence of a phosphorescent phenomenon they
+seemed to be running on a ground in flames, and the sledges seemed
+to raise a dust of sparks. The doctor went on in front to examine
+the state of the snow, but all at once he disappeared. Bell, who was
+nearest to him, ran up.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Mr. Clawbonny," he called out in anxiety, "where are you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Doctor!" called the captain.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, in a hole," answered a reassuring voice; "throw me a cord,
+and I shall soon be on the surface of the globe again."</p>
+
+<p>They threw a cord to the doctor, who was at the bottom of a hole about
+ten feet deep; he fastened it round his waist, and his companions
+hauled him up with difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you hurt?" asked Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit," answered the doctor, shaking his kind face, all covered
+with snow.</p>
+
+<p>"But how did you tumble down there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it was the refraction's fault," he answered laughing. "I thought
+I was stepping across about a foot's distance, and I fell into a hole
+ten feet deep! I never shall get used to it. It will teach us to sound
+every step before we advance. Ears hear and eyes see all topsy-turvy
+in this enchanted spot."</p>
+
+<p>"Can you go on?" asked the captain.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes; the little fall has done me more good than harm."</p>
+
+<p>In the evening the travellers had marched twenty-five miles; they
+were worn out, but it did not prevent the doctor climbing up an iceberg
+while the snow-house was being built. The full moon shone with
+extraordinary brilliancy in the clearest sky; the stars were
+singularly bright; from the top of the iceberg the view stretched
+over an immense plain, bristling with icebergs; they were of all sizes
+and shapes, and made the field look like a vast cemetery, in which
+twenty generations slept the sleep of death. Notwithstanding the cold,
+the doctor remained a long time in contemplation of the spectacle,
+and his companions had much trouble to get him away; but they were
+obliged to think of rest; the snow-hut was ready; the four companions
+burrowed into it like moles, and soon slept the sleep of the just.</p>
+
+<p>The next day and the following ones passed without any particular
+incident; the journey was easy or difficult according to the weather;
+when it was cold and clear they wore their moccasins and advanced
+rapidly, when damp and penetrating, their snow-shoes, and made little
+way. They reached thus the 15th of January; the moon was in her last
+quarter, and was only visible for a short time; the sun, though still
+hidden below the horizon, gave six hours of a sort of twilight, not
+sufficient to see the way by; they were obliged to stake it out
+according to the direction given by the compass. Bell led the way;
+Hatteras marched in a straight line behind him; then Simpson and the
+doctor, taking it in turns, so as only to see Hatteras, and keep in
+a straight line. But notwithstanding all their precautions, they
+deviated sometimes thirty or forty degrees; they were then obliged
+to stake it out again. On Sunday, the 15th of January, Hatteras
+considered he had made a hundred miles to the south; the morning was
+consecrated to the mending of different articles of clothing and
+encampment; divine service was not forgotten. They set out again at
+noon; the temperature was cold, the thermometer marked only 32&deg;
+below zero in a very clear atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p>All at once, without warning of any kind, a vapour rose from the ground
+in a complete state of congelation, reaching a height of about ninety
+feet, and remaining stationary; they could not see a foot before them;
+it clung to their clothing, and bristled it with ice. Our travellers,
+surprised by the frost-rime, had all the same idea&mdash;that of getting
+near one another. They called out, "Bell!" "Simpson!" "This way,
+doctor!" "Where are you, captain?" But no answers were heard; the
+vapour did not conduct sound. They all fired as a sign of rallying.
+But if the sound of the voice appeared too weak, the detonation of
+the firearms was too strong, for it was echoed in all directions,
+and produced a confused rumble without appreciable direction. Each
+acted then according to his instincts. Hatteras stopped, folded his
+arms, and waited. Simpson contented himself with stopping his sledge.
+Bell retraced his steps, feeling the traces with his hands. The doctor
+ran hither and thither, bumping against the icebergs, falling down,
+getting up, and losing himself more and more. At the end of five
+minutes he said:</p>
+
+<p>"I can't go on like this! What a queer climate! It changes too suddenly,
+and the icicles are cutting my face. Captain! I say, captain!"</p>
+
+<p>But he obtained no answer; he discharged his gun, and notwithstanding
+his thick gloves, burnt his hand with the trigger. During this
+operation he thought he saw a confused mass moving at a few steps
+from him.</p>
+
+<p>"At last!" said he. "Hatteras! Bell! Simpson! Is it you? Answer, do!"</p>
+
+<p>A hollow growl was the only answer.</p>
+
+<p>"Whatever is that?" thought the doctor. The mass approached, and its
+outline was more distinctly seen. "Why, it's a bear!" thought the
+terrified doctor. It was a bear, lost too in the frost-rime, passing
+within a few steps of the men of whose existence it was ignorant.
+The doctor saw its enormous paws beating the air, and did not like
+the situation. He jumped back and the mass disappeared like a phantom.
+The doctor felt the ground rising under his feet; climbing on
+all-fours he got to the top of a block, then another, feeling the
+end with his stick. "It's an iceberg!" he said to himself: "if I get
+to the top I shall be saved." So saying he climbed to a height of
+about eighty feet; his head was higher than the frozen fog, of which
+he could clearly see the top. As he looked round he saw the heads
+of his three companions emerging from the dense fluid.</p>
+
+<p>"Hatteras!"</p>
+
+<p>"Doctor!"</p>
+
+<p>"Bell!"</p>
+
+<p>"Simpson!"</p>
+
+<p>The four names were all shouted at the same time; the sky, lightened
+by a magnificent halo, threw pale rays which coloured the frost-rime
+like clouds, and the summits of the icebergs seemed to emerge from
+liquid silver. The travellers found themselves circumscribed by a
+circle less than a hundred feet in diameter. Thanks to the purity
+of the upper layers of air, they could hear each other distinctly,
+and could talk from the top of their icebergs. After the first shots
+they had all thought the best thing they could do was to climb.</p>
+
+<p>"The sledge!" cried the captain.</p>
+
+<p>"It's eighty feet below us," answered Simpson.</p>
+
+<p>"In what condition?"</p>
+
+<p>"In good condition."</p>
+
+<p>"What about the bear?" asked the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"What bear?" asked Bell.</p>
+
+<p>"The bear that nearly broke my head," answered the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"If there is a bear we must go down," said Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"If we do we shall get lost again," said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"And our dogs?" said Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment Dick's bark was heard through the fog.</p>
+
+<p>"That's Dick," said Hatteras; "there's something up; I shall go down."</p>
+
+<p>Growls and barks were heard in a fearful chorus. In the fog it sounded
+like an immense humming in a wadded room. Some struggle was evidently
+going on.</p>
+
+<p>"Dick! Dick!" cried the captain, re-entering the frost-rime.</p>
+
+<p>"Wait a minute, Hatteras; I believe the fog is clearing off," called
+out the doctor. So it was, but lowering like the waters of a pond
+that is being emptied; it seemed to enter the ground from whence it
+sprang; the shining summits of the icebergs grew above it; others,
+submerged till then, came out like new islands; by an optical illusion
+the travellers seemed to be mounting with their icebergs above the
+fog. Soon the top of the sledge appeared, then the dogs, then about
+thirty other animals, then enormous moving masses, and Dick jumping
+about in and out of the fog.</p>
+
+<p>"Foxes!" cried Bell.</p>
+
+<p>"Bears!" shouted the doctor. "Five!"</p>
+
+<p>"Our dogs! Our provisions!" cried Simpson. A band of foxes and bears
+had attacked the sledge, and were making havoc with the provisions.
+The instinct of pillage made them agree; the dogs barked furiously,
+but the herd took no notice, and the scene of destruction was
+lamentable.</p>
+
+<p>"Fire!" cried the captain, discharging his gun. His companions
+imitated him. Upon hearing the quadruple detonation the bears raised
+their heads, and with a comical growl gave the signal for departure;
+they went faster than a horse could gallop, and, followed by the herd
+of foxes, soon disappeared amongst the northern icebergs.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap30"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XXX</h3>
+
+<center>THE CAIRN</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The frost-rime had lasted about three-quarters of an hour; quite long
+enough for the bears and foxes to make away with a considerable
+quantity of provisions which they attacked all the more greedily,
+arriving, as they did, when the animals were perishing with hunger
+from the long winter. They had torn open the covering of the sledge
+with their enormous paws; the cases of pemmican were open, and
+half-empty; the biscuit-bags pillaged, the provisions of tea spilt
+over the snow, a barrel of spirits of wine broken up, and its precious
+contents run out; the camping materials lying all about. The wild
+animals had done their work.</p>
+
+<p>"The devils have done for us!" said Bell.</p>
+
+<p>"What shall we do now?" said Simpson.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us first see how much we've lost," said the doctor; "we can talk
+after."</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras said nothing, but began picking up the scattered objects.
+They picked up all the pemmican and biscuit that was still eatable.
+The loss of so much spirits of wine was deplorable, as without it
+it was impossible to get any hot drinks&mdash;no tea nor coffee.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor made an inventory of the provisions that were left, and
+found that the animals had eaten two hundred pounds of pemmican and
+a hundred and fifty pounds of biscuit; if the travellers continued
+their journey they would be obliged to put themselves on half-rations.
+They deliberated about what was to be done under the circumstances.
+Should they return to the brig and begin their expedition again? But
+how could they resolve to lose the hundred and fifty miles already
+cleared? and coming back without the fuel, how would they be received
+by the crew? and which of them would begin the excursion again? It
+was evident that the best thing to do was to go on, even at the price
+of the worst privations. The doctor, Hatteras, and Bell were for going
+on, but Simpson wanted to go back; his health had severely suffered
+from the fatigues of the journey, and he grew visibly weaker; but
+at last, seeing he was alone in his opinion, he took his place at
+the head of the sledge, and the little caravan continued its route.
+During the three following days, from the 15th to the 17th of January,
+the monotonous incidents of the journey took place again. They went
+on more slowly; the travellers were soon tired; their legs ached with
+fatigue, and the dogs drew with difficulty. Their insufficient food
+told upon them. The weather changed with its usual quickness, going
+suddenly from intense cold to damp and penetrating fogs.</p>
+
+<p>On the 18th of January the aspect of the ice-field changed all at
+once. A great number of peaks, like pyramids, ending in a sharp point
+at a great elevation, showed themselves on the horizon. The soil in
+certain places was seen through the layer of snow; it seemed to consist
+of schist and quartz, with some appearance of calcareous rock. At
+last the travellers had reached <i>terra firma</i>, and, according to their
+estimation, the continent must be New Cornwall. The doctor was
+delighted to tread on solid ground once more; the travellers had only
+a hundred more miles to go before reaching Belcher Cape; but the
+trouble of walking increased on this rocky soil, full of inequalities,
+crevices, and precipices; they were obliged to plunge into the
+interior of the land and climb the high cliffs on the coast, across
+narrow gorges, in which the snow was piled up to a height of thirty
+or forty feet. The travellers soon had cause to regret the levels
+they had left, on which the sledge rolled so easily. Now they were
+obliged to drag it with all their strength. The dogs were worn out,
+and had to be helped; the men harnessed themselves along with them,
+and wore themselves out too. They were often obliged to unload the
+provisions in order to get over a steep hill, whose frozen surface
+gave no hold. Some passages ten feet long took hours to clear. During
+the first day they only made about five miles on that land, so well
+named Cornwall. The next day the sledge attained the upper part of
+the cliffs; the travellers were too exhausted to construct their
+snow-house, and were obliged to pass the night under the tent,
+enveloped in their buffalo-skins, and drying their stockings by
+placing them on their chests. The consequences of such a state of
+things may be readily imagined; during the night the thermometer went
+down to 44&deg; below zero, and the mercury froze.</p>
+
+<p>The health of Simpson became alarming; an obstinate cold, violent
+rheumatism, and intolerable pain forced him to lie down on the sledge,
+which he could no longer guide. Bell took his place; he was not well,
+but was obliged not to give in. The doctor also felt the influence
+of his terrible winter excursion, but he did not utter a complaint;
+he marched on in front, leaning on his stick; he lighted the way;
+he helped in everything. Hatteras, impassive, impenetrable,
+insensible, in as good health as the first day, with his iron
+constitution, followed the sledge in silence. On the 20th of January
+the weather was so bad that the least effort caused immediate
+prostration; but the difficulties of the ground became so great that
+Hatteras and Bell harnessed themselves along with the dogs; the front
+of the sledge was broken by an unexpected shock, and they were forced
+to stop and mend it. Such delays occurred several times a day. The
+travellers were journeying along a deep ravine up to their waists
+in snow, and perspiring, notwithstanding the violent cold. No one
+spoke. All at once Bell looked at the doctor in alarm, picked up a
+handful of snow, and began to rub his companion's face with all his
+might.</p>
+
+<p>"What the deuce, Bell?" said the doctor, struggling.</p>
+
+<p>But Bell went on rubbing.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you mad? You've filled my eyes, nose, and mouth with snow. What
+is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why," answered Bell, "if you've got a nose left, you owe it to me."</p>
+
+<p>"A nose?" said the doctor, putting his hand to his face.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Mr. Clawbonny, you were quite frostbitten; your nose was quite
+white when I looked at you, and without my bit of rubbing you would
+be minus nose."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, Bell," said the doctor; "I'll do the same for you in case
+of need."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you will, Mr. Clawbonny, and I only wish we had nothing worse
+to look forward to!"</p>
+
+<p>"You mean Simpson! Poor fellow, he is suffering dreadfully!"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you fear for him?" asked Hatteras quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, captain," answered the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you fear?"</p>
+
+<p>"A violent attack of scurvy. His legs swell already, and his gums
+are attacked; the poor fellow is lying under his blankets on the sledge,
+and every shock increases his pain. I pity him, but I can't do anything
+for him!"</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Simpson!" said Bell.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps we had better stop a day or two," said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Stop!" cried Hatteras, "when the lives of eighteen men depend upon
+our return! You know we have only enough provisions left for twenty
+days."</p>
+
+<p>Neither the doctor nor Bell could answer that, and the sledge went
+on its way. In the evening they stopped at the foot of an ice-hill,
+out of which Bell soon cut a cavern; the travellers took refuge in
+it, and the doctor passed the night in nursing Simpson; he was a prey
+to the scurvy, and constant groans issued from his terrified lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Mr. Clawbonny, I shall never get over it. I wish I was dead
+already."</p>
+
+<p>"Take courage, my poor fellow!" answered the doctor, with pity in
+his tone, and he answered Simpson's complaints by incessant attention.
+Though half-dead with fatigue, he employed a part of the night in
+making the sick man a soothing draught, and rubbed him with lime-juice.
+Unfortunately it had little effect, and did not prevent the terrible
+malady spreading. The next day they were obliged to lift the poor
+fellow on to the sledge, although he begged and prayed them to leave
+him to die in peace, and begin their painful march again.</p>
+
+<p>The freezing mists wet the three men to the skin; the snow and sleet
+beat in their faces; they did the work of beasts of burden, and had
+not even sufficient food. Dick ran hither and thither, discovering
+by instinct the best route to follow. During the morning of the 23rd
+of January, when it was nearly dark, for the new moon had not yet
+made her appearance, Dick ran on first; he was lost to sight for
+several hours. Hatteras became anxious, as there were many bear-marks
+on the ground; he was considering what had better be done, when a
+loud barking was heard in front. The little procession moved on
+quicker, and soon came upon the faithful animal in the depth of a
+ravine. Dick was set as if he had been petrified in front of a sort
+of cairn, made of limestone, and covered with a cement of ice.</p>
+
+<p>"This time," said the doctor, disengaging himself from the traces,
+"it's really a cairn; we can't be mistaken."</p>
+
+<p>"What does it matter to us?" said Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, if it is a cairn, it may inclose something that would be useful
+to us&mdash;some provisions perhaps."</p>
+
+<p>"As if Europeans had ever been here!" said Hatteras, shrugging his
+shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"But if not Europeans, it may be that the Esquimaux have hidden some
+product of their hunting here. They are accustomed to doing it, I
+think."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, look if you like, Clawbonny, but I don't think it is worth
+your while."</p>
+
+<p>Clawbonny and Bell, armed with their pickaxes made for the cairn.
+Dick kept on barking furiously. The cairn was soon demolished, and
+the doctor took out a damp paper. Hatteras took the document and read:</p>
+
+<center>"Altam..., <i>Porpoise</i>, Dec... 13th, 1860,<br>
+12..&deg; long... 8..&deg; 35' lat..."</center>
+
+<p>"The <i>Porpoise</i>!" said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know any ship of that name frequenting these seas," said
+Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"It is evident," continued the doctor, "that some sailors, or perhaps
+some shipwrecked fellows, have passed here within the last two
+months."</p>
+
+<p>"That's certain," said Bell.</p>
+
+<p>"What shall we do?" asked the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Continue our route," said Hatteras coldly. "I don't know anything
+about the <i>Porpoise</i>, but I do know that the <i>Forward</i> is waiting
+for our return."</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap31"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XXXI</h3>
+
+<center>THE DEATH OF SIMPSON</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The travellers went on their weary way, each thinking of the discovery
+they had just made. Hatteras frowned with uneasiness.</p>
+
+<p>"What can the <i>Porpoise</i> be?" he asked himself. "Is it a ship? and
+if so, what was it doing so near the Pole?"</p>
+
+<p>At this thought he shivered, but not from the cold. The doctor and
+Bell only thought of the result their discovery might have for others
+or for themselves. But the difficulties and obstacles in their way
+soon made them oblivious to everything but their own preservation.</p>
+
+<p>Simpson's condition grew worse; the doctor saw that death was near.
+He could do nothing, and was suffering cruelly on his own account
+from a painful ophthalmia which might bring on blindness if neglected.
+The twilight gave them enough light to hurt the eyes when reflected
+by the snow; it was difficult to guard against the reflection, for
+the spectacle-glasses got covered with a layer of opaque ice which
+obstructed the view, and when so much care was necessary for the
+dangers of the route, it was important to see clearly; however, the
+doctor and Bell took it in turns to cover their eyes or to guide the
+sledge. The soil was volcanic, and by its inequalities made it very
+difficult to draw the sledge, the frame of which was getting worn
+out. Another difficulty was the effect of the uniform brilliancy of
+the snow; the ground seemed to fall beneath the feet of the travellers,
+and they experienced the same sensation as that of the rolling of
+a ship; they could not get accustomed to it, and it made them sleepy,
+and they often walked on half in a dream. Then some unexpected shock,
+fall, or obstacle would wake them up from their inertia, which
+afterwards took possession of them again.</p>
+
+<p>On the 25th of January they began to descend, and their dangers
+increased. The least slip might send them down a precipice, and there
+they would have been infallibly lost. Towards evening an extremely
+violent tempest swept the snow-clad summits; they were obliged to
+lie down on the ground, and the temperature was so low that they were
+in danger of being frozen to death. Bell, with the help of Hatteras,
+built a snow-house, in which the poor fellows took shelter; there
+they partook of a little pemmican and warm tea; there were only a
+few gallons of spirits of wine left, and they were obliged to use
+them to quench their thirst, as they could not take snow in its natural
+state; it must be melted. In temperate countries, where the
+temperature scarcely falls below freezing point, it is not injurious;
+but above the Polar circle it gets so cold that it cannot be touched
+more than a red-hot iron; there is such a difference of temperature
+that its absorption produces suffocation. The Esquimaux would rather
+suffer the greatest torments than slake their thirst with snow.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor took his turn to watch at three o'clock in the morning,
+when the tempest was at its height; he was leaning in a corner of
+the snow-house, when a lamentable groan from Simpson drew his
+attention; he rose to go to him, and struck his head against the roof;
+without thinking of the accident he began to rub Simpson's swollen
+limbs; after about a quarter of an hour he got up again, and bumped
+his head again, although he was kneeling then.</p>
+
+<p>"That's very queer," he said to himself.</p>
+
+<p>He lifted his hand above his head, and felt that the roof was lowering.</p>
+
+<p>"Good God!" he cried; "Hatteras! Bell!"</p>
+
+<p>His cries awoke his companions, who got up quickly, and bumped
+themselves too; the darkness was thick.</p>
+
+<p>"The roof is falling in!" cried the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>They all rushed out, dragging Simpson with them; they had no sooner
+left their dangerous retreat, than it fell in with a great noise.
+The poor fellows were obliged to take refuge under the tent covering,
+which was soon covered with a thick layer of snow, which, as a bad
+conductor, prevented the travellers being frozen alive. The tempest
+continued all through the night. When Bell harnessed the dogs the
+next morning he found that some of them had begun to eat their leather
+harness, and that two of them were very ill, and could not go much
+further. However, the caravan set out again; there only remained sixty
+miles to go. On the 26th, Bell, who went on in front, called out
+suddenly to his companions. They ran up to him, and he pointed to
+a gun leaning against an iceberg.</p>
+
+<p>"A gun!" cried the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras took it; it was loaded and in good condition.</p>
+
+<p>"The men from the <i>Porpoise</i> can't be far off," said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras remarked that the gun was of American manufacture, and his
+hands crisped the frozen barrel. He gave orders to continue the march,
+and they kept on down the mountain slope. Simpson seemed deprived
+of all feeling; he had no longer the strength to complain. The tempest
+kept on, and the sledge proceeded more and more slowly; they scarcely
+made a few miles in twenty-four hours, and in spite of the strictest
+economy, the provisions rapidly diminished; but as long as they had
+enough for the return journey, Hatteras kept on.</p>
+
+<p>On the 27th they found a sextant half-buried in the snow, then a
+leather bottle; the latter contained brandy, or rather a lump of ice,
+with a ball of snow in the middle, which represented the spirit; it
+could not be used. It was evident that they were following in the
+steps of some poor shipwrecked fellows who, like them, had taken the
+only practicable route. The doctor looked carefully round for other
+cairns, but in vain. Sad thoughts came into his mind; he could not
+help thinking that it would be a good thing not to meet with their
+predecessors; what could he and his companions do for them? They
+wanted help themselves; their clothes were in rags, and they had not
+enough to eat. If their predecessors were numerous they would all
+die of hunger. Hatteras seemed to wish to avoid them, and could he
+be blamed? But these men might be their fellow-countrymen, and,
+however slight might be the chance of saving them, ought they not
+to try it? He asked Bell what he thought about it, but the poor fellow's
+heart was hardened by his own suffering, and he did not answer.
+Clawbonny dared not question Hatteras, so he left it to Providence.</p>
+
+<p>In the evening of the 27th, Simpson appeared to be at the last
+extremity; his limbs were already stiff and frozen; his difficult
+breathing formed a sort of mist round his head, and convulsive
+movements announced that his last hour was come. The expression of
+his face was terrible, desperate, and he threw looks of powerless
+anger towards the captain. He accused him silently, and Hatteras
+avoided him and became more taciturn and wrapped up in himself than
+ever. The following night was frightful; the tempest redoubled in
+violence; the tent was thrown down three times, and the snowdrifts
+buried the poor fellows, blinded them, froze them, and wounded them
+with the sharp icicles struck off the surrounding icebergs. The dogs
+howled lamentably. Simpson lay exposed to the cruel atmosphere. Bell
+succeeded in getting up the tent again, which, though it did not
+protect them from the cold, kept out the snow. But a more violent
+gust blew it down a fourth time, and dragged it along in its fury.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we can't bear it any longer!" cried Bell.</p>
+
+<p>"Courage, man, courage!" answered the doctor, clinging to him in order
+to prevent themselves rolling down a ravine. Simpson's death-rattle
+was heard. All at once, with a last effort, he raised himself up and
+shook his fist at Hatteras, who was looking at him fixedly, then gave
+a fearful cry, and fell back dead in the midst of his unfinished
+threat.</p>
+
+<p>"He is dead!" cried the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Dead!" repeated Bell.</p>
+
+<p>Hatteras advanced towards the corpse, but was driven back by a gust
+of wind.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Simpson was the first victim to the murderous climate, the first
+to pay with his life the unreasonable obstinacy of the captain. The
+dead man had called Hatteras an assassin, but he did not bend beneath
+the accusation. A single tear escaped from his eyes and froze on his
+pale cheek. The doctor and Bell looked at him with a sort of terror.
+Leaning on his stick, he looked like the genius of the North, upright
+in the midst of the whirlwind, and frightful in his immobility.</p>
+
+<p>He remained standing thus till the first dawn of twilight, bold,
+tenacious, indomitable, and seemed to defy the tempest that roared
+round him.</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br><a name="chap32"></a>
+<h3>CHAPTER XXXII</h3>
+
+<center>THE RETURN</center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p>The wind went down about six in the morning, and turning suddenly
+north cleared the clouds from the sky; the thermometer marked 33&deg;
+below zero. The first rays of the sun reached the horizon
+which they would gild a few days later. Hatteras came up to his two
+dejected companions, and said to them, in a low, sad voice:</p>
+
+<p>"We are still more than sixty miles from the spot indicated by Sir
+Edward Belcher. We have just enough provisions to allow us to get
+back to the brig. If we go on any further we shall meet with certain
+death, and that will do good to no one. We had better retrace our
+steps."</p>
+
+<p>"That is a sensible resolution, Hatteras," answered the doctor; "I
+would have followed you as far as you led us, but our health gets
+daily weaker; we can scarcely put one foot before the other; we ought
+to go back."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that your opinion too, Bell?" asked Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, captain," answered the carpenter.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," said Hatteras; "we will take two days' rest. We want
+it. The sledge wants mending. I think we had better build ourselves
+a snow-house, and try to regain a little strength."</p>
+
+<p>After this was settled, our three men set to work with vigour. Bell
+took the necessary precautions to assure the solidity of the
+construction, and they soon had a good shelter at the bottom of the
+ravine where the last halt had taken place. It had cost Hatteras a
+great effort to interrupt his journey. All their trouble and pain
+lost! A useless excursion, which one man had paid for with his life.
+What would become of the crew now that all hope of coal was over?
+What would Shandon think? Notwithstanding all these painful thoughts,
+he felt it impossible to go on any further. They began their
+preparations for the return journey at once. The sledge was mended;
+it had now only two hundred pounds weight to carry. They mended their
+clothes, worn-out, torn, soaked with snow, and hardened by the frost;
+new moccasins and snow-shoes replaced those that were worn out. This
+work took the whole day of the 29th and the morning of the 30th; the
+three travellers rested and comforted themselves as well as they
+could.</p>
+
+<p>During the thirty-six hours passed in the snow-house and on the
+icebergs of the ravine, the doctor had noticed that Dick's conduct
+was very strange; he crept smelling about a sort of rising in the
+ground made by several layers of ice; he kept wagging his tail with
+impatience, and trying to draw the attention of his master to the
+spot. The doctor thought that the dog's uneasiness might be caused
+by the presence of Simpson's body, which he and his companions had
+not yet had time to bury. He resolved to put it off no longer,
+especially as they intended starting early the next morning. Bell
+and the doctor took their pickaxes and directed their steps towards
+the lowest part of the ravine; the mound indicated by Dick seemed
+to be a good spot to place the corpse in; they were obliged to bury
+it deep to keep it from the bears. They began by removing the layer
+of soft snow, and then attacked the ice. At the third blow of his
+pickaxe the doctor broke some hard obstacle; he took out the pieces
+and saw that it was a glass bottle; Bell discovered a small
+biscuit-sack with a few crumbs at the bottom.</p>
+
+<p>"Whatever does this mean?" said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't think," answered Bell, suspending his work.</p>
+
+<p>They called Hatteras, who came immediately. Dick barked loudly, and
+began scratching at the ice.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps we have found a provision-store," said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"It is possible," said Bell.</p>
+
+<p>"Go on," said Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>Some remains of food were drawn out, and a case a quarter full of
+pemmican.</p>
+
+<p>"If it is a hiding-place," said Hatteras, "the bears have been before
+us. See, the provisions are not intact."</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid so," answered the doctor; "for&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He was interrupted by a cry from Bell, who had come upon a man's leg,
+stiffened and frozen.</p>
+
+<p>"A corpse," cried the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a tomb," answered Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>When the corpse was disinterred it turned out to be that of a sailor,
+about thirty years old, perfectly preserved. He wore the clothes of
+an Arctic navigator. The doctor could not tell how long he had been
+dead. But after this corpse, Bell discovered a second, that of a man
+of fifty, bearing the mark of the suffering that had killed him on
+his face.</p>
+
+<p>"These are not buried bodies," cried the doctor, "the poor fellows
+were surprised by death just as we find them."</p>
+
+<p>"You are right, Mr. Clawbonny," answered Bell.</p>
+
+<p>"Go on! go on!" said Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>Bell obeyed tremblingly; for who knew how many human bodies the mound
+contained?</p>
+
+<p>"These men have been the victims of the same accident that almost
+happened to us," said the doctor. "Their snow-house tumbled in. Let
+us see if any one of them is still alive."</p>
+
+<p>The place was soon cleared, and Bell dug out a third body, that of
+a man of forty, who had not the cadaverous look of the others. The
+doctor examined him and thought he recognised some symptoms of
+existence.</p>
+
+<p>"He is alive!" he cried.</p>
+
+<p>Bell and he carried the body into the snow-house whilst Hatteras,
+unmoved, contemplated their late habitation. The doctor stripped the
+resuscitated man and found no trace of a wound on him. He and Bell
+rubbed him vigorously with oakum steeped in spirits of wine, and they
+saw signs of returning consciousness; but the unfortunate man was
+in a state of complete prostration, and could not speak a word. His
+tongue stuck to his palate as if frozen. The doctor searched his
+pockets, but they were empty. He left Bell to continue the friction,
+and rejoined Hatteras. The captain had been down into the depths of
+the snow-house, and had searched about carefully. He came up holding
+a half-burnt fragment of a letter. These words were on it:</p>
+
+ <center>... tamont<br>
+ ... orpoise<br>
+ ... w York.</center>
+
+<p>"Altamont!" cried the doctor, of the ship <i>Porpoise</i>, of New York."</p>
+
+<p>"An American," said Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll save him," said the doctor, "and then we shall know all about
+it."</p>
+
+<p>He went back to Altamont whilst Hatteras remained pensive. Thanks
+to his attentions, the doctor succeeded in recalling the unfortunate
+man to life, but not to feeling; he neither saw, heard, nor spoke,
+but he lived. The next day Hatteras said to the doctor:</p>
+
+<p>"We must start at once."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. The sledge is not loaded; we'll put the poor fellow on it and
+take him to the brig."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well; but we must bury these bodies first."</p>
+
+<p>The two unknown sailors were placed under the ruins of the snow-house
+again, and Simpson's corpse took Altamont's place. The three
+travellers buried their companion, and at seven o'clock in the morning
+they set out again. Two of the Greenland dogs were dead, and Dick
+offered himself in their place. He pulled with energy.</p>
+
+<p>During the next twenty days the travellers experienced the same
+incidents as before. But as it was in the month of February they did
+not meet with the same difficulty from the ice. It was horribly cold,
+but there was not much wind. The sun reappeared for the first time
+on the 31st of January, and every day he stopped longer above the
+horizon. Bell and the doctor were almost blinded and half-lame; the
+carpenter was obliged to walk upon crutches. Altamont still lived,
+but he was in a state of complete insensibility. The doctor took great
+care of him, although he wanted attention himself; he was getting
+ill with fatigue. Hatteras thought of nothing but his ship. What state
+should he find it in?</p>
+
+<p>On the 24th of February he stopped all of a sudden. A red light appeared
+about 300 paces in front, and a column of black smoke went up to the
+sky.</p>
+
+<p>"Look at that smoke! my ship is burning," said he with a beating heart.</p>
+
+<p>"We are three miles off yet," said Bell; "it can't be the <i>Forward</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes it is," said the doctor; "the mirage makes it seem nearer."</p>
+
+<p>The three men, leaving the sledge to the care of Dick, ran on, and
+in an hour's time were in sight of the ship. She was burning in the
+midst of the ice, which melted around her. A hundred steps farther
+a man met them, wringing his hands before the <i>Forward</i> in flames.
+It was Johnson. Hatteras ran to him.</p>
+
+<p>"My ship! My ship!" cried he.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that you, captain? Oh, don't come any nearer," said Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" said Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>"The wretches left forty-eight hours ago, after setting fire to the
+ship."</p>
+
+<p>"Curse them!" cried Hatteras.</p>
+
+<p>A loud explosion was then heard; the ground trembled; the icebergs
+fell upon the ice-field; a column of smoke went up into the clouds,
+and the <i>Forward</i> blew up. The doctor and Bell reached Hatteras, who
+out of the depths of despair cried:</p>
+
+<p>"The cowards have fled! The strong will succeed! Johnson and Bell,
+you are courageous. Doctor, you have science. I have faith. To the
+North Pole! To the North Pole!"</p>
+
+<p>His companions heard these energetic words, and they did them good;
+but it was a terrible situation for these four men, alone, under the
+80th degree of latitude, in the midst of the Polar Regions!</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<h4>END OF PART I OF THE ADVENTURES OF CAPTAIN HATTERAS</h4>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The English at the North Pole, by Jules Verne
+
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The English at the North Pole, by Jules Verne
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The English at the North Pole
+ Part I of the Adventures of Captain Hatteras
+
+Author: Jules Verne
+
+Release Date: September 24, 2007 [EBook #22759]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ENGLISH AT THE NORTH POLE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Ron Swanson
+
+
+
+
+
+THE ENGLISH AT THE NORTH POLE
+
+PART I
+OF
+THE ADVENTURES OF CAPTAIN HATTERAS
+
+
+BY
+
+JULES VERNE
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAP. PAGE
+ I.--THE "FORWARD" . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
+ II.--AN UNEXPECTED LETTER . . . . . . . . . 14
+ III.--DR. CLAWBONNY . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
+ IV.--DOG-CAPTAIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
+ V.--OUT AT SEA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
+ VI.--THE GREAT POLAR CURRENT . . . . . . . 44
+ VII.--DAVIS'S STRAITS . . . . . . . . . . . 52
+ VIII.--GOSSIP OF THE CREW . . . . . . . . . . 61
+ IX.--NEWS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
+ X.--DANGEROUS NAVIGATION . . . . . . . . . 78
+ XI.--THE DEVIL'S THUMB . . . . . . . . . . 88
+ XII.--CAPTAIN HATTERAS . . . . . . . . . . . 98
+ XIII.--THE PROJECTS OF HATTERAS . . . . . . . 109
+ XIV.--EXPEDITION IN SEARCH OF FRANKLIN . . . 118
+ XV.--THE "FORWARD" DRIVEN BACK SOUTH . . . 127
+ XVI.--THE MAGNETIC POLE . . . . . . . . . . 135
+ XVII.--THE FATE OF SIR JOHN FRANKLIN . . . . 144
+ XVIII.--THE NORTHERN ROUTE . . . . . . . . . . 150
+ XIX.--A WHALE IN SIGHT . . . . . . . . . . . 155
+ XX.--BEECHEY ISLAND . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
+ XXI.--THE DEATH OF BELLOT . . . . . . . . . 170
+ XXII.--BEGINNING OF REVOLT . . . . . . . . . 178
+ XXIII.--ATTACKED BY ICEBERGS . . . . . . . . . 184
+ XXIV.--PREPARATIONS FOR WINTERING . . . . . . 193
+ XXV.--AN OLD FOX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200
+ XXVI.--THE LAST LUMP OF COAL . . . . . . . . 209
+ XXVII.--CHRISTMAS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 215
+XXVIII.--PREPARATIONS FOR DEPARTURE . . . . . . 222
+ XXIX.--ACROSS THE ICE . . . . . . . . . . . . 227
+ XXX.--THE CAIRN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 236
+ XXXI.--THE DEATH OF SIMPSON . . . . . . . . . 243
+ XXXII.--THE RETURN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 249
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE "FORWARD"
+
+
+"To-morrow, at low tide, the brig _Forward_, Captain K. Z----, Richard
+Shandon mate, will start from New Prince's Docks for an unknown
+destination."
+
+The foregoing might have been read in the _Liverpool Herald_ of April
+5th, 1860. The departure of a brig is an event of little importance
+for the most commercial port in England. Who would notice it in the
+midst of vessels of all sorts of tonnage and nationality that six
+miles of docks can hardly contain? However, from daybreak on the 6th
+of April a considerable crowd covered the wharfs of New Prince's
+Docks--the innumerable companies of sailors of the town seemed to
+have met there. Workmen from the neighbouring wharfs had left their
+work, merchants their dark counting-houses, tradesmen their shops.
+The different-coloured omnibuses that ran along the exterior wall
+of the docks brought cargoes of spectators at every moment; the town
+seemed to have but one pre-occupation, and that was to see the
+_Forward_ go out.
+
+The _Forward_ was a vessel of a hundred and seventy tons, charged
+with a screw and steam-engine of a hundred and twenty horse-power.
+It might easily have been confounded with the other brigs in the port.
+But though it offered nothing curious to the eyes of the public,
+connoisseurs remarked certain peculiarities in it that a sailor
+cannot mistake. On board the _Nautilus_, anchored at a little distance,
+a group of sailors were hazarding a thousand conjectures about the
+destination of the _Forward_.
+
+"I don't know what to think about its masting," said one; "it isn't
+usual for steamboats to have so much sail."
+
+"That ship," said a quartermaster with a big red face--"that ship
+will have to depend more on her masts than her engine, and the topsails
+are the biggest because the others will be often useless. I haven't
+got the slightest doubt that the _Forward_ is destined for the Arctic
+or Antarctic seas, where the icebergs stop the wind more than is good
+for a brave and solid ship."
+
+"You must be right, Mr. Cornhill," said a third sailor. "Have you
+noticed her stern, how straight it falls into the sea?"
+
+"Yes," said the quartermaster, "and it is furnished with a steel
+cutter as sharp as a razor and capable of cutting a three-decker in
+two if the _Forward_ were thrown across her at top speed."
+
+"That's certain," said a Mersey pilot; "for that 'ere vessel runs
+her fourteen knots an hour with her screw. It was marvellous to see
+her cutting the tide when she made her trial trip. I believe you,
+she's a quick un."
+
+"The canvas isn't intricate either," answered Mr. Cornhill; "it goes
+straight before the wind, and can be managed by hand. That ship is
+going to try the Polar seas, or my name isn't what it is. There's
+something else--do you see the wide helm-port that the head of her
+helm goes through?"
+
+"It's there, sure enough," answered one; "but what does that prove?"
+
+"That proves, my boys," said Mr. Cornhill with disdainful
+satisfaction, "that you don't know how to put two and two together
+and make it four; it proves that they want to be able to take off
+the helm when they like, and you know it's a manoeuvre that's often
+necessary when you have ice to deal with."
+
+"That's certain," answered the crew of the _Nautilus_.
+
+"Besides," said one of them, "the way she's loaded confirms Mr.
+Cornhill's opinion. Clifton told me. The _Forward_ is victualled and
+carries coal enough for five or six years. Coals and victuals are
+all its cargo, with a stock of woollen garments and sealskins."
+
+"Then," said the quartermaster, "there is no more doubt on the matter;
+but you, who know Clifton, didn't he tell you anything about her
+destination?"
+
+"He couldn't tell me; he doesn't know; the crew was engaged without
+knowing. He'll only know where he's going when he gets there."
+
+"I shouldn't wonder if they were going to the devil," said an
+unbeliever: "it looks like it."
+
+"And such pay," said Clifton's friend, getting warm--"five times more
+than the ordinary pay. If it hadn't been for that, Richard Shandon
+wouldn't have found a soul to go with him. A ship with a queer shape,
+going nobody knows where, and looking more like not coming back than
+anything else, it wouldn't have suited this child."
+
+"Whether it would have suited you or not," answered Cornhill, "you
+couldn't have been one of the crew of the _Forward_."
+
+"And why, pray?"
+
+"Because you don't fulfil the required conditions. I read that all
+married men were excluded, and you are in the category, so you needn't
+talk. Even the very name of the ship is a bold one. The
+_Forward_--where is it to be forwarded to? Besides, nobody knows who
+the captain is."
+
+"Yes, they do," said a simple-faced young sailor.
+
+"Why, you don't mean to say that you think Shandon is the captain
+of the _Forward_?" said Cornhill.
+
+"But----" answered the young sailor--
+
+"Why, Shandon is commander, and nothing else; he's a brave and bold
+sailor, an experienced whaler, and a jolly fellow worthy in every
+respect to be the captain, but he isn't any more captain than you
+or I. As to who is going to command after God on board he doesn't
+know any more than we do. When the moment has come the true captain
+will appear, no one knows how nor where, for Richard Shandon has not
+said and hasn't been allowed to say to what quarter of the globe he
+is going to direct his ship."
+
+"But, Mr. Cornhill," continued the young sailor, "I assure you that
+there is someone on board who was announced in the letter, and that
+Mr. Shandon was offered the place of second to."
+
+"What!" said Cornhill, frowning, "do you mean to maintain that the
+_Forward_ has a captain on board?"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Cornhill."
+
+"Where did you get your precious information from?"
+
+"From Johnson, the boatswain."
+
+"From Johnson?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Johnson told you so?"
+
+"He not only told me so, but he showed me the captain."
+
+"He showed him to you!" said Cornhill, stupefied. "And who is it,
+pray?"
+
+"A dog."
+
+"What do you mean by a dog?"
+
+"A dog on four legs."
+
+Stupefaction reigned amongst the crew of the _Nautilus_. Under any
+other circumstances they would have burst out laughing. A dog captain
+of a vessel of a hundred and seventy tons burden! It was enough to
+make them laugh. But really the _Forward_ was such an extraordinary
+ship that they felt it might be no laughing matter, and they must
+be sure before they denied it. Besides, Cornhill himself didn't laugh.
+
+"So Johnson showed you the new sort of captain, did he?" added he,
+addressing the young sailor, "and you saw him?"
+
+"Yes, sir, as plainly as I see you now."
+
+"Well, and what do you think about it?" asked the sailors of the
+quartermaster.
+
+"I don't think anything," he answered shortly. "I don't think anything,
+except that the _Forward_ is a ship belonging to the devil, or madmen
+fit for nothing but Bedlam."
+
+The sailors continued silently watching the _Forward_, whose
+preparations for departure were drawing to an end; there was not one
+of them who pretended that Johnson had only been laughing at the young
+sailor. The history of the dog had already made the round of the town,
+and amongst the crowd of spectators many a one looked out for the
+dog-captain and believed him to be a supernatural animal. Besides,
+the _Forward_ had been attracting public attention for some months
+past. Everything about her was marvellous; her peculiar shape, the
+mystery which surrounded her, the incognito kept by the captain, the
+way Richard Shandon had received the proposition to direct her, the
+careful selection of the crew, her unknown destination, suspected
+only by a few--all about her was strange.
+
+To a thinker, dreamer, or philosopher nothing is more affecting than
+the departure of a ship; his imagination plays round the sails, sees
+her struggles with the sea and the wind in the adventurous journey
+which does not always end in port; when in addition to the ordinary
+incidents of departure there are extraordinary ones, even minds
+little given to credulity let their imagination run wild.
+
+So it was with the _Forward_, and though the generality of people
+could not make the knowing remarks of Quartermaster Cornhill, it did
+not prevent the ship forming the subject of Liverpool gossip for three
+long months. The ship had been put in dock at Birkenhead, on the
+opposite side of the Mersey. The builders, Scott and Co., amongst
+the first in England, had received an estimate and detailed plan from
+Richard Shandon; it informed them of the exact tonnage, dimensions,
+and store room that the brig was to have. They saw by the details
+given that they had to do with a consummate seaman. As Shandon had
+considerable funds at his disposal, the work advanced rapidly,
+according to the recommendation of the owner. The brig was constructed
+of a solidity to withstand all tests; it was evident that she was
+destined to resist enormous pressure, for her ribs were built of
+teak-wood, a sort of Indian oak, remarkable for its extreme hardness,
+and were, besides, plated with iron. Sailors asked why the hull of
+a vessel made so evidently for resistance was not built of sheet-iron
+like other steamboats, and were told it was because the mysterious
+engineer had his own reasons for what he did.
+
+Little by little the brig grew on the stocks, and her qualities of
+strength and delicacy struck connoisseurs. As the sailors of the
+_Nautilus_ had remarked, her stern formed a right angle with her keel;
+her steel prow, cast in the workshop of R. Hawthorn, of Newcastle,
+shone in the sun and gave a peculiar look to the brig, though otherwise
+she had nothing particularly warlike about her. However, a 16-pounder
+cannon was installed on the forecastle; it was mounted on a pivot,
+so that it might easily be turned in any direction; but neither the
+cannon nor the stern, steel-clad as they were, succeeded in looking
+warlike.
+
+On the 5th of February, 1860, this strange vessel was launched in
+the midst of an immense concourse of spectators, and the trial trip
+was perfectly successful. But if the brig was neither a man-of-war,
+a merchant vessel, nor a pleasure yacht--for a pleasure trip is not
+made with six years' provisions in the hold--what was it? Was it a
+vessel destined for another Franklin expedition? It could not be,
+because in 1859, the preceding year, Captain McClintock had returned
+from the Arctic seas, bringing the certain proof of the loss of the
+unfortunate expedition. Was the _Forward_ going to attempt the famous
+North-West passage? What would be the use? Captain McClure had
+discovered it in 1853, and his lieutenant, Creswell, was the first
+who had the honour of rounding the American continent from Behring's
+Straits to Davis's Straits. Still it was certain to competent judges
+that the _Forward_ was prepared to face the ice regions. Was it going
+to the South Pole, farther than the whaler Weddell or Captain James
+Ross? But, if so, what for?
+
+The day after the brig was floated her engine was sent from Hawthorn's
+foundry at Newcastle. It was of a hundred and twenty horse-power,
+with oscillating cylinders, taking up little room; its power was
+considerable for a hundred-and-seventy-ton brig, with so much sail,
+too, and of such fleetness. Her trial trips had left no doubt on that
+subject, and even the boatswain, Johnson, had thought right to express
+his opinion to Clifton's friend--
+
+"When the _Forward_ uses her engine and sails at the same time, her
+sails will make her go the quickest."
+
+Clifton's friend did not understand him, but he thought anything
+possible of a ship commanded by a dog. After the engine was installed
+on board, the stowage of provisions began. This was no slight work,
+for the vessel was to carry enough for six years. They consisted of
+dry and salted meat, smoked fish, biscuit, and flour; mountains of
+tea and coffee were thrown down the shafts in perfect avalanches.
+Richard Shandon presided over the management of this precious cargo
+like a man who knows what he is about; all was stowed away, ticketed,
+and numbered in perfect order; a very large provision of the Indian
+preparation called pemmican, which contains many nutritive elements
+in a small volume, was also embarked. The nature of the provisions
+left no doubt about the length of the cruise, and the sight of the
+barrels of lime-juice, lime-drops, packets of mustard, grains of
+sorrel and _cochlearia_, all antiscorbutic, confirmed the opinion
+on the destination of the brig for the ice regions; their influence
+is so necessary in Polar navigation. Shandon had doubtless received
+particular instructions about this part of the cargo, which, along
+with the medicine-chest, he attended to particularly.
+
+Although arms were not numerous on board, the powder-magazine
+overflowed. The one cannon could not pretend to use the contents.
+That gave people more to think about. There were also gigantic saws
+and powerful instruments, such as levers, leaden maces, handsaws,
+enormous axes, etc., without counting a considerable quantity of
+blasting cylinders, enough to blow up the Liverpool Customs--all that
+was strange, not to say fearful, without mentioning rockets, signals,
+powder-chests, and beacons of a thousand different sorts. The
+numerous spectators on the wharfs of Prince's Docks admired likewise
+a long mahogany whaler, a tin _pirogue_ covered with gutta-percha,
+and a certain quantity of halkett-boats, a sort of indiarubber cloaks
+that can be transformed into canoes by blowing in their lining.
+Expectation was on the _qui vive_, for the _Forward_ was going out
+with the tide.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+AN UNEXPECTED LETTER
+
+
+The letter received by Richard Shandon, eight months before, ran as
+follows:--
+
+
+ "ABERDEEN,
+
+ "August 2nd, 1859.
+
+"To Mr. Richard Shandon,
+
+ "Liverpool.
+
+"SIR,--I beg to advise you that the sum of sixteen thousand pounds
+sterling has been placed in the hands of Messrs. Marcuart and Co.,
+bankers, of Liverpool. I join herewith a series of cheques, signed
+by me, which will allow you to draw upon the said Messrs. Marcuart
+for the above-mentioned sum. You do not know me, but that is of no
+consequence. I know you: that is sufficient. I offer you the place
+of second on board the brig _Forward_ for a voyage that may be long
+and perilous. If you agree to my conditions you will receive a salary
+of 500 pounds, and all through the voyage it will be augmented
+one-tenth at the end of each year. The _Forward_ is not yet in
+existence. You must have it built so as to be ready for sea at the
+beginning of April, 1860, at the latest. Herewith is a detailed plan
+and estimate. You will take care that it is scrupulously followed.
+The ship is to be built by Messrs. Scott and Co., who will settle
+with you. I particularly recommend you the choice of the _Forward's_
+crew; it will be composed of a captain, myself, of a second, you,
+of a third officer, a boatswain, two engineers, an ice pilot, eight
+sailors, and two others, eighteen men in all, comprising Dr. Clawbonny,
+of this town, who will introduce himself to you when necessary. The
+_Forward's_ crew must be composed of Englishmen without incumbrance;
+they should be all bachelors and sober--for no spirits, nor even beer,
+will be allowed on board--ready to undertake anything, and to bear
+with anything. You will give the preference to men of a sanguine
+constitution, as they carry a greater amount of animal heat. Offer
+them five times the usual pay, with an increase of one-tenth for each
+year of service. At the end of the voyage five hundred pounds will
+be placed at the disposition of each, and two thousand at yours. These
+funds will be placed with Messrs. Marcuart and Co. The voyage will
+be long and difficult, but honourable, so you need not hesitate to
+accept my conditions. Be good enough to send your answer to K. Z.,
+Poste Restante, Goteborg, Sweden.
+
+"P.S.--On the 15th of February next you will receive a large Danish
+dog, with hanging lips, and tawny coat with black stripes. You will
+take it on board and have it fed with oaten bread, mixed with tallow
+grease. You will acknowledge the reception of the said dog to me under
+the same initials as above, Poste Restante, Leghorn, Italy.
+
+"The captain of the _Forward_ will introduce himself to you when
+necessary. When you are ready to start you will receive further
+instructions.
+
+ "THE CAPTAIN OF THE 'FORWARD,'
+
+ "K. Z."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+DR. CLAWBONNY
+
+
+Richard Shandon was a good sailor; he had been commander of whalers
+in the Arctic seas for many years, and had a wide reputation for skill.
+He might well be astonished at such a letter, and so he was, but
+astonished like a man used to astonishments. He fulfilled, too, all
+the required conditions: he had no wife, children, or relations; he
+was as free as a man could be. Having no one to consult, he went straight
+to Messrs. Marcuart's bank.
+
+"If the money is there," he said to himself, "I'll undertake the rest."
+
+He was received by the firm with all the attention due to a man with
+sixteen thousand pounds in their safes. Sure of that fact, Shandon
+asked for a sheet of letter-paper, and sent his acceptance in a large
+sailor's hand to the address indicated. The same day he put himself
+in communication with the Birkenhead shipbuilders, and twenty-four
+hours later the keel of the _Forward_ lay on the stocks in the
+dockyard.
+
+Richard Shandon was a bachelor of forty, robust, energetic, and brave,
+three sailor-like qualities, giving their possessor confidence,
+vigour, and _sang-froid_. He was reputed jealous and hard to be
+pleased, so he was more feared than loved by his sailors. But this
+reputation did not increase the difficulty of finding a crew, for
+he was known to be a clever commander. He was afraid that the mystery
+of the enterprise would embarrass his movements, and he said to
+himself, "The best thing I can do is to say nothing at all; there
+are sea-dogs who will want to know the why and the wherefore of the
+business, and as I know nothing myself, I can't tell them. K. Z. is
+a queer fish, but after all he knows me, and has confidence in me;
+that's enough. As to the ship, she will be a handsome lass, and my
+name isn't Richard Shandon if she is not destined for the Frozen Seas.
+But I shall keep that to myself and my officers."
+
+Upon which Richard Shandon set about recruiting his crew upon the
+conditions of family and health exacted by the captain. He knew a
+brave fellow and capital sailor, named James Wall. Wall was about
+thirty, and had made more than one trip to the North Seas. Shandon
+offered him the post of third officer, and he accepted blindly; all
+he cared for was to sail, as he was devoted to his profession. Shandon
+told him and Johnson (whom he engaged as boatswain) all he knew about
+the business.
+
+"Just as soon go there as anywhere else," answered Wall. "If it's
+to seek the North-West passage, many have been and come back."
+
+"Been, yes; but come back I don't answer for," said Johnson; "but
+that's no reason for not going."
+
+"Besides, if we are not mistaken in our conjectures," said Shandon,
+"the voyage will be undertaken under good conditions. The _Forward's_
+a bonny lass, with a good engine, and will stand wear and tear.
+Eighteen men are all the crew we want."
+
+"Eighteen men?" said Johnson. "That's just the number that the
+American, Kane, had on board when he made his famous voyage towards
+the North Pole."
+
+"It's a singular fact that there's always some private individual
+trying to cross the sea from Davis's Straits to Behring's Straits.
+The Franklin expeditions have already cost England more than seven
+hundred and sixty thousand pounds without producing any practical
+result. Who the devil means to risk his fortune in such an enterprise?"
+
+"We are reasoning now on a simple hypothesis," said Shandon. "I don't
+know if we are really going to the Northern or Southern Seas. Perhaps
+we are going on a voyage of discovery. We shall know more when Dr.
+Clawbonny comes; I daresay he will tell us all about it."
+
+"There's nothing for it but to wait," answered Johnson; "I'll go and
+hunt up some solid subjects, captain; and as to their animal heat,
+I guarantee beforehand you can trust me for that."
+
+Johnson was a valuable acquisition; he understood the navigation of
+these high latitudes. He was quartermaster on board the _Phoenix_,
+one of the vessels of the Franklin expedition of 1853. He was witness
+of the death of the French lieutenant Bellot, whom he had accompanied
+in his expedition across the ice. Johnson knew the maritime population
+of Liverpool, and started at once on his recruiting expedition.
+Shandon, Wall, and he did their work so well that the crew was complete
+in the beginning of December. It had been a difficult task; many,
+tempted by the high pay, felt frightened at the risk, and more than
+one enlisted boldly who came afterwards to take back his word and
+enlistment money, dissuaded by his friends from undertaking such an
+enterprise. All of them tried to pierce the mystery, and worried
+Shandon with questions; he sent them to Johnson.
+
+"I can't tell you what I don't know," he answered invariably; "you'll
+be in good company, that's all I can tell you. You can take it or
+leave it alone."
+
+And the greater number took it.
+
+"I have only to choose," added the boatswain; "such salary has never
+been heard of in the memory of sailors, and then the certainty of
+finding a handsome capital when we come back. Only think: it's
+tempting enough."
+
+"The fact is," answered the sailor, "it is tempting; enough to live
+on till the end of one's days."
+
+"I don't hide from you," continued Johnson, "that the cruise will
+be long, painful, and perilous; that is formally stated in our
+instructions, and you ought to know what you undertake; you will very
+likely be required to attempt all that it is possible for human beings
+to do, and perhaps more. If you are the least bit frightened, if you
+don't think you may just as well finish yonder as here, you'd better
+not enlist, but give way to a bolder man."
+
+"But, Mr. Johnson," continued the sailor, for the want of something
+better to say, "at least you know the captain?"
+
+"The captain is Richard Shandon till another comes."
+
+Richard Shandon, in his secret heart, hoped that the command would
+remain with him, and that at the last moment he should receive precise
+instructions as to the destination of the _Forward_. He did all he
+could to spread the report in his conversations with his officers,
+or when following the construction of the brig as it grew in the
+Birkenhead dockyard, looking like the ribs of a whale turned upside
+down. Shandon and Johnson kept strictly to their instructions
+touching the health of the sailors who were to form the crew; they
+all looked hale and hearty, and had enough heat in their bodies to
+suffice for the engine of the _Forward_; their supple limbs, their
+clear and florid complexions were fit to react against the action
+of intense cold. They were confident and resolute men, energetically
+and solidly constituted. Of course they were not all equally vigorous;
+Shandon had even hesitated about taking some of them, such as the
+sailors Gripper and Garry, and the harpooner Simpson, because they
+looked rather thin; but, on the whole, their build was good; they
+were a warm-hearted lot, and their engagement was signed.
+
+All the crew belonged to the same sect of the Protestant religion;
+during these long campaigns prayer in common and the reading of the
+Bible have a good influence over the men and sustain them in the hour
+of discouragement; it was therefore important that they should be
+all of the same way of thinking. Shandon knew by experience the utility
+of these practices, and their influence on the mind of the crew; they
+are always employed on board ships that are intended to winter in
+the Polar Seas. The crew once got together, Shandon and his two
+officers set about the provisions; they strictly followed the
+instructions of the captain; these instructions were clear, precise,
+and detailed, and the least articles were put down with their quality
+and quantity. Thanks to the cheques at the commander's disposition,
+every article was paid for at once with a discount of 8 per cent,
+which Richard carefully placed to the credit of K. Z.
+
+Crew, provisions, and cargo were ready by January, 1860; the _Forward_
+began to look shipshape, and Shandon went daily to Birkenhead. On
+the morning of the 23rd of January he was, as usual, on board one
+of the Mersey ferry-boats with a helm at either end to prevent having
+to turn it; there was a thick fog, and the sailors of the river were
+obliged to direct their course by means of the compass, though the
+passage lasts scarcely ten minutes. But the thickness of the fog did
+not prevent Shandon seeing a man of short stature, rather fat, with
+an intelligent and merry face and an amiable look, who came up to
+him, took him by the two hands, and shook them with an ardour, a
+petulance, and a familiarity "quite meridional," as a Frenchman would
+have said. But if this person did not come from the South, he had
+got his temperament there; he talked and gesticulated with
+volubility; his thought must come out or the machine would burst.
+His eyes, small as those of witty men generally are, his mouth, large
+and mobile, were safety-pipes which allowed him to give passage to
+his overflowing thoughts; he talked, and talked, and talked so much
+and so fast that Shandon couldn't understand a word he said. However,
+this did not prevent the _Forward's_ mate from recognising the little
+man he had never seen before; a lightning flash traversed his mind,
+and when the other paused to take breath, Shandon made haste to get
+out the words, "Doctor Clawbonny!"
+
+"Himself in person, commander! I've been at least half a quarter of
+an hour looking for you, asking everybody everywhere! Just think how
+impatient I got; five minutes more and I should have lost my head!
+And so you are the commander Richard? You really exist? You are not
+a myth? Your hand, your hand! I want to shake it again. It is Richard
+Shandon's hand, and if there is a commander Shandon, there's a brig
+_Forward_ to command; and if he commands he will start, and if he
+starts he'll take Dr. Clawbonny on board."
+
+"Well, yes, doctor, I am Richard Shandon; there is a brig _Forward_,
+and it will start."
+
+"That's logic," answered the doctor, after taking in a large provision
+of breathing air--"that's logic. And I am ready to jump for joy at
+having my dearest wishes gratified. I've wanted to undertake such
+a voyage. Now with you, commander----"
+
+"I don't----" began Shandon.
+
+"With you," continued Clawbonny, without hearing him, "we are sure
+to go far and not to draw back for a trifle."
+
+"But----" began Shandon again.
+
+"For you have shown what you are made of, commander; I know your deeds
+of service. You are a fine sailor!"
+
+"If you will allow me----"
+
+"No, I won't have your bravery, audacity, and skill put an instant
+in doubt, even by you! The captain who chose you for his mate is a
+man who knows what he's about, I can tell you."
+
+"But that's nothing to do with it," said Shandon, impatient.
+
+"What is it, then? Don't keep me in suspense another minute."
+
+"You don't give me time to speak. Tell me, if you please, doctor,
+how it comes that you are to take part in the expedition of the
+_Forward_."
+
+"Read this letter, this worthy letter, the letter of a brave
+captain--very laconic, but quite sufficient."
+
+Saying which the doctor held out the following letter to Shandon:--
+
+
+ "INVERNESS,
+
+ "Jan. 22nd, 1860.
+
+"To Dr. Clawbonny.
+
+"If Dr. Clawbonny wishes to embark on board the _Forward_ for a long
+cruise, he may introduce himself to the commander, Richard Shandon,
+who has received orders concerning him.
+
+ "THE CAPTAIN OF THE 'FORWARD,'
+
+ "K. Z."
+
+
+"This letter reached me this morning, and here I am, ready to embark."
+
+"But, doctor, do you know where we are going to?"
+
+"I haven't the slightest idea, and I do not care so that it is somewhere.
+They pretend that I am learned; they are mistaken, commander. I know
+nothing, and if I have published a few books that don't sell badly,
+I ought not to have done it; the public is silly for buying them.
+I know nothing, I tell you. I am only an ignorant man. When I have
+the offer of completing, or rather of going over again, my knowledge
+of medicine, surgery, history, geography, botany, mineralogy,
+conchology, geodesy, chemistry, natural philosophy, mechanics, and
+hydrography, why I accept, of course."
+
+"Then," said Shandon, disappointed, "you do not know where the
+_Forward_ is bound for?"
+
+"Yes, I do; it is bound for where there is something to learn, to
+discover, and to compare--where we shall meet with other customs,
+other countries, other nations, to study in the exercise of their
+functions; it is going, in short, where I have never been."
+
+"But I want to know something more definite than that," cried Shandon.
+
+"Well, I have heard that we are bound for the Northern Seas."
+
+"At least," asked Shandon, "you know the captain?"
+
+"Not the least bit in the world! But he is an honest fellow, you may
+believe me."
+
+The commander and the doctor disembarked at Birkenhead; the former
+told the doctor all he knew about the situation of things, and the
+mystery inflamed the imagination of the doctor. The sight of the brig
+caused him transports of joy. From that day he stopped with Shandon,
+and went every day to pay a visit to the shell of the _Forward_. Besides,
+he was specially appointed to overlook the installation of the ship's
+medicine-chest. For Dr. Clawbonny was a doctor, and a good one, though
+practising little. At the age of twenty-five he was an ordinary
+practitioner; at the age of forty he was a _savant_, well known in
+the town; he was an influential member of all the literary and
+scientific institutions of Liverpool. His fortune allowed him to
+distribute counsels which were none the worse for being gratuitous;
+beloved as a man eminently lovable must always be, he had never wronged
+any one, not even himself; lively and talkative, he carried his heart
+in his hand, and put his hand into that of everybody. When it was
+known in Liverpool that he was going to embark on board the _Forward_
+his friends did all they could to dissuade him, and only fixed him
+more completely in his determination, and when the doctor was
+determined to do anything no one could prevent him. From that time
+the suppositions and apprehensions increased, but did not prevent
+the _Forward_ being launched on the 5th of February, 1860. Two months
+later she was ready to put to sea. On the 15th of March, as the letter
+of the captain had announced, a dog of Danish breed was sent by railway
+from Edinburgh to Liverpool, addressed to Richard Shandon. The animal
+seemed surly, peevish, and even sinister, with quite a singular look
+in his eyes. The name of the _Forward_ was engraved on his brass collar.
+The commander installed it on board the same day, and acknowledged
+its reception to K. Z. at Leghorn. Thus, with the exception of the
+captain, the crew was complete. It was composed as follows:--
+
+1. K. Z., captain; 2. Richard Shandon, commander; 3. James Wall, third
+officer; 4. Dr. Clawbonny; 5. Johnson, boatswain; 6. Simpson,
+harpooner; 7. Bell, carpenter; 8. Brunton, chief engineer; 9. Plover,
+second engineer; 10. Strong (negro), cook; 11. Foker, ice-master;
+12. Wolsten, smith; 13. Bolton, sailor; 14. Garry, sailor; 15. Clifton,
+sailor; 16. Gripper, sailor; 17. Pen, sailor; 18. Warren, stoker.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+DOG-CAPTAIN
+
+
+The day of departure arrived with the 5th of April. The admission
+of the doctor on board had given the crew more confidence. They knew
+that where the worthy doctor went they could follow. However, the
+sailors were still uneasy, and Shandon, fearing that some of them
+would desert, wished to be off. With the coast out of sight, they
+would make up their mind to the inevitable.
+
+Dr. Clawbonny's cabin was situated at the end of the poop, and occupied
+all the stern of the vessel. The captain's and mate's cabins gave
+upon deck. The captain's remained hermetically closed, after being
+furnished with different instruments, furniture, travelling
+garments, books, clothes for changing, and utensils, indicated in
+a detailed list. According to the wish of the captain, the key of
+the cabin was sent to Lubeck; he alone could enter his room.
+
+This detail vexed Shandon, and took away all chance of the chief
+command. As to his own cabin, he had perfectly appropriated it to
+the needs of the presumed voyage, for he thoroughly understood the
+needs of a Polar expedition. The room of the third officer was placed
+under the lower deck, which formed a vast sleeping-room for the
+sailors' use; the men were very comfortably lodged, and would not
+have found anything like the same convenience on board any other ship;
+they were cared for like the most priceless cargo: a vast stove
+occupied all the centre of the common room. Dr. Clawbonny was in his
+element; he had taken possession of his cabin on the 6th of February,
+the day after the _Forward_ was launched.
+
+"The happiest of animals," he used to say, "is a snail, for it can
+make a shell exactly to fit it; I shall try to be an intelligent snail."
+
+And considering that the shell was to be his lodging for a considerable
+time, the cabin began to look like home; the doctor had a _savant's_
+or a child's pleasure in arranging his scientific traps. His books,
+his herbals, his set of pigeon-holes, his instruments of precision,
+his chemical apparatus, his collection of thermometers, barometers,
+hygrometers, rain-gauges, spectacles, compasses, sextants, maps,
+plans, flasks, powders, bottles for medicine-chest, were all classed
+in an order that would have shamed the British Museum. The space of
+six square feet contained incalculable riches: the doctor had only
+to stretch out his hand without moving to become instantaneously a
+doctor, a mathematician, an astronomer, a geographer, a botanist,
+or a conchologist. It must be acknowledged that he was proud of his
+management and happy in his floating sanctuary, which three of his
+thinnest friends would have sufficed to fill. His friends came to
+it in such numbers that even a man as easy-going as the doctor might
+have said with Socrates, "My house is small, but may it please Heaven
+never to fill it with friends!"
+
+To complete the description of the _Forward_ it is sufficient to say
+that the kennel of the large Danish dog was constructed under the
+window of the mysterious cabin but its savage inhabitant preferred
+wandering between decks and in the hold; it seemed impossible to tame
+him, and no one had been able to become his master; during the night
+he howled lamentably, making the hollows of the ship ring in a sinister
+fashion. Was it regret for his absent master? Was it the instinct
+of knowing that he was starting for a perilous voyage? Was it a
+presentiment of dangers to come? The sailors decided that it was for
+the latter reason, and more than one pretended to joke who believed
+seriously that the dog was of a diabolical kind. Pen, who was a brutal
+man, was going to strike him once, when he fell, unfortunately,
+against the angle of the capstan, and made a frightful wound in his
+head. Of course this accident was placed to the account of the
+fantastic animal. Clifton, the most superstitious of the crew, made
+the singular observation that when the dog was on the poop he always
+walked on the windward side, and afterwards, when the brig was out
+at sea, and altered its tack, the surprising animal changed its
+direction with the wind the same as the captain of the _Forward_ would
+have done in his place. Dr. Clawbonny, whose kindness and caresses
+would have tamed a tiger, tried in vain to win the good graces of
+the dog; he lost his time and his pains. The animal did not answer
+to any name ever written in the dog calendar, and the crew ended by
+calling him Captain, for he appeared perfectly conversant with ship
+customs; it was evident that it was not his first trip. From such
+facts it is easy to understand the boatswain's answer to Clifton's
+friend, and the credulity of those who heard it; more than one repeated
+jokingly that he expected one day to see the dog take human shape
+and command the manoeuvres with a resounding voice.
+
+If Richard Shandon did not feel the same apprehensions he was not
+without anxiety, and the day before the departure, in the evening
+of April 5th, he had a conversation on the subject with the doctor,
+Wall, and Johnson in the poop cabin. These four persons were tasting
+their tenth grog, and probably their last, for the letter from
+Aberdeen had ordered that all the crew, from the captain to the stoker,
+should be teetotallers, and that there should be no wine, beer, nor
+spirits on board except those given by the doctor's orders. The
+conversation had been going on about the departure for the last hour.
+If the instructions of the captain were realised to the end, Shandon
+would receive his last instructions the next day.
+
+"If the letter," said the commander, "does not tell me the captain's
+name, it must at least tell me the destination of the brig, or I shall
+not know where to take her to."
+
+"If I were you," said the impatient doctor, "I should start whether
+I get a letter or no; they'll know how to send after you, you may
+depend."
+
+"You are ready for anything, doctor; but if so, to what quarter of
+the globe should you set sail?"
+
+"To the North Pole, of course; there's not the slightest doubt about
+that."
+
+"Why should it not be the South Pole?" asked Wall.
+
+"The South Pole is out of the question. No one with any sense would
+send a brig across the whole of the Atlantic. Just reflect a minute,
+and you'll see the impossibility."
+
+"The doctor has an answer to everything," said Wall.
+
+"Well, we'll say north," continued Shandon. "But where north? To
+Spitzbergen or Greenland? Labrador or Hudson's Bay? Although all
+directions end in insuperable icebergs, I am not less puzzled as to
+which to take. Have you an answer to that, doctor?"
+
+"No," he answered, vexed at having nothing to say; "but if you don't
+get a letter what shall you do?"
+
+"I shall do nothing; I shall wait."
+
+"Do you mean to say you won't start?" cried Dr. Clawbonny, agitating
+his glass in despair.
+
+"Certainly I do."
+
+"And that would be the wisest plan," said Johnson tranquilly, while
+the doctor began marching round the table, for he could not keep still;
+"but still, if we wait too long, the consequences may be deplorable;
+the season is good now if we are really going north, as we ought to
+profit by the breaking up of the ice to cross Davis's Straits; besides,
+the crew gets more and more uneasy; the friends and companions of
+our men do all they can to persuade them to leave the _Forward_, and
+their influence may be pernicious for us."
+
+"Besides," added Wall, "if one of them deserted they all would, and
+then I don't know how you would get another crew together."
+
+"But what can I do?" cried Shandon.
+
+"What you said you would do," replied the doctor; "wait and wait till
+to-morrow before you despair. The captain's promises have all been
+fulfilled up to now with the greatest regularity, and there's no
+reason to believe we shan't be made acquainted with our destination
+when the proper time comes. I haven't the slightest doubt that
+to-morrow we shall be sailing in the Irish Channel, and I propose
+we drink a last grog to our pleasant voyage. It begins in an
+unaccountable fashion, but with sailors like you there are a thousand
+chances that it will end well."
+
+And all four drank to their safe return.
+
+"Now, commander," continued Johnson, "if you will allow me to advise
+you, you will prepare everything to start; the crew must think that
+you know what you are about. If you don't get a letter to-morrow,
+set sail; do not get up the steam, the wind looks like holding out,
+and it will be easy enough to sail; let the pilot come on board; go
+out of the docks with the tide, and anchor below Birkenhead; our men
+won't be able to communicate with land, and if the devil of a letter
+comes it will find us as easily there as elsewhere."
+
+"By heavens! you are right, Johnson!" cried the doctor, holding out
+his hand to the old sailor.
+
+"So be it," answered Shandon.
+
+Then each one entered his cabin, and waited in feverish sleep for
+the rising of the sun. The next day the first distribution of letters
+took place in the town, and not one bore the address of the commander,
+Richard Shandon. Nevertheless, he made his preparations for
+departure, and the news spread at once all over Liverpool, and, as
+we have already seen, an extraordinary affluence of spectators
+crowded the wharfs of New Prince's Docks. Many of them came on board
+to shake hands for the last time with a comrade, or to try and dissuade
+a friend, or to take a look at the brig, and to know its destination;
+they were disappointed at finding the commander more taciturn and
+reserved than ever. He had his reasons for that.
+
+Ten o'clock struck. Eleven followed. The tide began to go out that
+day at about one o'clock in the afternoon. Shandon from the top of
+the poop was looking at the crowd with uneasy eyes, trying to read
+the secret of his destiny on one of the faces. But in vain. The sailors
+of the _Forward_ executed his orders in silence, looking at him all
+the time, waiting for orders which did not come. Johnson went on
+preparing for departure. The weather was cloudy and the sea rough;
+a south-easter blew with violence, but it was easy to get out of the
+Mersey.
+
+At twelve o'clock nothing had yet been received. Dr. Clawbonny marched
+up and down in agitation, looking through his telescope,
+gesticulating, impatient for the sea, as he said. He felt moved,
+though he struggled against it. Shandon bit his lips till the blood
+came. Johnson came up to him and said--
+
+"Commander, if we want to profit by the tide, there is no time to
+be lost; we shall not be clear of the docks for at least an hour."
+
+Shandon looked round him once more and consulted his watch. The twelve
+o'clock letters had been distributed. In despair he told Johnson to
+start. The boatswain ordered the deck to be cleared of spectators,
+and the crowd made a general movement to regain the wharves while
+the last moorings were unloosed. Amidst the confusion a dog's bark
+was distinctly heard, and all at once the animal broke through the
+compact mass, jumped on to the poop, and, as a thousand spectators
+can testify, dropped a letter at Shandon's feet.
+
+"A letter!" cried Shandon. "_He_ is on board, then?"
+
+"He was, that's certain, but he isn't now," said Johnson, pointing
+to the deserted deck.
+
+Shandon held the letter without opening it in his astonishment.
+
+"But read it, read it, I say," said the doctor.
+
+Shandon looked at it. The envelope had no postmark or date; it was
+addressed simply to:
+
+
+ "RICHARD SHANDON,
+
+ "Commander on board the brig
+
+ "_Forward_."
+
+
+Shandon opened the letter and read as follows:--
+
+
+"Sail for Cape Farewell. You will reach it by the 20th of April. If
+the captain does not appear on board, cross Davis's Straits, and sail
+up Baffin's Sea to Melville Bay.
+
+ "THE CAPTAIN OF THE 'FORWARD,'
+
+ "K. Z."
+
+
+Shandon carefully folded this laconic epistle, put it in his pocket,
+and gave the order for departure. His voice, which rang above the
+east wind, had something solemn in it.
+
+Soon the _Forward_ had passed the docks, and directed by a Liverpool
+pilot whose little cutter followed, went down the Mersey with the
+current. The crowd precipitated itself on to the exterior wharf along
+the Victoria Docks in order to get a last glimpse of the strange brig.
+The two topsails, the foresail and the brigantine sail were rapidly
+set up, and the _Forward_, worthy of its name, after having rounded
+Birkenhead Point, sailed with extraordinary fleetness into the Irish
+Sea.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+OUT AT SEA
+
+
+The wind was favourable, though it blew in April gales. The _Forward_
+cut through the waves, and towards three o'clock crossed the mail
+steamer between Liverpool and the Isle of Man. The captain hailed
+from his deck the last adieu that the _Forward_ was destined to hear.
+
+At five o'clock the pilot left the command in the hands of Richard
+Shandon, the commander of the brig, and regained his cutter, which,
+turning round, soon disappeared on the south-west. Towards evening
+the brig doubled the Calf of Man at the southern extremity of the
+island. During the night the sea was very rough, but the _Forward_
+behaved well, left the point of Ayr to the north-west, and directed
+its course for the Northern Channel. Johnson was right; once out at
+sea the maritime instinct of the sailors gained the upper hand. Life
+on board went on with regularity.
+
+The doctor breathed in the sea air with delight; he walked about
+vigorously in the squalls, and for a _savant_ he was not a bad sailor.
+
+"The sea is splendid," said he to Johnson, coming up on deck after
+breakfast. "I have made its acquaintance rather late, but I shall
+make up for lost time."
+
+"You are right, Mr. Clawbonny. I would give all the continents of
+the world for a corner of the ocean. They pretend that sailors soon
+get tired of their profession, but I've been forty years on the sea
+and I love it as much as the first day."
+
+"It is a great pleasure to feel a good ship under one's feet, and
+if I'm not a bad judge the _Forward_ behaves herself well."
+
+"You judge rightly, doctor," answered Shandon, who had joined the
+talkers; "she is a good ship, and I acknowledge that a vessel destined
+for navigation amongst ice has never been better equipped. That
+reminds me that thirty years ago Captain James Ross, sailing for the
+North-West passage----"
+
+"In the _Victory_," added the doctor quickly, "a brig about the same
+tonnage as ours, with a steam-engine too."
+
+"What! you know about that?"
+
+"Judge if I do," answered the doctor. "Machines were then in their
+infancy, and the _Victory's_ kept her back; the captain, James Ross,
+after having vainly repaired it bit by bit, finished by taking it
+down, and abandoned it at his first winter quarters."
+
+"The devil!" said Shandon. "You know all about it, I see."
+
+"Yes. I've read the works of Parry, Ross, and Franklin, and the reports
+of McClure, Kennedy, Kane, and McClintock, and I remember something
+of what I've read. I can tell you, too, that this same McClintock,
+on board the _Fox_, a screw brig in the style of ours, went easier
+to his destination than any of the men who preceded him."
+
+"That's perfectly true," answered Shandon; "he was a bold sailor was
+McClintock; I saw him at work. You may add that, like him, we shall
+find ourselves in Davis's Straits in April, and if we succeed in
+passing the ice our voyage will be considerably advanced."
+
+"Unless," added the doctor, "it happens to us like it did to the _Fox_
+in 1857, to be caught the very first year by the ice in Baffin's Sea,
+and have to winter in the midst of the icebergs."
+
+"We must hope for better luck," answered Johnson. "If a ship like
+the _Forward_ can't take us where we want to go, we must renounce
+all hope for ever."
+
+"Besides," said the doctor, "if the captain is on board he will know
+better than we do what must be done. We know nothing as yet; his letter
+says nothing about what our voyage is for."
+
+"It is a good deal to know which way to go," answered Shandon quickly.
+"We can do without the captain and his instructions for another month
+at least. Besides, you know what I think about it."
+
+"A short time ago," said the doctor, "I thought like you that the
+captain would never appear, and that you would remain commander of
+the ship; but now----"
+
+"Now what?" replied Shandon in an impatient tone.
+
+"Since the arrival of the second letter I have modified that opinion."
+
+"Why, doctor?"
+
+"Because the letter tells you the route to follow, but leaves you
+ignorant of the _Forward's_ destination; and we must know where we
+are going to. How the deuce are you to get a letter now we are out
+at sea? On the coast of Greenland the service of the post must leave
+much to wish for. I believe that our gentleman is waiting for us in
+some Danish settlement--at Holsteinborg or Uppernawik; he has
+evidently gone there to complete his cargo of sealskins, buy his
+sledges and dog, and, in short, get together all the tackle wanted
+for a voyage in the Arctic Seas. I shouldn't be at all surprised to
+see him come out of his cabin one of these fine mornings and begin
+commanding the ship in anything but a supernatural way."
+
+"It's possible," answered Shandon drily; "but in the meantime the
+wind is getting up, and I can't risk my gallant sails in such weather."
+
+Shandon left the doctor and gave the order to reef the topsails.
+
+"He takes it to heart," said the doctor to the boatswain.
+
+"Yes," answered the latter, "and it's a great pity, for you may be
+right, Mr. Clawbonny."
+
+In the evening of Saturday the _Forward_ doubled the Mull of Galloway,
+whose lighthouse shone to the north-east; during the night they left
+the Mull of Cantyre to the north, and Cape Fair, on the coast of Ireland,
+to the east. Towards three o'clock in the morning, the brig, leaving
+Rathlin Island on her starboard side, disembogued by the Northern
+Channel into the ocean. It was Sunday, the 8th of April, and the doctor
+read some chapters of the Bible to the assembled seamen. The wind
+then became a perfect hurricane, and tended to throw the brig on to
+the Irish coast; she pitched, and rolled, and tossed, and if the doctor
+was not seasick it was because he would not be, for nothing was easier.
+At noon Cape Malinhead disappeared towards the south; it was the last
+European ground that these bold sailors were to perceive, and more
+than one watched it out of sight, destined never to see it again.
+They were then in 55 degrees 57 minutes latitude and 7 degrees 40
+minutes longitude by the Greenwich meridian.
+
+The storm spent itself out about nine o'clock in the evening; the
+_Forward_, like a good sailor, maintained her route north-west. She
+showed by her behaviour during the day what her sailing capacities
+were, and as the Liverpool connoisseurs had remarked, she was above
+all, a sailing vessel. During the following days the _Forward_ gained
+the north-west with rapidity; the wind veered round south, and the
+sea had a tremendous swell on; the brig was then going along under
+full sail. Some petrels and puffins came sailing over the poop; the
+doctor skilfully shot one of the latter, and it fell, fortunately,
+on the deck. The harpooner, Simpson, picked it up and brought it to
+its owner.
+
+"Nasty game that, Mr. Clawbonny," he said.
+
+"It will make an excellent meal, on the contrary," said the doctor.
+
+"You don't mean to say you are going to eat that thing?"
+
+"And so are you, old fellow," said the doctor, laughing.
+
+"Poh!" replied Simpson, "but it's oily and rancid, like all other
+sea birds."
+
+"Never mind!" answered the doctor, "I have a peculiar way of cooking
+that game, and if you recognise it for a sea bird I'll consent never
+to kill another in my life."
+
+"Do you know how to cook, then?"
+
+"A _savant_ ought to know how to do a little of everything."
+
+"You'd better take care, Simpson," said the boatswain; "the doctor's
+a clever man, and he'll make you take this puffin for a grouse."
+
+The fact is that the doctor was quite right about his fowl; he took
+off all the fat, which all lies under the skin, principally on the
+thighs, and with it disappeared the rancidity and taste of fish which
+is so disagreeable in a sea bird. Thus prepared the puffin was declared
+excellent, and Simpson acknowledged it the first.
+
+During the late storm Richard Shandon had been able to judge of the
+qualities of his crew; he had watched each man narrowly, and knew
+how much each was to be depended upon.
+
+James Wall was devoted to Richard, understood quickly and executed
+well, but he might fail in initiative; he placed him in the third
+rank. Johnson was used to struggle with the sea; he was an old stager
+in the Arctic Ocean, and had nothing to learn either in audacity or
+_sang-froid_. The harpooner, Simpson, and the carpenter, Bell, were
+sure men, faithful to duty and discipline. The ice-master, Foker,
+was an experienced sailor, and, like Johnson, was capable of rendering
+important service. Of the other sailors Garry and Bolton seemed to
+be the best; Bolton was a gay and talkative fellow; Garry was
+thirty-five, with an energetic face, but rather pale and sad-looking.
+The three sailors, Clifton, Gripper, and Pen, seemed less ardent and
+resolute; they easily grumbled. Gripper wanted to break his
+engagement even before the departure of the _Forward_; a sort of shame
+kept him on board. If things went on all right, if there were not
+too many risks to run, no dangers to encounter, these three men might
+be depended upon; but they must be well fed, for it might be said
+that they were led by their stomachs. Although warned beforehand,
+they grumbled at having to be teetotallers; at their meals they
+regretted the brandy and gin; it did not, however, make them spare
+the tea and coffee, which was prodigally given out on board. As to
+the two engineers, Brunton and Plover, and the stoker, Warren, there
+had been nothing for them to do as yet, and Shandon could not tell
+anything about their capabilities.
+
+On the 14th of April the _Forward_ got into the grand current of the
+Gulf Stream, which, after ascending the eastern coast of America to
+Newfoundland, inclines to the north-east along the coast of Norway.
+They were then in 57 degrees 37 minutes latitude by 22 degrees 58
+minutes longitude, at two hundred miles from the point of Greenland.
+The weather grew colder, and the thermometer descended to thirty-two
+degrees, that is to say to freezing point.
+
+The doctor had not yet begun to wear the garments he destined for
+the Arctic Seas, but he had donned a sailor's dress like the rest;
+he was a queer sight with his top-boots, in which his legs disappeared,
+his vast oilcloth hat, his jacket and trousers of the same; when
+drenched with heavy rains or enormous waves the doctor looked like
+a sort of sea-animal, and was proud of the comparison.
+
+During two days the sea was extremely rough; the wind veered round
+to the north-west, and delayed the progress of the _Forward_. From
+the 14th to the 16th of April the swell was great, but on the Monday
+there came such a torrent of rain that the sea became calm immediately.
+Shandon spoke to the doctor about this phenomenon.
+
+"It confirms the curious observations of the whaler Scoresby, who
+laid it before the Royal Society of Edinburgh, of which I have the
+honour to be an honorary member. You see that when it rains the waves
+are not very high, even under the influence of a violent wind, and
+when the weather is dry the sea is more agitated, even when there
+is less wind."
+
+"But how is this phenomenon accounted for?"
+
+"Very simply; it is not accounted for at all."
+
+Just then the ice-master, who was keeping watch on the crossbars of
+the topsails, signalled a floating mass on the starboard, at about
+fifteen miles distance before the wind.
+
+"An iceberg here!" cried the doctor.
+
+Shandon pointed his telescope in the direction indicated, and
+confirmed the pilot's announcement.
+
+"That is curious!" said the doctor.
+
+"What! you are astonished at last!" said the commander, laughing.
+
+"I am surprised, but not astonished," answered the doctor, laughing;
+"for the brig _Ann_, of Poole, from Greenspond, was caught in 1813
+in perfect ice-fields, in the forty-fourth degree of north latitude,
+and her captain, Dayernent, counted them by hundreds!"
+
+"I see you can teach us something, even upon that subject."
+
+"Very little," answered Clawbonny modestly; "it is only that ice has
+been met with in even lower latitudes."
+
+"I knew that already, doctor, for when I was cabinboy on board the
+war-sloop _Fly_----"
+
+"In 1818," continued the doctor, "at the end of March, almost in April,
+you passed between two large islands of floating ice under the
+forty-second degree of latitude."
+
+"Well, I declare you astonish me!" cried Shandon.
+
+"But the iceberg doesn't astonish me, as we are two degrees further
+north."
+
+"You are a well, doctor," answered the commander, "and all we have
+to do is to be water-buckets."
+
+"You will draw me dry sooner than you think for; and now, Shandon,
+if we could get a nearer look at this phenomenon, I should be the
+happiest of doctors."
+
+"Just so, Johnson," said Shandon, calling his boatswain. "It seems
+to me that the breeze is getting up."
+
+"Yes, commander," answered Johnson; "we are making very little way,
+and the currents of Davis's Straits will soon be against us."
+
+"You are right, Johnson, and if we wish to be in sight of Cape Farewell
+on the 20th of April we must put the steam on, or we shall be thrown
+on the coasts of Labrador. Mr. Wall, will you give orders to light
+the fires?"
+
+The commander's orders were executed, an hour afterwards the steam
+was up, the sails were furled, and the screw cutting the waves sent
+the _Forward_ against the north-west wind.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE GREAT POLAR CURRENT
+
+
+A short time after the flights of birds became more and more numerous.
+Petrels, puffins, and mates, inhabitants of those desolate quarters,
+signalled the approach of Greenland. The _Forward_ was rapidly
+nearing the north, leaving to her leeward a long line of black smoke.
+
+On Tuesday the 17th of April, about eleven o'clock in the morning,
+the ice-master signalled the first sight of the ice-blink; it was
+about twenty miles to the N.N.W. This glaring white strip was
+brilliantly lighted up, in spite of the presence of thick clouds in
+the neighbouring parts of the sky. Experienced people on board could
+make no mistake about this phenomenon, and declared, from its
+whiteness, that the blink was owing to a large ice-field, situated
+at about thirty miles out of sight, and that it proceeded from the
+reflection of luminous rays. Towards evening the wind turned round
+to the south, and became favourable; Shandon put on all sail, and
+for economy's sake caused the fires to be put out. The _Forward_,
+under her topsails and foresails, glided on towards Cape Farewell.
+
+At three o'clock on the 18th they came across the ice-stream, and
+a white thick line of a glaring colour cut brilliantly the lines of
+the sea and sky. It was evidently drifting from the eastern coast
+of Greenland more than from Davis's Straits, for ice generally keeps
+to the west coast of Baffin's Sea. An hour afterwards the _Forward_
+passed in the midst of isolated portions of the ice-stream, and in
+the most compact parts, the icebergs, though welded together, obeyed
+the movements of the swell. The next day the man at the masthead
+signalled a vessel. It was the _Valkirien_, a Danish corvette, running
+alongside the _Forward_, and making for the bank of Newfoundland.
+The current of the Strait began to make itself felt, and Shandon had
+to put on sail to go up it. At this moment the commander, the doctor,
+James Wall, and Johnson were assembled on the poop examining the
+direction and strength of the current. The doctor wanted to know if
+the current existed also in Baffin's Sea.
+
+"Without the least doubt," answered Shandon, "and the sailing vessels
+have much trouble to stem it."
+
+"Besides there," added Wall, "you meet with it on the eastern coast
+of America, as well as on the western coast of Greenland."
+
+"There," said the doctor, "that is what gives very singular reason
+to the seekers of the North-West passage! That current runs about
+five miles an hour, and it is a little difficult to suppose that it
+springs from the bottom of a gulf."
+
+"It is so much the more probable, doctor," replied Shandon, "that
+if this current runs from north to south we find in Behring's Straits
+a contrary current which runs from south to north, and which must
+be the origin of this one."
+
+"According to that," replied the doctor, "we must admit that America
+is totally unconnected with the Polar lands, and that the waters of
+the Pacific run round the coasts of America into the Atlantic. On
+the other hand, the greater elevation of the waters of the Pacific
+gives reason to the supposition that they fall into the European
+seas."
+
+"But," sharply replied Shandon, "there must be facts to establish
+that theory, and if there are any," added he with irony, "our
+universally well-informed doctor ought to know them."
+
+"Well," replied the above-mentioned, with amiable satisfaction, "if
+it interests you, I can tell you that whales, wounded in Davis's
+Straits, are caught some time afterwards in the neighbourhood of
+Tartary with the European harpoon still in their flanks."
+
+"And unless they have been able to double Cape Horn or the Cape of
+Good Hope," replied Shandon, "they must necessarily have rounded the
+septentrional coasts of America--that's what I call indisputable,
+doctor."
+
+"However, if you were not convinced, my dear fellow," said the doctor,
+smiling, "I could still produce other facts, such as drift-wood, of
+which Davis's Straits are full, larch, aspen, and other tropical trees.
+Now we know that the Gulf Stream hinders those woods from entering
+the Straits. If, then, they come out of it they can only get in from
+Behring's Straits."
+
+"I am convinced, doctor, and I avow that it would be difficult to
+remain incredulous with you."
+
+"Upon my honour," said Johnson, "there's something that comes just
+in time to help our discussion. I perceive in the distance a lump
+of wood of certain dimensions; if the commander permits it we'll haul
+it in, and ask it the name of its country."
+
+"That's it," said the doctor, "the example after the rule."
+
+Shandon gave the necessary orders; the brig was directed towards the
+piece of wood signalled, and soon afterwards, not without trouble,
+the crew hoisted it on deck. It was the trunk of a mahogany tree,
+gnawed right into the centre by worms, but for which circumstance
+it would not have floated.
+
+"This is glorious," said the doctor enthusiastically, "for as the
+currents of the Atlantic could not carry it to Davis's Straits, and
+as it has not been driven into the Polar basin by the streams of
+septentrional America, seeing that this tree grew under the Equator,
+it is evident that it comes in a straight line from Behring; and look
+here, you see those sea-worms which have eaten it, they belong to
+a hot-country species."
+
+"It is evident," replied Wall, "that the people who do not believe
+in the famous passage are wrong."
+
+"Why, this circumstance alone ought to convince them," said the
+doctor; "I will just trace you out the itinerary of that mahogany;
+it has been floated towards the Pacific by some river of the Isthmus
+of Panama or Guatemala, from thence the current has dragged it along
+the American coast as far as Behring's Straits, and in spite of
+everything it was obliged to enter the Polar Seas. It is neither so
+old nor so soaked that we need fear to assign a recent date to its
+setting out; it has had the good luck to get clear of the obstacles
+in that long suite of straits which lead out of Baffin's Bay, and
+quickly seized by the boreal current came by Davis's Straits to be
+made prisoner by the _Forward_ to the great joy of Dr. Clawbonny,
+who asks the commander's permission to keep a sample of it."
+
+"Do so," said Shandon, "but allow me to tell you that you will not
+be the only proprietor of such a wreck. The Danish governor of the
+Isle of Disko----"
+
+"On the coast of Greenland," continued the doctor, "possesses a
+mahogany table made from a trunk fished up under the same
+circumstances. I know it, but I don't envy him his table, for if it
+were not for the bother, I should have enough there for a whole
+bedroom."
+
+During the night, from Wednesday to Thursday, the wind blew with
+extreme violence, and driftwood was seen more frequently. Nearing
+the coast offered many dangers at an epoch in which icebergs were
+so numerous; the commander caused some of the sails to be furled,
+and the _Forward_ glided away under her foresail and foremast only.
+The thermometer sank below freezing-point. Shandon distributed
+suitable clothing to the crew, a woollen jacket and trousers, a
+flannel shirt, wadmel stockings, the same as those the Norwegian
+country-people wear, and a pair of perfectly waterproof sea-boots.
+As to the captain, he contented himself with his natural fur, and
+appeared little sensible to the change in the temperature; he had,
+no doubt, gone through more than one trial of this kind, and besides,
+a Dane had no right to be difficult. He was seen very little, as he
+kept himself concealed in the darkest parts of the vessel.
+
+Towards evening the coast of Greenland peeped out through an opening
+in the fog. The doctor, armed with his glass, could distinguish for
+an instant a line of peaks, ridged with large blocks of ice; but the
+fog closed rapidly on this vision, like the curtain of a theatre
+falling in the most interesting moment of the piece.
+
+On the morning of the 20th of April the _Forward_ was in sight of
+an iceberg a hundred and fifty feet high, stranded there from time
+immemorial; the thaws had taken no effect on it, and had respected
+its strange forms. Snow saw it; James Ross took an exact sketch of
+it in 1829; and in 1851 the French lieutenant Bellot saw it from the
+deck of the _Prince Albert_. Of course the doctor wished to keep a
+memento of the celebrated mountain, and made a clever sketch of it.
+It is not surprising that such masses should be stranded and adhere
+to the land, for to each foot above water they have two feet below,
+giving, therefore, to this one about eighty fathoms of depth.
+
+At last, under a temperature which at noon was only 12 degrees, under
+a snowy and foggy sky, Cape Farewell was perceived. The _Forward_
+arrived on the day fixed; if it pleased the unknown captain to come
+and occupy his position in such diabolical weather he would have no
+cause to complain.
+
+"There you are, then," said the doctor to himself, "cape so celebrated
+and so well named! Many have cleared it like us who were destined
+never to see it again. Is it, then, an eternal adieu said to one's
+European friends? You have all passed it. Frobisher, Knight, Barlow,
+Vaughan, Scroggs, Barentz, Hudson, Blosseville, Franklin, Crozier,
+Bellot, never to come back to your domestic hearth, and that cape
+has been really for you the cape of adieus."
+
+It was about the year 970 that some navigators left Iceland and
+discovered Greenland. Sebastian Cabot forced his way as far as
+latitude 56 degrees in 1498. Gaspard and Michel Cotreal, in 1500 and
+1502, went as far north as 60 degrees; and Martin Frobisher, in 1576,
+arrived as far as the bay that bears his name. To John Davis belongs
+the honour of having discovered the Straits in 1585; and two years
+later, in a third voyage, that bold navigator and great whaler reached
+the sixty-third parallel, twenty-seven degrees from the Pole.
+
+Barentz in 1596, Weymouth in 1602, James Hall in 1605 and 1607, Hudson,
+whose name was given to that vast bay which hollows out so profoundly
+the continent of America, James Poole, in 1611, advanced far into
+the Strait in search of that North-West passage the discovery of which
+would have considerably shortened the track of communication between
+the two worlds. Baffin, in 1616, found the Straits of Lancaster in
+the sea that bears his own name; he was followed, in 1619, by James
+Munk, and in 1719 by Knight, Barlow, Vaughan, and Scroggs, of whom
+no news has ever been heard. In 1776 Lieutenant Pickersgill, sent
+out to meet Captain Cook, who tried to go up Behring's Straits, reached
+the sixty-eighth degree; the following year Young, for the same
+purpose, went as far north as Woman's Island.
+
+Afterwards came Captain James Ross, who, in 1818, rounded the coasts
+of Baffin's Sea, and corrected the hydrographic errors of his
+predecessors. Lastly, in 1819 and 1820, the celebrated Parry passed
+through Lancaster Straits, and penetrated, in spite of unnumbered
+difficulties, as far as Melville Island, and won the prize of 5,000
+pounds promised by Act of Parliament to the English sailors who would
+reach the hundred and seventeenth meridian by a higher latitude than
+the seventy-seventh parallel.
+
+In 1826 Beechey touched Chamisso Island; James Ross wintered from
+1829 to 1833 in Prince Regent Straits, and amongst other important
+works discovered the magnetic pole. During this time Franklin, by
+an overland route, traversed the septentrional coasts of America from
+the River Mackenzie to Turnagain Point. Captain Back followed in his
+steps from 1823 to 1835, and these explorations were completed in
+1839 by Messrs. Dease and Simpson and Dr. Rae.
+
+Lastly, Sir John Franklin, wishing to discover the North-West passage,
+left England in 1845 on board the _Erebus_ and the _Terror_; he
+penetrated into Baffin's Sea, and since his passage across Disko
+Island no news had been heard of his expedition.
+
+That disappearance determined the numerous investigations which have
+brought about the discovery of the passage, and the survey of these
+Polar continents, with such indented coast lines. The most daring
+English, French, and American sailors made voyages towards these
+terrible countries, and, thanks to their efforts, the maps of that
+country, so difficult to make, figured in the list of the Royal
+Geographical Society of London. The curious history of these
+countries was thus presented to the doctor's imagination as he leaned
+on the rail, and followed with his eyes the long track left by the
+brig. Thoughts of the bold navigators weighed upon his mind, and he
+fancied he could perceive under the frozen arches of the icebergs
+the pale ghosts of those who were no more.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+DAVIS'S STRAITS
+
+
+During that day the _Forward_ cut out an easy road amongst the
+half-broken ice; the wind was good, but the temperature very low;
+the currents of air blowing across the ice-fields brought with them
+their penetrating cold. The night required the severest attention;
+the floating icebergs drew together in that narrow pass; a hundred
+at once were often counted on the horizon; they broke off from the
+elevated coasts under the teeth of the grinding waves and the
+influence of the spring season, in order to go and melt or to be
+swallowed up in the depths of the ocean. Long rafts of wood, with
+which it was necessary to escape collision, kept the crew on the alert;
+the crow's nest was put in its place on the mizenmast; it consisted
+of a cask, in which the ice-master was partly hidden to protect him
+from the cold winds while he kept watch over the sea and the icebergs
+in view, and from which he signalled danger and sometimes gave orders
+to the crew. The nights were short; the sun had reappeared since the
+31st of January in consequence of the refraction, and seemed to get
+higher and higher above the horizon. But the snow impeded the view,
+and if it did not cause complete obscurity it rendered navigation
+laborious.
+
+On the 21st of April Desolation Cape appeared in the midst of thick
+mists; the crew were tired out with the constant strain on their
+energies rendered necessary ever since they had got amongst the
+icebergs; the sailors had not had a minute's rest; it was soon
+necessary to have recourse to steam to cut a way through the heaped-up
+blocks. The doctor and Johnson were talking together on the stern,
+whilst Shandon was snatching a few hours' sleep in his cabin.
+Clawbonny was getting information from the old sailor, whose numerous
+voyages had given him an interesting and sensible education. The
+doctor felt much friendship for him, and the boatswain repaid it with
+interest.
+
+"You see, Mr. Clawbonny," Johnson used to say, "this country is not
+like all others; they call it _Green_land, but there are very few
+weeks in the year when it justifies its name."
+
+"Who knows if in the tenth century this land did not justify its name?"
+added the doctor. "More than one revolution of this kind has been
+produced upon our globe, and I daresay I should astonish you if I
+were to tell you that according to Icelandic chronicles two thousand
+villages flourished upon this continent about eight or nine hundred
+years ago."
+
+"You would so much astonish me, Mr. Clawbonny, that I should have
+some difficulty in believing you, for it is a miserable country."
+
+"However miserable it may be, it still offers a sufficient retreat
+to its inhabitants, and even to civilised Europeans."
+
+"Without doubt! We met men at Disko and Uppernawik who consented to
+live in such climates; but my ideas upon the matter were that they
+lived there by compulsion and not by choice."
+
+"I daresay you are right, though men get accustomed to everything,
+and the Greenlanders do not appear to me so unfortunate as the workmen
+of our large towns; they may be unfortunate, but they are certainly
+not unhappy. I say unhappy, but the word does not translate my thought,
+for if these people have not the comforts of temperate countries,
+they are formed for a rude climate, and find pleasures in it which
+we are not able to conceive."
+
+"I suppose we must think so, as Heaven is just. Many, many voyages
+have brought me upon these coasts, and my heart always shrinks at
+the sight of these wretched solitudes; but they ought to have cheered
+up these capes, promontories, and bays with more engaging names, for
+Farewell Cape and Desolation Cape are not names made to attract
+navigators."
+
+"I have also remarked that," replied the doctor, "but these names
+have a geographical interest that we must not overlook. They describe
+the adventures of those who gave them those names. Next to the names
+of Davis, Baffin, Hudson, Ross, Parry, Franklin, and Bellot, if I
+meet with Cape Desolation I soon find Mercy Bay; Cape Providence is
+a companion to Port Anxiety; Repulsion Bay brings me back to Cape
+Eden, and leaving Turnagain Point I take refuge in Refuge Bay. I have
+there under my eyes an unceasing succession of perils, misfortunes,
+obstacles, successes, despairs, and issues, mixed with great names
+of my country, and, like a series of old-fashioned medals, that
+nomenclature retraces in my mind the whole history of these seas."
+
+"You are quite right, Mr. Clawbonny, and I hope we shall meet with
+more Success Bays than Despair Capes in our voyage."
+
+"I hope so too, Johnson; but, I say, is the crew come round a little
+from its terrors?"
+
+"Yes, a little; but since we got into the Straits they have begun
+to talk about the fantastic captain; more than one of them expected
+to see him appear at the extremity of Greenland; but between you and
+me, doctor, doesn't it astonish you a little too?"
+
+"It does indeed, Johnson."
+
+"Do you believe in the captain's existence?"
+
+"Of course I do."
+
+"But what can be his reasons for acting in that manner?"
+
+"If I really must tell you the whole of my thoughts, Johnson, I believe
+that the captain wished to entice the crew far enough out to prevent
+them being able to come back. Now if he had been on board when we
+started they would all have wanted to know our destination, and he
+might have been embarrassed."
+
+"But why so?"
+
+"Suppose he should wish to attempt some superhuman enterprise, and
+to penetrate where others have never been able to reach, do you believe
+if the crew knew it they would ever have enlisted? As it is, having
+got so far, going farther becomes a necessity."
+
+"That's very probable, Mr. Clawbonny. I have known more than one
+intrepid adventurer whose name alone was a terror, and who would never
+have found any one to accompany him in his perilous expeditions----"
+
+"Excepting me," ventured the doctor.
+
+"And me, after you," answered Johnson, "and to follow you; I can
+venture to affirm that our captain is amongst the number of such
+adventurers. No matter, we shall soon see; I suppose the unknown will
+come as captain on board from the coast of Uppernawik or Melville
+Bay, and will tell us at last where it is his good pleasure to conduct
+the ship."
+
+"I am of your opinion, Johnson, but the difficulty will be to get
+as far as Melville Bay. See how the icebergs encircle us from every
+point! They scarcely leave a passage for the _Forward_. Just examine
+that immense plain over there."
+
+"The whalers call that in our language an ice-field, that is to say
+a continued surface of ice the limits of which cannot be perceived."
+
+"And on that side, that broken field, those long pieces of ice more
+or less joined at their edges?"
+
+"That is a pack; if it was of a circular form we should call it a
+patch; and, if the form was longer, a stream."
+
+"And there, those floating icebergs?"
+
+"Those are drift-ice; if they were a little higher they would be
+icebergs or hills; their contact with vessels is dangerous, and must
+be carefully avoided. Here, look over there: on that ice-field there
+is a protuberance produced by the pressure of the icebergs; we call
+that a hummock; if that protuberance was submerged to its base we
+should call it a calf. It was very necessary to give names to all
+those forms in order to recognise them."
+
+"It is truly a marvellous spectacle!" exclaimed the doctor,
+contemplating the wonders of the Boreal Seas; "there is a field for
+the imagination in such pictures!"
+
+"Yes," answered Johnson, "ice often takes fantastic shapes, and our
+men are not behindhand in explaining them according to their own
+notions."
+
+"Isn't that assemblage of ice-blocks admirable? Doesn't it look like
+a foreign town, an Eastern town, with its minarets and mosques under
+the pale glare of the moon? Further on there is a long series of Gothic
+vaults, reminding one of Henry the Seventh's chapel or the Houses
+of Parliament."
+
+"They would be houses and towns very dangerous to inhabit, and we
+must not sail too close to them. Some of those minarets yonder totter
+on their base, and the least of them would crush a vessel like the
+_Forward_."
+
+"And yet sailors dared to venture into these seas before they had
+steam at their command! How ever could a sailing vessel be steered
+amongst these moving rocks?"
+
+"Nevertheless, it has been accomplished, Mr. Clawbonny. When the wind
+became contrary--and that has happened to me more than once--we
+quietly anchored to one of those blocks, and we drifted more or less
+with it and waited for a favourable moment to set sail again. I must
+acknowledge that such a manner of voyaging required months, whilst
+with a little good fortune we shall only want a few days."
+
+"It seems to me," said the doctor, "that the temperature has a tendency
+to get lower."
+
+"That would be a pity," answered Johnson, "for a thaw is necessary
+to break up these masses and drive them away into the Atlantic; besides,
+they are more numerous in Davis's Straits, for the sea gets narrower
+between Capes Walsingham and Holsteinborg; but on the other side of
+the 67th degree we shall find the seas more navigable during the months
+of May and June."
+
+"Yes; but first of all we must get to the other side."
+
+"Yes, we must get there, Mr. Clawbonny. In June and July we should
+have found an open passage, like the whalers do, but our orders were
+precise; we were to be here in April. I am very much mistaken if our
+captain has not his reasons for getting us out here so early."
+
+The doctor was right in stating that the temperature was lowering;
+the thermometer at noon only indicated 6 degrees, and a north-west
+breeze was getting up, which, although it cleared the sky, assisted
+the current in precipitating the floating masses of ice into the path
+of the _Forward_. All of them did not obey the same impulsion, and
+it was not uncommon to encounter some of the highest masses drifting
+in an opposite direction, seized at their base by an undercurrent.
+
+It is easy to understand the difficulties of this kind of navigation;
+the engineers had not a minute's rest; the engines were worked from
+the deck by means of levers, which opened, stopped, and reversed them
+according to the orders of the officers on watch. Sometimes the brig
+had to hasten through an opening in the ice-fields, sometimes to
+struggle against the swiftness of an iceberg which threatened to close
+the only practicable issue, or, again, some block, suddenly
+overthrown, compelled the brig to back quickly so as not to be crushed
+to pieces. This mass of ice, carried along, broken up and amalgamated
+by the northern current, crushed up the passage, and if seized by
+the frost would oppose an impassable barrier to the passage of the
+_Forward_.
+
+Birds were found in innumerable quantities on these coasts, petrels
+and other sea-birds fluttered about here and there with deafening
+cries, a great number of big-headed, short-necked sea-gulls were
+amongst them; they spread out their long wings and braved in their
+play the snow whipped by the hurricane. This animation of the winged
+tribe made the landscape more lively.
+
+Numerous pieces of wood were floating to leeway, clashing with noise;
+a few enormous, bloated-headed sharks approached the vessel, but
+there was no question of chasing them, although Simpson, the harpooner,
+was longing to have a hit at them. Towards evening several seals made
+their appearance, nose above water, swimming between the blocks.
+
+On the 22nd the temperature again lowered; the _Forward_ put on all
+steam to catch the favourable passes: the wind was decidedly fixed
+in the north-west; all sails were furled.
+
+During that day, which was Sunday, the sailors had little to do. After
+the reading of Divine service, which was conducted by Shandon, the
+crew gave chase to sea-birds, of which they caught a great number.
+They were suitably prepared according to the doctor's method, and
+furnished an agreeable increase of provisions to the tables of the
+officers and crew.
+
+At three o'clock in the afternoon the _Forward_ had attained Thin
+de Sael, Sukkertop Mountain; the sea was very rough; from time to
+time a vast and inopportune fog fell from the grey sky; however, at
+noon an exact observation could be taken. The vessel was in 65 degrees
+20 minutes latitude by 54 degrees 22 minutes longitude. It was
+necessary to attain two degrees more in order to meet with freer and
+more favourable navigation.
+
+During the three following days, the 24th, 25th, and 26th of April,
+the _Forward_ had a continual struggle with the ice; the working of
+the machines became very fatiguing. The steam was turned off quickly
+or got up again at a moment's notice, and escaped whistling from its
+valves. During the thick mist the nearing of icebergs was only known
+by dull thundering produced by the avalanches; the brig was instantly
+veered; it ran the risk of being crushed against the heaps of
+fresh-water ice, remarkable for its crystal transparency, and as hard
+as a rock.
+
+Richard Shandon never missed completing his provision of water by
+embarking several tons of ice every day. The doctor could not accustom
+himself to the optical delusions that refraction produces on these
+coasts. An iceberg sometimes appeared to him like a small white lump
+within reach, when it was at least at ten or twelve miles' distance.
+He endeavoured to accustom his eyesight to this singular phenomenon,
+so that he might be able to correct its errors rapidly.
+
+At last the crew were completely worn out by their labours in hauling
+the vessel alongside of the ice-fields and by keeping it free from
+the most menacing blocks by the aid of long perches. Nevertheless,
+the _Forward_ was still held back in the impassable limits of the
+Polar Circle on Friday, the 27th of April.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+GOSSIP OF THE CREW
+
+
+However, the _Forward_ managed, by cunningly slipping into narrow
+passages, to gain a few more minutes north; but instead of avoiding
+the enemy, it was soon necessary to attack it. The ice-fields, several
+miles in extent, were getting nearer, and as these moving heaps often
+represent a pressure of more than ten millions of tons, it was
+necessary to give a wide berth to their embraces. The ice-saws were
+at once installed in the interior of the vessel, in such a manner
+as to facilitate immediate use of them. Part of the crew
+philosophically accepted their hard work, but the other complained
+of it, if it did not refuse to obey. At the same time that they assisted
+in the installation of the instruments, Garry, Bolton, Pen and Gripper
+exchanged their opinions.
+
+"By Jingo!" said Bolton gaily, "I don't know why the thought strikes
+me that there's a very jolly tavern in Water-street where it's
+comfortable to be between a glass of gin and a bottle of porter. Can't
+you imagine it, Gripper?"
+
+"To tell you the truth," quickly answered the questioned sailor, who
+generally professed to be in a bad temper, "I don't imagine it here."
+
+"It's for the sake of talking, Gripper; it's evident that the snow
+towns Dr. Clawbonny admires so don't contain the least public where
+a poor sailor can get a half-pint of brandy."
+
+"That's sure enough, Bolton; and you may as well add that there's
+nothing worth drinking here. It's a nice idea to deprive men of their
+grog when they are in the Northern Seas."
+
+"But you know," said Garry, "that the doctor told us it was to prevent
+us getting the scurvy. It's the only way to make us go far."
+
+"But I don't want to go far, Garry; it's pretty well to have come
+this far without trying to go where the devil is determined we shan't."
+
+"Well, we shan't go, that's all," replied Pen. "I declare I've almost
+forgotten the taste of gin."
+
+"But remember what the doctor says," replied Bolton.
+
+"It's all very fine for them to talk. It remains to be seen if it
+isn't an excuse for being skinny with the drink."
+
+"Pen may be right, after all," said Gripper.
+
+"His nose is too red for that," answered Bolton. "Pen needn't grumble
+if it loses a little of its colour in the voyage."
+
+"What's my nose got to do with you?" sharply replied the sailor,
+attacked in the most sensitive place. "My nose doesn't need any of
+your remarks; take care of your own."
+
+"Now, then, don't get angry, Pen; I didn't know your nose was so touchy.
+I like a glass of whisky as well as anybody, especially in such a
+temperature; but if I know it'll do me more harm than good, I go
+without."
+
+"You go without," said Warren, the stoker; "but everyone don't go
+without."
+
+"What do you mean, Warren?" asked Garry, looking fixedly at him.
+
+"I mean that for some reason or other there are spirits on board,
+and I know they don't go without in the stern."
+
+"And how do you know that?" asked Garry.
+
+Warren did not know what to say: he talked for the sake of talking.
+
+"You see Warren don't know anything about it, Garry," said Bolton.
+
+"Well," said Pen, "we'll ask the commander for a ration of gin; we've
+earned it well and we'll see what he says."
+
+"I wouldn't if I were you," answered Garry.
+
+"Why?" cried Pen and Gripper.
+
+"Because he'll refuse. You knew you weren't to have any when you
+enlisted; you should have thought of it then."
+
+"Besides," replied Bolton, who took Garry's part because he liked
+his character, "Richard Shandon isn't master on board; he obeys, like
+us."
+
+"Who is master if he isn't?"
+
+"The captain."
+
+"Always that unfortunate captain!" exclaimed Pen. "Don't you see that
+on these ice-banks there's no more a captain than there is a public?
+It's a polite way of refusing us what we've a right to claim."
+
+"But if there's a captain," replied Bolton, "I'll bet two months'
+pay we shall see him before long."
+
+"I should like to tell the captain a bit of my mind," said Pen.
+
+"Who's talking about the captain?" said a new-comer. It was Clifton,
+the sailor, a superstitious and envious man. "Is anything new known
+about the captain?" he asked.
+
+"No," they all answered at once.
+
+"Well, I believe we shall find him one fine morning installed in his
+cabin, and no one will know how he got there."
+
+"Get along, do!" replied Bolton. "Why, Clifton, you imagine that he's
+a hobgoblin--a sort of wild child of the Highlands."
+
+"Laugh as much as you like, Bolton, you won't change my opinion. Every
+day as I pass his cabin I look through the keyhole. One of these fine
+mornings I shall come and tell you what he's like."
+
+"Why, he'll be like everyone else," said Pen, "and if he thinks he'll
+be able to do what he likes with us, he'll find himself mistaken,
+that's all!"
+
+"Pen don't know him yet," said Bolton, "and he's beginning to quarrel
+with him already."
+
+"Who doesn't know him?" said Clifton, looking knowing; "I don't know
+that he don't!"
+
+"What the devil do you mean?" asked Gripper.
+
+"I know very well what I mean."
+
+"But we don't."
+
+"Well, Pen has quarrelled with him before."
+
+"With the captain?"
+
+"Yes, the dog-captain--it's all one."
+
+The sailors looked at one another, afraid to say anything.
+
+"Man or dog," muttered Pen, "I declare that that animal will have
+his account one of these days."
+
+"Come, Clifton," asked Bolton seriously, "you don't mean to say that
+you believe the dog is the real captain?"
+
+"Indeed I do," answered Clifton with conviction. "If you noticed
+things like I do, you would have noticed what a queer beast it is."
+
+"Well, tell us what you've noticed."
+
+"Haven't you noticed the way he walks on the poop with such an air
+of authority, looking up at the sails as if he were on watch?"
+
+"That's true enough," added Gripper, "and one evening I actually found
+him with his paws on the paddle-wheel."
+
+"You don't mean it!" said Bolton.
+
+"And now what do you think he does but go for a walk on the ice-fields,
+minding neither the bears nor the cold?"
+
+"That's true enough," said Bolton.
+
+"Do you ever see that 'ere animal, like an honest dog, seek men's
+company, sneak about the kitchen, and set his eyes on Mr. Strong when's
+he taking something good to the commander? Don't you hear him in the
+night when he goes away two or three miles from the vessel, howling
+fit to make your blood run cold, as if it weren't easy enough to feel
+that sensation in such a temperature as this? Again, have you ever
+seen him feed? He takes nothing from any one. His food is always
+untouched and unless a secret hand feeds him on board, I may say that
+he lives without eating, and if he's not unearthly, I'm a fool!"
+
+"Upon my word," said Bell, the carpenter, who had heard all Clifton's
+reasoning, "I shouldn't be surprised if such was the case." The other
+sailors were silenced.
+
+"Well, at any rate, where's the _Forward_ going to?"
+
+"I don't know anything about it," replied Bell. "Richard Shandon will
+receive the rest of his instructions in due time."
+
+"But from whom?"
+
+"From whom?"
+
+"Yes, how?" asked Bolton, becoming pressing.
+
+"Now then, answer, Bell!" chimed in all the other sailors.
+
+"By whom? how? Why, I don't know," said the carpenter, embarrassed
+in his turn.
+
+"Why, by the dog-captain," exclaimed Clifton. "He has written once
+already; why shouldn't he again? If I only knew half of what that
+'ere animal knows, I shouldn't be embarrassed at being First Lord
+of the Admiralty!"
+
+"So then you stick to your opinion that the dog is the captain?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well," said Pen in a hoarse voice, "if that 'ere animal don't want
+to turn up his toes in a dog's skin, he's only got to make haste and
+become a man, or I'm hanged if I don't settle him."
+
+"What for?" asked Garry.
+
+"Because I choose," replied Pen brutally; "besides, it's no business
+of any one."
+
+"Enough talking, my boys," called out Mr. Johnson, interfering just
+in time, for the conversation was getting hot. "Get on with your work,
+and set up your saws quicker than that. We must clear the iceberg."
+
+"What! on a Friday?" replied Clifton, shrugging his shoulders.
+"You'll see she won't get over the Polar circle as easily as you
+think."
+
+The efforts of the crew were almost powerless during the whole day.
+The _Forward_ could not separate the ice-fields even by going against
+them full speed, and they were obliged to anchor for the night. On
+Saturday the temperature lowered again under the influence of an
+easterly wind. The weather cleared up, and the eye could sweep over
+the white plains in the distance, which the reflection of the sun's
+rays rendered dazzling. At seven in the morning the thermometer marked
+eight degrees below zero. The doctor was tempted to stay quietly in
+his cabin, and read the Arctic voyages over again; but, according
+to his custom, he asked himself what would be the most disagreeable
+thing he could do, which he settled was to go on deck and assist the
+men to work in such a temperature. Faithful to the line of conduct
+he had traced out for himself, he left his well-warmed cabin and came
+to help in hauling the vessel. His was a pleasant face, in spite of
+the green spectacles by which he preserved his eyes from the biting
+of the reflected rays; in his future observations he was always
+careful in making use of his snow spectacles, in order to avoid
+ophthalmia, very frequent in these high latitudes.
+
+Towards evening the _Forward_ had made several miles further north,
+thanks to the activity of the men and Shandon's skill, which made
+him take advantage of every favourable circumstance; at midnight he
+had got beyond the sixty-sixth parallel, and the fathom line declared
+twenty-three fathoms of water; Shandon discovered that he was on the
+shoal where Her Majesty's ship _Victoria_ struck, and that land was
+drawing near, thirty miles to the east. But now the heaps of ice,
+which up till now had been motionless, divided and began to move;
+icebergs seemed coming from every point of the horizon; the brig was
+entangled in a series of moving rocks, the crushing force of which
+it was impossible to resist. Moving became so difficult that Garry,
+the best helmsman, took the wheel; the mountains had a tendency to
+close up behind the brig; it then became essential to cut through
+the floating ice, and prudence as well as duty ordered them to go
+ahead. Difficulties became greater from the impossibility that
+Shandon found in establishing the direction of the vessel amongst
+such changing points, which kept moving without offering one firm
+perspective. The crew was divided into two tacks, larboard and
+starboard; each one, armed with a long perch with an iron point, drove
+back the two threatening blocks. Soon the _Forward_ entered into a
+pass so narrow, between two high blocks, that the extremity of her
+yards struck against the walls, hard as rock; by degrees she entangled
+herself in the midst of a winding valley, filled up with eddies of
+snow, whilst the floating ice was crashing and splitting with sinister
+cracklings. But it soon became certain that there was no egress from
+this gullet. An enormous block, caught in the channel, was driving
+rapidly on to the _Forward_! It seemed impossible to avoid it, and
+equally impossible to back out along a road already obstructed.
+
+Shandon and Johnson, standing on the prow, were contemplating the
+position. Shandon was pointing with his right hand at the direction
+the helmsman was to take, and with his left was conveying to James
+Wall, posted near the engineer, his orders for the working of the
+machine.
+
+"How will this end?" asked the doctor of Johnson.
+
+"As it may please God," replied the boatswain.
+
+The block of ice, at least a hundred feet high, was only about a cable's
+length from the _Forward_, and threatened to pound her under it.
+
+"Cursed luck!" exclaimed Pen, swearing frightfully.
+
+"Silence!" exclaimed a voice which it was impossible to recognise
+in the midst of the storm.
+
+The block seemed to be precipitating itself upon the brig; there was
+a moment of undefinable anguish; the men forsook their poles and
+flocked to the stern in spite of Shandon's orders.
+
+Suddenly a frightful sound was heard; a genuine waterspout fell upon
+deck, heaved up by an enormous wave. A cry of terror rang out from
+the crew whilst Garry, at the helm, held the _Forward_ in a straight
+line in spite of the frightful incumbrance. When their frightened
+looks were drawn towards the mountain of ice it had disappeared; the
+pass was free, and further on a long channel, illuminated by the
+oblique rays of the sun, allowed the brig to pursue her track.
+
+"Well, Mr. Clawbonny," said Johnson, "can you explain to me the cause
+of that phenomenon?"
+
+"It is a very simple one," answered the doctor, "and happens very
+often. When those floating bodies are disengaged from each other by
+the thaw, they sail away separately, maintaining their balance; but
+by degrees, as they near the south, where the water is relatively
+warmer, their base, shaken by the collision with other icebergs,
+begins to melt and weaken; it then happens that their centre of gravity
+is displaced, and, naturally, they overturn. Only, if that one had
+turned over two minutes later, it would have crushed our vessel to
+pieces."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+NEWS
+
+
+The Polar circle was cleared at last. On the 30th of April, at midday,
+the _Forward_ passed abreast of Holsteinborg; picturesque mountains
+rose up on the eastern horizon. The sea appeared almost free from
+icebergs, and the few there were could easily be avoided. The wind
+veered round to the south-east, and the brig, under her mizensail,
+brigantine, topsails, and her topgallant sail, sailed up Baffin's
+Sea. It had been a particularly calm day, and the crew were able to
+take a little rest. Numerous birds were swimming and fluttering about
+round the vessel; amongst others, the doctor observed some
+_alca-alla_, very much like the teal, with black neck, wings and back,
+and white breast; they plunged with vivacity, and their immersion
+often lasted forty seconds.
+
+The day would not have been remarkable if the following fact, however
+extraordinary it may appear, had not occurred on board. At six o'clock
+in the morning Richard Shandon, re-entering his cabin after having
+been relieved, found upon the table a letter with this address:
+
+
+ "To the Commander,
+
+ "RICHARD SHANDON,
+
+ "On board the 'FORWARD,'
+
+ "Baffin's Sea."
+
+
+Shandon could not believe his own eyes, and before reading such a
+strange epistle he caused the doctor, James Wall and Johnson to be
+called, and showed them the letter.
+
+"That grows very strange," said Johnson.
+
+"It's delightful!" thought the doctor.
+
+"At last," cried Shandon, "we shall know the secret."
+
+With a quick hand he tore the envelope and read as follows:
+
+
+"COMMANDER,--The captain of the _Forward_ is pleased with the
+coolness, skill, and courage that your men, your officers, and
+yourself have shown on the late occasions, and begs you to give
+evidence of his gratitude to the crew.
+
+"Have the goodness to take a northerly direction towards Melville
+Bay, and from thence try and penetrate into Smith's Straits.
+
+ "THE CAPTAIN OF THE _Forward_,
+
+ "K. Z.
+
+ "Monday, April 30th,
+
+ "Abreast of Cape Walsingham."
+
+
+"Is that all?" cried the doctor.
+
+"That's all," replied Shandon, and the letter fell from his hands.
+
+"Well," said Wall, "this chimerical captain doesn't even mention
+coming on board, so I conclude that he never will come."
+
+"But how did this letter get here?" said Johnson.
+
+Shandon was silent.
+
+"Mr. Wall is right," replied the doctor, after picking up the letter
+and turning it over in every direction; "the captain won't come on
+board for an excellent reason----"
+
+"And what's that?" asked Shandon quickly.
+
+"Because he is here already," replied the doctor simply.
+
+"Already!" said Shandon. "What do you mean?"
+
+"How do you explain the arrival of this letter if such is not the
+case?"
+
+Johnson nodded his head in sign of approbation.
+
+"It is not possible!" said Shandon energetically. "I know every man
+of the crew. We should have to believe, in that case, that the captain
+has been with us ever since we set sail. It is not possible, I tell
+you. There isn't one of them that I haven't seen for more than two
+years in Liverpool; doctor, your supposition is inadmissible."
+
+"Then what do you admit, Shandon?"
+
+"Everything but that! I admit that the captain, or one of his men,
+has profited by the darkness, the fog, or anything you like, in order
+to slip on board; we are not very far from land; there are Esquimaux
+kayaks that pass unperceived between the icebergs; someone may have
+come on board and left the letter; the fog was intense enough to favour
+their design."
+
+"And to hinder them from seeing the brig," replied the doctor; "if
+we were not able to perceive an intruder slip on board, how could
+_he_ have discovered the _Forward_ in the midst of a fog?"
+
+"That is evident," exclaimed Johnson.
+
+"I come back, then," said the doctor, "to my first hypothesis. What
+do you think about it, Shandon?"
+
+"I think what you please," replied Shandon fiercely, "with the
+exception of supposing that this man is on board my vessel."
+
+"Perhaps," added Wall, "there may be amongst the crew a man of his
+who has received instructions from him."
+
+"That's very likely," added the doctor.
+
+"But which man?" asked Shandon. "I tell you I have known all my men
+a long time."
+
+"Anyhow," replied Johnson, "if this captain shows himself, let him
+be man or devil, we'll receive him; but we have another piece of
+information to draw from this letter."
+
+"What's that?" asked Shandon.
+
+"Why, that we are to direct our path not only towards Melville Bay,
+but again into Smith's Straits."
+
+"You are right," answered the doctor.
+
+"Smith's Straits?" echoed Shandon mechanically.
+
+"It is evident," replied Johnson, "that the destination of the
+_Forward_ is not to seek a North-West passage, as we shall leave to
+our left the only track that leads to it--that is to say, Lancaster
+Straits; that's what forebodes us difficult navigation in unknown
+seas."
+
+"Yes, Smith's Straits," replied Shandon, "that's the route the
+American Kane followed in 1853, and at the price of what dangers!
+For a long time he was thought to be lost in those dreadful latitudes!
+However, as we must go, go we must. But where? how far? To the Pole?"
+
+"And why not?" cried the doctor.
+
+The idea of such an insane attempt made the boatswain shrug his
+shoulders.
+
+"After all," resumed James Wall, "to come back to the captain, if
+he exists, I see nowhere on the coast of Greenland except Disko or
+Uppernawik where he can be waiting for us; in a few days we shall
+know what we may depend upon."
+
+"But," asked the doctor of Shandon, "aren't you going to make known
+the contents of that letter to the crew?"
+
+"With the commander's permission," replied Johnson, "I should do
+nothing of the kind."
+
+"And why so?" asked Shandon.
+
+"Because all that mystery tends to discourage the men: they are
+already very anxious about the fate of our expedition, and if the
+supernatural side of it is increased it may produce very serious
+results, and in a critical moment we could not rely upon them. What
+do you say about it, commander?"
+
+"And you, doctor--what do you think?" asked Shandon.
+
+"I think Johnson's reasoning is just."
+
+"And you, Wall?"
+
+"Unless there's better advice forthcoming, I shall stick to the
+opinion of these gentlemen."
+
+Shandon reflected seriously during a few minutes, and read the letter
+over again carefully.
+
+"Gentlemen," said he, "your opinion on this subject is certainly
+excellent, but I cannot adopt it."
+
+"Why not, Shandon?" asked the doctor.
+
+"Because the instructions of this letter are formal: they command
+me to give the captain's congratulations to the crew, and up till
+to-day I have always blindly obeyed his orders in whatever manner
+they have been transmitted to me, and I cannot----"
+
+"But----" said Johnson, who rightly dreaded the effect of such a
+communication upon the minds of the sailors.
+
+"My dear Johnson," answered Shandon, "your reasons are excellent,
+but read--'he begs you to give evidence of his gratitude to the crew.'"
+
+"Act as you think best," replied Johnson, who was besides a very strict
+observer of discipline. "Are we to muster the crew on deck?"
+
+"Do so," replied Shandon.
+
+The news of a communication having been received from the captain
+spread like wildfire on deck; the sailors quickly arrived at their
+post, and the commander read out the contents of the mysterious letter.
+The reading of it was received in a dead silence; the crew dispersed,
+a prey to a thousand suppositions. Clifton had heard enough to give
+himself up to all the wanderings of his superstitious imagination;
+he attributed a considerable share in this incident to the dog-captain,
+and when by chance he met him in his passage he never failed to salute
+him. "I told you the animal could write," he used to say to the sailors.
+No one said anything in answer to this observation, and even Bell,
+the carpenter himself, would not have known what to answer.
+
+Nevertheless it was certain to all that, in default of the captain,
+his spirit or his shadow watched on board; and henceforward the wisest
+of the crew abstained from exchanging their opinions about him.
+
+On the 1st of May, at noon, they were in 68 degrees latitude and 56
+degrees 32 minutes longitude. The temperature was higher and the
+thermometer marked twenty-five degrees above zero. The doctor was
+amusing himself with watching the antics of a white bear and two cubs
+on the brink of a pack that lengthened out the land. Accompanied by
+Wall and Simpson, he tried to give chase to them by means of the canoe;
+but the animal, of a rather warlike disposition, rapidly led away
+its offspring, and consequently the doctor was compelled to renounce
+following them up.
+
+Chilly Cape was doubled during the night under the influence of a
+favourable wind, and soon the high mountains of Disko rose in the
+horizon. Godhavn Bay, the residence of the Governor-General of the
+Danish Settlements, was left to the right. Shandon did not consider
+it worth while to stop, and soon outran the Esquimaux pirogues who
+were endeavouring to reach his ship.
+
+The Island of Disko is also called Whale Island. It was from this
+point that on the 12th of July, 1845, Sir John Franklin wrote to the
+Admiralty for the last time. It was also on that island on the 27th
+of August, 1859, that Captain McClintock set foot on his return,
+bringing back, alas! proofs too complete of the loss of the expedition.
+The coincidence of these two facts were noted by the doctor; that
+melancholy conjunction was prolific in memories, but soon the heights
+of Disko disappeared from his view.
+
+There were, at that time, numerous icebergs on the coasts, some of
+those which the strongest thaws are unable to detach; the continual
+series of ridges showed themselves under the strangest forms.
+
+The next day, towards three o'clock, they were bearing on to Sanderson
+Hope to the north-east. Land was left on the starboard at a distance
+of about fifteen miles; the mountains seemed tinged with a
+red-coloured bistre. During the evening, several whales of the
+finners species, which have fins on their backs, came playing about
+in the midst of the ice-trails, throwing out air and water from their
+blow-holes. It was during the night between the 3rd and 4th of May
+that the doctor saw for the first time the sun graze the horizon
+without dipping his luminous disc into it. Since the 31st of January
+the days had been getting longer and longer till the sun went down
+no more. To strangers not accustomed to the persistence of this
+perpetual light it was a constant subject of astonishment, and even
+of fatigue; it is almost impossible to understand to what extent
+obscurity is requisite for the well-being of our eyes. The doctor
+experienced real pain in getting accustomed to this light, rendered
+still more acute by the reflection of the sun's rays upon the plains
+of ice.
+
+On May 5th the _Forward_ headed the seventy-second parallel; two
+months later they would have met with numerous whalers under these
+high latitudes, but at present the straits were not sufficiently open
+to allow them to penetrate into Baffin's Bay. The following day the
+brig, after having headed Woman's Island, came in sight of Uppernawik,
+the most northerly settlement that Denmark possesses on these coasts.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+DANGEROUS NAVIGATION
+
+
+Shandon, Dr. Clawbonny, Johnson, Foker, and Strong, the cook, went
+on shore in the small boat. The governor, his wife, and five children,
+all of the Esquimaux race, came politely to meet the visitors. The
+doctor knew enough Danish to enable him to establish a very agreeable
+acquaintance with them; besides, Foker, who was interpreter of the
+expedition, as well as ice-master, knew about twenty words of the
+Greenland language, and if not ambitious, twenty words will carry
+you far. The governor was born on the island, and had never left his
+native country. He did the honours of the town, which is composed
+of three wooden huts, for himself and the Lutheran minister, of a
+school, and magazines stored with the produce of wrecks. The remainder
+consists of snow-huts, the entrance to which is attained by creeping
+through a hole.
+
+The greater part of the population came down to greet the _Forward_,
+and more than one native advanced as far as the middle of the bay
+in his kayak, fifteen feet long and scarcely two wide. The doctor
+knew that the word Esquimaux signified raw-fish-eater, and he
+likewise knew that the name was considered an insult in the country,
+for which reason he did not fail to address them by the title of
+Greenlanders, and nevertheless only by the look of their oily sealskin
+clothing, their boots of the same material, and all their greasy
+tainted appearance, it was easy to discover their accustomed food.
+Like all Ichthyophagans, they were half-eaten up with leprosy; and
+yet, for all that, were in no worse health.
+
+The Lutheran minister and his wife, with whom the doctor promised
+himself a private chat, were on a journey towards Proven on the south
+of Uppernawik; he was therefore reduced to getting information out
+of the governor. This chief magistrate did not seem to be very learned;
+a little less and he would have been an ass, a little more and he
+would have known how to read. The doctor, however, questioned him
+upon the commercial affairs, the customs and manners of the Esquimaux,
+and learnt by signs that seals were worth about 40 pounds delivered
+in Copenhagen, a bearskin forty Danish dollars, a blue foxskin four,
+and a white one two or three dollars. The doctor also wished, with
+an eye to completing his personal education, to visit one of the
+Esquimaux huts; it is almost impossible to imagine of what a learned
+man who is desirous of knowledge is capable. Happily the opening of
+those hovels was too narrow, and the enthusiastic fellow was not able
+to crawl in; it was very lucky for him, for there is nothing more
+repulsive than that accumulation of things living and dead, seal flesh
+or Esquimaux flesh, rotten fish and infectious wearing apparel, which
+constitute a Greenland hovel; no window to revive the unbreathable
+air, only a hole at the top of the hut, which gives free passage to
+the smoke, but does not allow the stench to go out.
+
+Foker gave these details to the doctor, who did not curse his
+corpulence the less for that. He wished to judge for himself about
+these emanations, _sui generis_.
+
+"I am sure," said he, "one gets used to it in the long run."
+
+_In the long run_ depicts Dr. Clawbonny in a single phrase. During
+the ethnographical studies of the worthy doctor, Shandon, according
+to his instructions, was occupied in procuring means of transport
+to cross the ice. He had to pay 4 pounds for a sledge and six dogs,
+and even then he had great difficulty in persuading the natives to
+part with them. Shandon wanted also to engage Hans Christian, the
+clever dog-driver, who made one of the party of Captain McClintock's
+expedition; but, unfortunately, Hans was at that time in Southern
+Greenland. Then came the grand question, the topic of the day, was
+there in Uppernawik a European waiting for the passage of the
+_Forward_? Did the governor know if any foreigner, an Englishman
+probably, had settled in those countries? To what epoch could he trace
+his last relations with whale or other ships? To these questions the
+governor replied that not one single foreigner had landed on that
+side of the coast for more than ten months.
+
+Shandon asked for the names of the last whalers seen there; he knew
+none of them. He was in despair.
+
+"You must acknowledge, doctor, that all this is quite inconceivable.
+Nothing at Cape Farewell, nothing at Disko Island, nothing at
+Uppernawik."
+
+"If when we get there you repeat 'Nothing in Melville Bay,' I shall
+greet you as the only captain of the _Forward_."
+
+The small boat came back to the brig towards evening, bringing back
+the visitors. Strong, in order to change the food a little, had
+procured several dozens of eider-duck eggs, twice as big as hens'
+eggs, and of greenish colour. It was not much, but the change was
+refreshing to a crew fed on salted meat. The wind became favourable
+the next day, but, however, Shandon did not command them to get under
+sail; he still wished to stay another day, and for conscience' sake
+to give any human being time to join the _Forward_. He even caused
+the 16-pounder to be fired from hour to hour; it thundered out with
+a great crash amidst the icebergs, but the noise only frightened the
+swarms of molly-mokes and rotches. During the night several rockets
+were sent up, but in vain. And thus they were obliged to set sail.
+
+On the 8th of May, at six o'clock in the morning, the _Forward_ under
+her topsails, foresails, and topgallant, lost sight of the Uppernawik
+settlement, and the hideous stakes to which were hung seal-guts and
+deer-paunches. The wind was blowing from the south-east, and the
+temperature went up to thirty-two degrees. The sun pierced through
+the fog, and the ice was getting a little loosened under its dissolving
+action. But the reflection of the white rays produced a sad effect
+on the eyesight of several of the crew. Wolsten, the gunsmith, Gripper,
+Clifton, and Bell were struck with snow blindness, a kind of weakness
+in the eyes very frequent in spring, and which determines, amongst
+the Esquimaux, numerous cases of blindness. The doctor advised those
+who were so afflicted and their companions in general to cover their
+faces with green gauze, and he was the first to put his own
+prescription into execution.
+
+The dogs bought by Shandon at Uppernawik were of a rather savage nature,
+but in the end they became accustomed to the ship; the captain did
+not take the arrival of these new comrades too much to heart, and
+he seemed to know their habits. Clifton was not the last to remark
+the fact that the captain must already have been in communication
+with his Greenland brethren, as on land they were always famished
+and reduced by incomplete nourishment; they only thought of
+recruiting themselves by the diet on board.
+
+On the 9th of May the _Forward_ touched within a few cables' length
+the most westerly of the Baffin Isles. The doctor noticed several
+rocks in the bay between the islands and the continent, those called
+Crimson Cliffs; they were covered over with snow as red as carmine,
+to which Dr. Kane gives a purely vegetable origin. Clawbonny wanted
+to consider this phenomenon nearer, but the ice prevented them
+approaching the coast; although the temperature had a tendency to
+rise, it was easy enough to see that the icebergs and ice-streams
+were accumulating to the north of Baffin's Sea. The land offered a
+very different aspect from that of Uppernawik; immense glaciers were
+outlined on the horizon against a greyish sky. On the 10th the
+_Forward_ left Hingston Bay on the right, near to the seventy-fourth
+degree of latitude. Several hundred miles westward the Lancaster
+Channel opened out into the sea.
+
+But afterwards that immense extent of water disappeared under
+enormous fields of ice, upon which hummocks rose up as regularly as
+a crystallisation of the same substance. Shandon had the steam put
+on, and up to the 11th of May the _Forward_ wound amongst the sinuous
+rocks, leaving the print of a track on the sky, caused by the black
+smoke from her funnels. But new obstacles were soon encountered; the
+paths were getting closed up in consequence of the incessant
+displacement of the floating masses; at every minute a failure of
+water in front of the _Forward's_ prow became imminent, and if she
+had been nipped it would have been difficult to extricate her. They
+all knew it, and thought about it.
+
+On board this vessel, without aim or known destination, foolishly
+seeking to advance towards the north, some symptoms of hesitation
+were manifested amongst those men, accustomed to an existence of
+danger; many, forgetting the advantages offered, regretted having
+ventured so far, and already a certain demoralisation prevailed in
+their minds, still more increased by Clifton's fears, and the idle
+talk of two or three of the leaders, such as Pen, Gripper, Warren,
+and Wolston.
+
+To the uneasiness of the crew were joined overwhelming fatigues, for
+on the 12th of May the brig was closed in on every side; her steam
+was powerless, and it was necessary to force a road through the
+ice-fields. The working of the saws was very difficult in the floes,
+which measured from six to seven feet in thickness. When two parallel
+grooves divided the ice for the length of a hundred feet, they had
+to break the interior part with hatchets or handspikes; then took
+place the elongation of the anchors, fixed in a hole by means of a
+thick auger; afterwards the working of the capstan began, and in this
+way the vessel was hauled over. The greatest difficulty consisted
+in driving the smashed pieces under the floes in order to open up
+a free passage for the ship, and to thrust them away they were
+compelled to use long iron-spiked poles.
+
+At last, what with the working of the saws, the hauling, the capstan
+and poles, incessant, dangerous, and forced work, in the midst of
+fogs or thick snow, the temperature relatively low, ophthalmic
+suffering and moral uneasiness, all contributed to discourage the
+crew, and react on the men's imagination. When sailors have an
+energetic, audacious, and convinced man to do with, who knows what
+he wants, where he is bound for, and what end he has in view, confidence
+sustains them in spite of everything. They make one with their chief,
+feeling strong in his strength, and quiet in his tranquillity; but
+on the brig it was felt that the commander was not sure of himself,
+that he hesitated before his unknown end and destination. In spite
+of his energetic nature, his weakness showed itself in his changing
+orders, incomplete manoeuvres, stormy reflections, and a thousand
+details which could not escape the notice of the crew.
+
+Besides, Shandon was not captain of the ship, a sufficient reason
+for argument about his orders; from argument to a refusal to obey
+the step is easy. The discontented soon added to their number the
+first engineer, who up to now had remained a slave to his duty.
+
+On May 16th, six days after the _Forward's_ arrival at the icebergs,
+Shandon had not gained two miles northward, and the ice threatened
+to freeze in the brig till the following season. This was becoming
+dangerous. Towards eight in the evening Shandon and the doctor,
+accompanied by Garry, went on a voyage of discovery in the midst of
+the immense plains; they took care not to go too far away from the
+vessel, as it was difficult to fix any landmarks in those white
+solitudes, the aspects of which changed constantly.
+
+The refraction produced strange effects; they still astonished the
+doctor; where he thought he had only one foot to leap he found it
+was five or six, or the contrary; and in both cases the result was
+a fall, if not dangerous, at least painful, on the frozen ice as hard
+as glass.
+
+Shandon and his two companions went in search of a practicable passage.
+Three miles from the ship they succeeded, not without trouble, in
+climbing the iceberg, which was perhaps three hundred feet high.
+
+From this point their view extended over that desolated mass which
+looked like the ruins of a gigantic town with its beaten-down obelisks,
+its overthrown steeples and palaces turned upside down all in a
+lump--in fact, a genuine chaos. The sun threw long oblique rays of
+a light without warmth, as if heat-absorbing substances were placed
+between it and that gloomy country. The sea seemed to be frozen to
+the remotest limits of view.
+
+"How shall we get through?" exclaimed the doctor.
+
+"I have not the least idea," replied Shandon; "but we will get through,
+even if we are obliged to employ powder to blow up those mountains,
+for I certainly won't let that ice shut me up till next spring."
+
+"Nevertheless, such was the fate of the _Fox_, almost in these same
+quarters. Never mind," continued the doctor, "we shall get through
+with a little philosophy. Believe me, that is worth all the engines
+in the world."
+
+"You must acknowledge," replied Shandon, "that the year doesn't begin
+under very favourable auspices."
+
+"That is incontestable, and I notice that Baffin's Sea has a tendency
+to return to the same state in which it was before 1817."
+
+"Then you think, doctor, that the present state of things has not
+always existed?"
+
+"Yes; from time to time there are vast breakings up which scientific
+men can scarcely explain; thus, up to 1817 this sea was constantly
+obstructed, when suddenly an immense cataclysm took place which drove
+back these icebergs into the ocean, the great part of which were
+stranded on Newfoundland Bank. From that time Baffin's Bay has been
+almost free, and has become the haunt of numerous whalers."
+
+"Then, since that epoch, voyages to the north have been easier?"
+
+"Incomparably so; but for the last few years it has been observed
+that the bay has a tendency to be closed up again, and according to
+investigations made by navigators, it may probably be so for a long
+time--a still greater reason for us to go on as far as possible. Just
+now we look like people who get into unknown galleries, the doors
+of which are always shut behind them."
+
+"Do you advise me to back out?" asked Shandon, endeavouring to read
+the answer in the doctor's eyes.
+
+"I! I have never known how to take a step backward, and should we
+never return, I say 'Go ahead.' However, I should like to make known
+to you that if we do anything imprudent, we know very well what we
+are exposed to."
+
+"Well, Garry, what do you think about it?" asked Shandon of the sailor.
+
+"I? Commander, I should go on; I'm of the same opinion as Mr.
+Clawbonny; but you do as you please; command, and we will obey."
+
+"They don't all speak like you, Garry," replied Shandon. "They aren't
+all in an obedient humour! Suppose they were to refuse to execute
+my orders?"
+
+"Commander," replied Garry coldly, "I have given you my advice because
+you asked me for it; but you are not obliged to act upon it."
+
+Shandon did not reply; he attentively examined the horizon, and
+descended with his two companions on to the ice-field.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+THE DEVIL'S THUMB
+
+
+During the commander's absence the men had gone through divers works
+in order to make the ship fit to avoid the pressure of the ice-fields.
+Pen, Clifton, Gripper, Bolton, and Simpson were occupied in this
+laborious work; the stoker and the two engineers were even obliged
+to come to the aid of their comrades, for, from the instant they were
+not wanted at the engine, they again became sailors, and, as such,
+they could be employed in all kinds of work on board. But this was
+not accomplished without a great deal of grumbling.
+
+"I'll tell you what," said Pen, "I've had enough of it, and if in
+three days the breaking up isn't come, I'll swear to God that I'll
+chuck up!"
+
+"You'll chuck up?" replied Gripper; "you'd do better to help us to
+back out. Do you think we are in the humour to winter here till next
+year?"
+
+"To tell you the truth, it would be a dreary winter," said Plover,
+"for the ship is exposed from every quarter."
+
+"And who knows," added Brunton, "if even next spring we should find
+the sea freer than it is now?"
+
+"We aren't talking about next spring," said Pen; "to-day's Thursday;
+if next Sunday morning the road ain't clear, we'll back out south."
+
+"That's the ticket!" cried Clifton.
+
+"Are you all agreed?" said Pen.
+
+"Yes," answered all his comrades.
+
+"That's right enough," answered Warren, "for if we are obliged to
+work like this, hauling the ship by the strength of our arms, my advice
+is to backwater."
+
+"We'll see about that on Sunday," answered Wolsten.
+
+"As soon as I get the order," said Brunton, "I'll soon get my steam
+up."
+
+"Or we'd manage to get it up ourselves," said Clifton.
+
+"If any of the officers," said Pen, "wants to have the pleasure of
+wintering here, we'll let him. He can build himself a snow-hut like
+the Esquimaux."
+
+"Nothing of the kind, Pen," replied Brunton; "we won't leave anybody.
+You understand that, you others. Besides, I don't think it would be
+difficult to persuade the commander; he already seems very uncertain,
+and if we were quietly to propose it----"
+
+"I don't know that," said Plover; "Richard Shandon is a hard,
+headstrong man, and we should have to sound him carefully."
+
+"When I think," replied Bolton, with a covetous sigh, "that in a month
+we might be back in Liverpool; we could soon clear the southern
+ice-line. The pass in Davis's Straits will be open in the beginning
+of June, and we shall only have to let ourselves drift into the
+Atlantic."
+
+"Besides," said the prudent Clifton, "if we bring back the commander
+with us, acting under his responsibility, our pay and bounty money
+will be sure; whilst if we return alone it won't be so certain."
+
+"That's certain!" said Plover; "that devil of a Clifton speaks like
+a book. Let us try to have nothing to explain to the Admiralty; it's
+much safer to leave no one behind us."
+
+"But if the officers refuse to follow us?" replied Pen, who wished
+to push his comrades to an extremity.
+
+To such a question they were puzzled to reply.
+
+"We shall see about it when the time comes," replied Bolton; "besides,
+it would be enough to win Richard Shandon over to our side. We shall
+have no difficulty about that."
+
+"Anyhow," said Pen, swearing, "there's something I'll leave here if
+I get an arm eaten in the attempt."
+
+"Ah! you mean the dog," said Plover.
+
+"Yes, the dog; and before long I'll settle his hash!"
+
+"The more so," replied Clifton, coming back to his favourite theme,
+"that the dog is the cause of all our misfortunes."
+
+"He's cast an evil spell over us," said Plover.
+
+"It's through him we're in an iceberg," said Gripper.
+
+"He's the cause that we've had more ice against us than has ever been
+seen at this time of year," said Wolsten.
+
+"He's the cause of my bad eyes," said Brunton.
+
+"He's cut off the gin and brandy," added Pen.
+
+"He's the cause of everything," said the assembly, getting excited.
+
+"And he's captain into the bargain!" cried Clifton.
+
+"Well, captain of ill-luck," said Pen, whose unreasonable fury grew
+stronger at every word; "you wanted to come here, and here you'll
+stay."
+
+"But how are we to nap him?" said Plover.
+
+"We've a good opportunity," replied Clifton; "the commander isn't
+on deck, the lieutenant is asleep in his cabin, and the fog's thick
+enough to stop Johnson seeing us."
+
+"But where's the dog?" cried Pen.
+
+"He's asleep near the coalhole," replied Clifton, "and if anybody
+wants----"
+
+"I'll take charge of him," answered Pen furiously.
+
+"Look out, Pen, he's got teeth that could snap an iron bar in two."
+
+"If he moves I'll cut him open," cried Pen, taking his knife in one
+hand. He bounced in between decks, followed by Warren, who wanted
+to help him in his undertaking. They quickly came back, carrying the
+animal in their arms, strongly muzzled, with his paws bound tightly
+together. They had taken him by surprise whilst he slept, so that
+the unfortunate dog could not escape them.
+
+"Hurrah for Pen!" cried Plover.
+
+"What do you mean to do with him now you've got him?" asked Clifton.
+
+"Why, drown him, and if ever he gets over it----" replied Pen, with
+a fearful smile of satisfaction.
+
+About two hundred steps from the vessel there was a seal-hole, a kind
+of circular crevice cut out by the teeth of that amphibious animal,
+hollowed out from underneath, and through which the seal comes up
+to breathe on to the surface of the ice. To keep this aperture from
+closing up he has to be very careful because the formation of his
+jaws would not enable him to bore through the hole again from the
+outside, and in a moment of danger he would fall a prey to his enemies.
+Pen and Warren directed their steps towards this crevice, and there,
+in spite of the dog's energetic efforts, he was unmercifully
+precipitated into the sea. An enormous lump of ice was then placed
+over the opening, thus closing all possible issue to the poor animal,
+walled up in a watery prison.
+
+"Good luck to you, captain," cried the brutal sailor.
+
+Shortly afterwards Pen and Warren returned on deck. Johnson had seen
+nothing of this performance. The fog thickened round about the ship,
+and snow began to fall with violence. An hour later, Richard Shandon,
+the doctor, and Garry rejoined the _Forward_. Shandon had noticed
+a pass in a north-eastern direction of which he was resolved to take
+advantage, and gave his orders in consequence. The crew obeyed with
+a certain activity, not without hinting to Shandon that it was
+impossible to go further on, and that they only gave him three more
+days' obedience. During a part of the night and the following day
+the working of the saws and the hauling were actively kept up; the
+_Forward_ gained about two miles further north. On the 18th she was
+in sight of land, and at five or six cable-lengths from a peculiar
+peak, called from its strange shape the Devil's Thumb.
+
+It was there that the _Prince Albert_ in 1851, and the _Advance_ with
+Kane, in 1853, were kept prisoners by the ice for several weeks. The
+odd form of the Devil's Thumb, the dreary deserts in its vicinity,
+the vast circus of icebergs--some of them more than three hundred
+feet high--the cracking of the ice, reproduced by the echo in so
+sinister a manner, rendered the position of the _Forward_ horribly
+dreary. Shandon understood the necessity of getting out of it and
+going further ahead. Twenty-four hours later, according to his
+estimation, he had been able to clear the fatal coast for about two
+miles, but this was not enough. Shandon, overwhelmed with fear, and
+the false situation in which he was placed, lost both courage and
+energy; in order to obey his instructions and get further north, he
+had thrown his vessel into an excessively perilous situation. The
+men were worn out by the hauling; it required more than three hours
+to hollow out a channel twenty feet long, through ice that was usually
+from four to five feet thick. The health of the crew threatened to
+break down. Shandon was astonished at the silence of his men and their
+unaccustomed obedience, but he feared that it was the calm before
+the storm. Who can judge, then, of his painful disappointment,
+surprise, and despair when he perceived that in consequence of an
+insensible movement of the ice-field the _Forward_ had, during the
+night from the 18th to the 19th, lost all the advantage she had gained
+with so much toil? On the Saturday morning they were once more opposite
+the ever-threatening Devil's Thumb, and in a still more critical
+position. The icebergs became more numerous, and drifted by in the
+fog like phantoms. Shandon was in a state of complete demoralisation,
+for fright had taken possession of the dauntless man and his crew.
+Shandon had heard the dog's disappearance spoken about, but dared
+not punish those who were guilty of it. He feared that a rebellion
+might be the consequence. The weather was fearful during the whole
+day; the snow rose up in thick whirlpools, wrapping up the _Forward_
+in an impenetrable cloak. Sometimes, under the action of the storm,
+the fog was torn asunder, and displayed towards land, raised up like
+a spectre, the Devil's Thumb.
+
+The _Forward_ was anchored to an immense block of ice; it was all
+that could be done; there was nothing more to attempt; the obscurity
+became denser, and the man at the helm could not see James Wall, who
+was on duty in the bow. Shandon withdrew to his cabin, a prey to
+unremitting uneasiness; the doctor was putting his voyage notes in
+order; one half the crew remained on deck, the other half stayed in
+the common cabin. At one moment, when the storm increased in fury,
+the Devil's Thumb seemed to rise up out of all proportion in the midst
+of the fog.
+
+"Good God!" cried Simpson, drawing back with fright.
+
+"What the devil's that?" said Foker, and exclamations rose up in every
+direction.
+
+"It is going to smash us!"
+
+"We are lost!"
+
+"Mr. Wall! Mr. Wall!"
+
+"It's all over with us!"
+
+"Commander! Commander!"
+
+These cries were simultaneously uttered by the men on watch. Wall
+fled to the quarter-deck, and Shandon, followed by the doctor, rushed
+on deck to look. In the midst of the fog the Devil's Thumb seemed
+to have suddenly neared the brig, and seemed to have grown in a most
+fantastic manner. At its summit rose up a second cone, turned upside
+down and spindled on its point; its enormous mass threatened to crush
+the ship, as it was oscillating and ready to fall. It was a most fearful
+sight; every one instinctively drew back, and several sailors,
+leaping on to the ice, abandoned the ship.
+
+"Let no one move!" cried the commander in a severe voice. "Every one
+to his post!"
+
+"How now, my friends? There's nothing to be frightened at!" said the
+doctor. "There's no danger! Look, commander, look ahead, Mr. Wall;
+it's only an effect of the mirage, nothing else."
+
+"You are quite right, Mr. Clawbonny," answered Johnson; "those fools
+were frightened at a shadow."
+
+After the doctor had spoken most of the sailors drew near, and their
+fear changed to admiration at the wonderful phenomenon, which shortly
+disappeared from sight.
+
+"They call that a mirage?" said Clifton. "Well, you may believe me
+that the devil has something to do with it."
+
+"That's certain!" replied Gripper.
+
+But when the fog cleared away it disclosed to the eyes of the commander
+an immense free and unexpected passage; it seemed to run away from
+the coast, and he therefore determined to seize such a favourable
+hazard. Men were placed on each side of the creek, hawsers were lowered
+down to them, and they began to tow the vessel in a northerly direction.
+During long hours this work was actively executed in silence. Shandon
+caused the steam to be got up, in order to take advantage of the
+fortunate discovery of this channel.
+
+"This," said he to Johnson, "is a most providential hazard, and if
+we can only get a few miles ahead, we shall probably get to the end
+of our misfortunes."
+
+"Brunton! stir up the fires, and as soon as there's enough pressure
+let me know. In the meantime our men will pluck up their courage--that
+will be so much gained. They are in a hurry to run away from the Devil's
+Thumb; we'll take advantage of their good inclinations!"
+
+All at once the progress of the _Forward_ was abruptly arrested.
+
+"What's up?" cried Shandon. "I say, Wall! have we broken our
+tow-ropes?"
+
+"Not at all, commander," answered Wall, looking over the side. "Hallo!
+Here are the men coming back again. They are climbing the ship's side
+as if the devil was at their heels."
+
+"What the deuce can it be?" cried Shandon, rushing forward.
+
+"On board! On board!" cried the terrified sailors.
+
+Shandon looked in a northerly direction, and shuddered in spite of
+himself. A strange animal, with appalling movements, whose foaming
+tongue emerged from enormous jaws, was leaping about at a cable's
+length from the ship. In appearance he seemed to be about twenty feet
+high, with hair like bristles; he was following up the sailors, whilst
+his formidable tail, ten feet long, was sweeping the snow and throwing
+it up in thick whirlwinds. The sight of such a monster riveted the
+most daring to the spot.
+
+"It's a bear!" said one.
+
+"It's the Gevaudan beast!"
+
+"It's the lion of the Apocalypse!"
+
+Shandon ran to his cabin for a gun he always kept loaded. The doctor
+armed himself, and held himself in readiness to fire upon an animal
+which, by its dimensions, recalled the antediluvian quadrupeds. He
+neared the ship in immense leaps; Shandon and the doctor fired at
+the same time, when, suddenly, the report of their firearms, shaking
+the atmospheric stratum, produced an unexpected effect. The doctor
+looked attentively, and burst out laughing.
+
+"It's the refraction!" he exclaimed.
+
+"Only the refraction!" repeated Shandon. But a fearful exclamation
+from the crew interrupted them.
+
+"The dog!" said Clifton.
+
+"The dog, captain!" repeated all his comrades.
+
+"Himself!" cried Pen; "always that cursed brute."
+
+They were not mistaken--it was the dog. Having got loose from his
+shackles, he had regained the surface by another crevice. At that
+instant the refraction, through a phenomenon common to these
+latitudes, caused him to appear under formidable dimensions, which
+the shaking of the air had dispersed; but the vexatious effect was
+none the less produced upon the minds of the sailors, who were very
+little disposed to admit an explanation of the fact by purely physical
+reasons. The adventure of the Devil's Thumb, the reappearance of the
+dog under such fantastic circumstances, gave the finishing touch to
+their mental faculties, and murmurs broke out on all sides.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+CAPTAIN HATTERAS
+
+
+The _Forward_, under steam, rapidly made its way between the
+ice-mountains and the icebergs. Johnson was at the wheel. Shandon,
+with his snow spectacles, was examining the horizon, but his joy was
+of short duration, for he soon discovered that the passage ended in
+a circus of mountains. However, he preferred going on, in spite of
+the difficulty, to going back. The dog followed the brig at a long
+distance, running along the plain, but if he lagged too far behind
+a singular whistle could be distinguished, which he immediately
+obeyed. The first time this whistle was heard the sailors looked round
+about them; they were alone on deck all together, and no stranger
+was to be seen; and yet the whistle was again heard from time to time.
+Clifton was the first alarmed.
+
+"Do you hear?" said he. "Just look how that animal answers when he
+hears the whistle."
+
+"I can scarcely believe my eyes," answered Gripper.
+
+"It's all over!" cried Pen. "I don't go any further."
+
+"Pen's right!" replied Brunton; "it's tempting God!"
+
+"Tempting the devil!" replied Clifton. "I'd sooner lose my bounty
+money than go a step further."
+
+"We shall never get back!" said Bolton in despair.
+
+The crew had arrived at the highest pitch of insubordination.
+
+"Not a step further!" cried Wolsten. "Are you all of the same mind?"
+
+"Ay! ay!" answered all the sailors.
+
+"Come on, then," said Bolton; "let's go and find the commander; I'll
+undertake the talking."
+
+The sailors in a tight group swayed away towards the poop. The
+_Forward_ at the time was penetrating into a vast circus, which
+measured perhaps 800 feet in diameter, and with the exception of one
+entrance--that by which the vessel had come--was entirely closed up.
+
+Shandon said that he had just imprisoned himself; but what was he
+to do? How were they to retrace their steps? He felt his responsibility,
+and his hand grasped the telescope. The doctor, with folded arms,
+kept silent; he was contemplating the walls of ice, the medium
+altitude of which was over 300 feet. A foggy dome remained suspended
+above the gulf. It was at this instant that Bolton addressed his speech
+to the commander.
+
+"Commander!" said he in a trembling voice, "we can't go any further."
+
+"What do you say?" replied Shandon, whose consciousness of
+disregarded authority made the blood rise to the roots of his hair.
+
+"Commander," replied Bolton, "we say that we've done enough for that
+invisible captain, and we are decided to go no further ahead."
+
+"You are decided?" cried Shandon. "You talk thus, Bolton? Take care!"
+
+"Your threats are all the same to us," brutally replied Pen; "we won't
+go an inch further."
+
+Shandon advanced towards the mutineers; at the same time the mate
+came up and said in a whisper: "Commander, if you wish to get out
+of here we haven't a minute to lose; there's an iceberg drifting up
+the pass, and it is very likely to cork up all issue and keep us
+prisoners."
+
+Shandon examined the situation.
+
+"You will give an account of your conduct later on, you fellows,"
+said he. "Now heave aboard!"
+
+The sailors rushed to their posts, and the _Forward_ quickly veered
+round; the fires were stuffed with coals; the great question was to
+outrun the floating mountain. It was a struggle between the brig and
+the iceberg. The former, in order to get through, was running south;
+the latter was drifting north, ready to close up every passage.
+
+"Steam up! steam up!" cried Shandon. "Do you hear, Brunton?"
+
+The _Forward_ glided like a bird amidst the struggling icebergs, which
+her prow sent to the right-about; the brig's hull shivered under the
+action of the screw, and the manometer indicated a prodigious tension
+of steam, for it whistled with a deafening noise.
+
+"Load the valves!" cried Shandon, and the engineer obeyed at the risk
+of blowing up the ship; but his despairing efforts were in vain. The
+iceberg, caught up by an undercurrent, rapidly approached the pass.
+The brig was still about three cables' length from it, when the
+mountain, entering like a corner-stone into the open space, strongly
+adhered to its neighbours and closed up all issue.
+
+"We are lost!" cried Shandon, who could not retain the imprudent
+words.
+
+"Lost!" repeated the crew.
+
+"Let them escape who can!" said some.
+
+"Lower the shore boats!" said others.
+
+"To the steward's room!" cried Pen and several of his band, "and if
+we are to be drowned, let's drown ourselves in gin!"
+
+Disorder among the men was at its height. Shandon felt himself
+overcome; when he wished to command, he stammered and hesitated. His
+thought was unable to make way through his words. The doctor was
+walking about in agitation. Johnson stoically folded his arms and
+said nothing. All at once a strong, imperious, and energetic voice
+was heard to pronounce these words:
+
+"Every man to his post and tack about!"
+
+Johnson started, and, hardly knowing what he did, turned the wheel
+rapidly. He was just in time, for the brig, launched at full speed,
+was about to crush herself against her prison walls. But while Johnson
+was instinctively obeying, Shandon, Clawbonny, the crew, and all down
+to the stoker Warren, who had abandoned his fires, even black Strong,
+who had left his cooking, were all mustered on deck, and saw emerge
+from that cabin the only man who was in possession of the key, and
+that man was Garry, the sailor.
+
+"Sir!" cried Shandon, becoming pale. "Garry--you--by what right do
+you command here?"
+
+"Dick," called out Garry, reproducing that whistle which had so much
+surprised the crew. The dog, at the sound of his right name, jumped
+with one bound on to the poop and lay quietly down at his master's
+feet. The crew did not say a word. The key which the captain of the
+_Forward_ alone possessed, the dog sent by him, and who came thus
+to verify his identity, that commanding accent which it was impossible
+to mistake--all this acted strongly on the minds of the sailors, and
+was sufficient to establish Garry's authority.
+
+Besides, Garry was no longer recognisable; he had cut off the long
+whiskers which had covered his face, which made it look more energetic
+and imperious than ever; dressed in the clothes of his rank which
+had been deposited in the cabin, he appeared in the insignia of
+commander.
+
+Then immediately, with that mobility which characterised them, the
+crew of the _Forward_ cried out--"Three cheers for the captain!"
+
+"Shandon!" said the latter to his second, "muster the crew; I am going
+to inspect it!"
+
+Shandon obeyed and gave orders with an altered voice. The captain
+advanced to meet his officers and men, saying something suitable to
+each, and treating each according to his past conduct. When he had
+finished the inspection, he returned on to the poop, and with a calm
+voice pronounced the following words:
+
+"Officers and sailors, like you, I am English, and my motto is that
+of Nelson, 'England expects that every man will do his duty.' As an
+Englishman I am resolved, we are resolved, that no bolder men shall
+go further than we have been. As an Englishman I will not allow, we
+will not allow, other people to have the glory of pushing further
+north themselves. If ever human foot can step upon the land of the
+North Pole, it shall be the foot of an Englishman. Here is our
+country's flag. I have equipped this vessel, and consecrated my
+fortune to this enterprise, and, if necessary, I shall consecrate
+to it my life and yours; for I am determined that these colours shall
+float on the North Pole. Take courage. From this day, for every degree
+we can gain northwards the sum of a thousand pounds will be awarded
+to you. There are ninety, for we are now in the seventy-second. Count
+them. Besides, my name is enough. It means energy and patriotism.
+I am Captain Hatteras!"
+
+"Captain Hatteras!" exclaimed Shandon, and that name, well known to
+English sailors, was whispered amongst the crew.
+
+"Now," continued Hatteras, "anchor the brig to the ice, put out the
+fires, and each of you return to your usual work. Shandon, I wish
+to hold a council with you relative to affairs on board. Join me with
+the doctor, Wall, and the boatswain in my cabin. Johnson, disperse
+the men."
+
+Hatteras, calm and haughty, quietly left the poop. In the meantime
+Shandon was anchoring the brig.
+
+Who, then, was this Hatteras, and for what reason did his name make
+such a profound impression upon the crew? John Hatteras was the only
+son of a London brewer, who died in 1852 worth six millions of money.
+Still young, he embraced the maritime career in spite of the splendid
+fortune awaiting him. Not that he felt any vocation for commerce,
+but the instinct of geographical discoveries was dear to him. He had
+always dreamt of placing his foot where no mortal foot had yet soiled
+the ground.
+
+At the age of twenty he was already in possession of the vigorous
+constitution of a thin and sanguine man; an energetic face, with lines
+geometrically traced; a high and perpendicular forehead; cold but
+handsome eyes; thin lips, which set off a mouth from which words rarely
+issued; a middle stature; solidly-jointed limbs, put in motion by
+iron muscles; the whole forming a man endowed with a temperament fit
+for anything. When you saw him you felt he was daring; when you heard
+him you knew he was coldly determined; his was a character that never
+drew back, ready to stake the lives of others as well as his own.
+It was well to think twice before following him in his expeditions.
+
+John Hatteras was proud of being an Englishman. A Frenchman once said
+to him, with what he thought was refined politeness and amiability:
+
+"If I were not a Frenchman I should like to be an Englishman."
+
+"And if I were not an Englishman," answered Hatteras, "I should like
+to be an Englishman."
+
+That answer revealed the character of the man. It was a great grief
+to him that Englishmen had not the monopoly of geographical
+discoveries, and were, in fact, rather behind other nations in that
+field.
+
+Christopher Columbus, the discoverer of America, was a Genoese; Vasco
+da Gama, a Portuguese, discovered India; another Portuguese,
+Fernando de Andrada, China; and a third, Magellan, the Terra del Fuego.
+Canada was discovered by Jacques Cartier, a Frenchman; Labrador,
+Brazil, the Cape of Good Hope, the Azores, Madeira, Newfoundland,
+Guinea, Congo, Mexico, Cape Blanco, Greenland, Iceland, the South
+Seas, California, Japan, Cambodia, Peru, Kamtchatka, the Philippines,
+Spitzbergen, Cape Horn, Behring's Straits, Tasmania, New Zealand,
+New Brittany, New Holland, Louisiana, Jean Mayen Island, were
+discovered by Icelanders, Scandinavians, French, Russians,
+Portuguese, Danes, Spaniards, Genoese, and Dutch, but not one by an
+Englishman. Captain Hatteras could not reconcile himself to the fact
+that Englishmen were excluded from the glorious list of navigators
+who made the great discoveries of the 15th and 16th centuries.
+
+Hatteras consoled himself a little when he turned to more modern times.
+Then Englishmen had the best of it with Sturt, Burke, Wills, King,
+and Grey in Australia; with Palliser in America; with Cyril Graham,
+Wadington, and Cummingham in India; with Burton, Speke, Grant, and
+Livingstone in Africa.
+
+But for a man like Hatteras this was not enough; from his point of
+view these bold travellers were _improvers_ rather than _inventors_;
+and he was determined to do something better, and he would have
+invented a country if he could, only to have the honour of discovering
+it. Now he had noticed that, although Englishmen did not form a
+majority amongst ancient discoverers, and that he had to go back to
+Cook in 1774 to obtain New Caledonia and the Sandwich Isles, where
+the unfortunate captain perished in 1778, yet there existed,
+nevertheless, a corner of the globe where they seemed to have united
+all their efforts. This corner was precisely the boreal lands and
+seas of North America. The list of Polar discoveries may be thus
+written:
+
+Nova Zembla, discovered by Willoughby, in 1553; Weigatz Island, by
+Barrough, in 1556; the West Coast of Greenland, by Davis, in 1585;
+Davis's Straits, by Davis, in 1587; Spitzbergen, by Willoughby, in
+1596; Hudson's Bay, by Hudson, in 1610; Baffin's Bay, by Baffin, in
+1616.
+
+In more modern times, Hearne, Mackenzie, John Ross, Parry, Franklin,
+Richardson, Beechey, James Ross, Back, Dease, Simpson, Rae,
+Inglefield, Belcher, Austin, Kellett, Moore, McClure, Kennedy, and
+McClintock have continually searched those unknown lands.
+
+The limits of the northern coasts of America had been fixed, and the
+North-West passage almost discovered, but this was not enough; there
+was something better still to be done, and John Hatteras had twice
+attempted it by equipping two ships at his own expense. He wanted
+to reach the North Pole, and thus crown the series of English
+discoveries by one of the most illustrious attempts. To attain the
+Pole was the aim of his life.
+
+After a few successful cruises in the Southern seas, Hatteras
+endeavoured for the first time, in 1846, to go north by Baffin's Sea;
+but he could not get beyond the seventy-fourth degree of latitude;
+he was then commanding the sloop _Halifax_. His crew suffered
+atrocious torments, and John Hatteras pushed his adventurous
+rashness so far, that, afterwards, sailors were little tempted to
+re-commence similar expeditions under such a chief.
+
+However, in 1850 Hatteras succeeded in enrolling on the schooner
+_Farewell_ about twenty determined men, tempted principally by the
+high prize offered for their audacity. It was upon that occasion that
+Dr. Clawbonny entered into correspondence with John Hatteras, whom
+he did not know, requesting to join the expedition, but happily for
+the doctor the post was already filled up. The _Farewell_, following
+the track taken in 1817 by the _Neptune_ from Aberdeen, got up to
+the north of Spitzbergen as far as the seventy-sixth degree of
+latitude. There the expedition was compelled to winter. But the
+sufferings of the crew from the intense cold were so great that not
+a single man saw England again, with the exception of Hatteras himself,
+who was brought back to his own country by a Danish whaler after a
+walk of more than two hundred miles across the ice.
+
+The sensation produced by the return of this one man was immense.
+Who in future would dare to follow Hatteras in his mad attempts?
+However, he did not despair of beginning again. His father, the brewer,
+died, and he became possessor of a nabob's fortune. Soon after a
+geographical fact bitterly stirred up John Hatteras. A brig, the
+_Advance_, manned by seventeen men, equipped by a merchant named
+Grinnell, under the command of Dr. Kane, and sent in search of Sir
+John Franklin, advanced in 1853 through Baffin's Sea and Smith's
+Strait, beyond the eighty-second degree of boreal latitude, much
+nearer the Pole than any of his predecessors. Now, this vessel was
+American, Grinnell was American, and Kane was American. The
+Englishman's disdain for the Yankee will be easily understood; in
+the heart of Hatteras it changed to hatred; he was resolved to outdo
+his audacious competitor and reach the Pole itself.
+
+For two years he had been living incognito in Liverpool, passing
+himself off as a sailor; he recognised in Richard Shandon the man
+he wanted; he sent him an offer by an anonymous letter, and one to
+Dr. Clawbonny at the same time. The _Forward_ was built, armed, and
+equipped. Hatteras took great care to conceal his name, for had it
+been known he would not have found a single man to accompany him.
+He was determined not to take the command of the brig except in a
+moment of danger, and when his crew had gone too far to draw back.
+He had in reserve, as we have seen, such offers of money to make to
+the men that not one of them would refuse to follow him to the other
+end of the world; and, in fact, it was right to the other end of the
+world that he meant to go. Circumstances had become critical, and
+John Hatteras had made himself known. His dog, the faithful Dick,
+the companion of his voyages, was the first to recognise him. Luckily
+for the brave and unfortunately for the timid, it was well and duly
+established that John Hatteras was the captain of the _Forward_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE PROJECTS OF HATTERAS
+
+
+The appearance of this bold personage was appreciated in different
+ways by the crew; part of them completely rallied round him, either
+from love of money or daring; others submitted because they could
+not help themselves, reserving their right to protest later on;
+besides, resistance to such a man seemed, for the present, difficult.
+Each man went back to his post. The 20th of May fell on a Sunday,
+and was consequently a day of rest for the crew. A council was held
+by the captain, composed of the officers, Shandon, Wall, Johnson,
+and the doctor.
+
+"Gentlemen," said the captain in that voice at the same time soft
+and imperious which characterised him, "you are aware that I intend
+to go as far as the Pole. I wish to know your opinion about this
+enterprise. Shandon, what do you think about it?"
+
+"It is not for me to think, captain," coldly replied Shandon; "I have
+only to obey."
+
+Hatteras was not surprised at the answer.
+
+"Richard Shandon," continued he, not less coldly, "I beg you will
+say what you think about our chance of success."
+
+"Very well, captain," answered Shandon, "facts are there, and answer
+for me; attempts of the same kind up till now have always failed;
+I hope we shall be more fortunate."
+
+"We shall be. What do you think, gentlemen?"
+
+"As far as I am concerned," replied the doctor, "I consider your plan
+practicable, as it is certain that some day navigators will attain
+the boreal Pole. I don't see why the honour should not fall to our
+lot."
+
+"There are many things in our favour," answered Hatteras; "our
+measures are taken in consequence, and we shall profit by the
+experience of those who have gone before us. And thereupon, Shandon,
+accept my thanks for the care you have taken in fitting out this ship;
+there are a few evil-disposed fellows amongst the crew that I shall
+have to bring to reason, but on the whole I have only praises to give
+you."
+
+Shandon bowed coldly. His position on the _Forward_, which he thought
+to command, was a false one. Hatteras understood this, and did not
+insist further.
+
+"As to you, gentlemen," he continued, turning to Wall and Johnson,
+"I could not have secured officers more distinguished for courage
+and experience."
+
+"Well, captain, I'm your man," answered Johnson, "and although your
+enterprise seems to me rather daring, you may rely upon me till the
+end."
+
+"And on me too," said James Wall.
+
+"As to you, doctor, I know what you are worth."
+
+"You know more than I do, then," quickly replied the doctor.
+
+"Now, gentlemen," continued Hatteras, "it is well you should learn
+upon what undeniable facts my pretension to arrive at the Pole is
+founded. In 1817 the _Neptune_ got up to the north of Spitzbergen,
+as far as the eighty-second degree. In 1826 the celebrated Parry,
+after his third voyage to the Polar Seas, started also from
+Spitzbergen Point, and by the aid of sledge-boats went a hundred and
+fifty miles northward. In 1852 Captain Inglefield penetrated into
+Smith's Inlet as far as seventy-eight degrees thirty-five minutes
+latitude. All these vessels were English, and Englishmen, our
+countrymen, commanded them." Here Hatteras paused. "I ought to add,"
+he continued, with a constrained look, and as though the words were
+unable to leave his lips--"I must add that, in 1854, Kane, the American,
+commanding the brig _Advance_, went still higher, and that his
+lieutenant, Morton, going across the ice-fields, hoisted the United
+States standard on the other side of the eighty-second degree. This
+said, I shall not return to the subject. Now what remains to be known
+is this, that the captains of the _Neptune_, the _Enterprise_, the
+_Isabel_, and the _Advance_ ascertained that proceeding from the
+highest latitudes there existed a Polar basin entirely free from ice."
+
+"Free from ice!" exclaimed Shandon, interrupting the captain, "that
+is impossible!"
+
+"You will notice, Shandon," quietly replied Hatteras, whose eye shone
+for an instant, "that I quote names and facts as a proof. I may even
+add that during Captain Parry's station on the border of Wellington
+Channel, in 1851, his lieutenant, Stewart, also found himself in the
+presence of open sea, and this peculiarity was confirmed during Sir
+Edward Beecher's wintering in 1853, in Northumberland Bay, in 76
+degrees 52 minutes N. latitude, and 99 degrees 20 minutes longitude.
+The reports are incontestable, and it would be most unjust not to
+admit them."
+
+"However, captain," continued Shandon, "those reports are so
+contradictory."
+
+"You are mistaken, Shandon," cried Dr. Clawbonny. "These reports do
+not contradict any scientific assertion, the captain will allow me
+to tell you."
+
+"Go on, doctor," answered Hatteras.
+
+"Well, listen, Shandon; it evidently follows from geographical facts,
+and from the study of isotherm lines, that the coldest point of the
+globe is not at the Pole itself; like the magnetic point, it deviates
+several degrees from the Pole. The calculations of Brewster, Bergham,
+and several other natural philosophers show us that in our hemisphere
+there are two cold Poles; one is situated in Asia at 79 degrees 30
+minutes N. latitude, and by 120 degrees E. longitude, and the other
+in America at 78 degrees N. latitude, and 97 degrees W. longitude.
+It is with the latter that we have to do, and you see, Shandon, we
+have met with it at more than twelve degrees below the Pole. Well,
+why should not the Polar Sea be as equally disengaged from ice as
+the sixty-sixth parallel is in summer--that is to say, the south of
+Baffin's Bay?"
+
+"That's what I call well pleaded," replied Johnson. "Mr. Clawbonny
+speaks upon these matters like a professional man."
+
+"It appears very probable," chimed in James Wall.
+
+"All guess-work," answered Shandon obstinately.
+
+"Well, Shandon," said Hatteras, "let us take into consideration
+either case; either the sea is free from ice or it is not so, and
+neither of these suppositions can hinder us from attaining the Pole.
+If the sea is free the _Forward_ will take us there without trouble;
+if it is frozen we will attempt the adventure upon our sledges. This,
+you will allow, is not impracticable. When once our brig has attained
+the eighty-third degree we shall only have six hundred miles to
+traverse before reaching the Pole."
+
+"And what are six hundred miles?" quickly answered the doctor, "when
+it is known that a Cossack, Alexis Markoff, went over the ice sea
+along the northern coast of the Russian Empire, in sledges drawn by
+dogs, for the space of eight hundred miles in twenty-four days?"
+
+"Do you hear that, Shandon?" said Hatteras; "can't Englishmen do as
+much as a Cossack?"
+
+"Of course they can," cried the impetuous doctor.
+
+"Of course," added the boatswain.
+
+"Well, Shandon?" said the captain.
+
+"I can only repeat what I said before, captain," said Shandon--"I
+will obey."
+
+"Very good. And now," continued Hatteras, "let us consider our present
+situation. We are caught by the ice, and it seems to me impossible,
+for this year at least, to get into Smith's Strait. Well, here, then,
+this is what I propose."
+
+Hatteras laid open upon the table one of the excellent maps published
+in 1859 by the order of the Admiralty.
+
+"Be kind enough to follow me. If Smith's Strait is closed up from
+us, Lancaster Strait, on the west coast of Baffin's Sea, is not. I
+think we ought to ascend that strait as far as Barrow Strait, and
+from there sail to Beechey Island; the same track has been gone over
+a hundred times by sailing vessels; consequently with a screw we can
+do it easily. Once at Beechey Island we will go north as far as possible,
+by Wellington Channel, up to the outlet of the creek which joins
+Wellington's and Queen's Channels, at the very point where the open
+sea was perceived. It is now only the 20th of May; in a month, if
+circumstances favour us, we shall have attained that point, and from
+there we'll drive forward towards the Pole. What do you think about
+it, gentlemen?"
+
+"It is evidently the only track to follow," replied Johnson.
+
+"Very well, we will take it from to-morrow. I shall let them rest
+to-day as it is Sunday. Shandon, you will take care that religious
+service be attended to; it has a beneficial effect on the minds of
+men, and a sailor above all needs to place confidence in the Almighty."
+
+"It shall be attended to, captain," answered Shandon, who went out
+with the lieutenant and the boatswain.
+
+"Doctor!" said Hatteras, pointing towards Shandon, "there's a man
+whose pride is wounded; I can no longer rely upon him."
+
+Early the following day the captain caused the pirogue to be lowered
+in order to reconnoitre the icebergs in the vicinity, the breadth
+of which did not exceed 200 yards. He remarked that through a slow
+pressure of the ice the basin threatened to become narrower. It became
+urgent, therefore, to make an aperture to prevent the ship being
+crushed in a vice of the mountains. By the means employed by John
+Hatteras, it is easy to observe that he was an energetic man.
+
+He first had steps cut out in the walls of ice, and by their means
+climbed to the summit of an iceberg. From that point he saw that it
+was easy for him to cut out a road towards the south-west. By his
+orders a blasting furnace was hollowed nearly in the heart of the
+mountain. This work, rapidly put into execution, was terminated by
+noon on Monday. Hatteras could not rely on his eight or ten pound
+blasting cylinders, which would have had no effect on such masses
+as those. They were only sufficient to shatter ice-fields. He
+therefore had a thousand pounds of powder placed in the blasting
+furnace, of which the diffusive direction was carefully calculated.
+This mine was provided with a long wick, bound in gutta-percha, the
+end of which was outside. The gallery conducting to the mine was filled
+up with snow and lumps of ice, which the cold of the following night
+made as hard as granite. The temperature, under the influence of an
+easterly wind, came down to twelve degrees.
+
+At seven the next morning the _Forward_ was held under steam, ready
+to profit by the smallest issue. Johnson was charged with setting
+fire to the wick, which, according to calculation, would burn for
+half an hour before setting fire to the mine. Johnson had, therefore,
+plenty of time to regain the brig; ten minutes after having executed
+Hatteras's order he was again at his post. The crew remained on deck,
+for the weather was dry and bright; it had left off snowing.
+
+Hatteras was on the poop, chronometer in hand, counting the minutes;
+Shandon and the doctor were with him. At eight thirty-five a dull
+explosion was heard, much less loud than any one would have supposed.
+The outline of the mountains was changed all at once as if by an
+earthquake; thick white smoke rose up to a considerable height in
+the sky, leaving long crevices in the iceberg, the top part of which
+fell in pieces all round the _Forward_. But the path was not yet free;
+large blocks of ice remained suspended above the pass on the adjacent
+mountains, and there was every reason to fear that they would fall
+and close up the passage. Hatteras took in the situation at one glance.
+
+"Wolsten!" cried he.
+
+The gunsmith hastened up.
+
+"Yes, captain?" cried he.
+
+"Load the gun in the bow with a triple charge," said Hatteras, "and
+wad it as hard as possible."
+
+"Are we going to attack the mountain with cannon-balls?" asked the
+doctor.
+
+"No," answered Hatteras, "that would be useless. No bullet, Wolsten,
+but a triple charge of powder. Look sharp!"
+
+A few minutes after the gun was loaded.
+
+"What does he mean to do without a bullet?" muttered Shandon between
+his teeth.
+
+"We shall soon see," answered the doctor.
+
+"Ready, captain!" called out Wolsten.
+
+"All right!" replied Hatteras.
+
+"Brunton!" he called out to the engineer, "a few turns ahead."
+
+Brunton opened the sliders, and the screw being put in movement, the
+_Forward_ neared the mined mountain.
+
+"Aim at the pass!" cried the captain to the gunsmith. The latter obeyed,
+and when the brig was only half a cable's length from it, Hatteras
+called out:
+
+"Fire!"
+
+A formidable report followed his order, and the blocks, shaken by
+the atmospheric commotion, were suddenly precipitated into the sea;
+the disturbance amongst the strata of the air had been sufficient
+to accomplish this.
+
+"All steam on, Brunton! Straight for the pass, Johnson!"
+
+The latter was at the helm; the brig, driven along by her screw, which
+turned in the foaming waves, dashed into the middle of the then opened
+pass; it was time, for scarcely had the _Forward_ cleared the opening
+than her prison closed up again behind her. It was a thrilling moment,
+and on board there was only one stout and undisturbed heart--that
+of the captain. The crew, astonished at the manoeuvre, cried out:
+
+"Hurrah for the captain!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+EXPEDITION IN SEARCH OF FRANKLIN
+
+
+On Wednesday, the 23rd of May, the _Forward_ had again taken up her
+adventurous navigation, cleverly tacking amongst the packs and
+icebergs. Thanks to steam, that obedient force which so many of our
+Polar sea navigators have had to do without, she appeared to be playing
+in the midst of the moving rocks. She seemed to recognise the hand
+of an experienced master, and like a horse under an able rider, she
+obeyed the thought of her captain. The temperature rose. At six
+o'clock in the morning the thermometer marked twenty-six degrees,
+at six in the evening twenty-nine degrees, and at midnight twenty-five
+degrees; the wind was lightly blowing from the south-east.
+
+On Thursday, towards three in the morning, the _Forward_ was in sight
+of Possession Bay, on the coast of America. At the entrance to
+Lancaster Strait, shortly after, the crew caught a glimpse of Burney
+Cape. A few Esquimaux pulled off towards the vessel, but Hatteras
+did not take the trouble to wait for them. The Byam-Martin peaks,
+which overlook Cape Liverpool, were sighted to the left, and soon
+disappeared in the evening mists, which also prevented any
+observation being taken from Cape Hay. This cape is so low that it
+gets confounded with the ice on the coast, a circumstance which often
+renders the hydrographic determination of the Polar seas extremely
+difficult.
+
+Puffins, ducks, and white sea-gulls showed up in very great numbers.
+The _Forward_ was then in latitude 74 degrees 1 minute, and in
+longitude 77 degrees 15 minutes. The snowy hoods of the two mountains,
+Catherine and Elizabeth, rose up above the clouds.
+
+On Friday, at six o'clock, Cape Warender was passed on the right side
+of the strait, and on the left Admiralty Inlet, a bay that has been
+little explored by navigators, who are generally in a hurry to sail
+away west. The sea became rather rough, and the waves often swept
+the deck of the brig, throwing up pieces of ice. The land on the north
+coast, with its high table lands almost level, and which reverberated
+the sun's rays, offered a very curious appearance.
+
+Hatteras wanted to run along the north coast, in order to reach Beechey
+Island and the entrance to Wellington Channel sooner; but continual
+icebergs compelled him, to his great annoyance, to follow the southern
+passes. That was why, on the 26th of May, the _Forward_ was abreast
+of Cape York in a thick fog interspersed with snow; a very high
+mountain, almost perpendicular, caused it to be recognised. The
+weather cleared up a little, and the sun, towards noon, appeared for
+an instant, allowing a tolerably good observation to be taken; 74
+degrees 4 minutes latitude and 84 degrees 23 minutes longitude. The
+_Forward_ was then at the extremity of Lancaster Strait.
+
+Hatteras pointed out to the doctor on his map the route already taken,
+and the one he meant to follow. The position of the brig at the time
+was very interesting.
+
+"I should like to have been further north," said he, "but no one can
+do the impossible; see, this is our exact situation."
+
+And the captain pricked his map at a short distance from Cape York.
+
+"We are in the centre of this four-road way, open to every wind, fenced
+by the outlets of Lancaster Strait, Barrow Strait, Wellington Channel,
+and Regent's Passage; it is a point that all navigators in these seas
+have been obliged to come to."
+
+"Well," replied the doctor, "it must have puzzled them greatly; four
+cross-roads with no sign-posts to tell them which to take. How did
+Parry, Ross, and Franklin manage?"
+
+"They did not manage at all, they were managed; they had no choice,
+I can assure you; sometimes Barrow Strait was closed to one of them,
+and the next year another found it open; sometimes the vessel was
+irresistibly drawn towards Regent's Passage, so that we have ended
+by becoming acquainted with these inextricable seas."
+
+"What a singular country!" said the doctor, examining the map. "It
+is all in pieces, and they seem to have no logical connection. It
+seems as if the land in the vicinity of the North Pole had been cut
+up like this on purpose to make access to it more difficult, whilst
+that in the other hemisphere quietly terminates in tapered-out points
+like those of Cape Horn, the Cape of Good Hope, and the Indian
+Peninsula. Is it the greater rapidity of the equator which has thus
+modified matters, whilst the land at the extremities, yet fluid from
+the creation, has not been able to get condensed or agglomerated
+together, for want of a sufficiently rapid rotation?"
+
+"That must be the case, for everything on earth is logical, and
+'nothing is that errs from law,' and God often allows men to discover
+His laws; make use of His permission, doctor."
+
+"Unfortunately, I shall not be able to take much advantage of it,"
+said the doctor, "but the wind here is something dreadful," added
+he, muffling himself up as well as he could.
+
+"Yes, we are quite exposed to the north wind, and it is turning us
+out of our road."
+
+"Anyhow it ought to drive the ice down south, and level a clear road."
+
+"It ought to do so, doctor, but the wind does not always do what it
+ought. Look, that ice-bank seems impenetrable. Never mind, we will
+try to reach Griffith Island, sail round Cornwallis Island, and get
+into Queen's Channel without going by Wellington Channel.
+Nevertheless I positively desire to touch at Beechey Island in order
+to renew my coal provision."
+
+"What do you mean?" asked the astonished doctor.
+
+"I mean that, according to orders from the Admiralty, large provisions
+have been deposited on that island in order to provide for future
+expeditions, and although Captain McClintock took some in 1859, I
+assure you that there will be some left for us."
+
+"By-the-bye," said the doctor, "these parts have been explored for
+the last fifteen years, and since the day when the proof of the loss
+of Franklin was acquired, the Admiralty has always kept five or six
+cruisers in these seas. If I am not mistaken, Griffith Island, which
+I see there on the map, almost in the middle of the cross-roads, has
+become a general meeting-place for navigators."
+
+"It is so, doctor; and Franklin's unfortunate expedition resulted
+in making known these distant countries to us."
+
+"That is true, captain, for since 1845 expeditions have been very
+numerous. It was not until 1848 that we began to be uneasy about the
+disappearance of the _Erebus_ and the _Terror_, Franklin's two
+vessels. It was then that we saw the admiral's old friend, Dr.
+Richardson, at the age of seventy, go to Canada, and ascend Coppermine
+River as far as the Polar Sea; and James Ross, commanding the
+_Enterprise_ and _Investigation_, set out from Uppernawik in 1848
+and arrived at Cape York, where we now are. Every day he threw a tub
+containing papers into the sea, for the purpose of making known his
+whereabouts. During the mists he caused the cannon to be fired, and
+had sky-rockets sent up at night along with Bengal lights, and kept
+under sail continually. He wintered in Port Leopold from 1848 to 1849,
+where he took possession of a great number of white foxes, and caused
+brass collars, upon which was engraved the indication of the
+whereabouts of ships and the store depots, to be riveted on their
+necks. Afterwards they were dispersed in all directions; in the
+following spring he began to search the coasts of North Somerset on
+sledges in the midst of dangers and privations from which almost all
+his men fell ill or lame. He built up cairns in which he inclosed
+brass cylinders with the necessary memoranda for rallying the lost
+expedition. While he was away his lieutenant McClure explored the
+northern coasts of Barrow Strait, but without result. James Ross had
+under his orders two officers who, later on, were destined to become
+celebrities--McClure, who cleared the North-West passage, and
+McClintock, who discovered the remains of Sir John Franklin."
+
+"Yes; they are now two good and brave English captains. You know the
+history of these seas well, doctor, and you will benefit us by telling
+us about it. There is always something to be gained by hearing about
+such daring attempts."
+
+"Well, to finish all I know about James Ross: he tried to reach
+Melville Island by a more westerly direction, but he nearly lost his
+two vessels, for he was caught by the ice and driven back into Baffin's
+Sea."
+
+"Driven back?" repeated Hatteras, contracting his brows; "forced
+back in spite of himself?"
+
+"Yes, and without having discovered anything," continued the doctor;
+"and ever since that year, 1850, English vessels have never ceased
+to plough these seas, and a reward of twenty thousand pounds was
+offered to any one who might find the crews of the _Erebus_ and
+_Terror_. Captains Kellett and Moore had already, in 1848, attempted
+to get through Behring's Strait. In 1850 and 1851 Captain Austin
+wintered in Cornwallis Island; Captain Parry, on board the
+_Assistance_ and the _Resolute_, explored Wellington Channel; John
+Ross, the venerable hero of the magnetic pole, set out again with
+his yacht, the _Felix_, in search of his friend; the brig _Prince
+Albert_ went on a first cruise at the expense of Lady Franklin; and,
+lastly, two American ships, sent out by Grinnell with Captain Haven,
+were drifted out of Wellington Channel and thrown back into Lancaster
+Strait. It was during this year that McClintock, who was then Austin's
+lieutenant, pushed on as far as Melville Island and Cape Dundas, the
+extreme points attained by Parry in 1819; it was then that he found
+traces of Franklin's wintering on Beechey Island in 1845."
+
+"Yes," answered Hatteras, "three of his sailors had been buried
+there--three men more fortunate than the others!"
+
+The doctor nodded in approval of Hatteras's remark, and continued:
+
+"During 1851 and 1852 the _Prince Albert_ went on a second voyage
+under the French lieutenant, Bellot; he wintered at Batty Bay, in
+Prince Regent Strait, explored the south-west of Somerset, and
+reconnoitred the coast as far as Cape Walker. During that time the
+_Enterprise_ and the _Investigator_ returned to England and passed
+under the command of Collinson and McClure for the purpose of
+rejoining Kellett and Moore in Behring's Straits; whilst Collinson
+came back to winter at Hong-Kong, McClure made the best of his way
+onward, and after being obliged to winter three times--from 1850 to
+'51; from 1851 to '52; and from 1852 to '53--he discovered the
+North-West passage without learning anything of Franklin's fate.
+During 1852 and '53 a new expedition composed of three sailing vessels,
+the _Resolute_, the _Assistance_, the _North Star_, and two steamers,
+the _Pioneer_ and _Intrepid_, set sail under the command of Sir Edward
+Belcher, with Captain Kellett under him; Sir Edward visited
+Wellington Channel, wintered in Northumberland Bay, and went over
+the coast, whilst Kellett, pushing on to Bridport in Melville Island,
+explored, without success, that part of the boreal land. It was at
+this time that news was spread in England that two ships, abandoned
+in the midst of icebergs, had been descried near the coast of New
+Scotland. Lady Franklin immediately had prepared the little screw
+_Isabelle_, and Captain Inglefield, after having steamed up Baffin's
+Bay as far as Victoria Point on the eightieth parallel, came back
+to Beechey Island no more successful than his predecessors. At the
+beginning of 1855, Grinnell, an American, fitted up a fresh expedition,
+and Captain Kane tried to penetrate to the Pole----"
+
+"But he didn't do it," cried Hatteras violently; "and what he didn't
+do we will, with God's help!"
+
+"I know, captain," answered the doctor, "and I mention it because
+this expedition is of necessity connected with the search for Franklin.
+But it had no result. I was almost forgetting to tell you that the
+Admiralty, considering Beechey Island as the general rendezvous of
+expeditions, charged Captain Inglefield, who then commanded the
+steamer _Phoenix_, to transport provisions there in 1853; Inglefield
+set out with Lieutenant Bellot, and lost the brave officer who for
+the second time had devoted his services to England; we can have more
+precise details upon this catastrophe, as our boatswain, Johnson,
+was witness to the misfortune."
+
+"Lieutenant Bellot was a brave Frenchman," said Hatteras, "and his
+memory is honoured in England."
+
+"By that time," continued the doctor, "Belcher's fleet began to come
+back little by little; not all of it, for Sir Edward had been obliged
+to abandon the _Assistance_ in 1854, as McClure had done with the
+_Investigator_ in 1853. In the meantime, Dr. Rae, in a letter dated
+the 29th of July, 1854, and addressed from Repulse Bay, which he had
+succeeded in reaching through America, sent word that the Esquimaux
+of King William's Land were in possession of different objects taken
+from the wrecks of the _Erebus_ and _Terror_; there was then not the
+least doubt about the fate of the expedition; the _Phoenix_, the
+_North Star_, and Collinson's vessel then came back to England,
+leaving the Arctic Seas completely abandoned by English ships. But
+if the Government seemed to have lost all hope it was not so with
+Lady Franklin, and with the remnants of her fortune she fitted out
+the _Fox_, commanded by McClintock, who set sail in 1857, and wintered
+in the quarters where you made your apparition; he reached Beechey
+Island on the 11th of August, 1858, wintered a second time in Bellot's
+Strait, began his search again in February, 1859, and on the 6th of
+May found the document which cleared away all doubt about the fate
+of the _Erebus_ and the _Terror_, and returned to England at the end
+of the year. That is all that has happened for fifteen years in these
+fateful countries, and since the return of the _Fox_ not a single
+vessel has returned to attempt success in the midst of these dangerous
+seas."
+
+"Well," replied Hatteras, "we will attempt it."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+THE "FORWARD" DRIVEN BACK SOUTH
+
+
+The weather cleared up towards evening, and land was clearly
+distinguished between Cape Sepping and Cape Clarence, which runs east,
+then south, and is joined to the coast on the west by a rather low
+neck of land. The sea at the entrance to Regent Strait was free from
+ice, with the exception of an impenetrable ice-bank, a little further
+than Port Leopold, which threatened to stop the _Forward_ in her
+north-westerly course. Hatteras was greatly vexed, but he did not
+show it; he was obliged to have recourse to petards in order to force
+an entrance to Port Leopold; he reached it on Sunday, the 27th of
+May; the brig was solidly anchored to the enormous icebergs, which
+were as upright, hard, and solid as rocks.
+
+The captain, followed by the doctor, Johnson, and his dog Dick,
+immediately leaped upon the ice, and soon reached land. Dick leaped
+with joy, for since he had recognised the captain he had become more
+sociable, keeping his grudge against certain men of the crew for whom
+his master had no more friendship than he. The port was not then
+blocked up with ice that the east winds generally heaped up there;
+the earth, intersected with peaks, offered at their summits graceful
+undulations of snow. The house and lantern erected by James Ross were
+still in a tolerable state of preservation; but the provisions seemed
+to have been ransacked by foxes and bears, the recent traces of which
+were easily distinguished. Men, too, had had something to do with
+the devastation, for a few remains of Esquimaux huts remained upon
+the shores of the Bay. The six graves inclosing the remains of the
+six sailors of the _Enterprise_ and the _Investigator_ were
+recognisable by a slight swelling of the ground; they had been
+respected both by men and animals. In placing his foot for the first
+time on boreal land, the doctor experienced much emotion. It is
+impossible to imagine the feelings with which the heart is assailed
+at the sight of the remains of houses, tents, huts, and magazines
+that Nature so marvellously preserves in those cold countries.
+
+"There is that residence," he said to his companions, "which James
+Ross himself called the Camp of Refuge; if Franklin's expedition had
+reached this spot, it would have been saved. There is the engine which
+was abandoned here, and the stove at which the crew of the _Prince
+Albert_ warmed themselves in 1851. Things have remained just as they
+were, and any one would think that Captain Kennedy had only left
+yesterday. Here is the long boat which sheltered him and his for a
+few days, for this Kennedy, separated from his ship, was in reality
+saved by Lieutenant Bellot, who braved the October temperature in
+order to go to his assistance."
+
+"I knew that brave and worthy officer," said Johnson.
+
+Whilst the doctor was examining with all an antiquarian's enthusiasm
+the vestiges of previous winterings, Hatteras was occupied in piling
+together the various provisions and articles of fuel, which were only
+to be found in very small quantities. The following day was employed
+in transporting them on board. The doctor, without going too far from
+the ship, surveyed the country, and took sketches of the most
+remarkable points of view. The temperature rose by degrees, and the
+heaped-up snow began to melt. The doctor made an almost complete
+collection of northern birds, such as gulls, divers, eider-down ducks,
+which are very much like common ducks, with white breasts and backs,
+blue bellies, the top of the head blue, and the remainder of the
+plumage white, shaded with green; several of them had already their
+breasts stripped of that beautiful down with which the male and female
+line their nests. The doctor also perceived large seals taking breath
+on the surface of the ice, but could not shoot one. In his excursions
+he discovered the high water mark, a stone upon which the following
+signs are engraved:
+
+ (E. I.)
+ 1849,
+
+and which indicate the passage of the _Enterprise_ and
+_Investigator_; he pushed forward as far as Cape Clarence to the spot
+where John and James Ross, in 1833, waited with so much impatience
+for the breaking up of the ice. The land was strewn with skulls and
+bones of animals, and traces of Esquimaux habitations could be still
+distinguished.
+
+The doctor wanted to raise up a cairn on Port Leopold, and deposit
+in it a note indicating the passage of the _Forward_, and the aim
+of the expedition. But Hatteras would not hear of it; he did not want
+to leave traces behind of which a competitor might take advantage.
+In spite of his good motives the doctor was forced to yield to the
+captain's will. Shandon blamed the captain's obstinacy, which
+prevented any ships following the trace of the _Forward_ in case of
+accident. Hatteras would not give way. His lading was finished on
+Monday night, and he attempted once more to gain the north by breaking
+open the ice-bank; but after dangerous efforts he was forced to resign
+himself, and to go down Regent's Channel again; he would not stop
+at Port Leopold, which, open to-day, might be closed again to-morrow
+by an unexpected displacement of ice-fields, a very frequent
+phenomenon in these seas, and which navigators ought particularly
+to take into consideration.
+
+If Hatteras did not allow his uneasiness to be outwardly perceived,
+it did not prevent him feeling it inwardly. His desire was to push
+northward, whilst, on the contrary, he found himself constrained to
+put back southward. Where should he get to in that case? Should he
+be obliged to put back to Victoria Harbour, in Boothia Gulf, where
+Sir John Ross wintered in 1833? Would he find Bellot Strait open at
+that epoch, and could he ascend Peel Strait by rounding North
+Somerset? Or, again, should he, like his predecessors, find himself
+captured during several winters, and be compelled to exhaust his
+strength and provisions? These fears were fermenting in his brain;
+he must decide one way or other. He heaved about, and struck out south.
+The width of Prince Regent's Channel is about the same from Port
+Leopold to Adelaide Bay. The _Forward_, more favoured than the ships
+which had preceded her, and of which the greater number had required
+more than a month to descend the channel, even in a more favourable
+season, made her way rapidly amongst the icebergs; it is true that
+other ships, with the exception of the _Fox_, had no steam at their
+disposal, and had to endure the caprices of an uncertain and often
+foul wind.
+
+In general the crew showed little wish to push on with the enterprising
+Hatteras; the men were only too glad to perceive that the vessel was
+taking a southerly direction. Hatteras would have liked to go on
+regardless of consequences.
+
+The _Forward_ rushed along under the pressure of her engines, the
+smoke from which twisted round the shining points of the icebergs;
+the weather was constantly changing from dry cold to snowy fogs. The
+brig, which drew little water, sailed along the west coast; Hatteras
+did not wish to miss the entrance to Bellot Strait, as the only outlet
+to the Gulf of Boothia on the south was the strait, only partially
+known to the _Fury_ and the _Hecla_; if he missed the Bellot Strait,
+he might be shut up without possibility of egress.
+
+In the evening the _Forward_ was in sight of Elwin Bay, known by its
+high perpendicular rocks; on the Tuesday morning Batty Bay was sighted,
+where the _Prince Albert_ anchored for its long wintering on the 10th
+of September, 1851. The doctor swept the whole coast with his
+telescope. It was from this point that the expeditions radiated that
+established the geographical configuration of North Somerset. The
+weather was clear, and the profound ravines by which the bay is
+surrounded could be clearly distinguished.
+
+The doctor and Johnson were perhaps the only beings on board who took
+any interest in these deserted countries. Hatteras was always intent
+upon his maps, and said little; his taciturnity increased as the brig
+got more and more south; he often mounted the poop, and there with
+folded arms, and eyes lost in vacancy, he stood for hours. His orders,
+when he gave any, were curt and rough. Shandon kept a cold silence,
+and kept himself so much aloof by degrees that at last he had no
+relations with Hatteras except those exacted by the service; James
+Wall remained devoted to Shandon, and regulated his conduct
+accordingly. The remainder of the crew waited for something to turn
+up, ready to take any advantage in their own interest. There was no
+longer that unity of thought and communion of ideas on board which
+are so necessary for the accomplishment of anything great, and this
+Hatteras knew to his sorrow.
+
+During the day two whales were perceived rushing towards the south;
+a white bear was also seen, and was shot at without any apparent
+success. The captain knew the value of an hour under the circumstances,
+and would not allow the animal to be chased.
+
+On Wednesday morning the extremity of Regent's Channel was passed;
+the angle on the west coast was followed by a deep curve in the land.
+By consulting his map the doctor recognised the point of Somerset
+House, or Fury Point.
+
+"There," said he to his habitual companion--"there is the very spot
+where the first English ship, sent into these seas in 1815, was lost,
+during the third of Parry's voyages to the Pole; the _Fury_ was so
+damaged by the ice on her second wintering, that her crew were obliged
+to desert her and return to England on board her companion ship the
+_Hecla_."
+
+"That shows the advantage of having a second ship," answered Johnson.
+"It is a precaution that Polar navigators ought not to neglect, but
+Captain Hatteras wasn't the sort of man to trouble himself with
+another ship."
+
+"Do you think he is imprudent, Johnson?" asked the doctor.
+
+"I? I think nothing, Mr. Clawbonny. Do you see those stakes over there
+with some rotten tent-rags still hanging to them?"
+
+"Yes; that's where Parry disembarked his provisions from his ship,
+and, if I remember rightly, the roof of his tent was a topsail."
+
+"Everything must be greatly changed since 1825!"
+
+"Not so much as any one might think. John Ross owed the health and
+safety of his crew to that fragile habitation in 1829. When the _Prince
+Albert_ sent an expedition there in 1851, it was still existing;
+Captain Kennedy had it repaired, nine years ago now. It would be
+interesting to visit it, but Hatteras isn't in the humour to stop!"
+
+"I daresay he is right, Mr. Clawbonny; if time is money in England,
+here it is life, and a day's or even an hour's delay might make all
+the difference."
+
+During the day of Thursday, the 1st of June, the _Forward_ cut across
+Creswell Bay; from Fury Point the coast rose towards the north in
+perpendicular rocks three hundred feet high; it began to get lower
+towards the south; some snow summits looked like neatly-cut tables,
+whilst others were shaped like pyramids, and had other strange forms.
+
+The weather grew milder during that day, but was not so clear; land
+was lost to sight, and the thermometer went up to thirty-two degrees;
+seafowl fluttered about, the flocks of wild ducks were seen flying
+north; the crew could divest themselves of some of their garments,
+and the influence of the Arctic summer began to be felt. Towards
+evening the _Forward_ doubled Cape Garry at a quarter of a mile from
+the shore, where the soundings gave from ten to twelve fathoms; from
+thence she kept near the coast as far as Brentford Bay. It was under
+this latitude that Bellot Strait was to be met with; a strait the
+existence of which Sir John Ross did not even guess at during his
+expedition in 1828; his maps indicated an uninterrupted coast-line,
+whose irregularities he noted with the utmost care; the entrance to
+the strait must therefore have been blocked up by ice at the time.
+It was really discovered by Kennedy in April, 1852, and he gave it
+the name of his lieutenant, Bellot, as "a just tribute," he said,
+"to the important services rendered to our expedition by the French
+officer."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE MAGNETIC POLE
+
+
+Hatteras felt his anxiety increase as he neared the strait; the fate
+of his voyage depended upon it; up till now he had done more than
+his predecessors, the most fortunate of whom, McClintock, had taken
+fifteen months to reach this part of the Polar Seas; but it was little
+or nothing if he did not succeed in clearing Bellot Strait; he could
+not retrace his steps, and would be blocked up till the following
+year.
+
+He trusted the care of examining the coast to no one but himself;
+he mounted the crow's nest and passed several hours there during the
+morning of Saturday. The crew perfectly understood the ship's
+position; profound silence reigned on board; the engine slackened
+steam, and the _Forward_ kept as near land as possible; the coast
+bristled with icebergs, which the warmest summers do not melt; an
+experienced eye alone could distinguish an opening between them.
+Hatteras compared his maps with the land. As the sun showed himself
+for an instant towards noon, he caused Shandon and Wall to take a
+pretty exact observation, which was shouted to him. All the crew
+suffered the tortures of anxiety for half the day, but towards two
+o'clock these words were shouted from the top of the mizenmast:
+
+"Veer to the west, all steam on."
+
+The brig instantly obeyed; her prow was directed towards the point
+indicated; the sea foamed under the screws, and the _Forward_, with
+all speed on, entered between two ice-streams. The road was found,
+Hatteras descended upon deck, and the ice-master took his place.
+
+"Well, captain," said the doctor, "we are in the famous strait at
+last."
+
+"Yes," answered Hatteras, lowering his voice; "but getting in isn't
+everything; we must get out too," and so saying he regained his cabin.
+
+"He's right," said the doctor; "we are here in a sort of mousetrap,
+with scarcely enough space for working the brig, and if we are forced
+to winter in the strait!... Well, we shan't be the first that have
+had to do it, and they got over it, and so shall we."
+
+The doctor was not mistaken. It was in that very place, in a little
+sheltered harbour called Kennedy Harbour by McClintock himself, that
+the _Fox_ wintered in 1858. The high granite chain and the steep cliffs
+of the two banks were clearly discernible.
+
+Bellot Strait is seventeen miles long and a mile wide, and about six
+or seven fathoms deep. It lies between mountains whose height is
+estimated at 1,600 feet. It separates North Somerset from Boothia
+Land.
+
+It is easy to understand that there is not much elbow-room for vessels
+in such a strait. The _Forward_ advanced slowly, but it did advance;
+tempests are frequent in the strait, and the brig did not escape them;
+by Hatteras's order all sails were furled; but, notwithstanding all
+precautions, the brig was much knocked about; the waves dashed over
+her, and her smoke fled towards the east with astonishing rapidity;
+her course was not certain amongst the moving ice; the barometer fell;
+it was difficult to stop on deck, and most of the men stayed below
+to avoid useless suffering.
+
+Hatteras, Johnson, and Shandon remained on the poop in spite of the
+gales of snow and rain; as usual the doctor had asked himself what
+would be the most disagreeable thing he could do, and answered himself
+by going on deck at once; it was impossible to hear and difficult
+to see one another, so that he kept his reflections to himself.
+Hatteras tried to see through the fog; he calculated that they would
+be at the mouth of the strait at six o'clock, but when the time came
+all issue seemed closed up; he was obliged to wait and anchor the
+brig to an iceberg; but he stopped under pressure all night.
+
+The weather was frightful. The _Forward_ threatened to break her
+chains at every instant; it was feared that the iceberg to which they
+were anchored, torn away at its base under the violent west wind,
+would float away with the brig. The officers were constantly on the
+look-out and under extreme apprehension; along with the snow there
+fell a perfect hail of ice torn off from the surface of the icebergs
+by the strength of the wind; it was like a shower of arrows bristling
+in the atmosphere. The temperature rose singularly during this
+terrible night; the thermometer marked fifty-seven degrees, and the
+doctor, to his great astonishment, thought he saw flashes of lightning
+in the south, followed by the roar of far-off thunder that seemed
+to corroborate the testimony of the whaler Scoresby, who observed
+a similar phenomenon above the sixty-fifth parallel. Captain Parry
+was also witness to a similar meteorological wonder in 1821.
+
+Towards five o'clock in the morning the weather changed with
+astonishing rapidity; the temperature went down to freezing point,
+the wind turned north, and became calmer. The western opening to the
+strait was in sight, but entirely obstructed. Hatteras looked eagerly
+at the coast, asking himself if the passage really existed. However,
+the brig got under way, and glided slowly amongst the ice-streams,
+whilst the icebergs pressed noisily against her planks, the packs
+at that epoch were still from six to seven feet thick; they were
+obliged carefully to avoid their pressure, for if the brig had
+resisted them she would have run the risk of being lifted up and turned
+over on her side. At noon, for the first time, they could admire a
+magnificent solar phenomenon, a halo with two parhelia; the doctor
+observed it, and took its exact dimensions; the exterior bow was only
+visible over an extent of thirty degrees on each side of its horizontal
+diameter; the two images of the sun were remarkably clear; the colours
+of the luminous bows proceeded from inside to outside, and were red,
+yellow, green, and very light blue--in short, white light without
+any assignable exterior limit. The doctor remembered the ingenious
+theory of Thomas Young about these meteors; this natural philosopher
+supposed that certain clouds composed of prisms of ice are suspended
+in the atmosphere; the rays of the sun that fall on the prisms are
+decomposed at angles of sixty and ninety degrees. Halos cannot,
+therefore, exist in a calm atmosphere. The doctor thought this theory
+very probable. Sailors accustomed to the boreal seas generally
+consider this phenomenon as the precursor of abundant snow. If their
+observation was just, the position of the _Forward_ became very
+difficult. Hatteras, therefore, resolved to go on fast; during the
+remainder of the day and following night he did not take a minute's
+rest, sweeping the horizon with his telescope, taking advantage of
+the least opening, and losing no occasion of getting out of the strait.
+
+But in the morning he was obliged to stop before the insuperable
+ice-bank. The doctor joined him on the poop. Hatteras went with him
+apart where they could talk without fear of being overheard.
+
+"We are in for it," began Hatteras; "it is impossible to go any
+further."
+
+"Is there no means of getting out?" asked the doctor.
+
+"None. All the powder in the _Forward_ would not make us gain half
+a mile!"
+
+"What shall we do, then?" said the doctor.
+
+"I don't know. This cursed year has been unfavourable from the
+beginning."
+
+"Well," answered the doctor, "if we must winter here, we must. One
+place is as good as another."
+
+"But," said Hatteras, lowering his voice, "we must not winter here,
+especially in the month of June. Wintering is full of physical and
+moral danger. The crew would be unmanageable during a long inaction
+in the midst of real suffering. I thought I should be able to stop
+much nearer the Pole than this!"
+
+"Luck would have it so, or Baffin's Bay wouldn't have been closed."
+
+"It was open enough for that American!" cried Hatteras in a rage.
+
+"Come, Hatteras," said the doctor, interrupting him on purpose,
+"to-day is only the 5th of June; don't despair; a passage may suddenly
+open up before us; you know that the ice has a tendency to break up
+into several blocks, even in the calmest weather, as if a force of
+repulsion acted upon the different parts of it; we may find the sea
+free at any minute."
+
+"If that minute comes we shall take advantage of it. It is quite
+possible that, once out of Bellot Strait, we shall be able to go north
+by Peel Strait or McClintock Channel, and then----"
+
+"Captain," said James Wall, who had come up while Hatteras was
+speaking, "the ice nearly carries off our rudder."
+
+"Well," answered Hatteras, "we must risk it. We must be ready day
+and night. You must do all you can to protect it, Mr. Wall, but I
+can't have it removed."
+
+"But----" added Wall.
+
+"That is my business," said Hatteras severely, and Wall went back
+to his post.
+
+"I would give five years of my life," said Hatteras, in a rage, "to
+be up north. I know no more dangerous passage. To add to the difficulty,
+the compass is no guide at this distance from the magnetic pole: the
+needle is constantly shifting its direction."
+
+"I acknowledge," answered the doctor, "that navigation is difficult,
+but we knew what we had to expect when we began our enterprise, and
+we ought not to be surprised at it."
+
+"Ah, doctor, my crew is no longer what it was; the officers are
+spoiling the men. I could make them do what I want by offering them
+a pecuniary reward, but I am not seconded by my officers, but they
+shall pay dearly for it!"
+
+"You are exaggerating, Hatteras."
+
+"No, I am not. Do you think the crew is sorry for the obstacles that
+I meet with? On the contrary, they hope they will make me abandon
+my projects. They do not complain now, and they won't as long as the
+_Forward_ is making for the south. The fools! They think they are
+getting nearer England! But once let me go north and you'll see how
+they'll change! I swear, though, that no living being will make me
+deviate from my line of conduct. Only let me find a passage, that's
+all!"
+
+One of the captain's wishes was fulfilled soon enough. There was a
+sudden change during the evening; under some influence of the wind,
+the current, or the temperature, the ice-fields were separated; the
+_Forward_ went along boldly, breaking up the ice with her steel prow;
+she sailed along all night, and the next morning about six cleared
+Bellot Strait. But that was all; the northern passage was completely
+obstructed--to the great disgust of Hatteras. However, he had
+sufficient strength of character to hide his disappointment, and as
+if the only passage open was the one he preferred, he let the _Forward_
+sail down Franklin Strait again; not being able to get up Peel Strait,
+he resolved to go round Prince of Wales's Land to get into McClintock
+Channel. But he felt he could not deceive Shandon and Wall as to the
+extent of his disappointment. The day of the 6th of June was
+uneventful; the sky was full of snow, and the prognostics of the halo
+were fulfilled.
+
+During thirty-six hours the _Forward_ followed the windings of
+Boothia Land, unable to approach Prince of Wales's Land; the captain
+counted upon getting supplies at Beechey Island; he arrived on the
+Thursday at the extremity of Franklin Strait, where he again found
+the road to the north blocked up. It was enough to make him despair;
+he could not even retrace his steps; the icebergs pushed him onwards,
+and he saw the passages close up behind him as if there never had
+existed open sea where he had passed an hour before. The _Forward_
+was, therefore, not only prevented from going northwards, but could
+not stop still an instant for fear of being caught, and she fled before
+the ice as a ship flies before a storm.
+
+On Friday, the 8th of June, they arrived near the shore of Boothia,
+at the entrance to James Ross Strait, which they were obliged to avoid,
+as its only issue is on the west, near the American coasts.
+
+Observations taken at noon from this point gave 70 degrees 5 minutes
+17 seconds latitude, and 96 degrees 46 minutes 45 seconds longitude;
+when the doctor heard that he consulted his map, and saw they were
+at the magnetic pole, at the very place where James Ross, the nephew
+of Sir John, had fixed it. The land was low near the coast, and at
+about a mile's distance became slightly elevated, sixty feet only.
+The _Forward's_ boiler wanted cleaning, and the captain caused the
+brig to be anchored to an ice-field, and allowed the doctor and the
+boatswain to land. He himself cared for nothing but his pet project,
+and stayed in his cabin, consulting his map of the Pole.
+
+The doctor and his companion easily succeeded in reaching land; the
+doctor took a compass to make experiments with. He wished to try if
+James Ross's conclusions hold good. He easily discovered the
+limestone heap raised by Ross; he ran to it; an opening allowed him
+to see, in the interior, the tin case in which James Ross had placed
+the official report of his discoveries. No living being seemed to
+have visited this desolate coast for the last thirty years. In this
+spot a loadstone needle, suspended as delicately as possible,
+immediately moved into an almost vertical position under the magnetic
+influence; if the centre of attraction was not immediately under the
+needle, it could only be at a trifling distance. The doctor made the
+experiment carefully, and found that the imperfect instruments of
+James Ross had given his vertical needle an inclination of 89 degrees
+59 minutes, making the real magnetic point at a minute's distance
+from the spot, but that his own at a little distance gave him an
+inclination of 90 degrees.
+
+"Here is the exact spot of the world's magnetic pole," said the doctor,
+rapping the earth.
+
+"Then," said the boatswain, "there's no loadstone mountain, after
+all."
+
+"Of course not; that mountain was only a credulous hypothesis. As
+you see, there isn't the least mountain capable of attracting ships,
+of attracting their iron anchor after anchor and nail after nail,
+and you see it respects your shoes as much as any other land on the
+globe."
+
+"Then how do you explain----"
+
+"Nothing is explained, Johnson; we don't know enough for that yet.
+But it is certain, exact, mathematical, that the magnetic pole is
+in this very spot!"
+
+"Ah, Mr. Clawbonny! how happy the captain would be to say as much
+of the boreal pole!"
+
+"He will some day, Johnson, you will see."
+
+"I hope he will," answered the boatswain.
+
+He and the doctor elevated a cairn on the exact spot where the
+experiment had been made, and returned on board at five o'clock in
+the evening.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE FATE OF SIR JOHN FRANKLIN
+
+
+The _Forward_ succeeded in cutting straight across James Ross Strait,
+but not without difficulty; the crew were obliged to work the saws
+and use petards, and they were worn out with fatigue. Happily the
+temperature was bearable, and thirty degrees higher than that
+experienced by James Ross at the same epoch. The thermometer marked
+thirty-four degrees.
+
+On Saturday they doubled Cape Felix at the northern extremity of King
+William's Land, one of the middle-sized isles of the northern seas.
+The crew there experienced a strong and painful sensation, and many
+a sad look was turned towards the island as they sailed by the coast.
+This island had been the theatre of the most terrible tragedy of modern
+times. Some miles to the west the _Erebus_ and the _Terror_ had been
+lost for ever. The sailors knew about the attempts made to find Admiral
+Franklin and the results, but they were ignorant of the affecting
+details of the catastrophe. While the doctor was following the
+progress of the ship on his map, several of them, Bell, Bolton, and
+Simpson, approached and entered into conversation with him. Their
+comrades, animated by curiosity, soon followed them; while the brig
+flew along with extreme rapidity, and the coast with its bays, capes,
+and promontories passed before their eyes like a gigantic panorama.
+
+Hatteras was marching up and down the poop with quick steps. The doctor,
+on the deck, looked round, and saw himself surrounded by almost the
+whole crew. He saw how powerful a recital would be in such a situation,
+and he continued the conversation begun with Johnson as follows:--
+
+"You know how Franklin began, my friends; he was a cabin-boy like
+Cook and Nelson; after having employed his youth in great maritime
+expeditions, he resolved in 1845 to launch out in search of the
+North-West passage; he commanded the _Erebus_ and the _Terror_, two
+vessels, already famous, that had just made an Antarctic campaign
+under James Ross, in 1840. The _Erebus_, equipped by Franklin, carried
+a crew of seventy men, officers and sailors, with Fitz-James as
+captain; Gore and Le Vesconte, lieutenants; Des Voeux, Sargent, and
+Couch, boatswains; and Stanley as surgeon. The _Terror_ had
+sixty-eight men, Captain Crozier; Lieutenants Little, Hodgson, and
+Irving; Horesby and Thomas were the boatswains, and Peddie the surgeon.
+In the names on the map of the capes, straits, points, and channels,
+you may read those of these unfortunate men, not one of whom was
+destined ever again to see his native land. There were a hundred and
+thirty-eight men in all! We know that Franklin's last letters were
+addressed from Disko Island, and were dated July 12th, 1845. 'I hope,'
+he said, 'to get under way to-night for Lancaster Strait.' What
+happened after his departure from Disko Bay? The captains of two
+whalers, the _Prince of Wales_ and the _Enterprise_, perceived the
+two ships in Melville Bay for the last time, and after that day nothing
+was heard of them. However, we can follow Franklin in his westerly
+course: he passed through Lancaster and Barrow Straits, and arrived
+at Beechey Island, where he passed the winter of 1845 and '46."
+
+"But how do you know all this?" asked Bell, the carpenter.
+
+"By three tombs which Austin discovered on that island in 1850. Three
+of Franklin's sailors were buried there, and by a document which was
+found by Lieutenant Hobson, of the _Fox_, which bears the date of
+April 25th, 1848, we know that after their wintering the _Erebus_
+and the _Terror_ went up Wellington Strait as far as the
+seventy-seventh parallel; but instead of continuing their route
+northwards, which was, probably, not practicable, they returned
+south."
+
+"And that was their ruin!" said a grave voice. "Safety lay to the
+north."
+
+Every one turned round. Hatteras, leaning on the rail of the poop,
+had just uttered that terrible observation.
+
+"There is not a doubt," continued the doctor, "that Franklin's
+intention was to get back to the American coast; but tempests stopped
+him, and on the 12th September, 1846, the two ships were seized by
+the ice, at a few miles from here, to the north-west of Cape Felix;
+they were dragged along N.N.W. to Victoria Point over there," said
+the doctor, pointing to a part of the sea. "Now," he continued, "the
+ships were not abandoned till the 22nd of April, 1848. What happened
+during these nineteen months? What did the poor unfortunate men do?
+They, doubtless, explored the surrounding land, attempting any
+chance of safety, for the admiral was an energetic man, and if he
+did not succeed----"
+
+"Very likely his crew betrayed him," added Hatteras.
+
+The sailors dared not raise their eyes; these words pricked their
+conscience.
+
+"To end my tale, the fatal document informs us also that John Franklin
+succumbed to fatigue on the 11th of June, 1847. Honour to his memory!"
+said the doctor, taking off his hat. His audience imitated him in
+silence.
+
+"What became of the poor fellows for the next ten months after they
+had lost their chief? They remained on board their vessels, and only
+resolved to abandon them in April, 1848; a hundred and five men out
+of a hundred and thirty-eight were still living; thirty-three were
+dead! Then Captain Crozier and Captain Fitz-James raised a cairn on
+Victory Point, and there deposited their last document. See, my
+friends, we are passing the point now! You can still see the remains
+of the cairn placed on the extreme point, reached by John Ross in
+1831. There is Jane Franklin Cape. There is Franklin Point. There
+is Le Vesconte Point. There is Erebus Bay, where the boat made out
+of the _debris_ of one of the vessels was found on a sledge. Silver
+spoons, provisions in abundance, chocolate, tea, and religious books
+were found there too. The hundred and five survivors, under Captain
+Crozier, started for Great Fish River. Where did they get to? Did
+they succeed in reaching Hudson's Bay? Did any survive? What became
+of them after this last departure?"
+
+"I will tell you what became of them," said John Hatteras in a firm
+voice. "Yes, they did try to reach Hudson's Bay, and they split up
+into several parties! Yes, they did make for the south! A letter from
+Dr. Rae in 1854 contained the information that in 1850 the Esquimaux
+had met on King William's Land a detachment of forty men travelling
+on the ice, and dragging a boat, thin, emaciated, worn out by fatigue
+and suffering! Later on they discovered thirty corpses on the
+continent and five on a neighbouring island, some half-buried, some
+left without burial, some under a boat turned upside down, others
+under the remains of a tent; here an officer with his telescope on
+his shoulder and a loaded gun at his side, further on a boiler with
+the remnants of a horrible meal! When the Admiralty received these
+tidings it begged the Hudson's Bay Company to send its most
+experienced agents to the scene. They descended Back River to its
+mouth. They visited the islands of Montreal, Maconochie, and Ogle
+Point. But they discovered nothing. All the poor wretches had died
+from misery, suffering, and hunger, whilst trying to prolong their
+existence by the dreadful resource of cannibalism. That is what became
+of them on the southern route. Well! Do you still wish to march in
+their footsteps?"
+
+His trembling voice, his passionate gestures and beaming face,
+produced an indescribable effect. The crew, excited by its emotion
+before this fatal land, cried out with one voice: "To the north! To
+the north!"
+
+"Yes, to the north! Safety and glory lie to the north. Heaven is for
+us! The wind is changing; the pass is free!"
+
+So saying, Hatteras gave orders to turn the vessel; the sailors went
+to work with alacrity; the ice streams got clear little by little;
+the _Forward_, with all steam on, made for McClintock Channel.
+Hatteras was right when he counted upon a more open sea; he followed
+up the supposed route taken by Franklin, sailing along the western
+coast of Prince of Wales's Land, then pretty well known, whilst the
+opposite shore is still unknown. It was evident that the breaking
+up of the ice had taken place in the eastern locks, for this strait
+appeared entirely free; the _Forward_ made up for lost time; she fled
+along so quickly that she passed Osborne Bay on the 14th of June,
+and the extreme points attained by the expeditions of 1851. Icebergs
+were still numerous, but the sea did not threaten to quit the keel
+of the _Forward_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE NORTHERN ROUTE
+
+
+The crew seemed to have returned to its habits of discipline and
+obedience. There was little fatiguing work to do, and they had a good
+deal of leisure. The temperature kept above freezing point, and it
+seemed as if the thaw had removed the great obstacles to navigation.
+
+Dick, now sociable and familiar, had made great friends with Dr.
+Clawbonny. But as in most friendships one friend has to give way to
+the other, it must be acknowledged it was not the dog. Dick did what
+he liked with the doctor, who obeyed him as if he were the dog. He
+was amiable with most of the sailors and officers on board, only by
+instinct, doubtless, he shunned Shandon's society; he also kept up
+a grudge against Pen and Foker; he vented his hatred of them by
+growling at their approach. But they dare not now attack the captain's
+dog--his "familiar," as Clifton called him. On the whole the crew
+had plucked up courage again and worked well.
+
+"It seems to me," said James Wall one day to Richard Shandon, "that
+our men took the captain's speech seriously; they no longer seem to
+be doubtful of success."
+
+"The more fools they!" answered Shandon. "If they reflected, if they
+examined the situation, they would see that we are going out of one
+imprudence into another."
+
+"But," continued Wall, "the sea is open now, and we are getting back
+into well-known tracks; aren't you exaggerating a bit, Shandon?"
+
+"No, I am not exaggerating; the dislike I feel to Hatteras is not
+blinding me. Have you seen the coal-holes lately?"
+
+"No," answered Wall.
+
+"Well, then, go and examine them: you will see how much there's left.
+He ought to have navigated under sail, and have kept the engine for
+currents and contrary winds; he ought only to have used his coal where
+he was obliged; who can tell where we shall be kept, and for how many
+years? But Hatteras only thinks about getting north. Whether the wind
+is contrary or not, he goes along at full steam, and if things go
+on as they are doing now, we shall soon be in a pretty pickle."
+
+"If what you say is true, it is very serious."
+
+"Yes, it is, because of the wintering. What shall we do without coal
+in a country where even the thermometer freezes?"
+
+"But, if I am not mistaken, the captain counts upon renewing his stock
+of coal at Beechey Island. It appears there is a large provision
+there."
+
+"And suppose we can't reach Beechey Island, what will become of us
+then?"
+
+"You are right, Shandon; Hatteras seems to me very imprudent; but
+why don't you expostulate with him on the subject?"
+
+"No," said Shandon, with ill-concealed bitterness, "I won't say a
+word. It is nothing to do with me now. I shall wait to see what turns
+up; I shall obey orders, and not give my opinion where it isn't
+wanted."
+
+"Allow me to tell you that you are in the wrong, Shandon; you have
+as much interest in setting yourself against the captain's imprudence
+as we have."
+
+"He wouldn't listen to me if I were to speak; do you think he would?"
+
+Wall dared not answer in the affirmative, and he added--
+
+"But perhaps he would listen to the crew."
+
+"The crew!" answered Shandon, shrugging his shoulders; "you don't
+know the crew. The men know they are nearing the 72nd parallel, and
+that they will earn a thousand pounds for every degree above that."
+
+"The captain knew what he was doing when he offered them that."
+
+"Of course he did, and for the present he can do what he likes with
+them."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I mean that while they have nothing to do, and there is an open sea,
+they will go on right enough; but wait till difficulty and danger
+come, and you will see how much they'll think about the money!"
+
+"Then you don't think Hatteras will succeed?"
+
+"No, he will not; to succeed in such an enterprise there must be a
+good understanding between him and his officers, and that does not
+exist. Hatteras is a madman; all his past career proves it. Well,
+we shall see; perhaps circumstances will force them to give the
+command to a less adventurous captain."
+
+"Still," said Wall, shaking his head, "he will always have on his
+side----"
+
+"Dr. Clawbonny, a man who only cares for science, and Johnson, a sailor
+who only cares to obey, and perhaps two more men like Bell, the
+carpenter; four at the most, and we are eighteen on board! No, Wall,
+Hatteras has not got the confidence of his men, and he knows it, so
+he bribes them; he profited cleverly by the Franklin affair, but that
+won't last, I tell you, and if he doesn't reach Beechey Island he's
+a lost man!"
+
+"Suppose the crew should take it into its head----"
+
+"Don't tell the crew what I think," answered Shandon quickly; "the
+men will soon see for themselves. Besides, just now we must go north.
+Who knows if Hatteras won't find that way will bring us back sooner?
+At the end of McClintock Channel lies Melville Bay, and from thence
+go the straits that lead to Baffin's Bay. Hatteras must take care!
+The way to the east is easier than the road to the north!"
+
+Hatteras was not mistaken in his opinion that Shandon would betray
+him if he could. Besides, Shandon was right in attributing the
+contentment of the men to the hope of gain. Clifton had counted exactly
+how much each man would have. Without reckoning the captain and the
+doctor, who would not expect a share in the bounty-money, there
+remained sixteen men to divide it amongst. If ever they succeeded
+in reaching the Pole, each man would have 1,125 pounds--that is to
+say, a fortune. It would cost the captain 18,000 pounds, but he could
+afford it. The thoughts of the money inflamed the minds of the crew,
+and they were now as anxious to go north as before they had been eager
+to turn south. The _Forward_ during the day of June 16th passed Cape
+Aworth. Mount Rawlinson raised its white peaks towards the sky; the
+snow and fog made it appear colossal, as they exaggerated its
+distance; the temperature still kept some degrees above freezing
+point; improvised cascades and cataracts showed themselves on the
+sides of the mountains, and avalanches roared down with the noise
+of artillery discharges. The glaciers, spread out in long white sheets,
+projected an immense reverberation into space. Boreal nature, in its
+struggle with the frost, presented a splendid spectacle. The brig
+went very near the coast; on some sheltered rocks rare heaths were
+to be seen, the pink flowers lifting their heads timidly out of the
+snows, and some meagre lichens of a reddish colour and the shoots
+of a dwarf willow.
+
+At last, on the 19th of June, at the famous seventy-third parallel,
+they doubled Cape Minto, which forms one of the extremities of Ommaney
+Bay; the brig entered Melville Bay, surnamed by Bolton Money Bay;
+the merry sailors joked about the name, and made Dr. Clawbonny laugh
+heartily. Notwithstanding a strong breeze from the northeast, the
+_Forward_ made considerable progress, and on the 23rd of June she
+passed the 74th degree of latitude. She was in the midst of Melville
+Bay, one of the most considerable seas in these regions. This sea
+was crossed for the first time by Captain Parry in his great expedition
+of 1819, and it was then that his crew earned the prize of 5,000 pounds
+promised by Act of Parliament. Clifton remarked that there were two
+degrees from the 72nd to the 74th; that already placed 125 pounds
+to his credit. But they told him that a fortune was not worth much
+there, and that it was of no use being rich if he could not drink
+his riches, and he had better wait till he could roll under a Liverpool
+table before he rejoiced and rubbed his hands.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+A WHALE IN SIGHT
+
+
+Melville Bay, though easily navigable, was not free from ice;
+ice-fields lay as far as the utmost limits of the horizon; a few
+icebergs appeared here and there, but they were immovable, as if
+anchored in the midst of the frozen fields. The _Forward_, with all
+steam on, followed the wide passes where it was easy to work her.
+The wind changed frequently from one point of the compass to another.
+The variability of the wind in the Arctic Seas is a remarkable fact;
+sometimes a dead calm is followed in a few minutes by a violent tempest,
+as the _Forward_ found to her cost on the 23rd of June in the midst
+of the immense bay. The more constant winds blow from off the ice-bank
+on to the open sea, and are intensely cold. On that day the thermometer
+fell several degrees; the wind veered round to the south, and violent
+gusts, sweeping over the ice-fields, brought a thick snow along with
+them. Hatteras immediately caused the sails that helped the screw
+to be furled, but not quickly enough to prevent his little foresail
+being carried away in the twinkling of an eye. Hatteras worked his
+ship with the greatest composure, and did not leave the deck during
+the tempest; he was obliged to fly before the weather and to turn
+westward. The wind raised up enormous waves, in the midst of which
+blocks of ice balanced themselves; these blocks were of all sizes
+and shapes, and had been struck off the surrounding ice-fields; the
+brig was tossed about like a child's plaything, and morsels of the
+packs were thrown over her hull; at one instant she was lying
+perpendicularly along the side of a liquid mountain; her steel prow
+concentrated the light, and shone like a melting metal bar; at another
+she was down an abyss, plunging her head into whirlwinds of snow,
+whilst her screws, out of the water, turned in space with a sinister
+noise, striking the air with their paddles. Rain mixed with the snow
+and fell in torrents.
+
+The doctor could not miss such an occasion of getting wet to the skin;
+he remained on deck, a prey to that emotional admiration which a
+scientific man must necessarily feel during such a spectacle. His
+nearest neighbour could not have heard him speak, so he said nothing
+and watched; but whilst watching he was witness to an odd phenomenon,
+peculiar to hyperborean regions. The tempest was confined to a
+restricted area, and only extended for about three or four miles;
+the wind that passes over ice-fields loses much of its strength and
+cannot carry its violence far out; the doctor perceived from time
+to time, through an opening in the tempest, a calm sky and a quiet
+sea beyond some ice-fields. The _Forward_ would therefore only have
+to take advantage of some channels left by the ice to find a peaceful
+navigation again, but she ran the risk of being thrown on to one of
+the moving banks which followed the movement of the swell. However,
+in a few hours Hatteras succeeded in getting his ship into a calm
+sea, whilst the violence of the hurricane spent itself at a few cables'
+length from the _Forward_. Melville Bay no longer presented the same
+aspect; under the influence of the winds and the waves a great number
+of icebergs, detached from the coast, floated northward, running
+against one another in every direction. There were several hundreds
+of them, but the bay is very wide, and the brig easily avoided them.
+The spectacle of these floating masses was magnificent; they seemed
+to be having a grand race for it on the open sea. The doctor was getting
+quite excited with watching them, when the harpooner, Simpson, came
+up and made him look at the changing tints in the sea; they varied
+from a deep blue to olive green; long stripes stretched north and
+south in such decided lines that the eye could follow each shade out
+of sight. Sometimes a transparent sheet of water would follow a
+perfectly opaque sheet.
+
+"Well, Mr. Clawbonny, what do you think of that?" said Simpson.
+
+"I am of the same opinion as the whaler Scoresby on the nature of
+the different coloured waters; blue water has no animalculae, and
+green water is full of them. Scoresby has made several experiments
+on this subject, and I think he is right."
+
+"Well, sir, I know something else about the colours in the sea, and
+if I were a whaler I should be precious glad to see them."
+
+"But I don't see any whales," answered the doctor.
+
+"You won't be long before you do, though, I can tell you. A whaler
+is lucky when he meets with those green stripes under this latitude."
+
+"Why?" asked the doctor, who always liked to get information from
+anybody who understood what they were talking about.
+
+"Because whales are always found in great quantities in green water."
+
+"What's the reason of that?"
+
+"Because they find plenty of food in them."
+
+"Are you sure of that?"
+
+"I've seen it a hundred times, at least, in Baffin Sea; why shouldn't
+it be the same in Melville Bay? Besides, look there, Mr. Clawbonny,"
+added Simpson, leaning over the barricading.
+
+"Why any one would think it was the wake of a ship!"
+
+"It is an oily substance that the whale leaves behind. The animal
+can't be far off!"
+
+The atmosphere was impregnated with a strong oily odour, and the
+doctor attentively watched the surface of the water. The prediction
+of the harpooner was soon accomplished. Foker called out from the
+masthead--
+
+"A whale alee!"
+
+All looks turned to the direction indicated. A small spout was
+perceived coming up out of the sea about a mile from the brig.
+
+"There she spouts!" cried Simpson, who knew what that meant.
+
+"She has disappeared!" answered the doctor.
+
+"Oh, we could find her again easily enough if necessary!" said Simpson,
+with an accent of regret. To his great astonishment, and although
+no one dared ask for it, Hatteras gave orders to man the whaler.
+Johnson went aft to the stern, while Simpson, harpoon in hand, stood
+in the bow. They could not prevent the doctor joining the expedition.
+The sea was pretty calm. The whaler soon got off, and in ten minutes
+was a mile from the brig. The whale had taken in another provision
+of air, and had plunged again; but she soon returned to the surface
+and spouted out that mixture of gas and mucus that escapes from her
+air-holes.
+
+"There! There!" said Simpson, pointing to a spot about eight hundred
+yards from the boat. It was soon alongside the animal, and as they
+had seen her from the brig too, she came nearer, keeping little steam
+on. The enormous cetacean disappeared and reappeared as the waves
+rose and fell, showing its black back like a rock in open sea. Whales
+do not swim quickly unless they are pursued, and this one only rocked
+itself in the waves. The boat silently approached along the green
+water; its opacity prevented the animal seeing the enemy. It is always
+an agitating spectacle when a fragile boat attacks one of these
+monsters; this one was about 130 feet long, and it is not rare, between
+the 72nd and the 80th degree, to meet with whales more than 180 feet
+long. Ancient writers have described animals more than 700 feet long,
+but they drew upon their imagination for their facts. The boat soon
+neared the whale; on a sign from Simpson the men rested on their oars,
+and brandishing his harpoon, the experienced sailor threw it with
+all his strength; it went deep into the thick covering of fat. The
+wounded whale struck the sea with its tail and plunged. The four oars
+were immediately raised perpendicularly; the cord fastened to the
+harpoon, and attached to the bow, rolled rapidly out and dragged the
+boat along, steered cleverly by Johnson.
+
+The whale got away from the brig and made for the moving icebergs;
+she kept on for more than half-an-hour; they were obliged to wet the
+cord fastened to the harpoon to prevent it catching fire by rubbing
+against the boat. When the whale seemed to be going along a little
+more slowly, the cord was pulled in little by little and rolled up;
+the whale soon reappeared on the surface of the sea, which she beat
+with her formidable tail: veritable waterspouts fell in a violent
+rain on to the boat. It was getting nearer. Simpson had seized a long
+lance, and was preparing to give close battle to the animal, when
+all at once the whale glided into a pass between two mountainous
+icebergs. The pursuit then became really dangerous.
+
+"The devil!" said Johnson.
+
+"Go ahead," cried Simpson; "we've got her!"
+
+"But we can't follow her into the icebergs!" said Johnson, steering
+steadily.
+
+"Yes we can!" cried Simpson.
+
+"No, no!" cried some of the sailors.
+
+"Yes, yes!" said others.
+
+During the discussion the whale had got between two floating mountains
+which the swell was bringing close together. The boat was being
+dragged into this dangerous part when Johnson rushed to the fore,
+an axe in his hand, and cut the cord. He was just in time; the two
+mountains came together with a tremendous crash, crushing the
+unfortunate animal.
+
+"The whale's lost!" cried Simpson.
+
+"But we are saved!" answered Johnson.
+
+"Well," said the doctor, who had not moved, "that was worth seeing!"
+
+The crushing force of these ice-mountains is enormous. The whale was
+victim to an accident that often happens in these seas. Scoresby
+relates that in the course of a single summer thirty whales perished
+in the same way in Baffin's Sea; he saw a three-master flattened in
+a minute between two immense walls of ice. Other vessels were split
+through, as if with a lance, by pointed icicles a hundred feet long,
+meeting through the planks. A few minutes afterwards the boat hailed
+the brig, and was soon in its accustomed place on deck.
+
+"It is a lesson for those who are imprudent enough to adventure into
+the channels amongst the ice!" said Shandon in a loud voice.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+BEECHEY ISLAND
+
+
+On the 25th of June the _Forward_ arrived in sight of Cape Dundas
+at the north-western extremity of Prince of Wales's Land. There the
+difficulty of navigating amongst the ice grew greater. The sea is
+narrower there, and the line made by Crozier, Young, Day, Lowther,
+and Garret Islands, like a chain of forts before a roadstead, forced
+the ice-streams to accumulate in this strait. The brig took from the
+25th to the 30th of June to make as much way as she would have done
+in one day under any other circumstances; she stopped, retraced her
+steps, waiting for a favourable occasion so as not to miss Beechey
+Island, using a great deal of coal, as the fires were only moderated
+when she had to halt, but were never put out, so that she might be
+under pressure day and night. Hatteras knew the extent of his coal
+provision as well as Shandon, but as he was certain of getting his
+provision renewed at Beechey Island he would not lose a minute for
+the sake of economy; he had been much delayed by his forced march
+southward, and although he had taken the precaution of leaving England
+before the month of April, he did not find himself more advanced than
+preceding expeditions had been at the same epoch. On the 30th they
+sighted Cape Walker at the north-eastern extremity of Prince of
+Wales's Land; it was the extreme point that Kennedy and Bellot
+perceived on the 3rd of May, 1852, after an excursion across the whole
+of North Somerset. Before that, in 1851, Captain Ommaney, of the
+Austin expedition, had the good luck to revictual his detachments
+there. This cape is very high, and remarkable for its reddish-brown
+colour; from there, when the weather is clear, the view stretches
+as far as the entrance to Wellington Channel. Towards evening they
+saw Cape Bellot, separated from Cape Walker by McLeon Bay. Cape Bellot
+was so named in the presence of the young French officer, for whom
+the English expedition gave three cheers. At this spot the coast is
+made of yellowish limestone, presenting a very rugged outline; it
+is defended by enormous icebergs which the north winds pile up there
+in a most imposing way. It was soon lost to sight by the _Forward_
+as she opened a passage amongst the ice to get to Beechey Island
+through Barrow Strait. Hatteras resolved to go straight on, and, so
+as not to be drifted further than the island, scarcely quitted his
+post during the following days; he often went to the masthead to look
+out for the most advantageous channels. All that pluck, skill, and
+genius could do he did while they were crossing the strait. Fortune
+did not favour him, for the sea is generally more open at this epoch.
+But at last, by dint of sparing neither his steam, his crew, nor
+himself, he attained his end.
+
+On the 3rd of July, at 11 o'clock in the morning, the ice-master
+signalled land to the north. After taking an observation Hatteras
+recognised Beechey Island, that general meeting-place of Arctic
+navigators. Almost all ships that adventure in these seas stop there.
+Franklin wintered there for the first time before getting into
+Wellington Strait, and Creswell, with Lieutenant McClure, after
+having cleared 170 miles on the ice, rejoined the _Phoenix_ and
+returned to England. The last ship which anchored at Beechey Island
+before the _Forward_ was the _Fox_; McClintock revictualled there
+the 11th of August, 1858, and repaired the habitations and magazines;
+only two years had elapsed since then, and Hatteras knew all these
+details. The boatswain's heart beat with emotion at the sight of this
+island; when he had visited it he was quartermaster on board the
+_Phoenix_; Hatteras questioned him about the coast line, the
+facilities for anchoring, how far they could go inland, &c.; the
+weather was magnificent, and the temperature kept at 57 degrees.
+
+"Well, Johnson," said the captain, "do you know where you are?"
+
+"Yes, sir, that is Beechey Island; only you must let us get further
+north--the coast is more easy of access."
+
+"But where are the habitations and the magazines?" said Hatteras.
+
+"Oh, you can't see them till you land; they are sheltered behind those
+little hills you see yonder."
+
+"And is that where you transported a considerable quantity of
+provisions?"
+
+"Yes, sir; the Admiralty sent us here in 1853, under the command of
+Captain Inglefield, with the steamer _Phoenix_ and a transport ship,
+the _Breadalbane_, loaded with provisions; we brought enough with
+us to revictual a whole expedition."
+
+"But the commander of the _Fox_ took a lot of them in 1858," said
+Hatteras.
+
+"That doesn't matter, sir; there'll be plenty left for you; the cold
+preserves them wonderfully, and we shall find them as fresh and in
+as good a state of preservation as the first day."
+
+"What I want is coal," said Hatteras; "I have enough provisions for
+several years."
+
+"We left more than a thousand tons there, so you can make your mind
+easy."
+
+"Are we getting near?" said Hatteras, who, telescope in hand, was
+watching the coast.
+
+"You see that point?" continued Johnson. "When we have doubled it
+we shall be very near where we drop anchor. It was from that place
+that we started for England with Lieutenant Creswell and the twelve
+invalids from the _Investigator_. We were fortunate enough to bring
+back McClure's lieutenant, but the officer Bellot, who accompanied
+us on board the _Phoenix_, never saw his country again! It is a painful
+thing to think about. But, captain, I think we ought to drop anchor
+here."
+
+"Very well," answered Hatteras, and he gave his orders in consequence.
+The _Forward_ was in a little bay naturally sheltered on the north,
+east, and south, and at about a cable's length from the coast.
+
+"Mr. Wall," said Hatteras, "have the long boat got ready to transport
+the coal on board. I shall land in the pirogue with the doctor and
+the boatswain. Will you accompany us, Mr. Shandon?"
+
+"As you please," answered Shandon.
+
+A few minutes later the doctor, armed as a sportsman and a _savant_,
+took his place in the pirogue along with his companions; in ten minutes
+they landed on a low and rocky coast.
+
+"Lead the way, Johnson," said Hatteras. "You know it, I suppose?"
+
+"Perfectly, sir; only there's a monument here that I did not expect
+to find!"
+
+"That!" cried the doctor; "I know what it is; let us go up to it;
+the stone itself will tell us."
+
+The four men advanced, and the doctor said, after taking off his hat--
+
+"This, my friends, is a monument in memory of Franklin and his
+companions."
+
+Lady Franklin had, in 1855, confided a black marble tablet to Doctor
+Kane, and in 1858 she gave a second to McClintock to be raised on
+Beechey Island. McClintock accomplished this duty religiously, and
+placed the stone near a funeral monument erected to the memory of
+Bellot by Sir John Barrow.
+
+The tablet bore the following inscription:
+
+
+ "TO THE MEMORY OF
+ FRANKLIN, CROZIER, FITZ-JAMES,
+ AND ALL THEIR VALIANT BRETHREN
+ OFFICERS AND FAITHFUL COMPANIONS
+who suffered for the cause of science and for their country's glory.
+
+"This stone is erected near the place where they passed their first
+Arctic winter, and from whence they departed to conquer obstacles
+or to die.
+
+"It perpetuates the regret of their countrymen and friends who admire
+them, and the anguish, conquered by Faith, of her who lost in the
+chief of the expedition the most devoted and most affectionate of
+husbands.
+
+"It is thus that He led them to the supreme haven where all men take
+their rest.
+
+ "1855."
+
+
+This stone, on a forlorn coast of these far-off regions, appealed
+mournfully to the heart; the doctor, in presence of these touching
+regrets, felt his eyes fill with tears. At the very same place which
+Franklin and his companions passed full of energy and hope, there
+only remained a block of marble in remembrance! And notwithstanding
+this sombre warning of destiny, the _Forward_ was going to follow
+in the track of the _Erebus_ and the _Terror_. Hatteras was the first
+to rouse himself from the perilous contemplation, and quickly climbed
+a rather steep hill, almost entirely bare of snow.
+
+"Captain," said Johnson, following him, "we shall see the magazines
+from here."
+
+Shandon and the doctor joined them on the summit. But from there the
+eye contemplated the vast plains, on which there remained no vestige
+of a habitation.
+
+"That is singular!" cried the boatswain.
+
+"Well, and where are the magazines?" said Hatteras quickly.
+
+"I don't know--I don't see----" stammered Johnson.
+
+"You have mistaken the way," said the doctor.
+
+"It seemed to me that this was the very place," continued Johnson.
+
+"Well," said Hatteras, impatiently "where are we to go now?"
+
+"We had better go down, for I may be mistaken. I may have forgotten
+the exact locality in seven years!"
+
+"Especially when the country is so uniformly monotonous!" added the
+doctor.
+
+"And yet----" murmured Johnson.
+
+Shandon had not spoken a word. After walking for a few minutes, Johnson
+stopped.
+
+"But no," he cried, "I am not mistaken!"
+
+"Well?" said Hatteras, looking round him.
+
+"Do you see that swell of the ground?" asked the boatswain, pointing
+to a sort of mound with three distinct swells on it.
+
+"What do you conclude from that?" asked the doctor.
+
+"Those are the three graves of Franklin's sailors. I am sure now that
+I am not mistaken; the habitations ought to be about a hundred feet
+from here, and if they are not, they----"
+
+He dared not finish his sentence; Hatteras had rushed forward, a prey
+to violent despair. There, where the wished-for stores on which he
+had counted ought to have been, there ruin, pillage and destruction
+had been before him. Who had done it? Animals would only have attacked
+the provisions, and there did not remain a single rag from the tent,
+a piece of wood or iron, and, more terrible still, not a fragment
+of coal! It was evident that the Esquimaux had learnt the value of
+these objects from their frequent relations with Europeans; since
+the departure of the _Fox_ they had fetched everything away, and had
+not left a trace even of their passage. A slight coating of snow
+covered the ground. Hatteras was confounded. The doctor looked and
+shook his head. Shandon still said nothing, but an attentive observer
+would have noticed his lips curl with a cruel smile. At this moment
+the men sent by Lieutenant Wall came up; they soon saw the state of
+affairs. Shandon advanced towards the captain, and said:
+
+"Mr. Hatteras, we need not despair; happily we are near the entrance
+to Barrow Strait, which will take us back to Baffin's Sea!"
+
+"Mr. Shandon," answered Hatteras, "happily we are near the entrance
+to Wellington Strait, and that will take us north!"
+
+"But how shall we get along, captain?"
+
+"With the sails, sir. We have two months' firing left, and that is
+enough for our wintering."
+
+"But allow me to tell you----" added Shandon.
+
+"I will allow you to follow me on board my ship, sir," answered
+Hatteras, and turning his back on his second, he returned to the brig
+and shut himself up in his cabin. For the next two days the wind was
+contrary, and the captain did not show up on deck. The doctor profited
+by the forced sojourn to go over Beechey Island; he gathered some
+plants, which the temperature, relatively high, allowed to grow here
+and there on the rocks that the snow had left, some heaths, a few
+lichens, a sort of yellow ranunculus, a sort of plant something like
+sorrel, with wider leaves and more veins, and some pretty vigorous
+saxifrages. He found the fauna of this country much richer than the
+flora; he perceived long flocks of geese and cranes going northward,
+partridges, eider ducks of a bluish black, sandpipers, a sort of
+wading bird of the scolopax class, northern divers, plungers with
+very long bodies, numerous ptarmites, a sort of bird very good to
+eat, dovekies with black bodies, wings spotted with white, feet and
+beak red as coral; noisy bands of kittywakes and fat loons with white
+breasts, represented the ornithology of the island. The doctor was
+fortunate enough to kill a few grey hares, which had not yet put on
+their white winter fur, and a blue fox which Dick ran down skilfully.
+Some bears, evidently accustomed to dread the presence of men, would
+not allow themselves to be got at, and the seals were extremely timid,
+doubtless for the same reason as their enemies the bears. The class
+of articulated animals was represented by a single mosquito, which
+the doctor caught to his great delight, though not till it had stung
+him. As a conchologist he was less favoured, and only found a sort
+of mussel and some bivalve shells.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE DEATH OF BELLOT
+
+
+The temperature during the days of the 3rd and 4th of July kept up
+to 57 degrees; this was the highest thermometric point observed during
+the campaign. But on Thursday, the 5th, the wind turned to the
+south-east, and was accompanied by violent snow-storms. The
+thermometer fell during the preceding night to 23 degrees. Hatteras
+took no notice of the murmurs of the crew, and gave orders to get
+under way. For the last thirteen days, from Cape Dundas, the _Forward_
+had not been able to gain one more degree north, so the party
+represented by Clifton was no longer satisfied, but wished like
+Hatteras to get into Wellington Channel, and worked away with a will.
+The brig had some difficulty in getting under sail; but Hatteras
+having set his mizensail, his topsails, and his gallantsails during
+the night, advanced boldly in the midst of fields of ice which the
+current was drifting south. The crew were tired out with this winding
+navigation, which kept them constantly at work at the sails.
+Wellington Channel is not very wide; it is bounded by North Devon
+on the east and Cornwallis Island on the west; this island was long
+believed to be a peninsula. It was Sir John Franklin who first sailed
+round it in 1846, starting west, and coming back to the same point
+to the north of the channel. The exploration of Wellington Channel
+was made in 1851 by Captain Penny in the whalers _Lady Franklin_ and
+_Sophia_; one of his lieutenants, Stewart, reached Cape Beecher in
+latitude 76 degrees 20 minutes, and discovered the open sea--that
+open sea which was Hatteras's dream!
+
+"What Stewart found I shall find," said he to the doctor; "then I
+shall be able to set sail to the Pole."
+
+"But aren't you afraid that your crew----"
+
+"My crew!" said Hatteras severely. Then in a low tone--"Poor fellows!"
+murmured he, to the great astonishment of the doctor. It was the first
+expression of feeling he had heard the captain deliver.
+
+"No," he repeated with energy, "they must follow me! They shall follow
+me!"
+
+However, although the _Forward_ had nothing to fear from the collision
+of the ice-streams, which were still pretty far apart, they made very
+little progress northward, for contrary winds often forced them to
+stop. They passed Capes Spencer and Innis slowly, and on Tuesday,
+the 10th, cleared 75 degrees to the great delight of Clifton. The
+_Forward_ was then at the very place where the American ships, the
+_Rescue_ and the _Advance_, encountered such terrible dangers.
+Doctor Kane formed part of this expedition; towards the end of
+September, 1850, these ships got caught in an ice-bank, and were
+forcibly driven into Lancaster Strait. It was Shandon who related
+this catastrophe to James Wall before some of the brig's crew.
+
+"The _Advance_ and the _Rescue_," he said to them, "were so knocked
+about by the ice, that they were obliged to leave off fires on board;
+but that did not prevent the temperature sinking 18 degrees below
+zero. During the whole winter the unfortunate crews were kept
+prisoners in the ice-bank, ready to abandon their ships at any moment;
+for three weeks they did not even change their clothes. They floated
+along in that dreadful situation for more than a thousand miles, when
+at last they were thrown into the middle of Baffin's Sea."
+
+The effect of this speech upon a crew already badly disposed can be
+well imagined. During this conversation Johnson was talking to the
+doctor about an event that had taken place in those very quarters;
+he asked the doctor to tell him when the brig was in latitude 75 degrees
+30 minutes, and when they passed it he cried:
+
+"Yes, it was just there!" in saying which tears filled his eyes.
+
+"You mean that Lieutenant Bellot died there?" said the doctor.
+
+"Yes, Mr. Clawbonny. He was as good and brave a fellow as ever lived!
+It was upon this very North Devon coast! It was to be, I suppose,
+but if Captain Pullen had returned on board sooner it would not have
+happened."
+
+"What do you mean, Johnson?"
+
+"Listen to me, Mr. Clawbonny, and you will see on what a slight thread
+existence often hangs. You know that Lieutenant Bellot went his first
+campaign in search of Franklin in 1850?"
+
+"Yes, on the _Prince Albert_."
+
+"Well, when he got back to France he obtained permission to embark
+on board the _Phoenix_ under Captain Inglefield; I was a sailor on
+board. We came with the _Breadalbane_ to transport provisions to
+Beechey Island!"
+
+"Those provisions we, unfortunately, did not find. Well?"
+
+"We reached Beechey Island in the beginning of August; on the 10th
+Captain Inglefield left the _Phoenix_ to rejoin Captain Pullen, who
+had been separated from his ship, the _North Star_, for a month. When
+he came back he thought of sending his Admiralty despatches to Sir
+Edward Belcher, who was wintering in Wellington Channel. A little
+while after the departure of our captain, Captain Pullen got back
+to his ship. Why did he not arrive before the departure of Captain
+Inglefield? Lieutenant Bellot, fearing that our captain would be long
+away, and knowing that the Admiralty despatches ought to be sent at
+once, offered to take them himself. He left the command of the two
+ships to Captain Pullen, and set out on the 12th of August with a
+sledge and an indiarubber boat. He took the boatswain of the _North
+Star_ (Harvey) with him, and three sailors, Madden, David Hook, and
+me. We supposed that Sir Edward Belcher was to be found in the
+neighbourhood of Beecher Cape, to the north of the channel; we made
+for it with our sledge along the eastern coast. The first day we
+encamped about three miles from Cape Innis; the next day we stopped
+on a block of ice about three miles from Cape Bowden. As land lay
+at about three miles' distance, Lieutenant Bellot resolved to go and
+encamp there during the night, which was as light as the day; he tried
+to get to it in his indiarubber canoe; he was twice repulsed by a
+violent breeze from the south-east; Harvey and Madden attempted the
+passage in their turn, and were more fortunate; they took a cord with
+them, and established a communication between the coast and the
+sledge; three objects were transported by means of the cord, but at
+the fourth attempt we felt our block of ice move; Mr. Bellot called
+out to his companions to drop the cord, and we were dragged to a great
+distance from the coast. The wind blew from the south-east, and it
+was snowing; but we were not in much danger, and the lieutenant might
+have come back as we did."
+
+Here Johnson stopped an instant to take a glance at the fatal coast,
+and continued:
+
+"After our companions were lost to sight we tried to shelter ourselves
+under the tent of our sledge, but in vain; then, with our knives,
+we began to cut out a house in the ice. Mr. Bellot helped us for half
+an hour, and talked to us about the danger of our situation. I told
+him I was not afraid. 'By God's help,' he answered, 'we shall not
+lose a hair of our heads.' I asked him what o'clock it was, and he
+answered, 'About a quarter-past six.' It was a quarter-past six in
+the morning of Thursday, August 18th. Then Mr. Bellot tied up his
+books, and said he would go and see how the ice floated; he had only
+been gone four minutes when I went round the block of ice to look
+for him; I saw his stick on the opposite side of a crevice, about
+five fathoms wide, where the ice was broken, but I could not see him
+anywhere. I called out, but no one answered. The wind was blowing
+great guns. I looked all round the block of ice, but found no trace
+of the poor lieutenant."
+
+"What do you think had become of him?" said the doctor, much moved.
+
+"I think that when Mr. Bellot got out of shelter the wind blew him
+into the crevice, and, as his greatcoat was buttoned up he could not
+swim. Oh! Mr. Clawbonny, I never was more grieved in my life! I could
+not believe it! He was a victim to duty, for it was in order to obey
+Captain Pullen's instructions that he tried to get to land. He was
+a good fellow, everybody liked him; even the Esquimaux, when they
+learnt his fate from Captain Inglefield on his return from Pound Bay,
+cried while they wept, as I am doing now, 'Poor Bellot! poor Bellot!'"
+
+"But you and your companion, Johnson," said the doctor, "how did you
+manage to reach land?"
+
+"Oh! we stayed twenty-four hours more on the block of ice, without
+food or firing; but at last we met with an ice-field; we jumped on
+to it, and with the help of an oar we fastened ourselves to an iceberg
+that we could guide like a raft, and we got to land, but without our
+brave officer."
+
+By the time Johnson had finished his story the _Forward_ had passed
+the fatal coast, and Johnson lost sight of the place of the painful
+catastrophe. The next day they left Griffin Bay to the starboard,
+and, two days after, Capes Grinnell and Helpmann; at last, on the
+14th of July, they doubled Osborn Point, and on the 15th the brig
+anchored in Baring Bay, at the extremity of the channel. Navigation
+had not been very difficult; Hatteras met with a sea almost as free
+as that of which Belcher profited to go and winter with the _Pioneer_
+and the _Assistance_ as far north as 77 degrees. It was in 1852 and
+1853, during his first wintering, for he passed the winter of 1853
+to 1854 in Baring Bay, where the _Forward_ was now at anchor. He
+suffered so much that he was obliged to leave the _Assistance_ in
+the midst of the ice. Shandon told all these details to the already
+discontented sailors. Did Hatteras know how he was betrayed by his
+first officer? It is impossible to say; if he did, he said nothing
+about it.
+
+At the top of Baring Bay there is a narrow channel which puts
+Wellington and Queen's Channel into communication with each other.
+There the rafts of ice lie closely packed. Hatteras tried, in vain,
+to clear the passes to the north of Hamilton Island; the wind was
+contrary; five precious days were lost in useless efforts. The
+temperature still lowered, and, on the 19th of July, fell to 26
+degrees; it got higher the following day; but this foretaste of winter
+made Hatteras afraid of waiting any longer. The wind seemed to be
+going to keep in the west, and to stop the progress of the ship. However,
+he was in a hurry to gain the point where Stewart had met with the
+open sea. On the 19th he resolved to get into the Channel at any price;
+the wind blew right on the brig, which might, with her screw, have
+stood against it, had not Hatteras been obliged to economise his fuel;
+on the other hand, the Channel was too wide to allow the men to haul
+the brig along. Hatteras, not considering the men's fatigue, resolved
+to have recourse to means often employed by whalers under similar
+circumstances. The men took it in turns to row, so as to push the
+brig on against the wind. The _Forward_ advanced slowly up the Channel.
+The men were worn out and murmured loudly. They went on in that manner
+till the 23rd of July, when they reached Baring Island in Queen's
+Channel. The wind was still against them. The doctor thought the
+health of the men much shaken, and perceived the first symptoms of
+scurvy amongst them; he did all he could to prevent the spread of
+the wretched malady, and distributed lime-juice to the men.
+
+Hatteras saw that he could no longer count upon his crew; reasoning
+and kindness were ineffectual, so he resolved to employ severity for
+the future; he suspected Shandon and Wall, though they dare not speak
+out openly. Hatteras had the doctor, Johnson, Bell, and Simpson for
+him; they were devoted to him body and soul; amongst the undecided
+were Foker, Bolton, Wolsten the gunsmith, and Brunton the first
+engineer; and they might turn against the captain at any moment; as
+to Pen, Gripper, Clifton, and Warren, they were in open revolt; they
+wished to persuade their comrades to force the captain to return to
+England. Hatteras soon saw that he could not continue to work his
+ship with such a crew. He remained twenty-four hours at Baring Island
+without taking a step forward. The weather grew cooler still, for
+winter begins to be felt in July in these high latitudes. On the 24th
+the thermometer fell to 22 degrees. Young ice formed during the night,
+and if snow fell it would soon be thick enough to bear the weight
+of a man. The sea began already to have that dirty colour which
+precedes the formation of the first crystals. Hatteras could not
+mistake these alarming symptoms; if the channels got blocked up, he
+should be obliged to winter there at a great distance from the point
+he had undertaken the voyage in order to reach, without having caught
+a glimpse of that open sea which his predecessors made out was so
+near. He resolved, then, to gain several degrees further north, at
+whatever cost; seeing that he could not employ oars without the rowers
+were willing, nor sail in a contrary wind, he gave orders to put steam
+on again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+BEGINNING OF REVOLT
+
+
+At this unexpected command, the surprise was great on board the
+_Forward_.
+
+"Light the fires!" exclaimed some.
+
+"What with?" asked others.
+
+"When we've only two months' coal in the hold!" said Pen.
+
+"What shall we warm ourselves with in the winter?" asked Clifton.
+
+"We shall be obliged to burn the brig down to her water-line," answered
+Gripper.
+
+"And stuff the stove with the masts," added Warren. Shandon looked
+at Wall. The stupefied engineers hesitated to go down to the
+machine-room.
+
+"Did you hear me?" cried the captain in an irritated tone.
+
+Brunton made for the hatchway, but before going down he stopped.
+
+"Don't go, Brunton!" called out a voice.
+
+"Who spoke?" cried Hatteras.
+
+"I did," said Pen, advancing towards the captain.
+
+"And what did you say?" asked Hatteras.
+
+"I say," answered Pen with an oath--"I say, we've had enough of it,
+and we won't go any further. You shan't kill us with hunger and work
+in the winter, and they shan't light the fires!"
+
+"Mr. Shandon," answered Hatteras calmly, "have that man put in irons!"
+
+"But, captain," replied Shandon, "what the man says----"
+
+"If you repeat what the man says," answered Hatteras, "I'll have you
+shut up in your cabin and guarded! Seize that man! Do you hear?"
+Johnson, Bell, and Simpson advanced towards the sailor, who was in
+a terrible passion.
+
+"The first who touches me----" he said, brandishing a handspike.
+Hatteras approached him.
+
+"Pen," said he tranquilly, "if you move, I shall blow out your brains!"
+So speaking, he cocked a pistol and aimed it at the sailor. A murmur
+was heard.
+
+"Not a word, men," said Hatteras, "or that man falls dead!" Johnson
+and Bell disarmed Pen, who no longer made any resistance, and placed
+him in the hold.
+
+"Go, Brunton," said Hatteras. The engineer, followed by Plover and
+Warren, went down to his post. Hatteras returned to the poop.
+
+"That Pen is a wretched fellow!" said the doctor.
+
+"No man has ever been nearer death!" answered the captain, simply.
+
+The steam was soon got up, the anchors were weighed, and the _Forward_
+veered away east, cutting the young ice with her steel prow. Between
+Baring Island and Beecher Point there are a considerable quantity
+of islands in the midst of ice-fields; the streams crowd together
+in the little channels which cut up this part of the sea; they had
+a tendency to agglomerate under the relatively low temperature;
+hummocks were formed here and there, and these masses, already more
+compact, denser, and closer together, would soon form an impenetrable
+mass. The _Forward_ made its way with great difficulty amidst the
+snowstorms. However, with the mobility that characterises the
+climate of these regions, the sun appeared from time to time, the
+temperature went up several degrees, obstacles melted as if by magic,
+and a fine sheet of water lay where icebergs bristled all the passes.
+The horizon glowed with those magnificent orange shades which rest
+the eye, tired with the eternal white of the snow.
+
+On the 26th of July the _Forward_ passed Dundas Island, and veered
+afterwards more to the north; but there Hatteras found himself
+opposite an ice-bank eight or nine feet high, formed of little
+icebergs detached from the coast; he was obliged to turn west. The
+uninterrupted cracking of the ice, added to the noise of the steamer,
+was like sighs or groans. At last the brig found a channel, and
+advanced painfully along it; often an enormous iceberg hindered her
+course for hours; the fog hindered the pilot's look-out; as long as
+he can see for a mile in front of him, he can easily avoid obstacles;
+but in the midst of the fog it was often impossible to see a cable's
+length, and the swell was very strong. Sometimes the clouds looked
+smooth and white as though they were reflections of the ice-banks;
+but there were entire days when the yellow rays of the sun could not
+pierce the tenacious fog. Birds were still very numerous, and their
+cries were deafening; seals, lying idle on the floating ice, raised
+their heads, very little frightened, and moved their long necks as
+the brig passed. Pieces from the ship's sheathing were often rubbed
+off in her contact with the ice. At last, after six days of slow
+navigation, Point Beecher was sighted to the north on the 1st of August.
+Hatteras passed the last few hours at his masthead; the open sea that
+Stewart had perceived on May 30th, 1851, about latitude 76 degrees
+20 minutes, could not be far off; but as far as the eye could reach,
+Hatteras saw no indication of it. He came down without saying a word.
+
+"Do you believe in an open sea?" asked Shandon of the lieutenant.
+
+"I am beginning not to," answered Wall.
+
+"Wasn't I right to say the pretended discovery was purely imagination?
+But they would not believe me, and even you were against me, Wall."
+
+"We shall believe in you for the future, Shandon."
+
+"Yes," said he, "when it's too late," and so saying he went back to
+his cabin, where he had stopped almost ever since his dispute with
+the captain. The wind veered round south towards evening; Hatteras
+ordered the brig to be put under sail and the fires to be put out;
+the crew had to work very hard for the next few days; they were more
+than a week getting to Barrow Point. The _Forward_ had only made thirty
+miles in ten days. There the wind turned north again, and the screw
+was set to work. Hatteras still hoped to find an open sea beyond the
+77th parallel, as Sir Edward Belcher had done. Ought he to treat these
+accounts as apocryphal? or had the winter come upon him earlier? On
+the 15th of August Mount Percy raised its peak, covered with eternal
+snow, through the mist. The next day the sun set for the first time,
+ending thus the long series of days with twenty-four hours in them.
+The men had ended by getting accustomed to the continual daylight,
+but it had never made any difference to the animals; the Greenland
+dogs went to their rest at their accustomed hour, and Dick slept as
+regularly every evening as though darkness had covered the sky. Still,
+during the nights which followed the 15th of August, darkness was
+never profound; although the sun set, he still gave sufficient light
+by refraction. On the 19th of August, after a pretty good observation,
+they sighted Cape Franklin on the east coast and Cape Lady Franklin
+on the west coast; the gratitude of the English people had given these
+names to the two opposite points--probably the last reached by
+Franklin: the name of the devoted wife, opposite to that of her husband,
+is a touching emblem of the sympathy which always united them.
+
+The doctor, by following Johnson's advice, accustomed himself to
+support the low temperature; he almost always stayed on deck braving
+the cold, the wind, and the snow. He got rather thinner, but his
+constitution did not suffer. Besides, he expected to be much worse
+off, and joyfully prepared for the approaching winter.
+
+"Look at those birds," he said to Johnson one day; "they are emigrating
+south in flocks! They are shrieking out their good-byes!"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Clawbonny, some instinct tells them they must go, and they
+set out."
+
+"There's more than one amongst us who would like to imitate them,
+I think."
+
+"They are cowards, Mr. Clawbonny; those animals have no provisions
+as we have, and are obliged to seek their food where it is to be found.
+But sailors, with a good ship under their feet, ought to go to the
+world's end."
+
+"You hope that Hatteras will succeed, then?"
+
+"He certainly will, Mr. Clawbonny."
+
+"I am of the same opinion as you, Johnson, and if he only wanted one
+faithful companion----"
+
+"He'll have two!"
+
+"Yes, Johnson," answered the doctor, shaking hands with the brave
+sailor.
+
+Prince Albert Land, which the _Forward_ was then coasting, bears also
+the name of Grinnell Land, and though Hatteras, from his hatred to
+the Yankees, would never call it by its American name, it is the one
+it generally goes by. It owes its double appellation to the following
+circumstances: At the same time that Penny, an Englishman, gave it
+the name of Prince Albert, Lieutenant Haven, commander of the _Rescue_,
+called it Grinnell Land in honour of the American merchant who had
+fitted out the expedition from New York at his own expense. Whilst
+the brig was coasting it, she experienced a series of unheard-of
+difficulties, navigating sometimes under sail, sometimes by steam.
+On the 18th of August they sighted Britannia Mountain, scarcely
+visible through the mist, and the _Forward_ weighed anchor the next
+day in Northumberland Bay. She was hemmed in on all sides.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+ATTACKED BY ICEBERGS
+
+
+Hatteras, after seeing to the anchoring of his ship, re-entered his
+cabin and examined his map attentively. He found himself in latitude
+76 degrees 57 minutes and longitude 99 degrees 20 minutes--that is
+to say, at only three minutes from the 77th parallel. It was at this
+very spot that Sir Edward Belcher passed his first winter with the
+_Pioneer_ and the _Assistance_. It was thence that he organised his
+sledge and boat excursions. He discovered Table Isle, North Cornwall,
+Victoria Archipelago, and Belcher Channel. He reached the 78th
+parallel, and saw that the coast was depressed on the south-east.
+It seemed to go down to Jones's Strait, the entrance to which lies
+in Baffin's Bay. But to the north-west, on the contrary, says his
+report, an open sea lay as far as the eye could reach.
+
+Hatteras considered attentively the white part of the map, which
+represented the Polar basin free from ice.
+
+"After such testimony as that of Stewart, Penny, and Belcher, I can't
+have a doubt about it," he said to himself. "They saw it with their
+own eyes. But if the winter has already frozen it! But no; they made
+their discoveries at intervals of several years. It exists, and I
+shall find it! I shall see it."
+
+Hatteras went on to the poop. An intense fog enveloped the _Forward_;
+the masthead could scarcely be distinguished from the deck. However,
+Hatteras called down the ice-master from his crow's nest, and took
+his place. He wished to profit by the shortest clear interval to
+examine the north-western horizon. Shandon did not let the occasion
+slip for saying to the lieutenant:
+
+"Well, Wall, where is the open sea?"
+
+"You were right, Shandon, and we have only six weeks' coal in the
+hold."
+
+"Perhaps the doctor will find us some scientific fuel to warm us in
+the place of coal," answered Shandon. "I have heard say you can turn
+fire to ice; perhaps he'll turn ice to fire." And he entered his cabin,
+shrugging his shoulders. The next day was the 20th of August, and
+the fog cleared away for several minutes. They saw Hatteras look
+eagerly at the horizon, and then come down without speaking; but it
+was easy to see that his hopes had again been crushed. The _Forward_
+weighed anchor, and took up her uncertain march northward. As the
+_Forward_ began to be weather-worn, the masts were unreeved, for they
+could no longer rely on the variable wind, and the sails were nearly
+useless in the winding channels. Large white marks appeared here and
+there on the sea like oil spots; they presaged an approaching frost;
+as soon as the breeze dropped the sea began to freeze immediately;
+but as soon as the wind got up again, the young ice was broken up
+and dispersed. Towards evening the thermometer went down to 17
+degrees.
+
+When the brig came to a closed-up pass she acted as a battering ram,
+and ran at full steam against the obstacle, which she sunk. Sometimes
+they thought she was stopped for good; but an unexpected movement
+of the streams opened her a new passage, and she took advantage of
+it boldly. When the brig stopped, the steam which escaped from the
+safety-pipes was condensed by the cold air and fell in snow on to
+the deck. Another impediment came in the way; the ice-blocks sometimes
+got entangled in the paddles, and they were so hard that all the
+strength of the machine was not sufficient to break them; it was then
+necessary to back the engine and send men to clear the screws with
+their handspikes. All this delayed the brig; it lasted thirteen days.
+The _Forward_ dragged herself painfully along Penny Strait; the crew
+grumbled, but obeyed: the men saw now that it was impossible to go
+back. Keeping north was less dangerous than retreating south. They
+were obliged to think about wintering. The sailors talked together
+about their present position, and one day they mentioned it to Richard
+Shandon, who, they knew, was on their side. The second officer forgot
+his duty as an officer, and allowed them to discuss the authority
+of the captain before him.
+
+"You say, then, Mr. Shandon, that we can't go back now?" said Gripper.
+
+"No, it's too late now," answered Shandon.
+
+"Then we must think about wintering," said another sailor.
+
+"It's the only thing we can do. They wouldn't believe me."
+
+"Another time," said Pen, who had been released, "we shall believe
+you."
+
+"But as I am not the master----" replied Shandon.
+
+"Who says you mayn't be?" answered Pen. "John Hatteras may go as far
+as he likes, but we aren't obliged to follow him."
+
+"You all know what became of the crew that did follow him in his first
+cruise to Baffin's Sea?" said Gripper.
+
+"And the cruise of the _Farewell_ under him that got lost in the
+Spitzbergen seas!" said Clifton.
+
+"He was the only man that came back," continued Gripper.
+
+"He and his dog," answered Clifton.
+
+"We won't die for his pleasure," added Pen.
+
+"Nor lose the bounty we've been at so much trouble to earn," cried
+Clifton. "When we've passed the 78th degree--and we aren't far off
+it, I know--that will make just the 375 pounds each."
+
+"But," answered Gripper, "shan't we lose it if we go back without
+the captain?"
+
+"Not if we prove that we were obliged to," answered Clifton.
+
+"But it's the captain----"
+
+"You never mind, Gripper," answered Pen; "we'll have a captain and
+a good one--that Mr. Shandon knows. When one commander goes mad, folks
+have done with him, and they take another; don't they, Mr. Shandon?"
+
+Shandon answered evasively that they could reckon upon him, but that
+they must wait to see what turned up. Difficulties were getting thick
+round Hatteras, but he was as firm, calm, energetic, and confident
+as ever. After all, he had done in five months what other navigators
+had taken two or three years to do! He should be obliged to winter
+now, but there was nothing to frighten brave sailors in that. Sir
+John Ross and McClure had passed three successive winters in the
+Arctic regions. What they had done he could do too!
+
+"If I had only been able to get up Smith Strait at the north of Baffin's
+Sea, I should be at the Pole by now!" he said to the doctor regretfully.
+
+"Never mind, captain!" answered the doctor, "we shall get at it by
+the 99th meridian instead of by the 75th; if all roads lead to Rome,
+it's more certain still that all meridians lead to the Pole."
+
+On the 31st of August the thermometer marked 13 degrees. The end of
+the navigable season was approaching; the _Forward_ left Exmouth
+Island to the starboard, and three days after passed Table Island
+in the middle of Belcher Channel. At an earlier period it would perhaps
+have been possible to regain Baffin's Sea by this channel, but it
+was not to be dreamt of then; this arm of the sea was entirely
+barricaded by ice; ice-fields extended as far as the eye could reach,
+and would do so for eight months longer. Happily they could still
+gain a few minutes further north on the condition of breaking up the
+ice with huge clubs and petards. Now the temperature was so low, any
+wind, even a contrary one, was welcome, for in a calm the sea froze
+in a single night. The _Forward_ could not winter in her present
+situation, exposed to winds, icebergs, and the drift from the channel;
+a shelter was the first thing to find; Hatteras hoped to gain the
+coast of New Cornwall, and to find above Albert Point a bay of refuge
+sufficiently sheltered. He therefore pursued his course northward
+with perseverance. But on the 8th an impenetrable ice-bank lay in
+front of him, and the temperature was at 10 degrees. Hatteras did
+all he could to force a passage, continually risking his ship and
+getting out of danger by force of skill. He could be accused of
+imprudence, want of reflection, folly, blindness, but he was a good
+sailor, and one of the best! The situation of the _Forward_ became
+really dangerous; the sea closed up behind her, and in a few hours
+the ice got so hard that the men could run along it and tow the ship
+in all security.
+
+Hatteras found he could not get round the obstacle, so he resolved
+to attack it in front; he used his strongest blasting cylinders of
+eight to ten pounds of powder; they began by making a hole in the
+thick of the ice, and filled it with snow, taking care to place the
+cylinder in a horizontal position, so that a greater portion of the
+ice might be submitted to the explosion; lastly, they lighted the
+wick, which was protected by a gutta-percha tube. They worked at the
+blasting, as they could not saw, for the saws stuck immediately in
+the ice. Hatteras hoped to pass the next day. But during the night
+a violent wind raged, and the sea rose under her crust of ice as if
+shaken by some submarine commotion, and the terrified voice of the
+pilot was heard crying:
+
+"Look out aft!"
+
+Hatteras turned to the direction indicated, and what he saw by the
+dim twilight was frightful. A high iceberg, driven back north, was
+rushing on to the ship with the rapidity of an avalanche.
+
+"All hands on deck!" cried the captain.
+
+The rolling mountain was hardly half a mile off; the blocks of ice
+were driven about like so many huge grains of sand; the tempest raged
+with fury.
+
+"There, Mr. Clawbonny," said Johnson to the doctor, "we are in
+something like danger now."
+
+"Yes," answered the doctor tranquilly, "it looks frightful enough."
+
+"It's an assault we shall have to repulse," replied the boatswain.
+
+"It looks like a troop of antediluvian animals, those that were
+supposed to inhabit the Pole. They are trying which shall get here
+first!"
+
+"Well," added Johnson, "I hope we shan't get one of their spikes into
+us!"
+
+"It's a siege--let's run to the ramparts!"
+
+And they made haste aft, where the crew, armed with poles, bars of
+iron, and handspikes, were getting ready to repulse the formidable
+enemy. The avalanche came nearer, and got bigger by the addition of
+the blocks of ice which it caught in its passage; Hatteras gave orders
+to fire the cannon in the bow to break the threatening line. But it
+arrived and rushed on to the brig; a great crackling noise was heard,
+and as it struck on the brig's starboard a part of her barricading
+was broken. Hatteras gave his men orders to keep steady and prepare
+for the ice. It came along in blocks; some of them weighing several
+hundredweight came over the ship's side; the smaller ones, thrown
+up as high as the topsails, fell in little spikes, breaking the shrouds
+and cutting the rigging. The ship was boarded by these innumerable
+enemies, which in a block would have crushed a hundred ships like
+the _Forward_. Some of the sailors were badly wounded whilst trying
+to keep off the ice, and Bolton had his left shoulder torn open. The
+noise was deafening. Dick barked with rage at this new kind of enemy.
+The obscurity of the night came to add to the horror of the situation,
+but did not hide the threatening blocks, their white surface reflected
+the last gleams of light. Hatteras's orders were heard in the midst
+of the crew's strange struggle with the icebergs. The ship giving
+way to the tremendous pressure, bent to the larboard, and the
+extremity of her mainyard leaned like a buttress against the iceberg
+and threatened to break her mast.
+
+Hatteras saw the danger; it was a terrible moment; the brig threatened
+to turn completely over, and the masting might be carried away. An
+enormous block, as big as the steamer itself, came up alongside her
+hull; it rose higher and higher on the waves; it was already above
+the poop; it fell over the _Forward_. All was lost; it was now upright,
+higher than the gallant yards, and it shook on its foundation. A cry
+of terror escaped the crew. Everyone fled to starboard. But at this
+moment the steamer was lifted completely up, and for a little while
+she seemed to be suspended in the air, and fell again on to the
+ice-blocks; then she rolled over till her planks cracked again. After
+a minute, which appeared a century, she found herself again in her
+natural element, having been turned over the ice-bank that blocked
+her passage by the rising of the sea.
+
+"She's cleared the ice-bank!" shouted Johnson, who had rushed to the
+fore of the brig.
+
+"Thank God!" answered Hatteras.
+
+The brig was now in the midst of a pond of ice, which hemmed her in
+on every side, and though her keel was in the water, she could not
+move; she was immovable, but the ice-field moved for her.
+
+"We are drifting, captain!" cried Johnson.
+
+"We must drift," answered Hatteras; "we can't help ourselves."
+
+When daylight came, it was seen that the brig was drifting rapidly
+northward, along with a submarine current. The floating mass carried
+the _Forward_ along with it. In case of accident, when the brig might
+be thrown on her side, or crushed by the pressure of the ice, Hatteras
+had a quantity of provisions brought up on deck, along with materials
+for encamping, the clothes and blankets of the crew. Taking example
+from Captain McClure under similar circumstances, he caused the brig
+to be surrounded by a belt of hammocks, filled with air, so as to
+shield her from the thick of the damage; the ice soon accumulated
+under a temperature of 7 degrees, and the ship was surrounded by a
+wall of ice, above which her masts only were to be seen. They navigated
+thus for seven days; Point Albert, the western extremity of New
+Cornwall, was sighted on the 10th of September, but soon disappeared;
+from thence the ice-field drifted east. Where would it take them to?
+Where should they stop? Who could tell? The crew waited, and the men
+folded their arms. At last, on the 15th of September, about three
+o'clock in the afternoon, the ice-field, stopped, probably, by
+collision with another field, gave a violent shake to the brig, and
+stood still. Hatteras found himself out of sight of land in latitude
+78 degrees 15 minutes and longitude 95 degrees 35 minutes in the midst
+of the unknown sea, where geographers have placed the Frozen Pole.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+PREPARATIONS FOR WINTERING
+
+
+The southern hemisphere is colder in parallel latitudes than the
+northern hemisphere; but the temperature of the new continent is still
+15 degrees below that of the other parts of the world; and in America
+the countries known under the name of the Frozen Pole are the most
+formidable. The average temperature of the year is 2 degrees below
+zero. Scientific men, and Dr. Clawbonny amongst them, explain the
+fact in the following way. According to them, the prevailing winds
+of the northern regions of America blow from the south-west; they
+come from the Pacific Ocean with an equal and bearable temperature;
+but in order to reach the Arctic Seas they have to cross the immense
+American territory, covered with snow, they get cold by contact with
+it, and then cover the hyperborean regions with their frigid violence.
+Hatteras found himself at the Frozen Pole beyond the countries seen
+by his predecessors; he, therefore, expected a terrible winter on
+a ship lost in the midst of the ice with a crew nearly in revolt.
+He resolved to face these dangers with his accustomed energy. He began
+by taking, with the help of Johnson's experience, all the measures
+necessary for wintering. According to his calculations he had been
+dragged two hundred and fifty miles beyond New Cornwall, the last
+country discovered; he was clasped in an ice-field as securely as
+in a bed of granite, and no power on earth could extricate him.
+
+There no longer existed a drop of water in the vast seas over which
+the Arctic winter reigned. Ice-fields extended as far as the eye could
+reach, bristling with icebergs, and the _Forward_ was sheltered by
+three of the highest on three points of the compass; the south-east
+wind alone could reach her. If instead of icebergs there had been
+rocks, verdure instead of snow, and the sea in its liquid state again,
+the brig would have been safely anchored in a pretty bay sheltered
+from the worst winds. But in such a latitude it was a miserable state
+of things. They were obliged to fasten the brig by means of her anchors,
+notwithstanding her immovability; they were obliged to prepare for
+the submarine currents and the breaking up of the ice. When Johnson
+heard where they were, he took the greatest precautions in getting
+everything ready for wintering.
+
+"It's the captain's usual luck," said he to the doctor; "we've got
+nipped in the most disagreeable point of the whole glove! Never mind;
+we'll get out of it!"
+
+As to the doctor, he was delighted at the situation. He would not
+have changed it for any other! A winter at the Frozen Pole seemed
+to him desirable. The crew were set to work at the sails, which were
+not taken down, and put into the hold, as the first people who wintered
+in these regions had thought prudent; they were folded up in their
+cases, and the ice soon made them an impervious envelope. The crow's
+nest, too, remained in its place, serving as a nautical observatory;
+the rigging alone was taken away. It became necessary to cut away
+the part of the field that surrounded the brig, which began to suffer
+from the pressure. It was a long and painful work. In a few days the
+keel was cleared, and on examination was found to have suffered little,
+thanks to the solidity of its construction, only its copper plating
+was almost all torn off. When the ship was once liberated she rose
+at least nine inches; the crew then bevelled the ice in the shape
+of the keel, and the field formed again under the brig, and offered
+sufficient opposition to pressure from without. The doctor helped
+in all this work; he used the ice-knife skilfully; he incited the
+sailors by his happy disposition. He instructed himself and others,
+and was delighted to find the ice under the ship.
+
+"It's a very good precaution!" said he.
+
+"We couldn't do without it, Mr. Clawbonny," said Johnson. "Now we
+can raise a snow-wall as high as the gunwale, and if we like we can
+make it ten feet thick, for we've plenty of materials."
+
+"That's an excellent idea," answered the doctor. "Snow is a bad
+conductor of heat; it reflects it instead of absorbing it, and the
+heat of the interior does not escape."
+
+"That's true," said Johnson. "We shall raise a fortification against
+the cold, and against animals too, if they take it into their heads
+to pay us a visit; when the work is done it will answer, I can tell
+you. We shall make two flights of steps in the snow, one from the
+ship and the other from outside; when once we've cut out the steps
+we shall pour water over them, and it will make them as hard as rock.
+We shall have a royal staircase."
+
+"It's a good thing that cold makes ice and snow, and so gives us the
+means of protecting ourselves against it. I don't know what we should
+do if it did not."
+
+A roofing of tarred cloth was spread over the deck and descended to
+the sides of the brig. It was thus sheltered from all outside
+impression, and made a capital promenade; it was covered with two
+feet and a-half of snow, which was beaten down till it became very
+hard, and above that they put a layer of sand, completely macadamising
+it.
+
+"With a few trees I should imagine myself in Hyde Park," said the
+doctor, "or in one of the hanging gardens of Babylon."
+
+They made a hole at a short distance from the brig; it was round,
+like a well; they broke the ice every morning. This well was useful
+in case of fire or for the frequent baths ordered to keep the crew
+in health. In order to spare their fuel, they drew the water from
+a greater depth by means of an apparatus invented by a Frenchman,
+Francois Arago. Generally, when a ship is wintering, all the objects
+which encumber her are placed in magazines on the coast, but it was
+impossible to do this in the midst of an ice-field. Every precaution
+was taken against cold and damp; men have been known to resist the
+cold and succumb to damp; therefore both had to be guarded against.
+The _Forward_ had been built expressly for these regions, and the
+common room was wisely arranged. They had made war on the corners,
+where damp takes refuge at first. If it had been quite circular it
+would have done better, but warmed by a vast stove and well ventilated,
+it was very comfortable; the walls were lined with buckskins and not
+with woollen materials, for wool condenses the vapours and
+impregnates the atmosphere with damp. The partitions were taken down
+in the poop, and the officers had a large comfortable room, warmed
+by a stove. Both this room and that of the crew had a sort of antechamber,
+which prevented all direct communication with the exterior, and
+prevented the heat going out; it also made the crew pass more gradually
+from one temperature to another. They left their snow-covered
+garments in these antechambers, and scraped their feet on scrapers
+put there on purpose to prevent any unhealthy element getting in.
+
+Canvas hose let in the air necessary to make the stoves draw; other
+hose served for escape-pipes for the steam. Two condensers were fixed
+in the two rooms; they gathered the vapour instead of letting it escape,
+and were emptied twice a week; sometimes they contained several
+bushels of ice. By means of the air-pipes the fires could be easily
+regulated, and it was found that very little fuel was necessary to
+keep up a temperature of 50 degrees in the rooms. But Hatteras saw
+with grief that he had only enough coal left for two months' firing.
+A drying-room was prepared for the garments that were obliged to be
+washed, as they could not be hung in the air or they would have been
+frozen and spoiled. The delicate parts of the machine were taken to
+pieces carefully, and the room where they were placed was closed up
+hermetically. The rules for life on board were drawn up by Hatteras
+and hung up in the common room. The men got up at six in the morning,
+and their hammocks were exposed to the air three times a week; the
+floors of the two rooms were rubbed with warm sand every morning;
+boiling tea was served out at every meal, and the food varied as much
+as possible, according to the different days of the week; it consisted
+of bread, flour, beef suet and raisins for puddings, sugar, cocoa,
+tea, rice, lemon-juice, preserved meat, salted beef and pork, pickled
+cabbage and other vegetables; the kitchen was outside the common rooms,
+and the men were thus deprived of its heat, but cooking is a constant
+source of evaporation and humidity.
+
+The health of men depends a great deal on the food they eat; under
+these high latitudes it is of great importance to consume as much
+animal food as possible. The doctor presided at the drawing up of
+the bill of fare.
+
+"We must take example from the Esquimaux," said he; "they have
+received their lessons from nature, and are our teachers here;
+although Arabians and Africans can live on a few dates and a handful
+of rice, it is very different here, where we must eat a great deal
+and often. The Esquimaux absorb as much as ten and fifteen pounds
+of oil in a day. If you do not like oil, you must have recourse to
+things rich in sugar and fat. In a word, you want carbon in the stove
+inside you as much as the stove there wants coal."
+
+Every man was forced to take a bath in the half-frozen water condensed
+from the fire. The doctor set the example; he did it at first as we
+do all disagreeable things that we feel obliged to do, but he soon
+began to take extreme pleasure in it. When the men had to go out either
+to hunt or work they had to take great care not to get frost-bitten;
+and if by accident it happened, they made haste to rub the part
+attacked with snow to bring back the circulation of the blood. Besides
+being carefully clothed in wool from head to foot, the men wore hoods
+of buckskin and sealskin trousers, through which it is impossible
+for the wind to penetrate. All these preparations took about three
+weeks, and the 10th of October came round without anything remarkable
+happening.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+AN OLD FOX
+
+
+That day the thermometer went down to 3 degrees below zero. The weather
+was pretty calm, and the cold without breeze was bearable. Hatteras
+profited by the clearness of the atmosphere to reconnoitre the
+surrounding plains; he climbed one of the highest icebergs to the
+north, and could see nothing, as far as his telescope would let him,
+but ice-fields and icebergs. No land anywhere, but the image of chaos
+in its saddest aspect. He came back on board trying to calculate the
+probable duration of his captivity. The hunters, and amongst them
+the doctor, James Wall, Simpson, Johnson, and Bell, did not fail to
+supply the ship with fresh meat. Birds had disappeared; they were
+gone to less rigorous southern climates. The ptarmigans, a sort of
+partridge, alone stay the winter in these latitudes; they are easily
+killed, and their great number promised an abundant supply of game.
+There were plenty of hares, foxes, wolves, ermine, and bears; there
+were enough for any sportsman, English, French, or Norwegian; but
+they were difficult to get at, and difficult to distinguish on the
+white plains from the whiteness of their fur; when the intense cold
+comes their fur changes colour, and white is their winter colour.
+The doctor found that this change of fur is not caused by the change
+of temperature, for it takes place in the month of October, and is
+simply a precaution of Providence to guard them from the rigour of
+a boreal winter.
+
+Seals were abundant in all their varieties, and were particularly
+sought after by the hunters for the sake, not only of their skins,
+but their fat, which is very warming; besides which, the liver of
+these animals makes excellent fuel: hundreds of them were to be seen,
+and two or three miles to the north of the brig the ice was literally
+perforated all over with the holes these enormous amphibians make;
+only they smelt the hunters from afar, and many were wounded that
+escaped by plunging under the ice. However, on the 19th, Simpson
+managed to catch one at about a hundred yards from the ship; he had
+taken the precaution to block up its hole of refuge so that it was
+at the mercy of the hunters. It took several bullets to kill the animal,
+which measured nine feet in length; its bulldog head, the sixteen
+teeth in its jaws, its large pectoral fins in the shape of pinions,
+and its little tail, furnished with another pair of fins, made it
+a good specimen of the family of dog-hound fish. The doctor, wishing
+to preserve the head for his natural history collection, and its skin
+for his future use, had them prepared by a rapid and inexpensive
+process. He plunged the body of the animal into the hole in the ice,
+and thousands of little prawns soon ate off all the flesh; in half
+a day the work was accomplished, and the most skilful of the honourable
+corporation of Liverpool tanners could not have succeeded better.
+
+As soon as the sun had passed the autumnal equinox--that is to say,
+on the 23rd of September--winter may be said to begin in the Arctic
+regions. The sun disappears entirely on the 23rd of October, lighting
+up with its oblique rays the summits of the frozen mountains. The
+doctor wished him a traveller's farewell; he was not going to see
+him again till February. But obscurity is not complete during this
+long absence of the sun; the moon comes each month to take its place
+as well as she can; starlight is very bright, and there is besides
+frequent aurora borealis, and a refraction peculiar to the snowy
+horizons; besides, the sun at the very moment of his greatest austral
+declination, the 21st of December, is still only 13 degrees from the
+Polar horizon, so that there is twilight for a few hours; only fogs,
+mists, and snowstorms often plunge these regions into complete
+obscurity. However, at this epoch the weather was pretty favourable;
+the partridges and the hares were the only animals that had a right
+to complain, for the sportsmen did not give them a moment's peace;
+they set several fox-traps, but the suspicious animals did not let
+themselves be caught so easily; they would often come and eat the
+snare by scratching out the snow from under the trap; the doctor wished
+them at the devil, as he could not get them himself. On the 25th of
+October the thermometer marked more than 4 degrees below zero. A
+violent tempest set in; the air was thick with snow, which prevented
+a ray of light reaching the _Forward_. During several hours they were
+very uneasy about Bell and Simpson, who had gone too far whilst
+hunting; they did not reach the ship till the next day, after having
+lain for a whole day in their buckskins, whilst the tempest swept
+the air about them, and buried them under five feet of snow. They
+were nearly frozen, and the doctor had some trouble to restore their
+circulation.
+
+The tempest lasted a week without interruption. It was impossible
+to stir out. In a single day the temperature varied fifteen and twenty
+degrees. During their forced idleness each one lived to himself; some
+slept, others smoked, or talked in whispers, stopping when they saw
+the doctor or Johnson approach; there was no moral union between the
+men; they only met for evening prayers, and on Sunday for Divine
+service. Clifton had counted that once the 78th parallel cleared,
+his share in the bounty would amount to 375 pounds; he thought that
+enough, and his ambition did not go beyond. The others were of the
+same opinion, and only thought of enjoying the fortune acquired at
+such a price. Hatteras was hardly ever seen. He neither took part
+in the hunting nor other excursions. He felt no interest in the
+meteorological phenomena which excited the doctor's admiration. He
+lived for one idea; it was comprehended in three words--the North
+Pole. He was constantly looking forward to the moment when the
+_Forward_, once more free, would begin her adventurous voyage again.
+
+In short, it was a melancholy life; the brig, made for movement, seemed
+quite out of place as a stationary dwelling; her original form could
+not be distinguished amidst the ice and snow that covered her, and
+she was anything but a lively spectacle. During these unoccupied hours
+the doctor put his travelling notes in order--the notes from which
+this history is taken; he was never idle, and the evenness of his
+humour remained the same, only he was very glad to see the tempest
+clearing off so as to allow him to set off hunting once more. On the
+3rd of November, at six in the morning, with a temperature at 5 degrees
+below zero, he started, accompanied by Johnson and Bell; the plains
+of ice were level; the snow, which covered the ground thickly,
+solidified by the frost, made the ground good for walking; a dry and
+keen cold lightened the atmosphere; the moon shone in all her
+splendour, and threw an astonishing light on all the asperities of
+the field; their footsteps left marks on the snow, and the moon lighted
+up their edges, so that they looked like a luminous track behind the
+hunters whose shadows fell on the ice with astonishing outlines.
+
+The doctor had taken his friend Dick with him; he preferred him to
+the Greenland dogs to run down the game for a good reason; the latter
+do not seem to have the scent of their brethren of more temperate
+climates. Dick ran on and often pointed out the track of a bear, but
+in spite of his skill the hunters had not even killed a hare after
+two hours' walking.
+
+"Do you think the game has gone south too?" asked the doctor, halting
+at the foot of a hummock.
+
+"It looks like it, Mr. Clawbonny," answered the carpenter.
+
+"I don't think so," answered Johnson; "hares, foxes, and bears are
+accustomed to the climate; I believe the late tempest is the cause
+of their disappearance; but with the south winds they'll soon come
+back. Ah! if you said reindeers or musk-oxen it would be a different
+thing."
+
+"But it appears those, too, are found in troops in Melville Island,"
+replied the doctor; "that is much further south, I grant you; when
+Parry wintered there he always had as much game as he wanted."
+
+"We are not so well off," said Bell; "if we could only get plenty
+of bear's flesh I should not complain."
+
+"Bears are very difficult to get at," answered the doctor; "it seems
+to me they want civilising."
+
+"Bell talks about the bear's flesh, but we want its fat more than
+its flesh or its skin," said Johnson.
+
+"You are right, Johnson; you are always thinking about the fuel."
+
+"How can I help thinking about it? I know if we are ever so careful
+of it we've only enough left for three weeks."
+
+"Yes," replied the doctor, "that is our greatest danger, for we are
+only at the beginning of November, and February is the coldest month
+of the year in the Frozen Zone; however, if we can't get bear's grease
+we can rely on that of the seals."
+
+"Not for long, Mr. Clawbonny," answered Johnson. "They'll soon desert
+us too; either through cold or fright, they'll soon leave off coming
+on to the surface of the ice."
+
+"Then we must get at the bears," said the doctor; "they are the most
+useful animals in these countries: they furnish food, clothes, light,
+and fuel. Do you hear, Dick?" continued he, caressing his friend;
+"we must have a bear, so look out."
+
+Dick, who was smelling the ice as the doctor spoke, started off all
+at once, quick as an arrow. He barked loudly, and, notwithstanding
+his distance, the sportsmen heard him distinctly. The extreme
+distance to which sound is carried in these low temperatures is
+astonishing; it is only equalled by the brilliancy of the
+constellations in the boreal sky.
+
+The sportsmen, guided by Dick's barking, rushed on his traces; they
+had to run about a mile, and arrived quite out of breath, for the
+lungs are rapidly suffocated in such an atmosphere. Dick was pointing
+at about fifty paces from an enormous mass at the top of a mound of
+ice.
+
+"We've got him," said the doctor, taking aim.
+
+"And a fine one," added Bell, imitating the doctor.
+
+"It's a queer bear," said Johnson, waiting to fire after his two
+companions.
+
+Dick barked furiously. Bell advanced to within twenty feet and fired,
+but the animal did not seem to be touched. Johnson advanced in his
+turn, and after taking a careful aim, pulled the trigger.
+
+"What," cried the doctor, "not touched yet? Why, it's that cursed
+refraction. The bear is at least a thousand paces off."
+
+The three sportsmen ran rapidly towards the animal, whom the firing
+had not disturbed; he seemed to be enormous, and without calculating
+the dangers of the attack, they began to rejoice in their conquest.
+Arrived within reasonable distance they fired again; the bear,
+mortally wounded, gave a great jump and fell at the foot of the mound.
+Dick threw himself upon it.
+
+"That bear wasn't difficult to kill," said the doctor.
+
+"Only three shots," added Bell in a tone of disdain, "and he's down."
+
+"It's very singular," said Johnson.
+
+"Unless we arrived at the very moment when it was dying of old age,"
+said the doctor, laughing.
+
+So speaking, the sportsmen reached the foot of the mound, and, to
+their great stupefaction, they found Dick with his fangs in the body
+of a white fox.
+
+"Well, I never!" cried Bell.
+
+"We kill a bear and a fox falls," added the doctor.
+
+Johnson did not know what to say.
+
+"Why!" said the doctor, with a roar of laughter, "it's the refraction
+again!"
+
+"What do you mean, Mr. Clawbonny?" asked the carpenter.
+
+"Why, it deceived us about the size as it did about the distance.
+It made us see a bear in a fox's skin."
+
+"Well," answered Johnson, "now we've got him, we'll eat him."
+
+Johnson was going to lift the fox on to his shoulders, when he cried
+like Bell--"Well, I never!"
+
+"What is it?" asked the doctor.
+
+"Look, Mr. Clawbonny--look what the animal's got on its neck; it's
+a collar, sure enough."
+
+"A collar?" echoed the doctor, leaning over the animal. A half
+worn-out collar encircled the fox's neck, and the doctor thought he
+saw something engraved on it; he took it off and examined it.
+
+"That bear is more than twelve years old, my friends," said the doctor;
+"it's one of James Ross's foxes, and the collar has been round its
+neck ever since 1848."
+
+"Is it possible?" cried Bell.
+
+"There isn't a doubt about it, and I'm sorry we've shot the poor animal.
+During his wintering James Ross took a lot of white foxes in his traps,
+and had brass collars put round their necks on which were engraved
+the whereabouts of his ships, the _Enterprise_ and the _Investigator_,
+and the store magazines. He hoped one of them might fall into the
+hands of some of the men belonging to Franklin's expedition. The poor
+animal might have saved the lives of the ship's crews, and it has
+fallen under our balls."
+
+"Well, we won't eat him," said Johnson, "especially as he's twelve
+years old. Anyway, we'll keep his skin for curiosity sake." So saying
+he lifted the animal on his shoulders, and they made their way to
+the ship, guided by the stars; still their expedition was not quite
+fruitless: they bagged several brace of ptarmigans. An hour before
+they reached the _Forward_, a phenomenon occurred which excited the
+astonishment of the doctor; it was a very rain of shooting stars;
+they could be counted by thousands, like rockets in a display of
+fireworks. They paled the light of the moon, and the admirable
+spectacle lasted several hours. A like meteor was observed at
+Greenland by the Moravian brothers in 1799. The doctor passed the
+whole night watching it, till it ceased, at seven in the morning,
+amidst the profound silence of the atmosphere.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+THE LAST LUMP OF COAL
+
+
+It seemed certain that no bears were to be had; several seals were
+killed during the days of the 4th, 5th, and 6th of November; then
+the wind changed, and the thermometer went up several degrees; but
+the snow-drifts began again with great violence. It became impossible
+to leave the vessel, and the greatest precaution was needed to keep
+out the damp. At the end of the week there were several bushels of
+ice in the condensers. The weather changed again on the 15th of
+November, and the thermometer, under the influence of certain
+atmospherical conditions, went down to 24 degrees below zero. It was
+the lowest temperature observed up till then. This cold would have
+been bearable in a quiet atmosphere, but there was a strong wind which
+seemed to fill the atmosphere with sharp blades. The doctor was vexed
+at being kept prisoner, for the ground was covered with snow, made
+hard by the wind, and was easy to walk upon; he wanted to attempt
+some long excursion.
+
+It is very difficult to work when it is so cold, because of the
+shortness of breath it causes. A man can only do a quarter of his
+accustomed work; iron implements become impossible to touch; if one
+is taken up without precaution, it causes a pain as bad as a burn,
+and pieces of skin are left on it. The crew, confined to the ship,
+were obliged to walk for two hours on the covered deck, where they
+were allowed to smoke, which was not allowed in the common room. There,
+directly the fire got low, the ice invaded the walls and the joins
+in the flooring; every bolt, nail, or metal plate became immediately
+covered with a layer of ice. The doctor was amazed at the instantaneity
+of the phenomenon. The breath of the men condensed in the air, and
+passing quickly from a fluid to a solid state, fell round them in
+snow. At a few feet only from the stoves the cold was intense, and
+the men stood near the fire in a compact group. The doctor advised
+them to accustom their skin to the temperature, which would certainly
+get worse, and he himself set the example; but most of them were too
+idle or too benumbed to follow his advice, and preferred remaining
+in the unhealthy heat. However, according to the doctor, there was
+no danger in the abrupt changes of temperature in going from the warm
+room into the cold. It is only dangerous for people in perspiration;
+but the doctor's lessons were thrown away on the greater part of the
+crew.
+
+As to Hatteras, he did not seem to feel the influence of the
+temperature. He walked silently about at his ordinary pace. Had the
+cold no empire over his strong constitution, or did he possess in
+a supreme degree the natural heat he wished his sailors to have? Was
+he so armed in his one idea as to be insensible to exterior
+impressions? His men were profoundly astonished at seeing him facing
+the 24 degrees below zero; he left the ship for hours, and came back
+without his face betraying the slightest mark of cold.
+
+"He is a strange man," said the doctor to Johnson; "he even astonishes
+me. He is one of the most powerful natures I have ever studied in
+my life."
+
+"The fact is," answered Johnson, "that he comes and goes in the open
+air without clothing himself more warmly than in the month of June."
+
+"Oh! the question of clothes is not of much consequence," replied
+the doctor; "it is of no use clothing people who do not produce heat
+naturally. It is the same as if we tried to warm a piece of ice by
+wrapping it up in a blanket! Hatteras does not want that; he is
+constituted so, and I should not be surprised if being by his side
+were as good as being beside a stove."
+
+Johnson had the job of clearing the water-hole the next day, and
+remarked that the ice was more than ten feet thick. The doctor could
+observe magnificent aurora borealis almost every night; from four
+till eight p.m. the sky became slightly coloured in the north; then
+this colouring took the regular form of a pale yellow border, whose
+extremities seemed to buttress on to the ice-field. Little by little
+the brilliant zone rose in the sky, following the magnetic meridian,
+and appeared striated with blackish bands; jets of some luminous
+matter, augmenting and diminishing, shot out lengthways; the meteor,
+arrived at its zenith, was often composed of several bows, bathed
+in floods of red, yellow, or green light. It was a dazzling spectacle.
+Soon the different curves all joined in one point, and formed boreal
+crowns of a heavenly richness. At last the bows joined, the splendid
+aurora faded, the intense rays melted into pale, vague, undetermined
+shades, and the marvellous phenomenon, feeble, and almost
+extinguished, fainted insensibly into the dark southern clouds.
+Nothing can equal the wonders of such a spectacle under the high
+latitudes less than eight degrees from the Pole; the aurora borealis
+perceived in temperate regions gives no idea of them--not even a
+feeble one; it seems as if Providence wished to reserve its most
+astonishing marvels for these climates.
+
+During the duration of the moon several images of her are seen in
+the sky, increasing her brilliancy; often simple lunar halos surround
+her, and she shines from the centre of her luminous circle with a
+splendid intensity.
+
+On the 26th of November there was a high tide, and the water escaped
+with violence from the water-hole; the thick layer of ice was shaken
+by the rising of the sea, and sinister crackings announced the
+submarine struggle; happily the ship kept firm in her bed, and her
+chains only were disturbed. Hatteras had had them fastened in
+anticipation of the event. The following days were still colder; there
+was a penetrating fog, and the wind scattered the piled-up snow; it
+became difficult to see whether the whirlwinds began in the air or
+on the ice-fields; confusion reigned.
+
+The crew were occupied in different works on board, the principal
+of which consisted in preparing the grease and oil produced by the
+seals; they had become blocks of ice, which had to be broken with
+axes into little bits, and ten barrels were thus preserved.
+
+All sorts of vessels were useless, and the liquid they contained would
+only have broken them when the temperature changed. On the 28th the
+thermometer went down to 32 degrees below zero; there was only coal
+enough left for ten days, and everyone looked forward to its
+disappearance with dread. Hatteras had the poop stove put out for
+economy's sake, and from that time Shandon, the doctor, and he stayed
+in the common room. Hatteras was thus brought into closer contact
+with the men, who threw ferocious and stupefied looks at him. He heard
+their reproaches, their recriminations, and even their threats, and
+he could not punish them. But he seemed to be deaf to everything.
+He did not claim the place nearest the fire, but stopped in a corner,
+his arms folded, never speaking.
+
+In spite of the doctor's recommendations, Pen and his friends refused
+to take the least exercise; they passed whole days leaning against
+the stove or lying under the blankets of their hammocks. Their health
+soon began to suffer; they could not bear up against the fatal
+influence of the climate, and the terrible scurvy made its appearance
+on board. The doctor had, however, begun, some time ago, to distribute
+limejuice and lime pastilles every morning; but these preservatives,
+generally so efficacious, had very little effect on the malady, which
+soon presented the most horrible symptoms. The sight of the poor
+fellows, whose nerves and muscles contracted with pain, was pitiable.
+Their legs swelled in an extraordinary fashion, and were covered with
+large blackish blue spots; their bloody gums and ulcerated lips only
+gave passage to inarticulate sounds; the vitiated blood no longer
+went to the extremities.
+
+Clifton was the first attacked; then Gripper, Brunton, and Strong
+took to their hammocks. Those that the malady still spared could not
+lose sight of their sufferings; they were obliged to stay there, and
+it was soon transformed into a hospital, for out of eighteen sailors
+of the _Forward_, thirteen were attacked in a few days. Pen seemed
+destined to escape contagion; his vigorous nature preserved him from
+it. Shandon felt the first symptoms, but they did not go further,
+and exercise kept the two in pretty good health.
+
+The doctor nursed the invalids with the greatest care, and it made
+him miserable to see the sufferings he could not alleviate. He did
+all he could to keep his companions in good spirits; he talked to
+them, read to them, and told them tales, which his astonishing memory
+made it easy for him to do. He was often interrupted by the complaints
+and groans of the invalids, and he stopped his talk to become once
+more the attentive and devoted doctor. His health kept up well; he
+did not get thinner, and he used to say that it was a good thing for
+him that he was dressed like a seal or a whale, who, thanks to its
+thick layer of fat, easily supports the Arctic atmosphere. Hatteras
+felt nothing, either physically or morally. Even the sufferings of
+his crew did not seem to touch him. Perhaps it was because he would
+not let his face betray his emotions; but an attentive observer would
+have remarked that a man's heart beat beneath the iron envelope. The
+doctor analysed him, studied him, but did not succeed in classifying
+so strange an organisation, a temperament so supernatural. The
+thermometer lowered again; the walk on deck was deserted; the
+Esquimaux dogs alone frequented it, howling lamentably.
+
+There was always one man on guard near the stove to keep up the fire;
+it was important not to let it go out. As soon as the fire got lower,
+the cold glided into the room; ice covered the walls, and the humidity,
+rapidly condensed, fell in snow on the unfortunate inhabitants of
+the brig. It was in the midst of these unutterable tortures that the
+8th of December was reached. That morning the doctor went as usual
+to consult the exterior thermometer. He found the mercury completely
+frozen.
+
+"Forty-four degrees below zero!" he cried with terror. And that day
+they threw the last lump of coal into the stove.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+CHRISTMAS
+
+
+There was then a movement of despair. The thought of death, and death
+from cold, appeared in all its horror; the last piece of coal burnt
+away as quickly as the rest, and the temperature of the room lowered
+sensibly. But Johnson went to fetch some lumps of the new fuel which
+the marine animals had furnished him with, and he stuffed it into
+the stove; he added some oakum, impregnated with frozen oil, and soon
+obtained enough heat. The smell of the grease was abominable, but
+how could they get rid of it? They were obliged to get used to it.
+Johnson agreed that his expedient left much to wish for, and would
+have no success in a Liverpool house.
+
+"However," added he, "the smell may have one good result."
+
+"What's that?" asked the carpenter.
+
+"It will attract the bears; they are very fond of the stink."
+
+"And what do we want with bears?" added Bell.
+
+"You know, Bell, we can't depend on the seals; they've disappeared
+for a good while to come; if the bears don't come to be turned into
+fuel too, I don't know what will become of us."
+
+"There would be only one thing left; but I don't see how----"
+
+"The captain would never consent; but perhaps we shall be obliged."
+
+Johnson shook his head sadly, and fell into a silent reverie, which
+Bell did not interrupt. He knew that their stock of grease would not
+last more than a week with the strictest economy.
+
+The boatswain was not mistaken. Several bears, attracted by the fetid
+exhalations, were signalled to the windward; the healthy men gave
+chase to them, but they are extraordinarily quick, and did not allow
+themselves to be approached, and the most skilful shots could not
+touch them. The ship's crew was seriously menaced with death from
+cold; it was impossible to resist such a temperature more than
+forty-eight hours, and every one feared the end of the fuel. The
+dreaded moment arrived at three o'clock p.m. on the 20th of December.
+The fire went out; the sailors looked at each other with haggard eyes.
+Hatteras remained immovable in his corner. The doctor as usual marched
+up and down in agitation; he was at his wits' end. The temperature
+of the room fell suddenly to 7 degrees below zero. But if the doctor
+did not know what to do, some of the others did. Shandon, calm and
+resolute, and Pen with anger in his eyes, and two or three of their
+comrades, who could still walk, went up to Hatteras.
+
+"Captain!" said Shandon.
+
+Hatteras, absorbed in thought, did not hear him.
+
+"Captain!" repeated Shandon, touching his hand.
+
+Hatteras drew himself up.
+
+"What is it?" he said.
+
+"Our fire is out!"
+
+"What then?" answered Hatteras.
+
+"If you mean to kill us with cold, you had better say so," said Shandon
+ironically.
+
+"I mean," said Hatteras gravely, "to require every man to do his duty
+to the end."
+
+"There's something higher than duty, captain--there's the right to
+one's own preservation. I repeat that the fire is out, and if it is
+not relighted, not one of us will be alive in two days."
+
+"I have no fuel," answered Hatteras, with a hollow voice.
+
+"Very well," cried Pen violently, "if you have no fuel, we must take
+it where we can!"
+
+Hatteras grew pale with anger.
+
+"Where?" said he.
+
+"On board," answered the sailor insolently.
+
+"On board!" echoed the captain, his fists closed, his eyes sparkling.
+
+He had seized an axe, and he now raised it over Pen's head.
+
+"Wretch!" he cried.
+
+The doctor rushed between the captain and Pen; the axe fell to the
+ground, its sharp edge sinking into the flooring. Johnson, Bell, and
+Simpson were grouped round Hatteras, and appeared determined to give
+him their support. But lamentable and plaintive voices came from the
+beds.
+
+"Some fire! Give us some fire!" cried the poor fellows.
+
+Hatteras made an effort, and said calmly:
+
+"If we destroy the brig, how shall we get back to England?"
+
+"We might burn some of the rigging and the gunwale, sir," said Johnson.
+
+"Besides, we should still have the boats left," answered Shandon;
+"and we could build a smaller vessel with the remains of the old one!"
+
+"Never!" answered Hatteras.
+
+"But----" began several sailors, raising their voices.
+
+"We have a great quantity of spirits of wine," answered Hatteras;
+"burn that to the last drop."
+
+"Ah, we didn't think of that!" said Johnson, with affected
+cheerfulness, and by the help of large wicks steeped in spirits he
+succeeded in raising the temperature a few degrees.
+
+During the days that followed this melancholy scene the wind went
+round to the south, and the thermometer went up. Some of the men could
+leave the vessel during the least damp part of the day; but ophthalmia
+and scurvy kept the greater number on board; besides, neither fishing
+nor hunting was practicable. But it was only a short respite from
+the dreadful cold, and on the 25th, after an unexpected change in
+the wind, the mercury again froze; they were then obliged to have
+recourse to the spirits of wine thermometer, which never freezes.
+The doctor found, to his horror, that it marked 66 degrees below zero;
+men had never been able to support such a temperature. The ice spread
+itself in long tarnished mirrors on the floor; a thick fog invaded
+the common room; the damp fell in thick snow; they could no longer
+see one another; the extremities became blue as the heat of the body
+left them; a circle of iron seemed to be clasping their heads, and
+made them nearly delirious. A still more fearful symptom was that
+their tongues could no longer articulate a word.
+
+From the day they had threatened to burn his ship, Hatteras paced
+the deck for hours. He was guarding his treasures; the wood of the
+ship was his own flesh, and whoever cut a piece off cut off one of
+his limbs. He was armed, and mounted guard, insensible to the cold,
+the snow, and the ice, which stiffened his garments and enveloped
+him in granite armour. His faithful Dick accompanied him, and seemed
+to understand why he was there.
+
+However, on Christmas Day he went down to the common room. The doctor,
+taking advantage of what energy he had left, went straight to him,
+and said--
+
+"Hatteras, we shall all die if we get no fuel."
+
+"Never!" said Hatteras, knowing what was coming.
+
+"We must," said the doctor gently.
+
+"Never!" repeated Hatteras with more emphasis still. "I will never
+consent! They can disobey me if they like!"
+
+Johnson and Bell took advantage of the half-permission, and rushed
+on deck. Hatteras heard the wood crack under the axe. He wept. What
+a Christmas Day for Englishmen was that on board the _Forward_! The
+thought of the great difference between their position and that of
+the happy English families who rejoiced in their roast beef, plum
+pudding, and mince pies added another pang to the miseries of the
+unfortunate crew. However, the fire put a little hope and confidence
+into the men; the boiling of coffee and tea did them good, and the
+next week passed less miserably, ending the dreadful year 1860; its
+early winter had defeated all Hatteras's plans.
+
+On the 1st of January, 1861, the doctor made a discovery. It was not
+quite so cold, and he had resumed his interrupted studies; he was
+reading Sir Edward Belcher's account of his expedition to the Polar
+Seas; all at once a passage struck him; he read it again and again.
+It was where Sir Edward Belcher relates that after reaching the
+extremity of Queen's Channel he had discovered important traces of
+the passage and residence of men. "They were," said he, "very superior
+habitations to those which might be attributed to the wandering
+Esquimaux. The walls had foundations, the floors of the interior had
+been covered with a thick layer of fine gravel, and were paved.
+Reindeer, seal, and walrus bones were seen in great quantities. _We
+found some coal._" At the last words the doctor was struck with an
+idea; he carried the book to Hatteras and showed him the passage.
+
+"They could not have found coal on this deserted coast," said
+Hatteras; "it is not possible!"
+
+"Why should we doubt what Belcher says? He would not have recorded
+such a fact unless he had been certain and had seen it with his own
+eyes."
+
+"And what then, doctor?"
+
+"We aren't a hundred miles from the coast where Belcher saw the coal,
+and what is a hundred miles' excursion? Nothing. Longer ones than
+that have often been made across the ice."
+
+"We will go," said Hatteras.
+
+Johnson was immediately told of their resolution, of which he strongly
+approved; he told his companions about it: some were glad, others
+indifferent.
+
+"Coal on these coasts!" said Wall, stretched on his bed of pain.
+
+"Let them go," answered Shandon mysteriously.
+
+But before Hatteras began his preparations for the journey, he wished
+to be exactly certain of the _Forward's_ position. He was obliged
+to be mathematically accurate as to her whereabouts, because of
+finding her again. His task was very difficult; he went upon deck
+and took at different moments several lunar distances and the meridian
+heights of the principal stars. These observations were hard to make,
+for the glass and mirrors of the instrument were covered with ice
+from Hatteras's breath; he burnt his eyelashes more than once by
+touching the brass of the glasses. However, he obtained exact bases
+for his calculations, and came down to make them in the room. When
+his work was over, he raised his head in astonishment, took his map,
+pricked it, and looked at the doctor.
+
+"What is it?" asked the latter.
+
+"In what latitude were we at the beginning of our wintering?"
+
+"We were in latitude 78 degrees 15 minutes, by longitude 95 degrees
+35 minutes; exactly at the Frozen Pole."
+
+"Well," said Hatteras, in a low tone, "our ice-field has been
+drifting! We are two degrees farther north and farther west, and three
+hundred miles at least from your store of coal!"
+
+"And those poor fellows don't know," said the doctor.
+
+"Hush!" said Hatteras, putting his finger on his lips.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+PREPARATIONS FOR DEPARTURE
+
+
+Hatteras would not inform his crew of their situation, for if they
+had known that they had been dragged farther north they would very
+likely have given themselves up to the madness of despair. The captain
+had hidden his own emotions at his discovery. It was his first happy
+moment during the long months passed in struggling with the elements.
+He was a hundred and fifty miles farther north, scarcely eight degrees
+from the Pole! But he hid his delight so profoundly that even the
+doctor did not suspect it; he wondered at seeing an unwonted
+brilliancy in the captain's eyes; but that was all, and he never once
+thought of the reason.
+
+The _Forward_, by getting nearer the Pole, had got farther away from
+the coal repository observed by Sir Edward Belcher; instead of one
+hundred, it lay at two hundred and fifty miles farther south. However,
+after a short discussion about it between Hatteras and Clawbonny,
+the journey was persisted in. If Belcher had written the truth--and
+there was no reason for doubting his veracity--they should find things
+exactly in the same state as he had left them, for no new expedition
+had gone to these extreme continents since 1853. There were few or
+no Esquimaux to be met with in that latitude. They could not be
+disappointed on the coast of New Cornwall as they had been on Beechey
+Island. The low temperature preserves the objects abandoned to its
+influence for any length of time. All probabilities were therefore
+in favour of this excursion across the ice. It was calculated that
+the expedition would take, at the most, forty days, and Johnson's
+preparations were made in consequence.
+
+The sledge was his first care; it was in the Greenland style,
+thirty-five inches wide and twenty-four feet long. The Esquimaux
+often make them more than fifty feet long. This one was made of long
+planks, bent up front and back, and kept bent like a bow by two thick
+cords; the form thus given to it gave it increased resistance to
+shocks; it ran easily on the ice, but when the snow was soft on the
+ground it was put upon a frame; to make it glide more easily it was
+rubbed, Esquimaux fashion, with sulphur and snow. Six dogs drew it;
+notwithstanding their leanness these animals did not appear to suffer
+from the cold; their buckskin harness was in good condition, and they
+could draw a weight of two thousand pounds without fatigue. The
+materials for encampment consisted of a tent, should the construction
+of a snow-house be impossible, a large piece of mackintosh to spread
+over the snow, to prevent it melting in contact with the human body,
+and lastly, several blankets and buffalo-skins. They took the halkett
+boat too.
+
+The provisions consisted of five cases of pemmican, weighing about
+four hundred and fifty pounds; they counted one pound of pemmican
+for each man and each dog; there were seven dogs including Dick, and
+four men. They also took twelve gallons of spirits of wine--that is
+to say, about one hundred fifty pounds weight--a sufficient quantity
+of tea and biscuit, a portable kitchen with plenty of wicks, oakum,
+powder, ammunition, and two double-barrelled guns. They also used
+Captain Parry's invention of indiarubber belts, in which the warmth
+of the body and the movement of walking keeps coffee, tea, and water
+in a liquid state. Johnson was very careful about the snow-shoes;
+they are a sort of wooden patten, fastened on with leather straps;
+when the ground was quite hard and frozen they could be replaced by
+buckskin moccasins; each traveller had two pairs of both.
+
+These preparations were important, for any detail omitted might
+occasion the loss of an expedition; they took four whole days. Each
+day at noon Hatteras took care to set the position of his ship; they
+had ceased to drift; he was obliged to be certain in order to get
+back. He next set about choosing the men he should take with him;
+some of them were not fit either to take or leave, but the captain
+decided to take none but sure companions, as the common safety
+depended upon the success of the excursion. Shandon was, therefore,
+excluded, which he did not seem to regret. James Wall was ill in bed.
+The state of the sick got no worse, however, and as the only thing
+to do for them was to rub them with lime-juice, and give them doses
+of it, the doctor was not obliged to stop, and he made one of the
+travellers. Johnson very much wished to accompany the captain in his
+perilous enterprise, but Hatteras took him aside, and said, in an
+affectionate tone:
+
+"Johnson, I have confidence in you alone. You are the only officer
+in whose hands I can leave my ship. I must know that you are there
+to overlook Shandon and the others. They are kept prisoners here by
+the winter, but I believe them capable of anything. You will be
+furnished with my formal instructions, which, in case of need, will
+give you the command. You will take my place entirely. Our absence
+will last four or five weeks at the most. I shall not be anxious,
+knowing you are where I cannot be. You must have wood, Johnson, I
+know, but, as far as possible, spare my poor ship. Do you understand
+me, Johnson?"
+
+"Yes, sir," answered the old sailor, "I'll stop if you wish."
+
+"Thank you," said Hatteras, shaking his boatswain's hand; "and if
+we don't come back, wait for the next breaking-up time, and try to
+push forward towards the Pole. But if the others won't go, don't mind
+us, and take the _Forward_ back to England."
+
+"Are those your last commands, captain?"
+
+"Yes, my express commands," answered Hatteras.
+
+"Very well, sir, they shall be carried out," said Johnson simply.
+
+The doctor regretted his friend, but he thought Hatteras had acted
+wisely in leaving him. Their other two travelling companions were
+Bell the carpenter and Simpson. The former was in good health, brave
+and devoted, and was the right man to render service during the
+encampments on the snow; Simpson was not so sure, but he accepted
+a share in the expedition, and his hunting and fishing capabilities
+might be of the greatest use. The expedition consisted, therefore,
+of four men, Hatteras, Clawbonny, Bell, and Simpson, and seven dogs.
+The provisions had been calculated in consequence. During the first
+days of January the temperature kept at an average of 33 degrees below
+zero. Hatteras was very anxious for the weather to change; he often
+consulted the barometer, but it is of little use in such high latitudes.
+A clear sky in these regions does not always bring cold, and the snow
+does not make the temperature rise; the barometer is uncertain; it
+goes down with the north and east winds; low, it brought fine weather;
+high, snow or rain. Its indications could not, therefore, be relied
+upon.
+
+At last, on January 5th, the mercury rose to 18 degrees below zero,
+and Hatteras resolved to start the next day; he could not bear to
+see his ship burnt piece by piece before his eyes; all the poop had
+gone into the stove. On the 6th, then, in the midst of whirlwinds
+of snow, the order for departure was given. The doctor gave his last
+orders about the sick; Bell and Simpson shook hands silently with
+their companions. Hatteras wished to say his good-byes aloud, but
+he saw himself surrounded by evil looks and thought he saw Shandon
+smile ironically. He was silent, and perhaps hesitated for an instant
+about leaving the _Forward_, but it was too late to turn back; the
+loaded sledge, with the dogs harnessed to it, awaited him on the
+ice-field. Bell started the first; the others followed.
+
+Johnson accompanied the travellers for a quarter of a mile, then
+Hatteras begged him to return on board, and the old sailor went back
+after making a long farewell gesture. At that moment Hatteras turned
+a last look towards the brig, and saw the extremity of her masts
+disappear in the dark clouds of the sky.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+ACROSS THE ICE
+
+
+The little troop descended towards the south-east. Simpson drove the
+sledge. Dick helped him with zeal, and did not seem astonished at
+the new occupation of his companions. Hatteras and the doctor walked
+behind, whilst Bell went on in front, sounding the ice with his
+iron-tipped stick. The rising of the thermometer indicated
+approaching snow; it soon fell in thick flakes, and made the journey
+difficult for the travellers; it made them deviate from the straight
+line, and obliged them to walk slower; but, on an average, they made
+three miles an hour. The surface of the ice was unequal, and the sledge
+was often in danger of being overturned, but by great care it was
+kept upright.
+
+Hatteras and his companions were clothed in skins more useful than
+elegant. Their heads and faces were covered with hoods, their mouths,
+eyes, and noses alone coming into contact with the air. If they had
+not been exposed the breath would have frozen their coverings, and
+they would have been obliged to take them off with the help of an
+axe--an awkward way of undressing. The interminable plain kept on
+with fatiguing monotony; icebergs of uniform aspect and hummocks
+whose irregularity ended by seeming always the same; blocks cast in
+the same mould, and icebergs between which tortuous valleys wound.
+The travellers spoke little, and marched on, compass in hand. It is
+painful to open one's mouth in such an atmosphere; sharp icicles form
+immediately between one's lips, and the breath is not warm enough
+to melt them. Bell's steps were marked in the soft ground, and they
+followed them attentively, certain of being able to go where he had
+been before.
+
+Numerous traces of bears and foxes crossed their path, but not an
+animal was seen that day. It would have been dangerous and useless
+to hunt them, as the sledge was sufficiently freighted. Generally
+in this sort of excursion travellers leave provision-stores along
+their route; they place them in hiding-places of snow, out of reach
+of animals; unload during the journey, and take up the provisions
+on their return. But Hatteras could not venture to do this on moveable
+ice-fields, and the uncertainty of the route made the return the same
+way exceedingly problematic. At noon Hatteras caused his little troop
+to halt under shelter of an ice-wall. Their breakfast consisted of
+pemmican and boiling tea; the latter beverage comforted the cold
+wayfarers. They set out again after an hour's rest. The first day
+they walked about twenty miles, and in the evening both men and dogs
+were exhausted. However, notwithstanding their fatigue, they were
+obliged to construct a snow-house in which to pass the night. It took
+about an hour and a half to build. Bell showed himself very skilful.
+The ice-blocks were cut out and placed above one another in the form
+of a dome; a large block at the top made the vault. Snow served for
+mortar and filled up the chinks. It soon hardened and made a single
+block of the entire structure. It was reached by a narrow opening,
+through which the doctor squeezed himself painfully, and the others
+followed him. The supper was rapidly prepared with spirits of wine.
+The interior temperature of the snow-house was bearable, as the wind
+which raged outside could not penetrate. When their repast, which
+was always the same, was over, they began to think of sleep. A
+mackintosh was spread over the floor and kept them from the damp.
+Their stockings and shoes were dried by the portable grate, and then
+three of the travellers wrapped themselves up in their blankets,
+leaving the fourth to keep watch; he watched over the common safety,
+and prevented the opening getting blocked up, for if it did they would
+be buried alive.
+
+Dick shared the snow-house; the other dogs remained outside, and after
+their supper they squatted down in the snow, which made them a blanket.
+The men were tired out with their day's walk, and soon slept. The
+doctor took his turn on guard at three o'clock in the morning. There
+was a tempest during the night, the gusts of which thickened the walls
+of the snow-house. The next day, at six o'clock, they set out again
+on their monotonous march. The temperature lowered several degrees,
+and hardened the ground so that walking was easier. They often met
+with mounds or cairns something like the Esquimaux hiding-places.
+The doctor had one demolished, and found nothing but a block of ice.
+
+"What did you expect, Clawbonny?" said Hatteras. "Are we not the first
+men who have set foot here?"
+
+"It's very likely we are, but who knows?" answered the doctor.
+
+"I do not want to lose my time in useless search," continued the
+captain; "I want to be quick back to my ship, even if we don't find
+the fuel."
+
+"I believe we are certain of doing that," said the doctor.
+
+"I often wish I had not left the _Forward_," said Hatteras; "a
+captain's place is on board."
+
+"Johnson is there."
+
+"Yes; but--well, we must make haste, that's all."
+
+The procession marched along rapidly; Simpson excited the dogs by
+calling to them; in consequence of a phosphorescent phenomenon they
+seemed to be running on a ground in flames, and the sledges seemed
+to raise a dust of sparks. The doctor went on in front to examine
+the state of the snow, but all at once he disappeared. Bell, who was
+nearest to him, ran up.
+
+"Well, Mr. Clawbonny," he called out in anxiety, "where are you?"
+
+"Doctor!" called the captain.
+
+"Here, in a hole," answered a reassuring voice; "throw me a cord,
+and I shall soon be on the surface of the globe again."
+
+They threw a cord to the doctor, who was at the bottom of a hole about
+ten feet deep; he fastened it round his waist, and his companions
+hauled him up with difficulty.
+
+"Are you hurt?" asked Hatteras.
+
+"Not a bit," answered the doctor, shaking his kind face, all covered
+with snow.
+
+"But how did you tumble down there?"
+
+"Oh, it was the refraction's fault," he answered laughing. "I thought
+I was stepping across about a foot's distance, and I fell into a hole
+ten feet deep! I never shall get used to it. It will teach us to sound
+every step before we advance. Ears hear and eyes see all topsy-turvy
+in this enchanted spot."
+
+"Can you go on?" asked the captain.
+
+"Oh, yes; the little fall has done me more good than harm."
+
+In the evening the travellers had marched twenty-five miles; they
+were worn out, but it did not prevent the doctor climbing up an iceberg
+while the snow-house was being built. The full moon shone with
+extraordinary brilliancy in the clearest sky; the stars were
+singularly bright; from the top of the iceberg the view stretched
+over an immense plain, bristling with icebergs; they were of all sizes
+and shapes, and made the field look like a vast cemetery, in which
+twenty generations slept the sleep of death. Notwithstanding the cold,
+the doctor remained a long time in contemplation of the spectacle,
+and his companions had much trouble to get him away; but they were
+obliged to think of rest; the snow-hut was ready; the four companions
+burrowed into it like moles, and soon slept the sleep of the just.
+
+The next day and the following ones passed without any particular
+incident; the journey was easy or difficult according to the weather;
+when it was cold and clear they wore their moccasins and advanced
+rapidly, when damp and penetrating, their snow-shoes, and made little
+way. They reached thus the 15th of January; the moon was in her last
+quarter, and was only visible for a short time; the sun, though still
+hidden below the horizon, gave six hours of a sort of twilight, not
+sufficient to see the way by; they were obliged to stake it out
+according to the direction given by the compass. Bell led the way;
+Hatteras marched in a straight line behind him; then Simpson and the
+doctor, taking it in turns, so as only to see Hatteras, and keep in
+a straight line. But notwithstanding all their precautions, they
+deviated sometimes thirty or forty degrees; they were then obliged
+to stake it out again. On Sunday, the 15th of January, Hatteras
+considered he had made a hundred miles to the south; the morning was
+consecrated to the mending of different articles of clothing and
+encampment; divine service was not forgotten. They set out again at
+noon; the temperature was cold, the thermometer marked only 32 degrees
+below zero in a very clear atmosphere.
+
+All at once, without warning of any kind, a vapour rose from the ground
+in a complete state of congelation, reaching a height of about ninety
+feet, and remaining stationary; they could not see a foot before them;
+it clung to their clothing, and bristled it with ice. Our travellers,
+surprised by the frost-rime, had all the same idea--that of getting
+near one another. They called out, "Bell!" "Simpson!" "This way,
+doctor!" "Where are you, captain?" But no answers were heard; the
+vapour did not conduct sound. They all fired as a sign of rallying.
+But if the sound of the voice appeared too weak, the detonation of
+the firearms was too strong, for it was echoed in all directions,
+and produced a confused rumble without appreciable direction. Each
+acted then according to his instincts. Hatteras stopped, folded his
+arms, and waited. Simpson contented himself with stopping his sledge.
+Bell retraced his steps, feeling the traces with his hands. The doctor
+ran hither and thither, bumping against the icebergs, falling down,
+getting up, and losing himself more and more. At the end of five
+minutes he said:
+
+"I can't go on like this! What a queer climate! It changes too suddenly,
+and the icicles are cutting my face. Captain! I say, captain!"
+
+But he obtained no answer; he discharged his gun, and notwithstanding
+his thick gloves, burnt his hand with the trigger. During this
+operation he thought he saw a confused mass moving at a few steps
+from him.
+
+"At last!" said he. "Hatteras! Bell! Simpson! Is it you? Answer, do!"
+
+A hollow growl was the only answer.
+
+"Whatever is that?" thought the doctor. The mass approached, and its
+outline was more distinctly seen. "Why, it's a bear!" thought the
+terrified doctor. It was a bear, lost too in the frost-rime, passing
+within a few steps of the men of whose existence it was ignorant.
+The doctor saw its enormous paws beating the air, and did not like
+the situation. He jumped back and the mass disappeared like a phantom.
+The doctor felt the ground rising under his feet; climbing on
+all-fours he got to the top of a block, then another, feeling the
+end with his stick. "It's an iceberg!" he said to himself: "if I get
+to the top I shall be saved." So saying he climbed to a height of
+about eighty feet; his head was higher than the frozen fog, of which
+he could clearly see the top. As he looked round he saw the heads
+of his three companions emerging from the dense fluid.
+
+"Hatteras!"
+
+"Doctor!"
+
+"Bell!"
+
+"Simpson!"
+
+The four names were all shouted at the same time; the sky, lightened
+by a magnificent halo, threw pale rays which coloured the frost-rime
+like clouds, and the summits of the icebergs seemed to emerge from
+liquid silver. The travellers found themselves circumscribed by a
+circle less than a hundred feet in diameter. Thanks to the purity
+of the upper layers of air, they could hear each other distinctly,
+and could talk from the top of their icebergs. After the first shots
+they had all thought the best thing they could do was to climb.
+
+"The sledge!" cried the captain.
+
+"It's eighty feet below us," answered Simpson.
+
+"In what condition?"
+
+"In good condition."
+
+"What about the bear?" asked the doctor.
+
+"What bear?" asked Bell.
+
+"The bear that nearly broke my head," answered the doctor.
+
+"If there is a bear we must go down," said Hatteras.
+
+"If we do we shall get lost again," said the doctor.
+
+"And our dogs?" said Hatteras.
+
+At this moment Dick's bark was heard through the fog.
+
+"That's Dick," said Hatteras; "there's something up; I shall go down."
+
+Growls and barks were heard in a fearful chorus. In the fog it sounded
+like an immense humming in a wadded room. Some struggle was evidently
+going on.
+
+"Dick! Dick!" cried the captain, re-entering the frost-rime.
+
+"Wait a minute, Hatteras; I believe the fog is clearing off," called
+out the doctor. So it was, but lowering like the waters of a pond
+that is being emptied; it seemed to enter the ground from whence it
+sprang; the shining summits of the icebergs grew above it; others,
+submerged till then, came out like new islands; by an optical illusion
+the travellers seemed to be mounting with their icebergs above the
+fog. Soon the top of the sledge appeared, then the dogs, then about
+thirty other animals, then enormous moving masses, and Dick jumping
+about in and out of the fog.
+
+"Foxes!" cried Bell.
+
+"Bears!" shouted the doctor. "Five!"
+
+"Our dogs! Our provisions!" cried Simpson. A band of foxes and bears
+had attacked the sledge, and were making havoc with the provisions.
+The instinct of pillage made them agree; the dogs barked furiously,
+but the herd took no notice, and the scene of destruction was
+lamentable.
+
+"Fire!" cried the captain, discharging his gun. His companions
+imitated him. Upon hearing the quadruple detonation the bears raised
+their heads, and with a comical growl gave the signal for departure;
+they went faster than a horse could gallop, and, followed by the herd
+of foxes, soon disappeared amongst the northern icebergs.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+THE CAIRN
+
+
+The frost-rime had lasted about three-quarters of an hour; quite long
+enough for the bears and foxes to make away with a considerable
+quantity of provisions which they attacked all the more greedily,
+arriving, as they did, when the animals were perishing with hunger
+from the long winter. They had torn open the covering of the sledge
+with their enormous paws; the cases of pemmican were open, and
+half-empty; the biscuit-bags pillaged, the provisions of tea spilt
+over the snow, a barrel of spirits of wine broken up, and its precious
+contents run out; the camping materials lying all about. The wild
+animals had done their work.
+
+"The devils have done for us!" said Bell.
+
+"What shall we do now?" said Simpson.
+
+"Let us first see how much we've lost," said the doctor; "we can talk
+after."
+
+Hatteras said nothing, but began picking up the scattered objects.
+They picked up all the pemmican and biscuit that was still eatable.
+The loss of so much spirits of wine was deplorable, as without it
+it was impossible to get any hot drinks--no tea nor coffee.
+
+The doctor made an inventory of the provisions that were left, and
+found that the animals had eaten two hundred pounds of pemmican and
+a hundred and fifty pounds of biscuit; if the travellers continued
+their journey they would be obliged to put themselves on half-rations.
+They deliberated about what was to be done under the circumstances.
+Should they return to the brig and begin their expedition again? But
+how could they resolve to lose the hundred and fifty miles already
+cleared? and coming back without the fuel, how would they be received
+by the crew? and which of them would begin the excursion again? It
+was evident that the best thing to do was to go on, even at the price
+of the worst privations. The doctor, Hatteras, and Bell were for going
+on, but Simpson wanted to go back; his health had severely suffered
+from the fatigues of the journey, and he grew visibly weaker; but
+at last, seeing he was alone in his opinion, he took his place at
+the head of the sledge, and the little caravan continued its route.
+During the three following days, from the 15th to the 17th of January,
+the monotonous incidents of the journey took place again. They went
+on more slowly; the travellers were soon tired; their legs ached with
+fatigue, and the dogs drew with difficulty. Their insufficient food
+told upon them. The weather changed with its usual quickness, going
+suddenly from intense cold to damp and penetrating fogs.
+
+On the 18th of January the aspect of the ice-field changed all at
+once. A great number of peaks, like pyramids, ending in a sharp point
+at a great elevation, showed themselves on the horizon. The soil in
+certain places was seen through the layer of snow; it seemed to consist
+of schist and quartz, with some appearance of calcareous rock. At
+last the travellers had reached _terra firma_, and, according to their
+estimation, the continent must be New Cornwall. The doctor was
+delighted to tread on solid ground once more; the travellers had only
+a hundred more miles to go before reaching Belcher Cape; but the
+trouble of walking increased on this rocky soil, full of inequalities,
+crevices, and precipices; they were obliged to plunge into the
+interior of the land and climb the high cliffs on the coast, across
+narrow gorges, in which the snow was piled up to a height of thirty
+or forty feet. The travellers soon had cause to regret the levels
+they had left, on which the sledge rolled so easily. Now they were
+obliged to drag it with all their strength. The dogs were worn out,
+and had to be helped; the men harnessed themselves along with them,
+and wore themselves out too. They were often obliged to unload the
+provisions in order to get over a steep hill, whose frozen surface
+gave no hold. Some passages ten feet long took hours to clear. During
+the first day they only made about five miles on that land, so well
+named Cornwall. The next day the sledge attained the upper part of
+the cliffs; the travellers were too exhausted to construct their
+snow-house, and were obliged to pass the night under the tent,
+enveloped in their buffalo-skins, and drying their stockings by
+placing them on their chests. The consequences of such a state of
+things may be readily imagined; during the night the thermometer went
+down to 44 degrees below zero, and the mercury froze.
+
+The health of Simpson became alarming; an obstinate cold, violent
+rheumatism, and intolerable pain forced him to lie down on the sledge,
+which he could no longer guide. Bell took his place; he was not well,
+but was obliged not to give in. The doctor also felt the influence
+of his terrible winter excursion, but he did not utter a complaint;
+he marched on in front, leaning on his stick; he lighted the way;
+he helped in everything. Hatteras, impassive, impenetrable,
+insensible, in as good health as the first day, with his iron
+constitution, followed the sledge in silence. On the 20th of January
+the weather was so bad that the least effort caused immediate
+prostration; but the difficulties of the ground became so great that
+Hatteras and Bell harnessed themselves along with the dogs; the front
+of the sledge was broken by an unexpected shock, and they were forced
+to stop and mend it. Such delays occurred several times a day. The
+travellers were journeying along a deep ravine up to their waists
+in snow, and perspiring, notwithstanding the violent cold. No one
+spoke. All at once Bell looked at the doctor in alarm, picked up a
+handful of snow, and began to rub his companion's face with all his
+might.
+
+"What the deuce, Bell?" said the doctor, struggling.
+
+But Bell went on rubbing.
+
+"Are you mad? You've filled my eyes, nose, and mouth with snow. What
+is it?"
+
+"Why," answered Bell, "if you've got a nose left, you owe it to me."
+
+"A nose?" said the doctor, putting his hand to his face.
+
+"Yes, Mr. Clawbonny, you were quite frostbitten; your nose was quite
+white when I looked at you, and without my bit of rubbing you would
+be minus nose."
+
+"Thanks, Bell," said the doctor; "I'll do the same for you in case
+of need."
+
+"I hope you will, Mr. Clawbonny, and I only wish we had nothing worse
+to look forward to!"
+
+"You mean Simpson! Poor fellow, he is suffering dreadfully!"
+
+"Do you fear for him?" asked Hatteras quickly.
+
+"Yes, captain," answered the doctor.
+
+"What do you fear?"
+
+"A violent attack of scurvy. His legs swell already, and his gums
+are attacked; the poor fellow is lying under his blankets on the sledge,
+and every shock increases his pain. I pity him, but I can't do anything
+for him!"
+
+"Poor Simpson!" said Bell.
+
+"Perhaps we had better stop a day or two," said the doctor.
+
+"Stop!" cried Hatteras, "when the lives of eighteen men depend upon
+our return! You know we have only enough provisions left for twenty
+days."
+
+Neither the doctor nor Bell could answer that, and the sledge went
+on its way. In the evening they stopped at the foot of an ice-hill,
+out of which Bell soon cut a cavern; the travellers took refuge in
+it, and the doctor passed the night in nursing Simpson; he was a prey
+to the scurvy, and constant groans issued from his terrified lips.
+
+"Ah, Mr. Clawbonny, I shall never get over it. I wish I was dead
+already."
+
+"Take courage, my poor fellow!" answered the doctor, with pity in
+his tone, and he answered Simpson's complaints by incessant attention.
+Though half-dead with fatigue, he employed a part of the night in
+making the sick man a soothing draught, and rubbed him with lime-juice.
+Unfortunately it had little effect, and did not prevent the terrible
+malady spreading. The next day they were obliged to lift the poor
+fellow on to the sledge, although he begged and prayed them to leave
+him to die in peace, and begin their painful march again.
+
+The freezing mists wet the three men to the skin; the snow and sleet
+beat in their faces; they did the work of beasts of burden, and had
+not even sufficient food. Dick ran hither and thither, discovering
+by instinct the best route to follow. During the morning of the 23rd
+of January, when it was nearly dark, for the new moon had not yet
+made her appearance, Dick ran on first; he was lost to sight for
+several hours. Hatteras became anxious, as there were many bear-marks
+on the ground; he was considering what had better be done, when a
+loud barking was heard in front. The little procession moved on
+quicker, and soon came upon the faithful animal in the depth of a
+ravine. Dick was set as if he had been petrified in front of a sort
+of cairn, made of limestone, and covered with a cement of ice.
+
+"This time," said the doctor, disengaging himself from the traces,
+"it's really a cairn; we can't be mistaken."
+
+"What does it matter to us?" said Hatteras.
+
+"Why, if it is a cairn, it may inclose something that would be useful
+to us--some provisions perhaps."
+
+"As if Europeans had ever been here!" said Hatteras, shrugging his
+shoulders.
+
+"But if not Europeans, it may be that the Esquimaux have hidden some
+product of their hunting here. They are accustomed to doing it, I
+think."
+
+"Well, look if you like, Clawbonny, but I don't think it is worth
+your while."
+
+Clawbonny and Bell, armed with their pickaxes made for the cairn.
+Dick kept on barking furiously. The cairn was soon demolished, and
+the doctor took out a damp paper. Hatteras took the document and read:
+
+"Altam..., _Porpoise_, Dec... 13th, 1860,
+12.. degrees long... 8.. degrees 35 minutes lat..."
+
+"The _Porpoise_!" said the doctor.
+
+"I don't know any ship of that name frequenting these seas," said
+Hatteras.
+
+"It is evident," continued the doctor, "that some sailors, or perhaps
+some shipwrecked fellows, have passed here within the last two
+months."
+
+"That's certain," said Bell.
+
+"What shall we do?" asked the doctor.
+
+"Continue our route," said Hatteras coldly. "I don't know anything
+about the _Porpoise_, but I do know that the _Forward_ is waiting
+for our return."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+THE DEATH OF SIMPSON
+
+
+The travellers went on their weary way, each thinking of the discovery
+they had just made. Hatteras frowned with uneasiness.
+
+"What can the _Porpoise_ be?" he asked himself. "Is it a ship? and
+if so, what was it doing so near the Pole?"
+
+At this thought he shivered, but not from the cold. The doctor and
+Bell only thought of the result their discovery might have for others
+or for themselves. But the difficulties and obstacles in their way
+soon made them oblivious to everything but their own preservation.
+
+Simpson's condition grew worse; the doctor saw that death was near.
+He could do nothing, and was suffering cruelly on his own account
+from a painful ophthalmia which might bring on blindness if neglected.
+The twilight gave them enough light to hurt the eyes when reflected
+by the snow; it was difficult to guard against the reflection, for
+the spectacle-glasses got covered with a layer of opaque ice which
+obstructed the view, and when so much care was necessary for the
+dangers of the route, it was important to see clearly; however, the
+doctor and Bell took it in turns to cover their eyes or to guide the
+sledge. The soil was volcanic, and by its inequalities made it very
+difficult to draw the sledge, the frame of which was getting worn
+out. Another difficulty was the effect of the uniform brilliancy of
+the snow; the ground seemed to fall beneath the feet of the travellers,
+and they experienced the same sensation as that of the rolling of
+a ship; they could not get accustomed to it, and it made them sleepy,
+and they often walked on half in a dream. Then some unexpected shock,
+fall, or obstacle would wake them up from their inertia, which
+afterwards took possession of them again.
+
+On the 25th of January they began to descend, and their dangers
+increased. The least slip might send them down a precipice, and there
+they would have been infallibly lost. Towards evening an extremely
+violent tempest swept the snow-clad summits; they were obliged to
+lie down on the ground, and the temperature was so low that they were
+in danger of being frozen to death. Bell, with the help of Hatteras,
+built a snow-house, in which the poor fellows took shelter; there
+they partook of a little pemmican and warm tea; there were only a
+few gallons of spirits of wine left, and they were obliged to use
+them to quench their thirst, as they could not take snow in its natural
+state; it must be melted. In temperate countries, where the
+temperature scarcely falls below freezing point, it is not injurious;
+but above the Polar circle it gets so cold that it cannot be touched
+more than a red-hot iron; there is such a difference of temperature
+that its absorption produces suffocation. The Esquimaux would rather
+suffer the greatest torments than slake their thirst with snow.
+
+The doctor took his turn to watch at three o'clock in the morning,
+when the tempest was at its height; he was leaning in a corner of
+the snow-house, when a lamentable groan from Simpson drew his
+attention; he rose to go to him, and struck his head against the roof;
+without thinking of the accident he began to rub Simpson's swollen
+limbs; after about a quarter of an hour he got up again, and bumped
+his head again, although he was kneeling then.
+
+"That's very queer," he said to himself.
+
+He lifted his hand above his head, and felt that the roof was lowering.
+
+"Good God!" he cried; "Hatteras! Bell!"
+
+His cries awoke his companions, who got up quickly, and bumped
+themselves too; the darkness was thick.
+
+"The roof is falling in!" cried the doctor.
+
+They all rushed out, dragging Simpson with them; they had no sooner
+left their dangerous retreat, than it fell in with a great noise.
+The poor fellows were obliged to take refuge under the tent covering,
+which was soon covered with a thick layer of snow, which, as a bad
+conductor, prevented the travellers being frozen alive. The tempest
+continued all through the night. When Bell harnessed the dogs the
+next morning he found that some of them had begun to eat their leather
+harness, and that two of them were very ill, and could not go much
+further. However, the caravan set out again; there only remained sixty
+miles to go. On the 26th, Bell, who went on in front, called out
+suddenly to his companions. They ran up to him, and he pointed to
+a gun leaning against an iceberg.
+
+"A gun!" cried the doctor.
+
+Hatteras took it; it was loaded and in good condition.
+
+"The men from the _Porpoise_ can't be far off," said the doctor.
+
+Hatteras remarked that the gun was of American manufacture, and his
+hands crisped the frozen barrel. He gave orders to continue the march,
+and they kept on down the mountain slope. Simpson seemed deprived
+of all feeling; he had no longer the strength to complain. The tempest
+kept on, and the sledge proceeded more and more slowly; they scarcely
+made a few miles in twenty-four hours, and in spite of the strictest
+economy, the provisions rapidly diminished; but as long as they had
+enough for the return journey, Hatteras kept on.
+
+On the 27th they found a sextant half-buried in the snow, then a
+leather bottle; the latter contained brandy, or rather a lump of ice,
+with a ball of snow in the middle, which represented the spirit; it
+could not be used. It was evident that they were following in the
+steps of some poor shipwrecked fellows who, like them, had taken the
+only practicable route. The doctor looked carefully round for other
+cairns, but in vain. Sad thoughts came into his mind; he could not
+help thinking that it would be a good thing not to meet with their
+predecessors; what could he and his companions do for them? They
+wanted help themselves; their clothes were in rags, and they had not
+enough to eat. If their predecessors were numerous they would all
+die of hunger. Hatteras seemed to wish to avoid them, and could he
+be blamed? But these men might be their fellow-countrymen, and,
+however slight might be the chance of saving them, ought they not
+to try it? He asked Bell what he thought about it, but the poor fellow's
+heart was hardened by his own suffering, and he did not answer.
+Clawbonny dared not question Hatteras, so he left it to Providence.
+
+In the evening of the 27th, Simpson appeared to be at the last
+extremity; his limbs were already stiff and frozen; his difficult
+breathing formed a sort of mist round his head, and convulsive
+movements announced that his last hour was come. The expression of
+his face was terrible, desperate, and he threw looks of powerless
+anger towards the captain. He accused him silently, and Hatteras
+avoided him and became more taciturn and wrapped up in himself than
+ever. The following night was frightful; the tempest redoubled in
+violence; the tent was thrown down three times, and the snowdrifts
+buried the poor fellows, blinded them, froze them, and wounded them
+with the sharp icicles struck off the surrounding icebergs. The dogs
+howled lamentably. Simpson lay exposed to the cruel atmosphere. Bell
+succeeded in getting up the tent again, which, though it did not
+protect them from the cold, kept out the snow. But a more violent
+gust blew it down a fourth time, and dragged it along in its fury.
+
+"Oh, we can't bear it any longer!" cried Bell.
+
+"Courage, man, courage!" answered the doctor, clinging to him in order
+to prevent themselves rolling down a ravine. Simpson's death-rattle
+was heard. All at once, with a last effort, he raised himself up and
+shook his fist at Hatteras, who was looking at him fixedly, then gave
+a fearful cry, and fell back dead in the midst of his unfinished
+threat.
+
+"He is dead!" cried the doctor.
+
+"Dead!" repeated Bell.
+
+Hatteras advanced towards the corpse, but was driven back by a gust
+of wind.
+
+Poor Simpson was the first victim to the murderous climate, the first
+to pay with his life the unreasonable obstinacy of the captain. The
+dead man had called Hatteras an assassin, but he did not bend beneath
+the accusation. A single tear escaped from his eyes and froze on his
+pale cheek. The doctor and Bell looked at him with a sort of terror.
+Leaning on his stick, he looked like the genius of the North, upright
+in the midst of the whirlwind, and frightful in his immobility.
+
+He remained standing thus till the first dawn of twilight, bold,
+tenacious, indomitable, and seemed to defy the tempest that roared
+round him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+THE RETURN
+
+
+The wind went down about six in the morning, and turning suddenly
+north cleared the clouds from the sky; the thermometer marked 33
+degrees below zero. The first rays of the sun reached the horizon
+which they would gild a few days later. Hatteras came up to his two
+dejected companions, and said to them, in a low, sad voice:
+
+"We are still more than sixty miles from the spot indicated by Sir
+Edward Belcher. We have just enough provisions to allow us to get
+back to the brig. If we go on any further we shall meet with certain
+death, and that will do good to no one. We had better retrace our
+steps."
+
+"That is a sensible resolution, Hatteras," answered the doctor; "I
+would have followed you as far as you led us, but our health gets
+daily weaker; we can scarcely put one foot before the other; we ought
+to go back."
+
+"Is that your opinion too, Bell?" asked Hatteras.
+
+"Yes, captain," answered the carpenter.
+
+"Very well," said Hatteras; "we will take two days' rest. We want
+it. The sledge wants mending. I think we had better build ourselves
+a snow-house, and try to regain a little strength."
+
+After this was settled, our three men set to work with vigour. Bell
+took the necessary precautions to assure the solidity of the
+construction, and they soon had a good shelter at the bottom of the
+ravine where the last halt had taken place. It had cost Hatteras a
+great effort to interrupt his journey. All their trouble and pain
+lost! A useless excursion, which one man had paid for with his life.
+What would become of the crew now that all hope of coal was over?
+What would Shandon think? Notwithstanding all these painful thoughts,
+he felt it impossible to go on any further. They began their
+preparations for the return journey at once. The sledge was mended;
+it had now only two hundred pounds weight to carry. They mended their
+clothes, worn-out, torn, soaked with snow, and hardened by the frost;
+new moccasins and snow-shoes replaced those that were worn out. This
+work took the whole day of the 29th and the morning of the 30th; the
+three travellers rested and comforted themselves as well as they
+could.
+
+During the thirty-six hours passed in the snow-house and on the
+icebergs of the ravine, the doctor had noticed that Dick's conduct
+was very strange; he crept smelling about a sort of rising in the
+ground made by several layers of ice; he kept wagging his tail with
+impatience, and trying to draw the attention of his master to the
+spot. The doctor thought that the dog's uneasiness might be caused
+by the presence of Simpson's body, which he and his companions had
+not yet had time to bury. He resolved to put it off no longer,
+especially as they intended starting early the next morning. Bell
+and the doctor took their pickaxes and directed their steps towards
+the lowest part of the ravine; the mound indicated by Dick seemed
+to be a good spot to place the corpse in; they were obliged to bury
+it deep to keep it from the bears. They began by removing the layer
+of soft snow, and then attacked the ice. At the third blow of his
+pickaxe the doctor broke some hard obstacle; he took out the pieces
+and saw that it was a glass bottle; Bell discovered a small
+biscuit-sack with a few crumbs at the bottom.
+
+"Whatever does this mean?" said the doctor.
+
+"I can't think," answered Bell, suspending his work.
+
+They called Hatteras, who came immediately. Dick barked loudly, and
+began scratching at the ice.
+
+"Perhaps we have found a provision-store," said the doctor.
+
+"It is possible," said Bell.
+
+"Go on," said Hatteras.
+
+Some remains of food were drawn out, and a case a quarter full of
+pemmican.
+
+"If it is a hiding-place," said Hatteras, "the bears have been before
+us. See, the provisions are not intact."
+
+"I am afraid so," answered the doctor; "for----"
+
+He was interrupted by a cry from Bell, who had come upon a man's leg,
+stiffened and frozen.
+
+"A corpse," cried the doctor.
+
+"It is a tomb," answered Hatteras.
+
+When the corpse was disinterred it turned out to be that of a sailor,
+about thirty years old, perfectly preserved. He wore the clothes of
+an Arctic navigator. The doctor could not tell how long he had been
+dead. But after this corpse, Bell discovered a second, that of a man
+of fifty, bearing the mark of the suffering that had killed him on
+his face.
+
+"These are not buried bodies," cried the doctor, "the poor fellows
+were surprised by death just as we find them."
+
+"You are right, Mr. Clawbonny," answered Bell.
+
+"Go on! go on!" said Hatteras.
+
+Bell obeyed tremblingly; for who knew how many human bodies the mound
+contained?
+
+"These men have been the victims of the same accident that almost
+happened to us," said the doctor. "Their snow-house tumbled in. Let
+us see if any one of them is still alive."
+
+The place was soon cleared, and Bell dug out a third body, that of
+a man of forty, who had not the cadaverous look of the others. The
+doctor examined him and thought he recognised some symptoms of
+existence.
+
+"He is alive!" he cried.
+
+Bell and he carried the body into the snow-house whilst Hatteras,
+unmoved, contemplated their late habitation. The doctor stripped the
+resuscitated man and found no trace of a wound on him. He and Bell
+rubbed him vigorously with oakum steeped in spirits of wine, and they
+saw signs of returning consciousness; but the unfortunate man was
+in a state of complete prostration, and could not speak a word. His
+tongue stuck to his palate as if frozen. The doctor searched his
+pockets, but they were empty. He left Bell to continue the friction,
+and rejoined Hatteras. The captain had been down into the depths of
+the snow-house, and had searched about carefully. He came up holding
+a half-burnt fragment of a letter. These words were on it:
+
+ ... tamont
+ ... orpoise
+ ... w York.
+
+"Altamont!" cried the doctor, of the ship _Porpoise_, of New York."
+
+"An American," said Hatteras.
+
+"I'll save him," said the doctor, "and then we shall know all about
+it."
+
+He went back to Altamont whilst Hatteras remained pensive. Thanks
+to his attentions, the doctor succeeded in recalling the unfortunate
+man to life, but not to feeling; he neither saw, heard, nor spoke,
+but he lived. The next day Hatteras said to the doctor:
+
+"We must start at once."
+
+"Yes. The sledge is not loaded; we'll put the poor fellow on it and
+take him to the brig."
+
+"Very well; but we must bury these bodies first."
+
+The two unknown sailors were placed under the ruins of the snow-house
+again, and Simpson's corpse took Altamont's place. The three
+travellers buried their companion, and at seven o'clock in the morning
+they set out again. Two of the Greenland dogs were dead, and Dick
+offered himself in their place. He pulled with energy.
+
+During the next twenty days the travellers experienced the same
+incidents as before. But as it was in the month of February they did
+not meet with the same difficulty from the ice. It was horribly cold,
+but there was not much wind. The sun reappeared for the first time
+on the 31st of January, and every day he stopped longer above the
+horizon. Bell and the doctor were almost blinded and half-lame; the
+carpenter was obliged to walk upon crutches. Altamont still lived,
+but he was in a state of complete insensibility. The doctor took great
+care of him, although he wanted attention himself; he was getting
+ill with fatigue. Hatteras thought of nothing but his ship. What state
+should he find it in?
+
+On the 24th of February he stopped all of a sudden. A red light appeared
+about 300 paces in front, and a column of black smoke went up to the
+sky.
+
+"Look at that smoke! my ship is burning," said he with a beating heart.
+
+"We are three miles off yet," said Bell; "it can't be the _Forward_."
+
+"Yes it is," said the doctor; "the mirage makes it seem nearer."
+
+The three men, leaving the sledge to the care of Dick, ran on, and
+in an hour's time were in sight of the ship. She was burning in the
+midst of the ice, which melted around her. A hundred steps farther
+a man met them, wringing his hands before the _Forward_ in flames.
+It was Johnson. Hatteras ran to him.
+
+"My ship! My ship!" cried he.
+
+"Is that you, captain? Oh, don't come any nearer," said Johnson.
+
+"What is it?" said Hatteras.
+
+"The wretches left forty-eight hours ago, after setting fire to the
+ship."
+
+"Curse them!" cried Hatteras.
+
+A loud explosion was then heard; the ground trembled; the icebergs
+fell upon the ice-field; a column of smoke went up into the clouds,
+and the _Forward_ blew up. The doctor and Bell reached Hatteras, who
+out of the depths of despair cried:
+
+"The cowards have fled! The strong will succeed! Johnson and Bell,
+you are courageous. Doctor, you have science. I have faith. To the
+North Pole! To the North Pole!"
+
+His companions heard these energetic words, and they did them good;
+but it was a terrible situation for these four men, alone, under the
+80th degree of latitude, in the midst of the Polar Regions!
+
+
+END OF PART I OF THE ADVENTURES OF CAPTAIN HATTERAS
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The English at the North Pole, by Jules Verne
+
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