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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67944 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67944)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Boy’s-Eye View of the Arctic, by
-Kennett Longley Rawson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: A Boy’s-Eye View of the Arctic
-
-Author: Kennett Longley Rawson
-
-Contributor: Donald B. MacMillan
-
-Release Date: April 27, 2022 [eBook #67944]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Steve Mattern, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was
- produced from images made available by the HathiTrust
- Digital Library.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BOY’S-EYE VIEW OF THE
-ARCTIC ***
-
-
-
-
-
-A BOY’S-EYE VIEW OF THE ARCTIC
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
- THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
-
- NEW YORK · BOSTON · CHICAGO · DALLAS
- ATLANTA · SAN FRANCISCO
-
- MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED
-
- LONDON · BOMBAY · CALCUTTA
- MELBOURNE
-
- THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD.
-
- TORONTO
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Kennett L. Rawson, June, 1925.]
-
-
-
-
- A BOY’S-EYE VIEW
- OF
- THE ARCTIC
-
- BY
- KENNETT LONGLEY RAWSON
- CABIN-BOY OF THE _BOWDOIN_
-
- _Introduction by_
- COMMANDER DONALD B. MACMILLAN
-
- New York
- THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
- 1926
-
- _All rights reserved_
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1926,
- BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY,
-
- Set up and electrotyped.
-
- Published October, 1926.
-
- _Printed in the United States of America by_
-
- THE FERRIS PRINTING COMPANY, NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
- TO MY MOTHER
- Bravest of them all.
-
-
-
-
-Illustrated with photographs taken by the author, and others loaned
-through the courtesy of Commander Donald B. MacMillan; National
-Geographic Society, taken by Maynard Owen Williams, photographer of the
-Expedition; Ralph P. Robinson, Mate of the _Bowdoin_; Onnig D. Melkon,
-moving picture photographer of the Expedition; Alfred Brust, Staff
-Photographer of the _Boston Herald_, and George Warren Lord, Staff
-Photographer of the _Boston Post_.
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-To the lecturer the introduction is the most interesting part of his
-lecture, in that it is generally so complimentary that his feeling
-of guilt and a sense of his own inferiority mars somewhat his whole
-discourse. My cabin boy, Kennett Rawson, suffers no handicap in this
-respect. His work is finished. Whatever I may write will not affect its
-status. His narrative stands as a testimonial of the influence of good
-and much reading. Very few will believe that such language is natural
-for a fourteen-year-old boy. But we knew “Ken” in the forecastle of
-the little _Bowdoin_, and teachers at Hill School who have watched his
-progress for two years can assure you that the book is his own.
-
-How fortunate that a boy in his early teens could visit the scenes
-of our early explorers, the headquarters of the great Peary, who,
-by his work, has placed before American youth the finest example of
-persistency, determination, and clean grit in all Arctic history. What
-a privilege for young Rawson to stand where the immortal Elisha Kent
-Kane stood with lifted ramrod and fluttering cap lining, the first to
-step foot on historical Littleton Island, and to enter the Basin which
-bears his name!
-
-From the heights about Etah he has looked across to the ice-covered
-hills of Ellesmere Land and Cape Sabine where Greely and his men lay
-dying in 1884 and where Peary fought a losing fight in 1900-1902. He
-has seen the last of the _S. S. Polaris_, which steamed farther north
-than ship ever steamed, now strewn about the beach rusting, rotting
-away. But memories of her Commander, the most enthusiastic of all
-Arctic explorers, will always live.
-
-Something more than pure sentiment. No boy can look upon such things,
-can dwell upon the deeds of such men as Kane, Hayes, Hall, Greely and
-Peary, without standing a little more erect, without visualizing his
-own future and determining to have that future count for something
-beyond material gain.
-
-With mingled feelings of apprehension, doubt as to the wisdom of my
-decision, I signed Kennett Rawson on the ship’s papers as “Cabin boy,
-Chicago, age 14,” the youngest white lad ever to go into the Far North.
-
-Under starlit skies and unruffled sea; in the semi-darkness of
-his 10-11 watch, I watched him as he stood at the wheel “giving
-her a spoke” now and then to keep her on her course, his small
-sheepskin-covered form outlined against the black of the ocean. In
-howling winds and with the _Bowdoin_ plunging and bucking head seas,
-decks awash and life lines stretched, the same huddled form, eyes
-on the compass card, doing his best, with never trace of quit, I, a
-shipmate for four months, knew him. Young Rawson made good. For that
-reason he goes back again with me in the Northland one week from
-to-day, back to the big grey hills of Labrador with their outlying,
-breaking reefs, to the inner reaches of its green bays, to its simple,
-sincere people; to Greenland, once the home of the Norsemen, now the
-land of the Dane and smiling half-breed; to Baffin Island, the Meta
-Incognita of Martin Frobisher, the objective of many an old New England
-whaling ship.
-
-May he enjoy this fourth cruise of the _Bowdoin_ as he did her third.
-“The thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts,” and when those
-thoughts or dreams are realized, doubly fortunate is youth.
-
- DONALD B. MACMILLAN.
-
- Freeport, Maine.
- June 12, 1926.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- INTRODUCTION ix
-
- CHAPTER
-
- I. HERE ENDETH THE LESSON 1
-
- II. UNDER WEIGH 14
-
- III. IN THE LAND OF ADVENTURE 22
-
- IV. A TRULY GLORIOUS FOURTH AND SOME VERY REAL FISHING 32
-
- V. THROUGH THE PACK TO DISASTER 41
-
- VI. THE HEROES OF HOPEDALE 49
-
- VII. IN ESKIMO LAND AND IN TROUBLE 56
-
- VIII. GREENLAND! 66
-
- IX. ICE AND MORE ICE 76
-
- X. WE TAKE THE AIR 89
-
- XI. MY FARTHEST NORTH 107
-
- XII. WE BREAK INTO SOCIETY 115
-
- XIII. STORM AND STRESS AND--HOME! 130
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- Kennett L. Rawson, June, 1925 _Frontispiece_
-
- FACING
- PAGE
-
- The journey of the _Bowdoin_, 1925 (map) 1
-
- The _Bowdoin_ and her crew, Wiscasset, Maine, June 20, 1925.
- John Jaynes, Engineer; Commander Donald B. MacMillan;
- Ralph P. Robinson, Mate; Kennett L. Rawson,
- Cabin Boy; John Reinartz, short wave radio expert;
- Martin Vorce, Cook; Lieutenant Benjamin Rigg, U. S.
- Coast and Geodetic Survey; Onnig D. Melkon, moving
- picture photographer 12
-
- Outward Bound, June, 1925 20
-
- The _Bowdoin_ leaving the dock at Wiscasset 20
-
- Rawson, MacMillan at the wheel, and Dr. Grosvenor. On
- way to Sydney 27
-
- “Yonder beneath the North Star lies our destination, Lad.” 27
-
- Commander MacMillan, Dr. Grosvenor and Dr. Grenfell,
- Battle Harbor 27
-
- Maynard Williams (left), photographer, National Geographic
- Society; Lieutenant Benjamin Rigg (right), U. S. Coast
- and Geodetic Survey 61
-
- The _Bowdoin_ passing an iceberg off west coast of Greenland 63
-
- The _Bowdoin_ caught in a nip, at Melville Bay 63
-
- Commander MacMillan with an Eskimo child; in flying costume;
- in the ice barrel 90
-
- Brother John’s Glacier and Alida Lake, Etah, North Greenland 90
-
- The _Peary_ 94
-
- Expedition plane at stern of _Bowdoin_ 94
-
- Launching first plane at Etah 95
-
- Eskimo kiddie with mother’s coat on 104
-
- Even Eskimo boys of Ig-loo-da-houny have a sweet tooth 104
-
- In-you-gee-to makes a coil of rawhide line out of skin of
- which he is justly proud 105
-
- The only Eskimo family in Etah 105
-
- The _Bowdoin_ on the rocks in North Greenland 118
-
- Head of 2000-pound walrus killed at Etah, North Greenland 118
-
- Oomiak: Eskimo women’s boat, made of sealskins 119
-
- South Greenland kayak 119
-
- At Sukkertoppen 122
-
- Dick Salmon with large cod jigged while stormbound in
- Godthaab Fiord 123
-
- A good Eskimo puppy 126
-
- Typical winter home of South Greenland Eskimo 126
-
- Eskimo girls of Holsteinborg, mixture of Danish, Spanish,
- English and Eskimo 126
-
- View of Godthaab with statue of Hans Egede, first missionary
- to the Eskimos of Greenland 130
-
- Norse Church at head of Godthaab Fiord, probably built
- about 1100 A. D. 130
-
- In rough weather off Nova Scotia, homeward bound 131
-
- The _Bowdoin_ delayed by the storm at Monhegan 131
-
-
-
-
-A BOY’S-EYE VIEW OF THE ARCTIC
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: The journey of the _Bowdoin_, 1925.]
-
-
-
-
-A BOY’S-EYE VIEW OF THE ARCTIC
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-HERE ENDETH THE LESSON
-
-
-One warm June evening I was sitting up in my room supposedly studying,
-but actually all thoughts of study had long since gone where most
-good resolutions go. Who can study on a mild June evening anyway? I
-can study almost any other time, but on such occasions my thoughts
-go fluie, and I am off to Treasure Island or with Jules Verne. I was
-somewhere in those latitudes when a rap sounded on my door. I thought
-just retribution had overtaken me in the form of a master; so I opened
-a text book, scattered a few papers about for realistic effect and then
-went to the door.
-
-“Long distance for you at the exchange,” said the messenger, who after
-all was not a master.
-
-I slipped into my bathrobe and reported to the master on the hall.
-
-“Sir, long distance wants me at the exchange,” I said.
-
-“All right, here’s your permission slip. Get it signed when you are
-through. And Rawson--don’t loaf on your way back.”
-
-“No, sir,” I said, and with this parting injunction I was off.
-
-I took down the receiver, got my connection and yelled “hello.”
-
-“Hello, Ken, that you?” It was Dad, and there was a note of excitement
-in his voice. “Do you want to go to the Arctic with MacMillan this
-summer?”
-
-I leaned against the panel. Was I still with Jules Verne?
-
-“What, Dad? Say it again.”
-
-Dad laughed. “Do you want to go to the Arctic with MacMillan this
-summer?”
-
-“With MacMillan? With MacMillan?” I gasped! What was he trying to
-put over? Well, at last it got across, and it didn’t take me long to
-say yes. He then told me how it all happened, and my surprise and
-wonderment increased at every word. At last he had to hang up, and I
-went back to my room in a haze. I could hardly grasp the significance
-of what I had just heard. A few minutes before I was merely a student
-at The Hill; now I was an explorer. Well of course not quite that,
-but something along that line, and anyway I was going on an Arctic
-expedition and that’s all that mattered.
-
-I returned to my hall and reported to the master in charge.
-
-“Where is your slip?” he said rather shortly.
-
-“My slip? I forgot to have it signed. Oh, sir, MacMillan and I are
-going exploring in the Arctic regions!”
-
-The master looked incredulous, but as I still retained the air of being
-partly sane, he began to show real interest.
-
-“How did you happen to choose MacMillan?” he queried.
-
-“Oh, sir, I didn’t mean that, I meant that Commander MacMillan is going
-to take me with him this summer,” I replied, rather embarrassed by my
-outbreak.
-
-“Well, just how did you get in on a thing like this?” he asked.
-
-“For several summers I have sailed,” I said, “and I like the sea. Last
-summer I was engaged in the scientific work of the Bureau of Fisheries
-on a little schooner. We made a number of trips off shore, and I
-gained quite a bit of experience. I liked the work so well that I told
-father that I thought I should like to be an explorer instead of a
-banker--father’s business. A friend of father’s, Mr. Joseph MacDonald,
-being acquainted with these facts and also with Commander MacMillan,
-conceived the idea that I ought to go on the forthcoming expedition
-with the Commander. I fear he must have strained a point in telling of
-my qualifications for a berth on the ship, but he finally persuaded
-the Commander to take me. After this he broke the good news to father.
-Then the two of them had the difficult task of convincing Mother that
-I ought to go. My mother is like most mothers, only a little more so,
-and it was quite a job to show her that the undertaking was not too
-dangerous and that it would be a valuable experience. She was finally
-won over, and so that’s how I am going.”
-
-“Well,” said the master, “some people do seem to have all the luck.
-Go to your room quietly, and remember that we’re still keeping school
-around here.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” I said, and I went out. He had forgotten all about the slip!
-
-If I worked hard, I had a chance of getting exempt from my examinations
-at the end of the term. That meant I could go home seven days earlier
-than otherwise. When I had calmed down, I made up my mind that no dust
-was going to collect on my books from then on. Too much depended on my
-plugging; so I tried to put away the thoughts of nice arctic coolness
-on a hot June night and bury myself in my books.
-
-The days went quickly by. They were happy days filled with hard work
-between which came rosy dreams of the future--the prelude to the great
-adventure. But at last came the important day--the day on which the
-list of exemptions from examinations was to be posted. I parked myself
-outside the Dean’s office anxiously awaiting that list. No vacation
-ever had seemed so far away, and the minutes were ninety seconds
-long. At last a figure appeared from within, armed with the list and
-a handful of thumbtacks. There was a wild mob there by that time, but
-I was in the front row. I ran my eye down the alphabet. My fate was
-before me. It was there--my name. Exempt in everything! With a yelp of
-joy I rushed for my room feeling for my trunk key on the way. Somehow I
-got my trunk packed, did the things that had to be done before leaving,
-and that night at dinner I had everything ready for an early departure
-in the morning.
-
-The next day, amid the good wishes of my somewhat envious school
-friends, I bade farewell to The Hill and started for home. There I
-would have a few days with my family and plenty of time to select my
-outfit before going on to Wiscasset, Maine, to join the expedition. On
-the train I did not buy any magazines. I just sat there and shot polar
-bears and dodged icebergs; and what a grand and glorious feeling it was!
-
-The family were at the train to meet me, and we all had so much to say
-that nobody could wait for the other person to finish. Mother was so
-happy that I could go and so unhappy because I would not be home for
-the vacation, that she didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Father was
-so enthusiastic that he wanted to go himself.
-
-I had about a week before joining the expedition; this time I employed
-in getting my equipment ready. I needed all manner of things, and
-without a list which the Commander had furnished, we should not have
-known what to get. Oilskins and rubber boots for wet weather were
-very necessary, as were all sorts of warm things such as knit socks,
-heavy underwear, flannel shirts, woolen trousers and a sheepskin
-coat, to name but a few of the items. I also laid in a big stock of
-five-and-ten-cent-store trinkets for trading with the Eskimos. The
-Commander had suggested rings, necklaces, beads, perfume, soap and
-various novelties, most of which certainly went like hot cakes with the
-Eskimos.
-
-At last the day arrived on which I must leave home for the last time
-until my return from the north, probably in a few months, but very
-possibly not for several years, maybe never. The Arctic keeps one
-guessing if it does nothing else. One never can tell what successes or
-disasters the next day holds.
-
-The family were not coming east with me now, as it was necessary for
-me to go on a few days early to help in the work of preparation. The
-family, however, were coming on for the official farewell which was not
-to be until a week later. On my way to Wiscasset, where the _Bowdoin_
-was being outfitted, I stopped in New York and joined forces with Dick
-Salmon, another member of the expedition. We continued our journey
-by steamer to Portland and there we caught a local to Wiscasset. The
-afternoon of the fifteenth, the day on which we were supposed to
-arrive, found us bumping along and wishing that the train would make
-more speed. But after what seemed years, the end of our trip hove in
-sight as we suddenly rounded a curve. With beating hearts we gathered
-our luggage and prepared to disembark. The train halted just opposite
-where the _Bowdoin_ was anchored, and we stared with interest and
-admiration at our new home, for such she proved to be for the next
-four months. We hailed a passing launch and her skipper put us aboard
-our ship. We at once reported for duty to the mate, Mr. Robinson,
-who was in charge of the loading. He seemed rather surprised when he
-saw me, and he said, “Why, I was told you were a great, big fellow
-weighing a hundred and sixty pounds.” As I fell some pounds short of
-his expectation, I told him that somebody must have been kidding him. I
-think we both knew who it was. I had strong suspicions, anyway. He at
-last decided that if I could work, that would help matters quite a bit.
-So he told me to be ready for work early next morning and meanwhile
-to make myself at home and get acquainted with the members of the
-expedition who already had arrived.
-
-I took a look around. The deck was piled high with boxes and barrels;
-the running rigging was all askew on the deck--in short, chaos reigned
-everywhere. This was far different from what I had pictured, and I
-decided right then and there that when it comes to actual work, getting
-the ship north was no more of a job than loading it. I also saw several
-dishevelled workmen busily engaged in stowing the cargo in various
-parts of the ship. I inquired from the mate who they were, and my
-disillusionment was complete when he told me they were two scientific
-experts with national reputations. I had always thought of scientists
-as not quite human, people who sat around looking into instruments
-and writing elaborate reports. But seeing them pitch in and work like
-normal human beings did much to restore my confidence that they were
-real he-men.
-
-I looked the ship over from stem to stern. She certainly is a beauty
-with lines almost as clean-cut as a yacht. But her timbering would make
-a yacht’s look like a melon crate. She has the most massive timbers
-of any ship I ever saw, and I think I may safely say that she is the
-strongest small vessel in existence. Another very excellent feature
-for Arctic work is the way the hull is shaped. It is so rounded that
-the ship rises when squeezed by the ice. This is the only way that an
-Arctic vessel should be built; as no matter how strong the vessel may
-be, she cannot withstand the pressure of heavy ice unless she is made
-to rise. The bow also is sloping, so that she may rise a short way on
-a cake of ice and crush it with her weight. At the point of impact
-it is armored with a heavy iron plate to give additional strength.
-A rather unusual feature for Arctic vessels is also incorporated in
-the _Bowdoin_, namely, having the vessel reach its full beam a short
-way abaft the mainmast which, in a schooner, is quite near the stern.
-This serves to shunt the ice away from the propeller, and anything to
-protect the propeller is very helpful, as the breaking of a propeller
-in the ice is a disaster second only to having the ship crushed;
-without strong means of propulsion one cannot get very far, and sails
-are a poor substitute for a propeller. She has a semi-Diesel engine
-which will run on anything from whale oil to kerosene. If we ran out
-of fuel in the north, we would literally “harpoon our way home,” to
-quote the Commander. In spite of all these features, she is only a
-small vessel, eighty-eight feet over all, fifteen tons net. She is, I
-believe, the smallest vessel ever to enter the Arctic.
-
-By the time we had finished our inspection, it was quitting time, and
-our scientist-stevedores knocked off work and began to prepare to
-go ashore. Dick and I soon became acquainted with them. They were
-Lieutenant Benjamin Rigg, of the Coast and Geodetic Survey, and John
-Reinartz, famous short wave radio expert; our hydrographer and radio
-operator, respectively, both fine fellows, and we made a congenial
-crowd at the inn that evening. We four were the first ones to arrive,
-with the exception of the mate, the cook and the engineer. John Jaynes,
-the engineer, was another very fine fellow, and we all liked John,
-as we soon came to call him. In a few days we were all calling each
-other by our first names and felt as if we had known each other all
-our lives. John certainly could make an engine behave when it didn’t
-want to, and he also could render valuable aid and advice on nearly
-everything.
-
-The cook had gone home for a couple of days to wind up his affairs, and
-he did not return until the day following. The mate, “Robbie,” as we
-soon called him, was a real mate. His job was to get things done in a
-hurry, and he did it. But in addition to his capability as a mate, he
-was a real fellow, and no one had more of the respect and friendship
-of the expedition than Robbie. The Commander was still in Boston
-supervising the preparation of the _Peary_, the ship that was to
-carry the naval airplanes and aviators. He was not scheduled to arrive
-in Wiscasset till Wednesday night; so we had several days before his
-arrival. The rest of the personnel were coming up with the _Peary_ from
-Boston.
-
-[Illustration: _Photo Brust._
- The _Bowdoin_ and her crew, Wiscasset, Maine, June 20,
- 1925.
-
-Left to right: John Jaynes, Engineer; Commander Donald B. MacMillan;
-Ralph P. Robinson, Mate; Kennett L. Rawson, Cabin Boy; John Reinartz,
-short wave radio expert; Martin Vorce, Cook; Lieutenant Benjamin Rigg,
-U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey; Onnig D. Melkon, moving picture
-photographer.]
-
-After a pleasant evening and a good sleep at the local inn, the
-sleeping accommodations on the vessel not yet being arranged, Dick
-and I repaired to the _Bowdoin_ early the next morning. My illusions
-about life on the bounding billow had undergone a change since I had
-seen scientists acting as stevedores. But it was still somewhat of a
-surprise when the mate ordered Dick and me to go ashore and sort and
-remove the sprouts from thirty bushels of potatoes that were lying in
-a neighboring storehouse. We spread the potatoes on the dock under a
-broiling sun and set to work. How good an iceberg would have looked at
-that moment! Some ten bushels and five blisters later, as I attempted
-to straighten up to see if my back had assumed a permanent wave, the
-thought struck me that Gareth scrubbing pots in King Arthur’s kitchen
-had nothing on me except that he gained immortality while I was getting
-an awful pain in the back. But the joke was on him; he had no Arctic
-expedition as a reward for his pains. At last, however, the potatoes
-were divorced from their sprouts and carefully resacked. We both
-decided that our shipmates should never know how much unbargained-for
-sweat they were consuming with their tubers. The mate, who later
-appeared, seemed to be satisfied with our labors, and this fact greatly
-reassured me. Thus, as the old ship’s log might read: “This day came in
-with bliss and worked around into blisters. So ends this day.” This,
-with the exception of a very pleasant dance which the delightfully
-hospitable Sewalls gave that evening. Bliss again!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-UNDER WEIGH
-
-
-The next day was to be a very interesting one. In the first place
-the Commander was coming in the evening, and secondly the cook was
-arriving. The time-honored tradition on shipboard is that next in
-importance to the captain comes the cook. My stomach was in full accord
-with this theory, and I was anxious to see the arbiter of its destiny.
-As soon as I got to know him I knew my trust had not been misplaced.
-Martin Vorce was the best cook and had the finest disposition I ever
-saw wrapped up in human form. There is no theory either about the
-cook’s having the hardest work on the ship; it is straight fact. Mart
-was always on the job, “blow high, blow low.” He had several bouts with
-refractory dishes in rough weather, but he always came out on top.
-
-After the excitement incident to his arrival had died down, we were
-aware of the approach of a vessel. At first we thought it was the
-_Peary_, but as she was not due till the next day we decided it could
-not be she. In a short time we saw that it was a navy tug loaded to
-the gunwales with gasolene. She drew alongside the dock and began
-discharging her cargo. First a mound of gasolene cases that seemed as
-big as the great pyramid of Cheops was hoisted out; this was followed
-by a fleet of barrels, and to cap the climax three Liberty engines made
-their appearance. I thought if all that was stowed aboard the _Bowdoin_
-there would be no room for the rest of us. But beyond doubt, enough of
-those cases would go aboard to keep me on the move for some time. My
-prophecy was true. The remainder of that day and all the next I walked
-back and forth across a narrow plank accompanied by the inevitable
-case. Sometimes the case and I teetered dangerously near the edge;
-at others we made an uneventful voyage. I almost hoped I might slip,
-for in my reeking condition I felt a good swim would have been worth
-ten years of my life. But I avoided this longed for disgrace through
-gyrations worthy of a gymnast, and while there was no crowd to cheer me
-on, I had the satisfaction of seeing the mound slowly diminish.
-
-After work was over for the day I became painfully aware that loading
-gasolene had discovered a number of tender muscles of which school
-athletics had never made me aware. But this condition did not prevent
-my looking forward with zest to a dance that was to be given in honor
-of the High School Graduation. This was to be held that evening, and
-the outstanding feature of the graduation was that the graduates were
-to receive their diplomas from the hand of the Commander, who had
-especially cut short his stay in Boston in order to be present.
-
-With the big event of the evening in mind, we went below and
-holy-stoned our gasolene-soaked hides religiously. Then we turned to
-and attacked our first meal on shipboard, and we vowed that if all the
-other meals were as good, we should never have cause to complain.
-
-After we had waded through our food, we started for the High School.
-A short walk landed us there, and we nosed our way through the mob
-gathered about the entrance. As we entered, the exercises were just
-beginning, and the Commander was on the point of entering into his
-presentation speech. We listened to his speech and the ones following
-with interest mingled with impatience. Finally the graduates were
-graduated, and the dance was on. Then came our long awaited opportunity
-to meet the Commander. The mate led us over and presented us. I had
-never before seen the Commander, but I had heard enough about him to
-whet my curiosity to a degree where I wanted to know the man from the
-myth. From the moment I met him I knew that I was serving under a
-Commander who was a real leader and a man among men. This impression
-has never left me, but has since been constantly strengthened.
-
-After we had chatted together for a few minutes, with characteristic
-good humor, the Commander told the mate to see that we met all of the
-sweet young things and had plenty of dancing, for it would be some time
-before we danced again. We accepted the Commander’s suggestion as a
-sacred duty, and obeyed it to the letter.
-
-“The morning after the night before” was rather a painful period, as
-dancing until the midnight oil is low and then arising at the crack
-of dawn does not incline one to rhapsodize over the sunrise. But that
-morning, without the aid of our usual battery of alarm clocks, we were
-awakened by the shrill blast of a steamer’s siren. We all tumbled into
-our clothes as fast as our sleep-numbed bodies could make the grade.
-The first person on deck yelled, “Here comes the _Peary_!” True
-enough, in another moment we could make out the white lettering against
-the black bow. We gave a lusty cheer as she sidled up to the dock, and
-then stood by to make fast her lines. In a few moments she was safely
-moored, and we were swarming aboard to examine our companion of the
-long cruise.
-
-The first objects to attract our attention were the three navy
-airplanes on the after deck. On these three canvas-swathed forms hung
-all our hopes. If they failed, it would mean sure death for their
-intrepid occupants. In their undress condition they did not look very
-imposing, but in my imagination I already heard the roar of the mighty
-engines tuning up in the lee of some sheltering icepan. I visioned the
-flash of the white foam as they skimmed along for the take-off, and I
-saw them recede into the western sky with an ever-diminishing whirr
-of engines, outward bound on those flights from which we hoped so
-much. Again I saw these proud argosies of the air, this time returning
-triumphant with the secret of the ages disclosed. However, the cook’s
-sudden cry for breakfast, mingled with the savory odors of bacon and
-coffee effectually dissipated all this sort of dreaming.
-
-After breakfast we got acquainted with our shipmates on board the
-_Peary_. There were eight naval aviators under the leadership of
-Commander Richard E. Byrd, who has since distinguished himself in
-his daring flight over the Polar Sea, and there were also several
-scientists and photographers. The ship was under the general direction
-of Commander E. F. McDonald, who was second in command of the
-expedition and in charge of radio communication. Captain George Steele
-was master of the ship and in direct charge of the navigating and
-safety of the vessel.
-
-At this time arrived the remaining members of the _Bowdoin’s_ crew,
-namely, Maynard Owen Williams, author and photographer, known to
-many by his fine articles and pictures in the _National Geographic
-Magazine_; and Onnig D. Melkon, motion picture expert, whose job was to
-preserve a motion picture record of the expedition for later use in the
-Commander’s lectures. These two completed the ship’s crew, and now with
-our full complement we were counting the minutes till sailing time.
-
-At last the great day came. The departure was an event of national
-importance. Town, state and nation were all officially represented. In
-addition to these were thousands of interested citizens and visitors
-come to wish us bon voyage. Among the latter were most of the families
-of the crew, including my own. Two o’clock was the zero hour, and after
-short exercises at the town hall, the Commander came aboard and gave
-the long awaited order: “Cast off.”
-
-[Illustration: _Photo Geo. W. Lord._ Outward bound, June, 1925.]
-
-[Illustration: The _Bowdoin_ leaving the dock at Wiscasset.]
-
-Eager hands freed the lines and amid the roar of steam whistles and
-cheers from the crowd we slowly headed seaward. Governor Brewster of
-Maine had furnished a band and a tug to transport them, and as we
-steamed outward they poured forth a brazen blare of melody. Alumni
-and students of Bowdoin College, the Commander’s alma mater, had
-chartered a steamer, and the enthusiastic, leather-lunged collegians
-raked us fore and aft with a series of vocal salvos that would have
-driven any team on to victory. The procession was headed by two naval
-vessels especially designated by the Navy Department to do honor to
-the occasion. In addition to this official recognition, a large number
-of yachts from far and near had gathered to join in the celebration.
-But as we reeled off the miles, our escorts gradually turned back one
-by one, until by the time we neared the open sea, only a persistent
-few remained. Even these had returned by the time we were fairly
-launched forth on the long ocean roll, and the _Peary_, too, had
-deserted us, as she was going to Boothbay to take on a final supply of
-water, while we set our course in solitary state for Monhegan Island.
-Just as the great lighthouse began to blink, we dropped anchor under
-the lee of the island. Here the guests who had thus far accompanied us,
-soon followed the anchor over the side and went up to the village inn
-where we shortly joined them. There, in accordance with custom, the
-hospitable islanders had prepared a delicious banquet for the members
-of the expedition and their guests. There we ate well indeed but not
-too wisely for mariners who were about to slip their cable in the
-morning.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-IN THE LAND OF ADVENTURE
-
-
-At noon the next day, Sunday, June 21st, we put to sea from the last
-outpost of the United States that we should see until our return. As we
-circled the islands, a fishing boat filled with enthusiastic members of
-the Civitan Club, who had come all the way from Minneapolis to see us
-off, came alongside and throwing huge codfish aboard shouted the last
-farewells we heard in home waters from fellow citizens.
-
-In a few moments a Bay of Fundy fog had swallowed us up, and the
-curtain had dropped on the last home setting. The day was fairly calm,
-but there was a long, oily swell which rolled the boat like a lazy
-pendulum. Moreover, the smoke from the exhaust was carried forward
-across the deck by a light, following breeze. In a few hours I began
-to notice a greenish pallor overspreading the faces of my shipmates,
-and, guided by my own feelings amidships, I had an intuition that my
-face was experiencing the same change. Soon a disheveled figure sprang
-from the forecastle companionway and made a dash for the rail. In a
-few moments another appeared bound for the same destination. I thought
-this was very funny, when suddenly the ship fetched a great roll, and I
-meditated with melancholy on my liberal indulgence at the dinner of the
-night before. Without stopping for further speculations I too joined
-in the mad scramble for the rail. Under the suasion of an unstable
-equilibrium the gastric organs have certain generous periods when they
-won’t keep a thing, and when they are in this mood they follow the
-example of time and tide and wait for no man. This lack of a sense
-of expediency on the part of these unfortunate organs caused several
-similar embarrassing situations from time to time. After completing my
-first session at the rail, I felt relieved--much relieved, and decided
-I was all through with such foolishness; so I sat down to await my
-trick at the wheel and to enjoy the adventures in mal de mer of the
-other unfortunates. But again my mirth ended in another dash for the
-rail. These upsets, however, did not permit of any laying off from
-regular duties, since the work had to be done and there were none too
-many of us to do it. Thus I stood my regular trick at the wheel, a
-task with which I was familiar from previous voyages, kept my regular
-watch and did whatever duties were assigned me despite a few protests
-on the part of my stomach. This state of affairs continued for the next
-three days until we reached Sydney, Nova Scotia.
-
-Early on the morning of the second day out we rounded Cape Sable, the
-southernmost point in Nova Scotia, and laid a northerly course parallel
-to the coast heading for Cape Breton Island where Sydney is located.
-Here we were to take on water and fuel oil before squaring away for
-“The Labrador.”
-
-Three days later on Wednesday morning, we reached Cape Breton Island
-and made our way into the spacious harbor of Sydney. The _Peary_,
-having preceded us, was lying at North Sydney loading coal and placing
-iron plates over the lower portholes, that they might not be broken by
-the ice.
-
-We made our way to a supply dock in the lower end of Sydney harbor and
-began loading fuel and other supplies. Inasmuch as Sydney was the most
-outlying stop on our journey to offer tonsorial and other luxurious
-civilized conveniences, we availed ourselves of all the facilities
-that the town afforded. For awhile the barber shop was the center of
-interest, with the soda counter at the drug store running a close
-second. It was while we were in a drug store that an unprecedented
-thing happened. Mr. Raycroft, a friend of the Commander’s, who had
-accompanied us up to Sydney, entered the store, started to make a
-purchase, when suddenly he bolted into the street without a word of
-explanation. In a few moments he returned looking a few shades paler,
-and in reply to our anxious queries he told us that the unaccustomed
-steadiness of the building had made him feel sick, and he felt an
-urgent need of fresh air. That was the only case of “land sickness” in
-the memory of the oldest inhabitant.
-
-After a voyage of general exploration about the town, we discovered
-the product for which Sydney is famous, and that is lobsters. Under
-the leadership of Ben Rigg, an ardent enthusiast on the subject of
-shellfish, we raided every lobster joint in town. One may easily
-imagine after our hollow days at sea that there was plenty of room for
-food. After visiting about five places and exhausting their limited
-supplies, we ended up about eleven o’clock in a Chinaman’s, where we
-gorged on more of these luscious crustaceans and on chop suey. None of
-us had nightmare, strange to say.
-
-After three days of the strenuous life in Sydney, our preparations
-were complete, and we pulled out for the bleak and desolate Labrador,
-leaving instructions with the _Peary_ to join us at Battle Harbor after
-completing her coaling.
-
-We set sail for the Labrador with a feeling that we were at last
-entering the great unknown. From what we had heard and read concerning
-this region, none of us knew what to expect. But we had the best
-possible person on board to enlighten us; namely, Doctor Wilfred
-Grenfell, the famous Labrador missionary doctor. He was just returning
-from a trip around the world and had arrived in Sydney preparatory to
-going on to Battle Harbor. Being acquainted with the Commander, he came
-down, and as the Doctor was planning to leave on the next steamer, the
-Commander invited him to accompany us instead. In addition to Doctor
-Grenfell we were accompanied by another distinguished guest, Dr.
-Gilbert Grosvenor, President of the National Geographic Society, under
-whose auspices we sailed. Having voyaged with us to Sydney, he was so
-charmed with the life aboard ship that he continued with us to Battle
-Harbor. Thus we were well equipped with celebrities, come what might.
-
-[Illustration: _Copyright, National Geographic Society._
- Rawson, MacMillan at the wheel, and Dr. Grosvenor.
- On way to Sydney.]
-
-[Illustration: “Yonder beneath the North Star lies our destination,
- Lad.”]
-
-[Illustration: Commander MacMillan, Dr. Grosvenor and Dr. Grenfell.
- Battle Harbor.]
-
-After sailing for several days through the placid waters of the Gulf
-of St. Lawrence, we found ourselves at the entrance of the Straits of
-Belle Isle. Here we realized for the first time that we were really
-getting north, when the word was passed around to look out for bergs. I
-had heard much of the danger of icebergs, and an apprehensive shudder
-spread over my frame as I imagined what would happen if we should run
-on one unawares, for we were shrouded in one of the usual Straits fogs.
-In a short while our straining eyes discerned a dark object loom out of
-the fog on the starboard bow. At the time, I was at the wheel, and Dick
-Salmon was on the lookout. I gripped the spokes at the thought of how
-close this chill apparition was, but we were well to port, and in a few
-moments it melted into the mist.
-
-A short time later after the excitement fomented by the berg had
-subsided, we began to notice signs of the proximity of land. Robbie
-clambered aloft into the crow’s nest to watch for shoal water, and
-the rest of us clustered into the bow for the same purpose. Suddenly
-out of the fog appeared a white line. It was breakers rolling across
-a long point. A hasty chorus of shouts to the helmsman resulted in
-an immediate altering of the course to parallel the land, instead of
-heading straight at it as we were when we first sighted it. It was in
-this dramatic manner that we made our acquaintance with The Labrador,
-and it was in a setting typical of this rugged country. One usually
-becomes acquainted with The Labrador by nearly running on it every time
-one approaches it during the early summer months, for at that time the
-land is almost perpetually shrouded in fog. Not long afterwards another
-line of breakers indicated the presence of a new exponent of terra
-firma. This disturber of the mariners’ peace was named Blanc Sablon, a
-reminder of the old days of the French domination. This entire south
-coast is sprinkled with French names and with French speaking people.
-
-As the fog was still too thick for safe navigating along this
-treacherous coast, we put into the little settlement of Forteau. This
-is one of Doctor Grenfell’s stations, and he made us very welcome
-there. He also recommended the splendid trout fishing and issued us
-honorary fishing licenses for the neighboring creeks, since he was
-an honorary magistrate. Armed with this legal protection and also
-with rods and gear, we sallied forth to a likely looking brook to try
-conclusions with the wily denizens of the stream. It certainly seemed
-good to get our sea legs straightened out as we strolled up and down
-whipping the stream. After a few casts I felt a sudden tightening on
-my line, and the reel began to sing. For a minute I let it run; then
-I checked it abruptly in order to drive the hook well home. Then the
-fight was on. The fish threshed wildly in a vain endeavor to free
-himself, but I had him fast. There was about five minutes of play, and
-then I reeled him in. He was a fine specimen, weighing very nearly
-two pounds, and my hopes were high that we might obtain enough for
-all hands. In a moment I heard a yell from Mart, and looking in his
-direction I saw that he was holding aloft a trout fully as large as
-my own. Then we went at it with all our might, but the God of Fortune
-smiled no further, and at last tired and discomfited, we returned to
-the ship.
-
-Early the next morning we were under weigh again for Battle Harbor. On
-our way out as we rounded Cape Point Amour we sighted what seemed to
-be a great cruiser sailing close to the Cape. As we drew nearer we saw
-that she was too far in for a large ship, and still closer inspection
-showed that she was hard and fast on the rocks. We then learned from
-the Commander that this was the British cruiser _Raleigh_ which had run
-aground in a fog some years previous while endeavoring to make Forteau.
-We felt a twinge of pity that such a fine ship should rust out her
-heart on the bleak rocks of Labrador.
-
-Continuing on up the coast, sometimes in fog and sometimes in beautiful
-clear weather, we were encompassed by a magnificent vista. On one
-hand the bleak and rugged hills of the shore-line, and on the seaward
-side a matchless panorama of schooners, dancing waves and icebergs.
-The schooners tacking in and out under full sail among the glistening
-bergs; the tall, majestic spires and turrets of the larger bergs
-dwarfing the tallest mast into insignificance; the dancing wavelets
-curtsying to the graceful schooners whose black hulls contrasted
-sharply against the whiteness and marvellous shades of ultramarine blue
-of the glacial ice, all combined to make an unforgettable picture.
-
-Just as the shadows of evening had begun to creep up from the west and
-merge the glories of a perfect day into a matchless sunset, the rugged
-outline of Battle Island appeared bathed in a purple glow that made the
-hard unyielding rock look like rich dyed velvet. It was not long before
-we dropped anchor between the sheer rock walls of Battle Harbor.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-A TRULY GLORIOUS FOURTH AND SOME VERY REAL FISHING
-
-
-Dr. Grenfell’s staff were down at the dock to welcome us, and they soon
-made us realize that American hospitality is the same the world around.
-Although Labrador is English territory, the hospital is manned and,
-to improvise an expression, “womanned” by Americans. A doctor, three
-nurses and three college men, all of whom had volunteered to serve for
-the summer, made up the staff of the hospital. In every way possible
-they strove to make our stay in Battle Harbor an enjoyable one, and
-they certainly succeeded.
-
-While in this port we celebrated the glorious Fourth of July. The day
-previous we had remembered with a start that the following day was the
-Fourth! Dick Salmon suggested that we inaugurate the festivities with
-a snowball fight, since there was a large deposit on the opposite side
-of the tickle, so-called by the Newfoundlanders in speaking of a narrow
-channel which indicates ticklish navigating. Dick’s cool suggestion
-did not meet with a warm reception for obvious reasons, and we turned
-in with our plans for the observance of the day somewhat nebulous.
-
-The next morning at an early hour I was awakened from a sound sleep by
-the explosion of a firecracker uncomfortably close to my ear. I made a
-nose dive for the floor muttering imprecations against the authors of
-the outrage. Then realizing that the great day had come, I hurriedly
-dressed and made my way to the deck where the celebrants greeted me
-with such a penitent air that I did not engage in the retaliations I
-had determined to employ.
-
-After clearing away the breakfast wreckage, the cook began making
-the pots fly in a business-like manner, and soon savory odors
-ascending from the galleys gave notice that a culinary masterpiece
-was in the process of preparation. To the accompaniment of these
-welcome sounds and odors, we swabbed down the deck and coiled down
-the lines with despatch, and then sat back in the crisp sunlight in
-languid anticipation of the approaching feast. At twelve-thirty the
-cook’s warcry resounded through the vessel, and we tumbled down the
-companionway to make the first table. Since there was not room for
-us all at one sitting, our meals were served in two shifts. As “first
-come, first served” was the order of the day, the competition was keen
-indeed for the coveted places. I was fortunate enough to slide into the
-last remaining seat much to the disgust of Melkon who had been keeping
-his eye on the food all morning. Then came on the grub, and what
-grub it was! Fish chowder flavored with onions, a magnificent roast
-of beef--the last domestic meat we were to taste until our return--a
-profusion of vegetables, plum duff and candy, with coffee and fruit
-punch to wash it all down. Then there were cigars for those who desired
-them; a pleasure in which several of us did not indulge.
-
-After this repast we repaired to the deck where we basked in the
-mellow sunlight like a herd of well-fed walrus. At last one of our
-more ambitious shipmates suggested that we have an outboard motor race
-with a boat from the _Peary_. This suggestion was hailed with acclaim,
-and we immediately set to work tuning up our engine. At this moment
-arrived Chief Aerographer Francis in the _Peary’s_ cutter. Immediately
-we hurled at him our challenge which he at once accepted and it was
-not long before both boats were at the line ready for the starting
-gun. Our interest was keen, and suggestions and advice poured over our
-bulwarks like a Bay of Fundy tide. Soon they were off neck and neck.
-For a time all progressed beautifully. Then the regular cadence of our
-boat’s exhaust became faltering. The _Peary’s_ craft forged ahead. We
-yelled like mad as our crew of two desperately spun the needle valve,
-and tinkered with every other gadget on the craft. But to no avail. Off
-went our opponent and with him our hopes of victory. When he crossed
-the finish line, our crew was still wrestling with the refractory
-engine, and we reluctantly presented Francis with the first prize, a
-leaky rubber boot. He hove the boot at our heads and went off in high
-dudgeon over our lack of appreciation of his superior prowess.
-
-All along the Commander had held forth on the delicacy of the Labrador
-trout and salmon, and therefore great was our delight when one day the
-mission people proposed a trip to the head of St. Louis Bay, where
-was located a fine trout stream not far from the winter hospital. It
-is necessary to maintain a winter station in addition to the summer
-station at Battle Harbor, as the outer islands are untenable in winter
-owing to their exposed position. The heavy pack ice comes in from
-the sea, and savage winter gales lash the bleak and desolate islands,
-rendering them impracticable for winter habitation. Every one moves
-inland to the head of the great bays and settles down in a well
-sheltered log cabin in close proximity to a forest of good firewood.
-The hospital is no exception to this rule, and by the time the last
-schooner has winged its way southward, the Battle Harbor station is
-closed, and the winter hospital is put into service. We were all very
-anxious to see the back country and looked forward to the trip with
-keen expectancy, whetted by what we had heard from the Commander.
-
-Early the next day with the Commander’s permission, all hands, with the
-exception of one or two who unfortunately had to keep the ship, gaily
-sallied forth in the capacious mission boat. After traversing a space
-of rough water, which caused embarrassment to several of the ladies,
-hospital nurses who accompanied us, we entered the great bay and sailed
-past shores at first barren of vegetation but growing progressively
-greener as we penetrated inland. It was interesting to observe this
-increase in plant life as we drew away from the blighting influence
-of the frigid Labrador current, which makes this coast the bleak and
-barren land it is.
-
-We arrived at the winter station a short time before noon and gave it
-a thorough inspection. It seemed so nice and cosy tucked away in the
-midst of a beautiful grove of pines on a picturesque arm of the bay,
-that I almost wished I was a patient there.
-
-As the sun mounted higher and higher towards the zenith, I began to
-wonder where lunch fitted into the program. This also seemed to be in
-the minds of our hosts and Doctor Grenfell soon suggested that we have
-lunch on the banks of St. Mary’s Creek and do our fishing afterwards.
-The lunch was to be cooked “on location,” as they say in the movies,
-and the pièce de résistance was to be a real old New England fish
-chowder. To one who has never experienced a fish chowder--for it is an
-experience--words are inadequate to describe it; and to one who has
-experienced it any attempt at description is superfluous. Suffice it to
-say we gorged ourselves to repletion.
-
-Even this heavy cargo of chowder did not hinder our getting under weigh
-for the trout basin, and we were soon off with rod and gear. Williams,
-however, who looked down on fishing with sophisticated contempt,
-remained behind to amuse the ladies. As we moved off we last saw him
-feverishly tossing dishes aloft, and only on our return did we learn
-much to our relief that his brain had not been affected by the heavy
-meal and that he was merely giving an exhibition of Bagdad juggling.
-
-A short distance up the stream we found a small series of rapids
-between which were dark, enticing pools. Mart, our mentor in such
-matters, declared the location favorable, and we were soon casting our
-flies into the swirling eddies. Every now and then we could see the
-silver flash of a fish break the white water of the rapids, but for a
-considerable time no welcome tug at the line ensued. We were on the
-point of moving farther upstream when suddenly I felt a violent jerk,
-my reel sang and my rod assumed an excessive arc. I stood my ground and
-watched the line pay out until I could see the nickel core of the reel.
-I was on the point of dashing into the stream to relieve the danger
-of having the line unreeve, when slowly the rod came straight and the
-reel ceased to revolve. One of father’s old fishing axioms came to me:
-“A slack line spells disaster.” I began reeling furiously, and for a
-minute I felt that my fish was off. I was on the point of giving up
-when again came a taut jerk. Away sped the fish with another thirty
-feet of my line. I played him with all the cunning I could command,
-until at last his silver scales sparkled in the shallow pool at my
-feet. Just as I was about to draw him to shore, he flipped his tail
-and was gone again. Once more I gave him his head. This time he dashed
-towards a jagged clump of rocks, and I realized with dismay that unless
-I took extreme measures I should soon have my line inextricably tangled
-around the rocks. Taking a desperate chance I added a few more pounds
-tension to the reel. The rod bent dangerously, and my breath came hard
-with the suspense, but the rod held. He came short of the rocks by
-several inches; then, exhausted by this desperate sally, he slackened
-his efforts, and I began to reel him in. This time the struggle was
-short, and in a few minutes he was gasping on the rocks at my feet, as
-fine a specimen of brook trout as I ever saw!
-
-In my excitement I had not noticed that success had crowned the efforts
-of my companions, and there were three or four other speckled beauties
-divided among them. For a while longer we fished with signal good
-fortune, but at last the dipping sun warned us that it was time to
-think of returning to the ship. Gathering up our trophies we hastened
-down to the shore where we rejoined the others, and in a short time we
-were chugging along towards the ship, at the close of one of the finest
-days we ever had in Labrador.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THROUGH THE PACK TO DISASTER
-
-
-It was with regret that at dawn on the day following we bade farewell
-to Battle Harbor and the hospitable Grenfell workers and squared away
-for Hopedale whence we would make the long leg to Greenland. While
-on the way to Hopedale we crossed the mouth of Hamilton Inlet, a
-great fiord or arm of the sea that penetrates the land for a hundred
-miles. From this fiord extends a river containing one of the largest
-waterfalls in the world, the Grand Falls of the Hamilton River.
-
-Early the next morning we were off Cape Harrison at the northern end
-of the inlet. Here we began to notice scattered cakes of ice drifting
-out to sea--“Gone abroad,” as the Newfoundlanders say. Soon the
-scattered fragments became thicker, and a full-fledged field of pack
-ice presented itself to our vision.
-
-The Commander ascended to the crow’s nest to survey the situation and
-con the ship through the ice. As this pack barred the entrance to
-Hopedale it was necessary to go through it, and the Commander seeing a
-likely lead--a lane of open water between the ice cakes--ordered the
-wheel put hard aport. The vessel rapidly swung around until her bow was
-directed down the lead. “Steady!” was the next command from aloft, and
-the helmsman spun the wheel in the opposite direction as hard as he
-could until she checked in her swing. She rapidly traversed the lead
-which soon terminated in a solid cake of ice. Straight on continued the
-_Bowdoin_ like a hunter for a jump. Soon her rounded bow was almost
-in contact with the ice, and in another second she had struck it fair
-and square. Her prow leaped up on the pan, and I leaned over the prow
-thinking that surely she would never be able to force her way through
-such a large cake of ice. But driven by her powerful engine, her bow
-glided straight up. Then she slowly came to a halt with her bow well
-up on the ice. With breathless interest we watched to see whether she
-had the weight to crush it. Just as we were preparing to back out and
-hit it again, a thin line of black broke the even white. She had made
-it! The great cake was rent asunder by our sturdy little vessel, and
-she slowly gained way until she leaped forward with increasing rapidity
-at the next obstacle which dared to bar her way. Thus we continued
-weaving in and out, now to port and now to starboard, wherever a lead
-opened, and where there was none smashing our way. Good judgment and
-a knowledge of ice conditions are required in ice navigation on the
-part of the man aloft, and the helmsman must possess the ability to
-follow orders rapidly and efficiently and be able to keep the ship from
-brushing the sides of narrow passages. Spinning that wheel frequently
-and for all one is worth is no joke, and even in that cold, stripped
-down to my underwear, I sweated like a pack mule before I had been at
-it for long.
-
-All day we ploughed through the pack with the _Peary_ near by. She was
-under a disadvantage in having a straight bow and in not maneuvering
-as readily as we did, but her superior engine power in a large measure
-compensated for this. As darkness slowly fell I was struck by the
-absence of any friendly light twinkling a welcome through the dusk,
-such as one sees in friendlier climes. Nothing but rocks, ice, sky and
-water--not even a tree or fisherman’s hut to vary the monotony of those
-barren cliffs. What a contrast to the ceaseless activity of The Hill
-with its life and action, its cheering bleachers at the games and its
-humming classrooms--never a moment there when one feels that sense of
-utter detachment from one’s fellow man which oppressed me in viewing
-the bleak Labrador. The utter desolation of it all brought thoughts
-of School and Home with their warmth and life and cheer. Suddenly I
-found myself shivering violently, and with a start I returned to the
-immediate present. Turning away from the fading landscape I hastened to
-the companionship of my mates in the warm, well-lighted forecastle.
-
-The following morning we were away early and were soon clear of the
-last of the ice and were bound up Flagstaff Tickle on the way to
-Hopedale, the southernmost settlement of the Eskimos. Despite the fact
-that these waters are poorly charted, we experienced no difficulty in
-keeping the channel until we were almost in Hopedale. Then out of a
-clear sky, grim disaster descended upon us. We were skirting a small
-reef which jutted a considerable way into the Sound when suddenly the
-bow of the _Peary_ made an abrupt ascent; then she slowly assumed a
-list. Immediately the Commander ordered the _Bowdoin’s_ helm put hard
-down. In a moment more we were flying down wind to the aid of our
-stricken companion. She had struck on a sunken ledge of rock which gave
-no indication of its presence until the vessel’s keel had touched. At
-once we came alongside, which our comparatively shallow draft rendered
-safe, and after rigging a masthead line we steamed slowly away to see
-if we could pull her off. Calm and cool as always, Captain Steele
-ordered the lowering of a small boat in order to run out a kedge anchor.
-
-Meanwhile we ran out the slack in the line and gradually took up a
-strain. But owing to a strong wind assisting the efforts of our engine,
-no sooner had the line come taut than it snapped. Captain Steele was
-now manfully striving to work his boat to windward. Seeing his plight
-we steamed over to give the lifeboat a tow. In a few moments we had
-it in the proper position, and let go the anchor. Then we ran down
-and placed a line over the _Peary’s_ stern to try to haul her off in
-that manner. During this time the lifeboat had returned and was hauled
-up on a short bight astern while her crew disembarked. In the stern
-of the small boat stood Commander McDonald awaiting his turn to get
-aboard the _Peary_. In some unaccountable manner the lifeboat caught
-under the counter of the ship, and a sea suddenly jammed her against
-the plates. As she could rise no farther, the waves poured over her
-gunwales and swamped her. McDonald shouted to those on deck to drop the
-boat aft, but she had become so waterlogged that they could do nothing
-with her, and each succeeding wave forced her farther and farther down.
-All yelled for him to jump while the jumping was good, but he still
-maintained his position in a manner reminiscent of the boy who stood
-on the burning deck. In spite of the Commander’s heroic pose, the boat
-gradually sank, and in a second more it began to roll over. With one
-wild leap he left his sinking craft to its fate, caught a hold on the
-bulwarks and was pulled aboard the _Peary_.
-
-In the meantime, the deck of the _Peary_ became a scene of wild
-excitement. Everyone stood around on the deck with their bags packed,
-apparently convinced that the boat was going down. But their fears were
-vain. Under the combined influence of a rising tide, our pulling and
-the kedge anchor, she began slowly to slide off the ledge, and in a
-few moments she was once more safe afloat.
-
-We then went in search of the submerged lifeboat which had slowly
-drifted away during the intervening time. We soon came upon her
-drifting bottom upwards. To rescue the boat was somewhat of a problem,
-since there was nothing visible to which we could make fast. By
-skillful maneuvering, however, Captain MacMillan brought us alongside,
-and we strove desperately to get a line on her. But the winds and the
-waves unfortunately separated us, and we had the whole operation to
-do over again. The next time we approached her a sudden gust of wind
-swerved our bow just enough to hit her a crashing blow, seriously
-damaging her.
-
-That misfortune, however, was not the worst that befell us that
-afternoon, for, as we strove to clear the boat, our propeller struck
-one of her spare fittings thereby stripping her internal gears. At
-the time we were unaware of the damage, and the propellor continued
-turning, seemingly uninjured. We at last managed to corral the
-unruly lifeboat and then set our course for Hopedale. It had been a
-harrowing afternoon, but all in all we had much to be thankful for. Our
-misfortunes were nothing compared to what they would have been if the
-tide had been falling, and the _Peary_ had been unable to float off.
-For being a steel ship, she would have filled and become a total loss
-when the tide began to flow.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE HEROES OF HOPEDALE
-
-
-Hopedale, with the exception of Makkovik, which harbors only two
-families, is the southernmost settlement of the Eskimos and one of
-the principal posts of the Moravian missions. Unknown to the world at
-large, the Moravians have been carrying on a wonderful missionary work
-on this desolate coast and great have been their services. In the first
-place they have formed the one barrier between the primitive Eskimo
-and the ruin which has been the inevitable accompaniment of contact
-with the white race. Had it not been for these good Samaritans there
-would not be a single Eskimo in Labrador to-day! For when all the
-rest of the people who have dealings with the natives have striven to
-encourage their destruction, these brave missionaries, and they alone,
-have held firm for the right, have waged a never-ceasing fight against
-all who threatened the welfare of their wards. No obstacle has proved
-too great; no effort has been too tiring; not even a lack of funds has
-deterred these indomitable evangelists from doing their duty where they
-found it. They have converted the Eskimos to Christianity and endowed
-them with the priceless gift of the true Christian spirit of brotherly
-love. Aside from their religious work, they are the only agency for
-carrying on education in Northern Labrador, both among Eskimos and
-whites. Owing to their untiring efforts the Eskimos have been uplifted
-from a state of complete ignorance and savagery to a status of
-civilization and education.
-
-At their Makkovik station the Moravians maintain a boarding school for
-boys, up there education being considered the heritage of the male
-alone. At this school the children are given board and lodging and as
-much education as their untrained minds can assimilate. This board,
-lodging and education they receive for fifty cents a week! Yet such is
-the poverty of these people that most of the families find it well-nigh
-impossible to pay even this modest sum.
-
-The school consisted of one bare classroom furnished with a few
-rough desks and chairs, while across the hall a room comprised the
-dormitory. I could not help comparing it to the elaborately equipped
-plant which I had so recently left. At this primitive school there
-were no spacious athletic fields, no huge, airy dormitories, no
-stately towers, no gymnasium of any description. We, in this country,
-can hardly conceive of a crack school, for that is what this one is
-considered, not having at least a gymnasium. The children came to
-learn and for no other reason. There were no dances, no gay parties
-or entertainments and no competitive sports--in short, education was
-reduced to terms of severest simplicity. None the less it is, I dare
-say, more appreciated and more highly respected than it is in many
-other places.
-
-The fearless regard of these missionaries for justice and impartiality
-has been the shield and buckler of the simple aborigine against the
-unscrupulous avarice of the trader and the demoralizing influence of
-the depraved white. Much also have they done for the poverty-stricken
-white settler, educating the children, bringing relief to the bereaved,
-and keeping alive in the breasts of all the spirit of honesty and
-idealism. In addition to their care for the things of the spirit, they
-were the first to introduce medical aid to The Labrador. Truly have
-they carried out in the broadest sense the words of the Master when
-he said, “Go ye into all the world, and preach the Gospel unto every
-creature.”
-
-What a glorious epic of Christian service has been their ministry
-on this coast! Clear and strong as to the apostles of old came the
-call of duty--that inspiring lodestone which has drawn forth the
-noblest and best from the men of all ages. Home and kindred, material
-rewards, ease and luxury were as naught before it. The stern dictates
-of conscience to them comprised the sole path to joy and happiness.
-But how little we realize the trials and deprivations that their
-self-imposed exile necessitates; how many of the little things that
-to us seem so necessary they must perforce do without. A prized
-possession of one of the missionaries was an old camera dating back to
-1870. This he displayed with great pride one afternoon while we were
-taking tea at the mission. It consisted of a cumbersome old box on a
-tripod, of which the only method of regulating the diaphragm opening
-was by inserting brass plugs with a proper sized hole bored in them. He
-handled this venerable machine with the affection born of long years
-of association. While we were examining it, his kindly wife brought
-forth with pride several bulky albums filled with the results of her
-husband’s efforts. We opened these and great was our surprise to see
-the beautiful quality and real artistry of these pictures. He was an
-artist to the soul, and with proper equipment what pictures he might
-have taken!
-
-No one better realized the strict economy under which these people
-perforce must labor, than did the Commander, and it was at his
-suggestion that the Zenith Radio Corporation, which had supplied
-us with our radio equipment, donated several receiving sets for
-distribution among the worthy missionaries. One of these we presented
-to Mr. Perrit, the minister at Hopedale, and when he heard the music,
-his gratitude and delight were so touching that we wished we might do
-infinitely more for him and his cause.
-
-Never a strong sect, the Moravians have made up in zeal and quality
-of service what they lack in money and numbers. With no prospect of
-reward from the world, they have carried on year in and year out. Many
-an opportunity for improvement have they seen slip for lack of funds,
-but undaunted they have kept their faith and courage in spite of the
-most disheartening discouragements. When one brother succumbed another
-was always ready to fill the gap. Their service to humanity cannot be
-over-rated. Theirs is the true understanding.
-
-But it seems that their long ministry soon may end. Never a strong
-sect, in the last few years they have suffered from many ill-advised
-attacks. During the war many of them were interned by the Newfoundland
-government, and their bishop was deported--acts not unlike those
-earlier perpetrated against the simple Acadian farmers. The great
-fur-trading companies have been making every effort to crowd them out.
-Last year unfortunately they were obliged to abandon their northernmost
-station to the Hudson’s Bay Company, and it is not unlikely that unless
-aid is soon forthcoming from some source, their remaining stations will
-suffer a like fate.
-
-All true friends of Labrador who know of the labors of this noble
-group will view with regret the passing of this earnest organization
-which has accomplished so much for these simple children of the
-north. My strong personal hope is that the necessary funds for the
-perpetuation of this fine work may be realized. A few thousand dollars
-will mean worlds of help to them, and when one sees, he realizes the
-worth-whileness of giving to such a cause as is supported by these
-apostles of the outposts of civilization.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-IN ESKIMO LAND AND IN TROUBLE
-
-
-No sooner were we at anchor in Hopedale Harbor than I noticed the
-approach of several large boats filled with strange-looking, brown
-folk, different from any I had ever before seen. For a moment I was
-at a loss to explain them; then suddenly I remembered that we had
-arrived in Eskimo Land. I stared with interest and surprise. These
-were not the kind of people I had seen in pictures! These were not the
-grotesque, fur-swathed barbarians that my mind had conceived. With the
-exception of dark skin and rather high cheek-bones, they looked not so
-very different from ourselves, and they lacked that ferocious look I
-had seen stamped on their countenances in the Sunday supplements. As
-they came alongside they greeted us with expansive grins and a babble
-of good-natured banter which displayed their white teeth and black
-flashing eyes.
-
-“Ochshinai! Taku oomiak-swa!” came from the boats, and I later learned
-that this meant, “Hello, look at the big ship.”
-
-The Commander came on deck at this juncture and was greeted with
-an enthusiastic outburst, for his generosity and kindliness are
-remembered by more than one denizen of this isolated land. Immediately
-he entered into conversation with them, as he is well acquainted with
-the language. While he was thus engaged, Robbie appeared on deck and
-took in the situation at one glance. He then descended into the cabin
-with an inscrutable smile on his face. We did not realize what he was
-about until he reappeared laden with tobacco and candy. At once he
-was surrounded by a laughing, chattering mob striving to wheedle from
-him some of the coveted articles. With a deliberate air, born of long
-experience at this game, he began distributing these much-desired
-treasures. To each one he presented one article, and saw that none was
-slighted or obtained an undue share of the spoils, in spite of many
-ingenious and good-natured attempts to defraud him. Each attempt was
-regarded as a sporting proposition, and loud were the laughs among
-the natives when one of their number was detected trying to “gyp the
-system.”
-
-Soon Mr. Perrit, the head missionary, arrived and officially welcomed
-us to Hopedale. Mr. Perrit is a strapping six footer with curly blonde
-hair--a regular Viking. He is one of the most earnest missionaries on
-the coast, and none has a greater and more well-deserved popularity
-than he. He remained aboard for some time, and after his departure
-we went ashore to consummate the purpose for which we had come to
-Hopedale--namely, to obtain warm Eskimo clothing for the colder weather
-to be encountered farther north.
-
-We soon had the storekeeper booked up with orders, and he immediately
-set the entire female population to work chewing skins. The Eskimo
-tailor differs considerably from the Broadway type. In the first place
-it is a she instead of a he, and in lieu of shrinking the material she
-chews it. Since the material consists of sealskin or other heavy hides,
-it requires a thorough chewing to render it pliable. After the chewing
-is completed, she cuts the skin to the proper size and shape by means
-of an ooloo, or woman’s knife--a knife shaped like an old-fashioned
-chopping knife. Then she takes the material and sews it together with
-sinew from the back of a deer. This sinew has the useful property of
-swelling when wet, and once it has been wet, it never again contracts.
-This swelling completely closes the needle hole and renders the
-garment water-tight. It is no easy task to wield a needle in this tough
-hide, but these strong-fingered women turn out a very finished product.
-The fit may leave something to be desired as the measurements are taken
-by eye and the garment constructed accordingly, but they are warm and
-comfortable.
-
-In addition to the clothes, we also laid in a supply of sealskin boots,
-as the Labrador product is far superior to the Greenland variety. The
-workmanship is more thorough, and the water-resisting qualities are
-better. These boots are made of harp seal and are the best things going
-for Arctic work. With a handful of grass in the sole to form insulation
-against the cold and to act as a pad against pebbles or sharp ice, they
-are as comfortable an article of footwear as one can desire.
-
-Another reason for our coming to Hopedale was to secure our old
-interpreter, Abram Bromfield, who had been with the Commander on
-numerous previous trips. Abie lived about thirty miles from Hopedale at
-the head of a large bay known as Jack Lane’s Bay. Therefore, after we
-had obtained our clothing, we set our course for his home. While on the
-way we noticed that the vessel was not turning up her customary speed,
-but as the engine was functioning perfectly we decided that it must
-have been an illusion created by the effects of tide or wind.
-
-On our arrival at Jack Lane’s Bay, the Commander and McDonald took one
-of the small boats and started up the Bay for Abie’s house. Early the
-next morning they returned accompanied by the whole Bromfield family
-who brought us several thick, tender, juicy venison steaks and a large
-mess of fresh-caught trout. Old Sam Bromfield, Abie’s father, aged
-seventy, also brought his accordion and gave us a rare treat by dancing
-the good old folk dances and playing some of the songs of yesteryear.
-
-The following morning at two o’clock sharp, the mate slid back the
-forecastle hatch and uttered the familiar cry, “All hands on deck!” In
-spite of sleep-numbed brains and the well-nigh irresistible desire to
-return to the alluring arms of Morpheus, we snapped back, “Yes, sir,”
-and hit the deck with despatch.
-
-In getting under weigh my particular job was to stow the chain in the
-chain locker, and in a few moments my ears were greeted with: “Stand
-by the chain!” I made a dash over Dick’s bunk and dived into the
-locker just in time to grab the chain as the great electric winch by
-my ear was beginning its raucous clatter, and the muddy chain was
-commencing its rapid descent. A few minutes later there lay at my feet
-a huge mound of rusted links, and I heard the creak of the tackle with
-which the anchor is brought to the cat-head. The engine-room telegraph
-jangled; a sudden vibration indicated the throwing in of the clutch,
-and I prepared to go on deck. Suddenly I noticed the absence of the
-customary ripple which can be heard from the chain locker when the
-vessel is under weigh. I listened intently, but no murmur of gurgling
-water greeted my straining ears. Could the engineer have mistaken the
-signal? No, the engine was running as usual. I dashed on deck wondering
-what could be the trouble. The Commander stood by the wheel, on his
-face a puzzled expression. The rest of the crew were bending over the
-stern, vainly endeavoring to fathom the trouble.
-
-[Illustration: Maynard Williams (left), photographer, National
-Geographic Society, Lieut. Benjamin Rigg (right), U. S. Coast and
-Geodetic Survey.]
-
-It was still nearly as dark as midnight; just a faint touch of red in
-the east. In a moment more the _Peary_ came sliding along through the
-morning vapors like a great, grey ghost, her black smoke flickering
-across the face of the waning moon like a dark forerunner of disaster.
-Shortly our ears were assailed by a shrill blast from her siren. The
-Commander realizing that there was something radically wrong with
-our propulsive apparatus, ordered a boat lowered to take him over to
-the _Peary_ that he might acquaint them with our predicament. In a
-few moments he had spanned the intervening stretch of water, and we
-saw the vessel stop as she came down on the boat. The Commander then
-told Commander McDonald of our trouble and instructed him to continue
-the voyage to Greenland and await our arrival at Disko Island, where
-we would rejoin him as soon as our trouble had been adjusted. In
-the meanwhile we had again let go the anchor to keep the _Bowdoin_
-from drifting; then we pulled a small boat under the stern for a
-closer inspection. There the Commander joined us and took part in the
-investigation. As we had surmised, the propeller was sadly damaged.
-There was no other recourse but to beach the vessel and change the
-propeller. With this end in view, the Commander despatched Dick Salmon
-with one of our motor boats to enlist the aid of the Bromfields and
-their staunch motor boat. It was decided that it would be advisable
-to return to Hopedale where there were better facilities.
-
-[Illustration: The _Bowdoin_ passing an iceberg off west coast of
-Greenland.]
-
-[Illustration: The _Bowdoin_ caught in a nip, at Melville Bay.]
-
-The day being calm, our sails were not of much assistance, and we had
-to depend in the main on the Bromfield motor boat. How that little
-motor ever stood the strain is more than I can understand, but stand it
-she did, and after ten hours of slow progress we limped into Hopedale.
-There, since the tide was right, we immediately beached the vessel
-on an adjacent sand-spit and waited for the low tide to lay bare the
-propeller. Unfortunately we had arrived at the period of neap or small
-tides. The rise and fall was so small that the propeller was scarcely
-more accessible at low tide than at high. Luckily, however, the tides
-were increasing daily, and in about a week they would enter on the
-period of spring, or large tides. Therefore, all we could do was to
-wait philosophically for the much-needed higher water and pull the
-vessel a little farther in on each high tide.
-
-But this philosophical calm which we had decided to cultivate was not
-given an opportunity to flourish. Another infliction beset us. We were
-welcomed back not only by the inhabitants but by a singing, stinging
-scourge of blood-thirsty mosquitoes. This savage horde had but come
-to maturity during the past few days, and they descended upon us as
-did the locusts upon the Egyptians. Before we could stretch mosquito
-nettings across the hatches, the whole interior of the vessel was
-infested. We slapped and scratched; sprayed kerosene in all directions;
-made crude swatters and attacked the noisome pestilence en masse, but
-all to no avail. In every possible way we strove to devise some means
-of wholesale annihilation. In the meantime we had stretched netting
-across all the openings, but this was like locking the stable door
-after the horse is stolen. We resorted to every conceivable method of
-extinction and some inconceivable ones, but the insects continued their
-attacks with unabated ferocity. Nowhere else have I ever encountered
-such insectivorous persistence. They came from every nook and cranny.
-But just as we were beginning to despair of discomforting our
-persecutors, someone had the inspiration of burning plug tobacco. This
-was an extreme and extravagant measure, dictated by desperation alone,
-since tobacco was held second only to the safety of the expedition by
-the devotees of the weed. Regretfully each contributed his quota of
-tobacco as a burnt offering on the altar of Comfort. In a short time
-the forecastle was thick with acrid, blue smoke. It was suffocating.
-But it was efficacious, and soon the inside of the nettings was black
-with insects struggling for deliverance. We withdrew the nettings, and
-in a dense swarm they sought safety in flight. Drawing a thick, dizzy
-breath of relief, we sat on the edges of our bunks and watched the
-last stragglers disappear. The next problem was to rid the forecastle
-of smoke, a task almost as difficult as the former problem, but
-accomplished after much discomfort and effort.
-
-In the midst of the earlier confusion, one wiser than his fellows hit
-upon what he considered a happy solution of the entire difficulty; to
-wit, leaving both mosquitoes and smoke in undisputed possession of the
-forecastle by going aloft and sleeping in the crow’s nest. Ten minutes
-elapsed, when much to our surprise, we heard the rattle of the rigging
-and muttered imprecations as our intellectual giant returned to our
-humble company, covered with mosquitoes. Without stopping to answer our
-jibes, he disappeared where the smoke was thickest.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-GREENLAND!
-
-
-After enduring a week of insufficient tides and diabolical attacks on
-the part of the mosquitoes, we at last managed to put in place the new
-propeller. What a sigh of relief we all gave when the last nut was
-screwed on and the little _Bowdoin_ was once more in trim to continue
-her voyage. We were at last through with Labrador and Hopedale, and
-ready to square away for that land of many myths--Greenland.
-
-Once more we wended our way through Windy Tickle and Jack Lane’s Bay,
-where we bade farewell to the Bromfield family. Then with old Sam’s
-fervent blessing still ringing in our ears, we swung our bow seaward
-while the last rays of the setting sun streamed on ahead as if to guide
-our wandering footsteps safe across the treacherous North Atlantic to
-Godhavn--the harbor of God’s rest.
-
-For three days we sailed on “through many a fair sea circle” till at
-last we drew nigh to Greenland. Each day the sun held longer in the
-sky--in fact, after leaving Labrador, we had no real darkness, though
-the sun set for a few hours each night. The sea was calm with the
-exception of a few turbulent hours off Hudson’s Straits, when the tidal
-influence of the bay produced a boisterous chop. The temperature was
-not very low, and during the long sunny days it was nearly as warm as
-in many a more favored clime.
-
-On and on we sailed, with nothing to break the vast desolation of
-the sea, no friendly steamer’s smoke, no glistening sail, not even
-an iceberg--only the great smooth mounds of water which rolled
-majestically across the surface of the sea to be followed one upon
-another in unending sequence, until it seemed that we were “alone on a
-wide, wide sea.”
-
-The third day out we began to notice icebergs again. These shining
-mountains of ice had traveled in the bosom of the Cape Farewell current
-from their glacial birthplace on the east coast of Greenland around
-the southernmost point of Greenland and thus far up the west coast,
-whence they would swing across Davis Strait and drift down into the
-North Atlantic in the Labrador current. In this Greenland current also
-we saw several large trees floating along. These, we learned from the
-Commander, had drifted across the Polar Sea from Siberia, utilizing
-the same current by which Nansen strove to drift over the Pole in the
-_Fram_. In a short while we also observed a considerable lightening of
-the blue of the sky in the eastern quadrant of the horizon. This was
-the “iceblink,” a reliable indication of the proximity of ice, which
-produces a whitish reflection in the sky. Since the whole interior of
-Greenland is solid ice, there could be no doubt from the direction in
-which it appeared that it was the iceblink over the great Greenland
-ice-cap. A consultation with the chart further verified our adjacence
-to Greenland. In fact, we were not more than sixty miles from the
-coast, which would put us about a hundred and fifty miles from the
-ice-cap--a distance easily within the range of visibility of the
-“blink.” All eyes were straining for the first sight of land, when
-slowly the horizon began to dissolve, and a white wall of vapor came
-rolling down upon us. Everything became clammy in the dismal drabness
-that enveloped us. We should have to maintain unrelaxing vigilance
-against the menace of icebergs. Moreover, it would prevent our seeing
-the land until the next day at least, unless it speedily cleared away.
-
-All night we kept a careful watch and came through without a mishap,
-in spite of the fog’s remaining as thick as burgoo. When the starboard
-watch, my watch, came on deck at six o’clock the next morning, the fog
-was beginning to burn off and slowly the visibility increased mile by
-mile. Suddenly a bit of a breeze ruffled the surface of the sea; the
-fog curtain suddenly lifted, as in a theatre, and the whole glorious
-panorama of glaciers, mountains, and fiords burst upon our startled
-gaze. This coastal scenery on “The Greenland” is as magnificent as
-any Alpine scenery. Peaks tower five or six thousand feet sheer from
-the depths, with deep blue fiords cleaving their base, and glittering
-glaciers suspended from their peaks like diamond pendants.
-
-The Commander soon determined our position as being off the town of
-Holsteinborg--a deduction aided by our sighting a peculiarly shaped
-mountain peak known as the Kin of Sal. Hence we were not much more than
-a hundred miles from Godhavn, which we should therefore reach early the
-next day if the Weather Man remained affable.
-
-At five o’clock the next morning I was awakened by the clank of the
-anchor chain running through the hawse pipe. In an instant I was on
-my feet and in two more I was in my clothes and out on deck, this
-feat being made easier as the result of long practice attending
-school roll-call. I took a look around. The harbor was spacious with
-high cliffs towering on either side, with here and there an iceberg
-hard aground. Safe and snug in the lee of one of these bergs lay
-the _Peary_, a welcome sight, indeed, to our eyes. In a few minutes
-Commander McDonald hove in sight paddling an Eskimo kayak and loudly
-assailing us with a running fire of unacademic Eskimo. Shortly he
-came aboard and disappeared into the after cabin. Not long afterwards
-Commander Byrd and Floyd Bennet appeared in an inflated rubber boat,
-the oddest looking craft I ever saw afloat. They were soon alongside
-and came aboard to consult with the Commander.
-
-Across from the _Peary_ lay a large Danish collier. She had come
-out from Copenhagen to distribute along the coast at the various
-settlements the local coal which is mined in Greenland. This coal is
-obtained at a town called Umanak, where the _Peary_ was going in a
-few hours to bunker up before cutting loose from the last outposts of
-civilization.
-
-Across the bay an interesting sight met our eyes. It was an old hulk,
-battered and twisted until it little resembled a ship. This we learned
-was the historic old _Fox_, the famous exploring vessel of Sir Leopold
-McClintock. On board of her he set out in 1857 to discover the fate of
-Sir John Franklin and his men, who had disappeared into the Northwest
-Passage in 1845. No word of them was ever received until Sir Leopold
-solved the mystery.
-
-Meanwhile the British admiralty attempted to discover the fate of
-the lost navigators. When three years had elapsed and no news of
-the expedition’s whereabouts was received, they despatched Admiral
-Sir Edward Belcher with a relief squadron to go to his assistance.
-During the following year he searched diligently, but could discover
-no traces of the location of the expedition. When the full import of
-this disaster which had befallen Sir John and his one hundred and
-twenty-eight men in those bleak, ice-ridden waters of the Northwest
-Passage was at last realized, the entire civilized world stood aghast.
-From all sides poured in proffers of aid, and messages of condolence
-and hope deluged Lady Jane Franklin, the brave wife of Sir John. It
-was in response to an appeal from Lady Franklin to the President of the
-United States that the first American Arctic Expedition was organized.
-Henry Grinnell, a rich ship merchant, played an important part in the
-organization and financing of this noble philanthropy, and in tribute
-to his high ideals, the expedition was named in his honor. Lieutenant
-Edward J. DeHaven went as commander, and Elisha Kent Kane as surgeon,
-of whom we shall hear much, further on, in connection with the second
-Grinnell Expedition.
-
-But all of these expeditions returned unsuccessful. The admiralty lost
-interest in the undertaking, and the names of Sir John and his men
-were crossed from the navy register, thereby concluding all admiralty
-participation and further attempts at rescue. Lady Franklin, however,
-was not content to consider her husband as irretrievably lost until
-every effort had been made to discover the circumstances of his
-disappearance. To this end she self-sacrificingly pledged her personal
-fortune to the cause, and in spite of disheartening reverses, she
-gamely continued sending forth expedition after expedition. At last
-her funds became nearly depleted, and still no success had crowned
-her efforts. But she determined to make one final attempt with the
-last of her fortune. She therefore enlisted the aid of Sir Leopold
-McClintock, “the greatest of Arctic sledge men,” as he was called by
-his contemporaries. They determined to purchase the little steam yacht
-_Fox_ to transport the expedition. She was the best that could be
-obtained for the money, but far from being as large as they desired.
-
-In 1857 the expedition sailed from England for Godhavn. There they made
-their final adjustments before squaring away for the treacherous ice of
-Melville Bay. They made their way to this bay, and there on the 13th of
-August the pack came in solid around them, and they were locked fast
-for the year. For six months they remained in the pack and were carried
-nearly a thousand miles to the southward before they broke out in the
-spring. The vessel was so badly damaged after her experience in the ice
-that it seemed imperative to return to England immediately, but Sir
-Leopold, remembering Lady Jane’s faith in the expedition, courageously
-ordered his battered ship headed northward once again. Once more he
-managed to make Godhavn in spite of his crippled condition, and there
-with the primitive instruments obtainable he instituted such crude
-repairs as were possible.
-
-Once again he headed north, and this time without mishap he made his
-way through Melville Bay and to the head of Lancaster Sound, thence
-southward to Bellot Strait where they wintered. In rambling about the
-shore they came upon a number of bleached skeletons and miscellaneous
-camp articles. These upon examination proved to bear the stamp of His
-Majesty’s Ships _Erebus_ and _Terror_, Sir John’s ill-fated vessels.
-Following up these traces Sir Leopold soon determined that Sir John
-and all his men had perished in retreating from their ships, which had
-remained fast in the ice until the dwindling store of supplies forced
-the expedition to the desperate expedient of attempting a retreat to
-the Hudson’s Bay Company posts down Bach’s Great Fish River.
-
-Sir Leopold then returned to Godhavn and after remaining a short while
-in that port he sailed away for England. There his great discoveries
-satisfied the tired heart of Lady Franklin, and the curiosity of the
-British public.
-
-Years later the vessel was sold to the Danish Government and employed
-in the Greenland trade. In 1915 she was damaged in the ice and towed
-into Godhavn. She was then beached and left to rot out her days in the
-ignominious fashion in which we found her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-ICE AND MORE ICE
-
-
-After we had been in port a good part of the morning, the _Peary_
-hoisted anchor and started towards the mouth of the harbor, and we
-needs must follow suit. In the meantime we had loaded up with water
-and had had a brief rest from our sea voyage. We wanted to reach Etah
-on August 1st at the latest, and as it was then well along in July it
-was necessary to make as much haste as was convenient. Therefore, we
-pushed straight on from Disko Island to South Upernavik as fast as wind
-and tide would permit us. There the _Peary_ joined us loaded deep with
-coal--the last she would obtain until her return from the far north.
-
-At this town we saw our first exhibition of the remarkable dexterity of
-the Greenlanders in their frail skin-boats, known as “kayaks.” These
-craft are about eighteen feet long and twenty inches wide. In them the
-natives can go out in any kind of a sea, and if a wave capsizes the
-boat they can right themselves with a few skilled strokes of their
-paddles, or if they lose the paddle, a twist of the body will suffice.
-To keep water from seeping in while they are head downward, a tight
-sealskin shirt is worn. This laces tightly at both wrists and around
-the head, thus forming a water-tight seam. Furthermore, it tightly
-buttons to the cockpit coaming of the kayak, making another water-tight
-fit. Thus the man constitutes almost a part of the boat, and the
-marvellous feats they perform with this rig can be appreciated only by
-witnessing these aquatic demonstrations.
-
-We were all very anxious to land to see how the people lived, but on
-account of the prevalence of whooping cough, the government would not
-permit us to do so. At Godhavn also this condition prevailed, and we
-had been allowed to go ashore only for water. Our desire to land was
-further whetted by a view of many gaudily dressed maidens emerging
-from church, as the day was Sunday. They were all decked out in
-elaborate finery, and through the glass they seemed quite attractive.
-But discipline is discipline, and we were obliged to forego any closer
-association with these alluring sirens.
-
-The morning after the _Peary_ arrived from the coal mines, we set sail
-for Melville Bay. The very prospect of entering this dread stretch
-of water was a challenge. Here in the _Fox_, McClintock had been
-imprisoned in the ice for a year and drifted for over a thousand miles.
-In 1834, thirty-four whaling vessels were crushed in the pack. Thoughts
-of such events were far from comforting, and I could not help wondering
-how our little vessels would fare in the relentless ice. If they were
-crushed we would be left to retreat as best we could to Upernavik. To
-become imprisoned for a year would also necessitate the abandonment
-of the vessels as we had been able to make room for only four months’
-provisions, because of the space occupied by the aeroplane equipment.
-But I had confidence in our craft and in our leaders, and I looked
-forward with an untroubled mind to the thrilling work of ice navigation
-(such is the assurance of youth).
-
-The Commander had determined to take what is known as the Middle
-Passage which is directly through the centre of the pack. Therefore, we
-pushed out boldly from Upernavik and laid our course straight for Cape
-York--the northern terminus of the Bay and the goal of all who attempt
-its navigation.
-
-Without sighting any ice we sailed along for some hours. We soon
-entered a dense fog, and the visibility became very poor. In a short
-while we began to pass innumerable icebergs. Weaving in and out among
-the bergs, always vigilant, always tense, we continued on into the
-Arctic wastes. During this anxious period I was on lookout, and my
-every minute was occupied in watching for the bergs and directing the
-helmsman how to avoid them. Out of the white background of the fog
-these sinister mountains of ice would emerge, first as a thin black
-line on the sea’s surface; then taking shape until high above they
-towered, grey and lustreless. On all sides they appeared, until the
-sea was like a boulder-strewn plain through which we threaded our mazy
-way. Now and then one would disintegrate or capsize with a mighty roar
-suggestive of a bombardment of artillery, and we would rise and fall on
-the ensuing swell.
-
-After we had been in this field of bergs for some time, I began to
-notice occasional little cakes of ice. Soon these increased in number
-until there was a regular fleet of them. Then as suddenly as they
-had appeared they disappeared, and we were in open water with only a
-fugitive berg here and there. I thought to myself that the ancient
-mariners had greatly exaggerated the terrors of the ice field when
-just as it seemed thickening to a degree where our progress would
-really be impeded, it suddenly was dissipated. But this superior
-contempt for the old salts did not long hold sway. Gradually a dark,
-ragged line broke the even white of the enshrouding mist. My first
-thought was that it was a low berg or “growler” as they are called,
-but it continued opening out along the horizon until I saw that it was
-too large for a single berg. Then in a flash it dawned on me that here
-was the Arctic pack! I watched attentively. Shortly it merged into
-well-defined pans with thin leads between.
-
-Immediately the Commander clambered aloft to survey the situation.
-Seeing a favorable opening he directed the helmsman to head her for it.
-In another second we had passed the outer portals of the pack and had
-at least entered upon the great ordeal of the expedition. Here even
-the delay of several weeks would defeat the aims of the expedition,
-as the short northern summer would be over and the season for flying
-terminated. If the winds blew from the southward our situation would
-be precarious in the extreme, and only a kind providence could keep us
-from an untimely end. Even a few hours of ice pressure against the
-_Peary’s_ sides might easily open her seams, and leave her a leaking
-hulk.
-
-Our watch continued working the vessel through the leads until
-midnight, when the port watch came on deck. As I lay in my forecastle
-bunk in the eerie half-light of the northern midnight I could hear the
-crash of the vessel smashing her way forward through the fog over the
-encroaching pans. My berth was well up in the bow, and as each blow
-smote the planking it seemed as if the next surely would stave the bow.
-But the sturdy oak withstood all onslaughts, and soon the dread sounds
-became sweet music, and I fell asleep.
-
-When I came on deck the next morning, the vessel was lying moored to a
-pan as the fog had become so thick that it was impossible to discern
-the weak spots in the ice. As the fog showed no signs of lifting,
-the Commander proffered a suggestion. We were to go on a seal hunt!
-Therefore, we took down our guns and set forth at once. I went along
-with Abie, as I figured that he would know where to find the quarry
-from his long association with them in Labrador. For some time we
-tramped across the ice. Then Abie suddenly turned with a signal for
-silence. I followed the direction of his eyes and saw a small dark
-object floating in the open water of the lead. Silently he unlimbered
-his rifle, took deliberate aim, and dispatched a ball through the
-animal’s head. His was a perfect shot and made in the one essential
-spot, since it is necessary to shoot a seal through the head or its
-dying reflex action will expel the air from its lungs thus causing it
-to sink. After we saw that the shot had been properly placed and the
-animal was going to float, I dashed back to the ship to obtain a small
-boat and a harpoon. The harpoon was soon procured and I sprang into
-the boat. Just then Byrd and McDonald sauntered over from the _Peary_.
-Seeing what was up they climbed in with me to recover the prize. I
-rowed as hard as I could down the lead, since I was fearful that our
-trophy would sink. A short pull brought us to the spot, and one of the
-men seized the harpoon and lunged with all his might. But he struck
-the seal across the hair and the harpoon glanced off, while under the
-impetus of the blow the seal sank about ten feet. My heart sank with
-him. Slowly, however, he emerged, and this time with Abie bellowing
-advice, the harpoon was firmly affixed and we drew our victim out on
-the ice. It was a young seal, not much larger than a roasting pig. Abie
-decided that it would make tender eating; so he set about skinning it.
-After the skinning and cleaning was completed, we stowed the seal in
-the boat and departed for the ship.
-
-Meanwhile several of the other boys had scattered over the floes,
-Dick Salmon being hull down some distance away. As the fog had begun
-to rot out, it was decided to get under weigh immediately. Therefore
-the recall signal was sounded from the _Peary’s_ siren, and the boys
-came scurrying back. Poor Dick, however, had an intervening lead open
-between him and the vessel; so he was forced to hang up until he
-could find a place to cross. Seeing his plight, the Commander ran the
-_Bowdoin_ down towards him, and just as the lead again closed he came
-down on him and picked him up.
-
-We were now nearly in the centre of the pack, and with clearer skies
-our hopes of getting clear of the pack began to rise. Steadily we
-forged to the northward through the thick pans. So far there had been
-little wind, and the ice had not packed together very heavily. Towards
-evening, however, under the influence of the tide, the ice began to
-pack, and the _Bowdoin_ was caught in a nip. We were jammed as if in
-a vise, between two great floes of ice. Robbie was in charge as the
-Commander had gone aboard the _Peary_ to con her through the ice.
-Immediately Robbie ordered us out on the ice to try to break away the
-jagged edges which threatened to impale us. We pounded away with heavy
-timbers and managed to break off several sharp points, thus making an
-easier berth for the vessel. But try as we would, we could neither go
-forward nor backward. The _Peary_ observing our situation swung around
-and came ramming back to our aid. With the tremendous blows of her
-massive bow, she planed off great pieces of the floes until finally she
-broke through to our relief. In a short time, however, she herself was
-inextricably caught. The pressure was considerable, and the _Peary_
-assumed a list of five or six degrees.
-
-Dr. Koelz soon came over to the _Bowdoin_ in royal bad humor,
-complaining that the grinding of the ice against the side of the
-_Peary_ had prevented him from sleeping. Furthermore, on trying to
-leave his cabin, the pressure had so contracted the vessel that he
-found his door so jammed it would not open, and the combined efforts
-of three men were necessary to liberate the Doctor who came aboard the
-_Bowdoin_ for refuge. Long afterwards we discovered that the vessel
-had contracted several inches from the tremendous pressure.
-
-In a few hours the tide again shifted, and to our great relief the
-vessel was freed of the pressure. Then we again got under weigh, and
-were soon ploughing along at a good rate of speed, considering the
-handicaps under which we labored. At this time we began to wonder where
-we were, as for some days we had been unable to determine our position
-by observation, because of the thick weather.
-
-For five days we had been at sea. We had encountered heavy fogs,
-icebergs and the savage pack, and we had come through safe and
-undaunted. Now as the weather was clearing, our wonder as to where we
-were increased. Had some fell current swept us far from our course?
-Had our many zigzags in the ice carried us in circles? Where were we
-indeed? The weather continued to clear until we could discern the blue
-sky overhead and the pale iceblink all around. Then the Commander, with
-his glass clapped on the northern horizon, suddenly became aware of a
-dark streak in the even white of the iceblink.
-
-“Land clouds,” said the Commander, as he swept them with his
-binoculars.
-
-Land clouds they indeed seemed to be, and all eyes were thenceforth
-strained to catch a view of the land itself. Meanwhile the man aloft
-had been saying little and looking much. Suddenly rang out the
-long-hoped-for cry, “Land ho!”
-
-In thirty seconds every man who could scramble to a place in the
-rigging was there, and each was eager to spy out the distant peaks
-which soon came into view. Immediately we put on full speed in order
-to reach them before the ice should again become impassable. As if
-some wayward spirit had sensed our wish, the floes came crunching and
-sliding into a compact mass, rendering futile all attempts to proceed.
-We were therefore regretfully forced to lose more precious hours. These
-hours were doubly precious as it was already July 31st, and every hour
-counted if we were to reach our destination on our scheduled date,
-August 1st.
-
-As I looked out over the slowly drifting ice, with its unending white
-broken only by the thin dark lines of the ever-opening and closing
-leads, towards the rugged cliffs on the far horizon, standing like grim
-sentries at the portals of the North, I wondered why we had come. Why
-had this company left all that was dearest to them; their loved ones;
-their congenial firesides; the labors in which until so recently they
-had been engrossed? Why had we endured the perils of wind, and sea and
-ice, borne discomforts and hardships, sacrificed personal ease and
-safety? For what had we sailed three thousand miles across tractless
-seas? For a moment it seemed utter folly to have come all this distance
-for things that at best appeared vague and indistinct! We had all
-been in comfort and safety at home. For what conceivable reason would
-intelligent men turn their backs on these pretentious inducements?
-For a moment I pondered. Suddenly in my mind’s eye I saw another ice
-waste not dissimilar to this one, and I visioned other hills, this
-time in the west, hills on which no human eye had rested--our quest.
-Then three small specks clove the deep blue of the eastern sky. Soon
-the hum of engines echoed from berg and hummock, and they resolved
-into aeroplanes--our planes. Nearer they soared, over the first range
-of hills. Then they wheeled about and soon receded into the endless
-vault of heaven whence they had come. My heart leaped within me. I knew
-why we had come. In our blood surged the age-old spirit of adventure
-which drove the first Viking to the Arctic seas; which sent Columbus
-across the terror-strewn western ocean; which lured Sir John Franklin
-to his lonesome grave. I felt my blood flow fast. The same old urge
-had gripped me, and obedient to its demands I, too, had joined the
-adventurous throng and seen home and ease fade astern as the vessel’s
-prow pointed for the unknown lands over the horizon’s edge.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-WE TAKE THE AIR
-
-
-Early on the morning of August 1st, we broke through the last of the
-pack of Cape York and laid our course around the shore ice as yet
-unbroken from the Cape. In a short time we had rounded it and were
-finally out of Melville Bay, a departure which caused no sorrow on
-the part of any of us. The body of water which we had now entered was
-known as Smith Sound, a name given it by William Baffin in honor of one
-of his supporters. It stretches from Cape York to beyond Etah where
-it opens out into Kane Basin. Usually the Sound is free from pack ice
-except on the western side where a heavy stream of it flows to the
-southward.
-
-For several hours we sailed without seeing a sign of any living thing
-save a few birds. Suddenly two kayaks darted out from the shore. With a
-few deft strokes of the paddle their occupants brought them alongside,
-and we heard the musical hail “Ochshinai!” followed by a demand for
-“bacca.” In response to their hail Robbie tossed them two plugs
-which they aptly caught, waved their arms with delight and yelled,
-“Quoin-amik!” (Thank you!). As we sailed away, we could see them
-lovingly caressing their prizes.
-
-The wind freshened as we bent our course to the north and we were soon
-bowling along with a bone in our teeth. The coast flashed by. Soon Cape
-Alexander, “the Cape Horn of the North,” which lies half-way between
-the Pole and the Arctic Circle, hove in sight. As we rounded this
-wicked old promontory, the customary vicious squall snapped at us. We
-were soon past the cape, however, and once again entered smooth waters.
-Here we could see the walrus breaking water all about us, and every now
-and then a savage, white-tusked face would leer at us as we scudded
-along. Now and then almost beneath our bows an entire herd would blow
-and disappear in a mass of white water. At nine o’clock that night, we
-worked our way into Foulke Fiord, and there dead ahead lay the haven of
-our hopes, the goal of our endeavors--Etah!
-
-[Illustration: Commander MacMillan: with an eskimo child; in flying
-costume; in the ice barrel.]
-
-[Illustration: Brother John’s glacier and Alida Lake, Etah, North
-Greenland.]
-
-There in the bright light of the Arctic night glistened the tranquil
-waters of the fiord, and the crumbling cliffs reflected a ruddy
-welcome. Far away up the fiord sparkled a great glacier, an arm of
-the huge inland Mer de Glace. Close at hand bubbled and splashed a tiny
-stream which tumbled down among the rugged boulders from the melting
-snow above and trickled across the coastal intervale which was rich
-with lush grass. We stood there staring and straining our eyes for some
-sign of the expected village. All we saw on the slope above the fringe
-of grass was the hillside in which there were two holes in the ground,
-the remains of igloos of a former age, only these and nothing more!
-
-In a few moments we had rounded Provision Point, so named from its use
-as a supply depot on the Commander’s previous expeditions. Thinking
-this location favorable for an anchorage, he immediately ordered the
-anchor dropped. A quick heave with the anchor chain announced the
-successful completion of the outward voyage. We of the ship personnel
-had consummated our mission; now it was for the aviators to accomplish
-theirs.
-
-The clatter of the anchor chain acquainted Melkon with the fact that we
-had arrived.
-
-“What kind of postage stamps do they use here?” he called up the
-companionway.
-
-Receiving no enlightenment on this subject, he started up on deck.
-Poking his head above the hatch he inquired with a puzzled expression
-on his face:
-
-“Why, where is the post office?”
-
-The Commander extended his arm shorewards with a dramatic gesture and
-said simply and significantly:
-
-“Look!”
-
-Melkon took one long look at those two holes in the ground and scanned
-that stern and rock-bound coast. Then it dawned upon him that we were
-now in the real Arctic, far beyond the last pale of civilization and
-its appurtenances. With a subdued air he replied:
-
-“Ah, now I understand.”
-
-We had rather expected to find a considerable encampment of Eskimos
-and were somewhat disappointed to see that the country was apparently
-depopulated. But in a short time from the upper end of the fiord by the
-glacier we saw two kayaks approaching. Soon the Commander recognized
-their occupants as Noo-ka-ping-wa and In-you-gee-to, both old friends
-and companions of the Commander’s on former sleighing expeditions.
-They were delighted to see the Commander, and informed us that they
-represented the entire male population of the town with the exception
-of old Ak-kom-mo-ding-wa, who was coming as rapidly as his advanced
-years would allow. He soon appeared in a dilapidated canvas canoe,
-a gift of some explorer. He had abandoned the kayak in favor of the
-canoe, as the smaller craft’s cramped quarters no longer felt as
-comfortable as of yore. He was a comical old loafer, and his behavior
-caused us much amusement. His lazy habits and good-natured disposition
-soon gained for him the sobriquet of, “The Beloved Vagabond.”
-
-Next morning at five o’clock sharp, we were roused out for an early
-start at constructing a landing place for the planes. After a hasty
-breakfast we piled into the boats and rowed over to the beach which
-had been chosen for the assembling of the planes. It was strewn with
-boulders and small rocks, and the only way of ridding the beach of them
-was to pry them out and roll them away. At this task everybody was soon
-engaged from the Commander down. All morning we labored, and by noon
-the sand was well cleared of them.
-
-Our next task was to construct the runway for hauling the planes up to
-the beach, since the wheels would otherwise sink in the soft sand. For
-this purpose we requisitioned the sides of the cases in which the wings
-had been packed. To get them ashore was somewhat of a problem, and we
-tried several methods before we hit upon the ultimate one of lashing
-two boats together, thus forming a raft of sufficient stability upon
-which to load them.
-
-After landing the planes, crosspieces were nailed under them, and these
-were weighed down with heavy rocks to keep the whole apparatus from
-floating away with the tide. When the runway was completed, the Navy
-men began bringing in the wings. In a short time the first fuselage was
-slung over the side of the _Peary_, into the water, and then brought
-ashore lashed between two boats in order that it might not tip over.
-
-When the plane had grounded on the runway, all hands tailed on her
-tackle and walked her up the beach. Then the wings were set up, and the
-aviators secured them to the fuselage while we supported them on our
-backs. Having been assembled, the plane was then rolled back into the
-water and taken off to its anchorage.
-
-[Illustration: The _Peary_.]
-
-[Illustration: Expedition plane at the stern of the _Bowdoin_.]
-
-In three days all of the planes were assembled and ready to go. It
-indeed gave us a thrill to see them soaring up from the waters of
-Etah Fiord and flying over a land and sea which never before had seen
-the shadow of a bird larger than a glaucous gull. The Eskimos also
-looked on with wide-eyed wonder, and many were the “Ahs” and “Naveos”
-as the great birds left the water amidst clouds of spray and went
-skimming over berg and glacier.
-
-[Illustration: Launching first plane at Etah.]
-
-We had got away to a propitious start for our flying, and the prospects
-for success in the fullest measure seemed bright. Our hopes rose all
-too soon, however, for at this point old Torngak, the evil spirit of
-the North, angered at this invasion of his realm, took a hand in the
-proceedings. With driving snow and squalls he came sweeping down on us
-before we had been in Etah three days. Then his tactics changed, and
-he blanketed us in fog. For but three days of the entire summer did
-he sulk in his tent; during the remainder of the time he was either
-hovering in the offing or engaged in active offense through driving
-storms or insidious fog. But in spite of these handicaps, on every
-occasion at all suitable for flying the Commander and the aviators were
-away in their endeavor to penetrate the unknown area. To do this it was
-necessary to lay down a base between Etah and the Polar Sea. The planes
-were of the type known as amphibian, equipped to land either in the
-water or on the land. Equipped with skids they might possibly utilize
-the ice. An examination of the drift ice of Smith Sound precluded all
-possibility of its being used as an aviation field, covered as it was
-with pools of water, cracks, and pressure ridges. The ice covered the
-mountains of Ellesmere Land, threatening disaster to any plane which
-had to make a forced landing.
-
-It was therefore necessary to rely on the water of the fiords, which
-should afford a safe, ice-free landing place. Time after time the
-aviators searched for open water, but fate was against them, and at
-nearly every visit the waters were choked with cakes of ice large
-enough to puncture a plane. Several times they found an apparently
-ice-free spot, but in a few hours the ice would return, rendering
-it impossible to again utilize that point for a base. The Commander
-had confidently believed from his sledging experience, and from the
-testimony of the Eskimos, that these fiords would be free of ice. The
-unforeseen presence of the ice can probably be explained, however,
-by the unprecedentedly short and cold summer we were experiencing.
-Not even in the memory of the oldest Eskimo had such unfortunate
-meteorological conditions prevailed.
-
-In addition to the remarkable summer, or rather lack of summer,
-with which we were embarrassed, the usual run of engine trouble and
-other mishaps fell to our lot. One morning I was sitting down in
-the forecastle when the alarming news became known that a plane was
-sinking. Robbie and John Jaynes immediately took energetic measures
-to save the plane, and all hands came tumbling on deck. At the moment
-I arrived, the plane had sunk until the water was level with the
-propeller shaft of the inverted motor. She lay poised for a final
-plunge to the depths, and John and Robbie were desperately striving
-to get a line on the shaft. Rocheville, a Navy mechanic, lay aft on
-the tail gallantly trying to counter-balance the weight of the water
-forward and bring the plane on a level keel. The line was soon made
-fast, and just in time, as in another second she would have taken the
-last plunge. All hands then tailed on the line, and gradually the plane
-emerged. In a short time the deck was above water, and the aircraft
-was in a position to be bailed out. It was a fortunate rescue, but the
-plane never flew again in spite of our efforts.
-
-The days not occupied in overhauling the planes or not rendered
-worthless by storms were devoted to flights over Ellesmere Land in
-search of a base. The presence of drifting ice, however, had dealt
-our planes a deathblow. By the 20th of August the Commander realized
-that the planes could not add to the results he had obtained with dog
-sledges in 1914. At best they might put him at the edge of the Polar
-Sea, but they would never carry him out over the unexplored district on
-which he had previously traveled off shore one hundred and fifty miles.
-
-In the realm of science, however, the expedition produced notable
-results. Lieutenant Benjamin Rigg of the Coast and Geodetic Survey
-obtained valuable sets of magnetic and tidal observations at nearly
-every point at which we tarried. The first automatic tidal recorder
-to be used in the far north was also put in operation by him. Dr.
-Koelz, the expedition’s naturalist, also did some very valuable work.
-His collection of fish and bird specimens was large and contained
-many rare species. The National Geographic photographers obtained
-excellent photographs of Arctic scenes and people. For the first time
-far northern scenes were recorded by the new natural color process of
-photography. All-together the scientific results more than justified
-the expedition and made up for the unfortunate termination of the
-flying.
-
-On this strip of coast upon which Etah is located dwells a group of
-people--the northernmost race in the world. These people are known
-to the white race as Eskimos, which means “meat eaters,” but among
-themselves the appellation Innuit, “the people,” is applied.
-
-They are a very strange group and little is known about them. It is
-thought that they are of Mongolian origin. Whence they came and by what
-path, however, has always remained a mystery and is apparently little
-closer to solution now than formerly. At the present time they are
-distributed along the Arctic coasts of America, Greenland and Eastern
-Asia.
-
-The particular branch of the race which lives on the North Greenland
-shore was unknown until 1818, when Sir John Ross worked his little
-vessel through the ice of Melville Bay to Cape York. As he lay off
-the Cape he observed several black dots moving towards him over
-the ice. These soon resolved into Eskimos, and dog sleds. On their
-nearer approach he entered into a conversation with them through an
-interpreter from South Greenland. He then told them he came from far
-to the south. Upon the receipt of this information they assumed an
-incredulous air and informed him that surely no one could live in the
-south as all their ice drifted off in that direction and by this time
-that region must be absolutely choked with it.
-
-For many years these “Arctic Highlanders,” to use the rather poetical
-name Ross gave them, remained unvisited. In 1850-51, however, Saunders
-wintered among them in the ship _North Star_. He was the first man ever
-really to live with them. To-day on the bay named after his ship, Knud
-Rasmussen, the explorer, maintains a trading station.
-
-Two years after the departure of Saunders, the little brig _Advance_
-with Elisha Kent Kane, “America’s first Arctic explorer,” in command,
-rounded Cape York, and gallantly beat up Smith Sound to Renssaeler
-Harbor. While Kane was there the Eskimos sledged up to see him. With a
-gun on his shoulder he went forth to meet them, with so great suspicion
-did he regard them. But they appeared peaceable and he had no occasion
-to employ the firearm. Kane brought back the first reliable reports on
-the Eskimos. However, he did not make much use of their knowledge and
-skill, nor of their dog teams, in his explorations. Seven years after
-Kane, in 1860, Dr. Isaac Israel Hayes, one of Kane’s men, revisited
-Etah and entered into extensive relations with the natives. For the
-first time did the Eskimos aid in the work of exploration in which they
-were later to take so conspicuous a part with Peary and MacMillan. But
-Hayes never fully trusted them, and for awhile he considered himself
-and his men the objects of a conspiracy on the part of the Eskimos to
-murder them all.
-
-After Hayes, with the exception of a winter which the crew of the
-_Polaris_ spent just north of Etah, the Eskimos remained unvisited
-until the arrival of Peary. Peary quickly realized the great value of
-the Eskimo and his sturdy team of dogs. He gained their confidence
-and esteem. Without experiencing any of the evils which the earlier
-expeditions had expected from the Eskimos, he worked with them for
-eighteen years. It was largely due to the skill and energy of the
-Eskimos and the power in their sturdy dogs that Peary eventually
-conquered the Pole. In 1876 Markham, of the English North Pole
-Expedition, reported to his government that he considered it impossible
-to attain the Pole. He relied on the unaided labors of his men to pull
-the sledges, a terrific task which well demonstrated the bravery and
-stamina of the British. In a little over a month, Markham and his men
-traveled seventy-three miles from the ship, advancing their sledges by
-man power alone, and nearly dying with exhaustion. Peary in three days
-by the aid of Eskimos and dog sledges exceeded this distance with ease.
-This clearly shows the superiority of the Eskimo method of travel.
-Peary never had cause to regret his employment of the Eskimo, and they
-did not play him false in spite of the beliefs of the older explorers.
-
-Four years after the Pole had been conquered, the American flag again
-entered Smith Sound. This time it snapped in the breeze over the head
-of one who would bring it new renown. Upon the scene had appeared the
-fit successor of the great Peary--MacMillan. With the aid of Eskimos
-and dog teams in the spring of 1914 he turned his steps westward
-over Ellesmere and Axel Heiberg Land. One hundred and fifty miles he
-penetrated the Polar Sea towards the land which Peary had seen. But
-he found this land had been nothing but a mirage, and regretfully he
-and his Eskimos turned their steps homeward. For four years he lived
-among them, and studied their way of living, and his researches greatly
-extended our knowledge concerning them. Thus at last the Eskimo came
-into his own as the helpmate and companion of the white man on his
-trips in the Arctic regions.
-
-On the 1925 MacMillan expedition I had the opportunity of observing
-them and their interesting customs. At the time of year in which I
-was among them they were living in sealskin tents or tupiks. The rock
-igloos had been abandoned for their summer airing. The Eskimos removed
-the dome of their arched rock igloos on the arrival of warm weather.
-This airing of the igloos is about the only sanitary act the natives
-perform. They rarely if ever wash themselves or their clothes.
-
-Their methods of food preservation also are rather distasteful to a
-civilized person. After walrus or other meat has been secured, it is
-cut up and then stacked in a pile. Then over all is placed a large
-number of rocks. In this way it is stored until there is need of it. In
-a few days these caches can be located by the smell alone.
-
-But at all things requiring a good eye, a cool head and a steady hand,
-they excel. A good example of this is the way in which they make their
-rope. It is made by taking the skin of a seal which has been so skinned
-that the hide comes off in concentric bands. Then one of the natives
-pulls the band along while another holds a knife. Even a small tremble
-in the hand of the one holding the knife would cut through the thin
-line, ruining it, but so accurate is their handiwork that the lines
-vary in width hardly at all and the rope seems so uniform that one
-would think it had been made in a machine. They also skin small seals
-in such a way that the skin pulls off absolutely whole with but one
-perforation. This skin is so carefully removed from the flesh that it
-will hold air without leaking!
-
-They display the greatest ingenuity in the manufacture of all their
-instruments and utensils. The point in their harpoons, and the way
-they employ the sealskin bag to float the walrus which sinks when it
-is killed, all show the innate skill and ingenuity in the race. They
-are never at a loss and never “stumped.” Once someone was repairing
-a sledge, and he could not find a drill. An Eskimo stepped forward
-and coolly shot a hole through the runner. They are like that in
-everything, always alert, always on the job.
-
-[Illustration: Eskimo kiddie with his mother’s coat on.]
-
-[Illustration: Even Eskimo boys of Ig-loo-da-houny have a sweet tooth.]
-
-Their philosophy of life is also interesting. The hard struggle they
-wage against the inhospitable environment in which they live has
-not made them an ill-tempered, sullen race. On the contrary, they
-are always laughing and smiling. A good joke is much enjoyed. On one
-occasion several of our photographers wanted pictures of live ducks
-on the nest. The Eskimos learning of this wish took a dead duck and
-propped it up on a nest with walrus whiskers so that it looked quite
-lifelike. Then they motioned to the photographers who cautiously crept
-forward, making every effort to keep from making a noise. The Eskimos
-meanwhile nearly died laughing. They are little inclined to worry. Old
-Panikpa admirably summarized their outlook on life when asked if he was
-not worried on a very dangerous strip of ice. “No,” he replied, “I let
-Peary do all the worrying.”
-
-[Illustration: In-you-gee-to makes a coil of rawhide line out of skin
-of which he is justly proud.]
-
-[Illustration: The only Eskimo family in Etah.]
-
-One may think them unintelligent and mentally deficient, but they
-have keen intellects and they use some very clever devices, in one
-instance utilizing advanced engineering principles. In the building of
-their circular rock igloos they employ the cantilever principle--an
-engineering method used in some of our greatest bridges. One would
-not expect an Eskimo to know a principle which our greatest engineers
-employ.
-
-Altogether these children of the ice are a group of people from whom
-we may learn much. Though they are one of the world’s most primitive
-peoples, they are in some respects the peers of those who are generally
-considered to be the most highly civilized.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-MY FARTHEST NORTH
-
-
-While we were in Etah, Dr. Koelz, the expedition’s naturalist, decided
-that he would like to travel a few miles up the Greenland shore to
-collect specimens. As he needed someone to help him row the dory and
-run the outboard motor which he intended to use, I volunteered to go
-with him. This arrangement being approved by the Commander, we cast off
-from the ship at about ten o’clock on the night of August 15th. With
-us journeyed two Eskimos, Panikpa and Kanga, who wished to reach the
-Eskimo settlement of Anoritok which is just beyond Refuge Harbor, the
-Commander’s headquarters in 1923-24.
-
-We made our way down Etah Fiord in the calm of the Arctic night, with
-scarcely a breath of wind ruffling the surface of the water. Soon we
-were off Sunrise Point where Hayes and his men used to walk from their
-ship to observe the sunrise after the long, five-month, winter night.
-
-We now emerged from the shelter of the cliffs. As we did so we were
-hit by a savage squall. It was too late to retreat into the fiord as
-turning about was a maneuver fraught with danger. All we could do was
-to plug ahead off the lee shore under the shelter of an iceberg and
-then square away for the north. This I did and in a few moments we
-were clear of the berg and then away we went before wind and sea. A
-very steep, choppy sea, probably fourteen or fifteen feet high, was
-running in from the southward. Under ordinary conditions a sea of that
-height would not be cause for any great concern, but these waves had
-nearly vertical faces and the crests were breaking continually. The
-only thing to do was to keep the dory running off before the sea as she
-would be capsized or swamped if she turned broadside on for even the
-briefest interval. I held the tiller stick in both hands and kept our
-little vessel’s head pointing straight to leeward in spite of incessant
-attempts on the part of the waves to “broach her to.”
-
-The Eskimos were quite frightened when they saw those big seas. Old
-Panikpa kept waving for us to go closer to the shore. But even one
-glance at that unbroken line of jagged rocks and leaping surf convinced
-both Koelz and myself that it would be suicidal to attempt a landing
-on that stretch of shore-line.
-
-All went well for about ten minutes. Then as I glanced aft over my
-shoulder I saw a tremendous comber seemingly hang directly over my
-head. I thought to myself that if we ever came out of that one with
-the boat still floating we would be lucky. The water mounted higher
-and higher on the stern as the dory’s tail cocked skyward until it was
-just level with the top of the coaming. Then with a swish the crest of
-the wave came crashing down over the counter. The engine was drenched
-and immediately stopped. I was soaked through and through and there
-were several inches of water in the boat. We started to swing broadside
-on, in the trough of the sea. One more wave would have finished us
-for good, and with a dead engine this was all too probable, in fact
-inevitable if the boat should swing enough to present her side to the
-sea. I yelled to Koelz to grab the oars and keep her off side before it
-until I got the engine going. Koelz with great presence of mind fitted
-the thole pins and soon had the oars shipped. In a few seconds we were
-again slowly moving along on our course, owing to skillful handling by
-the Doctor. In a few moments the engine was in running order and we
-were bowling along as merrily as before.
-
-In a short time we were in calm water in the channel between Littleton
-Island and the mainland. It was named by Inglefield, the first man to
-penetrate upper Smith Sound. In the channel between the island and the
-mainland lies the wreck of the old _Polaris_ which broke the world’s
-record for farthest north, in 1871. On this island, Sir Allen Young,
-in the _Pandora_, left mail for the British North Polar Expedition. On
-the first Greely Relief Expedition of 1882, Beebe deposited a cache
-of provisions there. It has always received prominent mention in all
-Arctic journals dealing with this region, and Dr. Koelz and I were
-interested in seeing it at close quarters.
-
-The wind was still blowing with great force, so hard in fact that I
-shut down the motor and rigged a sail with a tarpaulin and an oar,
-which made the boat go even faster than it did with the motor. In a few
-moments we were through the channel and bound up the coast for Cape
-Hatherton. For several hours we continued under sail until at last we
-were pretty close to the Cape. We then cut in for the shore and made
-our way through loose ice to the beach. We landed at five o’clock in
-the morning after a rather exciting voyage, to say the least.
-
-Sleep now appeared about the most desirable sensation possible for
-human beings to experience and rolling our blankets on the hard
-ground we went to it. We slept for what seemed years, but we awakened
-eventually. Now the question was whether it was morning, afternoon or
-night. The never-setting midnight sun gave but little clew to the time,
-and our watches had stopped! The time went on and soon we did not know
-what day it was. This was an awful fix, as we would not know when the
-days we had planned to remain in this vicinity had elapsed. But we did
-not let the time question bother us, and we started to accomplish the
-tasks we had set ourselves.
-
-Our primary object was to collect as many bird and fish specimens as
-possible, which we set about to do immediately. But another wish which
-we entertained, though it was subordinate to the first, was to make
-as high a latitude on the Greenland coast as our meager equipment
-and time, spared from our real objective, would warrant. With this
-goal in mind we set forth on what we considered to be our second day
-out from the ship. The gas which we had saved by sailing rendered a
-considerable trip under engine power practicable. Thus we set forth
-from our camp with all the gasolene we had, beyond a surplus to enable
-us to buck a storm if we had to on the way back to the ship from the
-camp. In an hour or so we were around Cape Hatherton and bound on up
-the coast. There was not much pack ice in sight except far to the
-westward, and the iceblink gave promise of more to the northward. A
-breeze from that direction also hindered our advance, but by noon
-we were off the mouth of Refuge Harbor. Here we were on the edge of
-Kane Sea, and we could see the glittering Polar pack slowly drifting
-southward. We crossed the entrance to the harbor in a few moments, and
-I hove away to round Cairn Point. At this juncture Koelz espied several
-large floes moving in towards the entrance of the harbor. Beyond them
-there were wide levels of half a mile or so between the scattered pans
-of the pack.
-
-I was hoping that my companion might express a wish to go on to
-the most northern Eskimo village in the world--Anoritok, some five
-miles beyond Refuge Harbor, where some of the Smith Sound natives
-happened to be living. Possibly we might have done this had it not
-been for running ice off Cairn Point which Koelz considered a bit
-dangerous. Reluctantly we gave up the idea and headed back for Refuge
-Harbor. There the ice had not broken out as it usually does, and if
-the _Bowdoin_ had been there she might have had great difficulty in
-reaching the open water beyond.
-
-After a leisurely lunch we started back to our camp and arrived there
-some time in the evening, probably as the sun was bearing pretty well
-north. The next two days we spent in collecting specimens, and then
-Koo-e-tig-e-to arrived with a letter from the Commander requesting
-us to return to the ship, as he would have to start south in a short
-while and wanted us there in plenty of time. So once again our little
-boat put to sea; this time bound south--away from the glorious land of
-the midnight sun and the glittering ice fields. Our stay in the Arctic
-fairyland had been all too short. I realized with sorrow that in a few
-days we would be bound for civilization and the pleasant days in Etah
-and north of there would be but a memory.
-
-On the way to Etah we stopped at Polaris beach where the crew of the
-_Polaris_ wintered after the wreck of their ship. There we found some
-old pieces of iron belonging to that ship. We also stopped for a few
-moments on Littleton Island. But in a short time we had left the island
-and Cape Ohlsen astern. Cape Ohlsen recalls the name of one of Kane’s
-men who died close by. We were thankful that the bones of none of our
-men lay bleaching on this inhospitable coast. Thus we started onward
-filled with memories, until with a start I found we were off Sunrise
-Point. In a few moments we were in Etah and aboard the ship after a
-most enjoyable trip up the coast. We learned that it was August the
-20th, thus we had been away five days.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-WE BREAK INTO SOCIETY
-
-
-The formation of new ice on the surface of Etah Fiord grimly brought
-home to us the dread reality that the relentless Arctic winter was
-now all but upon us. To flee before this dire warning was our only
-recourse, and the Commander ruefully gave the word to pack up and
-make all speed for home. The elements had barred our way to the great
-unknown area of the Polar Sea, but we had at least carried the outer
-ramparts through our new and untried means of attack by air. Now the
-time for temporizing had passed, and we must fly before young ice,
-snowstorms and September winds.
-
-Thus it was with regret that we broke out the anchor from the mud of
-Etah Harbor on the morning of August 21st, and headed out through the
-channel, and across the walrus grounds towards Cape Alexander. There
-the usual squall met us, and this time with such force that we were
-forced to go into McCormick’s Bight, (Pandora Harbor), to await the
-abatement of the storm.
-
-In a few hours it calmed down sufficiently to permit us to round the
-Cape, and we set our course for Ig-loo-da-houny. At this place we
-arrived at about six in the evening, and dropped anchor to await the
-arrival of the _Peary_ which was still at Etah loading aboard the last
-of our equipment.
-
-At Ig-loo-da-houny was encamped a considerable number of Eskimos,
-including several valuable assistants of Peary’s. Among these was
-Oo-bloo-ya, a very noted aide of Peary’s on nearly all his trips in
-the eighteen years of his work. Also sojourning at this settlement was
-Sipsoo of the heroic starvation party of 1906, which broke the world’s
-record of farthest north. Koo-la-ting-wa of the successful Polar trip
-also was present. Even Ah-pellah, assistant to the notorious Dr.
-Frederick Cook, on his now famous Polar hoax of 1907-1909, was eking
-out his existence at this spot. Indeed a notable group of Eskimos.
-
-That evening in the forecastle we gave a motion picture show for the
-Eskimos, exhibiting some of the Commander’s Arctic pictures, and
-several reels of Melkon’s pie-throwing comedy. The only one amused
-by the comedy was Melkon, since its crass horseplay was too broad for
-the Eskimo sense of humor. But when there flashed on the screen the
-pictures of themselves and their environment, they shouted and yelled
-with the sheerest childlike delight. And when the half-dozen belles saw
-themselves depicted, their joy was greater than that of any Hollywood
-Magdalene of seven husbands.
-
-The next day the Commander flew down to Karna to see his old friend
-and companion of many previous expeditions, E-took-a-shoo. When
-E-took-a-shoo saw the plane come skimming along the land in front of
-his tupik he was flabbergasted. But when the Commander invited him
-to fly back to Ig-loo-da-houny, he simply said, “Wait till I get my
-mittens.” Then with utter confidence in his own safety while he was at
-the Commander’s side, he mounted into this strange machine and flew
-back to Ig-loo-da-houny with as little concern as if he had been on his
-own sledge.
-
-In the meanwhile the _Peary_ had arrived to load on the remaining
-plane, and we got under weigh for Karna to return E-took-a-shoo to his
-home. On the way to Karna we had to sail through a long stretch of
-uncharted water. The Commander had scrutinized it from the air, and
-apparently it was safe and free from obstructions.
-
-We were unconcernedly sailing along when suddenly there was a grinding
-shock, and the vessel trembled from stem to stern. The bow lurched
-skyward, and we came to an abrupt stop. At the time, the Commander
-was below donning his oilskins, as a driving sleet was coming on. In
-two jumps he was on deck, and with one swift glance he took in our
-predicament. Immediately he reversed the engine, but we were hard and
-fast aground. The all important question faced us: “Was the tide rising
-or falling?” In a few moments it was apparent that it was falling. The
-Commander at once ordered us to throw overboard the thirty barrels of
-gasolene which constituted our deck load. This was but the work of a
-few moments. Then a kedge anchor was run astern to see if we might
-heave her off. But the tide was falling very rapidly and all of our
-efforts were frustrated. It was now apparent that we should have to
-wait until the tide rose again,--a matter of twelve hours or so.
-
-[Illustration: The _Bowdoin_ on the rocks in North Greenland.]
-
-[Illustration: Head of 2000-pound walrus, killed at Etah, North
-Greenland.]
-
-Meanwhile the barrels were slowly drifting away down wind, and the
-Commander perceived that if they were to be saved immediate measures
-were necessary. Therefore he despatched us in the small boats to
-recover them. We tumbled over the side into the dories and were soon
-scudding before the curling seas which lay between us and the barrels.
-Once among the barrels, we swung our boat’s nose into the wind, and
-the laborious process of salvaging the barrels was begun. Koelz held
-us steady with the oars, and I set to work putting lines on the
-barrels. Leaning over the stern of a pitching dory in a rough chop and
-striving to maintain a grip on a heavy steel drum which was rising and
-falling in opposite sequence to the boat, was indeed a task not to be
-underestimated. It was necessary to lift the barrel partly out of the
-water with one hand and float a clove hitch under it with the other
-hand. Every pitch of the boat nearly wrenched my arm from its socket.
-The icy water almost froze my hands, and soon they were white and numb.
-We stuck to this work, however, until all barrels had been gathered
-and tethered into rafts. These were then anchored to prevent further
-drifting and left to be later picked up by the vessel.
-
-[Illustration: Oomiak: Eskimo women’s boat, made of sealskins.]
-
-[Illustration: South Greenland kayak.]
-
-After three exhausting hours of this toil, they were all securely
-bound together and anchored. Then we returned to the ship. By this
-time the tide had fallen so far that she lay on her side at an acute
-angle. In fact, the incline was so great that it was impossible to
-stand on the deck. We had to walk along the bulwarks, and to cross
-the decks necessitated pulling oneself up by a rope. In the cabin one
-had to stand on the side walls, and the galley stove was so tilted
-that to cook on it was impossible. We had to make a meal of cold willy
-and other preparations which required no cooking. Despite the soggy
-coldness of it all, food never did taste better!
-
-The hours dragged slowly by as we waited for the tide to rise. The
-_Peary_ had been summoned to our aid, and she soon came hugging the far
-side of Herbert Island. Taking soundings as she went, she came nosing
-up within a few hundred feet of the _Bowdoin_. By the time she arrived
-the tide had begun to rise, and the water was slowly creeping up the
-deck of our ship. We clapped shut the portholes and battened down the
-hatches, and waited. By inches the tide rose, and the vessel began
-to show signs of stirring. We began taking up on the kedge anchor.
-The _Peary_ was ready for immediate action, when a most astounding
-phenomenon took place. About a half-mile away lay a huge million ton
-iceberg. Suddenly we heard an ear-rending roar. We looked towards
-the great berg. Slowly it up-ended with great fragments hurtling in
-every direction, then rocked from side to side as it regained its
-balance. In a few seconds a monstrous swell came rolling towards us
-from this cataclysm, and we were lifted gently from the ledge and swept
-gracefully into the open water beyond. We stared aghast; could we
-believe our senses? Yes, there could be no doubt of it, we were free
-of the ledge. We looked after the great receding wave and felt that at
-last the baneful spell of Torngak had been shattered!
-
-Quickly we hauled aboard the barrels, set things to rights and made all
-sail for Cape York. There we arrived early on the morning of August
-27th, and we indeed realized that we had left none too soon, for the
-winds were white with winter snow. The Commander stopped for a brief
-visit and to present a few gifts to the Eskimos encamped there; then
-we squared away for South Greenland. Across the now ice-free Melville
-Bay we flew with a roaring boreal wind, speeding our progress home.
-For three days we ran dead before it with huge seas coming up from the
-stern and rolling under our vessel.
-
-After we left Cape York, the midnight sun was with us no longer, and
-we had darkness for the first time in over a month. It indeed seemed
-strange to see the icebergs again bathed in a sunset flush, gleaming
-in the distance like old Greek temples of delicate pink marble. As
-twilight shaded into darkness and the stars blossomed once more in
-the heavens, we sat long on the quarter deck drinking in the infinite
-beauty of the night, silent save for the murmur of the water beneath
-the prow.
-
-[Illustration: At Sukkertoppen.]
-
-At last, late in the evening of August 30th, after a remarkably rapid
-run from Cape York, we made our way into the harbor of Holsteinborg in
-Danish Greenland. We had heard much about this port from our companions
-who had made previous voyages, especially regarding the attractions of
-its maidens. Our expectations were aroused, and great was our chagrin
-when the governor refused us permission to land. The Commander came to
-the rescue, and after he had wirelessed to the Governor-general, he at
-last obtained consent for the expedition to go ashore. This permission
-was extended only until nightfall, however. Thus any participation in
-the much-heralded Greenland dances was frustrated. We went ashore,
-nevertheless, and were at least permitted to take photographs of
-the Greenland belles dressed in their barbaric finery. In return for
-their smiles we presented them with some beads and trinkets. Then we
-left them and went for a visit to the halibut canning factory which
-is this hundred-man-town’s only industry. Here are preserved annually
-several hundred thousand cans of the most delectable fish for shipment
-to Denmark.
-
-[Illustration: _Photo Melkon._
-
-Dick Salmon with large cod jigged while stormbound in Godthaab Fiord.]
-
-Here we waited a brief time for the _Peary_, and on her arrival we got
-under weigh for Sukkertoppen, a town of six hundred, and the largest
-in all Greenland. We were hospitably welcomed by Governor Langskov,
-who extended us a cordial welcome and the freedom of the city. His
-welcome was in strong contrast to the chilly reception farther up the
-coast, and we felt that we had once more arrived among friends. In
-every way possible, he and his charming family entertained us, and we
-did our best to return their hospitality. That night we gave the entire
-population a treat by showing our choicest films at the schoolhouse.
-
-To thread our way through the unlighted town was a hazardous
-proceeding. Since the way to the schoolhouse was little better than a
-swampy trail, and ankle deep in mud over a considerable portion of its
-length, we had our troubles. Once we nearly walked off the sea-wall;
-again we nearly skidded down an abrupt and rocky hill. But at last we
-arrived at the schoolhouse which was pitch dark, owing to the fact that
-the oil lamps had not yet arrived. After considerable trouble, however,
-with the aid of a feeble flashlight, we managed to set up the projector
-and the screen. Then the population arrived, and the show began.
-
-Being more nearly civilized, these people took far more interest in
-our regular cinema dramas than did the northern Eskimos, in fact these
-people are not really Eskimos at all, but three-quarters European.
-
-After the pictures we went up to the Governor’s house for refreshments.
-There we were delightfully entertained by the Governor, his genial wife
-and his charming daughter, and there we were served with Danish coffee,
-which we all agreed was the most aromatic coffee we had ever drunk.
-Moreover it was enriched with real cow’s cream--the first we had had
-since leaving Sydney. The cow that gave this cream is probably one of
-the northernmost cows in the world, but the cream showed no sign of
-having been affected by the latitude, and it tasted better than it
-used to at home.
-
-The following morning, Sunday, the Commander announced that we had all
-been invited to attend the church service. This, we learned, was to be
-conducted entirely in the Eskimo language, for the people there still
-speak Eskimo though they have lost nearly all other similarity to the
-real Eskimos through their having bred with Europeans.
-
-At ten o’clock we heard the church bells ringing, and the Commander
-called all aboard for those going ashore. A short row put us at the
-dock, and in a few moments we were at the church. The population was
-there arranged in respectful lines awaiting our arrival before entering
-the church--one of many courtesies accorded us in this hospitable
-settlement.
-
-We entered the church. It was not far different from those at home.
-An organ at the left, the ornate altar in the center, a pulpit at
-the right, and behind the altar several oil paintings representing
-Biblical scenes comprised the main part of the furnishings. Garbed in
-his ecclesiastical robes, the Lutheran minister intoned the opening
-chant; then the congregation struck up a hymn, the tune of which I had
-often heard in the old Hill School chapel. But the words had all been
-translated into Eskimo, and a bizarre effect was produced through the
-combination of the familiar music and the outlandish words. We found
-the service most interesting until the sermon. That lasted for nearly
-an hour, and to sit on hard board benches and listen to words, the
-import of which we had no conception, was to say the least trying!
-
-After the service and lunch on the ship, we went to the house of Mr.
-Neilson, the chief trader. There we shared the hospitality of Mr.
-Neilson, and his attractive wife and daughter, this being one of many
-pleasant occasions that we spent in their home.
-
-We had now experienced many of the delightful customs and courtesies
-which so endear the memory of days spent in Greenland, but one desire
-that still remained with us was to attend a Greenland dance such as
-we had seen depicted in the Commander’s films. Great was our delight,
-therefore, when the village lads and lasses the next day accosted us
-with the word “danswa.” Through the interpreter we learned that this
-combination of Eskimo-Danish meant “big dance.”
-
-[Illustration: A good Eskimo puppy.]
-
-[Illustration: Typical winter home of South Greenland Eskimo.]
-
-[Illustration: Eskimo girls of Holsteinborg, Mixture of Danish,
-Spanish, English and Eskimo.]
-
-That evening we put on our best clothes and glossiest sealskin
-boots--the Greenland dancing pump de rigeur. After our toilet was
-complete, we repaired to the cooper’s shop, then utilized as a dance
-hall. We made our way through the assembled crowd, and entered the
-long, low room which was lighted by only three or four smoky candles.
-All decked in their most elaborate finery, the girls were ranged along
-the wall, and a short distance removed from them stood the young
-bucks. Against the white sila-paks of the males, the colorful feminine
-costumes made a pleasing contrast. This costume consisted first of all
-of a pair of elaborately dyed and embroidered sealskin boots, with
-tops of fine linen on which is sewed lace. These reach almost to the
-hips. Tucked into the top of these are tight-fitting sealskin pants
-with a broad, colorful strip of leather running down the front. Around
-the upper part of the body was fitted a bodice lined with eiderdown,
-and over this was a facing of ornate velvet. Around their necks and
-reaching half-way to the waist was a wide, artistically beaded collar
-of which no two were alike in design and workmanship. About their heads
-each wore a ribbon. A red ribbon was worn by the maidens; a blue ribbon
-by the married ones, and a black ribbon by the widows. For one who was
-a mother, but who was not in the last two categories, a green ribbon
-was worn--a later learned fact which explained why some of us were
-greeted with smiling refusals to accept green ribbon in exchange for
-furs and trinkets.
-
-Soon arrived the Governor and his lady and their daughter, as did also
-Mr. Neilson and his family. This was the signal for the dance to begin,
-and the orchestra struck up a lively tune. The orchestra, by the way,
-consisted of a wheezy accordion which seemed reasonably in tune except
-on the very high C’s. This accordion was manipulated by a relay of
-players who spelled each other while each took his turn at dancing.
-
-The dancing itself consisted of a series of gyrations and whirls which
-made the Charleston appear like Walter Camp’s setting up exercises in a
-home for old ladies. It is made up of measures of everything from the
-hornpipe to the hula hula--fragments of dances contributed by sailors
-from the seven seas, and well suited to the cosmopolitan blood of many
-of these children of mischance.
-
-The fun was fast and furious, and the night merrily tripped along
-“on light fantastic toe” until at last the candles guttered in their
-sockets and went out, leaving the party whirling about in the
-darkness. This incident in no way dimmed the enjoyment of the occasion,
-and there was many a close shave and tight squeeze before the party
-broke up.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-STORM AND STRESS AND--HOME!
-
-
-After several days of the gay and intimate life of this “Venice of the
-North,” so-called because of its many waterways and numerous islands,
-and the Latin temperament of its inhabitants, we regretfully set sail
-for Godthaab. There we loaded fuel oil and also visited some very
-interesting Norse ruins dating back to the year 1000 A.D. These were
-sixty miles up a fiord, not far from the spot where Nansen came down
-from the ice-cap after his first crossing of Greenland. On the way to
-these ruins we had a most delightful sail in the midst of the Alpine
-scenery we had observed on our first sighting of Greenland. We spent an
-interesting day rambling about these ruins, after which we returned to
-Godthaab.
-
-[Illustration: View of Godthaab with statue of Hans Egede, first
-missionary to the Eskimos of Greenland.]
-
-[Illustration: Norse church at head of Godthaab Fiord, probably built
-about 1100 A. D.]
-
-Upon our return to Godthaab we were received and delightfully
-entertained by Governor Simony and his wife. There we met many of the
-notables of the settlement, and we also visited the “university,”
-a sort of a glorified high school comprising a gymnasium and an
-academic building.
-
-For several days a frightful hurricane delayed our departure for
-home, but at last came clear weather, and we pointed our nose to the
-southward. We were homeward bound!
-
-[Illustration: In rough weather, off Nova Scotia, homeward bound.]
-
-[Illustration: _Photo Brust._
-
-The _Bowdoin_ detained by the storm at Monhegan.]
-
-Sixteen hours out of Godthaab the barometer took an ominous drop, and
-a heavy wind and sea rolled up from the southeastward. Soon we were
-forced to heave to under storm canvas. The seas were tremendous. Great
-mountains of water came hurtling over the deck nearly sweeping away our
-deck cargo, in fact one barrel of gasolene drifted over the rail, so
-deep was the water on deck, and the boats were also engulfed, held only
-by their stout lashings. Drenched to the skin and chilled to the bone
-we worked at tightening the lashings on the barrels, and soon all was
-secure.
-
-Below decks everything was sadly awry. The hatches were battened down,
-thereby excluding the entrance of all air, and the deck, which had been
-strained in the ice, leaked badly, and trickles of water soaked both
-our bunks and ourselves. To these discomforts was added the noxious
-fumes of coal gas which came from the galley stove. Owing to these
-upsetting conditions all hands became seasick, and taking a trick at
-the wheel became the sheerest agony. When my trick came, I struggled
-into my clothes, donned my oilskins, and made my way to the deck on
-unsteady feet. Staggering over the seething deck I made my way aft and
-took over the wheel from my pallid and gagging colleague. All alone
-I sat there for two hours with the great mounds of water crashing
-over the bow and sweeping aft in a rushing torrent. It was indeed an
-awe-inspiring spectacle, and in spite of my upset insides I could not
-help but admire the grandeur and wild beauty of it all. It brought home
-to me the insignificance of man in the face of nature aroused.
-
-As I looked out over the rolling green of the angry water it somehow
-brought back to me the quiet peace and orderly beauty of the
-close-cropped lawns of The Hill. I contrasted my present woebegone
-state to that of a few months previous when I wandered book in hand in
-the shadow of its stately cloisters, with nature at rest and with no
-responsibility. A sudden wild lurch of the vessel recalled my mind to
-my present task, and I again concentrated my attention on wheel and
-compass.
-
-For three days we fought on through a bleak and stormy sea towards
-Labrador. Those three days were the worst I ever experienced at sea,
-and few of the other members of the crew, even the Commander himself,
-could remember worse, but at last the bold headland of Cape Mugford
-broke the dreary expanse of tumbling billows. This sight of land was
-a tonic to our sea-racked bodies, and with renewed buoyancy we pushed
-on. By nightfall the sea had moderated, and life took on a cheerier
-tinge. Once again the sizzle and sputter of cooking food was sweet
-music to our ears, and for the first time in days there was an inward
-response to the savory odors which came from the galley. Even Doctor
-Koelz emerged from his refuge behind the ice-box and consented to take
-a glass of water, a sure sign that we were once again in calm weather.
-After he recovered his equilibrium, his first thought was for his pet
-goose which he kept in a cage on deck. He dashed up to see how it
-had fared, but alas! the poor goose had been drowned. The Doctor was
-stricken with grief, and all hands joined him in mourning the loss of
-his pet.
-
-After a peaceful night’s run we arrived early the next morning at Jack
-Lane’s Bay and at once made our way up to Abie’s home. There we spent
-the day recuperating and getting thoroughly rested. At dawn on the day
-following we were once more under weigh. A few hours put us in Hopedale
-where we unloaded the troublesome gasolene. Then we headed out through
-Flagstaff Tickle for the open sea and Battle Harbor. During this run I
-experienced one of the finest nights of the entire voyage. It was cold
-with frost forming on the ropes and on the deck. The perfect clarity
-of the sky and the magnificence of the flashing stars along with the
-beautiful full moon, with the wavering aurora in the north formed a
-picture of such brilliance and splendor that I was loath to go below at
-the end of my watch.
-
-The next day we reached Battle Harbor. We had made a fine run down
-The Labrador, but we could not afford to loiter as the season was far
-advanced, and we were two weeks behind schedule. Therefore early the
-next morning we were once again on the way on the next to the last lap
-headed for Sydney. Here we were greeted by a delegation of newspaper
-men and Mr. Hildebrand of the National Geographic Society. They
-welcomed us back to civilization in regal style. But we could not long
-linger in their pleasant company, and in five hours we were once again
-leaving Sydney astern--_headed for Home_!
-
-We were flying on around Scateri wafted southward by a fair wind. But
-as we neared Halifax the wind hauled to the southwest and swept upon us
-with a force unparalleled by any hurricane that even the Commander had
-ever seen. It was far worse than any through which we had previously
-passed. In an astonishingly short time the surface of the sea was a
-series of steep and treacherous ridges which struck us from every side.
-Luckily the mainsail had been taken in before dark, but the foresail
-and jumbo were still up. The Commander immediately despatched Melkon
-and Dick Salmon to take in the jumbo, while he gripped the wheel. I was
-busily engaged in rescuing the loose articles on deck when suddenly
-a towering sea crashed over the bow, and leaving the wheel to me the
-Commander dashed forward to the aid of the two men there. I seized the
-wheel and put her hard over to hold her bow in the wind. The engine was
-running full blast. The force of the wind and the sea was so great that
-the vessel was literally pushed backward and began shipping seas over
-the stern.
-
-This was indeed a most precarious situation with the seas breaking
-aboard from all sides, and seeing that the engine could not hold the
-vessel in the wind against the seas, I eased her off a few points to
-relieve the grim danger of being pooped,--a danger almost unprecedented
-for a vessel heading into the seas. This easing off had the desired
-effect, and as the boys had taken in the staysail, I was able to fill
-away the foresail, and we were soon bounding along again in comparative
-safety. It took all my strength to hold that bucking wheel against the
-terrific forces striving to throw it up. Suddenly the cover of the
-wheelbox was lifted out from under me by the force of the wind and went
-flying off to leeward, and as the deck was heeled at such a terrific
-angle that it was practically impossible to stand on it with the seas
-breaking around my knees, I got into the wheelbox and thus managed to
-keep going.
-
-Soon the Commander, Dick and Melkon returned from forward, and we
-settled down to ride it out as best we might. Suddenly an ominous
-slatting sounded through the shrill scream of the wind in the
-rigging. Holding our hands before our faces to shield them from the
-cutting spray, we fought our way forward to investigate. A hasty
-glance revealed that our foresail had been blown loose from the gaff
-laceline. This was a dangerous situation as the sail was likely to
-thrash to pieces. The Commander immediately gave the word to call all
-hands. In a moment Robbie came piling up from the cabin, and under his
-direction we started to haul down the sail. The Commander held the
-vessel in the wind while we labored. Five of us seized the downhaul,
-but we were ineffectually dragged back and forth across the deck by the
-terrible thrashing of the sail. At last I managed to catch a turn over
-a belaying pin, and then inch by inch we swayed it down. Luck was with
-us, and down it came without tearing. We were greatly relieved to have
-this important sail safe on deck with no further damage than the broken
-laceline. It required fast work to save it. This filled out an active
-and exciting evening.
-
-Now the only reasonable course of action was to heave to and wait for
-the storm to abate, as it could not long blow with the fury it now
-displayed. But the little _Bowdoin_ was slowly driven out to sea, since
-even with her engine going at full speed she was no match for the force
-of the gale. There she was flung about through the night, and there was
-little rest for our tired watch.
-
-Morning at last dawned, and with it came sunlight and calmer weather,
-and by the time we again came on deck the vessel had resumed her
-course. The sparkling miles flew by, and before dark we were off Cape
-Sable. All day we had held our own in a race with the _Peary_, which
-had joined us off Halifax after the storm. But at Cape Sable the wind
-fell calm, and she soon forged ahead and was lost in the night.
-
-All that night and all the next day the _Bowdoin_ ploughed steadily
-onward, and at four o’clock the next afternoon Matinicus Rock, the
-farthest outpost of Maine, hove in sight, shortly to be followed by our
-goal--Monhegan Island. Not long afterwards we rounded the Island, and
-just before sundown we dropped anchor in Dead Man’s Cove.
-
-We had hoped to make an early start on Saturday morning for Wiscasset
-where we were expected by many of our friends and well-wishers. But at
-three o’clock in the morning we were awakened by the shrill scream of
-a storm humming through the rigging. This storm later developed into
-the great gale of October 10th, known to every fisherman on the coast.
-We did not, however, immediately despair of being able to make the run
-to Wiscasset. When we roused out at breakfast time the wind had shown
-no sign of abating, and one look out to sea sufficed to demonstrate
-that any thought of departure that day was but an idle wish. I put my
-head above the level of the hatch and glanced about. The vessel was
-wallowing in a heavy swell which came rolling into Dead Man’s Cove
-from the west. The anchor chain stood out as taut and stiff as a bar
-of iron. The vessel’s stern tailed dangerously close to the wicked
-rocks astern which reared their ugly heads through a wall of breaking
-seas and flying spume. As the morning wove on, the storm increased
-in violence and our situation became precarious. Twice the sturdy
-fishermen of Monhegan bucked their way out from the inner harbor to
-warn us that our anchorage would soon become untenable, and it behooved
-us to get out while we still could. Eventually our stern approached
-within a few feet of the rocks, and the Commander decided we should
-have to go around the island into the inner harbor. To take the vessel
-out in the teeth of that roaring hurricane with a bent propeller such
-as we had, was a feat not lightly to be undertaken.
-
-But as it was imperative, the Commander reluctantly gave the order
-to up anchor. Inch by inch our powerful winch brought the chain
-aboard. Soon it was up and down and the engine was started. Then a
-few more revolutions of the windlass and we were clear. The engine
-telegraph stood at full speed and yet the vessel barely moved. We
-watched breathlessly. Would she make it? Slowly the gap between us and
-the rocks widened. The vessel plunged her bow deep in the seas. All
-undaunted the little _Bowdoin_ crept to windward. At last we rounded
-the outermost cape and with a sigh of relief the Commander put up the
-helm and we fairly blew to leeward around the remaining stretch of
-coast.
-
-In a few moments we were safe once more in the inner harbor and the
-shrieking seventy-five mile an hour gale was powerless to tear us from
-our moorings. We were indeed fortunate to make a safe harbor as many a
-great ship disappeared in that hurricane and was never seen again. From
-all parts of the Atlantic seaboard reports rained in of shipwreck and
-disaster.
-
-All that day and all the next the gale raged with unmitigated severity.
-On Sunday, however, the barometer began to rise and patches of blue sky
-showed through the leaden pale overhead. These signs that the weather
-would soon be on the mend were welcome to all hands, from the crew to
-the visitors. It appeared probable that a start might be made Monday
-morning. As it would still be rough, the ladies who had joined us at
-Battle Harbor were requested to go up to Wiscasset on the _Peary_ that
-they might be spared the discomforts of a trip on the smaller vessel.
-
-Monday morning arrived and the _Peary_ gave a long toot on her siren
-and pulled out from the dock. She passed quite close to us and we
-observed that her decks were nearly deserted. Where were the ladies? In
-a few moments we knew. Boat after boat appeared, loaded to the gunwales
-with their numbers. Not more than a handful had gone on the _Peary_;
-contrary to all instructions they had refused to go on our consort,
-and insisted on going on the _Bowdoin_. We stared aghast at their
-temerity to disobey the Commander’s request. They came aboard with an
-air of assurance which showed that a well-planned conspiracy had been
-launched, but their disobedience was left unnoticed, strange to say. I
-think perhaps it would be more correct to those who have had experience
-with the wily sex to say, “As might have been expected.” A good many of
-them were soon seasick, but in a short time we had come into the quiet
-waters of Boothbay Harbor. Up the green bordered channels we picked our
-way, our decks crowded with cheering visitors. Slowly we reeled off the
-miles until at last we entered the Sheepscot, and then--then with flags
-flying we proceeded up the river, and at last amidst the roar of steam
-whistles and the cheers of the multitude assembled on the shore, the
-Commander uttered those long awaited words: “Let go.”
-
-Soon the visitors had departed, and we were left alone on our
-sturdy little ship. We had sailed six thousand miles, crossed the
-Arctic Circle twice, fought through the dread reaches of Melville
-Bay, launched our planes over the unknown Arctic, and returned all
-unscathed. Now all was ended: “Timakeza,” as the Eskimo would say.
-
-Two days later, as my train rumbled over the bridge, I looked out and
-saw the little _Bowdoin_ lying quiet and peaceful in the tranquil
-waters of Wiscasset, her long voyage over. As she receded into the
-distance I recalled the happy days spent under the shadow of her masts,
-and in my heart the hope was born that once again I might tread her
-deck and feel the long ocean roll beneath my feet--outward bound!
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
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-
- Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
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-
- Illustrations have been moved to the nearest paragraph breaks. In some
- cases, these breaks are on different pages. The List of
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-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BOY’S-EYE VIEW OF THE
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Boy’s-Eye View of the Arctic, by Kennett Longley Rawson</p>
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: A Boy’s-Eye View of the Arctic</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Kennett Longley Rawson</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Contributor: Donald B. MacMillan</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: April 27, 2022 [eBook #67944]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
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-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BOY’S-EYE VIEW OF THE ARCTIC ***</div>
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-<div class="figcenter hide"><img src="images/coversmall.jpg" width="40%" alt="" /></div>
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-<h1>A BOY&#8217;S-EYE VIEW OF THE ARCTIC</h1>
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-<p class="center"><span class="large">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">NEW YORK &middot; BOSTON &middot; CHICAGO &middot; DALLAS<br />
-ATLANTA &middot; SAN FRANCISCO</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="large">MACMILLAN &amp; CO., <span class="smcap">Limited</span></span></p>
-
-<p class="center">LONDON &middot; BOMBAY &middot; CALCUTTA<br />
-MELBOURNE</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="large">THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, <span class="smcap">Ltd.</span></span></p>
-
-<p class="center">TORONTO</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_0"></span>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_frontispiece.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Kennett L. Rawson, June, 1925.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_titlepage.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<p><span class="xlarge">A BOY&#8217;S-EYE VIEW<br />
-
-OF<br />
-
-THE ARCTIC</span></p>
-
-<p>BY<br />
-
-<span class="large">KENNETT LONGLEY RAWSON</span><br />
-
-CABIN-BOY OF THE <i>BOWDOIN</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Introduction by</i><br />
-
-<span class="large"><span class="smcap">Commander Donald B. MacMillan</span></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="antiqua">New York</span><br />
-
-<span class="large">THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br />
-
-1926<br />
-
-<i>All rights reserved</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">Copyright, 1926,<br />
-
-
-<span class="smcap">By</span> THE MACMILLAN COMPANY,<br />
-
-Set up and electrotyped.<br />
-
-Published October, 1926.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><i>Printed in the United States of America by</i><br />
-
-THE FERRIS PRINTING COMPANY, NEW YORK</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center"><span class="large"><span class="smcap">To My Mother</span><br />
-
-
-Bravest of them all.</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>Illustrated with photographs taken by the author,
-and others loaned through the courtesy of Commander
-Donald B. MacMillan; National Geographic
-Society, taken by Maynard Owen Williams,
-photographer of the Expedition; Ralph P. Robinson,
-Mate of the <i>Bowdoin</i>; Onnig D. Melkon,
-moving picture photographer of the Expedition;
-Alfred Brust, Staff Photographer of the <i>Boston
-Herald</i>, and George Warren Lord, Staff Photographer
-of the <i>Boston Post</i>.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">[ix]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">INTRODUCTION</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">TO the lecturer the introduction is the most
-interesting part of his lecture, in that it is
-generally so complimentary that his feeling of
-guilt and a sense of his own inferiority mars
-somewhat his whole discourse. My cabin boy,
-Kennett Rawson, suffers no handicap in this respect.
-His work is finished. Whatever I may
-write will not affect its status. His narrative
-stands as a testimonial of the influence of good
-and much reading. Very few will believe that
-such language is natural for a fourteen-year-old
-boy. But we knew &#8220;Ken&#8221; in the forecastle of
-the little <i>Bowdoin</i>, and teachers at Hill School
-who have watched his progress for two years
-can assure you that the book is his own.</p>
-
-<p>How fortunate that a boy in his early teens
-could visit the scenes of our early explorers, the
-headquarters of the great Peary, who, by his
-work, has placed before American youth the
-finest example of persistency, determination, and
-clean grit in all Arctic history. What a privilege
-for young Rawson to stand where the immortal
-Elisha Kent Kane stood with lifted ramrod<span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">[x]</span>
-and fluttering cap lining, the first to step
-foot on historical Littleton Island, and to enter
-the Basin which bears his name!</p>
-
-<p>From the heights about Etah he has looked
-across to the ice-covered hills of Ellesmere Land
-and Cape Sabine where Greely and his men lay
-dying in 1884 and where Peary fought a losing
-fight in 1900-1902. He has seen the last of the
-<i>S. S. Polaris</i>, which steamed farther north than
-ship ever steamed, now strewn about the beach
-rusting, rotting away. But memories of her
-Commander, the most enthusiastic of all Arctic
-explorers, will always live.</p>
-
-<p>Something more than pure sentiment. No
-boy can look upon such things, can dwell upon
-the deeds of such men as Kane, Hayes, Hall,
-Greely and Peary, without standing a little more
-erect, without visualizing his own future and
-determining to have that future count for something
-beyond material gain.</p>
-
-<p>With mingled feelings of apprehension, doubt
-as to the wisdom of my decision, I signed Kennett
-Rawson on the ship&#8217;s papers as &#8220;Cabin boy,
-Chicago, age 14,&#8221; the youngest white lad ever
-to go into the Far North.</p>
-
-<p>Under starlit skies and unruffled sea; in the
-semi-darkness of his 10-11 watch, I watched him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xi">[xi]</span>
-as he stood at the wheel &#8220;giving her a spoke&#8221;
-now and then to keep her on her course, his small
-sheepskin-covered form outlined against the
-black of the ocean. In howling winds and with
-the <i>Bowdoin</i> plunging and bucking head seas,
-decks awash and life lines stretched, the same
-huddled form, eyes on the compass card, doing
-his best, with never trace of quit, I, a shipmate
-for four months, knew him. Young Rawson
-made good. For that reason he goes back again
-with me in the Northland one week from to-day,
-back to the big grey hills of Labrador with their
-outlying, breaking reefs, to the inner reaches of
-its green bays, to its simple, sincere people; to
-Greenland, once the home of the Norsemen, now
-the land of the Dane and smiling half-breed; to
-Baffin Island, the Meta Incognita of Martin
-Frobisher, the objective of many an old New
-England whaling ship.</p>
-
-<p>May he enjoy this fourth cruise of the <i>Bowdoin</i>
-as he did her third. &#8220;The thoughts of
-youth are long, long thoughts,&#8221; and when those
-thoughts or dreams are realized, doubly fortunate
-is youth.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Donald B. MacMillan.</span></p>
-
-<p>Freeport, Maine.<br />
-June 12, 1926.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xii">[xii]</span></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiii">[xiii]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-<tr><td class="tdr" colspan="3"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td><span class="smcap">Introduction</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_ix"> ix</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr"><small>CHAPTER</small></td><td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">I.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Here Endeth the Lesson</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1"> 1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">II.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Under Weigh</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_14"> 14</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">III.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In the Land of Adventure</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_22"> 22</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">A Truly Glorious Fourth and Some
-Very Real Fishing</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_32"> 32</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">V.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Through the Pack to Disaster</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_41"> 41</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Heroes of Hopedale</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_49"> 49</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In Eskimo Land and in Trouble</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_56"> 56</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Greenland!</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_66"> 66</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IX.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Ice and More Ice</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_76"> 76</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">X.</td><td> <span class="smcap">We Take the Air</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_89"> 89</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">My Farthest North</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_107"> 107</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">We Break Into Society</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_115"> 115</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">Storm and Stress and&mdash;Home!</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_130"> 130</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiv">[xiv]</span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xv">[xv]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-
-<tr><td>Kennett L. Rawson, June, 1925</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_0"> <i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr" colspan="2"><small>FACING</small><br />
-<small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>The journey of the <i>Bowdoin</i>, 1925 (map)</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_1"> 1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>The <i>Bowdoin</i> and her crew, Wiscasset, Maine, June 20, 1925.<br />
-John Jaynes, Engineer; Commander Donald B. MacMillan;<br />
-Ralph P. Robinson, Mate; Kennett L. Rawson,<br />
-Cabin Boy; John Reinartz, short wave radio expert;<br />
-Martin Vorce, Cook; Lieutenant Benjamin Rigg, U. S.<br />
-Coast and Geodetic Survey; Onnig D. Melkon, moving<br />
-picture photographer</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_12"> 12</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Outward Bound, June, 1925</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_20"> 20</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>The <i>Bowdoin</i> leaving the dock at Wiscasset</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_20"> 20</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Rawson, MacMillan at the wheel, and Dr. Grosvenor. On<br />
-way to Sydney</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_27"> 27</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&#8220;Yonder beneath the North Star lies our destination, Lad.&#8221;</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_27"> 27</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Commander MacMillan, Dr. Grosvenor and Dr. Grenfell,<br />
-Battle Harbor</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_27"> 27</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Maynard Williams (left), photographer, National Geographic<br />
-Society; Lieutenant Benjamin Rigg (right), U. S. Coast<br />
-and Geodetic Survey</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_61"> 61</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>The <i>Bowdoin</i> passing an iceberg off west coast of Greenland</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_63"> 63</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>The <i>Bowdoin</i> caught in a nip, at Melville Bay</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_63"> 63</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Commander MacMillan with an Eskimo child; in flying costume;<br />
-in the ice barrel</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_90"> 90</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Brother John&#8217;s Glacier and Alida Lake, Etah, North Greenland</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_90"> 90</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>The <i>Peary</i></td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_94"> 94</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Expedition plane at stern of <i>Bowdoin</i></td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_94"> 94</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Launching first plane at Etah</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_95"> 95</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Eskimo kiddie with mother&#8217;s coat on</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_104"> 104</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Even Eskimo boys of Ig-loo-da-houny have a sweet tooth</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_104"> 104</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xvi">[xvi]</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>In-you-gee-to makes a coil of rawhide line out of skin of<br />
-which he is justly proud</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_105"> 105</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>The only Eskimo family in Etah</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_105"> 105</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>The <i>Bowdoin</i> on the rocks in North Greenland</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_118"> 118</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Head of 2000-pound walrus killed at Etah, North Greenland</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_118"> 118</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Oomiak: Eskimo women&#8217;s boat, made of sealskins</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_119"> 119</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>South Greenland kayak</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_119"> 119</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>At Sukkertoppen</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_122"> 122</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Dick Salmon with large cod jigged while stormbound in Godthaab<br />
-Fiord</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_123"> 123</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>A good Eskimo puppy</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_126"> 126</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Typical winter home of South Greenland Eskimo</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_126"> 126</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Eskimo girls of Holsteinborg, mixture of Danish, Spanish,<br />
-English and Eskimo</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_126"> 126</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>View of Godthaab with statue of Hans Egede, first missionary<br />
-to the Eskimos of Greenland</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_130"> 130</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Norse Church at head of Godthaab Fiord, probably built<br />
-about 1100 A. D.</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_130"> 130</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>In rough weather off Nova Scotia, homeward bound</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_131"> 131</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>The <i>Bowdoin</i> delayed by the storm at Monhegan</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_131"> 131</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="ph2">A BOY&#8217;S-EYE VIEW OF THE ARCTIC</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i001.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">The journey of the <i>Bowdoin</i>, 1925.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph2">A BOY&#8217;S-EYE VIEW OF THE<br />
-ARCTIC</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">I<br />
-
-
-<small>HERE ENDETH THE LESSON</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">ONE warm June evening I was sitting up in
-my room supposedly studying, but actually
-all thoughts of study had long since gone
-where most good resolutions go. Who can study
-on a mild June evening anyway? I can study almost
-any other time, but on such occasions my
-thoughts go fluie, and I am off to Treasure
-Island or with Jules Verne. I was somewhere in
-those latitudes when a rap sounded on my door.
-I thought just retribution had overtaken me in
-the form of a master; so I opened a text book,
-scattered a few papers about for realistic effect
-and then went to the door.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Long distance for you at the exchange,&#8221; said
-the messenger, who after all was not a master.</p>
-
-<p>I slipped into my bathrobe and reported to the
-master on the hall.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sir, long distance wants me at the exchange,&#8221;
-I said.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span>&#8220;All right, here&#8217;s your permission slip. Get
-it signed when you are through. And Rawson&mdash;don&#8217;t
-loaf on your way back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, sir,&#8221; I said, and with this parting injunction
-I was off.</p>
-
-<p>I took down the receiver, got my connection
-and yelled &#8220;hello.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hello, Ken, that you?&#8221; It was Dad, and
-there was a note of excitement in his voice. &#8220;Do
-you want to go to the Arctic with MacMillan
-this summer?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I leaned against the panel. Was I still with
-Jules Verne?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What, Dad? Say it again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Dad laughed. &#8220;Do you want to go to the
-Arctic with MacMillan this summer?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;With MacMillan? With MacMillan?&#8221; I
-gasped! What was he trying to put over? Well,
-at last it got across, and it didn&#8217;t take me long
-to say yes. He then told me how it all happened,
-and my surprise and wonderment increased at
-every word. At last he had to hang up, and I
-went back to my room in a haze. I could
-hardly grasp the significance of what I had just
-heard. A few minutes before I was merely a
-student at The Hill; now I was an explorer.
-Well of course not quite that, but something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
-along that line, and anyway I was going on
-an Arctic expedition and that&#8217;s all that mattered.</p>
-
-<p>I returned to my hall and reported to the
-master in charge.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where is your slip?&#8221; he said rather shortly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My slip? I forgot to have it signed. Oh, sir,
-MacMillan and I are going exploring in the
-Arctic regions!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The master looked incredulous, but as I still
-retained the air of being partly sane, he began
-to show real interest.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How did you happen to choose MacMillan?&#8221;
-he queried.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, sir, I didn&#8217;t mean that, I meant that
-Commander MacMillan is going to take me
-with him this summer,&#8221; I replied, rather embarrassed
-by my outbreak.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, just how did you get in on a thing
-like this?&#8221; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;For several summers I have sailed,&#8221; I said,
-&#8220;and I like the sea. Last summer I was engaged
-in the scientific work of the Bureau of Fisheries
-on a little schooner. We made a number of
-trips off shore, and I gained quite a bit of
-experience. I liked the work so well that I told
-father that I thought I should like to be an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
-explorer instead of a banker&mdash;father&#8217;s business.
-A friend of father&#8217;s, Mr. Joseph MacDonald,
-being acquainted with these facts
-and also with Commander MacMillan, conceived
-the idea that I ought to go on the forthcoming
-expedition with the Commander. I fear
-he must have strained a point in telling of my
-qualifications for a berth on the ship, but he
-finally persuaded the Commander to take me.
-After this he broke the good news to father.
-Then the two of them had the difficult task of
-convincing Mother that I ought to go. My
-mother is like most mothers, only a little more
-so, and it was quite a job to show her that the
-undertaking was not too dangerous and that it
-would be a valuable experience. She was finally
-won over, and so that&#8217;s how I am going.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said the master, &#8220;some people do
-seem to have all the luck. Go to your room
-quietly, and remember that we&#8217;re still keeping
-school around here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, sir,&#8221; I said, and I went out. He had
-forgotten all about the slip!</p>
-
-<p>If I worked hard, I had a chance of getting
-exempt from my examinations at the end of the
-term. That meant I could go home seven days
-earlier than otherwise. When I had calmed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-down, I made up my mind that no dust was
-going to collect on my books from then on. Too
-much depended on my plugging; so I tried to
-put away the thoughts of nice arctic coolness on
-a hot June night and bury myself in my books.</p>
-
-<p>The days went quickly by. They were happy
-days filled with hard work between which came
-rosy dreams of the future&mdash;the prelude to the
-great adventure. But at last came the important
-day&mdash;the day on which the list of exemptions
-from examinations was to be posted. I parked
-myself outside the Dean&#8217;s office anxiously
-awaiting that list. No vacation ever had seemed
-so far away, and the minutes were ninety
-seconds long. At last a figure appeared from
-within, armed with the list and a handful of
-thumbtacks. There was a wild mob there by
-that time, but I was in the front row. I ran my
-eye down the alphabet. My fate was before
-me. It was there&mdash;my name. Exempt in
-everything! With a yelp of joy I rushed for
-my room feeling for my trunk key on the way.
-Somehow I got my trunk packed, did the things
-that had to be done before leaving, and that
-night at dinner I had everything ready for an
-early departure in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>The next day, amid the good wishes of my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
-somewhat envious school friends, I bade farewell
-to The Hill and started for home. There
-I would have a few days with my family and
-plenty of time to select my outfit before going
-on to Wiscasset, Maine, to join the expedition.
-On the train I did not buy any magazines. I
-just sat there and shot polar bears and dodged
-icebergs; and what a grand and glorious feeling
-it was!</p>
-
-<p>The family were at the train to meet me, and
-we all had so much to say that nobody could
-wait for the other person to finish. Mother
-was so happy that I could go and so unhappy
-because I would not be home for the vacation,
-that she didn&#8217;t know whether to laugh or cry.
-Father was so enthusiastic that he wanted to go
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>I had about a week before joining the expedition;
-this time I employed in getting my equipment
-ready. I needed all manner of things, and
-without a list which the Commander had furnished,
-we should not have known what to get.
-Oilskins and rubber boots for wet weather were
-very necessary, as were all sorts of warm things
-such as knit socks, heavy underwear, flannel
-shirts, woolen trousers and a sheepskin coat, to
-name but a few of the items. I also laid in a big<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
-stock of five-and-ten-cent-store trinkets for trading
-with the Eskimos. The Commander had
-suggested rings, necklaces, beads, perfume, soap
-and various novelties, most of which certainly
-went like hot cakes with the Eskimos.</p>
-
-<p>At last the day arrived on which I must leave
-home for the last time until my return from the
-north, probably in a few months, but very possibly
-not for several years, maybe never. The
-Arctic keeps one guessing if it does nothing else.
-One never can tell what successes or disasters the
-next day holds.</p>
-
-<p>The family were not coming east with me
-now, as it was necessary for me to go on a few
-days early to help in the work of preparation.
-The family, however, were coming on for the
-official farewell which was not to be until a week
-later. On my way to Wiscasset, where the
-<i>Bowdoin</i> was being outfitted, I stopped in New
-York and joined forces with Dick Salmon, another
-member of the expedition. We continued
-our journey by steamer to Portland and
-there we caught a local to Wiscasset. The
-afternoon of the fifteenth, the day on which
-we were supposed to arrive, found us bumping
-along and wishing that the train would make
-more speed. But after what seemed years, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
-end of our trip hove in sight as we suddenly
-rounded a curve. With beating hearts we gathered
-our luggage and prepared to disembark.
-The train halted just opposite where the <i>Bowdoin</i>
-was anchored, and we stared with interest
-and admiration at our new home, for such she
-proved to be for the next four months. We
-hailed a passing launch and her skipper put us
-aboard our ship. We at once reported for duty
-to the mate, Mr. Robinson, who was in charge
-of the loading. He seemed rather surprised
-when he saw me, and he said, &#8220;Why, I was told
-you were a great, big fellow weighing a hundred
-and sixty pounds.&#8221; As I fell some pounds short
-of his expectation, I told him that somebody
-must have been kidding him. I think we both
-knew who it was. I had strong suspicions, anyway.
-He at last decided that if I could work,
-that would help matters quite a bit. So he told
-me to be ready for work early next morning and
-meanwhile to make myself at home and get
-acquainted with the members of the expedition
-who already had arrived.</p>
-
-<p>I took a look around. The deck was piled
-high with boxes and barrels; the running rigging
-was all askew on the deck&mdash;in short, chaos
-reigned everywhere. This was far different<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-from what I had pictured, and I decided right
-then and there that when it comes to actual work,
-getting the ship north was no more of a job than
-loading it. I also saw several dishevelled workmen
-busily engaged in stowing the cargo in various
-parts of the ship. I inquired from the mate
-who they were, and my disillusionment was
-complete when he told me they were two scientific
-experts with national reputations. I had
-always thought of scientists as not quite human,
-people who sat around looking into instruments
-and writing elaborate reports. But seeing them
-pitch in and work like normal human beings did
-much to restore my confidence that they were
-real he-men.</p>
-
-<p>I looked the ship over from stem to stern. She
-certainly is a beauty with lines almost as clean-cut
-as a yacht. But her timbering would make
-a yacht&#8217;s look like a melon crate. She has the
-most massive timbers of any ship I ever saw,
-and I think I may safely say that she is the
-strongest small vessel in existence. Another very
-excellent feature for Arctic work is the way the
-hull is shaped. It is so rounded that the ship
-rises when squeezed by the ice. This is the only
-way that an Arctic vessel should be built; as no
-matter how strong the vessel may be, she cannot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
-withstand the pressure of heavy ice unless she is
-made to rise. The bow also is sloping, so that
-she may rise a short way on a cake of ice and
-crush it with her weight. At the point of impact
-it is armored with a heavy iron plate to give
-additional strength. A rather unusual feature
-for Arctic vessels is also incorporated in the
-<i>Bowdoin</i>, namely, having the vessel reach its full
-beam a short way abaft the mainmast which, in
-a schooner, is quite near the stern. This serves
-to shunt the ice away from the propeller, and
-anything to protect the propeller is very helpful,
-as the breaking of a propeller in the ice is a disaster
-second only to having the ship crushed;
-without strong means of propulsion one cannot
-get very far, and sails are a poor substitute for a
-propeller. She has a semi-Diesel engine which
-will run on anything from whale oil to kerosene.
-If we ran out of fuel in the north, we would
-literally &#8220;harpoon our way home,&#8221; to quote the
-Commander. In spite of all these features, she
-is only a small vessel, eighty-eight feet over all,
-fifteen tons net. She is, I believe, the smallest
-vessel ever to enter the Arctic.</p>
-
-<p>By the time we had finished our inspection, it
-was quitting time, and our scientist-stevedores
-knocked off work and began to prepare to go<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
-ashore. Dick and I soon became acquainted with
-them. They were Lieutenant Benjamin Rigg, of
-the Coast and Geodetic Survey, and John Reinartz,
-famous short wave radio expert; our hydrographer
-and radio operator, respectively, both
-fine fellows, and we made a congenial crowd at
-the inn that evening. We four were the first
-ones to arrive, with the exception of the mate,
-the cook and the engineer. John Jaynes, the
-engineer, was another very fine fellow, and we
-all liked John, as we soon came to call him. In
-a few days we were all calling each other by our
-first names and felt as if we had known each
-other all our lives. John certainly could make
-an engine behave when it didn&#8217;t want to, and he
-also could render valuable aid and advice on
-nearly everything.</p>
-
-<p>The cook had gone home for a couple of days
-to wind up his affairs, and he did not return until
-the day following. The mate, &#8220;Robbie,&#8221; as
-we soon called him, was a real mate. His job
-was to get things done in a hurry, and he did it.
-But in addition to his capability as a mate, he
-was a real fellow, and no one had more of the
-respect and friendship of the expedition than
-Robbie. The Commander was still in Boston
-supervising the preparation of the <i>Peary</i>, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-ship that was to carry the naval airplanes and
-aviators. He was not scheduled to arrive in
-Wiscasset till Wednesday night; so we had several
-days before his arrival. The rest of the
-personnel were coming up with the <i>Peary</i> from
-Boston.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i012.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="illoright"><i>Photo Brust.</i></span></p>
-<p class="caption">The <i>Bowdoin</i> and her crew, Wiscasset, Maine, June 20, 1925.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<p> &nbsp; &nbsp; <b>Left to right: John Jaynes, Engineer; Commander Donald B. MacMillan; Ralph<br />
-P. Robinson, Mate; Kennett L. Rawson, Cabin Boy; John Reinartz, short wave radio<br />
-expert; Martin Vorce, Cook; Lieutenant Benjamin Rigg, U. S. Coast and Geodetic<br />
-Survey; Onnig D. Melkon, moving picture photographer.</b></p></div></div>
-
-<p>After a pleasant evening and a good sleep at
-the local inn, the sleeping accommodations on
-the vessel not yet being arranged, Dick and I repaired
-to the <i>Bowdoin</i> early the next morning.
-My illusions about life on the bounding billow
-had undergone a change since I had seen scientists
-acting as stevedores. But it was still somewhat
-of a surprise when the mate ordered Dick
-and me to go ashore and sort and remove the
-sprouts from thirty bushels of potatoes that were
-lying in a neighboring storehouse. We spread
-the potatoes on the dock under a broiling sun
-and set to work. How good an iceberg would
-have looked at that moment! Some ten bushels
-and five blisters later, as I attempted to
-straighten up to see if my back had assumed a
-permanent wave, the thought struck me that
-Gareth scrubbing pots in King Arthur&#8217;s kitchen
-had nothing on me except that he gained immortality
-while I was getting an awful pain in the
-back. But the joke was on him; he had no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-Arctic expedition as a reward for his pains. At
-last, however, the potatoes were divorced from
-their sprouts and carefully resacked. We both
-decided that our shipmates should never know
-how much unbargained-for sweat they were consuming
-with their tubers. The mate, who later
-appeared, seemed to be satisfied with our labors,
-and this fact greatly reassured me. Thus, as the
-old ship&#8217;s log might read: &#8220;This day came in
-with bliss and worked around into blisters. So
-ends this day.&#8221; This, with the exception of a
-very pleasant dance which the delightfully hospitable
-Sewalls gave that evening. Bliss again!</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br />
-
-
-<small>UNDER WEIGH</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE next day was to be a very interesting
-one. In the first place the Commander
-was coming in the evening, and secondly the
-cook was arriving. The time-honored tradition
-on shipboard is that next in importance to the
-captain comes the cook. My stomach was in
-full accord with this theory, and I was anxious
-to see the arbiter of its destiny. As soon as
-I got to know him I knew my trust had not been
-misplaced. Martin Vorce was the best cook and
-had the finest disposition I ever saw wrapped
-up in human form. There is no theory either
-about the cook&#8217;s having the hardest work on the
-ship; it is straight fact. Mart was always on
-the job, &#8220;blow high, blow low.&#8221; He had several
-bouts with refractory dishes in rough weather,
-but he always came out on top.</p>
-
-<p>After the excitement incident to his arrival
-had died down, we were aware of the approach
-of a vessel. At first we thought it was the
-<i>Peary</i>, but as she was not due till the next day<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
-we decided it could not be she. In a short time
-we saw that it was a navy tug loaded to the
-gunwales with gasolene. She drew alongside
-the dock and began discharging her cargo. First
-a mound of gasolene cases that seemed as big as
-the great pyramid of Cheops was hoisted out;
-this was followed by a fleet of barrels, and to
-cap the climax three Liberty engines made their
-appearance. I thought if all that was stowed
-aboard the <i>Bowdoin</i> there would be no room for
-the rest of us. But beyond doubt, enough of
-those cases would go aboard to keep me on the
-move for some time. My prophecy was true.
-The remainder of that day and all the next I
-walked back and forth across a narrow plank
-accompanied by the inevitable case. Sometimes
-the case and I teetered dangerously near the
-edge; at others we made an uneventful voyage.
-I almost hoped I might slip, for in my reeking
-condition I felt a good swim would have been
-worth ten years of my life. But I avoided this
-longed for disgrace through gyrations worthy of
-a gymnast, and while there was no crowd to
-cheer me on, I had the satisfaction of seeing the
-mound slowly diminish.</p>
-
-<p>After work was over for the day I became
-painfully aware that loading gasolene had discovered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-a number of tender muscles of which
-school athletics had never made me aware. But
-this condition did not prevent my looking forward
-with zest to a dance that was to be given
-in honor of the High School Graduation. This
-was to be held that evening, and the outstanding
-feature of the graduation was that the graduates
-were to receive their diplomas from the hand
-of the Commander, who had especially cut short
-his stay in Boston in order to be present.</p>
-
-<p>With the big event of the evening in mind,
-we went below and holy-stoned our gasolene-soaked
-hides religiously. Then we turned to
-and attacked our first meal on shipboard, and
-we vowed that if all the other meals were as
-good, we should never have cause to complain.</p>
-
-<p>After we had waded through our food, we
-started for the High School. A short walk
-landed us there, and we nosed our way through
-the mob gathered about the entrance. As we
-entered, the exercises were just beginning, and
-the Commander was on the point of entering
-into his presentation speech. We listened to his
-speech and the ones following with interest
-mingled with impatience. Finally the graduates
-were graduated, and the dance was on. Then
-came our long awaited opportunity to meet the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>
-Commander. The mate led us over and presented
-us. I had never before seen the Commander,
-but I had heard enough about him to
-whet my curiosity to a degree where I wanted
-to know the man from the myth. From the
-moment I met him I knew that I was serving
-under a Commander who was a real leader and
-a man among men. This impression has never
-left me, but has since been constantly strengthened.</p>
-
-<p>After we had chatted together for a few minutes,
-with characteristic good humor, the Commander
-told the mate to see that we met all of
-the sweet young things and had plenty of dancing,
-for it would be some time before we danced
-again. We accepted the Commander&#8217;s suggestion
-as a sacred duty, and obeyed it to the letter.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The morning after the night before&#8221; was
-rather a painful period, as dancing until the
-midnight oil is low and then arising at the crack
-of dawn does not incline one to rhapsodize over
-the sunrise. But that morning, without the aid
-of our usual battery of alarm clocks, we were
-awakened by the shrill blast of a steamer&#8217;s siren.
-We all tumbled into our clothes as fast as our
-sleep-numbed bodies could make the grade. The
-first person on deck yelled, &#8220;Here comes the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-<i>Peary</i>!&#8221; True enough, in another moment we
-could make out the white lettering against the
-black bow. We gave a lusty cheer as she sidled
-up to the dock, and then stood by to make fast
-her lines. In a few moments she was safely
-moored, and we were swarming aboard to examine
-our companion of the long cruise.</p>
-
-<p>The first objects to attract our attention were
-the three navy airplanes on the after deck. On
-these three canvas-swathed forms hung all our
-hopes. If they failed, it would mean sure death
-for their intrepid occupants. In their undress
-condition they did not look very imposing, but
-in my imagination I already heard the roar of
-the mighty engines tuning up in the lee of some
-sheltering icepan. I visioned the flash of the
-white foam as they skimmed along for the take-off,
-and I saw them recede into the western sky
-with an ever-diminishing whirr of engines, outward
-bound on those flights from which we
-hoped so much. Again I saw these proud argosies
-of the air, this time returning triumphant
-with the secret of the ages disclosed. However,
-the cook&#8217;s sudden cry for breakfast, mingled
-with the savory odors of bacon and coffee effectually
-dissipated all this sort of dreaming.</p>
-
-<p>After breakfast we got acquainted with our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
-shipmates on board the <i>Peary</i>. There were
-eight naval aviators under the leadership of
-Commander Richard E. Byrd, who has since
-distinguished himself in his daring flight over
-the Polar Sea, and there were also several scientists
-and photographers. The ship was under
-the general direction of Commander E. F. McDonald,
-who was second in command of the
-expedition and in charge of radio communication.
-Captain George Steele was master of the
-ship and in direct charge of the navigating and
-safety of the vessel.</p>
-
-<p>At this time arrived the remaining members
-of the <i>Bowdoin&#8217;s</i> crew, namely, Maynard Owen
-Williams, author and photographer, known to
-many by his fine articles and pictures in the
-<i>National Geographic Magazine</i>; and Onnig D.
-Melkon, motion picture expert, whose job was
-to preserve a motion picture record of the expedition
-for later use in the Commander&#8217;s lectures.
-These two completed the ship&#8217;s crew,
-and now with our full complement we were
-counting the minutes till sailing time.</p>
-
-<p>At last the great day came. The departure
-was an event of national importance. Town,
-state and nation were all officially represented.
-In addition to these were thousands of interested<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
-citizens and visitors come to wish us bon voyage.
-Among the latter were most of the families
-of the crew, including my own. Two
-o&#8217;clock was the zero hour, and after short exercises
-at the town hall, the Commander came
-aboard and gave the long awaited order: &#8220;Cast
-off.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i020a.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="center"><span class="illoright2"><i>Photo Geo. W. Lord.</i></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="caption">Outward bound, June, 1925.</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i020b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">The <i>Bowdoin</i> leaving the dock at Wiscasset.</p>
-
-<p>Eager hands freed the lines and amid the
-roar of steam whistles and cheers from the
-crowd we slowly headed seaward. Governor
-Brewster of Maine had furnished a band and a
-tug to transport them, and as we steamed outward
-they poured forth a brazen blare of melody.
-Alumni and students of Bowdoin College,
-the Commander&#8217;s alma mater, had chartered a
-steamer, and the enthusiastic, leather-lunged
-collegians raked us fore and aft with a series
-of vocal salvos that would have driven any team
-on to victory. The procession was headed by
-two naval vessels especially designated by the
-Navy Department to do honor to the occasion.
-In addition to this official recognition, a large
-number of yachts from far and near had gathered
-to join in the celebration. But as we reeled
-off the miles, our escorts gradually turned back
-one by one, until by the time we neared the open
-sea, only a persistent few remained. Even these<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
-had returned by the time we were fairly
-launched forth on the long ocean roll, and the
-<i>Peary</i>, too, had deserted us, as she was going to
-Boothbay to take on a final supply of water,
-while we set our course in solitary state for Monhegan
-Island. Just as the great lighthouse
-began to blink, we dropped anchor under the
-lee of the island. Here the guests who had thus
-far accompanied us, soon followed the anchor
-over the side and went up to the village inn
-where we shortly joined them. There, in accordance
-with custom, the hospitable islanders
-had prepared a delicious banquet for the members
-of the expedition and their guests. There
-we ate well indeed but not too wisely for mariners
-who were about to slip their cable in the
-morning.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III<br />
-
-
-<small>IN THE LAND OF ADVENTURE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap2">AT noon the next day, Sunday, June 21st,
-we put to sea from the last outpost of the
-United States that we should see until our return.
-As we circled the islands, a fishing boat filled
-with enthusiastic members of the Civitan Club,
-who had come all the way from Minneapolis
-to see us off, came alongside and throwing huge
-codfish aboard shouted the last farewells we
-heard in home waters from fellow citizens.</p>
-
-<p>In a few moments a Bay of Fundy fog had
-swallowed us up, and the curtain had dropped
-on the last home setting. The day was fairly
-calm, but there was a long, oily swell which
-rolled the boat like a lazy pendulum. Moreover,
-the smoke from the exhaust was carried
-forward across the deck by a light, following
-breeze. In a few hours I began to notice a
-greenish pallor overspreading the faces of my
-shipmates, and, guided by my own feelings
-amidships, I had an intuition that my face was
-experiencing the same change. Soon a disheveled<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
-figure sprang from the forecastle companionway
-and made a dash for the rail. In a few
-moments another appeared bound for the same
-destination. I thought this was very funny,
-when suddenly the ship fetched a great roll, and
-I meditated with melancholy on my liberal indulgence
-at the dinner of the night before. Without
-stopping for further speculations I too joined
-in the mad scramble for the rail. Under the
-suasion of an unstable equilibrium the gastric
-organs have certain generous periods when they
-won&#8217;t keep a thing, and when they are in this
-mood they follow the example of time and tide
-and wait for no man. This lack of a sense of
-expediency on the part of these unfortunate
-organs caused several similar embarrassing situations
-from time to time. After completing
-my first session at the rail, I felt relieved&mdash;much
-relieved, and decided I was all through with
-such foolishness; so I sat down to await my trick
-at the wheel and to enjoy the adventures in mal
-de mer of the other unfortunates. But again
-my mirth ended in another dash for the rail.
-These upsets, however, did not permit of any
-laying off from regular duties, since the work
-had to be done and there were none too many of
-us to do it. Thus I stood my regular trick at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
-the wheel, a task with which I was familiar
-from previous voyages, kept my regular watch
-and did whatever duties were assigned me
-despite a few protests on the part of my
-stomach. This state of affairs continued for the
-next three days until we reached Sydney, Nova
-Scotia.</p>
-
-<p>Early on the morning of the second day out
-we rounded Cape Sable, the southernmost point
-in Nova Scotia, and laid a northerly course parallel
-to the coast heading for Cape Breton
-Island where Sydney is located. Here we were
-to take on water and fuel oil before squaring
-away for &#8220;The Labrador.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Three days later on Wednesday morning, we
-reached Cape Breton Island and made our way
-into the spacious harbor of Sydney. The <i>Peary</i>,
-having preceded us, was lying at North Sydney
-loading coal and placing iron plates over the
-lower portholes, that they might not be broken
-by the ice.</p>
-
-<p>We made our way to a supply dock in the
-lower end of Sydney harbor and began loading
-fuel and other supplies. Inasmuch as Sydney
-was the most outlying stop on our journey to
-offer tonsorial and other luxurious civilized
-conveniences, we availed ourselves of all the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-facilities that the town afforded. For awhile
-the barber shop was the center of interest, with
-the soda counter at the drug store running a
-close second. It was while we were in a drug
-store that an unprecedented thing happened. Mr.
-Raycroft, a friend of the Commander&#8217;s, who had
-accompanied us up to Sydney, entered the store,
-started to make a purchase, when suddenly he
-bolted into the street without a word of explanation.
-In a few moments he returned looking a
-few shades paler, and in reply to our anxious
-queries he told us that the unaccustomed steadiness
-of the building had made him feel sick,
-and he felt an urgent need of fresh air. That
-was the only case of &#8220;land sickness&#8221; in the memory
-of the oldest inhabitant.</p>
-
-<p>After a voyage of general exploration about
-the town, we discovered the product for which
-Sydney is famous, and that is lobsters. Under
-the leadership of Ben Rigg, an ardent enthusiast
-on the subject of shellfish, we raided every lobster
-joint in town. One may easily imagine
-after our hollow days at sea that there was plenty
-of room for food. After visiting about five
-places and exhausting their limited supplies, we
-ended up about eleven o&#8217;clock in a Chinaman&#8217;s,
-where we gorged on more of these luscious crustaceans<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
-and on chop suey. None of us had nightmare,
-strange to say.</p>
-
-<p>After three days of the strenuous life in Sydney,
-our preparations were complete, and we
-pulled out for the bleak and desolate Labrador,
-leaving instructions with the <i>Peary</i> to join us
-at Battle Harbor after completing her coaling.</p>
-
-<p>We set sail for the Labrador with a feeling
-that we were at last entering the great unknown.
-From what we had heard and read concerning
-this region, none of us knew what to expect. But
-we had the best possible person on board to enlighten
-us; namely, Doctor Wilfred Grenfell,
-the famous Labrador missionary doctor. He
-was just returning from a trip around the world
-and had arrived in Sydney preparatory to going
-on to Battle Harbor. Being acquainted with
-the Commander, he came down, and as the Doctor
-was planning to leave on the next steamer,
-the Commander invited him to accompany us
-instead. In addition to Doctor Grenfell we were
-accompanied by another distinguished guest, Dr.
-Gilbert Grosvenor, President of the National
-Geographic Society, under whose auspices we
-sailed. Having voyaged with us to Sydney, he
-was so charmed with the life aboard ship that he
-continued with us to Battle Harbor. Thus we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>
-were well equipped with celebrities, come what
-might.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i027a.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="illoright3"><i>Copyright, National Geographic Society.</i></span></p>
-<p class="caption">Rawson, MacMillan at the wheel, and Dr. Grosvenor.<br />
-
-On way to Sydney.</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i027b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">&#8220;Yonder beneath the North Star lies our destination, Lad.&#8221;</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i027c.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Commander MacMillan, Dr. Grosvenor and Dr. Grenfell.<br />
-
-Battle Harbor.</p>
-
-<p>After sailing for several days through the
-placid waters of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, we
-found ourselves at the entrance of the Straits of
-Belle Isle. Here we realized for the first time
-that we were really getting north, when the word
-was passed around to look out for bergs. I had
-heard much of the danger of icebergs, and an
-apprehensive shudder spread over my frame as
-I imagined what would happen if we should run
-on one unawares, for we were shrouded in one
-of the usual Straits fogs. In a short while our
-straining eyes discerned a dark object loom out
-of the fog on the starboard bow. At the time, I
-was at the wheel, and Dick Salmon was on the
-lookout. I gripped the spokes at the thought
-of how close this chill apparition was, but we
-were well to port, and in a few moments it
-melted into the mist.</p>
-
-<p>A short time later after the excitement fomented
-by the berg had subsided, we began to
-notice signs of the proximity of land. Robbie
-clambered aloft into the crow&#8217;s nest to watch for
-shoal water, and the rest of us clustered into the
-bow for the same purpose. Suddenly out of the
-fog appeared a white line. It was breakers rolling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-across a long point. A hasty chorus of shouts
-to the helmsman resulted in an immediate altering
-of the course to parallel the land, instead of
-heading straight at it as we were when we first
-sighted it. It was in this dramatic manner that
-we made our acquaintance with The Labrador,
-and it was in a setting typical of this rugged
-country. One usually becomes acquainted with
-The Labrador by nearly running on it every
-time one approaches it during the early summer
-months, for at that time the land is almost perpetually
-shrouded in fog. Not long afterwards
-another line of breakers indicated the presence
-of a new exponent of terra firma. This disturber
-of the mariners&#8217; peace was named Blanc
-Sablon, a reminder of the old days of the French
-domination. This entire south coast is sprinkled
-with French names and with French speaking
-people.</p>
-
-<p>As the fog was still too thick for safe navigating
-along this treacherous coast, we put into the
-little settlement of Forteau. This is one of Doctor
-Grenfell&#8217;s stations, and he made us very welcome
-there. He also recommended the splendid
-trout fishing and issued us honorary fishing
-licenses for the neighboring creeks, since he was
-an honorary magistrate. Armed with this legal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
-protection and also with rods and gear, we sallied
-forth to a likely looking brook to try conclusions
-with the wily denizens of the stream.
-It certainly seemed good to get our sea legs
-straightened out as we strolled up and down
-whipping the stream. After a few casts I felt
-a sudden tightening on my line, and the reel
-began to sing. For a minute I let it run; then
-I checked it abruptly in order to drive the hook
-well home. Then the fight was on. The fish
-threshed wildly in a vain endeavor to free himself,
-but I had him fast. There was about five
-minutes of play, and then I reeled him in. He
-was a fine specimen, weighing very nearly two
-pounds, and my hopes were high that we might
-obtain enough for all hands. In a moment I
-heard a yell from Mart, and looking in his
-direction I saw that he was holding aloft a trout
-fully as large as my own. Then we went at it
-with all our might, but the God of Fortune
-smiled no further, and at last tired and discomfited,
-we returned to the ship.</p>
-
-<p>Early the next morning we were under weigh
-again for Battle Harbor. On our way out as
-we rounded Cape Point Amour we sighted what
-seemed to be a great cruiser sailing close to the
-Cape. As we drew nearer we saw that she was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-too far in for a large ship, and still closer inspection
-showed that she was hard and fast on
-the rocks. We then learned from the Commander
-that this was the British cruiser <i>Raleigh</i>
-which had run aground in a fog some years
-previous while endeavoring to make Forteau.
-We felt a twinge of pity that such a fine ship
-should rust out her heart on the bleak rocks of
-Labrador.</p>
-
-<p>Continuing on up the coast, sometimes in fog
-and sometimes in beautiful clear weather, we
-were encompassed by a magnificent vista. On
-one hand the bleak and rugged hills of the shore-line,
-and on the seaward side a matchless panorama
-of schooners, dancing waves and icebergs.
-The schooners tacking in and out under full sail
-among the glistening bergs; the tall, majestic
-spires and turrets of the larger bergs dwarfing
-the tallest mast into insignificance; the dancing
-wavelets curtsying to the graceful schooners
-whose black hulls contrasted sharply against the
-whiteness and marvellous shades of ultramarine
-blue of the glacial ice, all combined to make an
-unforgettable picture.</p>
-
-<p>Just as the shadows of evening had begun to
-creep up from the west and merge the glories of
-a perfect day into a matchless sunset, the rugged<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-outline of Battle Island appeared bathed in a
-purple glow that made the hard unyielding rock
-look like rich dyed velvet. It was not long
-before we dropped anchor between the sheer
-rock walls of Battle Harbor.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-
-<small>A TRULY GLORIOUS FOURTH AND SOME VERY REAL
-FISHING</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">DR. GRENFELL&#8217;S staff were down at the
-dock to welcome us, and they soon made
-us realize that American hospitality is the same
-the world around. Although Labrador is English
-territory, the hospital is manned and, to improvise
-an expression, &#8220;womanned&#8221; by Americans.
-A doctor, three nurses and three college
-men, all of whom had volunteered to serve for
-the summer, made up the staff of the hospital.
-In every way possible they strove to make our
-stay in Battle Harbor an enjoyable one, and they
-certainly succeeded.</p>
-
-<p>While in this port we celebrated the glorious
-Fourth of July. The day previous we had
-remembered with a start that the following day
-was the Fourth! Dick Salmon suggested that
-we inaugurate the festivities with a snowball
-fight, since there was a large deposit on the opposite
-side of the tickle, so-called by the Newfoundlanders
-in speaking of a narrow channel<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-which indicates ticklish navigating. Dick&#8217;s
-cool suggestion did not meet with a warm reception
-for obvious reasons, and we turned in with
-our plans for the observance of the day somewhat
-nebulous.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning at an early hour I was
-awakened from a sound sleep by the explosion
-of a firecracker uncomfortably close to my ear.
-I made a nose dive for the floor muttering imprecations
-against the authors of the outrage.
-Then realizing that the great day had come, I
-hurriedly dressed and made my way to the deck
-where the celebrants greeted me with such a
-penitent air that I did not engage in the retaliations
-I had determined to employ.</p>
-
-<p>After clearing away the breakfast wreckage,
-the cook began making the pots fly in a business-like
-manner, and soon savory odors ascending
-from the galleys gave notice that a culinary masterpiece
-was in the process of preparation. To
-the accompaniment of these welcome sounds and
-odors, we swabbed down the deck and coiled
-down the lines with despatch, and then sat back
-in the crisp sunlight in languid anticipation of
-the approaching feast. At twelve-thirty the
-cook&#8217;s warcry resounded through the vessel, and
-we tumbled down the companionway to make<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
-the first table. Since there was not room for
-us all at one sitting, our meals were served in
-two shifts. As &#8220;first come, first served&#8221; was the
-order of the day, the competition was keen
-indeed for the coveted places. I was fortunate
-enough to slide into the last remaining seat much
-to the disgust of Melkon who had been keeping
-his eye on the food all morning. Then came on
-the grub, and what grub it was! Fish chowder
-flavored with onions, a magnificent roast of beef&mdash;the
-last domestic meat we were to taste until
-our return&mdash;a profusion of vegetables, plum
-duff and candy, with coffee and fruit punch to
-wash it all down. Then there were cigars for
-those who desired them; a pleasure in which
-several of us did not indulge.</p>
-
-<p>After this repast we repaired to the deck
-where we basked in the mellow sunlight like a
-herd of well-fed walrus. At last one of our
-more ambitious shipmates suggested that we
-have an outboard motor race with a boat from
-the <i>Peary</i>. This suggestion was hailed with
-acclaim, and we immediately set to work tuning
-up our engine. At this moment arrived Chief
-Aerographer Francis in the <i>Peary&#8217;s</i> cutter. Immediately
-we hurled at him our challenge which
-he at once accepted and it was not long before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-both boats were at the line ready for the starting
-gun. Our interest was keen, and suggestions
-and advice poured over our bulwarks like a Bay
-of Fundy tide. Soon they were off neck and
-neck. For a time all progressed beautifully.
-Then the regular cadence of our boat&#8217;s exhaust
-became faltering. The <i>Peary&#8217;s</i> craft forged
-ahead. We yelled like mad as our crew of two
-desperately spun the needle valve, and tinkered
-with every other gadget on the craft. But to no
-avail. Off went our opponent and with him our
-hopes of victory. When he crossed the finish
-line, our crew was still wrestling with the refractory
-engine, and we reluctantly presented Francis
-with the first prize, a leaky rubber boot. He
-hove the boot at our heads and went off in high
-dudgeon over our lack of appreciation of his
-superior prowess.</p>
-
-<p>All along the Commander had held forth on
-the delicacy of the Labrador trout and salmon,
-and therefore great was our delight when one
-day the mission people proposed a trip to the
-head of St. Louis Bay, where was located a fine
-trout stream not far from the winter hospital. It
-is necessary to maintain a winter station in addition
-to the summer station at Battle Harbor, as
-the outer islands are untenable in winter owing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
-to their exposed position. The heavy pack ice
-comes in from the sea, and savage winter gales
-lash the bleak and desolate islands, rendering
-them impracticable for winter habitation. Every
-one moves inland to the head of the great bays
-and settles down in a well sheltered log cabin
-in close proximity to a forest of good firewood.
-The hospital is no exception to this rule, and by
-the time the last schooner has winged its way
-southward, the Battle Harbor station is closed,
-and the winter hospital is put into service. We
-were all very anxious to see the back country
-and looked forward to the trip with keen expectancy,
-whetted by what we had heard from the
-Commander.</p>
-
-<p>Early the next day with the Commander&#8217;s
-permission, all hands, with the exception of one
-or two who unfortunately had to keep the ship,
-gaily sallied forth in the capacious mission boat.
-After traversing a space of rough water, which
-caused embarrassment to several of the ladies,
-hospital nurses who accompanied us, we entered
-the great bay and sailed past shores at first barren
-of vegetation but growing progressively
-greener as we penetrated inland. It was interesting
-to observe this increase in plant life as
-we drew away from the blighting influence of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
-the frigid Labrador current, which makes this
-coast the bleak and barren land it is.</p>
-
-<p>We arrived at the winter station a short time
-before noon and gave it a thorough inspection.
-It seemed so nice and cosy tucked away in the
-midst of a beautiful grove of pines on a picturesque
-arm of the bay, that I almost wished I
-was a patient there.</p>
-
-<p>As the sun mounted higher and higher towards
-the zenith, I began to wonder where lunch fitted
-into the program. This also seemed to be in
-the minds of our hosts and Doctor Grenfell soon
-suggested that we have lunch on the banks of
-St. Mary&#8217;s Creek and do our fishing afterwards.
-The lunch was to be cooked &#8220;on location,&#8221; as
-they say in the movies, and the pi&egrave;ce de r&eacute;sistance
-was to be a real old New England fish
-chowder. To one who has never experienced a
-fish chowder&mdash;for it is an experience&mdash;words
-are inadequate to describe it; and to one who
-has experienced it any attempt at description is
-superfluous. Suffice it to say we gorged ourselves
-to repletion.</p>
-
-<p>Even this heavy cargo of chowder did not
-hinder our getting under weigh for the trout
-basin, and we were soon off with rod and gear.
-Williams, however, who looked down on fishing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
-with sophisticated contempt, remained behind
-to amuse the ladies. As we moved off we last
-saw him feverishly tossing dishes aloft, and only
-on our return did we learn much to our relief
-that his brain had not been affected by the heavy
-meal and that he was merely giving an exhibition
-of Bagdad juggling.</p>
-
-<p>A short distance up the stream we found a
-small series of rapids between which were dark,
-enticing pools. Mart, our mentor in such matters,
-declared the location favorable, and we
-were soon casting our flies into the swirling
-eddies. Every now and then we could see the
-silver flash of a fish break the white water of the
-rapids, but for a considerable time no welcome
-tug at the line ensued. We were on the point
-of moving farther upstream when suddenly I
-felt a violent jerk, my reel sang and my rod
-assumed an excessive arc. I stood my ground
-and watched the line pay out until I could see
-the nickel core of the reel. I was on the point
-of dashing into the stream to relieve the danger
-of having the line unreeve, when slowly the rod
-came straight and the reel ceased to revolve.
-One of father&#8217;s old fishing axioms came to me:
-&#8220;A slack line spells disaster.&#8221; I began reeling
-furiously, and for a minute I felt that my fish<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
-was off. I was on the point of giving up when
-again came a taut jerk. Away sped the fish
-with another thirty feet of my line. I played
-him with all the cunning I could command,
-until at last his silver scales sparkled in the shallow
-pool at my feet. Just as I was about to draw
-him to shore, he flipped his tail and was gone
-again. Once more I gave him his head. This
-time he dashed towards a jagged clump of rocks,
-and I realized with dismay that unless I took
-extreme measures I should soon have my line
-inextricably tangled around the rocks. Taking
-a desperate chance I added a few more pounds
-tension to the reel. The rod bent dangerously,
-and my breath came hard with the suspense, but
-the rod held. He came short of the rocks by
-several inches; then, exhausted by this desperate
-sally, he slackened his efforts, and I began to reel
-him in. This time the struggle was short, and
-in a few minutes he was gasping on the rocks at
-my feet, as fine a specimen of brook trout as I
-ever saw!</p>
-
-<p>In my excitement I had not noticed that success
-had crowned the efforts of my companions,
-and there were three or four other speckled
-beauties divided among them. For a while
-longer we fished with signal good fortune, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
-at last the dipping sun warned us that it was
-time to think of returning to the ship. Gathering
-up our trophies we hastened down to the
-shore where we rejoined the others, and in a
-short time we were chugging along towards
-the ship, at the close of one of the finest days
-we ever had in Labrador.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V<br />
-
-
-<small>THROUGH THE PACK TO DISASTER</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT was with regret that at dawn on the day
-following we bade farewell to Battle Harbor
-and the hospitable Grenfell workers and squared
-away for Hopedale whence we would make the
-long leg to Greenland. While on the way to
-Hopedale we crossed the mouth of Hamilton
-Inlet, a great fiord or arm of the sea that penetrates
-the land for a hundred miles. From this
-fiord extends a river containing one of the largest
-waterfalls in the world, the Grand Falls of
-the Hamilton River.</p>
-
-<p>Early the next morning we were off Cape
-Harrison at the northern end of the inlet. Here
-we began to notice scattered cakes of ice drifting
-out to sea&mdash;&#8220;Gone abroad,&#8221; as the Newfoundlanders
-say. Soon the scattered fragments
-became thicker, and a full-fledged field of pack
-ice presented itself to our vision.</p>
-
-<p>The Commander ascended to the crow&#8217;s nest
-to survey the situation and con the ship through<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
-the ice. As this pack barred the entrance to
-Hopedale it was necessary to go through it, and
-the Commander seeing a likely lead&mdash;a lane of
-open water between the ice cakes&mdash;ordered the
-wheel put hard aport. The vessel rapidly
-swung around until her bow was directed down
-the lead. &#8220;Steady!&#8221; was the next command
-from aloft, and the helmsman spun the wheel
-in the opposite direction as hard as he could
-until she checked in her swing. She rapidly
-traversed the lead which soon terminated in a
-solid cake of ice. Straight on continued the
-<i>Bowdoin</i> like a hunter for a jump. Soon her
-rounded bow was almost in contact with the ice,
-and in another second she had struck it fair and
-square. Her prow leaped up on the pan, and
-I leaned over the prow thinking that surely she
-would never be able to force her way through
-such a large cake of ice. But driven by her
-powerful engine, her bow glided straight up.
-Then she slowly came to a halt with her bow
-well up on the ice. With breathless interest we
-watched to see whether she had the weight to
-crush it. Just as we were preparing to back
-out and hit it again, a thin line of black broke
-the even white. She had made it! The great
-cake was rent asunder by our sturdy little vessel,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>
-and she slowly gained way until she leaped forward
-with increasing rapidity at the next obstacle
-which dared to bar her way. Thus we
-continued weaving in and out, now to port and
-now to starboard, wherever a lead opened, and
-where there was none smashing our way. Good
-judgment and a knowledge of ice conditions are
-required in ice navigation on the part of the
-man aloft, and the helmsman must possess the
-ability to follow orders rapidly and efficiently
-and be able to keep the ship from brushing the
-sides of narrow passages. Spinning that wheel
-frequently and for all one is worth is no joke,
-and even in that cold, stripped down to my
-underwear, I sweated like a pack mule before I
-had been at it for long.</p>
-
-<p>All day we ploughed through the pack with
-the <i>Peary</i> near by. She was under a disadvantage
-in having a straight bow and in not maneuvering
-as readily as we did, but her superior
-engine power in a large measure compensated
-for this. As darkness slowly fell I was struck
-by the absence of any friendly light twinkling a
-welcome through the dusk, such as one sees in
-friendlier climes. Nothing but rocks, ice, sky
-and water&mdash;not even a tree or fisherman&#8217;s hut to
-vary the monotony of those barren cliffs. What<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-a contrast to the ceaseless activity of The Hill
-with its life and action, its cheering bleachers at
-the games and its humming classrooms&mdash;never a
-moment there when one feels that sense of utter
-detachment from one&#8217;s fellow man which
-oppressed me in viewing the bleak Labrador.
-The utter desolation of it all brought thoughts
-of School and Home with their warmth and life
-and cheer. Suddenly I found myself shivering
-violently, and with a start I returned to the
-immediate present. Turning away from the
-fading landscape I hastened to the companionship
-of my mates in the warm, well-lighted forecastle.</p>
-
-<p>The following morning we were away early
-and were soon clear of the last of the ice and
-were bound up Flagstaff Tickle on the way to
-Hopedale, the southernmost settlement of the
-Eskimos. Despite the fact that these waters are
-poorly charted, we experienced no difficulty in
-keeping the channel until we were almost in
-Hopedale. Then out of a clear sky, grim disaster
-descended upon us. We were skirting a
-small reef which jutted a considerable way into
-the Sound when suddenly the bow of the <i>Peary</i>
-made an abrupt ascent; then she slowly assumed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
-a list. Immediately the Commander ordered
-the <i>Bowdoin&#8217;s</i> helm put hard down. In a
-moment more we were flying down wind to the
-aid of our stricken companion. She had struck
-on a sunken ledge of rock which gave no indication
-of its presence until the vessel&#8217;s keel had
-touched. At once we came alongside, which
-our comparatively shallow draft rendered safe,
-and after rigging a masthead line we steamed
-slowly away to see if we could pull her off. Calm
-and cool as always, Captain Steele ordered the
-lowering of a small boat in order to run out a
-kedge anchor.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile we ran out the slack in the line
-and gradually took up a strain. But owing to a
-strong wind assisting the efforts of our engine,
-no sooner had the line come taut than it snapped.
-Captain Steele was now manfully striving to
-work his boat to windward. Seeing his plight
-we steamed over to give the lifeboat a tow. In
-a few moments we had it in the proper position,
-and let go the anchor. Then we ran down and
-placed a line over the <i>Peary&#8217;s</i> stern to try to haul
-her off in that manner. During this time the
-lifeboat had returned and was hauled up on a
-short bight astern while her crew disembarked.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
-In the stern of the small boat stood Commander
-McDonald awaiting his turn to get aboard the
-<i>Peary</i>. In some unaccountable manner the lifeboat
-caught under the counter of the ship, and
-a sea suddenly jammed her against the plates.
-As she could rise no farther, the waves poured
-over her gunwales and swamped her. McDonald
-shouted to those on deck to drop the boat
-aft, but she had become so waterlogged that they
-could do nothing with her, and each succeeding
-wave forced her farther and farther down. All
-yelled for him to jump while the jumping was
-good, but he still maintained his position in a
-manner reminiscent of the boy who stood on the
-burning deck. In spite of the Commander&#8217;s
-heroic pose, the boat gradually sank, and in a
-second more it began to roll over. With one
-wild leap he left his sinking craft to its fate,
-caught a hold on the bulwarks and was pulled
-aboard the <i>Peary</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, the deck of the <i>Peary</i>
-became a scene of wild excitement. Everyone
-stood around on the deck with their bags packed,
-apparently convinced that the boat was going
-down. But their fears were vain. Under the
-combined influence of a rising tide, our pulling
-and the kedge anchor, she began slowly to slide<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
-off the ledge, and in a few moments she was
-once more safe afloat.</p>
-
-<p>We then went in search of the submerged lifeboat
-which had slowly drifted away during the
-intervening time. We soon came upon her
-drifting bottom upwards. To rescue the boat
-was somewhat of a problem, since there was
-nothing visible to which we could make fast. By
-skillful maneuvering, however, Captain MacMillan
-brought us alongside, and we strove desperately
-to get a line on her. But the winds and
-the waves unfortunately separated us, and we
-had the whole operation to do over again. The
-next time we approached her a sudden gust of
-wind swerved our bow just enough to hit her a
-crashing blow, seriously damaging her.</p>
-
-<p>That misfortune, however, was not the worst
-that befell us that afternoon, for, as we strove to
-clear the boat, our propeller struck one of her
-spare fittings thereby stripping her internal
-gears. At the time we were unaware of the
-damage, and the propellor continued turning,
-seemingly uninjured. We at last managed to
-corral the unruly lifeboat and then set our course
-for Hopedale. It had been a harrowing afternoon,
-but all in all we had much to be thankful
-for. Our misfortunes were nothing compared<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-to what they would have been if the tide had
-been falling, and the <i>Peary</i> had been unable to
-float off. For being a steel ship, she would have
-filled and become a total loss when the tide
-began to flow.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-
-<small>THE HEROES OF HOPEDALE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">HOPEDALE, with the exception of Makkovik,
-which harbors only two families, is
-the southernmost settlement of the Eskimos and
-one of the principal posts of the Moravian missions.
-Unknown to the world at large, the Moravians
-have been carrying on a wonderful missionary
-work on this desolate coast and great
-have been their services. In the first place they
-have formed the one barrier between the primitive
-Eskimo and the ruin which has been the
-inevitable accompaniment of contact with the
-white race. Had it not been for these good
-Samaritans there would not be a single Eskimo
-in Labrador to-day! For when all the rest of the
-people who have dealings with the natives have
-striven to encourage their destruction, these
-brave missionaries, and they alone, have held
-firm for the right, have waged a never-ceasing
-fight against all who threatened the welfare of
-their wards. No obstacle has proved too great;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
-no effort has been too tiring; not even a lack of
-funds has deterred these indomitable evangelists
-from doing their duty where they found it. They
-have converted the Eskimos to Christianity and
-endowed them with the priceless gift of the true
-Christian spirit of brotherly love. Aside from
-their religious work, they are the only agency
-for carrying on education in Northern Labrador,
-both among Eskimos and whites. Owing
-to their untiring efforts the Eskimos have been
-uplifted from a state of complete ignorance and
-savagery to a status of civilization and education.</p>
-
-<p>At their Makkovik station the Moravians
-maintain a boarding school for boys, up there
-education being considered the heritage of the
-male alone. At this school the children are given
-board and lodging and as much education as
-their untrained minds can assimilate. This
-board, lodging and education they receive for
-fifty cents a week! Yet such is the poverty of
-these people that most of the families find it
-well-nigh impossible to pay even this modest
-sum.</p>
-
-<p>The school consisted of one bare classroom
-furnished with a few rough desks and chairs,
-while across the hall a room comprised the dormitory.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-I could not help comparing it to the
-elaborately equipped plant which I had so
-recently left. At this primitive school there were
-no spacious athletic fields, no huge, airy dormitories,
-no stately towers, no gymnasium of any
-description. We, in this country, can hardly
-conceive of a crack school, for that is what this
-one is considered, not having at least a gymnasium.
-The children came to learn and for no
-other reason. There were no dances, no gay
-parties or entertainments and no competitive
-sports&mdash;in short, education was reduced to terms
-of severest simplicity. None the less it is, I dare
-say, more appreciated and more highly respected
-than it is in many other places.</p>
-
-<p>The fearless regard of these missionaries for
-justice and impartiality has been the shield and
-buckler of the simple aborigine against the unscrupulous
-avarice of the trader and the demoralizing
-influence of the depraved white. Much
-also have they done for the poverty-stricken
-white settler, educating the children, bringing
-relief to the bereaved, and keeping alive in the
-breasts of all the spirit of honesty and idealism.
-In addition to their care for the things of the
-spirit, they were the first to introduce medical
-aid to The Labrador. Truly have they carried<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
-out in the broadest sense the words of the
-Master when he said, &#8220;Go ye into all the
-world, and preach the Gospel unto every creature.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>What a glorious epic of Christian service has
-been their ministry on this coast! Clear and
-strong as to the apostles of old came the call of
-duty&mdash;that inspiring lodestone which has drawn
-forth the noblest and best from the men of all
-ages. Home and kindred, material rewards,
-ease and luxury were as naught before it. The
-stern dictates of conscience to them comprised
-the sole path to joy and happiness. But how
-little we realize the trials and deprivations that
-their self-imposed exile necessitates; how many
-of the little things that to us seem so necessary
-they must perforce do without. A prized possession
-of one of the missionaries was an old
-camera dating back to 1870. This he displayed
-with great pride one afternoon while we were
-taking tea at the mission. It consisted of a cumbersome
-old box on a tripod, of which the only
-method of regulating the diaphragm opening
-was by inserting brass plugs with a proper sized
-hole bored in them. He handled this venerable
-machine with the affection born of long years of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
-association. While we were examining it, his
-kindly wife brought forth with pride several
-bulky albums filled with the results of her husband&#8217;s
-efforts. We opened these and great was
-our surprise to see the beautiful quality and real
-artistry of these pictures. He was an artist to
-the soul, and with proper equipment what pictures
-he might have taken!</p>
-
-<p>No one better realized the strict economy
-under which these people perforce must labor,
-than did the Commander, and it was at his suggestion
-that the Zenith Radio Corporation,
-which had supplied us with our radio equipment,
-donated several receiving sets for distribution
-among the worthy missionaries. One of
-these we presented to Mr. Perrit, the minister at
-Hopedale, and when he heard the music, his
-gratitude and delight were so touching that we
-wished we might do infinitely more for him and
-his cause.</p>
-
-<p>Never a strong sect, the Moravians have made
-up in zeal and quality of service what they lack
-in money and numbers. With no prospect of
-reward from the world, they have carried on
-year in and year out. Many an opportunity for
-improvement have they seen slip for lack of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-funds, but undaunted they have kept their faith
-and courage in spite of the most disheartening
-discouragements. When one brother succumbed
-another was always ready to fill the gap. Their
-service to humanity cannot be over-rated. Theirs
-is the true understanding.</p>
-
-<p>But it seems that their long ministry soon
-may end. Never a strong sect, in the last
-few years they have suffered from many ill-advised
-attacks. During the war many of
-them were interned by the Newfoundland
-government, and their bishop was deported&mdash;acts
-not unlike those earlier perpetrated against
-the simple Acadian farmers. The great fur-trading
-companies have been making every
-effort to crowd them out. Last year unfortunately
-they were obliged to abandon their northernmost
-station to the Hudson&#8217;s Bay Company,
-and it is not unlikely that unless aid is soon
-forthcoming from some source, their remaining
-stations will suffer a like fate.</p>
-
-<p>All true friends of Labrador who know of the
-labors of this noble group will view with regret
-the passing of this earnest organization which
-has accomplished so much for these simple children
-of the north. My strong personal hope is
-that the necessary funds for the perpetuation of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
-this fine work may be realized. A few thousand
-dollars will mean worlds of help to them,
-and when one sees, he realizes the worth-whileness
-of giving to such a cause as is supported by
-these apostles of the outposts of civilization.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-
-<small>IN ESKIMO LAND AND IN TROUBLE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">NO sooner were we at anchor in Hopedale
-Harbor than I noticed the approach of several
-large boats filled with strange-looking,
-brown folk, different from any I had ever before
-seen. For a moment I was at a loss to explain
-them; then suddenly I remembered that we had
-arrived in Eskimo Land. I stared with interest
-and surprise. These were not the kind of people
-I had seen in pictures! These were not the
-grotesque, fur-swathed barbarians that my mind
-had conceived. With the exception of dark
-skin and rather high cheek-bones, they looked
-not so very different from ourselves, and they
-lacked that ferocious look I had seen stamped
-on their countenances in the Sunday supplements.
-As they came alongside they greeted us
-with expansive grins and a babble of good-natured
-banter which displayed their white teeth
-and black flashing eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ochshinai! Taku oomiak-swa!&#8221; came from
-the boats, and I later learned that this meant,
-&#8220;Hello, look at the big ship.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>The Commander came on deck at this juncture
-and was greeted with an enthusiastic outburst,
-for his generosity and kindliness are
-remembered by more than one denizen of this
-isolated land. Immediately he entered into
-conversation with them, as he is well acquainted
-with the language. While he was thus engaged,
-Robbie appeared on deck and took in the situation
-at one glance. He then descended into the
-cabin with an inscrutable smile on his face. We
-did not realize what he was about until he reappeared
-laden with tobacco and candy. At once
-he was surrounded by a laughing, chattering
-mob striving to wheedle from him some of the
-coveted articles. With a deliberate air, born
-of long experience at this game, he began distributing
-these much-desired treasures. To each
-one he presented one article, and saw that none
-was slighted or obtained an undue share of the
-spoils, in spite of many ingenious and good-natured
-attempts to defraud him. Each attempt
-was regarded as a sporting proposition, and loud
-were the laughs among the natives when one of
-their number was detected trying to &#8220;gyp the
-system.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Soon Mr. Perrit, the head missionary, arrived
-and officially welcomed us to Hopedale. Mr.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-Perrit is a strapping six footer with curly blonde
-hair&mdash;a regular Viking. He is one of the most
-earnest missionaries on the coast, and none has
-a greater and more well-deserved popularity
-than he. He remained aboard for some time, and
-after his departure we went ashore to consummate
-the purpose for which we had come to
-Hopedale&mdash;namely, to obtain warm Eskimo
-clothing for the colder weather to be encountered
-farther north.</p>
-
-<p>We soon had the storekeeper booked up with
-orders, and he immediately set the entire female
-population to work chewing skins. The Eskimo
-tailor differs considerably from the Broadway
-type. In the first place it is a she instead of a
-he, and in lieu of shrinking the material she
-chews it. Since the material consists of sealskin
-or other heavy hides, it requires a thorough
-chewing to render it pliable. After the chewing
-is completed, she cuts the skin to the proper size
-and shape by means of an ooloo, or woman&#8217;s
-knife&mdash;a knife shaped like an old-fashioned
-chopping knife. Then she takes the material
-and sews it together with sinew from the back
-of a deer. This sinew has the useful property
-of swelling when wet, and once it has been wet,
-it never again contracts. This swelling completely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-closes the needle hole and renders the
-garment water-tight. It is no easy task to wield
-a needle in this tough hide, but these strong-fingered
-women turn out a very finished product.
-The fit may leave something to be desired
-as the measurements are taken by eye and the
-garment constructed accordingly, but they are
-warm and comfortable.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the clothes, we also laid in a
-supply of sealskin boots, as the Labrador product
-is far superior to the Greenland variety. The
-workmanship is more thorough, and the water-resisting
-qualities are better. These boots are
-made of harp seal and are the best things going
-for Arctic work. With a handful of grass in
-the sole to form insulation against the cold and
-to act as a pad against pebbles or sharp ice, they
-are as comfortable an article of footwear as one
-can desire.</p>
-
-<p>Another reason for our coming to Hopedale
-was to secure our old interpreter, Abram Bromfield,
-who had been with the Commander on
-numerous previous trips. Abie lived about
-thirty miles from Hopedale at the head of a
-large bay known as Jack Lane&#8217;s Bay. Therefore,
-after we had obtained our clothing, we set our
-course for his home. While on the way we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
-noticed that the vessel was not turning up her
-customary speed, but as the engine was functioning
-perfectly we decided that it must have
-been an illusion created by the effects of tide or
-wind.</p>
-
-<p>On our arrival at Jack Lane&#8217;s Bay, the Commander
-and McDonald took one of the small
-boats and started up the Bay for Abie&#8217;s house.
-Early the next morning they returned accompanied
-by the whole Bromfield family who
-brought us several thick, tender, juicy venison
-steaks and a large mess of fresh-caught trout.
-Old Sam Bromfield, Abie&#8217;s father, aged seventy,
-also brought his accordion and gave us a rare
-treat by dancing the good old folk dances and
-playing some of the songs of yesteryear.</p>
-
-<p>The following morning at two o&#8217;clock sharp,
-the mate slid back the forecastle hatch and
-uttered the familiar cry, &#8220;All hands on deck!&#8221;
-In spite of sleep-numbed brains and the well-nigh
-irresistible desire to return to the alluring
-arms of Morpheus, we snapped back, &#8220;Yes, sir,&#8221;
-and hit the deck with despatch.</p>
-
-<p>In getting under weigh my particular job was
-to stow the chain in the chain locker, and in a
-few moments my ears were greeted with: &#8220;Stand
-by the chain!&#8221; I made a dash over Dick&#8217;s bunk<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
-and dived into the locker just in time to grab the
-chain as the great electric winch by my ear was
-beginning its raucous clatter, and the muddy
-chain was commencing its rapid descent. A few
-minutes later there lay at my feet a huge mound
-of rusted links, and I heard the creak of the
-tackle with which the anchor is brought to the
-cat-head. The engine-room telegraph jangled;
-a sudden vibration indicated the throwing in of
-the clutch, and I prepared to go on deck. Suddenly
-I noticed the absence of the customary
-ripple which can be heard from the chain locker
-when the vessel is under weigh. I listened
-intently, but no murmur of gurgling water
-greeted my straining ears. Could the engineer
-have mistaken the signal? No, the engine was
-running as usual. I dashed on deck wondering
-what could be the trouble. The Commander
-stood by the wheel, on his face a puzzled expression.
-The rest of the crew were bending over
-the stern, vainly endeavoring to fathom the
-trouble.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i063a.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Maynard Williams (left), photographer, National Geographic<br />
-Society, Lieut. Benjamin Rigg (right), U. S. Coast and Geodetic<br />
-Survey.</p>
-
-<p>It was still nearly as dark as midnight; just a
-faint touch of red in the east. In a moment
-more the <i>Peary</i> came sliding along through the
-morning vapors like a great, grey ghost, her
-black smoke flickering across the face of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-waning moon like a dark forerunner of disaster.
-Shortly our ears were assailed by a shrill blast
-from her siren. The Commander realizing that
-there was something radically wrong with our
-propulsive apparatus, ordered a boat lowered
-to take him over to the <i>Peary</i> that he might
-acquaint them with our predicament. In a few
-moments he had spanned the intervening stretch
-of water, and we saw the vessel stop as she came
-down on the boat. The Commander then told
-Commander McDonald of our trouble and instructed
-him to continue the voyage to Greenland
-and await our arrival at Disko Island,
-where we would rejoin him as soon as our
-trouble had been adjusted. In the meanwhile
-we had again let go the anchor to keep the <i>Bowdoin</i>
-from drifting; then we pulled a small boat
-under the stern for a closer inspection. There
-the Commander joined us and took part in the
-investigation. As we had surmised, the propeller
-was sadly damaged. There was no other
-recourse but to beach the vessel and change the
-propeller. With this end in view, the Commander
-despatched Dick Salmon with one
-of our motor boats to enlist the aid of the
-Bromfields and their staunch motor boat.
-It was decided that it would be advisable to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
-return to Hopedale where there were better
-facilities.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i063b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">The <i>Bowdoin</i> passing an iceberg off west coast of Greenland.</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i063c.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">The <i>Bowdoin</i> caught in a nip, at Melville Bay.</p>
-
-<p>The day being calm, our sails were not of
-much assistance, and we had to depend in the
-main on the Bromfield motor boat. How that
-little motor ever stood the strain is more than I
-can understand, but stand it she did, and after
-ten hours of slow progress we limped into Hopedale.
-There, since the tide was right, we immediately
-beached the vessel on an adjacent
-sand-spit and waited for the low tide to lay bare
-the propeller. Unfortunately we had arrived
-at the period of neap or small tides. The rise
-and fall was so small that the propeller was
-scarcely more accessible at low tide than at high.
-Luckily, however, the tides were increasing
-daily, and in about a week they would enter on
-the period of spring, or large tides. Therefore,
-all we could do was to wait philosophically for
-the much-needed higher water and pull the vessel
-a little farther in on each high tide.</p>
-
-<p>But this philosophical calm which we had
-decided to cultivate was not given an opportunity
-to flourish. Another infliction beset us.
-We were welcomed back not only by the inhabitants
-but by a singing, stinging scourge of blood-thirsty
-mosquitoes. This savage horde had but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>
-come to maturity during the past few days, and
-they descended upon us as did the locusts upon
-the Egyptians. Before we could stretch mosquito
-nettings across the hatches, the whole interior
-of the vessel was infested. We slapped
-and scratched; sprayed kerosene in all directions;
-made crude swatters and attacked the
-noisome pestilence en masse, but all to no avail.
-In every possible way we strove to devise some
-means of wholesale annihilation. In the meantime
-we had stretched netting across all the
-openings, but this was like locking the stable
-door after the horse is stolen. We resorted to
-every conceivable method of extinction and some
-inconceivable ones, but the insects continued
-their attacks with unabated ferocity. Nowhere
-else have I ever encountered such insectivorous
-persistence. They came from every nook and
-cranny. But just as we were beginning to despair
-of discomforting our persecutors, someone
-had the inspiration of burning plug tobacco.
-This was an extreme and extravagant measure,
-dictated by desperation alone, since tobacco was
-held second only to the safety of the expedition
-by the devotees of the weed. Regretfully each
-contributed his quota of tobacco as a burnt offering
-on the altar of Comfort. In a short time<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-the forecastle was thick with acrid, blue smoke.
-It was suffocating. But it was efficacious, and
-soon the inside of the nettings was black with
-insects struggling for deliverance. We withdrew
-the nettings, and in a dense swarm they
-sought safety in flight. Drawing a thick, dizzy
-breath of relief, we sat on the edges of our bunks
-and watched the last stragglers disappear. The
-next problem was to rid the forecastle of smoke,
-a task almost as difficult as the former problem,
-but accomplished after much discomfort and
-effort.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of the earlier confusion, one
-wiser than his fellows hit upon what he considered
-a happy solution of the entire difficulty;
-to wit, leaving both mosquitoes and smoke in undisputed
-possession of the forecastle by going
-aloft and sleeping in the crow&#8217;s nest. Ten minutes
-elapsed, when much to our surprise, we
-heard the rattle of the rigging and muttered
-imprecations as our intellectual giant returned
-to our humble company, covered with mosquitoes.
-Without stopping to answer our jibes,
-he disappeared where the smoke was thickest.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-
-<small>GREENLAND!</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap2">AFTER enduring a week of insufficient tides
-and diabolical attacks on the part of the
-mosquitoes, we at last managed to put in place
-the new propeller. What a sigh of relief we all
-gave when the last nut was screwed on and the
-little <i>Bowdoin</i> was once more in trim to continue
-her voyage. We were at last through with
-Labrador and Hopedale, and ready to square
-away for that land of many myths&mdash;Greenland.</p>
-
-<p>Once more we wended our way through
-Windy Tickle and Jack Lane&#8217;s Bay, where we
-bade farewell to the Bromfield family. Then
-with old Sam&#8217;s fervent blessing still ringing in
-our ears, we swung our bow seaward while the
-last rays of the setting sun streamed on ahead as
-if to guide our wandering footsteps safe across
-the treacherous North Atlantic to Godhavn&mdash;the
-harbor of God&#8217;s rest.</p>
-
-<p>For three days we sailed on &#8220;through many a
-fair sea circle&#8221; till at last we drew nigh to Greenland.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
-Each day the sun held longer in the
-sky&mdash;in fact, after leaving Labrador, we had no
-real darkness, though the sun set for a few hours
-each night. The sea was calm with the exception
-of a few turbulent hours off Hudson&#8217;s Straits,
-when the tidal influence of the bay produced a
-boisterous chop. The temperature was not very
-low, and during the long sunny days it was
-nearly as warm as in many a more favored
-clime.</p>
-
-<p>On and on we sailed, with nothing to break
-the vast desolation of the sea, no friendly
-steamer&#8217;s smoke, no glistening sail, not even an
-iceberg&mdash;only the great smooth mounds of water
-which rolled majestically across the surface of
-the sea to be followed one upon another in unending
-sequence, until it seemed that we were
-&#8220;alone on a wide, wide sea.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The third day out we began to notice icebergs
-again. These shining mountains of ice had traveled
-in the bosom of the Cape Farewell current
-from their glacial birthplace on the east coast of
-Greenland around the southernmost point of
-Greenland and thus far up the west coast,
-whence they would swing across Davis Strait
-and drift down into the North Atlantic in the
-Labrador current. In this Greenland current<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-also we saw several large trees floating along.
-These, we learned from the Commander, had
-drifted across the Polar Sea from Siberia, utilizing
-the same current by which Nansen strove to
-drift over the Pole in the <i>Fram</i>. In a short
-while we also observed a considerable lightening
-of the blue of the sky in the eastern quadrant
-of the horizon. This was the &#8220;iceblink,&#8221; a reliable
-indication of the proximity of ice, which
-produces a whitish reflection in the sky. Since
-the whole interior of Greenland is solid ice,
-there could be no doubt from the direction in
-which it appeared that it was the iceblink over
-the great Greenland ice-cap. A consultation
-with the chart further verified our adjacence to
-Greenland. In fact, we were not more than
-sixty miles from the coast, which would put us
-about a hundred and fifty miles from the ice-cap&mdash;a
-distance easily within the range of visibility
-of the &#8220;blink.&#8221; All eyes were straining
-for the first sight of land, when slowly the horizon
-began to dissolve, and a white wall of vapor
-came rolling down upon us. Everything became
-clammy in the dismal drabness that enveloped
-us. We should have to maintain unrelaxing
-vigilance against the menace of icebergs. Moreover,
-it would prevent our seeing the land until<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-the next day at least, unless it speedily cleared
-away.</p>
-
-<p>All night we kept a careful watch and came
-through without a mishap, in spite of the fog&#8217;s
-remaining as thick as burgoo. When the starboard
-watch, my watch, came on deck at six
-o&#8217;clock the next morning, the fog was beginning
-to burn off and slowly the visibility increased
-mile by mile. Suddenly a bit of a breeze ruffled
-the surface of the sea; the fog curtain suddenly
-lifted, as in a theatre, and the whole glorious
-panorama of glaciers, mountains, and fiords
-burst upon our startled gaze. This coastal
-scenery on &#8220;The Greenland&#8221; is as magnificent
-as any Alpine scenery. Peaks tower five or six
-thousand feet sheer from the depths, with deep
-blue fiords cleaving their base, and glittering
-glaciers suspended from their peaks like diamond
-pendants.</p>
-
-<p>The Commander soon determined our position
-as being off the town of Holsteinborg&mdash;a
-deduction aided by our sighting a peculiarly
-shaped mountain peak known as the Kin of Sal.
-Hence we were not much more than a hundred
-miles from Godhavn, which we should therefore
-reach early the next day if the Weather
-Man remained affable.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>At five o&#8217;clock the next morning I was awakened
-by the clank of the anchor chain running
-through the hawse pipe. In an instant I was
-on my feet and in two more I was in my clothes
-and out on deck, this feat being made easier as
-the result of long practice attending school roll-call.
-I took a look around. The harbor was
-spacious with high cliffs towering on either side,
-with here and there an iceberg hard aground.
-Safe and snug in the lee of one of these bergs
-lay the <i>Peary</i>, a welcome sight, indeed, to our
-eyes. In a few minutes Commander McDonald
-hove in sight paddling an Eskimo kayak and
-loudly assailing us with a running fire of unacademic
-Eskimo. Shortly he came aboard and
-disappeared into the after cabin. Not long
-afterwards Commander Byrd and Floyd Bennet
-appeared in an inflated rubber boat, the oddest
-looking craft I ever saw afloat. They
-were soon alongside and came aboard to consult
-with the Commander.</p>
-
-<p>Across from the <i>Peary</i> lay a large Danish
-collier. She had come out from Copenhagen
-to distribute along the coast at the various settlements
-the local coal which is mined in Greenland.
-This coal is obtained at a town called
-Umanak, where the <i>Peary</i> was going in a few<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
-hours to bunker up before cutting loose from the
-last outposts of civilization.</p>
-
-<p>Across the bay an interesting sight met our
-eyes. It was an old hulk, battered and twisted
-until it little resembled a ship. This we learned
-was the historic old <i>Fox</i>, the famous exploring
-vessel of Sir Leopold McClintock. On board of
-her he set out in 1857 to discover the fate of
-Sir John Franklin and his men, who had disappeared
-into the Northwest Passage in 1845. No
-word of them was ever received until Sir Leopold
-solved the mystery.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the British admiralty attempted to
-discover the fate of the lost navigators. When
-three years had elapsed and no news of the expedition&#8217;s
-whereabouts was received, they despatched
-Admiral Sir Edward Belcher with a
-relief squadron to go to his assistance. During
-the following year he searched diligently, but
-could discover no traces of the location of the
-expedition. When the full import of this disaster
-which had befallen Sir John and his one
-hundred and twenty-eight men in those bleak,
-ice-ridden waters of the Northwest Passage was
-at last realized, the entire civilized world stood
-aghast. From all sides poured in proffers of aid,
-and messages of condolence and hope deluged<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
-Lady Jane Franklin, the brave wife of Sir John.
-It was in response to an appeal from Lady
-Franklin to the President of the United States
-that the first American Arctic Expedition was
-organized. Henry Grinnell, a rich ship merchant,
-played an important part in the organization
-and financing of this noble philanthropy,
-and in tribute to his high ideals, the expedition
-was named in his honor. Lieutenant Edward J.
-DeHaven went as commander, and Elisha Kent
-Kane as surgeon, of whom we shall hear much,
-further on, in connection with the second Grinnell
-Expedition.</p>
-
-<p>But all of these expeditions returned unsuccessful.
-The admiralty lost interest in the undertaking,
-and the names of Sir John and his men
-were crossed from the navy register, thereby
-concluding all admiralty participation and further
-attempts at rescue. Lady Franklin, however,
-was not content to consider her husband as
-irretrievably lost until every effort had been
-made to discover the circumstances of his disappearance.
-To this end she self-sacrificingly
-pledged her personal fortune to the cause, and
-in spite of disheartening reverses, she gamely
-continued sending forth expedition after expedition.
-At last her funds became nearly depleted,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
-and still no success had crowned her efforts. But
-she determined to make one final attempt with
-the last of her fortune. She therefore enlisted
-the aid of Sir Leopold McClintock, &#8220;the greatest
-of Arctic sledge men,&#8221; as he was called by his
-contemporaries. They determined to purchase
-the little steam yacht <i>Fox</i> to transport the expedition.
-She was the best that could be obtained
-for the money, but far from being as large as
-they desired.</p>
-
-<p>In 1857 the expedition sailed from England
-for Godhavn. There they made their final
-adjustments before squaring away for the treacherous
-ice of Melville Bay. They made their way
-to this bay, and there on the 13th of August the
-pack came in solid around them, and they were
-locked fast for the year. For six months they
-remained in the pack and were carried nearly a
-thousand miles to the southward before they
-broke out in the spring. The vessel was so badly
-damaged after her experience in the ice that it
-seemed imperative to return to England immediately,
-but Sir Leopold, remembering Lady
-Jane&#8217;s faith in the expedition, courageously
-ordered his battered ship headed northward once
-again. Once more he managed to make Godhavn
-in spite of his crippled condition, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>
-there with the primitive instruments obtainable
-he instituted such crude repairs as were
-possible.</p>
-
-<p>Once again he headed north, and this time
-without mishap he made his way through Melville
-Bay and to the head of Lancaster Sound,
-thence southward to Bellot Strait where they
-wintered. In rambling about the shore they
-came upon a number of bleached skeletons and
-miscellaneous camp articles. These upon examination
-proved to bear the stamp of His
-Majesty&#8217;s Ships <i>Erebus</i> and <i>Terror</i>, Sir John&#8217;s
-ill-fated vessels. Following up these traces Sir
-Leopold soon determined that Sir John and all
-his men had perished in retreating from their
-ships, which had remained fast in the ice until
-the dwindling store of supplies forced the expedition
-to the desperate expedient of attempting
-a retreat to the Hudson&#8217;s Bay Company posts
-down Bach&#8217;s Great Fish River.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Leopold then returned to Godhavn and
-after remaining a short while in that port
-he sailed away for England. There his great
-discoveries satisfied the tired heart of Lady
-Franklin, and the curiosity of the British
-public.</p>
-
-<p>Years later the vessel was sold to the Danish<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
-Government and employed in the Greenland
-trade. In 1915 she was damaged in the ice and
-towed into Godhavn. She was then beached
-and left to rot out her days in the ignominious
-fashion in which we found her.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-
-<small>ICE AND MORE ICE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap2">AFTER we had been in port a good part of
-the morning, the <i>Peary</i> hoisted anchor and
-started towards the mouth of the harbor, and we
-needs must follow suit. In the meantime we had
-loaded up with water and had had a brief rest
-from our sea voyage. We wanted to reach Etah
-on August 1st at the latest, and as it was then well
-along in July it was necessary to make as much
-haste as was convenient. Therefore, we pushed
-straight on from Disko Island to South Upernavik
-as fast as wind and tide would permit us.
-There the <i>Peary</i> joined us loaded deep with coal&mdash;the
-last she would obtain until her return from
-the far north.</p>
-
-<p>At this town we saw our first exhibition of the
-remarkable dexterity of the Greenlanders in
-their frail skin-boats, known as &#8220;kayaks.&#8221; These
-craft are about eighteen feet long and twenty
-inches wide. In them the natives can go out in
-any kind of a sea, and if a wave capsizes the boat
-they can right themselves with a few skilled<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
-strokes of their paddles, or if they lose the
-paddle, a twist of the body will suffice. To keep
-water from seeping in while they are head downward,
-a tight sealskin shirt is worn. This laces
-tightly at both wrists and around the head, thus
-forming a water-tight seam. Furthermore, it
-tightly buttons to the cockpit coaming of the
-kayak, making another water-tight fit. Thus the
-man constitutes almost a part of the boat, and the
-marvellous feats they perform with this rig can
-be appreciated only by witnessing these aquatic
-demonstrations.</p>
-
-<p>We were all very anxious to land to see how
-the people lived, but on account of the prevalence
-of whooping cough, the government would
-not permit us to do so. At Godhavn also this
-condition prevailed, and we had been allowed
-to go ashore only for water. Our desire to
-land was further whetted by a view of many
-gaudily dressed maidens emerging from church,
-as the day was Sunday. They were all decked
-out in elaborate finery, and through the glass
-they seemed quite attractive. But discipline is
-discipline, and we were obliged to forego any
-closer association with these alluring sirens.</p>
-
-<p>The morning after the <i>Peary</i> arrived from
-the coal mines, we set sail for Melville Bay.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>
-The very prospect of entering this dread stretch
-of water was a challenge. Here in the <i>Fox</i>,
-McClintock had been imprisoned in the ice for a
-year and drifted for over a thousand miles. In
-1834, thirty-four whaling vessels were crushed
-in the pack. Thoughts of such events were far
-from comforting, and I could not help wondering
-how our little vessels would fare in the
-relentless ice. If they were crushed we would
-be left to retreat as best we could to Upernavik.
-To become imprisoned for a year would also
-necessitate the abandonment of the vessels as we
-had been able to make room for only four
-months&#8217; provisions, because of the space occupied
-by the aeroplane equipment. But I had
-confidence in our craft and in our leaders, and I
-looked forward with an untroubled mind to the
-thrilling work of ice navigation (such is the
-assurance of youth).</p>
-
-<p>The Commander had determined to take what
-is known as the Middle Passage which is directly
-through the centre of the pack. Therefore, we
-pushed out boldly from Upernavik and laid our
-course straight for Cape York&mdash;the northern
-terminus of the Bay and the goal of all who
-attempt its navigation.</p>
-
-<p>Without sighting any ice we sailed along for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
-some hours. We soon entered a dense fog, and
-the visibility became very poor. In a short while
-we began to pass innumerable icebergs. Weaving
-in and out among the bergs, always vigilant,
-always tense, we continued on into the Arctic
-wastes. During this anxious period I was on
-lookout, and my every minute was occupied in
-watching for the bergs and directing the helmsman
-how to avoid them. Out of the white background
-of the fog these sinister mountains of ice
-would emerge, first as a thin black line on the
-sea&#8217;s surface; then taking shape until high above
-they towered, grey and lustreless. On all sides
-they appeared, until the sea was like a boulder-strewn
-plain through which we threaded our
-mazy way. Now and then one would disintegrate
-or capsize with a mighty roar suggestive
-of a bombardment of artillery, and we would
-rise and fall on the ensuing swell.</p>
-
-<p>After we had been in this field of bergs for
-some time, I began to notice occasional little
-cakes of ice. Soon these increased in number
-until there was a regular fleet of them. Then as
-suddenly as they had appeared they disappeared,
-and we were in open water with only a fugitive
-berg here and there. I thought to myself that
-the ancient mariners had greatly exaggerated the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-terrors of the ice field when just as it seemed
-thickening to a degree where our progress would
-really be impeded, it suddenly was dissipated.
-But this superior contempt for the old salts did
-not long hold sway. Gradually a dark, ragged
-line broke the even white of the enshrouding
-mist. My first thought was that it was a low
-berg or &#8220;growler&#8221; as they are called, but it continued
-opening out along the horizon until I saw
-that it was too large for a single berg. Then
-in a flash it dawned on me that here was the
-Arctic pack! I watched attentively. Shortly it
-merged into well-defined pans with thin leads
-between.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately the Commander clambered aloft
-to survey the situation. Seeing a favorable opening
-he directed the helmsman to head her for it.
-In another second we had passed the outer portals
-of the pack and had at least entered upon the
-great ordeal of the expedition. Here even the
-delay of several weeks would defeat the aims of
-the expedition, as the short northern summer
-would be over and the season for flying terminated.
-If the winds blew from the southward
-our situation would be precarious in the extreme,
-and only a kind providence could keep
-us from an untimely end. Even a few hours of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-ice pressure against the <i>Peary&#8217;s</i> sides might easily
-open her seams, and leave her a leaking hulk.</p>
-
-<p>Our watch continued working the vessel
-through the leads until midnight, when the port
-watch came on deck. As I lay in my forecastle
-bunk in the eerie half-light of the northern midnight
-I could hear the crash of the vessel smashing
-her way forward through the fog over the
-encroaching pans. My berth was well up in the
-bow, and as each blow smote the planking it
-seemed as if the next surely would stave the bow.
-But the sturdy oak withstood all onslaughts, and
-soon the dread sounds became sweet music, and
-I fell asleep.</p>
-
-<p>When I came on deck the next morning, the
-vessel was lying moored to a pan as the fog had
-become so thick that it was impossible to discern
-the weak spots in the ice. As the fog showed no
-signs of lifting, the Commander proffered a suggestion.
-We were to go on a seal hunt! Therefore,
-we took down our guns and set forth at
-once. I went along with Abie, as I figured that
-he would know where to find the quarry from his
-long association with them in Labrador. For
-some time we tramped across the ice. Then Abie
-suddenly turned with a signal for silence. I
-followed the direction of his eyes and saw a small<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-dark object floating in the open water of the lead.
-Silently he unlimbered his rifle, took deliberate
-aim, and dispatched a ball through the animal&#8217;s
-head. His was a perfect shot and made in the
-one essential spot, since it is necessary to shoot a
-seal through the head or its dying reflex action
-will expel the air from its lungs thus causing it to
-sink. After we saw that the shot had been
-properly placed and the animal was going to
-float, I dashed back to the ship to obtain a small
-boat and a harpoon. The harpoon was soon
-procured and I sprang into the boat. Just then
-Byrd and McDonald sauntered over from the
-<i>Peary</i>. Seeing what was up they climbed in
-with me to recover the prize. I rowed as hard
-as I could down the lead, since I was fearful that
-our trophy would sink. A short pull brought us
-to the spot, and one of the men seized the harpoon
-and lunged with all his might. But he
-struck the seal across the hair and the harpoon
-glanced off, while under the impetus of the blow
-the seal sank about ten feet. My heart sank with
-him. Slowly, however, he emerged, and this
-time with Abie bellowing advice, the harpoon
-was firmly affixed and we drew our victim out on
-the ice. It was a young seal, not much larger
-than a roasting pig. Abie decided that it would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
-make tender eating; so he set about skinning it.
-After the skinning and cleaning was completed,
-we stowed the seal in the boat and departed for
-the ship.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile several of the other boys had
-scattered over the floes, Dick Salmon being hull
-down some distance away. As the fog had begun
-to rot out, it was decided to get under weigh
-immediately. Therefore the recall signal was
-sounded from the <i>Peary&#8217;s</i> siren, and the boys
-came scurrying back. Poor Dick, however, had
-an intervening lead open between him and the
-vessel; so he was forced to hang up until he could
-find a place to cross. Seeing his plight, the
-Commander ran the <i>Bowdoin</i> down towards
-him, and just as the lead again closed he came
-down on him and picked him up.</p>
-
-<p>We were now nearly in the centre of the pack,
-and with clearer skies our hopes of getting clear
-of the pack began to rise. Steadily we forged to
-the northward through the thick pans. So far
-there had been little wind, and the ice had not
-packed together very heavily. Towards evening,
-however, under the influence of the tide, the ice
-began to pack, and the <i>Bowdoin</i> was caught in a
-nip. We were jammed as if in a vise, between
-two great floes of ice. Robbie was in charge as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
-the Commander had gone aboard the <i>Peary</i> to
-con her through the ice. Immediately Robbie
-ordered us out on the ice to try to break away
-the jagged edges which threatened to impale us.
-We pounded away with heavy timbers and managed
-to break off several sharp points, thus
-making an easier berth for the vessel. But try
-as we would, we could neither go forward nor
-backward. The <i>Peary</i> observing our situation
-swung around and came ramming back to our
-aid. With the tremendous blows of her massive
-bow, she planed off great pieces of the floes
-until finally she broke through to our relief.
-In a short time, however, she herself was inextricably
-caught. The pressure was considerable,
-and the <i>Peary</i> assumed a list of five or six
-degrees.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Koelz soon came over to the <i>Bowdoin</i> in
-royal bad humor, complaining that the grinding
-of the ice against the side of the <i>Peary</i> had prevented
-him from sleeping. Furthermore, on
-trying to leave his cabin, the pressure had so contracted
-the vessel that he found his door so
-jammed it would not open, and the combined
-efforts of three men were necessary to liberate
-the Doctor who came aboard the <i>Bowdoin</i> for
-refuge. Long afterwards we discovered that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>
-vessel had contracted several inches from the
-tremendous pressure.</p>
-
-<p>In a few hours the tide again shifted, and to
-our great relief the vessel was freed of the pressure.
-Then we again got under weigh, and were
-soon ploughing along at a good rate of speed,
-considering the handicaps under which we
-labored. At this time we began to wonder where
-we were, as for some days we had been unable
-to determine our position by observation, because
-of the thick weather.</p>
-
-<p>For five days we had been at sea. We had
-encountered heavy fogs, icebergs and the savage
-pack, and we had come through safe and undaunted.
-Now as the weather was clearing, our
-wonder as to where we were increased. Had
-some fell current swept us far from our course?
-Had our many zigzags in the ice carried us in
-circles? Where were we indeed? The weather
-continued to clear until we could discern the
-blue sky overhead and the pale iceblink all
-around. Then the Commander, with his glass
-clapped on the northern horizon, suddenly
-became aware of a dark streak in the even white
-of the iceblink.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Land clouds,&#8221; said the Commander, as he
-swept them with his binoculars.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>Land clouds they indeed seemed to be, and
-all eyes were thenceforth strained to catch a view
-of the land itself. Meanwhile the man aloft had
-been saying little and looking much. Suddenly
-rang out the long-hoped-for cry, &#8220;Land ho!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In thirty seconds every man who could scramble
-to a place in the rigging was there, and each
-was eager to spy out the distant peaks which soon
-came into view. Immediately we put on full
-speed in order to reach them before the ice
-should again become impassable. As if some
-wayward spirit had sensed our wish, the floes
-came crunching and sliding into a compact mass,
-rendering futile all attempts to proceed. We
-were therefore regretfully forced to lose more
-precious hours. These hours were doubly precious
-as it was already July 31st, and every hour
-counted if we were to reach our destination on
-our scheduled date, August 1st.</p>
-
-<p>As I looked out over the slowly drifting ice,
-with its unending white broken only by the thin
-dark lines of the ever-opening and closing leads,
-towards the rugged cliffs on the far horizon,
-standing like grim sentries at the portals of the
-North, I wondered why we had come. Why had
-this company left all that was dearest to them;
-their loved ones; their congenial firesides; the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>
-labors in which until so recently they had been
-engrossed? Why had we endured the perils of
-wind, and sea and ice, borne discomforts and
-hardships, sacrificed personal ease and safety?
-For what had we sailed three thousand miles
-across tractless seas? For a moment it seemed
-utter folly to have come all this distance for
-things that at best appeared vague and indistinct!
-We had all been in comfort and safety at
-home. For what conceivable reason would
-intelligent men turn their backs on these pretentious
-inducements? For a moment I pondered.
-Suddenly in my mind&#8217;s eye I saw another
-ice waste not dissimilar to this one, and I visioned
-other hills, this time in the west, hills on which
-no human eye had rested&mdash;our quest. Then
-three small specks clove the deep blue of the
-eastern sky. Soon the hum of engines echoed
-from berg and hummock, and they resolved into
-aeroplanes&mdash;our planes. Nearer they soared,
-over the first range of hills. Then they wheeled
-about and soon receded into the endless vault of
-heaven whence they had come. My heart leaped
-within me. I knew why we had come. In our
-blood surged the age-old spirit of adventure
-which drove the first Viking to the Arctic seas;
-which sent Columbus across the terror-strewn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-western ocean; which lured Sir John Franklin
-to his lonesome grave. I felt my blood flow
-fast. The same old urge had gripped me, and
-obedient to its demands I, too, had joined the
-adventurous throng and seen home and ease fade
-astern as the vessel&#8217;s prow pointed for the unknown
-lands over the horizon&#8217;s edge.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X<br />
-
-
-<small>WE TAKE THE AIR</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">EARLY on the morning of August 1st, we
-broke through the last of the pack of Cape
-York and laid our course around the shore ice as
-yet unbroken from the Cape. In a short time we
-had rounded it and were finally out of Melville
-Bay, a departure which caused no sorrow on the
-part of any of us. The body of water which we
-had now entered was known as Smith Sound, a
-name given it by William Baffin in honor of one
-of his supporters. It stretches from Cape York
-to beyond Etah where it opens out into Kane
-Basin. Usually the Sound is free from pack ice
-except on the western side where a heavy stream
-of it flows to the southward.</p>
-
-<p>For several hours we sailed without seeing a
-sign of any living thing save a few birds. Suddenly
-two kayaks darted out from the shore.
-With a few deft strokes of the paddle their occupants
-brought them alongside, and we heard the
-musical hail &#8220;Ochshinai!&#8221; followed by a demand
-for &#8220;bacca.&#8221; In response to their hail Robbie<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
-tossed them two plugs which they aptly caught,
-waved their arms with delight and yelled,
-&#8220;Quoin-amik!&#8221; (Thank you!). As we sailed
-away, we could see them lovingly caressing their
-prizes.</p>
-
-<p>The wind freshened as we bent our course to
-the north and we were soon bowling along with
-a bone in our teeth. The coast flashed by. Soon
-Cape Alexander, &#8220;the Cape Horn of the North,&#8221;
-which lies half-way between the Pole and the
-Arctic Circle, hove in sight. As we rounded this
-wicked old promontory, the customary vicious
-squall snapped at us. We were soon past the
-cape, however, and once again entered smooth
-waters. Here we could see the walrus breaking
-water all about us, and every now and then a
-savage, white-tusked face would leer at us as we
-scudded along. Now and then almost beneath
-our bows an entire herd would blow and disappear
-in a mass of white water. At nine o&#8217;clock
-that night, we worked our way into Foulke
-Fiord, and there dead ahead lay the haven of our
-hopes, the goal of our endeavors&mdash;Etah!</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i090a.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Commander MacMillan: with an eskimo child; in flying costume;<br />
-in the ice barrel.</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i090b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Brother John&#8217;s glacier and Alida Lake, Etah, North Greenland.</p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i090c.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-
-<p>There in the bright light of the Arctic night
-glistened the tranquil waters of the fiord, and the
-crumbling cliffs reflected a ruddy welcome. Far
-away up the fiord sparkled a great glacier, an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
-arm of the huge inland Mer de Glace. Close at
-hand bubbled and splashed a tiny stream which
-tumbled down among the rugged boulders from
-the melting snow above and trickled across the
-coastal intervale which was rich with lush grass.
-We stood there staring and straining our eyes for
-some sign of the expected village. All we saw
-on the slope above the fringe of grass was the
-hillside in which there were two holes in the
-ground, the remains of igloos of a former age,
-only these and nothing more!</p>
-
-<p>In a few moments we had rounded Provision
-Point, so named from its use as a supply depot
-on the Commander&#8217;s previous expeditions.
-Thinking this location favorable for an anchorage,
-he immediately ordered the anchor
-dropped. A quick heave with the anchor chain
-announced the successful completion of the outward
-voyage. We of the ship personnel had
-consummated our mission; now it was for the
-aviators to accomplish theirs.</p>
-
-<p>The clatter of the anchor chain acquainted
-Melkon with the fact that we had arrived.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What kind of postage stamps do they use
-here?&#8221; he called up the companionway.</p>
-
-<p>Receiving no enlightenment on this subject, he
-started up on deck. Poking his head above the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>
-hatch he inquired with a puzzled expression on
-his face:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, where is the post office?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Commander extended his arm shorewards
-with a dramatic gesture and said simply
-and significantly:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Look!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Melkon took one long look at those two holes
-in the ground and scanned that stern and rock-bound
-coast. Then it dawned upon him that we
-were now in the real Arctic, far beyond the last
-pale of civilization and its appurtenances. With
-a subdued air he replied:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah, now I understand.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>We had rather expected to find a considerable
-encampment of Eskimos and were somewhat disappointed
-to see that the country was apparently
-depopulated. But in a short time from the
-upper end of the fiord by the glacier we saw two
-kayaks approaching. Soon the Commander
-recognized their occupants as Noo-ka-ping-wa
-and In-you-gee-to, both old friends and companions
-of the Commander&#8217;s on former sleighing
-expeditions. They were delighted to see the
-Commander, and informed us that they represented
-the entire male population of the town
-with the exception of old Ak-kom-mo-ding-wa,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
-who was coming as rapidly as his advanced years
-would allow. He soon appeared in a dilapidated
-canvas canoe, a gift of some explorer. He
-had abandoned the kayak in favor of the canoe,
-as the smaller craft&#8217;s cramped quarters no longer
-felt as comfortable as of yore. He was a comical
-old loafer, and his behavior caused us much
-amusement. His lazy habits and good-natured
-disposition soon gained for him the sobriquet of,
-&#8220;The Beloved Vagabond.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Next morning at five o&#8217;clock sharp, we were
-roused out for an early start at constructing a
-landing place for the planes. After a hasty
-breakfast we piled into the boats and rowed over
-to the beach which had been chosen for the
-assembling of the planes. It was strewn with
-boulders and small rocks, and the only way of
-ridding the beach of them was to pry them out
-and roll them away. At this task everybody was
-soon engaged from the Commander down. All
-morning we labored, and by noon the sand was
-well cleared of them.</p>
-
-<p>Our next task was to construct the runway for
-hauling the planes up to the beach, since the
-wheels would otherwise sink in the soft sand.
-For this purpose we requisitioned the sides of the
-cases in which the wings had been packed. To<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>
-get them ashore was somewhat of a problem, and
-we tried several methods before we hit upon the
-ultimate one of lashing two boats together, thus
-forming a raft of sufficient stability upon which
-to load them.</p>
-
-<p>After landing the planes, crosspieces were
-nailed under them, and these were weighed down
-with heavy rocks to keep the whole apparatus
-from floating away with the tide. When the
-runway was completed, the Navy men began
-bringing in the wings. In a short time the first
-fuselage was slung over the side of the <i>Peary</i>,
-into the water, and then brought ashore lashed
-between two boats in order that it might not tip
-over.</p>
-
-<p>When the plane had grounded on the runway,
-all hands tailed on her tackle and walked her up
-the beach. Then the wings were set up, and the
-aviators secured them to the fuselage while we
-supported them on our backs. Having been
-assembled, the plane was then rolled back into
-the water and taken off to its anchorage.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i094a.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">The <i>Peary</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i094b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Expedition plane at the stern of the <i>Bowdoin</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In three days all of the planes were assembled
-and ready to go. It indeed gave us a thrill to
-see them soaring up from the waters of Etah
-Fiord and flying over a land and sea which never
-before had seen the shadow of a bird larger than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
-a glaucous gull. The Eskimos also looked on
-with wide-eyed wonder, and many were the
-&#8220;Ahs&#8221; and &#8220;Naveos&#8221; as the great birds left the
-water amidst clouds of spray and went skimming
-over berg and glacier.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i094c.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Launching first plane at Etah.</p>
-
-<p>We had got away to a propitious start for our
-flying, and the prospects for success in the fullest
-measure seemed bright. Our hopes rose all too
-soon, however, for at this point old Torngak, the
-evil spirit of the North, angered at this invasion
-of his realm, took a hand in the proceedings.
-With driving snow and squalls he came sweeping
-down on us before we had been in Etah three
-days. Then his tactics changed, and he blanketed
-us in fog. For but three days of the entire summer
-did he sulk in his tent; during the remainder
-of the time he was either hovering in the offing
-or engaged in active offense through driving
-storms or insidious fog. But in spite of these
-handicaps, on every occasion at all suitable for
-flying the Commander and the aviators were
-away in their endeavor to penetrate the unknown
-area. To do this it was necessary to lay down a
-base between Etah and the Polar Sea. The
-planes were of the type known as amphibian,
-equipped to land either in the water or on the
-land. Equipped with skids they might possibly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>
-utilize the ice. An examination of the drift ice
-of Smith Sound precluded all possibility of its
-being used as an aviation field, covered as it was
-with pools of water, cracks, and pressure ridges.
-The ice covered the mountains of Ellesmere
-Land, threatening disaster to any plane which
-had to make a forced landing.</p>
-
-<p>It was therefore necessary to rely on the water
-of the fiords, which should afford a safe, ice-free
-landing place. Time after time the aviators
-searched for open water, but fate was against
-them, and at nearly every visit the waters were
-choked with cakes of ice large enough to puncture
-a plane. Several times they found an apparently
-ice-free spot, but in a few hours the ice
-would return, rendering it impossible to again
-utilize that point for a base. The Commander
-had confidently believed from his sledging experience,
-and from the testimony of the Eskimos,
-that these fiords would be free of ice. The
-unforeseen presence of the ice can probably be
-explained, however, by the unprecedentedly
-short and cold summer we were experiencing.
-Not even in the memory of the oldest Eskimo
-had such unfortunate meteorological conditions
-prevailed.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the remarkable summer, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
-rather lack of summer, with which we were
-embarrassed, the usual run of engine trouble and
-other mishaps fell to our lot. One morning I
-was sitting down in the forecastle when the
-alarming news became known that a plane was
-sinking. Robbie and John Jaynes immediately
-took energetic measures to save the plane, and all
-hands came tumbling on deck. At the moment I
-arrived, the plane had sunk until the water was
-level with the propeller shaft of the inverted
-motor. She lay poised for a final plunge to the
-depths, and John and Robbie were desperately
-striving to get a line on the shaft. Rocheville, a
-Navy mechanic, lay aft on the tail gallantly
-trying to counter-balance the weight of the water
-forward and bring the plane on a level keel. The
-line was soon made fast, and just in time, as in
-another second she would have taken the last
-plunge. All hands then tailed on the line, and
-gradually the plane emerged. In a short time
-the deck was above water, and the aircraft was
-in a position to be bailed out. It was a fortunate
-rescue, but the plane never flew again in spite of
-our efforts.</p>
-
-<p>The days not occupied in overhauling the
-planes or not rendered worthless by storms were
-devoted to flights over Ellesmere Land in search<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
-of a base. The presence of drifting ice, however,
-had dealt our planes a deathblow. By the
-20th of August the Commander realized that
-the planes could not add to the results he had
-obtained with dog sledges in 1914. At best they
-might put him at the edge of the Polar Sea, but
-they would never carry him out over the unexplored
-district on which he had previously traveled
-off shore one hundred and fifty miles.</p>
-
-<p>In the realm of science, however, the expedition
-produced notable results. Lieutenant Benjamin
-Rigg of the Coast and Geodetic Survey
-obtained valuable sets of magnetic and tidal
-observations at nearly every point at which we
-tarried. The first automatic tidal recorder to be
-used in the far north was also put in operation by
-him. Dr. Koelz, the expedition&#8217;s naturalist, also
-did some very valuable work. His collection of
-fish and bird specimens was large and contained
-many rare species. The National Geographic
-photographers obtained excellent photographs
-of Arctic scenes and people. For the first time
-far northern scenes were recorded by the new
-natural color process of photography. All-together
-the scientific results more than justified
-the expedition and made up for the unfortunate
-termination of the flying.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>On this strip of coast upon which Etah is
-located dwells a group of people&mdash;the northernmost
-race in the world. These people are
-known to the white race as Eskimos, which
-means &#8220;meat eaters,&#8221; but among themselves the
-appellation Innuit, &#8220;the people,&#8221; is applied.</p>
-
-<p>They are a very strange group and little is
-known about them. It is thought that they are
-of Mongolian origin. Whence they came and
-by what path, however, has always remained a
-mystery and is apparently little closer to solution
-now than formerly. At the present time they
-are distributed along the Arctic coasts of
-America, Greenland and Eastern Asia.</p>
-
-<p>The particular branch of the race which lives
-on the North Greenland shore was unknown
-until 1818, when Sir John Ross worked his little
-vessel through the ice of Melville Bay to Cape
-York. As he lay off the Cape he observed several
-black dots moving towards him over the ice.
-These soon resolved into Eskimos, and dog sleds.
-On their nearer approach he entered into a
-conversation with them through an interpreter
-from South Greenland. He then told them he
-came from far to the south. Upon the receipt of
-this information they assumed an incredulous air
-and informed him that surely no one could live<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
-in the south as all their ice drifted off in that
-direction and by this time that region must be
-absolutely choked with it.</p>
-
-<p>For many years these &#8220;Arctic Highlanders,&#8221;
-to use the rather poetical name Ross gave them,
-remained unvisited. In 1850-51, however, Saunders
-wintered among them in the ship <i>North
-Star</i>. He was the first man ever really to live
-with them. To-day on the bay named after his
-ship, Knud Rasmussen, the explorer, maintains
-a trading station.</p>
-
-<p>Two years after the departure of Saunders,
-the little brig <i>Advance</i> with Elisha Kent
-Kane, &#8220;America&#8217;s first Arctic explorer,&#8221; in command,
-rounded Cape York, and gallantly beat
-up Smith Sound to Renssaeler Harbor. While
-Kane was there the Eskimos sledged up to see
-him. With a gun on his shoulder he went forth
-to meet them, with so great suspicion did he
-regard them. But they appeared peaceable and
-he had no occasion to employ the firearm. Kane
-brought back the first reliable reports on the
-Eskimos. However, he did not make much use
-of their knowledge and skill, nor of their dog
-teams, in his explorations. Seven years after
-Kane, in 1860, Dr. Isaac Israel Hayes, one of
-Kane&#8217;s men, revisited Etah and entered into<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
-extensive relations with the natives. For the
-first time did the Eskimos aid in the work of
-exploration in which they were later to take so
-conspicuous a part with Peary and MacMillan.
-But Hayes never fully trusted them, and for
-awhile he considered himself and his men the
-objects of a conspiracy on the part of the Eskimos
-to murder them all.</p>
-
-<p>After Hayes, with the exception of a winter
-which the crew of the <i>Polaris</i> spent just north of
-Etah, the Eskimos remained unvisited until the
-arrival of Peary. Peary quickly realized the
-great value of the Eskimo and his sturdy team of
-dogs. He gained their confidence and esteem.
-Without experiencing any of the evils which the
-earlier expeditions had expected from the Eskimos,
-he worked with them for eighteen years.
-It was largely due to the skill and energy of the
-Eskimos and the power in their sturdy dogs that
-Peary eventually conquered the Pole. In 1876
-Markham, of the English North Pole Expedition,
-reported to his government that he considered
-it impossible to attain the Pole. He relied
-on the unaided labors of his men to pull the
-sledges, a terrific task which well demonstrated
-the bravery and stamina of the British. In a
-little over a month, Markham and his men<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
-traveled seventy-three miles from the ship,
-advancing their sledges by man power alone, and
-nearly dying with exhaustion. Peary in three
-days by the aid of Eskimos and dog sledges
-exceeded this distance with ease. This clearly
-shows the superiority of the Eskimo method of
-travel. Peary never had cause to regret his
-employment of the Eskimo, and they did not
-play him false in spite of the beliefs of the older
-explorers.</p>
-
-<p>Four years after the Pole had been conquered,
-the American flag again entered Smith Sound.
-This time it snapped in the breeze over the head
-of one who would bring it new renown. Upon
-the scene had appeared the fit successor of the
-great Peary&mdash;MacMillan. With the aid of
-Eskimos and dog teams in the spring of 1914
-he turned his steps westward over Ellesmere and
-Axel Heiberg Land. One hundred and fifty
-miles he penetrated the Polar Sea towards the
-land which Peary had seen. But he found this
-land had been nothing but a mirage, and regretfully
-he and his Eskimos turned their steps
-homeward. For four years he lived among
-them, and studied their way of living, and his
-researches greatly extended our knowledge concerning
-them. Thus at last the Eskimo came<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-into his own as the helpmate and companion
-of the white man on his trips in the Arctic
-regions.</p>
-
-<p>On the 1925 MacMillan expedition I had the
-opportunity of observing them and their interesting
-customs. At the time of year in which I
-was among them they were living in sealskin
-tents or tupiks. The rock igloos had been
-abandoned for their summer airing. The Eskimos
-removed the dome of their arched rock
-igloos on the arrival of warm weather. This
-airing of the igloos is about the only sanitary act
-the natives perform. They rarely if ever wash
-themselves or their clothes.</p>
-
-<p>Their methods of food preservation also are
-rather distasteful to a civilized person. After
-walrus or other meat has been secured, it is cut
-up and then stacked in a pile. Then over all is
-placed a large number of rocks. In this way it
-is stored until there is need of it. In a few days
-these caches can be located by the smell alone.</p>
-
-<p>But at all things requiring a good eye, a cool
-head and a steady hand, they excel. A good
-example of this is the way in which they make
-their rope. It is made by taking the skin of a
-seal which has been so skinned that the hide
-comes off in concentric bands. Then one of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
-natives pulls the band along while another holds
-a knife. Even a small tremble in the hand of
-the one holding the knife would cut through the
-thin line, ruining it, but so accurate is their
-handiwork that the lines vary in width hardly
-at all and the rope seems so uniform that one
-would think it had been made in a machine.
-They also skin small seals in such a way that the
-skin pulls off absolutely whole with but one
-perforation. This skin is so carefully removed
-from the flesh that it will hold air without
-leaking!</p>
-
-<p>They display the greatest ingenuity in the
-manufacture of all their instruments and utensils.
-The point in their harpoons, and the way
-they employ the sealskin bag to float the walrus
-which sinks when it is killed, all show the innate
-skill and ingenuity in the race. They are never
-at a loss and never &#8220;stumped.&#8221; Once someone
-was repairing a sledge, and he could not find a
-drill. An Eskimo stepped forward and coolly
-shot a hole through the runner. They are like
-that in everything, always alert, always on the
-job.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i104a.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Eskimo kiddie with his mother&#8217;s coat on.</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i104b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Even Eskimo boys of Ig-loo-da-houny have a sweet tooth.</p>
-
-<p>Their philosophy of life is also interesting.
-The hard struggle they wage against the inhospitable
-environment in which they live has not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
-made them an ill-tempered, sullen race. On the
-contrary, they are always laughing and smiling.
-A good joke is much enjoyed. On one occasion
-several of our photographers wanted pictures of
-live ducks on the nest. The Eskimos learning
-of this wish took a dead duck and propped it up
-on a nest with walrus whiskers so that it looked
-quite lifelike. Then they motioned to the
-photographers who cautiously crept forward,
-making every effort to keep from making a
-noise. The Eskimos meanwhile nearly died
-laughing. They are little inclined to worry.
-Old Panikpa admirably summarized their outlook
-on life when asked if he was not worried
-on a very dangerous strip of ice. &#8220;No,&#8221; he
-replied, &#8220;I let Peary do all the worrying.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i104c.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">In-you-gee-to makes a coil of rawhide line out of skin<br />
-of which he is justly proud.</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i104d.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">The only Eskimo family in Etah.</p>
-
-<p>One may think them unintelligent and mentally
-deficient, but they have keen intellects and
-they use some very clever devices, in one instance
-utilizing advanced engineering principles.
-In the building of their circular rock igloos
-they employ the cantilever principle&mdash;an engineering
-method used in some of our greatest
-bridges. One would not expect an Eskimo to
-know a principle which our greatest engineers
-employ.</p>
-
-<p>Altogether these children of the ice are a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
-group of people from whom we may learn
-much. Though they are one of the world&#8217;s most
-primitive peoples, they are in some respects the
-peers of those who are generally considered to
-be the most highly civilized.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-
-<small>MY FARTHEST NORTH</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WHILE we were in Etah, Dr. Koelz, the
-expedition&#8217;s naturalist, decided that he
-would like to travel a few miles up the Greenland
-shore to collect specimens. As he needed
-someone to help him row the dory and run the
-outboard motor which he intended to use, I volunteered
-to go with him. This arrangement
-being approved by the Commander, we cast off
-from the ship at about ten o&#8217;clock on the night
-of August 15th. With us journeyed two Eskimos,
-Panikpa and Kanga, who wished to reach the
-Eskimo settlement of Anoritok which is just
-beyond Refuge Harbor, the Commander&#8217;s headquarters
-in 1923-24.</p>
-
-<p>We made our way down Etah Fiord in the
-calm of the Arctic night, with scarcely a breath
-of wind ruffling the surface of the water. Soon
-we were off Sunrise Point where Hayes and his
-men used to walk from their ship to observe the
-sunrise after the long, five-month, winter night.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>We now emerged from the shelter of the cliffs.
-As we did so we were hit by a savage squall. It
-was too late to retreat into the fiord as turning
-about was a maneuver fraught with danger. All
-we could do was to plug ahead off the lee shore
-under the shelter of an iceberg and then square
-away for the north. This I did and in a few
-moments we were clear of the berg and then
-away we went before wind and sea. A very
-steep, choppy sea, probably fourteen or fifteen
-feet high, was running in from the southward.
-Under ordinary conditions a sea of that height
-would not be cause for any great concern, but
-these waves had nearly vertical faces and the
-crests were breaking continually. The only thing
-to do was to keep the dory running off before
-the sea as she would be capsized or swamped if
-she turned broadside on for even the briefest
-interval. I held the tiller stick in both hands
-and kept our little vessel&#8217;s head pointing straight
-to leeward in spite of incessant attempts on the
-part of the waves to &#8220;broach her to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Eskimos were quite frightened when they
-saw those big seas. Old Panikpa kept waving
-for us to go closer to the shore. But even one
-glance at that unbroken line of jagged rocks and
-leaping surf convinced both Koelz and myself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-that it would be suicidal to attempt a landing on
-that stretch of shore-line.</p>
-
-<p>All went well for about ten minutes. Then
-as I glanced aft over my shoulder I saw a tremendous
-comber seemingly hang directly over
-my head. I thought to myself that if we ever
-came out of that one with the boat still floating
-we would be lucky. The water mounted higher
-and higher on the stern as the dory&#8217;s tail cocked
-skyward until it was just level with the top of
-the coaming. Then with a swish the crest of the
-wave came crashing down over the counter. The
-engine was drenched and immediately stopped.
-I was soaked through and through and there
-were several inches of water in the boat. We
-started to swing broadside on, in the trough of
-the sea. One more wave would have finished us
-for good, and with a dead engine this was all too
-probable, in fact inevitable if the boat should
-swing enough to present her side to the sea. I
-yelled to Koelz to grab the oars and keep her off
-side before it until I got the engine going. Koelz
-with great presence of mind fitted the thole pins
-and soon had the oars shipped. In a few seconds
-we were again slowly moving along on our
-course, owing to skillful handling by the Doctor.
-In a few moments the engine was in running<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
-order and we were bowling along as merrily as
-before.</p>
-
-<p>In a short time we were in calm water in the
-channel between Littleton Island and the mainland.
-It was named by Inglefield, the first man
-to penetrate upper Smith Sound. In the channel
-between the island and the mainland lies the
-wreck of the old <i>Polaris</i> which broke the world&#8217;s
-record for farthest north, in 1871. On this island,
-Sir Allen Young, in the <i>Pandora</i>, left mail for
-the British North Polar Expedition. On the first
-Greely Relief Expedition of 1882, Beebe deposited
-a cache of provisions there. It has always
-received prominent mention in all Arctic journals
-dealing with this region, and Dr. Koelz
-and I were interested in seeing it at close quarters.</p>
-
-<p>The wind was still blowing with great force,
-so hard in fact that I shut down the motor and
-rigged a sail with a tarpaulin and an oar, which
-made the boat go even faster than it did with
-the motor. In a few moments we were through
-the channel and bound up the coast for Cape
-Hatherton. For several hours we continued
-under sail until at last we were pretty close to
-the Cape. We then cut in for the shore and
-made our way through loose ice to the beach.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>
-We landed at five o&#8217;clock in the morning after
-a rather exciting voyage, to say the least.</p>
-
-<p>Sleep now appeared about the most desirable
-sensation possible for human beings to experience
-and rolling our blankets on the hard ground
-we went to it. We slept for what seemed years,
-but we awakened eventually. Now the question
-was whether it was morning, afternoon or
-night. The never-setting midnight sun gave but
-little clew to the time, and our watches had
-stopped! The time went on and soon we did
-not know what day it was. This was an awful
-fix, as we would not know when the days we had
-planned to remain in this vicinity had elapsed.
-But we did not let the time question bother us,
-and we started to accomplish the tasks we had
-set ourselves.</p>
-
-<p>Our primary object was to collect as many
-bird and fish specimens as possible, which we set
-about to do immediately. But another wish
-which we entertained, though it was subordinate
-to the first, was to make as high a latitude on the
-Greenland coast as our meager equipment and
-time, spared from our real objective, would warrant.
-With this goal in mind we set forth on
-what we considered to be our second day out
-from the ship. The gas which we had saved<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
-by sailing rendered a considerable trip under
-engine power practicable. Thus we set forth
-from our camp with all the gasolene we had,
-beyond a surplus to enable us to buck a storm if
-we had to on the way back to the ship from the
-camp. In an hour or so we were around Cape
-Hatherton and bound on up the coast. There
-was not much pack ice in sight except far to the
-westward, and the iceblink gave promise of more
-to the northward. A breeze from that direction
-also hindered our advance, but by noon we were
-off the mouth of Refuge Harbor. Here we were
-on the edge of Kane Sea, and we could see the
-glittering Polar pack slowly drifting southward.
-We crossed the entrance to the harbor in a few
-moments, and I hove away to round Cairn Point.
-At this juncture Koelz espied several large floes
-moving in towards the entrance of the harbor.
-Beyond them there were wide levels of half a
-mile or so between the scattered pans of the
-pack.</p>
-
-<p>I was hoping that my companion might express
-a wish to go on to the most northern Eskimo
-village in the world&mdash;Anoritok, some five
-miles beyond Refuge Harbor, where some of the
-Smith Sound natives happened to be living. Possibly
-we might have done this had it not been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>
-for running ice off Cairn Point which Koelz
-considered a bit dangerous. Reluctantly we
-gave up the idea and headed back for Refuge
-Harbor. There the ice had not broken out as
-it usually does, and if the <i>Bowdoin</i> had been
-there she might have had great difficulty in
-reaching the open water beyond.</p>
-
-<p>After a leisurely lunch we started back to our
-camp and arrived there some time in the evening,
-probably as the sun was bearing pretty well
-north. The next two days we spent in collecting
-specimens, and then Koo-e-tig-e-to arrived with
-a letter from the Commander requesting us to
-return to the ship, as he would have to start south
-in a short while and wanted us there in plenty
-of time. So once again our little boat put to
-sea; this time bound south&mdash;away from the glorious
-land of the midnight sun and the glittering
-ice fields. Our stay in the Arctic fairyland had
-been all too short. I realized with sorrow that
-in a few days we would be bound for civilization
-and the pleasant days in Etah and north of
-there would be but a memory.</p>
-
-<p>On the way to Etah we stopped at Polaris
-beach where the crew of the <i>Polaris</i> wintered
-after the wreck of their ship. There we found
-some old pieces of iron belonging to that ship.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
-We also stopped for a few moments on Littleton
-Island. But in a short time we had left the
-island and Cape Ohlsen astern. Cape Ohlsen
-recalls the name of one of Kane&#8217;s men who died
-close by. We were thankful that the bones of
-none of our men lay bleaching on this inhospitable
-coast. Thus we started onward filled with
-memories, until with a start I found we were
-off Sunrise Point. In a few moments we were
-in Etah and aboard the ship after a most enjoyable
-trip up the coast. We learned that it was
-August the 20th, thus we had been away five
-days.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-
-<small>WE BREAK INTO SOCIETY</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE formation of new ice on the surface of
-Etah Fiord grimly brought home to us the
-dread reality that the relentless Arctic winter
-was now all but upon us. To flee before this
-dire warning was our only recourse, and the
-Commander ruefully gave the word to pack up
-and make all speed for home. The elements
-had barred our way to the great unknown area
-of the Polar Sea, but we had at least carried the
-outer ramparts through our new and untried
-means of attack by air. Now the time for temporizing
-had passed, and we must fly before
-young ice, snowstorms and September winds.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it was with regret that we broke out the
-anchor from the mud of Etah Harbor on the
-morning of August 21st, and headed out through
-the channel, and across the walrus grounds
-towards Cape Alexander. There the usual
-squall met us, and this time with such force that
-we were forced to go into McCormick&#8217;s Bight,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>
-(Pandora Harbor), to await the abatement of
-the storm.</p>
-
-<p>In a few hours it calmed down sufficiently to
-permit us to round the Cape, and we set our
-course for Ig-loo-da-houny. At this place we
-arrived at about six in the evening, and dropped
-anchor to await the arrival of the <i>Peary</i> which
-was still at Etah loading aboard the last of our
-equipment.</p>
-
-<p>At Ig-loo-da-houny was encamped a considerable
-number of Eskimos, including several valuable
-assistants of Peary&#8217;s. Among these was
-Oo-bloo-ya, a very noted aide of Peary&#8217;s on
-nearly all his trips in the eighteen years of his
-work. Also sojourning at this settlement was
-Sipsoo of the heroic starvation party of 1906,
-which broke the world&#8217;s record of farthest north.
-Koo-la-ting-wa of the successful Polar trip also
-was present. Even Ah-pellah, assistant to the
-notorious Dr. Frederick Cook, on his now famous
-Polar hoax of 1907-1909, was eking out his
-existence at this spot. Indeed a notable group
-of Eskimos.</p>
-
-<p>That evening in the forecastle we gave a motion
-picture show for the Eskimos, exhibiting
-some of the Commander&#8217;s Arctic pictures, and
-several reels of Melkon&#8217;s pie-throwing comedy.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
-The only one amused by the comedy was Melkon,
-since its crass horseplay was too broad for
-the Eskimo sense of humor. But when there
-flashed on the screen the pictures of themselves
-and their environment, they shouted and yelled
-with the sheerest childlike delight. And when
-the half-dozen belles saw themselves depicted,
-their joy was greater than that of any Hollywood
-Magdalene of seven husbands.</p>
-
-<p>The next day the Commander flew down to
-Karna to see his old friend and companion of
-many previous expeditions, E-took-a-shoo.
-When E-took-a-shoo saw the plane come skimming
-along the land in front of his tupik he was
-flabbergasted. But when the Commander invited
-him to fly back to Ig-loo-da-houny, he
-simply said, &#8220;Wait till I get my mittens.&#8221; Then
-with utter confidence in his own safety while he
-was at the Commander&#8217;s side, he mounted into
-this strange machine and flew back to Ig-loo-da-houny
-with as little concern as if he had been
-on his own sledge.</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile the <i>Peary</i> had arrived to
-load on the remaining plane, and we got under
-weigh for Karna to return E-took-a-shoo to his
-home. On the way to Karna we had to sail
-through a long stretch of uncharted water. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
-Commander had scrutinized it from the air,
-and apparently it was safe and free from obstructions.</p>
-
-<p>We were unconcernedly sailing along when
-suddenly there was a grinding shock, and the
-vessel trembled from stem to stern. The bow
-lurched skyward, and we came to an abrupt
-stop. At the time, the Commander was below
-donning his oilskins, as a driving sleet was coming
-on. In two jumps he was on deck, and with
-one swift glance he took in our predicament.
-Immediately he reversed the engine, but we were
-hard and fast aground. The all important question
-faced us: &#8220;Was the tide rising or falling?&#8221;
-In a few moments it was apparent that it was
-falling. The Commander at once ordered us
-to throw overboard the thirty barrels of gasolene
-which constituted our deck load. This was
-but the work of a few moments. Then a kedge
-anchor was run astern to see if we might heave
-her off. But the tide was falling very rapidly
-and all of our efforts were frustrated. It was
-now apparent that we should have to wait until
-the tide rose again,&mdash;a matter of twelve hours
-or so.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i118a.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">The <i>Bowdoin</i> on the rocks in North Greenland.</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i118b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Head of 2000-pound walrus, killed at Etah, North<br />
-Greenland.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the barrels were slowly drifting
-away down wind, and the Commander perceived<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>
-that if they were to be saved immediate measures
-were necessary. Therefore he despatched us in
-the small boats to recover them. We tumbled
-over the side into the dories and were soon
-scudding before the curling seas which lay between
-us and the barrels. Once among the barrels,
-we swung our boat&#8217;s nose into the wind,
-and the laborious process of salvaging the barrels
-was begun. Koelz held us steady with the
-oars, and I set to work putting lines on the barrels.
-Leaning over the stern of a pitching dory
-in a rough chop and striving to maintain a grip
-on a heavy steel drum which was rising and falling
-in opposite sequence to the boat, was indeed
-a task not to be underestimated. It was necessary
-to lift the barrel partly out of the water with
-one hand and float a clove hitch under it with the
-other hand. Every pitch of the boat nearly
-wrenched my arm from its socket. The icy
-water almost froze my hands, and soon they
-were white and numb. We stuck to this work,
-however, until all barrels had been gathered and
-tethered into rafts. These were then anchored
-to prevent further drifting and left to be later
-picked up by the vessel.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i118c.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Oomiak: Eskimo women&#8217;s boat, made of sealskins.</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i118d.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">South Greenland kayak.</p>
-
-<p>After three exhausting hours of this toil, they
-were all securely bound together and anchored.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>
-Then we returned to the ship. By this time the
-tide had fallen so far that she lay on her side at
-an acute angle. In fact, the incline was so great
-that it was impossible to stand on the deck. We
-had to walk along the bulwarks, and to cross the
-decks necessitated pulling oneself up by a rope.
-In the cabin one had to stand on the side walls,
-and the galley stove was so tilted that to cook
-on it was impossible. We had to make a meal
-of cold willy and other preparations which required
-no cooking. Despite the soggy coldness
-of it all, food never did taste better!</p>
-
-<p>The hours dragged slowly by as we waited
-for the tide to rise. The <i>Peary</i> had been summoned
-to our aid, and she soon came hugging
-the far side of Herbert Island. Taking soundings
-as she went, she came nosing up within a
-few hundred feet of the <i>Bowdoin</i>. By the time
-she arrived the tide had begun to rise, and the
-water was slowly creeping up the deck of our
-ship. We clapped shut the portholes and battened
-down the hatches, and waited. By inches
-the tide rose, and the vessel began to show
-signs of stirring. We began taking up on the
-kedge anchor. The <i>Peary</i> was ready for immediate
-action, when a most astounding phenomenon
-took place. About a half-mile away<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>
-lay a huge million ton iceberg. Suddenly we
-heard an ear-rending roar. We looked towards
-the great berg. Slowly it up-ended with great
-fragments hurtling in every direction, then
-rocked from side to side as it regained its balance.
-In a few seconds a monstrous swell came
-rolling towards us from this cataclysm, and we
-were lifted gently from the ledge and swept
-gracefully into the open water beyond. We
-stared aghast; could we believe our senses? Yes,
-there could be no doubt of it, we were free of
-the ledge. We looked after the great receding
-wave and felt that at last the baneful spell of
-Torngak had been shattered!</p>
-
-<p>Quickly we hauled aboard the barrels, set
-things to rights and made all sail for Cape York.
-There we arrived early on the morning of August
-27th, and we indeed realized that we had
-left none too soon, for the winds were white with
-winter snow. The Commander stopped for a
-brief visit and to present a few gifts to the Eskimos
-encamped there; then we squared away for
-South Greenland. Across the now ice-free Melville
-Bay we flew with a roaring boreal wind,
-speeding our progress home. For three days we
-ran dead before it with huge seas coming up
-from the stern and rolling under our vessel.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>After we left Cape York, the midnight sun
-was with us no longer, and we had darkness for
-the first time in over a month. It indeed seemed
-strange to see the icebergs again bathed in a
-sunset flush, gleaming in the distance like old
-Greek temples of delicate pink marble. As twilight
-shaded into darkness and the stars blossomed
-once more in the heavens, we sat long on
-the quarter deck drinking in the infinite beauty
-of the night, silent save for the murmur of the
-water beneath the prow.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i122a.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">At Sukkertoppen.</p>
-
-<p>At last, late in the evening of August 30th,
-after a remarkably rapid run from Cape York,
-we made our way into the harbor of Holsteinborg
-in Danish Greenland. We had heard much
-about this port from our companions who had
-made previous voyages, especially regarding the
-attractions of its maidens. Our expectations
-were aroused, and great was our chagrin when
-the governor refused us permission to land. The
-Commander came to the rescue, and after he
-had wirelessed to the Governor-general, he at
-last obtained consent for the expedition to go
-ashore. This permission was extended only until
-nightfall, however. Thus any participation
-in the much-heralded Greenland dances was
-frustrated. We went ashore, nevertheless, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>
-were at least permitted to take photographs of
-the Greenland belles dressed in their barbaric
-finery. In return for their smiles we presented
-them with some beads and trinkets. Then we
-left them and went for a visit to the halibut
-canning factory which is this hundred-man-town&#8217;s
-only industry. Here are preserved
-annually several hundred thousand cans of
-the most delectable fish for shipment to Denmark.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i122b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="center"><span class="illoright2"><i>Photo Melkon.</i></span></p>
-<p class="caption">Dick Salmon with large cod jigged while stormbound<br />
-in Godthaab Fiord.</p>
-
-<p>Here we waited a brief time for the <i>Peary</i>,
-and on her arrival we got under weigh for Sukkertoppen,
-a town of six hundred, and the largest
-in all Greenland. We were hospitably welcomed
-by Governor Langskov, who extended us
-a cordial welcome and the freedom of the city.
-His welcome was in strong contrast to the chilly
-reception farther up the coast, and we felt that
-we had once more arrived among friends. In
-every way possible, he and his charming family
-entertained us, and we did our best to return
-their hospitality. That night we gave the entire
-population a treat by showing our choicest films
-at the schoolhouse.</p>
-
-<p>To thread our way through the unlighted
-town was a hazardous proceeding. Since the
-way to the schoolhouse was little better than a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>
-swampy trail, and ankle deep in mud over a
-considerable portion of its length, we had our
-troubles. Once we nearly walked off the sea-wall;
-again we nearly skidded down an abrupt
-and rocky hill. But at last we arrived at the
-schoolhouse which was pitch dark, owing to the
-fact that the oil lamps had not yet arrived. After
-considerable trouble, however, with the aid of
-a feeble flashlight, we managed to set up the
-projector and the screen. Then the population
-arrived, and the show began.</p>
-
-<p>Being more nearly civilized, these people took
-far more interest in our regular cinema dramas
-than did the northern Eskimos, in fact these people
-are not really Eskimos at all, but three-quarters
-European.</p>
-
-<p>After the pictures we went up to the Governor&#8217;s
-house for refreshments. There we were
-delightfully entertained by the Governor, his
-genial wife and his charming daughter, and
-there we were served with Danish coffee, which
-we all agreed was the most aromatic coffee we
-had ever drunk. Moreover it was enriched with
-real cow&#8217;s cream&mdash;the first we had had since
-leaving Sydney. The cow that gave this cream
-is probably one of the northernmost cows in the
-world, but the cream showed no sign of having<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
-been affected by the latitude, and it tasted better
-than it used to at home.</p>
-
-<p>The following morning, Sunday, the Commander
-announced that we had all been invited
-to attend the church service. This, we learned,
-was to be conducted entirely in the Eskimo language,
-for the people there still speak Eskimo
-though they have lost nearly all other similarity
-to the real Eskimos through their having bred
-with Europeans.</p>
-
-<p>At ten o&#8217;clock we heard the church bells ringing,
-and the Commander called all aboard for
-those going ashore. A short row put us at the
-dock, and in a few moments we were at the
-church. The population was there arranged in
-respectful lines awaiting our arrival before entering
-the church&mdash;one of many courtesies
-accorded us in this hospitable settlement.</p>
-
-<p>We entered the church. It was not far different
-from those at home. An organ at the left, the
-ornate altar in the center, a pulpit at the right,
-and behind the altar several oil paintings representing
-Biblical scenes comprised the main part
-of the furnishings. Garbed in his ecclesiastical
-robes, the Lutheran minister intoned the opening
-chant; then the congregation struck up a hymn,
-the tune of which I had often heard in the old<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>
-Hill School chapel. But the words had all
-been translated into Eskimo, and a bizarre effect
-was produced through the combination of the
-familiar music and the outlandish words. We
-found the service most interesting until the sermon.
-That lasted for nearly an hour, and to
-sit on hard board benches and listen to words,
-the import of which we had no conception, was
-to say the least trying!</p>
-
-<p>After the service and lunch on the ship, we
-went to the house of Mr. Neilson, the chief
-trader. There we shared the hospitality of Mr.
-Neilson, and his attractive wife and daughter,
-this being one of many pleasant occasions that
-we spent in their home.</p>
-
-<p>We had now experienced many of the delightful
-customs and courtesies which so endear the
-memory of days spent in Greenland, but one
-desire that still remained with us was to attend
-a Greenland dance such as we had seen depicted
-in the Commander&#8217;s films. Great was our delight,
-therefore, when the village lads and lasses
-the next day accosted us with the word &#8220;danswa.&#8221;
-Through the interpreter we learned that this
-combination of Eskimo-Danish meant &#8220;big
-dance.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i126a.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">A good Eskimo puppy.</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i126b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Typical winter home of South Greenland Eskimo.</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i126c.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Eskimo girls of Holsteinborg, Mixture of Danish, Spanish,<br />
-English and Eskimo.</p>
-
-<p>That evening we put on our best clothes and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
-glossiest sealskin boots&mdash;the Greenland dancing
-pump de rigeur. After our toilet was complete,
-we repaired to the cooper&#8217;s shop, then utilized
-as a dance hall. We made our way through the
-assembled crowd, and entered the long, low
-room which was lighted by only three or four
-smoky candles. All decked in their most elaborate
-finery, the girls were ranged along the
-wall, and a short distance removed from them
-stood the young bucks. Against the white sila-paks
-of the males, the colorful feminine costumes
-made a pleasing contrast. This costume
-consisted first of all of a pair of elaborately dyed
-and embroidered sealskin boots, with tops of fine
-linen on which is sewed lace. These reach
-almost to the hips. Tucked into the top of these
-are tight-fitting sealskin pants with a broad, colorful
-strip of leather running down the front.
-Around the upper part of the body was fitted a
-bodice lined with eiderdown, and over this was
-a facing of ornate velvet. Around their necks
-and reaching half-way to the waist was a wide,
-artistically beaded collar of which no two were
-alike in design and workmanship. About their
-heads each wore a ribbon. A red ribbon was
-worn by the maidens; a blue ribbon by the married
-ones, and a black ribbon by the widows. For<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>
-one who was a mother, but who was not in the
-last two categories, a green ribbon was worn&mdash;a
-later learned fact which explained why some
-of us were greeted with smiling refusals to
-accept green ribbon in exchange for furs and
-trinkets.</p>
-
-<p>Soon arrived the Governor and his lady and
-their daughter, as did also Mr. Neilson and his
-family. This was the signal for the dance to
-begin, and the orchestra struck up a lively tune.
-The orchestra, by the way, consisted of a wheezy
-accordion which seemed reasonably in tune except
-on the very high C&#8217;s. This accordion was
-manipulated by a relay of players who spelled
-each other while each took his turn at dancing.</p>
-
-<p>The dancing itself consisted of a series of gyrations
-and whirls which made the Charleston
-appear like Walter Camp&#8217;s setting up exercises
-in a home for old ladies. It is made up of
-measures of everything from the hornpipe to
-the hula hula&mdash;fragments of dances contributed
-by sailors from the seven seas, and well suited
-to the cosmopolitan blood of many of these children
-of mischance.</p>
-
-<p>The fun was fast and furious, and the night
-merrily tripped along &#8220;on light fantastic toe&#8221;
-until at last the candles guttered in their sockets<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
-and went out, leaving the party whirling about
-in the darkness. This incident in no way
-dimmed the enjoyment of the occasion, and there
-was many a close shave and tight squeeze before
-the party broke up.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-
-<small>STORM AND STRESS AND&mdash;HOME!</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap2">AFTER several days of the gay and intimate
-life of this &#8220;Venice of the North,&#8221; so-called
-because of its many waterways and numerous
-islands, and the Latin temperament of its inhabitants,
-we regretfully set sail for Godthaab.
-There we loaded fuel oil and also visited some
-very interesting Norse ruins dating back to the
-year 1000 A.D. These were sixty miles up a
-fiord, not far from the spot where Nansen came
-down from the ice-cap after his first crossing of
-Greenland. On the way to these ruins we had
-a most delightful sail in the midst of the Alpine
-scenery we had observed on our first sighting
-of Greenland. We spent an interesting day
-rambling about these ruins, after which we returned
-to Godthaab.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i130a.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">View of Godthaab with statue of Hans Egede, first missionary to<br />
-the Eskimos of Greenland.</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i130b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Norse church at head of Godthaab Fiord, probably built about
-1100 A. D.</p>
-
-<p>Upon our return to Godthaab we were
-received and delightfully entertained by Governor
-Simony and his wife. There we met many
-of the notables of the settlement, and we also
-visited the &#8220;university,&#8221; a sort of a glorified high<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
-school comprising a gymnasium and an academic
-building.</p>
-
-<p>For several days a frightful hurricane delayed
-our departure for home, but at last came clear
-weather, and we pointed our nose to the southward.
-We were homeward bound!</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i130c.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">In rough weather, off Nova Scotia, homeward bound.</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i130d.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="center"><span class="illoright"><i>Photo Brust.</i></span></p>
-
-<p class="caption">The <i>Bowdoin</i> detained by the storm at Monhegan.</p>
-
-<p>Sixteen hours out of Godthaab the barometer
-took an ominous drop, and a heavy wind and
-sea rolled up from the southeastward. Soon we
-were forced to heave to under storm canvas. The
-seas were tremendous. Great mountains of
-water came hurtling over the deck nearly sweeping
-away our deck cargo, in fact one barrel of
-gasolene drifted over the rail, so deep was the
-water on deck, and the boats were also engulfed,
-held only by their stout lashings. Drenched to
-the skin and chilled to the bone we worked at
-tightening the lashings on the barrels, and soon
-all was secure.</p>
-
-<p>Below decks everything was sadly awry. The
-hatches were battened down, thereby excluding
-the entrance of all air, and the deck, which had
-been strained in the ice, leaked badly, and
-trickles of water soaked both our bunks and ourselves.
-To these discomforts was added the noxious
-fumes of coal gas which came from the
-galley stove. Owing to these upsetting conditions<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>
-all hands became seasick, and taking a
-trick at the wheel became the sheerest agony.
-When my trick came, I struggled into my
-clothes, donned my oilskins, and made my way
-to the deck on unsteady feet. Staggering over
-the seething deck I made my way aft and took
-over the wheel from my pallid and gagging colleague.
-All alone I sat there for two hours with
-the great mounds of water crashing over the
-bow and sweeping aft in a rushing torrent. It
-was indeed an awe-inspiring spectacle, and in
-spite of my upset insides I could not help but
-admire the grandeur and wild beauty of it all.
-It brought home to me the insignificance of man
-in the face of nature aroused.</p>
-
-<p>As I looked out over the rolling green of the
-angry water it somehow brought back to me the
-quiet peace and orderly beauty of the close-cropped
-lawns of The Hill. I contrasted my
-present woebegone state to that of a few months
-previous when I wandered book in hand in the
-shadow of its stately cloisters, with nature at
-rest and with no responsibility. A sudden wild
-lurch of the vessel recalled my mind to my present
-task, and I again concentrated my attention
-on wheel and compass.</p>
-
-<p>For three days we fought on through a bleak<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>
-and stormy sea towards Labrador. Those three
-days were the worst I ever experienced at sea,
-and few of the other members of the crew, even
-the Commander himself, could remember worse,
-but at last the bold headland of Cape Mugford
-broke the dreary expanse of tumbling billows.
-This sight of land was a tonic to our sea-racked
-bodies, and with renewed buoyancy we pushed
-on. By nightfall the sea had moderated, and
-life took on a cheerier tinge. Once again the
-sizzle and sputter of cooking food was sweet
-music to our ears, and for the first time in days
-there was an inward response to the savory odors
-which came from the galley. Even Doctor
-Koelz emerged from his refuge behind the ice-box
-and consented to take a glass of water, a
-sure sign that we were once again in calm
-weather. After he recovered his equilibrium,
-his first thought was for his pet goose which he
-kept in a cage on deck. He dashed up to see
-how it had fared, but alas! the poor goose had
-been drowned. The Doctor was stricken with
-grief, and all hands joined him in mourning the
-loss of his pet.</p>
-
-<p>After a peaceful night&#8217;s run we arrived early
-the next morning at Jack Lane&#8217;s Bay and at
-once made our way up to Abie&#8217;s home. There<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>
-we spent the day recuperating and getting thoroughly
-rested. At dawn on the day following
-we were once more under weigh. A few hours
-put us in Hopedale where we unloaded the
-troublesome gasolene. Then we headed out
-through Flagstaff Tickle for the open sea and
-Battle Harbor. During this run I experienced
-one of the finest nights of the entire voyage. It
-was cold with frost forming on the ropes and
-on the deck. The perfect clarity of the sky and
-the magnificence of the flashing stars along with
-the beautiful full moon, with the wavering aurora
-in the north formed a picture of such brilliance
-and splendor that I was loath to go below
-at the end of my watch.</p>
-
-<p>The next day we reached Battle Harbor. We
-had made a fine run down The Labrador, but
-we could not afford to loiter as the season was
-far advanced, and we were two weeks behind
-schedule. Therefore early the next morning
-we were once again on the way on the next to the
-last lap headed for Sydney. Here we were
-greeted by a delegation of newspaper men and
-Mr. Hildebrand of the National Geographic
-Society. They welcomed us back to civilization
-in regal style. But we could not long linger in
-their pleasant company, and in five hours we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>
-were once again leaving Sydney astern&mdash;<i>headed
-for Home</i>!</p>
-
-<p>We were flying on around Scateri wafted
-southward by a fair wind. But as we neared
-Halifax the wind hauled to the southwest and
-swept upon us with a force unparalleled by any
-hurricane that even the Commander had ever
-seen. It was far worse than any through which
-we had previously passed. In an astonishingly
-short time the surface of the sea was a series of
-steep and treacherous ridges which struck us
-from every side. Luckily the mainsail had been
-taken in before dark, but the foresail and jumbo
-were still up. The Commander immediately
-despatched Melkon and Dick Salmon to take in
-the jumbo, while he gripped the wheel. I was
-busily engaged in rescuing the loose articles on
-deck when suddenly a towering sea crashed over
-the bow, and leaving the wheel to me the Commander
-dashed forward to the aid of the two
-men there. I seized the wheel and put her hard
-over to hold her bow in the wind. The engine
-was running full blast. The force of the wind
-and the sea was so great that the vessel was literally
-pushed backward and began shipping seas
-over the stern.</p>
-
-<p>This was indeed a most precarious situation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>
-with the seas breaking aboard from all sides, and
-seeing that the engine could not hold the vessel
-in the wind against the seas, I eased her off a few
-points to relieve the grim danger of being
-pooped,&mdash;a danger almost unprecedented for a
-vessel heading into the seas. This easing off had
-the desired effect, and as the boys had taken in
-the staysail, I was able to fill away the foresail,
-and we were soon bounding along again in comparative
-safety. It took all my strength to hold
-that bucking wheel against the terrific forces
-striving to throw it up. Suddenly the cover of
-the wheelbox was lifted out from under me by
-the force of the wind and went flying off to leeward,
-and as the deck was heeled at such a terrific
-angle that it was practically impossible
-to stand on it with the seas breaking around my
-knees, I got into the wheelbox and thus managed
-to keep going.</p>
-
-<p>Soon the Commander, Dick and Melkon returned
-from forward, and we settled down to
-ride it out as best we might. Suddenly an ominous
-slatting sounded through the shrill scream
-of the wind in the rigging. Holding our hands
-before our faces to shield them from the cutting
-spray, we fought our way forward to investigate.
-A hasty glance revealed that our foresail had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>
-been blown loose from the gaff laceline. This
-was a dangerous situation as the sail was likely
-to thrash to pieces. The Commander immediately
-gave the word to call all hands. In a moment
-Robbie came piling up from the cabin,
-and under his direction we started to haul down
-the sail. The Commander held the vessel in the
-wind while we labored. Five of us seized the
-downhaul, but we were ineffectually dragged
-back and forth across the deck by the terrible
-thrashing of the sail. At last I managed to catch
-a turn over a belaying pin, and then inch by inch
-we swayed it down. Luck was with us, and
-down it came without tearing. We were greatly
-relieved to have this important sail safe on deck
-with no further damage than the broken laceline.
-It required fast work to save it. This filled
-out an active and exciting evening.</p>
-
-<p>Now the only reasonable course of action was
-to heave to and wait for the storm to abate, as
-it could not long blow with the fury it now displayed.
-But the little <i>Bowdoin</i> was slowly
-driven out to sea, since even with her engine
-going at full speed she was no match for the
-force of the gale. There she was flung about
-through the night, and there was little rest for
-our tired watch.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>Morning at last dawned, and with it came
-sunlight and calmer weather, and by the time we
-again came on deck the vessel had resumed her
-course. The sparkling miles flew by, and before
-dark we were off Cape Sable. All day we had
-held our own in a race with the <i>Peary</i>, which
-had joined us off Halifax after the storm. But
-at Cape Sable the wind fell calm, and she soon
-forged ahead and was lost in the night.</p>
-
-<p>All that night and all the next day the <i>Bowdoin</i>
-ploughed steadily onward, and at four
-o&#8217;clock the next afternoon Matinicus Rock, the
-farthest outpost of Maine, hove in sight, shortly
-to be followed by our goal&mdash;Monhegan Island.
-Not long afterwards we rounded the Island, and
-just before sundown we dropped anchor in Dead
-Man&#8217;s Cove.</p>
-
-<p>We had hoped to make an early start on Saturday
-morning for Wiscasset where we were
-expected by many of our friends and well-wishers.
-But at three o&#8217;clock in the morning we
-were awakened by the shrill scream of a storm
-humming through the rigging. This storm later
-developed into the great gale of October 10th,
-known to every fisherman on the coast. We did
-not, however, immediately despair of being able
-to make the run to Wiscasset. When we roused<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>
-out at breakfast time the wind had shown no
-sign of abating, and one look out to sea sufficed
-to demonstrate that any thought of departure
-that day was but an idle wish. I put my head
-above the level of the hatch and glanced about.
-The vessel was wallowing in a heavy swell
-which came rolling into Dead Man&#8217;s Cove from
-the west. The anchor chain stood out as taut and
-stiff as a bar of iron. The vessel&#8217;s stern tailed
-dangerously close to the wicked rocks astern
-which reared their ugly heads through a wall
-of breaking seas and flying spume. As the morning
-wove on, the storm increased in violence
-and our situation became precarious. Twice the
-sturdy fishermen of Monhegan bucked their
-way out from the inner harbor to warn us that
-our anchorage would soon become untenable,
-and it behooved us to get out while we still could.
-Eventually our stern approached within a few
-feet of the rocks, and the Commander decided
-we should have to go around the island into the
-inner harbor. To take the vessel out in the teeth
-of that roaring hurricane with a bent propeller
-such as we had, was a feat not lightly to be
-undertaken.</p>
-
-<p>But as it was imperative, the Commander reluctantly
-gave the order to up anchor. Inch by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>
-inch our powerful winch brought the chain
-aboard. Soon it was up and down and the
-engine was started. Then a few more revolutions
-of the windlass and we were clear. The
-engine telegraph stood at full speed and yet the
-vessel barely moved. We watched breathlessly.
-Would she make it? Slowly the gap between us
-and the rocks widened. The vessel plunged her
-bow deep in the seas. All undaunted the little
-<i>Bowdoin</i> crept to windward. At last we rounded
-the outermost cape and with a sigh of relief the
-Commander put up the helm and we fairly blew
-to leeward around the remaining stretch of
-coast.</p>
-
-<p>In a few moments we were safe once more in
-the inner harbor and the shrieking seventy-five
-mile an hour gale was powerless to tear us from
-our moorings. We were indeed fortunate to
-make a safe harbor as many a great ship disappeared
-in that hurricane and was never seen
-again. From all parts of the Atlantic seaboard
-reports rained in of shipwreck and disaster.</p>
-
-<p>All that day and all the next the gale raged
-with unmitigated severity. On Sunday, however,
-the barometer began to rise and patches
-of blue sky showed through the leaden pale overhead.
-These signs that the weather would soon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>
-be on the mend were welcome to all hands, from
-the crew to the visitors. It appeared probable
-that a start might be made Monday morning.
-As it would still be rough, the ladies who had
-joined us at Battle Harbor were requested to
-go up to Wiscasset on the <i>Peary</i> that they might
-be spared the discomforts of a trip on the smaller
-vessel.</p>
-
-<p>Monday morning arrived and the <i>Peary</i> gave
-a long toot on her siren and pulled out from the
-dock. She passed quite close to us and we observed
-that her decks were nearly deserted.
-Where were the ladies? In a few moments we
-knew. Boat after boat appeared, loaded to the
-gunwales with their numbers. Not more than
-a handful had gone on the <i>Peary</i>; contrary to all
-instructions they had refused to go on our consort,
-and insisted on going on the <i>Bowdoin</i>. We
-stared aghast at their temerity to disobey the
-Commander&#8217;s request. They came aboard with
-an air of assurance which showed that a well-planned
-conspiracy had been launched, but their
-disobedience was left unnoticed, strange to say.
-I think perhaps it would be more correct to those
-who have had experience with the wily sex to
-say, &#8220;As might have been expected.&#8221; A good
-many of them were soon seasick, but in a short<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>
-time we had come into the quiet waters of Boothbay
-Harbor. Up the green bordered channels
-we picked our way, our decks crowded with
-cheering visitors. Slowly we reeled off the
-miles until at last we entered the Sheepscot, and
-then&mdash;then with flags flying we proceeded up
-the river, and at last amidst the roar of steam
-whistles and the cheers of the multitude assembled
-on the shore, the Commander uttered those
-long awaited words: &#8220;Let go.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Soon the visitors had departed, and we were
-left alone on our sturdy little ship. We had
-sailed six thousand miles, crossed the Arctic
-Circle twice, fought through the dread reaches
-of Melville Bay, launched our planes over the
-unknown Arctic, and returned all unscathed.
-Now all was ended: &#8220;Timakeza,&#8221; as the Eskimo
-would say.</p>
-
-<p>Two days later, as my train rumbled over the
-bridge, I looked out and saw the little <i>Bowdoin</i>
-lying quiet and peaceful in the tranquil waters
-of Wiscasset, her long voyage over. As she
-receded into the distance I recalled the happy
-days spent under the shadow of her masts, and in
-my heart the hope was born that once again I
-might tread her deck and feel the long ocean
-roll beneath my feet&mdash;outward bound!</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTES:</p>
-
-
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-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
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-<p>Illustrations have been moved to the nearest paragraph breaks. In some cases, these breaks are on different pages. The List of Illustrations has been updated to reflect these changes.</p>
-</div></div>
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