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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/8991-0.txt b/8991-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d50b840 --- /dev/null +++ b/8991-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,14880 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fur Country, by Jules Verne #31 in +our series by Jules Verne + +Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the +copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing +this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook. + +This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project +Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the +header without written permission. + +Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the +eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is +important information about your specific rights and restrictions in how +the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a donation +to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved. + + +**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** + +**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** + +*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!***** + + +Title: The Fur Country Seventy Degrees North Latitude + +Author: Jules Verne + +Release Date: September, 2005 [EBook #8991] +Last Updated: February 8, 2018 + +Edition: 10 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: UTF-8 + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FUR COUNTRY *** + + + + +Produced by N. Wolcott + + + + + +THE FUR COUNTRY by Jules Verne [Redactor’s Note: The Fur +Country(Number V010 in the T&M numerical listing of Verne’s works) is +a translation of Le Pays de fourrures (1873) first published in England +by Sampson and Low and in the United States by James Osgood (1874). The +translation is by N. d’Anvers, a pseudonym for Mrs. Arthur Bell (d. +1933) who also translated other works of Jules Verne. Other translations +of this work are by Henry Frith (George Routledge, 1879) and Edward +Baxter (New Canada Press, 1987). + +A listing of the illustrations in the original editions is provided +as well as a table of contents for each part. The illustrations are +assigned numbers which refer to the part of the book, chapter, and order +(a,b,c etc.) for use when an illustrated version is created. + +This redaction is by N. Wolcott (nwolcott2@post.harvard.edu) who assumes +all responsibility for errors of omission or commission. ] + + +THE FUR COUNTRY or Seventy Degrees North Latitude Translated from the +French of Jules Verne + +BY N. D’ANVERS + +With One Hundred Illustrations + +1874 + + +TO MY NEPHEWS HERBERT, EDGAR, AND ROBERT + +This Translation + +is + +AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED, + +N. D’ANVERS + +Clapham, 1873 + + +THE FUR COUNTRY. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. I-01-a + +“Mrs Joliffe served out slice after slice” + +I-01-b + +Lieutenant Hobson and Sergeant Long + +I-01-c + +“The Corporal, match in hand, awaited the order of his Captain” + +I-02-a + +The arrival of Thomas Black + +I-02-b + +A savant thawed + +I-03-a + +Thomas Black introduces himself + +I-04-a + +The start from Fort Reliancce + +I-04-b + +“Lieutenant Hobson and the Sergeant led the way,” + +I-05-a + +Corporal Joliffe proves his skill in driving, + +I-05-b + +The beginning of the thaw + +I-05-c + +The effects of the thaw + +I-06-a + +A wapiti duel + +I-06-b + +“To the icebergs! to the icebergs!” + +I-06-c + +“There were bears prowling in the pass” + +I-07-a + +The Hare Indians + +I-08-a + +A storm on the lake + +I-08-b + +“Hobson uttered a last despairing cry!” + +I-08-c + +Saved! + +I-09-a + +The mouth of the Coppermine River + +I-09-b + +“Thousands of birds were shot” + +I-10-a + +Traces of an encampment + +I-11-a + +The footprints of a dancer + +I-11-b + +A temporary encampment + +I-12-a + +“I promise you double pay” + +I-12-b + +The site of the fort + +I-12-c + +Collecting materials for the new factory + +I-13-a + +A hunting party + +I-14-a + +Sergeant Long and Madge fishing + +I-14-a + +“From this position they were able,” &c. + +I-15-a + +A Morse Hunt + +I-16-a + +Walrus Bay + +I-16-b + +Two shots + +I-16-c + +Rival claimants + +I-17-a + +“A new country was springing into being” + +I-17-b + +“A kind of fete was held” + +I-18-a + +“Mrs Barnett read aloud” + +I-18-b + +“The dogs rushed out” &c. + +I-19-a + +“The body was hauled up” &c. + +I-19-b + +Some living creatures came out of the hut + +I-19-c + +“She ran up to it” &c. + +I-20-a + +“It is more beautiful than an Aurora Borealis!” + +I-21-a + +“The bears were walking about on the roof” + +I-21-b + +“Mrs Barnett pressed the brave man’s hand” + +I-21-b + +“Mrs Barnett discharged the contents” &c. + +I-21-d + +“Mingled howls and screams were heard” + +I-22-a + +“Just look at our house now!” + +I-22-b + +“The ice burst” &c. + +I-22-c + +“Its waters were still sweet” &c. + +I-23-a + +“He might be seen standing motionless and silent” + +I-23-b + +“All might watch the progress of the phenomenon” + +I-23-c + +“Please, sir, it’s because of the pay” + +I-23-d + +“He shook his fist at the sun” + +II-02-a + +“I think not” + +II-02-b + +“The carpenter fixed upon the beach” &c. + +II-02-c + +“Thomas Black would not even join the exploring party” + +II-03-a + +“They breakfasted” &c. + +II-03-b + +“Numerous furred animals” &c. + +II-04-a + +“He was able to look closely at the steep wall” &c. + +II-04-b + +“Keep hold!” + +II-04-c + +“Corporal Joliffe was extremely fond of him” + +II-05-a + +“Thanks to the Corporal’s unwearying exertions” + +II-05-b + +“We are sinking gradually” + +II-06-a + +“Hobson remained crouching” &c. + +II-060b + +“The Lieutenant promised” &c. + +II-07-a + +“Not that way” + +II-07-b + +“Sergeant! Where are you?” + +II-07-c + +“We saw their fire; they will see ours!” + +II-08-a + +“Look, Madge, look!” + +II-08-b + +“The bear seized Kalumah by the clothes” + +II-08-c + +“It was the young Esquimaux girl Kalumah” + +II-09-a + +She murmured, ‘Mrs Barnett’ + +II-09-b + +“The waves dashed over her kayak” + +II-09-c + +“She covered him with kisses” + +II-10-a + +“The Lieutenant tied round their necks” + +II-10-b + +“Hobson was in dismay” + +II-11-a + +“The wolves came within musket range” + +II-11-b + +“We knew it, sir!” + +II-12-a + +“It was a Polar bear” + +II-12-b + +“Two large waggon sledges were built” + +II-13-a + +“Some of the icebergs assumed extraordinary forms” + +II-13-b + +“We must pass somehow” + +II-14-a + +“Marbre flung his running noose skilfully,” + +II-14-b + +“Everybody started back” + +II-15-a + +“It was dashed upon the ice-field with a fearful crash” + +II-15-b + +“I think it is time to retrace our steps” + +II-16-a + +“It is a frost-rime” + +II-16-b + +“He took the altitude” + +II-17-a + +“When an unexpected noise” + +II-17-b + +“It was like an army of icebergs” &c. + +II-18-a + +“Poor things! poor things!” + +II-18-b + +“And a figure appeared” &c. + +II-19-a + +“Examining the state of the sea” &c. + +II-19-b + +“Mrs Barnett sobbed aloud” + +II-20-a + +“The lower framework was already floating” + +II-20-b + +“He escaped with a ducking” + +II-21-a + +“The embarkation of provisions, &c., had to be put off” + +II-22-a + +“He tightened them,” &c. + +II-22-b + +“Mrs Barnett turned and looked Madge full in the face” + +II-23-a + +“A beam . . . sunk deep into the earth” &c. + +II-23-b + +“The colonists, falling on their knees, returned thanks to God” + +II-24-a + +Kalumah and the bear + + + +CONTENTS Part I I + +A Soirée at Fort Reliance + +II + +The Hudson’s Bay Fur Company + +III + +A Savant Thawed + +IV + +A Factory + +V + +From Fort Reliance to Fort enterprise + +VI + +A Wapiti Duel + +VII + +The Arctic Circle + +VIII + +The Great Bear Lake + +IX + +A Storm on the Lake + +X + +A Retrospect + +XI + +Along the Coast + +XII + +The Midnight Sun + +XIII + +Fort Hope + +XIV + +Some Excursions + +XV + +Fifteen Miles from Cape Bathurst + +XVI + +Two Shots + +XVII + +The Approach of Winter + +XVIII + +The Polar Night + +XIX + +A Neighbourly Visit + +XX + +Mercury Freezes + +XXI + +The Large Polar Bears + +XXII + +Five Months More + +XXIII + +The Eclipse of the 18th June 1860 + + + +CHAPTER I. A SOIRÉE AT FORT RELIANCE. On the evening of the 17th March +1859, Captain Craventy gave a fête at Fort Reliance. Our readers must +not at once imagine a grand entertainment, such as a court ball, or a +musical soirée with a fine orchestra. Captain Craventy’s reception +was a very simple affair, yet he had spared no pains to give it éclat. + +In fact, under the auspices of Corporal Joliffe, the large room on the +ground-floor was completely transformed. The rough walls, constructed of +roughly-hewn trunks of trees piled up horizontally, were still visible, +it is true, but their nakedness was disguised by arms and armour, +borrowed from the arsenal of the fort, and by an English tent at each +corner of the room. Two lamps suspended by chains, like chandeliers, +and provided with tin reflectors, relieved the gloomy appearance of the +blackened beams of the ceiling, and sufficiently illuminated the +misty atmosphere of the room. The narrow windows, some of them mere +loop-holes, were so encrusted with hoar-frost, that it was impossible +to look through them; but two or three pieces of red bunting, tastily +arranged about them, challenged the admiration of all who entered. The +floor, of rough joists of wood laid parallel with each other, had been +carefully swept by Corporal Joliffe. No sofas, chairs, or other modern +furniture, impeded the free circulation of the guests. Wooden benches +half fixed against the walls, huge blocks of wood cut with the axe, +and two tables with clumsy legs, were all the appliances of luxury +the saloon could boast of. But the partition wall, with a narrow door +leading into the next room, was decorated in a style alike costly and +picturesque. From the beams hung magnificent furs admirably arranged, +the equal of which could not be seen in the more favoured regions of +Regent Street or the Perspective-Newski. It seemed as if the whole fauna +of the ice-bound North were here represented by their finest skins. The +eye wandered from the furs of wolves, grey bears, polar bears, otters, +wolverenes, beavers, muskrats, water pole-cats, ermines, and silver +foxes; and above this display was an inscription in brilliantly-coloured +and artistically shaped cardboard—the motto of the world-famous +Hudson’s Bay Company— + +“PROPELLE CUTUM.” + +“Really, Corporal Joliffe, you have surpassed yourself !” said +Captain Craventy to his subordinate. + +“I think I have, I think I have !” replied the Corporal; “but +honour to whom honour is due, Mrs Joliffe deserves part of your +commendation; she assisted me in everything.” + +“A wonderful woman, Corporal.” + +“Her equal is not to be found, Captain.” + +An immense brick and earthenware stove occupied the centre of the +room, with a huge iron pipe passing from it through the ceiling, +and conducting the dense black smoke into the outer air. This stove +contained a roaring fire constantly fed with fresh shovelfuls of coal by +the stoker, an old soldier specially appointed to the service. Now and +then a gust of wind drove back a volume of smoke into the room, dimming +the brightness of the lamps, and adding fresh blackness to the beams of +the ceiling, whilst tongues of flame shot forth from the stove. But the +guests of Fort Reliance thought little of this slight inconvenience; the +stove warmed them, and they could not pay too dearly for its cheering +heat, so terribly cold was it outside in the cutting north wind. + +The storm could be heard raging without, the snow fell fast, becoming +rapidly solid and coating the already frosted window panes with fresh +ice. The whistling wind made its way through the cranks and chinks of +the doors and windows, and occasionally the rattling noise drowned every +other sound. Presently an awful silence ensued. Nature seemed to be +taking breath; but suddenly the squall recommenced with terrific fury. +The house was shaken to its foundations, the planks cracked, the beams +groaned. A stranger less accustomed than the habitués of the fort to +the war of the elements, would have asked if the end of the world were +come. + +But, with two exceptions, Captain Craventy’s guests troubled +themselves little about the weather, and if they had been outside +they would have felt no more fear than the stormy petrels disporting +themselves in the midst of the tempest. Two only of the assembled +company did not belong to the ordinary society of the neighbourhood, +two women, whom we shall introduce when we have enumerated Captain +Craventy’s other guests: these were, Lieutenant Jaspar Hobson, +Sergeant Long, Corporal Joliffe, and his bright active Canadian wife, +a certain Mac-Nab and his wife, both Scotch, John Rae, married to an +Indian woman of the country, and some sixty soldiers or employés of +the Hudson’s Bay Company. The neighbouring forts also furnished their +contingent of guests, for in these remote lands people look upon each +other as neighbours although their homes may be a hundred miles apart. +A good many employés or traders came from Fort Providence or Fort +Resolution, of the Great Slave Lake district, and even from Fort +Chippeway and Fort Liard further south. A rare break like this in the +monotony of their secluded lives, in these hyberborean regions, was +joyfully welcomed by all the exiles, and even a few Indian chiefs, about +a dozen, had accepted Captain Craventy’s invitation. They were not, +however, accompanied by their wives, the luckless squaws being still +looked upon as little better than slaves. The presence of these natives +is accounted for by the fact that they are in constant intercourse with +the traders, and supply the greater number of furs which pass through +the hands of the Hudson’s Bay Company, in exchange for other +commodities. They are mostly Chippeway Indians, well grown men with +hardy constitutions. Their complexions are of the peculiar reddish black +colour always ascribed in Europe to the evil spirits of fairyland. +They wear very picturesque cloaks of skins and mantles of fur, with a +head-dress of eagle’s feathers spread out like a lady’s fan, and +quivering with every motion of their thick black hair. + +Such was the company to whom the Captain was doing the honours of Fort +Reliance. There was no dancing for want of music, but the “buffet” +admirably supplied the want of the hired musicians of the European +balls. On the table rose a pyramidal pudding made by Mrs Joliffe’s +own hands; it was an immense truncated cone, composed of flour, fat, +rein-deer venison, and musk beef. The eggs, milk, and citron prescribed +in recipe books were, it is true, wanting, but their absence was atoned +for by its huge proportions. Mrs Joliffe served out slice after slice +with liberal hands, yet there remained enough and to spare. Piles of +sandwiches also figured on the table, in which ship biscuits took the +place of thin slices of English bread and butter, and dainty morsels of +corned beef that of the ham and stuffed veal of the old world. The sharp +teeth of the Chippeway Indians made short work of the tough biscuits; +and for drink there was plenty of whisky and gin handed round in little +pewter pots, not to speak of a great bowl of punch which was to close +the entertainment, and of which the Indians talked long afterwards in +their wigwams. + +Endless were the compliments paid to the Joliffes that evening, but they +deserved them; how zealously they waited on the guests, with what easy +grace they distributed the refreshments! They did not need prompting, +they anticipated the wishes of each one. The sandwiches were succeeded +by slices of the inexhaustible pudding, the pudding by glasses of gin or +whisky. + +“No, thank you, Mr Joliffe.” + +“You are too good, Corporal; but let me have time to breathe.” + +“Mrs Joliffe, I assure you, I can eat no more.” + +“Corporal Joliffe, I am at your mercy.” + +“No more, Mrs Joliffe, no more, thank you!” + +Such were the replies met with on every side by the zealous pair, but +their powers of persuasion were such that the most reluctant yielded in +the end. The quantities of food and drink consumed were really enormous. +The hubbub of conversation increased. The soldiery and employés became +excited. Here the talk was of hunting, there of trade. What plans were +laid for next season! The entire fauna of the Arctic regions would +scarcely supply game enough for these enterprising hunters. They already +saw bears, foxes, and musk oxen, falling beneath their bullets, and +pole-cats by hundreds caught in their traps. Their imagination pictured +the costly furs piled up in the magazines of the Company, which was this +year to realise hitherto unheard of profits. And whilst the spirits thus +freely circulated inflamed the imagination of the Europeans, the large +doses of Captain Craventy’s “fire-water” imbibed by the Indians +had an opposite effect. Too proud to show admiration, too cautious to +make promises, the taciturn chiefs listened gravely and silently to the +babel of voices around them. + +The captain enjoying the hurly burly, and pleased to see the poor +people, brought back as it were to the civilised world, enjoying +themselves so thoroughly, was here, there, and everywhere, answering all +inquiries about the fête with the words + +“Ask Joliffe, ask Joliffe !” + +And they asked Joliffe, who had a gracious word for every body. + +Some of those employed in the garrison and civil service of Fort +Reliance must here receive a few words of special notice, for they were +presently to go through experiences of a most terrible nature, which no +human perspicacity could possibly have foreseen. Amongst others we must +name Lieutenant Jaspar Hobson, Sergeant Long, Corporal and Mrs Joliffe, +and the two foreign women already alluded to, in whose honour Captain +Craventy’s fête was given. + +Jaspar Hobson was a man of forty years of age. He was short and slight, +with little muscular power; but a force of will which carried him +successfully through all trials, and enabled him to rise superior to +adverse circumstances. He was “ a child of the Company.” His father, +Major Hobson, an Irishman from Dublin, who had now been dead for some +time, lived for many years at Fort Assiniboin with his wife. There +Jaspar Hobson was born. His childhood and youth were spent at the foot +of the Rocky Mountains. His father brought him up strictly, and he +became a man in self-control and courage whilst yet a boy in years. +Jaspar Hobson was no mere hunter, but a soldier, a brave and intelligent +officer. During the struggles in Oregon of the Hudson’s Bay Company +with the rival companies of the Union, he distinguished himself by his +zeal and intrepidity, and rapidly rose to the rank of lieutenant. His +well-known merit led to his appointment to the command of an expedition +to the north, the aim of which was to explore the northern shores of +the Great Bear Lake, and to found a fort on the confines of the American +continent. Jaspar Hobson was to set out on his journey early in April. + +If the lieutenant was the type of a good officer, Sergeant Long was +that of a good soldier. He was a man of fifty years of age, with a +rough beard that looked as if it were made of cocoa-nut fibre. +Constitutionally brave, and disposed to obey rather than to command. +He had no ambition but to obey the orders he received never questioning +them, however strange they might appear, never reasoning for himself +when on duty for the Company-a true machine in uniform; but a perfect +machine, never wearing out; ever on the march, yet never showing signs +of fatigue. Perhaps Sergeant Long was rather hard upon his men, as he +was upon himself. He would not tolerate the slightest infraction +of discipline, and mercilessly ordered men into confinement for the +slightest neglect, whilst he himself had never been reprimanded. In a +word, he was a man born to obey, and this self-annihilation suited +his passive temperament. Men such as he are the materials of which a +formidable army is formed. They are the arms of the service, obeying a +single head. Is not this the only really powerful organisation? The two +types of fabulous mythology, Briareus with a hundred arms and Hydra +with a hundred heads, well represent the two kinds of armies; and in +a conflict between them, which would be victorious? Briareus without a +doubt ! + +We have already made acquaintance with Corporal Joliffe. He was the busy +bee of the party, but it was pleasant to hear him humming. He would have +made a better major-domo than a soldier; and he was himself aware of +this. So he called himself the “ Corporal in charge of details,” but +he would have lost himself a hundred times amongst these details, had +not little Mrs Joliffe guided him with a firm hand. So it came to pass, +that Corporal Joliffe obeyed his wife without owning it, doubtless +thinking to himself, like the philosopher Sancho, “a woman’s advice +is no such great thing, but he must be a fool who does not listen to +it.” + +It is now time to say a few words of the two foreign women already +alluded to more than once. They were both about forty years old, and +one of them well deserved to take first rank amongst celebrated female +travellers. The name of Paulina Barnett, the rival of the Pfeiffers, +Tinnis, and Haimaires of Hull, has been several times honourably +mentioned at the meetings of the Royal Geographical Society. In her +journeys up the Brahmaputra, as far as the mountains of Thibet, +across an unknown corner of New Holland, from Swan Bay to the Gulf of +Carpentaria, Paulina Barnett had given proof of the qualities of a great +traveller. She had been a widow for fifteen years, and her passion for +travelling led her constantly to explore new lands. She was tall, and +her face, framed in long braids of hair, already touched with white, was +full of energy. She was near-sighted, and a double eye-glass rested upon +her long straight nose, with its mobile nostrils. We must confess that +her walk was somewhat masculine, and her whole appearance was suggestive +of moral power, rather than of female grace. She was an Englishwoman +from Yorkshire, possessed of some fortune, the greater part of which was +expended in adventurous expeditions, and some new scheme of exploration +had now brought her to Fort Reliance. Having crossed the equinoctial +regions, she was doubtless anxious to penetrate to the extreme limits of +the hyperborean. Her presence at the fort was an event. The governor of +the Company had given her a special letter of recommendation to Captain +Craventy, according to which the latter was to do all in his power to +forward the design of the celebrated traveller to reach the borders of +the Arctic Ocean. A grand enterprise! To follow in the steps of Hearne, +Mackenzie, Rae, Franklin, and others. What fatigues, what trials, what +dangers would have to be gone through in the conflict with the terrible +elements of the Polar climate! How could a woman dare to venture where +so many explorers have drawn back or perished? But the stranger now shut +up in Fort Reliance was no ordinary woman; she was Paulina Barnett, a +laureate of the Royal Society. + +We must add that the celebrated traveller was accompanied by a servant +named Madge. This faithful creature was not merely a servant, but +a devoted and courageous friend, who lived only for her mistress. A +Scotchwoman of the old type, whom a Caleb might have married without +loss of dignity. Madge was about five years older than Mrs Barnett, and +was tall and strongly built. The two were on the most intimate terms; +Paulina looked upon Madge as an elder sister, and Madge treated Paulina +as her daughter. + +It was in honour of Paulina Barnett that Captain Craventy was this +evening treating his employés and the Chippeway Indians. In fact, +the lady traveller was to join the expedition of Jaspar Hobson for the +exploration of the north. It was for Paulina Barnett that the large +saloon of the factory resounded with joyful hurrahs. And it was no +wonder that the stove consumed a hundredweight of coal on this memorable +evening, for the cold outside was twenty-four degrees Fahrenheit below +zero, and Fort Reliance is situated in 61° 47’ N. Lat., at least four +degrees from the Polar circle. + +CHAPTER II. THE HUDSON’S BAY FUR COMPANY. “Captain Craventy?” + +“Mrs Barnett?” + +What do you think of your Lieutenant, Jaspar Hobson?” + +“I think he is an officer who will go far.” + +“What do you mean by the words, Will go far? Do you mean that he will +go beyond the Twenty-fourth parallel?” + +Captain Craventy could not help smiling at Mrs Paulina Barnett’s +question. They were talking together near the stove, whilst the guests +were passing backwards and forwards between the eating and drinking +tables. + +“Madam,” replied the Captain, “all that a man can do, will be done +by Jaspar Hobson. The Company has charged him to explore the north of +their possessions, and to establish a factory as near as possible to the +confines of the American continent, and he will establish it.” + +“That is a great responsibility for Lieutenant Hobson !” said the +traveller. + +“It is, madam, but Jaspar Hobson has never yet drawn back from a task +imposed upon him, however formidable it may have appeared.” + +“I can quite believe it, Captain,” replied Mrs Barnett, “and we +shall now see the Lieutenant at work. But what induces the Company to +construct a fort on the shores of the Arctic Ocean?” + +“They have a powerful motive, madam,” replied the Captain. + +“I may add a double motive. At no very distant date, Russia will +probably cede her American possessions to the Government of the United +States. [*1] When this cession has taken place, the Company will find +access to the Pacific Ocean extremely difficult, unless the North-west +passage discovered by Mc’Clure be practicable. [*1 Captain +Craventy’s prophecy has since been realised.] Fresh explorations will +decide this, for the Admiralty is about to send a vessel which will +coast along the North American continent, from Behring Strait to +Coronation Gulf, on the eastern side of which the new-Art is to be +established. If the enterprise succeed, this point will become an +important factory, the centre of the northern fur trade. The transport +of furs across the Indian territories involves a vast expenditure of +time and money, whereas, if the new route be available, steamers will +take them from the new fort to the Pacific Ocean in a few days.” + +“That would indeed be an important result of the enterprise, if this +North-west passage can really be used,” replied Mrs Paulina Barnett; +“but I think you spoke of a double motive.” + +“I did, madam,” said the Captain, “and I alluded to a matter of +vital interest to the Company. But I must beg of you to allow me to +explain to you in a few words how the present state of things came +about, how it is in fact that the very source of the trade of this once +flourishing Company is in danger of destruction.” + +The Captain then proceeded to give a brief sketch of the history of the +famous Hudson’s Bay Company. + +In the earliest times men employed the skins and furs of animals as +clothing. The fur trade is therefore of very great antiquity. Luxury in +dress increased to such an extent, that sumptuary laws were enacted to +control too great extravagance, especially in furs, for which there +was a positive passion. Vair and the furs of Siberian squirrels were +prohibited at the middle of the 12th century. + +In 1553 Russia founded several establishments in the northern steppes, +and England lost no time in following her example. The trade in +sables, ermines, and beavers, was carried on through the agency of the +Samoiedes; but during the reign of Elizabeth, a royal decree restricted +the use of costly furs to such an extent, that for several years this +branch of industry was completely paralysed. + +On the 2nd May, 1670, a licence to trade in furs in the Hudson’s Bay +Territory was granted to the Company, which numbered several men of high +rank amongst its shareholders : the Duke of York, the Duke of Albemarle, +the Earl of Shaftesbury, &c. Its capital was then only £8420. Private +companies were formidable rivals to its success; and French agents, +making Canada their headquarters, ventured on hazardous but most +lucrative expeditions. The active competition of these bold hunters +threatened the very existence of the infant Company. + +The conquest of Canada, however, somewhat lessened the danger of its +position. Three years after the taking of Quebec, 1776, the fur trade +received a new impulse. English traders became familiar with the +difficulties of trade of this kind; they learned the customs of the +country, the ways of the Indians and their system of exchange of goods, +but for all this the Company as yet made no profits whatever. Moreover, +towards 1784 some merchants of Montreal combined to explore the fur +country, and founded that powerful North-west Company, which soon became +the centre of the fur trade. In 1798 the new Company shipped furs to the +value of no less than £120,000, and the existence of the Hudson’s Bay +Company was again threatened. + +We must add, that the North-west Company shrank from no act, however +iniquitous, if its interests were at stake. Its agents imposed on their +own employés, speculated on the misery of the Indians, robbed them +when they had themselves made them drunk, setting at defiance the Act +of Parliament forbidding the sale of spirituous liquors on Indian +territory; and consequently realising immense profits, in spite of the +competition of the various Russian and American companies which had +sprung up—the American Fur Company amongst others, founded in 1809, +with a capital of a million of dollars, which was carrying on operations +on the west of the Rocky Mountains. + +The Hudson’s Bay Company was probably in greater danger of ruin than +any other; but in 1821, after much discussion, a treaty was made, +in accordance with which its old rival the North-west Company became +amalgamated with it, the two receiving the common title of “The +Hudson’s Bay Fur Company.” + +Now the only rival of this important association is the American +St Louis Fur Company. The Hudson’s Bay Company has numerous +establishments scattered over a domain extending over 3,700,000 square +miles. Its principal factories are situated on James Bay, at the mouth +of the Severn, in the south, and towards the frontiers of Upper Canada, +on Lakes Athapeskow, Winnipeg, Superior, Methye, Buffalo, and near the +Colombia, Mackenzie, Saskatchewan, and Assiniboin rivers, &c. Fort York, +commanding the course of the river Nelson, is the headquarters of the +Company, and contains its principal fur depôt. Moreover, in 1842 it +took a lease of all the Russian establishments in North America at an +annual rent of £40,000, so that it is now working on its own account +the vast tracts of country between the Mississippi and the Pacific +Ocean. It has sent out intrepid explorers in every direction: Hearne, +towards the Polar Sea, in 1770, to the discovery of the Coppermine +River; Franklin, in 1819 to 1822, along 5550 miles of the American +coast; Mackenzie, who, after having discovered the river to which he +gave his name, reached the shores of the Pacific at 52° 24’ N. Lat. +The following is a list of the quantities of skins and furs despatched +to Europe by the Hudson’s Bay Company in 1833-34, which will give an +exact idea of the extent of its trade:— + +Beavers . . . . . . . . . . . 1,074 + +Skins and young Beavers,. . 92,288 + +Musk Rats,. . . . . . . . . 694,092 + +Badgers,. . . . . . . . . . 1,069 + +Bears,. . . . . . . . . . . 7,451 + +Ermines,. . . . . . . . . . 491 + +Foxes, . . . . . . . . . . . 9,937 + +Lynxes, . . . . . . . . . . 14,255 + +Sables, . . . . . . . . . . 64,490 + +Polecats, . . . . . . . . . 25,100 + +Otters, . . . . . . . . . . 22,303 + +Racoons,. . . . . . . . . . 713 + +Swans, . . . . . . . . . . 7,918 + +Wolves, . . . . . . . . . . 8,484 + +Wolverines, . . . . . . . . 1,571 + +Such figures ought to bring in a large profit to the Hudson’s Bay +Company, but unfortunately they have not been maintained, and for the +last twenty years have been decreasing. + +The cause of this decline was the subject of Captain Craventy’s +explanation to Mrs Paulina Barnett. + +“Until 1839, madam,” said he, “the Company was in a flourishing +condition. In that year the number of furs exported was 2,350,000, but +since then the trade has gradually declined, and this number is now +reduced by one-half at least.” + +“But what do you suppose is the cause of this extraordinary decrease +in the exportation of furs?” inquired Mrs Barnett. + +“The depopulation of the hunting territories, caused by the activity, +and, I must add, the want of foresight of the hunters. The game was +trapped and killed without mercy. These massacres were conducted in the +most reckless and short-sighted fashion. Even females with young and +their little ones did not escape. The consequence is, that the animals +whose fur is valuable have become extremely rare. The otter has almost +entirely disappeared, and is only to be found near the islands of the +North Pacific. Small colonies of beavers have taken refuge on the shores +of the most distant rivers. It is the same with many other animals, +compelled to flee before the invasion of the hunters. The traps, once +crowded with game, are now empty. The price of skins is rising just +when a great demand exists for furs. Hunters have gone away in disgust, +leaving none but the most intrepid and indefatigable, who now penetrate +to the very confines of the American continent.” + +“Yes,” said Mrs Paulina Barnett, “the fact of the fur-bearing +animals having taken refuge beyond the polar circle, is a sufficient +explanation of the Company’s motive in founding a factory on the +borders of the Arctic Ocean.” + +“Not only so, madam,” replied the Captain, “the Company is also +compelled to seek a more northern centre of operations, for an Act of +Parliament has lately greatly reduced its domain.” + +“And the motive for this reduction?” inquired the traveller. + +“A very important question of political economy was involved, madam; +one which could not fail greatly to interest the statesmen of +Great Britain. In a word, the interests of the Company and those of +civilisation are antagonistic. It is to the interest of the Company to +keep the territory belonging to it in a wild uncultivated condition. +Every attempt at clearing ground was pitilessly put a stop to, as +it drove away the wild animals, so that the monopoly enjoyed by the +Hudson’s Bay Company was detrimental to all agricultural enterprise. +All questions not immediately relating to their own particular trade, +were relentlessly put aside by the governors of the association. It was +this despotic, and, in a certain sense, immoral system, which provoked +the measures taken by Parliament, and, in 1837, a commission appointed +by the Colonial Secretary decided that it was necessary to annex to +Canada all the territories suitable for cultivation, such as the Red +River and Saskatchewan districts, and to leave to the Company only +that portion of its land which appeared to be incapable of future +civilisation. The next year the Company lost the western slopes of the +Rocky Mountains, which it held direct from the Colonial Office, and you +will now understand, madam, how the agents of the Company, having lost +their power over their old territories, are determined before giving up +their trade to try to work the little known countries of the north, +and so open a communication with the Pacific by means of the North-west +passage.” + +Mrs Paulina Barnett was now well informed as to the ulterior projects of +the celebrated Company. Captain Craventy had given her a graphic sketch +of the situation, and it is probable he would have entered into further +details, had not an incident cut short his harangue. + +Corporal Joliffe announced in a loud voice that, with Mrs Joliffe’s +assistance, he was about to mix the punch. This news was received as it +deserved. The bowl—or rather, the basin—was filled with the precious +liquid. It contained no less than ten pints of coarse rum. Sugar, +measured out by Mrs Joliffe, was piled up at the bottom, and on the top +floated slices of lemon shrivelled with age. Nothing remained to be +done but to light this alcoholic lake, and the Corporal, match in hand, +awaited the order of his Captain, as if he were about to spring a mine. + +“All right, Joliffe !” at last said Captain Craventy. + +The light was applied to the bowl, and in a moment the punch was in +flames, whilst the guests applauded and clapped their hands. Ten minutes +afterwards, full glasses of the delightful beverage were circulating +amongst the guests, fresh bidders for them coming forward in endless +succession, like speculators on the Stock Exchange. + +“Hurrah! hurrah! hurrah! three cheers for Mrs Barnett! A cheer for the +Captain.” + +In the midst of these joyful shouts cries were heard from outside. +Silence immediately fell upon the company assembled. + +“Sergeant Long,” said the Captain, “go and see what is the +matter.” + +And at his chief’s order, the Sergeant, leaving his glass unfinished, +left the room. + +CHAPTER III. A SAVANT THAWED. Sergeant Long hastened to the narrow +passage from which opened the outer door of the fort, and heard the +cries redoubled, and combined with violent blows on the postern gate, +surrounded by high walls, which gave access to the court. The Sergeant +pushed open the door, and plunging into the snow, already a foot deep; +he waded through it, although half-blinded by the cutting sleet, and +nipped by the terrible cold. + +“What the devil does any one want at this time of night?” exclaimed +the Sergeant to himself, as he mechanically removed the heavy bars of +the gate; “none but Esquimaux would dare to brave such a temperature +as this!” + +“Open! open! open!” they shouted from without. + +“I am opening,” replied Sergeant Long, who really seemed to be a +long time about it. + +At last the door swung open, and the Sergeant was almost upset by +a sledge, drawn by six dogs, which dashed past him like a flash of +lightning. Worthy Sergeant Long only just escaped being crushed, but he +got up without a murmur, closed the gate, and returned to the house at +his ordinary pace, that is to say, at the rate of seventy-five strides a +minute. + +But Captain Craventy, Lieutenant Jaspar Hobson, and Corporal Joliffe +were already outside, braving the intense cold, and staring at the +sledge, white with snow, which had just drawn up in front of them. + +A man completely enveloped in furs now descended from it, + +“Fort Reliance?;” he inquired. + +“The same,” replied the Captain. + +“Captain Craventy?” + +“Behold him! Who are you?” + +“A courier of the Company.” + +“Are you alone?” + +“No, I bring a traveller.” + +“A traveller! And what does he want?” + +“He is come to see the moon.” + +At this reply, Captain Craventy said to himself the man must be a fool. +But there was no time to announce this opinion, for the courier had +taken an inert mass from the sledge, a kind of bag covered with snow, +and was about to carry it into the house, when the Captain inquired + +“What is that bag?” + +“It is my traveller,” replied the courier. + +“Who is this traveller?” + +“The astronomer, Thomas Black.” + +“But he is frozen.” + +“Well, he must be thawed.” + +Thomas Black, carried by the Sergeant, the Corporal, and the courier, +now made his entrance into the house of the fort, and was taken to a +room on the first floor, the temperature of which was bearable, thanks +to a glowing stove. He was laid upon a bed, and the Captain took his +hand. + +It was literally frozen. The wrappers and furred mantles, in which +Thomas Black was rolled up like a parcel requiring care, were removed, +and revealed a man of about fifty. He was short and stout, his hair +was already touched with grey, his beard was untrimmed, his eyes were +closed, and his lips pressed together as if glued to one another. If he +breathed at all, it was so slightly that the frost-work on the windows +would not have been affected by it. Joliffe undressed him, and turned +him rapidly on to his face and back again, with the words— + +“Come, come, sir, when do you mean to return to consciousness?” + +But the visitor who had arrived in so strange a manner showed no signs +of returning life, and Corporal Joliffe could think of no better means +to restore the lost vital heat than to give him a bath in the bowl of +hot punch. + +Very happily for Thomas Black, however, Lieutenant Jaspar Hobson had +another idea. + +“Snow, bring snow!” he cried. + +There was plenty of it in the court of Fort Reliance; and whilst the +Sergeant went to fetch the snow, Joliffe removed all the astronomer’s +clothes. The body of the unfortunate man was covered with white +frost-bitten patches. It was urgently necessary to restore the +circulation of the blood in the affected portions. This result Jaspar +Hobson hoped to obtain by vigorous friction with the snow. We know that +this is the means generally employed in the polar countries to set going +afresh the circulation of the blood arrested by the intense cold, even +as the rivers are arrested in their courses by the icy touch of winter. +Sergeant Loin soon returned, and he and Joliffe gave the new arrival +such a rubbing as he had probably never before received. It was no +soft and agreeable friction, but a vigorous shampooing most lustily +performed, more like the scratching of a curry-comb than the caresses of +a human hand. + +And during the operation the loquacious Corporal continued to exhort the +unconscious traveller. + +“Come, come, sir. What do you mean by getting frozen like this. Now, +don’t be so obstinate !” + +Probably it was obstinacy which kept Thomas Black from deigning to show +a sign of life. At the end of half an hour the rubbers began to despair, +and were about to discontinue their exhausting efforts, when the poor +man sighed several times. + +“He lives; he is coming to !” cried Jaspar Hobson. + +After having warmed the outside of his body, Corporal Joliffe hurried +to do the same for the inside, and hastily fetched a few glasses of +the punch. The traveller really felt much revived by them; the colour +returned to his cheeks, expression to his eyes, and words to his +lips, so that Captain Craventy began to hope that he should have an +explanation from Thomas Black himself of his strange arrival at the fort +in such a terrible condition. + +At last the traveller, well covered with wraps, rose on his elbow, and +said in a voice still faint + +“Fort Reliance?” + +“The same,” replied the Captain. + +“Captain Craventy?” + +“He is before you, and is happy to bid you welcome. But may I inquire +what brings you to Fort Reliance?” + +“He is come to see the moon,” replied the courier, who evidently +thought this a happy answer. + +It satisfied Thomas Black too, for he bent his head in assent and +resumed— + +“Lieutenant Hobson?” + +“I am here,” replied the Lieutenant. + +“You have not yet started?” + +“Not. yet, sir.” + +“Then,” replied Thomas Black, “I have only to thank you, and to go +to sleep until to-morrow morning.” + +The Captain and his companions retired, leaving their strange visitor to +his repose. Half an hour later the fête was at an end, and the guests +had regained their respective homes, either in the different rooms of +the fort, or the scattered houses outside the enceinte. + +The next day Thomas Black was rather better. His vigorous constitution +had thrown off the effects of the terrible chill he had had. Any one +else would have died from it; but he was not like other men. + +And now who was this astronomer? Where did he come from? Why had he +undertaken this journey across the territories of the Company in the +depth of winter? What did the courier’s reply signify?— To see the +moon! The moon could be seen anywhere; there was no need to come to the +hyperborean regions to look at it! + +Such were the thoughts which passed through Captain Craventy’s mind. +But the next day, after an hour’s talk with his new guest, he had +learned all he wished to know. + +Thomas Black was an astronomer attached to the Greenwich Observatory, so +brilliantly presided over by Professor Airy. Mr Black was no theorist, +but a sagacious and intelligent observer; and in the twenty years +during which he had devoted himself to astronomy, he had rendered great +services to the science of ouranography. In private life he was a simple +nonentity; he existed only for astronomy; he lived in the heavens, not +upon the earth; and was a true descendant of the witty La Fontaine’s +savant who fell into a well. He could talk of nothing but stars and +constellations. He ought to have lived in a telescope. As an observer +be had not his rival; his patience was inexhaustible; he could watch for +months for a cosmical phenomenon. He had a specialty of his own, too; he +had studied luminous meteors and shooting stars, and his discoveries in +this branch of astronomical science were considerable. When ever minute +observations or exact measurements and definitions were required, +Thomas Black was chosen for the service; for his clearness of sight was +something remarkable. The power of observation is not given to everyone, +and it will not therefore be surprising that the Greenwich astronomer +should have been chosen for the mission we are about to describe, which +involved results so interesting for selenographic science. + +We know that during a total eclipse of the sun the moon is surrounded by +a luminous corona. But what is the origin of this corona? Is it a real +substance? or is it only an effect of the diffraction of the sun’s +rays near the moon? This is a question which science has hitherto been +unable to answer. + +As early as 1706 this luminous halo was scientifically described. +The corona was minutely examined during the total eclipse of 1715 by +Lonville and Halley, by Maraldi in 1724, by Antonio de’Ulloa in +1778, and by Bonditch and Ferrer in 1806; but their theories were so +contradictory that no definite conclusion could be arrived at. During +the total eclipse of 1842, learned men of all nations—Airy, Arago, +Keytal, Langier, Mauvais, Otto, Struve, Petit, Baily, &c.—endeavoured +to solve the mystery of the origin of the phenomenon; but in spite +of all their efforts, “the disagreement,” says Arago, “of the +observations taken in different places by skilful astronomers of one and +the same eclipse, have involved the question in fresh obscurity, so that +it is now impossible to come to any certain conclusion as to the cause +of the phenomenon.” Since this was written, other total eclipses have +been studied with no better results. + +Yet the solution of the question is of such vast importance to +selenographic science that no price would be too great to pay for it. +A fresh opportunity was now about to occur to study the much-discussed +corona. A total eclipse of the sun—total, at least, for the extreme +north of America, for Spain and North Africa—was to take place on +July 18th, 1860. It was arranged between the astronomers of different +countries that simultaneous observations should be taken at the various +points of the zone where the eclipse would be total. Thomas Black was +chosen for the expedition to North America, and was now much in the same +situation as the English astronomers who were transported to Norway and +Sweden on the occasion of the eclipse of 1851. + +It will readily be imagined that Thomas Black seized with avidity the +opportunity offered him of studying this luminous halo. He was also to +examine into the nature of the red prominences which appear on different +parts of the edge of the terrestrial satellite when the totality of the +eclipse has commenced; and should he be able satisfactorily to establish +their origin, he would be entitled to the applause of the learned men of +all Europe. + +Thomas Black eagerly prepared for his journey. He obtained urgent +letters of recommendation to the principal agents of the Hudson’s +Bay Company. He ascertained that an expedition was to go to the extreme +north of the continent to found a new fort. It was an opportunity not +to be lost; so he set out, crossed the Atlantic, landed at New York, +traversed the lakes to the Red River settlement, and pressed on from +fort to fort in a sledge, under the escort of a courier of the Company; +in spite of the severity of the winter, braving all the dangers of a +journey across the Arctic regions, and arriving at Fort Reliance on the +19th March in the condition we have described. + +Such was the explanation given by the astronomer to Captain Craventy. He +at once placed himself entirely at Mr Black’s service, but could not +refrain from inquiring why he had been in such a great hurry to arrive, +when the eclipse was not to take place until the following year, 1860? + +“But, Captain,” replied the astronomer, “I heard that the Company +was sending an expedition along the northern coast of America, and I did +not wish to miss the departure of Lieutenant Hobson.” + +“Mr Black,” replied the Captain, “if the Lieutenant had already +started, I should have felt it my duty to accompany you myself to the +shores of the Polar Sea.” + +And with fresh assurances of his willingness to serve him, the Captain +again bade his new guest welcome to Fort Reliance. + +CHAPTER IV. A FACTORY. One of the largest of the lakes beyond the 61st +parallel is that called the Great Slave Lake; it is two hundred and +fifty miles long by fifty across, and is situated exactly at 61° 25’ +N. lat. and 114° W. long. The surrounding districts slope down to it, +and it completely fills a vast natural hollow. The position of the lake +in the very centre of the hunting districts. once swarming with game, +early attracted the attention of the Company. Numerous streams either +take their rise from it or flow into it-the Mackenzie, the Athabasca, +&c.; and several important forts have been constructed on its +shores—Fort Providence on the north, and Fort Resolution on the south. +Fort Reliance is situated on the north-east extremity, and is about +three hundred miles from the Chesterfield inlet, a long narrow estuary +formed by the waters of Hudson’s Bay. + +The Great Slave Lake is dotted with little islands, the granite and +gneiss of which they are formed jutting up in several places. Its +northern banks are clothed with thick woods, shutting out the barren +frozen district beyond, not inaptly called the “Cursed Land.” The +southern regions, on the other band, are flat, without a rise of any +kind, and the soil is mostly calcareous. The large ruminants of the +polar districts—the buffaloes or bisons, the flesh of which forms +almost the only food of the Canadian and native hunters—seldom go +further north than the Great Slave Lake. + +The trees on the northern shores of the lake form magnificent forests. +We need not be astonished at meeting with such fine vegetation in this +remote district. The Great Slave Lake is not really in a higher latitude +than Stockholm or Christiania. We have only to remember that the +isothermal lines, or belts of equal heat, along which heat is +distributed in equal quantities, do not follow the terrestrial +parallels, and that with the same latitude, America is ever so much +colder than Europe. In April the streets of New York are still white +with snow, yet the latitude of New York is nearly the same as that of +the Azores. The nature of a country, its position with regard to +the oceans, and even the conformation of its soil, all influence its +climate. + +In summer Fort Reliance was surrounded with masses of verdure, +refreshing to the sight after the long dreary winter. Timber was +plentiful in these forests, which consisted almost entirely of poplar, +pine, and birch. The islets on the lake produced very fine willows. Game +was abundant in the underwood, even during the bad season. Further +south the hunters from the fort successfully pursued bisons, elks, and +Canadian porcupines, the flesh of which is excellent. The waters of the +Slave Lake were full of fish; trout in them attained to an immense size, +their weight often exceeding forty pounds. Pikes, voracious lobes, a +sort of charr or grayling called “ blue fish,” and countless legions +of tittamegs, the Coregonus of naturalists, disported themselves in the +water, so that the inhabitants of Fort Reliance were well supplied with +food. Nature provided for all their wants; and clothed in the skins of +foxes, martens, bears, and other Arctic animals, they were able to brave +the rigour of the winter. + +The fort, properly so called, consisted of a wooden house with a +ground-floor and one upper storey. In it lived the commandant and his +officers. The barracks for the soldiers, the magazines of the Company, +and the offices where exchanges were made, surrounded this house. +A little chapel, which wanted nothing but a clergyman, and a +powder-magazine, completed the buildings of the settlement. The whole +was surrounded by palisades twenty-five feet high, defended by a +small bastion with a pointed roof at each of the four corners of the +parallelogram formed by the enceinte. The fort was thus protected from +surprise, a necessary precaution in the days when the Indians, instead +of being the purveyors of the Company, fought for the independence +of their native land, and when the agents and soldiers of rival +associations disputed the possession of the rich fur country. + +At that time the Hudson’s Bay Company employed about a million men on +its territories. It held supreme authority over them, an authority which +could even inflict death. The governors of the factories could regulate +salaries, and arbitrarily fix the price of provisions and furs; and as +a result of this irresponsible power, they often realised a profit of no +less than three hundred per cent. + +We shall see from the following table, taken from the “ Voyage of +Captain Robert Lade,” on what terms exchanges were formerly made with +those Indians who have since become the best hunters of the Company. +Beavers’ skins were then the currency employed in buying and selling. + +The Indians paid— + +For one gun, + +10 beavers’ skins + +“ half a pound of powder, + +1 “ + +“ four pounds of shot, + +1 “ + +“ one axe, + +1 “ + +“ six knives, + +1 “ + +“ one pound of glass beads, + +1 “ + +“ one laced coat, + +6 “ + +“ one coat not laced, + +5 “ + +“ one laced female dress, + +6 “ + +“ one pound of tobacco, + +1 “ + +“ one box of powder, + +1 “ + +“ one comb and one looking glass, + +2 “ + + +But a few years ago beaver-skins became so scarce that the currency had +to be changed. Bison-furs are now the medium of trade. When an Indian +presents himself at the fort, the agents of the Company give him as many +pieces of wood as he brings skins, and he exchanges these pieces of wood +for manufactured articles on the premises; and as the Company fix the +price of the articles they buy and sell, they cannot fail to realise +large profits. + +Such was the mode of proceeding in Fort Reliance and other factories; +so that Mrs Paulina Barnett was able to watch the working of the system +during her stay, which extended until the 16th April. Many a long talk +did she have with Lieutenant Hobson, many were the projects they formed, +and firmly were they both determined to allow no obstacle to check their +advance. As for Thomas Black, he never opened his lips except when his +own special mission was discussed. He was wrapped up in the subject of +the luminous corona and red prominences of the moon; he lived but to +solve the problem, and in the end made Mrs Paulina Barnett nearly as +enthusiastic as himself. How eager the two were to cross the Arctic +Circle, and how far off the 18th July 1860 appeared to both, but +especially to the impatient Greenwich astronomer, can easily be +imagined. + +The preparations for departure could not be commenced until the middle +of March, and a month passed before they were completed. In fact, it was +a formidable undertaking to organise such an expedition for crossing the +Polar regions. Everything had to betaken with them-food, clothes, tools, +arms, ammunition, and a nondescript collection of various requisites. + +The troops, under the command of Lieutenant Jaspar Hobson, were one +chief and two subordinate officers, with ten soldiers, three of whom +took their wives with them. They were all picked men, chosen by Captain +Craventy on account of their energy and resolution. We append a list of +the whole party:— + +1. Lieutenant Jaspar Hobson. + +11. Sabine, soldier. + +2. Sergeant Long. + +12. Hope, do. + +3. Corporal Joliffe. + +13. Kellet, do. + +4. Petersen, soldier + +14. Mrs Rae + +5. Belcher, do. + +15. Mrs Joliffe. + +6. Rae, do + +16. Mrs Mac-Nab. + +7. Marbre, do + +17. Mrs Paulina Barnett. + +8. Garry, do + +18. Madge. + +9. Pond, do + +19. Thomas Black + +10. Mac-Nab, do. + + + + +In all, nineteen persons to be transported several hundreds of miles +through a desert and imperfectly-known country. + +With this project in view, however, the Company had collected everything +necessary for the expedition. A dozen sledges, with their teams of dogs, +were in readiness. These primitive vehicles consisted of strong but +light planks joined together by transverse bands. A piece of curved +wood, turning up at the end like a skate, was fixed beneath the sledge, +enabling it to cleave the snow without sinking deeply into it. Six swift +and intelligent dogs, yoked two and two, and controlled by the long +thong brandished by the driver, drew the sledges, and could go at a rate +of fifteen miles an hour. + +The wardrobe of the travellers consisted of garments made of +reindeer-skins, lined throughout with thick furs. All wore linen next +the skin as a protection against the sudden changes of temperature +frequent in these latitudes. Each one, officer or soldier, male or +female, wore seal-skin boots sewn with twine, in the manufacture of +which the natives excel. These boots are absolutely impervious, and +are so flexible that they are admirably adapted for walking. Pine-wood +snow-shoes, two or three feet long, capable of supporting the weight of +a man on the most brittle snow, and enabling him to pass over it with +the rapidity of a skater on ice, can be fastened to the soles of the +seal-skin boots. Fur caps and deer-skin belts completed the costumes. + +For arms, Lieutenant Hobson had the regulation musketoons provided by +the Company, pistols, ordnance sabres, and plenty of ammunition; +for tools : axes, saws, adzes, and other instruments required in +carpentering. Then there was the collection of all that would be needed +for setting up a factory in the remote district for which they were +bound : a stove; a smelting furnace, two airpumps for ventilation, an +India-rubber boat, only inflated when required, &c., &c. + +The party might have relied for provisions on the hunters amongst them. +Some of the soldiers were skilful trackers of game, and there were +plenty of reindeer in the Polar regions. Whole tribes of Indians, or +Esquimaux, deprived of bread and all other nourishment, subsist entirely +on this venison, which is both abundant and palatable. But as delays and +difficulties had to be allowed for, a certain quantity of provisions was +taken with them. The flesh of the bison, elk, and deer, amassed in the +large battues on the south of the lake; corned beef, which will keep for +any length of time; and some Indian preparations, in which the flesh of +animals, ground to powder, retains its nutritive properties in a very +small bulk, requiring no cooking, and forming a very nourishing diet, +were amongst the stores provided in case of need. + +Lieutenant Hobson likewise took several casks of rum and whisky; but +he was firmly resolved to economise these spirits, so injurious to the +health in cold latitudes, as much as possible. The Company had placed +at his disposal a little portable medicine-chest, containing formidable +quantities of lime-juice, lemons, and other simple remedies necessary +to check, or if possible to prevent, the scorbutic affections which take +such a terrible form in these regions. + +All the men had been chosen with great care; none were too stout or +too thin, and all had for years been accustomed to the severity of +the climate, and could therefore more easily endure the fatigues of an +expedition to the Polar Sea. They were all brave, high-spirited fellows, +who had taken service of their own accord. Double pay had been promised +them during their stay at the confines of the American continent, should +they succeed in making a settlement beyond the seventieth parallel. + +The sledge provided for Mrs Barnett and her faithful Madge was rather +more comfortable than the others. She did not wish to be treated better +than her travelling companions, but yielded to the urgent request of +Captain Craventy, who was but carrying out the wishes of the Company. + +The vehicle which brought Thomas Black to Fort Reliance also +conveyed him and his scientific apparatus from it. A few astronomical +instruments, of which there were not many in those days-a telescope for +his selenographic observations, a sextant for taking the latitude, a +chronometer for determining the longitudes, a few maps, a few books, +were all stored away in this sledge, and Thomas Black relied upon his +faithful dogs to lose nothing by the way. + +Of course the food for the various teams was not forgotten. There were +altogether no less than seventy-two dogs, quite a herd to provide for by +the way, and it was the business of the hunters to cater for them. These +strong intelligent animals were bought of the Chippeway Indians, who +know well how to train them for their arduous calling. + +The little company was most skilfully organised. The zeal of Lieutenant +Jaspar Hobson was beyond all praise. Proud of his mission, and devoted +to his task; he neglected nothing which could insure success. Corporal +Joliffe, always a busybody, exerted himself without producing any very +tangible results; but his wife was most useful and devoted; and Mrs +Paulina Barnett had already struck up a great friendship with the brisk +little Canadian woman, whose fair hair and large soft eyes were so +pleasant to look at. + +We need scarcely add that Captain Craventy did all in his power to +further the enterprise. The instructions he had received from the +Company showed what great importance they attached to the success of the +expedition, and the establishment of a new factory beyond the seventieth +parallel. We may therefore safely affirm that every human effort likely +to insure success which could be made was made; but who could tell what +insurmountable difficulties nature might place in the path of the brave +Lieutenant I who could tell what awaited him and his devoted little +band. + +CHAPTER V. FROM FORT RELIANCE TO FORT ENTERPRISE. The first fine days +came at last. The green carpet of the hills began to appear here +and there where the snow had melted. A few migratory birds from the +south-such as swans, bald-headed eagles, &c.—passed through the warmer +air. The poplars, birches, and willows began to bud, and the redheaded +ducks, of which there are so many species in North America, to skim the +surface of the numerous pools formed by the melted snow. Guillemots, +puffins, and eider ducks sought colder latitudes; and little shrews +no bigger than a hazel-nut ventured from their holes, tracing strange +figures on the ground with their tiny-pointed tails. It was intoxicating +once more to breathe the fresh air of spring, and to bask in the +sunbeams. Nature awoke once more from her heavy sleep in the long winter +night, and smiled as she opened her eyes. + +The renovation of creation in spring is perhaps more impressive in the +Arctic regions than in any other portion of the globe, on account of the +greater contrast with what has gone before. + +The thaw was not, however, complete. The thermometer, it is true, marked +41° Fahrenheit above zero; but the mean temperature of the nights kept +the surface of the snowy plains solid—a good thing for the passage of +sledges, of which Jaspar Hobson meant to avail himself before the thaw +became complete. + +The ice of the lake was still unbroken. During the last month several +successful hunting expeditions had been made across the vast smooth +plains, which were already frequented by game. Mrs Barnett was +astonished at the skill with which the men used their snow-shoes, +scudding along at the pace of a horse in full gallop. Following Captain +Craventy’s advice, the lady herself practised walking in these +contrivances, and she soon became very expert in sliding over the snow. + +During the last few days several bands of Indians had arrived at the +fort to exchange the spoils of the winter chase for manufactured goods. +The season had been bad. There were a good many polecats and sables; but +the furs of beavers, otters, lynxes, ermines, and foxes were scarce. It +was therefore a wise step for the Company to endeavour to explore a new +country, where the wild animals had hitherto escaped the rapacity of +man. + +On the morning of the 16th April Lieutenant Jaspar Hobson and his party +were ready to start. The route across the known districts, between the +Slave Lake and that of the Great Bear beyond the Arctic Circle, was +already determined. Jaspar Hobson was to make for Fort Confidence, on +the northern extremity of the latter lake; and he was to revictual at +Fort Enterprise, a station two hundred miles further to the north-west, +on the shores of the Snare Lake, By travelling at the rate of fifteen +miles a day the Lieutenant hoped to halt there about the beginning of +May. + +From this point the expedition was to take the shortest route to Cape +Bathurst, on the North American coast. It was agreed that in a year +Captain Craventy should send a convoy with provisions to Cape Bathurst, +and that a detachment of the Lieutenant’s men was to go to meet this +convoy, to guide it to the spot where the new fort was to be erected. +This plan was a guarantee against any adverse circumstances, and left +a means of communication with their fellow-creatures open to the +Lieutenant and his voluntary companions in exile. + +On the 16th April dogs and sledges were awaiting the travellers at the +postern gate. Captain Craventy called the men of the party together and +said a few kind words to them. He urged them above all things to stand +by one another in the perils they might be called upon to meet; reminded +them that the enterprise upon which they were about to enter required +self-denial and devotion, and that submission to their officers was +an indispensable condition of success. Cheers greeted the Captain’s +speech, the adieux were quickly made, and each one took his place in the +sledge assigned to him. Jaspar Hobson and Sergeant Long went first; then +Mrs Paulina Barnett and Madge, the latter dexterously wielding the long +Esquimaux whip, terminating in a stiff thong. Thomas Black and one of +the soldiers, the Canadian, Petersen, occupied the third sledge ;and +the others followed, Corporal and Mrs Joliffe bringing up the rear. +According to the orders of Lieutenant Hobson, each driver kept as nearly +as possible at the same distance from the preceding sledge, so as to +avoid all confusion—a necessary precaution, as a collision between two +sledges going at full speed, might have had disastrous results. + +On leaving Fort Reliance, Jaspar Hobson at once directed his course +towards the north-west. The first thing to be done was to cross the +large river connecting Lakes Slave and Wolmsley, which was, however, +still frozen so hard as to be undistinguishable from the vast white +plains around. A uniform carpet of snow covered the whole country, and +the sledges, drawn by their swift teams, sped rapidly over the firm +smooth surface. + +The weather was fine, but still very cold. The sun, scarce above the +horizon, described a lengthened curve; and its rays, reflected on +the snow, gave more light than heat. Fortunately not a breath of air +stirred, and this lessened the severity of the cold, although the rapid +pace of the sledges through the keen atmosphere must have been trying to +any one not inured to the rigour of a Polar climate. + +“A good beginning,” said Jaspar Hobson to the Sergeant, who sat +motionless beside him as if rooted to his seat; “the journey has +commenced favourably. The sky is cloudless; the temperature propitious, +our equipages shoot along like express trains, and as long as this fine +weather lasts we shall get on capitally. What do you think, Sergeant +Long?” + +“I agree with you, Lieutenant,” replied the Sergeant, who never +differed from his chief. + +“Like myself, Sergeant, you are determined to push on as far north as +possible—are you not?” resumed Lieutenant Hobson. + +“You have but to command to be obeyed, Lieutenant.” + +“I know it, Sergeant; I know that with you to bear is to obey. Would +that all our men understood as you do the importance of our mission, and +would devote themselves body and soul to the interests of the Company! +Ah, Sergeant Long, I know if I gave you an impossible order— “ + +“Lieutenant, there is no such thing as an impossible order.” + +“What? Suppose now I ordered you to go to the North Pole?” + +“Lieutenant, I should go !” + +“And to comeback!” added Jaspar Hobson with a smile. + +“I should come back,” replied Sergeant Long simply. + +During this colloquy between Lieutenant Hobson and his Sergeant a slight +ascent compelled the sledges to slacken speed, and Mrs Barnett and +Madge also exchanged a few sentences. These two intrepid women, in their +otter-skin caps and white bear-skin mantles, gazed in astonishment upon +the rugged scenery around them, and at the white outlines of the huge +glaciers standing out against the horizon. They had already left behind +them the hills of the northern banks of the Slave Lake, with their +summits crowned with the gaunt skeletons of trees. The vast plains +stretched before them in apparently endless succession. The rapid flight +and cries of a few birds of passage alone broke the monotony of the +scene. Now and then a troop of swans, with plumage so white that the +keenest sight could not distinguish them from the snow when they settled +on the ground, rose into view in the clear blue atmosphere and pursued +their journey to the north. + +“What an extraordinary country !” exclaimed Mrs Paulina Barnett. +“What a difference between these Polar regions and the green prairies +of Australia! You remember, Madge, how we suffered from the heat on the +shores of the Gulf of Carpentaria—you remember the cloudless sky and +the parching sunbeams?” + +My dear,” replied Madge, “I have not the gift of remembering like +you. You retain your impressions, I forget mine.” + +“What, Madge !” cried Mrs Barnett, “you have forgotten the +tropical heat of India arid Australia? You have no recollection of +our agonies when water failed us in the desert, when the pitiless sun +scorched us to the bone, when even the night brought us no relief from +our sufferings !” + +“No, Paulina,” replied Madge, wrapping her furs more closely round +her, “no, I remember nothing. How could I now recollect the sufferings +to which you allude—the heat, the agonies of thirst—when we are +surrounded on every side by ice, and I have but to stretch my arm out of +this sledge to pick up a handful of snow? You talk to me of heat, when +we are freezing beneath our bearskins; you recall the broiling rays of +the sun when its April beams cannot melt the icicles on our lips! No, +child, no, don’t try to persuade me it’s hot anywhere else; don’t +tell me I ever complained of being too warm, for I sha’n’t believe +you!” + +Mrs Paulina Barnett could not help smiling. + +“So, poor Madge,” she said, “you are very cold!” + +“Yes, child, I am cold; but I rather like this climate. I’ve no +doubt it’s very healthy, and I think North America will agree with me. +It’s really a very fine country !” + +“Yes, Madge; it is a fine country, and we have as yet seen none of +the wonders it contains. But wait until we reach the Arctic Ocean; +wait until the winter shuts us in with its gigantic icebergs and thick +covering of snow; wait till the northern storms break over us, and the +glories of the Aurora Borealis and of the splendid constellations of +the Polar skies are spread out above our heads; wait till we have lived +through the strange long six months’ night, and then indeed you will +understand the infinite variety, the infinite beauty, of our Creator’s +handiwork !” + +Thus spoke Mrs Paulina Barnett, carried away by her vivid imagination. +She could see nothing but beauty in these deserted regions, with their +rigorous climate. Her enthusiasm got the better for the time of her +judgment. Her sympathy with nature enabled her to read the touching +poetry of the ice-bound north-the poetry embodied in the Sagas, and sung +by the bards of the time of Ossian. But Madge, more matter of fact +than her mistress, disguised from herself neither the dangers of an +expedition to the Arctic Ocean, nor the sufferings involved in wintering +only thirty degrees at the most from the North Pole. + +And indeed the most robust had sometimes succumbed to the fatigues, +privations, and mental and bodily agonies endured in this severe +climate. Jaspar Hobson had not, it is true, to press on to the very +highest latitudes of the globe,; he had not to reach the pole itself, +or to follow in the steps of Parry, Ross, Mc’Clure, Kean, Morton, +and others. But after once crossing the Arctic Circle, there is little +variation in the temperature; it does not increase in coldness in +proportion to the elevation reached. Granted that Jaspar Hobson did not +think of going beyond the seventieth parallel, we must still remember +that Franklin and his unfortunate companions died of cold and hunger +before they had penetrated beyond 68° N. lat. + +Very different was the talk in the sledge occupied by Mr and Mrs +Joliffe. Perhaps the gallant Corporal had too often drunk to the success +of the expedition on starting; for, strange to say, he was disputing +with his little wife. Yes, he was actually contradicting her, which +never happened except under extraordinary circumstances! + +“No, Mrs Joliffe,” he was saying, “no, you have nothing to fear. +A sledge is not more difficult to guide than a pony-carriage, and the +devil take me if I can’t manage a team of dogs !” + +“I don’t question your skill,” replied Mrs Joliffe; “I only ask +you not to go so fast. You are in front of the whole caravan now, and +I hear Lieutenant Hobson calling out to you to resume your proper place +behind.” + +“Let him call, Mrs Joliffe, let him call.” + +And the Corporal, urging on his dogs with a fresh cut of the whip, +dashed along at still greater speed. + +“Take care, Joliffe,” repeated his little wife; “not so fast, we +are going down hill.” + +“Down hill, Mrs Joliffe; you call that down hill? why, it’s up +hill!” + +“I tell you we are going down!” repeated poor Mrs Joliffe. + +“And I tell you we are going up; look how the dogs pull !” + +Whoever was right, the dogs became uneasy. The ascent was, in fact, +pretty steep; the sledge dashed along at a reckless pace, and was +already considerably in advance of the rest of the party. Mr and Mrs +Joliffe bumped up and down every instant, the surface of the snow became +more and more uneven, and the pair, flung first to one side and then to +the other, knocked against each other and the sledge, and were horribly +bruised and shaken. But the Corporal would listen neither to the advice +of his wife nor to the shouts of Lieutenant Hobson. The latter, seeing +the danger of this reckless course, urged on his own animals, and the +rest of the caravan followed at a rapid pace. + +But the Corporal became more and more excited-the speed of his equipage +delighted him. He shouted, he gesticulated, and flourished his long whip +like an accomplished sportsman. + +“Wonderful things these whips!” he cried; “the Esquimaux wield +them with unrivalled skill !” + +“But you are not an Esquimaux!” cried Mrs Joliffe, trying in vain to +arrest the arm of her imprudent husband. + +“I have heard tell,” resumed the Corporal—” I’ve heard tell +that the Esquimaux can touch any dog they like in any part, that they +can even cut out a bit of one of their ears with the stiff thong at the +end of the whip. I am going to try.” + +“Don’t try, don’t try, Joliffe !” screamed the poor little +woman, frightened out of her wits. + +“Don’t be afraid, Mrs Joliffe, don’t be afraid; I know what I can +do. The fifth dog on the right is misbehaving himself;. I will correct +him a little!” + +But Corporal Joliffe was evidently not yet enough of an Esquimaux to be +able to manage the whip with its thong four feet longer than the sledge; +for it unrolled with an ominous hiss, and rebounding, twisted itself +round Corporal Joliffe’s own neck, sending his fur cap into the air, +perhaps with one of his ears in it. + +At this moment the dogs flung themselves on one side, the sledge was +overturned, and the pair were flung into the snow. Fortunately it was +thick and soft, so that they escaped unhurt. But what a disgrace for the +Corporal! how reproachfully his little wife looked at him, and how stern +was the reprimand of Lieutenant Hobson! + +The sledge was picked up, but it was decided that henceforth the reins +of the dogs, like those of the household, were to be in the hands of +Mrs Joliffe. The crest-fallen Corporal was obliged to submit, and the +interrupted journey was resumed. + +No incident worth mentioning occurred during the next fifteen days. The +weather continued favourable, the cold was not too severe, and on the +1st May the expedition arrived at Fort Enterprise. + +: + +CHAPTER VI. A WAPITI DUEL. Two hundred miles had been traversed since +the expedition left Fort Reliance. The travellers, taking advantage of +the long twilight, pressed on day and night, and were literally overcome +with fatigue when they reached Fort Enterprise, near the shores of Lake +Snare. + +This fort was no more than a depôt of provisions, of little importance, +erected a few years before by the Hudson’s Bay Company. It served as a +resting-place for the men taking the convoys of furs from the Great Bear +Lake, some three hundred miles further to the north-west. About a dozen +soldiers formed the garrison. The fort consisted of a wooden house +surrounded by palisades. But few as were the comforts it offered, +Lieutenant Hobson’s companions gladly took refuge in it and rested +there for two days. + +The gentle influence of the Arctic spring was beginning to be felt. Here +and there the snow had melted, and the temperature of the nights was no +longer below freezing point. A few delicate mosses and slender grasses +clothed the rugged ground with their soft verdure; and from between the +stones peeped the moist calices of tiny, almost colourless, flowers. +These faint signs of reawakening vegetation, after the long night of +winter, were refreshing to eyes weary of the monotonous whiteness of +the snow; and the scattered specimens of the Flora of the Arctic regions +were welcomed with delight. + +Mrs Paulina Barnett and Jaspar Hobson availed themselves of this leisure +time to visit the shores of the little lake. They were both students and +enthusiastic lovers of nature. Together they wandered amongst the ice +masses, already beginning to break up, and the waterfalls created by +the action of the rays of the sun. The surface itself of Lake Snare +was still intact, not a crack denoted the approaching thaw; but it was +strewn with the ruins of mighty icebergs, which assumed all manner +of picturesque forms, and the beauty of which was heightened when the +light, diffracted by the sharp edges of the ice, touched them with all +manner of colours. One might have fancied that a rainbow, crushed in a +powerful hand, bad been flung upon the ground, its fragments crossing +each other as they fell. + +“What a beautiful scene!” exclaimed Mrs Paulina Barnett. “These +prismatic effects vary at every change of our position. Does it not seem +as if we were bending over the opening of an immense kaleidoscope, or +are you already weary of a sight so new and interesting to me?” + +“No, madam,” replied the Lieutenant; “although I was born and +bred on this continent, its beauties never pall upon me. But if your +enthusiasm is so great when you see this scenery with the sun shining +upon it, what will it be when you are privileged to behold the terrible +grandeur of the winter? To own the truth, I think the sun, so much +thought of in temperate latitudes, spoils my Arctic home.” + +“Indeed!” exclaimed Mrs Barnett, smiling at the Lieutenant’s last +remark; “for my part, I think the sun a capital travelling companion, +and I shall not be disposed to grumble at the warmth it gives even in +the Polar regions !” + +“Ah, madam,” replied Jaspar Hobson, “I am one of those who think +it best to visit Russia in the winter, and the Sahara Desert in the +summer. You then see their peculiar characteristics to advantage. The +sun is a star of the torrid and temperate zones, and is out of place +thirty degrees from the North Pole. The true sky of this country is the +pure frigid sky of winter, bright with constellations, and sometimes +flushed with the glory of the Aurora Borealis. This land is the land of +the night, not of the day; and you have yet to make acquaintance with +the delights and marvels of the long Polar night.” + +“Have you ever visited the temperate zones of Europe and America?” +inquired Mrs Barnett. + +“Yes, madam; and I admired them as they deserved. But I returned home +with fresh love and enthusiasm for my native land. Cold is my element, +and no merit is due to me for braving it. It has no power over me; and, +like the Esquimaux. I can live for months together in a snow hut.” + +“Really, Lieutenant Hobson, it is quite cheering to hear our dreaded +enemy spoken of in such terms. I hope to prove myself worthy to be your +companion, and wherever you venture, we will venture together.” + +“I agree, madam, I agree; and may all the women and soldiers +accompanying me show themselves as resolute as you. If so, God helping +us, we shall indeed advance far.” + +“You have nothing to complain of yet,” observed the lady. “Not a +single accident has occurred, the weather has been propitious, the cold +not too severe-everything has combined to aid us.” + +“Yes, madam; but the sun which you admire so much will soon create +difficulties for us, and strew obstacles in our path.” + +“What do you mean, Lieutenant Hobson?” + +“I mean that the heat will soon have changed the aspect of the +country; that the melted ice will impede the sliding of the sledges; +that the ground will become rough and uneven; that our panting dogs will +no longer carry us along with the speed of an arrow; that the rivers and +lakes will resume their liquid state, and that we shall have to ford +or go round them. All these changes, madam, due to the influence of the +solar rays, will cause delays, fatigue, and dangers, the very least of +which will be the breaking of the brittle snow beneath our feet, or the +falling of the avalanches from the summits of the icebergs. For all this +we have to thank the gradual rise of the sun higher and higher above +the horizon. Bear this in mind, madam: of the four elements of the old +creation, only one is necessary to us here, the air; the other three, +fire, earth, and water, are de trop in the Arctic regions.” + +Of course the Lieutenant was exaggerating, and Mrs Barnett could easily +have retorted with counter-arguments; but she liked to hear his raptures +in praise of his beloved country, and she felt that his enthusiasm was a +guarantee that he would shrink from no obstacle. + +Yet Jaspar Hobson was right when he said the sun would cause +difficulties. This was seen when the party set out again on the 4th +May, three days later. The thermometer, even in the coldest part of the +night, marked more than 32° Fahrenheit. A complete thaw set in, the +vast white sheet of snow resolved itself into water. The irregularities +of the rocky soil caused constant jolting of the sledges, and the +passengers were roughly shaken. The roads were so heavy that the dogs +had to go at a slow trot, and the reins were therefore again entrusted +to the hands of the imprudent Corporal + +Joliffe. Neither shouts nor flourishings of the whip had the slightest +effect on the jaded animals. + +From time to time the travellers lightened the sledges by walking little +way. This mode of locomotion suited the hunters, who were now gradually +approaching the best districts for game in the whole of English America. +Mrs Paulina Barnett and Madge took a great interest in the chase, whilst +Thomas Black professed absolute indifference to all athletic exercise. +He had not come all this distance to hunt the polecat or the ermine, but +merely to look at the moon at the moment when her disc should cover +that of the sun. When the queen of the night rose above the horizon, the +impatient astronomer would gaze at her with eager eyes, and one day the +Lieutenant said to him + +“It would be a bad look-out for you, Mr Black, if by any unlucky +chance the moon should fail to keep her appointment on the 16th July +1860.” + +“Lieutenant Hobson,” gravely replied the astronomer, “if the moon +were guilty of such a breach of good manners, I should indeed have cause +to complain.” + +The chief hunters of the expedition were the soldiers Marbre and Sabine, +both very expert at their business. Their skill was wonderful; and the +cleverest Indians would not have surpassed them in keenness of sight, +precision of aim, or manual address. They were alike trappers and +hunters, and were acquainted with all the nets and snares for taking +sables, otters, wolves, foxes, bears, &c. No artifice was unknown to +them, and Captain Craventy had shown his wisdom in choosing two such +intelligent men to accompany the little troop. + +Whilst on the march however, Marbre and Sabine had no time for setting +traps. They could not separate from the others for more than an hour or +two at a time, and were obliged to be content with the game which passed +within range of their rifles. Still they were fortunate enough to kill +two of the large American ruminants, seldom met with in such elevated +latitudes. + +On the morning of the 15th May the hunters asked permission to follow +some fresh traces they had found, and the Lieutenant not only granted +it, but himself accompanied them with Mrs Paulina Barnett, and they went +several miles out of their route towards the east. + +The impressions were evidently the result of the passage of about +half-a-dozen large deer. There could be no mistake about it; Marbre +and Sabine were positive on that point, and could even have named the +species to which the animals belonged. + +“You seem surprised to have met with traces of these animals here, +Lieutenant,” said Mrs Barnett. + +“Well, madam,” replied Hobson, “this species is rarely seen beyond +57° N. lat. We generally hunt them at the south of the Slave Lake, +where they feed upon the shoots of willows and poplars, and certain wild +roses to which they are very partial.” + +“I suppose these creatures, like those with valuable furs, have fled +from the districts scoured by the hunters.” + +“I see no other explanation of their presence at 65° N. lat.,” +replied the Lieutenant-”that is, if the men are not mistaken as to the +origin of the footprints.” + +“No, no, sir,” cried Sabine; “Marbre and I are not mistaken. These +traces were left by deer, the deer we hunters call red deer, and the +natives wapitis.” + +“He is quite right,” added Marbre; “old trappers like us are +not to be taken in; besides, don’t you hear that peculiar whistling +sound?” + +The party had now reached the foot of a little hill, and as the snow +had almost disappeared from its sides they were able to climb it, +and hastened to the summit, the peculiar whistling noticed by Marbre +becoming louder, mingled with cries resembling the braying of an ass, +and proving that the two hunters were not mistaken. + +Once at the top of the hill, the adventurers looked eagerly towards the +east. The undulating plains were still white with snow, but its dazzling +surface was here and there relieved with patches of stunted light green +vegetation. A few gaunt shrubs stretched forth their bare and shrivelled +branches, and huge icebergs with precipitous sides stood out against the +grey background of the sky. + +“Wapitis! wapitis!-there they are !” cried Sabine and Marbre at +once, pointing to a group of animals distinctly visible about a quarter +of a mile to the east. + +“What are they doing?” asked Mrs Barnett. + +“They are fighting, madam,” replied Hobson; “they always do when +the heat of the Polar sun inflames their blood-another deplorable result +of the action of the radiant orb of day !” + +From where they stood the party could easily watch the group of wapitis. +They were fine specimens of the family of deer known under the various +names of stags with rounded antlers, American stags, roebucks, grey elks +and red elks, &c. These graceful creatures have slender legs and brown +skins with patches of red hair, the colour of which becomes darker in +the warmer season. The fierce males are easily distinguished from the +females by their fine white antlers, the latter being entirely without +these ornaments. These wapitis were once very numerous all over North +America, and the United States imported a great many; but clearings +were begun on every side, the forest trees fell beneath the axe of +the pioneer of civilisation, and the wapitis took refuge in the more +peaceful districts of Canada; but they were soon again disturbed, and +wandered to the shores of Hudson’s Bay. So that although the wapiti +thrives in a cold country, Lieutenant Hobson was right in saying that it +seldom penetrates beyond 57° N. latitude; and the specimens now found +had doubtless fled before the Chippeway Indians, who hunt them without +mercy. + +The wapitis were so engrossed in their desperate struggle that they were +unconscious of the approach of the hunters; but they would probably +not have ceased fighting, had they been aware of it. Marbre and Sabine, +aware of their peculiarity in this respect, might therefore have +advanced fearlessly upon them, and have taken aim at leisure. + +Lieutenant Hobson suggested that they should do so. + +“Beg pardon, sir,” replied Marbre; “but let us spare our powder +and shot. These beasts are engaged in a war to the death, and we shall +arrive in plenty of time to pick up the vanquished.” + +“Have these wapitis a commercial value?” asked Mrs Paulina Barnett. + +“Yes, madam,” replied Hobson; “and their skin, which is not quite +so thick as that of the elk, properly so called makes very valuable +leather. By rubbing this skin with the fat and brains of the animal +itself, it is rendered flexible, and neither damp nor dryness injures +it. The Indians are therefore always eager to procure the skins of the +wapitis.” + +“Does not the flesh make admirable venison?” + +“Pretty good, madam; only pretty good. It is tough, and does not taste +very nice; the fat becomes hard directly it is taken from the fire, and +sticks to the teeth. It is certainly inferior as an article of food to +the flesh of other deer; but when meat is scarce we are glad enough to +eat it, and it supports life as well as anything else.” + +Mrs Barnett and Lieutenant Hobson had been chatting together for some +minutes, when, with the exception of two, the wapitis suddenly ceased +fighting. Was their rage satiated?- or had they perceived the hunters, +and felt the approach of danger? Whatever the cause, all but two fine +creatures fled a towards the east With incredible speed; in a few +instants they were out of sight, and the swiftest horse could not have +caught them up. + +Meanwhile, however, two magnificent specimens remained on the field +of battle. Heads down, antlers to antlers, hind legs stretched and +quivering, they butted at each other without a moment’s pause. Like +two wrestlers struggling for a prize which neither will yield, they +would not separate, but whirled round and round together on their front +legs as if riveted to one another. What implacable rage !” exclaimed +Mrs Barnett. + +“Yes,” replied the Lieutenant; “the wapitis really are most +spiteful beasts. I have no doubt they are fighting out an old +quarrel.” + +“Would not this be the time to approach them, when they are blinded +with rage?” + +“There’s plenty of time, ma’am,” said Sabine; “they won’t +escape us now. They will not stir from where they are when we are three +steps from them, the rifles at our shoulders, and our fingers on the +triggers !” + +Indeed? Yes, madam,” added Hobson, who had carefully examined the +wapitis after the hunter’s remark; “and whether at our hands or +from the teeth of wolves, those wapitis will meet death where they now +stand.” + +“I don’t understand what you mean, Lieutenant,” said Mrs Barnett. + +“Well, go nearer, madam,” he replied; “don’t be afraid of +startling the animals; for, as our hunter says, they are no longer +capable of flight.” + +The four now descended the hill, and in a few minutes gained the theatre +of the struggle. The wapitis had not moved. They were pushing at +each other like a couple of rams, and seemed to be inseparably glued +together. + +In fact, in the heat of the combat the antlers of the two creatures had +become entangled together to such an extent that they could no longer +separate without breaking them. This often happens in the hunting +districts. It is not at all uncommon to find antlers thus connected +lying on the ground; the poor encumbered animals soon die of hunger, or +they become an easy prey to wild beasts. + +Two bullets put an end to the fight between the wapitis; and Marbre +and Sabine taking immediate possession, carried off their skins to be +subsequently prepared, leaving their bleeding carcasses to be devoured +by wolves and bears. + +CHAPTER VII. THE ARCTIC CIRCLE. The expedition continued to advance +towards the north-west; but the great inequalities of the ground made it +hard work for the dogs to get along, and the poor creatures, who could +hardly be held in when they started, were now quiet enough. Eight or ten +miles a day were as much as they could accomplish, although Lieutenant +Hobson urged them on to the utmost. + +He was anxious to get to Fort Confidence, on the further side of the +Great Bear Lake, where he hoped to obtain some useful information. Had +the Indians frequenting the northern banks of the lake been able to +cross the districts on the shores of the sea? was the Arctic Ocean open +at this time of year? These were grave questions, the reply to which +would decide the fate of the new factory. + +The country through which the little troop was now passing was +intersected by numerous streams, mostly tributaries of the two large +rivers, the Mackenzie and Coppermine, which flow from the south to the +north, and empty themselves into the Arctic Ocean. Lakes, lagoons, and +numerous pools are formed between these two principal arteries; and +as they were no longer frozen over, the sledges could not venture upon +them, and were compelled to go around them, which caused considerable +delay. Lieutenant Hobson was certainly right in saying that winter is +the time to visit the hyperborean regions, for they are then far easier +to traverse. Mrs Paulina Barnett had reason to own the justice of this +assertion than once. + +This region, included in the “Cursed Land,” was, besides, completely +deserted, as are the greater portion of the districts of the extreme +north of America. It has been estimated that there is but one inhabitant +to every ten square miles. Besides the scattered natives, there are some +few thousand agents or soldiers of the different fur-trading companies; +but they mostly congregate in the southern districts and about the +various factories. No human footprints gladdened the eyes of the +travellers, the only traces on the sandy soil were those of ruminants +and rodents. Now and then a fierce polar bear was seen, and Mrs Paulina +Barnett expressed her surprise at not meeting more of these terrible +carnivorous beasts, of whose daily attacks on whalers and persons +shipwrecked in Baffin’s Bay and on the coasts of Greenland and +Spitzbergen she had read in the accounts of those who had wintered in +the Arctic regions. + +“Wait for the winter, madam,” replied the Lieutenant; “wait till +the cold makes them hungry, and then you will perhaps see as many as you +care about !” + +On the 23d May, after a long and fatiguing journey, the expedition at +last reached the Arctic Circle. We know that this latitude 23° 27’ +57” from the North Pole, forms the mathematical limit beyond which +the rays of the sun do not penetrate in the winter, when the northern +districts of the globe are turned away from the orb of day. Here, then, +the travellers entered the true Arctic region, the northern Frigid Zone. + +The latitude had been very carefully obtained by means of most accurate +instruments, which were handled with equal skill by the astronomer and +by Lieutenant Hobson. Mrs Barnett was present at the operation, and +had the satisfaction of hearing that she was at last about to cross the +Arctic Circle. It was with a feeling of just pride that she received the +intelligence. + +“You have already passed through the two Torrid Zones in your previous +journeys,” said the Lieutenant, “and now you are on the verge of the +Arctic Circle. Few explorers have ventured into such totally different +regions. Some, so to speak, have a specialty for hot countries, and +choose Africa or Australia as the field for their investigations. Such +were Barth, Burton, Livingstone Speke, Douglas, Stuart, &c. Others, on +the contrary, have a passion for the Arctic regions, still so little +known. Mackenzie, Franklin, Penny, Kane, Parry, Rae, &c., preceded us on +our present journey; but we must congratulate you, Mrs Barnett, on being +a more cosmopolitan traveller than all of them.” + +“I must see everything or at least try to see everything, +Lieutenant,” replied. Mrs Paulina; “and I think the dangers and +difficulties are about equal everywhere. Although we have not to dread +the fevers of the unhealthy torrid regions, or the attacks of the fierce +black races, in this Frigid Zone, the cold is a no less formidable +enemy; and I suspect that the white bears we are liable to meet with +here will give us quite as warm a reception as would the tigers of +Thibet or the lions of Africa. In Torrid and Frigid Zones alike there +are vast unexplored tracts which will long defy the efforts of the +boldest adventurers.” + +“Yes, madam,” replied Jaspar Hobson; “but I think the hyperborean +regions will longer resist thorough exploration. The natives are +the chief obstacle in tropical regions, and I am well aware how many +travellers have fallen victims to savages. But civilisation will +necessarily subdue the wild races sooner or later; whereas in the Arctic +and Antarctic Zones it is not the inhabitants who arrest the progress of +the explorer, but Nature herself who repels those who approach her, and +paralyses their energies with the bitter cold !” + +“You think, then, that the secrets of the most remote districts of +Africa and Australia will have been fathomed before the Frigid Zone has +been entirely examined?” + +“Yes, madam,” replied the Lieutenant; “and I think my opinion is +founded on facts. The most intrepid discoverers of the Arctic regions +- Parry, Penny, Franklin, M’Clure, Dane, and Morton — did not get +beyond 83° north latitude, seven degrees from the pole — whereas +Australia has several times been crossed from south to north by the +bold Stuart; and even Africa, with all its terrors, was traversed by +Livingstone from the Bay of Loanga to the mouth of the Zambesi. We are, +therefore, nearer to geographical knowledge of the equatorial countries +than of the Polar districts.” + +“Do you think that the Pole itself will ever be reached by man?” +inquired Mrs Paulina Barnett. + +“Certainly,” replied Hobson, adding with a smile, “by man or +woman. But I think other means must be tried of reaching this point, +where all the meridians of the globe cross each other, than those +hitherto adopted by travellers. We hear of the open sea, of which +certain explorers are said to have caught a glimpse. But if such a sea, +free from ice, really exist, it is very difficult to get at, and no one +can say positively whether it extends to the North Pole. For my part, I +think an open sea would increase rather than lessen the difficulties of +explorers. As for me, I would rather count upon firm footing, whether on +ice or rock, all the way. Then I would organise successive expeditions, +establishing depôts of provisions and fuel nearer and nearer to the +Pole; and so, with plenty of time, plenty of money, and perhaps the +sacrifice of a good many lives, I should in the end solve the great +scientific problem. I should, I think, at last reach the hitherto +inaccessible goal !” + +“I think you are right, Lieutenant,” said Mrs Barnett; “and if +ever you try the experiment, I should not be afraid to join you, and +would gladly go to set up the Union Jack at the North Pole. But that is +not our present object.” + +“Not our immediate object, madam,” replied Hobson; “but when once +the projects of the Company are realised, when the new fort has been +erected on the confines of the American continent, it may become the +natural starting-point of all expeditions to the north. Besides, should +the fur-yielding animals, too zealously hunted, take refuge at the Pole, +we should have to follow them.” + +“Unless costly furs should go out of fashion,” replied Mrs Barnett. + +“O madam,” cried the Lieutenant, “there will always be some pretty +woman whose wish for a sable muff or an ermine tippet must be gratified +!” + +“I am afraid so,” said Mrs Barnett, laughing; “and probably the +first discoverer of the Pole will have been led thither in pursuit of a +sable or a silver fox.” + +“That is my conviction,” replied Hobson. “ Such is human nature, +and greed of gain will always carry a man further than zeal for +science.” + +“What! do you utter such sentiments?” exclaimed Mrs Barnett. + +“Well, madam, what am I but an employé of the Hudson’s Bay Company? +and does the Company risk its capital and agents with any other hope +than an increase of profits?” + +“Lieutenant Hobson,” said Mrs Barnett, “I think I know you well +enough to assert that on occasion you would be ready to devote body and +soul to science. If a purely geographical question called you to the +Pole, I feel sure you would not hesitate to go. But,” she added, with +a smile, “the solution of this great problem is still far distant. We +have but just reached the verge of the Arctic Circle, but I hope we may +cross it without any very great difficulty.” + +“That I fear is doubtful,” said the Lieutenant, who had been +attentively examining the sky during their conversation. “The weather +has looked threatening for the last few days. Look at the uniformly grey +hue of the heavens. That mist will presently resolve itself into snow; +and if the wind should rise ever so little, we shall have to battle with +a fearful storm. I wish we were at the Great Bear Lake !” + +“Do not let us lose any time, then,” said Mrs Barnett, rising; +“give the signal to start at once.” + +The Lieutenant needed no urging. Had he been alone, or accompanied by a +few men as energetic as himself, he would have pressed on day and night; +but he was obliged to make allowance for the fatigue of others, although +he never spared himself. He therefore granted a few hours of rest to +his little party, and it was not until three in the afternoon that they +again set out. + +Jaspar Hobson was not mistaken in prophesying a change in the weather. +It came very soon. During the afternoon of the same day the mist became +thicker, and assumed a yellowish and threatening hue. The Lieutenant, +although very uneasy, allowed none of his anxiety to appear, but had a +long consultation with Sergeant Long whilst the dogs of his sledge were +laboriously preparing to start. + +Unfortunately, the district now to be traversed was very unsuitable +for sledges. The ground was very uneven; ravines were of frequent +occurrence; and masses of granite or half-thawed icebergs blocked up +the road, causing constant delay. The poor dogs did their best, but the +drivers’ whips no longer produced any effect upon them. + +And so the Lieutenant and his men were often obliged to walk to rest the +exhausted animals, to push the sledges, or even sometimes to lift them +when the roughness of the ground threatened to upset them. The incessant +fatigue was, however, borne by all without a murmur. Thomas Black alone, +absorbed in his one idea, never got out of his sledge, and indeed be was +so corpulent that all exertion was disagreeable to him. + +The nature of the soil changed from the moment of entering the Arctic +Circle. Some geological convulsion had evidently upheaved the enormous +blocks strewn upon the surface. The vegetation, too, was of a more +distinctive character. Wherever they were sheltered from the keen north +winds, the flanks of the hills were clothed not only with shrubs, but +with large trees, all of the same species — pines, willows, and firs +— proving by their presence that a certain amount of vegetative force +is retained even in the Frigid Zone. Jaspar Hobson hoped to find such +specimens of the Arctic Flora even on the verge of the Polar Sea; for +these trees would supply him with wood to build his fort, and fuel to +warm its inhabitants. The same thought passed through the minds of his +companions, and they could not help wondering at the contrast between +this comparatively fertile region, and the long white plains stretching +between the Great Slave Lake and Fort Enterprise. + +At night the yellow mist became more opaque; the wind rose, the snow +began to fall in large flakes, and the ground was soon covered with a +thick white carpet. In less than an hour the snow was a foot deep, and +as it did not freeze but remained in a liquid state, the sledges could +only advance with extreme difficulty; the curved fronts stuck in the +soft substance, and the dogs were obliged to stop again and again. + +Towards eight o’clock in the evening the wind became very boisterous. +The snow, driven before it, was flung upon the ground or whirled in the +air, forming one huge whirlpool. The dogs, beaten back by the squall +and blinded with snow, could advance no further. The party was then in +a narrow gorge between huge icebergs, over which the storm raged with +fearful fury. Pieces of ice, broken off by the hurricane, were hurled +into the pass; partial avalanches, any one of which could have crushed +the sledges and their inmates, added to its dangers, and to press +on became impossible. The Lieutenant no longer insisted, and after +consulting with Sergeant Long, gave the order to halt. It was now +necessary to find a shelter from the snow-drift; but this was no +difficult matter to men accustomed to Polar expeditions. Jaspar Hobson +and his men knew well what they had to do under the circumstances. It +was not the first time they had been surprised by a tempest some hundred +miles from the forts of the Company, without so much as an Esquimaux hut +or Indian hovel in which to lay their heads. + +“To the icebergs! to the icebergs !” cried Jaspar Hobson. + +Every one understood what he meant. Snow houses were to be hollowed +out of the frozen masses, or rather holes were to be dug, in which each +person could cower until the storm was over. Knives and hatchets were +soon at work on the brittle masses of ice, and in three-quarters of an +hour some ten dens had been scooped out large enough to contain two or +three persons each. The dogs were left to themselves, their own instinct +leading them to find sufficient shelter under the snow. + +Before ten o’clock all the travellers were crouching in the snow +houses, in groups of two or three, each choosing congenial companions. +Mrs Barnett, Madge, and Lieutenant Hobson occupied one hut, Thomas Black +and Sergeant Long another, and so on. These retreats were warm, if not +comfortable; and the Esquimaux and Indians have no other refuge even in +the bitterest cold. The adventurers could therefore fearlessly await the +end of the storm as long as they took care not to let the openings of +their holes become blocked up with the snow, which they had to shovel +away every half hour. So violent was the storm that even the Lieutenant +and his soldiers could scarcely set foot outside. Fortunately, all were +provided with sufficient food, and were able to endure their beaver-like +existence without suffering from cold or hunger + +For forty-eight hours the fury of the tempest continued to increase. The +wind roared in the narrow pass, and tore off the tops of the icebergs. +Loud reports, repeated twenty times by the echoes, gave notice of the +fall of avalanches, and Jaspar Hobson began to fear that his further +progress would be barred by the masses of debris accumulated between +the mountains. Other sounds mingled with these reports, which Lieutenant +Hobson knew too well, and he did not disguise from Mrs Barnett that +bears were prowling about the pass. But fortunately these terrible +animals were too much occupied with their own concerns to discover the +retreat of the travellers; neither the dogs nor the sledges, buried in +the snow, attracted their attention, and they passed on without doing +any harm. + +The last night, that of the 25th or 26th May, was even more terrible. So +great was the fury of the hurricane that a general overthrow of +icebergs appeared imminent. A fearful death would then have awaited +the unfortunate travellers beneath the ruins of the broken masses. The +blocks of ice cracked with an awful noise, and certain oscillations gave +warning that breaches had been made threatening their solidity. However, +no great crash occurred, the huge mountains remained intact, and towards +the end of the night one of those sudden changes so frequent in the +Arctic regions took place; the tempest ceased suddenly beneath the +influence of intense cold, and with the first dawn of day peace was +restored. + +CHAPTER VIII. THE GREAT BEAR LAKE. This sudden increase of cold was most +fortunate. Even in temperate climes there are generally three or four +bitter days in May; and they were most serviceable now in consolidating +the freshly-fallen snow, and making it practicable for sledges. +Lieutenant Hobson, therefore, lost no time in resuming his journey, +urging on the dogs to their utmost speed. + +The route was, however, slightly changed. Instead of bearing due north, +the expedition advanced towards the west, following, so to speak, the +curve of the Arctic Circle. The Lieutenant was most anxious to reach +Fort Confidence, built on the northern extremity of the Great Bear Lake. +These few cold days were of the greatest service to him; he advanced +rapidly, no obstacle was encountered, and his little troop arrived at +the factory on the 30th May. + +At this time Forts Confidence and Good Hope were the most advanced +posts of the Company in the north. Fort Confidence was a most important +position, built on the northern extremity of the lake, close to its +waters, which being frozen over in winter, and navigable in summer, +afforded easy access to Fort Franklin, on the southern shores, and +promoted the coming and going of the Indian hunters with their daily +spoils. Many were the hunting and fishing expeditions which started from +Forts Confidence and Good Hope, especially from the former. The Great +Bear Lake is quite a Mediterranean Sea, extending over several +degrees of latitude and longitude. Its shape is very irregular : two +promontories jut into it towards the centre, and the upper portion forms +a triangle; its appearance, as a whole, much resembling the extended +skin of a ruminant without the head. + +Fort Confidence was built at the end of the “ right paw,” at least +two hundred miles from Coronation Gulf, one of the numerous estuaries +which irregularly indent the coast of North America. It was therefore +situated beyond the Arctic Circle, but three degrees south of the +seventieth parallel, north of which the Hudson’s Bay Company proposed +forming a new settlement. + +Fort Confidence, as a whole, much resembled other factories further +south. It consisted of a house for the officers, barracks for the +soldiers, and magazines for the furs - all of wood, surrounded by +palisades. The captain in command was then absent. He had gone towards +the east on a hunting expedition with a few Indians and soldiers. The +last season had not been good, costly furs had been scarce; but to make +up for this the lake had supplied plenty of otter-skins. The stock of +them had, however, just been sent to the central factories in the south, +so that the magazines of Fort Confidence were empty on the arrival of +our party. + +In the absence of the Captain a Sergeant did the honours of the fort to +Jaspar Hobson and his companions. This second officer, Felton by name +was a brother-in-law of Sergeant Long. He showed the greatest readiness +to assist the views of the Lieutenant, who being anxious to rest his +party, decided on remaining two or three days at Fort Confidence. In the +absence of the little garrison there was plenty of room, and dogs and +men were soon comfortably installed. The best room in the largest house +was of course given to Mrs Paulina Barnett, who was delighted with the +politeness of Sergeant Felton. + +Jaspar Hobson’s first care was to ask Felton if any Indians from the +north were then beating the shores of the Great Bear Lake + +“Yes, Lieutenant,” replied the Sergeant; “we have just received +notice of the encampment of a party of Hare Indians on the other +northern extremity of the lake.” + +“How far from here?” inquired Hobson. + +“About thirty miles,” replied Sergeant Felton. “Do you wish to +enter into communication with these Indians?” + +“Yes,” said Hobson; they may be able to give me some valuable +information about the districts bordering on the Arctic Ocean, and +bounded by Cape Bathurst. Should the site be favourable, I propose +constructing our new fort somewhere about there.” + +“Well, Lieutenant, nothing is easier than to go to the Hare +encampment.” + +“Along the shores of the lake?” + +“No, across it; it is now free from ice, and the wind is favourable. +We will place a cutter and a boatman at your service, and in a few hours +you will be in the Indian settlement.” + +“Thank you, Sergeant; to-morrow, then.” Whenever you like, +Lieutenant.” + +The start was fixed for the next morning; and when Mrs Paulina Barnett +heard of the plan, she begged the Lieutenant to allow her to accompany +him, which of course he readily did. + +But now to tell how the rest of this first day was passed. Mrs Barnett, +Hobson, two or three soldiers, Madge, Mrs Mac-Nab, and Joliffe explored +the shores of the lake under the guidance of Felton. The neighbourhood +was by no means barren of vegetation; the hills, now free from snow, +were crowned by resinous trees of the Scotch pine species. These trees, +which attain a height of some forty feet, supply the inhabitants of the +forts with plenty of fuel through the long winter. Their thick trunks +and dark gloomy branches form a striking feature of the landscape; but +the regular clumps of equal height, sloping down to the very edge of the +water, are somewhat monotonous. Between the groups of trees the soil was +clothed with a sort of whitish weed, which perfumed the air with a sweet +thymy odour. Sergeant Felton informed his guests that this plant was +called the “ herb of incense “ on account of the fragrance it emits +when burnt. + +Some hundred steps from the fort the party came to a little natural +harbour shut in by high granite rocks, which formed an admirable +protection from the heavy surf. Here was anchored the fleet of Fort +Confidence, consisting of a single fishing-boat—the very one which was +to take Mrs Barnett and Hobson to the Indian encampment the next day. +From this harbour an extensive view was obtained of the lake; its waters +slightly agitated by the wind, with its irregular shores broken by +jagged capes and intersected by creeks. The wooded heights beyond, with +here and there the rugged outline of a floating iceberg standing out +against the clear blue air, formed the background on the north; whilst +on the south a regular sea horizon, a circular line clearly cutting sky +and water, and at this moment glittering in the sunbeams, bounded the +sight. + +The whole scene was rich in animal and vegetable life. The surface of +the water, the shores strewn with flints and blocks of granite, the +slopes with their tapestry of herbs, the tree-crowned hill-tops, were +all alike frequented by various specimens of the feathered tribe. +Several varieties of ducks, uttering their different cries and calls, +eider ducks, whistlers spotted redshanks, “old women,” those +loquacious birds whose beak is never closed, skimmed the surface of the +lake. Hundreds of puffins and guillemots with outspread wings darted +about in every direction, and beneath the trees strutted ospreys two +feet high-a kind of hawk with a grey body, blue beak and claws, and +orange-coloured eyes, which build their huge nests of marine plants in +the forked branches of trees. The hunter Sabine managed to bring down +a couple of these gigantic ospreys, which measured nearly six feet from +tip to tip of their wings, and were therefore magnificent specimens of +these migratory birds, who feed entirely on fish, and take refuge on +the shores of the Gulf of Mexico when winter sets in, only visiting the +higher latitudes of North America during the short summer. + +But the most interesting event of the day was the capture of an otter, +the skin of which was worth several hundred roubles. + +The furs of these valuable amphibious creatures were once much sought +after in China; and although the demand for them has considerably +decreased in the Celestial Empire, they still command very high prices +in the Russian market. Russian traders, ready to buy up sea-otter skins, +travel all along the coasts of New Cornwall as far as the Arctic Ocean; +and of course, thus hunted, the animal is becoming very rare. It has +taken refuge further and further north, and the trackers have now to +pursue it on the shores of the Kamtchatka Sea, and in the islands of the +Behring Archipelago. + +“But,” added Sergeant Felton, after the preceding explanation, +“American inland otters are not to be despised, and those which +frequent the Great Bear Lake are worth from £50 to £60 each.” + +The Sergeant was right; magnificent otters are found in these waters, +and he himself skilfully tracked and killed one in the presence of his +visitors which was scarcely inferior in value to those from Kamtchatka +itself. The creature measured three feet from the muzzle to the end of +its tail; it had webbed feet, short legs, and its fur, darker on the +upper than on the under part of its body, was long and silky. + +“A good shot, Sergeant,” said Lieutenant Hobson, who with Mrs +Barnett had been attentively examining the magnificent fur of the dead +animal. + +“Yes, Lieutenant,” replied Felton; “and if each day brought us +such a skin as that, we should have nothing to complain of. But much +time is wasted in watching these animals, who swim and dive with +marvellous rapidity. We generally hunt them at night, as they very +seldom venture from their homes in the trunks of trees or the holes of +rocks in the daytime, and even expert hunters find it very difficult to +discover their retreats.” + +“And are these otters also becoming scarcer and scarcer?” inquired +Mrs Barnett. + +“Yes, madam,” replied the Sergeant; “and when this species becomes +extinct, the profits of the Company will sensibly decline. All the +hunters try to obtain its fur, and the Americans in particular are +formidable rivals to us. Did you not meet any American agents on your +journey up, Lieutenant?” + +“Not one,” replied Hobson. “Do they ever penetrate as far as +this?” + +“Oh yes !” said the Sergeant; “and when you hear of their +approach, I advise you to be on your guard.” + +“Are these agents, then, highway robbers?” asked Mrs Paulina +Barnett. + +“No, madam,” replied the Sergeant; “but they are formidable +rivals, and when game is scarce, hunters often come to blows about it. I +daresay that if the Company’s attempt to establish a fort on the verge +of the Arctic Ocean be successful, its example will at once be followed +by these Americans, whom Heaven confound!” + +“Bah!” exclaimed the Lieutenant; “the hunting districts are vast, +and there’s room beneath the sun for everybody. As for us, let’s +make a start to begin with. Let us press on as long as we have firm +ground beneath our feet, and God be with us!” + +After a walk of three hours the visitors returned to Fort Confidence, +where a good meal of fish and fresh venison awaited them. Sergeant Long +did the honours of the table, and after a little pleasant conversation, +all retired to rest to forget their fatigues in a healthy and refreshing +sleep. + +The next day, May 31st, Mrs Barnett and Jaspar Hobson were on foot at +five A.M. The Lieutenant intended to devote this day to visiting the +Indian encampment, and obtaining as much useful information as possible. +He asked Thomas Black to go with him, but the astronomer preferred +to remain on terra firma. He wished to make a few astronomical +observations, and to determine exactly the latitude and longitude of +Fort Confidence; so that Mrs Barnett and Jaspar Hobson had to cross the +lake alone, under the guidance of an old boatman named Norman, who had +long been in the Company’s service. + +The two travellers were accompanied by Sergeant Long as far as the +little harbour, where they found old Norman ready to embark. Their +little vessel was but an open fishing-boat, six feet long, rigged like +a cutter, which one man could easily manage. The weather was beautiful, +and the slight breeze blowing from the north-east was favourable to the +crossing. Sergeant Felton took leave of his guests with many apologies +for being unable to accompany them in the absence of his chief. The boat +was let loose from its moorings, and tacking to starboard, shot across +the clear waters of the lake. + +The little trip passed pleasantly enough. The taciturn old sailor sat +silent in the stern of the boat with the tiller tucked under his arm. +Mrs Barnett and Lieutenant Hobson, seated opposite to each other, +examined with interest the scenery spread out before them. The boat +skirted the northern shores of the lake at about three miles’ +distance, following a rectilinear direction, so that the wooded heights +sloping gradually to the west were distinctly visible. From this side +the district north of the lake appeared perfectly flat, and the horizon +receded to a considerable distance. The whole of this coast contrasted +strongly with the sharp angle, at the extremity of which rose Fort +Confidence, framed in green pines. The flag of the Company was still +visible floating from the tower of the fort. The oblique rays of the sun +lit up the surface of the water, and striking on the floating icebergs, +seemed to convert them into molten silver of dazzling brightness. No +trace remained of the solid ice-mountains of the winter but these moving +relies, which the solar rays could scarcely dissolve, and which seemed, +as it were, to protest against the brilliant but not very powerful Polar +sun, now describing a diurnal arc of considerable length. + +Mrs Barnett and the Lieutenant, as was their custom, communicated to +each other the thoughts suggested by the strange scenes through which +they were passing. They laid up a store of pleasant recollections for +the future whilst the beat floated rapidly along upon the peaceful +waves. + +The party started at six in the morning, and at nine they neared the +point on the northern bank at which they were to land. The Indian +encampment was situated at the north-west angle of the Great Bear Lake. +Before ten o’clock old Norman ran the boat aground on a low bank at +the foot of a cliff of moderate height. Mrs Barnett and the Lieutenant +landed at once. Two or three Indians, with their chief, wearing gorgeous +plumes, hastened to meet them, and addressed them in fairly intelligible +English. + +These Hare Indians, like the Copper and Beaver Indians, all belong to +the Chippeway race, and differ but little in customs and costumes +from their fellow-tribes. They are in constant communication with the +factories, and have become, so to speak, “Britainised” — at least +as much so as is possible for savages. They bring the spoils of the +chase to the forts, and there exchange them for the necessaries of life, +which they no longer provide for themselves. They are in the pay of the +Company, they live upon it, and it is not surprising that they have lost +all originality. To find a native race as yet uninfluenced by contact +with Europeans we must go to still higher latitudes, to the ice-bound +regions frequented by the Esquimaux, who, like the Greenlanders, are the +true children of Arctic lands. + +Mrs Barnett and Jaspar Hobson accompanied the Indians to their camp, +about half a mile from the shore, and found some thirty natives there, +men, women, and children, who supported themselves by hunting and +fishing on the borders of the lake. These Indians had just come from the +northernmost districts of the American continent, and were able to +give the Lieutenant some valuable, although necessarily incomplete, +information on the actual state of the sea-coast near the seventieth +parallel. The Lieutenant heard with considerable satisfaction that a +party of Americans or Europeans had been seen on the confines of +the Polar Sea, and that it was open at this time of year. About Cape +Bathurst, properly so called, the point for which he intended to make, +the Hare Indians could tell him nothing. Their chief said, however, +that the district between the Great Bear Lake and Cape Bathurst was +very difficult to cross, being hilly and intersected by streams, at this +season of the year free from ice. He advised the Lieutenant to go down +the Coppermine river, from the north-east of the lake, which would take +him to the coast by the shortest route. Once at the Arctic Ocean, it +would be easy to skirt along its shores and to choose the best spot at +Which to halt. + +Lieutenant Hobson thanked the Indian chief, and took leave after giving +him a few presents. Then accompanied by Mrs Barnett, he explored the +neighbourhood of the camp, not returning to the boat until nearly three +o’clock in the afternoon. + +CHAPTER IX. A STORM ON THE LAKE. The old sailor was impatiently awaiting +the return of the travellers; for during the last hour the weather had +changed, and the appearance of the sky was calculated to render any one +accustomed to read the signs of the clouds uneasy. The sun was obscured +by a thick mist, the wind had fallen, but - an ominous moaning was heard +from the south of the lake. These symptoms of an approaching change +of temperature were developed with all the rapidity peculiar to these +elevated latitudes. + +“Let us be off, sir! let us be off!” cried old Norman, looking +anxiously at the fog above his head. “ Let us start without losing an +instant. There are terrible signs in the air!” + +“Indeed,” exclaimed the Lieutenant, “the appearance of the sky is +quite changed, and we never noticed it, Mrs Barnett!” + +“Are you afraid of a storm?” inquired the lady of old Norman. + +“Yes, madam,” replied the old sailor; “and the storms on the Great +Bear Lake are often terrible. The hurricane rages as if upon the open +Atlantic Ocean. This sudden fog bodes us no good; but the tempest may +hold back for three or four hours, and by that time we shall be at Fort +Confidence. Let us then start without a moment’s delay, for the boat +would not be safe near these rocks.” + +The Lieutenant, feeling that the old man, accustomed as he was to +navigate these waters, was better able to judge than himself, decided to +follow his advice, and embarked at once with Mrs Barnett. + +But just as they were pushing off, old Norman, as if possessed by some +sudden presentiment, murmured — + +“Perhaps it would be better to wait.” + +Lieutenant Hobson overheard these words, and looked inquiringly at the +old boatman, already seated at the helm. Had he been alone he would not +have hesitated to start, but as Mrs Barnett was with him caution was +necessary. The lady at once saw and understood his hesitation. + +“Never mind about me, Lieutenant,” she said; “act as if I were not +present. Let us start immediately , as our brave guide suggests.” + +“We are off, then,” cried Norman, letting go the moorings, “to the +fort by the shortest route.” + +For about an hour the bark made little head. The sail, scarcely filled +by the fitful breeze, flapped against the mast. The fog became thicker. +The waves began to rise and the boat to rock considerably; for the +approaching hurricane affected the water sooner than the atmosphere +itself. The two travellers sat still and silent, whilst the old +sailor peered into the darkness with bloodshot eyes. Prepared for +all contingencies, he awaited the shock of the wind, ready to pay out +rapidly should the attack be very violent. The conflict of the elements +had not, however, as yet commenced; and all would have been well if they +bad been able to advance, but after an hour’s sail they were still +only about two hours’ distance from the Indian encampment. A few gusts +of wind from the shore drove them out of their course, and the dense fog +rendered it impossible for them to make out the coast-line. Should the +wind settle in the north it would probably go hard with the light boat, +which, unable to hold its own course, would be drifted out into the lake +no one knew where. + +“We are scarcely advancing at all,” said the Lieutenant to old +Norman. + +“No, sir,” replied Norman; “the wind is not strong enough to fill +the sail, and if it were, I fear it comes from the wrong quarter. If +so,” he added, pointing to the south, “we may see Fort Franklin +before Fort Confidence.” + +“Well,” said Mrs Barnett cheerfully, “our trip will have been all +the more complete. This is a magnificent lake, well worth exploring from +north to south. I suppose, Norman, one might get back even from Fort +Franklin?” + +“Yes, madam, if we ever reach it,” replied the old man. “But +tempests lasting fifteen days are by no means rare on this lake; and +if our bad luck should drive us to the south, it may be a month before +Lieutenant Hobson again sees Fort Confidence.” + +“Let us be careful, then,” said the Lieutenant; “for such a delay, +would hinder our projects very much. Do the best you can under the +circumstances, and if you think it would be prudent, go back to the +north. I don’t suppose Mrs Barnett would mind a walk of twenty or +twenty-five miles.” + +I should be glad enough to go back to the north, Lieutenant,” replied +Norman, “if it were still possible. But look, the wind seems likely +to settle against us. All I can attempt is to get to the cape on the +north-east, and if it doesn’t blow too hard, I hope to succeed.” + +But at about half-past four the storm broke. The shrill whistling of the +wind was heard far above their heads, but the state of the atmosphere +prevented it from as yet descending upon the lake; this was, however, +only delayed for a brief space of time. The cries of frightened birds +flying through the fog mingled with the noise of the wind. Suddenly the +mist was torn open, and revealed low jagged masses of rain-cloud chased +towards the south. The fears of the old sailor were realised. The wind +blew from the north, and it was not long before the travellers learned +the meaning of a squall upon the lake. + +“Look out!” cried old Norman, tightening sail so as to get his boat +ahead of the wind, whilst keeping her under control of the helm. + +The squall came. It caught the boat upon the flank, and it was turned +over on its side; but recovering itself, it was flung upon the crest +of a wave. The billows surged as if upon an open sea. The waters of the +lake not being very deep, struck against the bottom and rebounded to an +immense height. + +“Help! help!” cried old Norman, hurriedly struggling to haul down +his sail. + +Mrs Barnett and Hobson endeavoured to come to his assistance, but +without success, for they knew noticing of the management of a boat. +Norman, unable to leave the helm, and the halliards being entangled at +the top of the mast, could not take in the sail. Every moment the boat +threatened to capsize, and heavy seas broke over its sides. The +sky became blacker and blacker, cold rain mingled with snow fell in +torrents, whilst the squall redoubled its fury, lashing the crests of +the waves into foam. + +“Cut it! cut it!” screamed Norman above the roaring of the storm. + +The Lieutenant, his cap blown away and his eyes blinded by the spray, +seized Norman’s knife and cut the halliard like a harp-string; but the +wet cordage no longer acted in the grooves of the pulleys, and the yard +remained attached to the top of the mast. + +Norman, totally unable to make head against the wind, now resolved to +tack about for the south, dangerous as it would be to have the boat +before the wind, pursued by waves advancing at double its speed. Yes, to +tack, although this course would probably bring them all to the southern +shores of the lake, far away from their destination. + +The Lieutenant and his brave companion were well aware of the danger +which threatened them. The frail boat could not long resist the blows +of the waves, it would either be crushed or capsized; the lives of those +within it were in the hands of God. + +But neither yielded to despair; clinging to the sides of the boat, wet +to the skin, chilled to the bone by the cutting blast, they strove +to gaze through the thick mist and fog. All trace of the land had +disappeared, and so great was the obscurity that at a cable’s length +from the boat clouds and waves could not be distinguished from each +other. Now and then the two travellers looked inquiringly into old +Norman’s face, who, with teeth set and hands clutching the tiller; +tried to keep his boat as much as possible under wind. + +But the violence of the squall became such that the boat could not long +maintain this course. The waves which struck its bow would soon have +inevitably crushed it; the front planks were already beginning to +separate, and when its whole weight was flung into the hollows of the +waves it seemed as if it could rise no more. + +“We must tack, we must tack, whatever happens !” murmured the old +sailor. + +And pushing the tiller and paying out sail, he turned the head of the +boat to the south. The sail, stretched to the utmost, brought the boat +round with giddy rapidity, and the immense waves, chased by the wind, +threatened to engulf the little bark. This was the great danger of +shifting with the wind right aft. The billows hurled themselves in rapid +succession upon the boat, which could not evade them. It filled rapidly, +and the water bad to be baled out without a moment’s pause, or it must +have foundered. As they got nearer and nearer to the middle of the lake +the waves became rougher. Nothing there broke the fury of the wind; no +clumps of trees, no hills, checked for a moment the headlong course of +the hurricane. Now and then momentary glimpses were obtained through the +fog of icebergs dancing like buoys upon the waves, and driven towards +the south of the lake. + +It was half-past five. Neither Norman nor the Lieutenant had any idea of +where they were, or whither they were going. They had lost all control +over the boat, and were at the mercy of the winds and waves. + +And now at about a hundred feet behind the boat a huge wave upreared its +foam-crowned crest, whilst in front a black whirlpool was formed by the +sudden sinking of the water. All surface agitation, crushed by the +wind, had disappeared around this awful gulf, which, growing deeper and +blacker every moment, drew the devoted little vessel towards its fatal +embrace. Ever nearer came the mighty wave, all lesser billows sinking +into insignificance before it. It gained upon the boat, another moment +and it would crush it to atoms. Norman, looking round, saw its approach; +and Mrs Barnett and the Lieutenant, with eyes fixed and staring, awaited +in fearful suspense the blow from which there was no escape. The wave +broke over them with the noise of thunder; it enveloped the stern of the +boat in foam, a fearful crash was heard, and a cry burst from the lips +of the Lieutenant and his companion, smothered beneath the liquid mass. + +They thought that all was over, and that the boat had sunk; but no, it +rose once more, although more than half filled with water. + +The Lieutenant uttered a cry of despair. Where was Norman? The poor old +sailor had disappeared ! + +Mrs Paulina Barnett looked inquiringly at Hobson. + +“Norman!” he repeated, pointing to his empty place. + +“Unhappy man !” murmured Mrs Barnett; and at the risk of being flung +from the boat rocking on the waves, the two started to their feet and +looked around them. But they could see and hear nothing. No cry for help +broke upon their ears. No dead body floated in the white foam. The old +sailor had met his death in the element he loved so well. + +Mrs Barnett and Hobson sank back upon their seats. They were now alone, +and must see to their own safety; but neither of them knew anything of +the management of a boat, and even an experienced hand could scarcely +have controlled it now. They were at the mercy of the waves, and the +bark, with distended sail, swept along in mad career. What could the +Lieutenant do to check or direct its course? + +What a terrible situation for our travellers, to be thus overtaken by a +tempest in a frail bark which they could not manage ! + +“We are lost!” said the Lieutenant. + +“No, Lieutenant,” replied Mrs Barnett; “let us make another +effort. Heaven helps those who help themselves !” + +Lieutenant Hobson now for the first time realised with how intrepid a +woman fate had thrown him. + +The first thing to be done was to get rid of the water which weighed +down the boat. Another wave shipped would have filled it in a moment, +and it must have sunk at once. The vessel lightened, it would have a +better chance of rising on the waves; and the two set to work to bale +out the water. This was no easy task; for fresh waves constantly broke +over them, and the scoop could not be laid aside for an instant. Mrs +Barnett was indefatigable, and the Lieutenant, leaving the baling to +her, took the helm himself, and did the best he could to guide the boat +with the wind right aft. + +To add to the danger, night, or rather darkness, for in these latitudes +night only lasts a few hours at this time of year, fell upon them. +Scarce a ray of light penetrated through the heavy clouds and fog. They +could not see two yards before them, and the boat must have been dashed +to pieces had it struck a floating iceberg. This danger was indeed +imminent, for the loose ice-masses advance with such rapidity that it is +impossible to get out of their way. + +“You have no control over the helm?” said Mrs Barnett in a slight +lull of the storm. + +No, madam he replied; “and you must prep are for the worst.” + +“I am ready!” replied the courageous woman simply. + +As she spoke a loud rippling sound was heard. The sail, torn away by the +wind, disappeared like a white cloud. The boat sped rapidly along for +a few instants, and then stopped suddenly, the waves buffeting it about +like an abandoned wreck. Mrs Barnett and Hobson, flung to the bottom of +the boat, bruised, shaken, and torn, felt that all was lost. Not a shred +of canvas was left to aid in navigating the craft; and what with the +spray, the snow, and the rain, they could scarcely see each other, +whilst the uproar drowned their voices. Expecting every moment to +perish, they remained for an hour in painful suspense, commending +themselves to God, who alone could save them. + +Neither of them could have said how long they waited when they were +aroused by a violent shock. + +The boat had just struck an enormous iceberg, a floating block with +rugged, slippery sides, to which it would be impossible to cling. + +At this sudden blow, which could not have been parried, the bow of the +boat was split open, and the water poured into it in torrents. + +“We are sinking! we are sinking !” cried Jasper Hobson. + +He was right. The boat was settling down; the water had already reached +the seats. + +“Madam, madam, I am here! I will not leave you!” added the +Lieutenant. + +“No, no,” cried Mrs Barnett : “alone, you may save yourself; +together, we should perish. Leave me! leave me!” + +“Never!” cried Hobson. + +But he had scarcely pronounced this word when the boat, struck by +another wave, filled and sank. + +Both were drawn under water by the eddy caused by the sudden settling +down of the boat, but in a few instants they rose to the surface. +Hobson was a strong swimmer, and struck out with one arm, supporting +his companion with the other. But it was evident that he could not long +sustain a conflict with the furious waves, and that he must perish with +her he wished to save. + +At this moment a strange sound attracted his attention. It was not the +cry of a frightened bird, but the shout of a human voice! By one supreme +effort Hobson raised himself above the waves and looked around him. + +But he could distinguish nothing in the thick fog. And yet he again +beard cries, this time nearer to him. Some bold men were coming to his +succour! Alas! if it were so, they would arrive too late. Encumbered by +his clothes, the Lieutenant felt himself sinking with the unfortunate +lady, whose head he could scarcely keep above the water. With a last +despairing effort he uttered a heartrending cry and disappeared beneath +the waves. + +It was, however, no mistake-he had heard voices. Three men, wandering +about by the lake, had seen the boat in danger, and put off to its +rescue. They were Esquimaux, the only men who could have hoped to +weather such a storm, for theirs are the only boats constructed to +escape destruction in these fearful tempests. + +The Esquimaux boat or kayak is a long pirogue raised at each end, made +of a light framework of wood, covered with stretched seal-skins strongly +stitched with the sinews of the Walrus. In the upper part of the boat; +also covered with skins, is an opening in which the Esquimaux takes his +place, fastening his waterproof jacket to the back of his seat; so +that he is actually joined to his bark, which not a drop of water can +penetrate. This light, easily-managed kayak, floating as it does, on +the crests of the waves, can never be submerged; and if it be sometimes +capsized, a blow of the paddle rights it again directly; so that it +is able to live and make way in seas in which any other boat would +certainly be dashed to pieces. + +The three Esquimaux, guided by the Lieutenant’s last despairing +cry, arrived at the scene of the wreck joints in time. Hobson and Mrs +Barnett, already half drowned, felt themselves drawn up by powerful +hands; but in the darkness they were unable to discover who were their +deliverers. One of the men took the Lieutenant and laid him across his +own boat, another did the sane for Mrs Barnett, and the three kayaks, +skilfully managed with the paddles, six feet long, sped rapidly over the +white foam. + +Half an hour afterwards, the shipwrecked travellers were lying on the +sandy beach three miles above Fort Providence. + +The old sailor alone was missing ! + +CHAPTER X. A RETROSPECT. It was about ten o’clock the same night when +Mrs Barnett and Lieutenant Hobson knocked at the postern gate of the +fort. Great was the joy on seeing them, for they had been given up for +lost; but this joy was turned to mourning at the news of the death +of Norman. The brave fellow had been beloved by all, and his loss +was sincerely mourned. The intrepid and devoted Esquimaux received +phlegmatically the earnest expressions of gratitude of those they had +saved, and coulot be persuaded to come to the fort. What they had done +seemed to them only natural, and these were not the first persons they +had rescued; so they quietly returned to their wild life of adventure on +the lake, where they hunted the otters and water-birds day and night. + +For the next three nights the party rested. Hobson always intended to +set out on June 2d; and on that day, all having recovered from their +fatigues and the storm having abated, the order was given to start. + +Sergeant Felton had done all in his power to make his guests comfortable +and to aid their enterprise; some of the jaded dogs were replaced by +fresh animals, and now the Lieutenant found all his sledges drawn up in +good order at the door of the enceinte, and awaiting the travellers. + +The adieux were soon over. Each one thanked Sergeant Felton for his +hospitality, and Mrs Paulina Barnett was most profuse in her expressions +of gratitude. A hearty shake of the hand between the Sergeant and his +brother-in-law, Long, completed the leave-taking, + +Each pair got into the sledge assigned to them; but this time Mrs +Barnett and the Lieutenant shared one vehicle, Madge and Sergeant Long +following them. + +According to the advice of the Indian chief, Hobson determined to get to +the coast by the shortest route, and to take a north-easterly direction. +After consulting, his map, which merely gave a rough outline of the +configuration of the country, it seemed best to him to descend the +valley of the Coppermine, a large river which flows into Coronation +Gulf. + +The distance between Fort Confidence and the mouth of this river is only +a degree and a half-that is to say, about eighty-five or ninety miles. +The deep hollow formed by the gulf is bounded on the north by Cape +Krusenstein, and from it the coast juts out towards the north-west, +ending in Cape Bathurst, which is above the seventieth parallel. + +The Lieutenant, therefore, now changed the route he had hitherto +followed, directing his course to the east, so as to reach the river in +a few hours. + +In the afternoon of the next day, June 3d, the river was gained. It was +now free from ice, and its clear and rapid waters flowed through a vast +valley, intersected by numerous but easily fordable streams. The +sledges advanced pretty rapidly, and as they went along, Hobson gave his +companion some account of the country through which they were passing. A +sincere friendship founded on mutual esteem, had sprung up between these +two. Mrs Paulina Barnett was an earnest student with a special gift for +discovery, and was therefore always glad to converse with travellers and +explorers. Hobson, who knew his beloved North America by heart, was able +to answer all her inquiries fully. + +“About ninety years ago,” he said, “the territory through which +the Coppermine flows was unknown, and we are indebted for its discovery +to the agents of the Hudson’s Bay Company. But as always happens in +scientific matters, in seeking one thing, another was found. Columbus +was trying to find Asia, and discovered America.” + +“And what were the agents of the Hudson’s Bay Company seeking? The +famous North-West Passage?” + +“No, madam,” replied the young Lieutenant. “A century ago the +Company had no interest in the opening of a new route, which would have +been more valuable to its rivals than to it. It is even said that in +1741 a certain Christopher Middleton, sent to explore these latitudes, +was publicly charged with receiving a bribe of £500 from the Company +to say that there was not, and could not be, a sea passage between the +oceans.” + +“That was not much to the credit of the celebrated Company,” said +Mrs Barnett. + +“I do not defend it in the matter,” replied Hobson; “and its +interference was severely censured by Parliament in 1746, when a reward +of £20,000 was offered by the Government for the discovery of the +passage in question. In that year two intrepid explorers, William Moor +and Francis Smith, penetrated as far as Repulse Bay in the hope of +discovering the much-longed-for passage. But they were unsuccessful, and +returned to England after an absence of a year and a half.” + +“But did not other captains follow in their steps, resolved to conquer +where they had failed?” inquired Mrs Barnett. + +“No, madam; and in spite of the large reward offered by Parliament, no +attempt was made to resume explorations in English America until thirty +years afterwards, when some agents of the Company took up the unfinished +task of Captains Moor and Smith.” + +“The Company had then relinquished the narrow-minded egotistical +position it had taken up?” + +“No, madam, not yet. Samuel Hearne, the agent, only went to +reconnoitre the position of a copper-mine which native miners had +reported. On November 6, 1769, this agent left Fort Prince of Wales, +on the river Churchill, near the western shores of Hudson’s Bay. He +pressed boldly on to the north-west; but the excessive cold and +the exhaustion of his provisions compelled him to return without +accomplishing anything. Fortunately he was not easily discouraged, and +on February 23d of the next year he set out again, this time taking some +Indians with him. Great hardships were endured in this second journey. +The fish and game on which Hearne had relied often failed him; and +he had once nothing to eat for seven days but wild fruit, bits of old +leather, and burnt bones. He was again compelled to return to the fort +a disappointed man. But he did not even yet despair, and started a third +time, December 7th, 1770; and after a struggle of nineteen months, he +discovered the Coppermine river, July 13th, 1772, the course of which +he followed to its mouth. According to his own account, he saw the open +sea, and in any case he was the first to penetrate to the northern coast +of America.” + +“But the North-West Passage-that is to say, the direct communication +by sea between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans—was not then +discovered?” + +“Oh no, madam,” replied the Lieutenant; “and what countless +adventurous sailors have since gone to seek it! Phipps in 1773, James +Cook and Clerke in 1776 to 1779, Kotzebue in 1815 to 1818, Ross, Parry, +Franklin, and others have attempted this difficult task; but it was +reserved to M’Clure in our own day to pass from one ocean to the other +across the Polar Sea.” + +“Well, Lieutenant, that was a geographical discovery of which we +English may well be proud. But do tell me if the Hudson’s Bay Company +did not adopt more generous views, and send out some other explorer +after the return of Hearne.” + +“It did, madam; and it was thanks to it that Captain Franklin was able +to accomplish his voyage of 1819 to 1822 between the river discovered +by Hearne and Cape Turnagain. This expedition endured great fatigue and +hardships; provisions often completely failed, and two Canadians were +assassinated and eaten by their comrades. But in spite of all his +sufferings, Captain Franklin explored no less than five thousand +five hundred and fifty miles of the hitherto unknown coast of North +America!” + +“He was indeed a man of energy,” added Mrs Barnett; “and he gave +proof of his great qualities in starting on a fresh Polar expedition +after all he had gone through.” + +“Yes,” replied the Lieutenant; “and he met a terrible death in +the land his own intrepidity had discovered. It has now been proved, +however, that all his companions did not perish with him. Many are +doubtless still wandering about on the vast ice-fields. I cannot +think of their awful condition without a shudder. One day,” be added +earnestly, and with strange emotion—” one day I will search the +unknown lands where the dreadful catastrophe took place, and— “ + +“And,” exclaimed Mrs Barnett, pressing his hand, “I will accompany +you. Yes, this idea has occurred to me more than once, as it has to +you; and my heart beats high when I think that fellow countrymen of my +own-Englishmen-are awaiting succour.” + +“Which will come too late for most of them, madam,” said the +Lieutenant; “but rest assured some will even yet be saved.” + +“God grant it, Lieutenant!” replied Mrs Barnett; “and it appears +to me that the agents of the Company, living as they do close to the +coast, are better fitted than any one else to fulfil this duty of +humanity.” + +“I agree with you, madam; they are, as they have often proved, inured +to the rigours of the Arctic climate. Was it not they who aided Captain +Back in his voyage in 1834, when he discovered King William’s Land, +where Franklin met his fate? Was it not two of us, Dease and Simpson, +who were sent by the Governor of Hudson’s Bay to explore the shores +of the Polar Sea in 1838, and whose courageous efforts first discovered +Victoria Land? It is my opinion that the future reserves for the +Hudson’s Bay Company the final conquest of the Arctic regions. +Gradually its factories are advancing further and further north, +following the retreat of the fur-yielding animals; and one day a fort +will be erected on the Pole itself, that mathematical point where meet +all the meridians of the globe.” + +During this and the succeeding journeys Jaspar Hobson related his own +adventures since he entered the service of the Company his struggles +with the agents of rival associations, and his efforts to explore the +unknown districts of the north or west; and Mrs Barnett, on her side, +told of her travels in the tropics. She spoke of all she had done, and +of all she hoped still to accomplish; so that the long hours, lightened +by pleasant conversation, passed rapidly away. + +Meanwhile the dogs advanced at full gallop towards the north. The +Coppermine valley widened sensibly as they neared the Arctic Ocean. The +hills on either side sank lower and lower, and only scattered clumps of +resinous trees broke the monotony of the landscape. A few blocks of ice, +drifted down by the river, still resisted the action of the sun; but +each day their number decreased, and a canoe, or even a good-sized +boat, might easily have descended the stream, the course of which was +unimpeded by any natural barrier or aggregation of rocks. The bed of the +Coppermine was both deep and wide; its waters were very clear, and +being fed by the melted snow, flowed on at a considerable pace, never, +however, forming dangerous rapids. Its course, at first very sinuous, +became gradually less and less winding, and at last stretched along in a +straight line for several miles. Its banks, composed of fine firm sand, +and clothed in part with short dry herbage, were wide and level, so that +the long train of sledges sped rapidly over them. + +The expedition travelled day and night-if we can speak of the night, +when the sun, describing an almost horizontal circle, scarcely +disappeared at all. The true night only lasted two hours, and the dawn +succeeded the twilight almost immediately. The weather was fine; the sky +clear, although somewhat misty on the horizon; and everything combined +to favour the travellers. + +For two days they kept along the river-banks without meeting with any +difficulties. They saw but few fur-bearing animals; but there were +plenty of birds, which might have been counted by thousands. The absence +of otters, sables, beavers, ermines, foxes, &c., did not trouble the +Lieutenant much, for he supposed that they had been driven further +north by over-zealous tracking; and indeed the marks of encampments, +extinguished fires, &c., told of the more or less recent passage of +native hunters. Hobson knew that he would have to penetrate a good deal +further north, and that part only of his journey would be accomplished +when he got to the mouth of the Coppermine river. He was therefore most +eager to reach the limit of Hearne’s exploration, and pressed on as +rapidly as possible. + +Every one shared the Lieutenant’s impatience, and resolutely resisted +fatigue in order to reach the Arctic Ocean with the least possible +delay. They were drawn onwards by an indefinable attraction; the glory +of the unknown dazzled their sight. Probably real hardships would +commence when they did arrive at the much-desired coast. But no matter, +they longed to battle with difficulties, and to press straight onwards +to their aim. The district they were now traversing could have no direct +interest for them; the real exploration would only commence on the +shores of the Arctic Ocean. Each one, then, would gladly hail the +arrival in the elevated western districts for which they were bound, cut +across though they were by the seventieth parallel of north latitude. + +On the 5th June, four days after leaving Fort Confidence the river +widened considerably. The western banks, curving slightly, ran almost +due north; whilst the eastern rounded off into the coastline, stretching +away as far as the eye could reach. + +Lieutenant Hobson paused, and waving his hand to his companions, pointed +to the boundless ocean. + +CHAPTER XI. ALONG THE COAST. Coronation Gulf, the large estuary dotted +with the islands forming the Duke of York Archipelago, which the party +had now reached, was a sheet of water with irregular banks, let in, as +it were, into the North American continent. At its western angle opened +the mouth of the Coppermine; and on the east a long narrow creek called +Bathurst Inlet ran into the mainland, from which stretched the jagged +broken coast with its pointed capes and rugged promontories, ending +in that confusion of straits, sounds, and channels which gives such a +strange appearance to the maps of North America. On the other side the +coast turned abruptly to the north beyond the mouth of the Coppermine +River, and ended in Cape Krusenstern. + +After consulting with Sergeant Long, Lieutenant Hobson decided to give +his party a day’s rest here. + +The exploration, properly so called, which was to enable the Lieutenant +to fix upon a suitable site for the establishment of a fort, was now +really about to begin. The Company had advised him to keep as much as +possible above the seventieth parallel, and on the shores of the Arctic +Ocean. To obey his orders Hobson was obliged to keep to the west; for on +the east—with the exception, perhaps, of the land of Boothia, crossed +by the seventieth parallel—the whole country belongs rather to the +Arctic Circle, and the geographical conformation of Boothia is as yet +but imperfectly known. + +After carefully ascertaining the latitude and longitude, and verifying +his position by the map, the Lieutenant found that he was a hundred +miles below the seventieth degree. But beyond Cape Krusenstern, the +coast-line, running in a north-easterly direction, abruptly crosses the +seventieth parallel at a sharp angle near the one hundred and thirtieth +meridian, and at about the same elevation as Cape Bathurst, the spot +named as a rendezvous by Captain Craventy. He must therefore make for +that point, and should the site appear suitable the new fort would be +erected there. + +“There,” said the Lieutenant to his subordinate, Long, “we shall +be in the position ordered by the Company. There the sea, open for a +great part of the year, will allow the vessels from Behring Strait to +come right up to the fort, bringing us fresh provisions and taking away +our commodities.” + +“Not to mention,” added Sergeant Long, “that our men will be +entitled to double pay all the time they are beyond the seventieth +parallel.” + +“Of course that is understood,” replied Hobson; “and I daresay +they will accept it without a murmur.” + +“Well then, Lieutenant,” said Long simply, “we have now only to +start for Cape Bathurst.” + +But as a day of rest had been promised, the start did not actually take +place until the next day, June 6th. + +The second part of the journey would naturally be very different from +the first. The rules with regard to the sledges keeping their rank need +no longer be enforced, and each couple drove as it pleased them. Only +short distances were traversed at a time; halts were made at every angle +of the coast, and the party often walked. Lieutenant Hobson only urged +two things upon his companions not to go further than three miles from +the coast, and to rally their forces twice a day, at twelve o’clock +and in the evening. At night they all encamped in tents. + +The weather continued very fine and the temperature moderate, +maintaining a mean height of 59° Fahrenheit above zero. Two or three +times sudden snowstorms came on; but they did not last long, and +exercised no sensible influence upon the temperature. + +The whole of the American coast between Capes Krusenstern and Parry, +comprising an extent of more than two hundred and fifty miles, was +examined with the greatest care between the 6th and 20th of June. +Geographical observations were accurately taken, and Hobson, most +effectively aided by Thomas Black, was able to rectify certain errors +in previous marine surveys; whilst the primary object of the +expedition—the examination into the quality and quantity of the game +in the surrounding districts-was not neglected. + +Were these lands well stocked with game? Could they count with certainty +not only on a good supply of furs, but also of meat? Would the resources +of the country provide a fort with provisions in the summer months at +least? Such were the grave questions which Lieutenant Hobson had to +solve, and which called for immediate attention. We give a summary of +the conclusions at which he arrived. + +Game, properly so called, of the kind for which Corporal Joliffe amongst +others had a special predilection, was not abundant. There were plenty +of birds of the duck tribe; but only a few Polar hares, difficult of +approach, poorly represented the rodents of the north. There seemed, +however, to be a good many bears about. Marbre and Sabine had come upon +the fresh traces of several. Some were even seen and tracked; but, as a +rule, they kept at a respectful distance. In the winter, however, driven +by famine from higher latitudes, there would probably be more than +enough of these ravenous beasts prowling about the shores of the Arctic +Ocean. + +“There is certainly no denying,” said Corporal Joliffe, “that +bear’s flesh is very good eating when once it’s in the larder; but +there is something very problematical about it beforehand, and it’s +always just possible that the hunters themselves may meet the fate they +intended for the bears!” + +This was true enough. It was no use counting upon the bears to provision +their fort. Fortunately traces were presently found of herds of a far +more useful animal, the flesh of which is the principal food of the +Indians and Esquimaux. We allude to the reindeer; and Corporal Joliffe +announced with the greatest satisfaction that there were plenty of these +ruminants on this coast. The ground was covered with the lichen to which +they are so partial, and which they cleverly dig out from under the +snow. + +There could be no mistake as to the footprints left by the reindeer, as, +like the camel, they have a small nail-like hoof with a convex surface. +Large herds, sometimes numbering several thousand animals, are seen +running wild in certain parts of America. Being easily domesticated, +they are employed to draw sledges; and they also supply the factories +with excellent milk, more nourishing than that of cows. Their dead +bodies are not less useful. Their thick skin provides clothes, their +hair makes very good thread, and their flesh is palatable; so that they +are really the most valuable animals to be found in these latitudes, +and Hobson, being assured of their presence, was relieved from half his +anxiety. + +As he advanced he had also reason to be satisfied with regard to the +fur-bearing animals. By the little streams rose many beaver lodges +and musk-rat tunnels. Badgers, lynxes, ermines, wolverenes, sables, +polecats, &c., frequented these districts, hitherto undisturbed by +hunters. They had thus far come to no trace of the presence of man, and +the animals had chosen their refuge well. Footprints were also found of +the fine blue and silver foxes, which are becoming more and more rare, +and the fur of which is worth its weight in gold. Sabine and Mac-Nab +might many a time have shot a very valuable animal on this excursion, +but the Lieutenant had wisely forbidden all hunting of the kind. He did +not wish to alarm the animals before the approaching season-that is to +say, before the winter months, when their furs become thicker and +more beautiful. It was also desirable not to overload the sledges. The +hunters saw the force of his reasoning; but for all that, their fingers +itched when they came within shot-range of a sable or some valuable fox. +Their Lieutenant’s orders were, however, not to be disobeyed. + +Polar bears and birds were, therefore, all that the hunters had to +practise upon in this second stage of their journey. The former, +however, not yet rendered bold by hunger, soon scampered off, and no +serious struggle with them ensued. + +The poor birds suffered for the enforced immunity of the quadrupeds. +White-headed eagles, huge birds with a harsh screeching cry; fishing +hawks, which build their nests in dead trees and migrate to the Arctic +regions in the summer; snow buntings with pure white plumage, wild +geese, which afford the best food of all the Anseres tribe; ducks with +red heads and black breasts; ash-coloured crows, a kind of mocking jay +of extreme ugliness; eider ducks; scoters or black divers, &c. &c., +whose mingled cries awake the echoes of the Arctic regions, fell victims +by hundreds to the unerring aim of Marbre and Sabine. These birds haunt +the high latitudes by millions, and it would be impossible to form an +accurate estimate of their number on the shores of the Arctic Ocean. +Their flesh formed a very pleasant addition to the daily rations of +biscuit and corned beef, and we can understand that the hunters laid up +a good stock of them in the fifteen days during which they were debarred +from attacking more valuable game. + +There would then be no lack of animal food; the magazines of the Company +would be well stocked with game, and its offices filled with furs +and traders; but something more was wanted to insure success to the +undertaking. Would it be possible to obtain a sufficient supply of +fuel to contend with the rigour of an Arctic winter at so elevated a +latitude? + +Most fortunately the coast, was well wooded; the hills which sloped down +towards the sea were crowned with green trees, amongst which the pine +predominated. Some of the woods might even be called forests, and would +constitute an admirable reserve of timber for the fort. Here and there +Hobson noticed isolated groups of willows, poplars, dwarf birch-trees, +and numerous thickets of arbutus. At this time of the warm season +all these trees were covered with verdure, and were an unexpected and +refreshing sight to eyes so long accustomed to the rugged, barren polar +landscape. The ground at the foot of the hills was carpeted with a short +herbage devoured with avidity by the reindeer, and forming their only +sustenance in winter. On the whole, then, the Lieutenant had reason to +congratulate himself on having chosen the north-west of the American +continent for the foundation of a new settlement. + +We have said that these territories, so rich in animals, were apparently +deserted by men. The travellers saw neither Esquimaux, who prefer the +districts round Hudson’s Bay, nor Indians, who seldom venture so far +beyond the Arctic Circle. And indeed in these remote latitudes hunters +may be overtaken by storms, or be suddenly surprised by winter, and cut +off from all communication with their fellow-creatures. We can easily +imagine that Lieutenant Hobson was by no means sorry not to meet any +rival explorers. What he wanted was an unoccupied country, a deserted +land, suitable as a refuge for the fur-bearing animals; and in this +matter he had the full sympathy of Mrs Barnett, who, as the guest of the +Company, naturally took a great interest in the success of its schemes. + +Fancy, then, the disappointment of the Lieutenant, when on the morning +of the 20th June he came to an encampment but recently abandoned. + +It was situated at the end of a narrow creek called Darnley Bay, of +which Cape Parry is the westernmost point. There at the foot of a little +hill were the stakes which had served to mark the limits of the camp, +and heaps of cinders, the extinct embers of the fires. + +The whole party met at this encampment, and all understood how great a +disappointment it involved for Lieutenant Hobson. + +“What a pity!” he exclaimed. “I would rather have met a whole +family of polar bears!” + +“But I daresay the men who encamped here are already far off,” said +Mrs Barnett; “very likely they have returned to their usual hunting +grounds.” + +“That is as it may be,” replied the Lieutenant. “If these be the +traces of Esquimaux, they are more likely to have gone on than to have +turned back; and if they be those of Indians, they are probably, like +ourselves, seeking a new hunting district; and in either case it will be +very unfortunate for us.” + +“But,” said Mrs Barnett, “cannot we find out to what race the +travellers do belong? Can’t we ascertain if they be Esquimaux or +Indians from the south? I should think tribes of such a different +origin, and of such dissimilar customs, would not encamp in the same +manner.” + +Mrs Barnett was right; they might possibly solve the mystery after a +thorough examination of the ground. + +Jaspar Hobson and others set to work, carefully examining every trace, +every object left behind, every mark on the ground; but in vain, there +was nothing to guide them to a decided opinion. The bones of some +animals scattered about told them nothing, and the Lieutenant, much +annoyed, was about to abandon the useless search, when he heard an +exclamation from Mrs Joliffe, who had wandered a little way to the left. + +All hurried towards the young Canadian, who remained fixed to the spot, +looking attentively at the ground before her. + +As her companions came up she said— + +“You are looking for traces, Lieutenant; well, here are some.” + +And Mrs Joliffe pointed to a good many footprints clearly visible in the +firm clay. + +These might reveal something; for the feet of the Indians and Esquimaux, +as well as their boots, are totally different from each other. + +But what chiefly struck Lieutenant Hobson was the strange arrangement +of these impressions. They were evidently made by a human foot, a shod +foot; but, strange to say, the ball alone appeared to have touched the +ground! The marks were very numerous, close together, often crossing one +another, but confined to a very small circle. + +Jaspar Hobson called the attention of the rest of the party to this +singular circumstance. + +“These were not made by a person walking,” he said. + +“Nor by a person jumping,” added Mrs Barnett; “for there is no +mark of a heel.” + +“No,” said Mrs Joliffe; “these footprints were left by a +dancer.” + +She was right, as further examination proved. They were the marks left +by a dancer, and a dancer engaged in some light and graceful exercise, +for they were neither clumsy nor deep. + +But who could the light-hearted individual be who had been impelled to +dance in this sprightly fashion some degrees above the Arctic Circle? + +“It was certainly not an Esquimaux,” said the Lieutenant. + +“Nor an Indian,” cried Corporal Joliffe. + +“No, it was a Frenchman,” said Sergeant Long quietly. + +And all agreed that none but a Frenchman could have been capable of +dancing on such a spot. + +CHAPTER XII. THE MIDNIGHT SUN. Sergeant Long’s assertion must appear +to have been founded on insufficient evidence. That there had been +dancing no one could deny, but that the dancer was a Frenchman, however +probable, could not be considered proved. + +However, the Lieutenant shared the opinion of his subordinate, which did +not appear too positive to any of the party, who all agreed in feeling +sure that some travellers, with at least one compatriot of Vestris +amongst them, had recently encamped on this spot. + +Of course Lieutenant Hobson was by no means pleased at this he was +afraid of having been preceded by rivals in the north-western districts +of English America; and secret as the Company had kept its scheme, it +had doubtless been divulged in the commercial centres of Canada and the +United States. + +The Lieutenant resumed his interrupted march; but he was full of care +and anxiety, although he would not now have dreamed of retracing his +steps. + +“Frenchmen are then sometimes met with in these high latitudes?” was +Mrs Barnett’s natural question after this incident. + +“Yes, madam,” replied the Lieutenant; “or if not exactly +Frenchmen, the descendants of the masters of Canada when it belonged to +France, which comes to much the same thing. These men are in fact our +most formidable rivals.” + +“But I thought,” resumed Mrs Barnett, “that after the absorption +by the Hudson’s Bay Company of the old North-West Company, that it had +no longer any rivals on the American continent.” + +“Although there is no longer any important association for trading in +furs except our own, there are a good many perfectly independent private +companies, mostly American, which have retained French agents or their +descendants in their employ.” + +“Are these agents then held in such high esteem?” asked Mrs Barnett. + +“Yes, madam, and with good reason. During the ninety-four years of +French supremacy in Canada, French agents always proved themselves +superior to ours. We must be just even to our rivals.” + +“Especially to our rivals,” added Mrs Barnett. + +“Yes, especially. . . At that time French hunters, starting from +Montreal, their headquarters, pressed on to the north with greater +hardihood than any others. They lived for years with the Indian +tribes, sometimes intermarrying with them. The natives called them the +‘Canadian travellers,’ and were on the most intimate terms with +them. They were bold, clever fellows, expert at navigating streams, +light-hearted and merry, adapting themselves to circumstances with the +easy flexibility of their race, and always ready to sing or dance.” + +“And do you suppose that hunting is the only object of the party whose +traces we have just discovered?” + +“I don’t think any other hypotheses at all likely,” replied +Hobson. “They are sure to be seeking new hunting grounds. But as +we cannot possibly stop them, we must make haste to begin our own +operations, and compete boldly with all rivals.” + +Lieutenant Hobson was now prepared for the competition he could not +prevent, and he urged on the march of his party as much as possible, +hoping that his rivals might not follow him beyond the seventieth +parallel. + +The expedition now descended towards the south for some twenty miles, in +order the more easily to pass round Franklin Bay. The country was still +covered with verdure, and the quadrupeds and birds already enumerated +were as plentiful as ever; so that they could reasonably hope that +the whole of the north-western coasts of the American continent were +populated in the same manner. + +The ocean which bathed these shores stretched away as far as the eye +could reach Recent atlases give no land beyond the north American +coast-line, and it is only the icebergs which impede the free navigation +of the open sea from Behring Strait to the Pole itself. + +On the 4th July the travellers skirted round another deep bay called +Washburn Bay, and reached the furthest point of a little lake, until +then imperfectly known, covering but a small extent of territory, +scarcely two square miles-in fact it was rather a lagoon, or large pond +of sweet water, than a lake. + +The sledges went on easily and rapidly, and the appearance of the +country was most encouraging to the explorers. It seemed that the +extremity of Cape Bathurst would be a most favourable site for the new +fort, as with this lagoon behind them, and the sea open for four or five +months in the warm season, and giving access to the great highway of +Behring Strait, before them, it would be easy for the exiles to lay in +fresh provisions and to export their commodities. + +On the 5th June, about three o’clock in the afternoon, the party at +last halted at the extremity of Cape Bathurst. It remained to ascertain +the exact position of this cape, which the maps place above the +seventieth parallel. It was, however, impossible to rely upon the marine +surveys of the coast, as they had never yet been made with exactitude. +Jaspar Hobson decided to wait and ascertain the latitude and longitude. + +“What prevents us from settling here?” asked Corporal Joliffe. +“You will own, Lieutenant, that it is a very inviting spot.” + +“It will seem more inviting still if you get double pay here, my +worthy Corporal,” replied Hobson. + +“No doubt,” said Joliffe; “and the orders of the Company must be +obeyed.” + +“Then wait patiently till to-morrow,” added Hobson; “and if we +find that Cape Bathurst is really beyond 70° north latitude, we will +pitch our tent here.” + +The site was indeed admirably suited for the foundation of a new +settlement. The wooded heights surrounding the lagoon would supply +plenty of pine, birch, and other woods for the construction of the +fort, and for stocking, it with’ fuel. The Lieutenant and some of his +companions went to the very edge of the cape, and found that towards the +west the coast-line formed a lengthened curve, beyond which icebergs +of a considerable height shut out the view. The water of the lagoon, +instead of being brackish as they expected from its close vicinity to +the sea, was perfectly sweet; but had it not been so, drinkable water +would not have failed the little colony, as a fresh and limpid stream +ran a few yards to the south-east of Cape Bathurst, and emptied itself +into the Arctic Ocean through a narrow inlet, which, protected by a +singular accumulation of sand and earth instead of by rocks, would have +afforded a refuge to several vessels from the winds of the offing, and +might be turned to account for the anchorage of the ships which it +was hoped would come to the new settlement from Behring Strait. Out of +compliment to the lady of the party, and much to her delight, Lieutenant +Hobson named the stream Paulina river, and the little harbour Port +Barnett. + +By building the fort a little behind the actual cape, the principal +house and the magazines would be quite sheltered from the coldest +winds. The elevation of the cape would help to protect them from the +snow-drifts, which sometimes completely bury large buildings beneath +their heavy avalanches in a few hours. There was plenty of room between +the foot of the promontory and the bank of the lagoon for all the +constructions necessary to a fort. It could even be surrounded by +palisades, which would break the shock of the icebergs; and the cape +itself might be surrounded with a fortified redoubt, if the vicinity of +rivals should render such a purely defensive erection necessary; and the +Lieutenant, although with no idea of commencing anything of the kind +as yet, naturally rejoiced at having met with an easily defensible +position. + +The weather remained fine, and it was quite warm enough. There was not a +cloud upon the sky; but, of course, the clear blue air of temperate +and torrid zones could not be expected here, and the atmosphere was +generally charged with a light mist. What would Cape Bathurst be like in +the long winter night of four months when the ice-mountains became fixed +and rigid, and the hoarse north wind swept down upon the icebergs in +all its fury? None of the party gave a thought to that time now; for +the weather was beautiful, the verdant landscape smiled, and the waves +sparkled in the sunbeams, whilst the temperature remained warm and +pleasant. + +A provisional camp, the sledges forming its only material, was arranged +for the night on the banks of the lagoon; and towards evening Mrs +Barnett, the Lieutenant, Sergeant Long, and even Thomas Black, explored +the surrounding district in order to ascertain its resources. It +appeared to be in every respect suitable; and Hobson was eager for the +next day, that he might determine the exact situations, and find out if +it fulfilled the conditions imposed by the Company. + +“Well, Lieutenant,” said the astronomer when the examination was +over, “this is really a charming spot, such as I should not have +imagined could have existed beyond the Arctic Circle.” + +“Ah, Mr Black!” cried Hobson, “the finest countries in the world +are to be found here, and I am impatient to ascertain our latitude and +longitude.” + +“Especially the latitude,” said the astronomer, whose eclipse was +never out of his thoughts; “and I expect your brave companions are as +eager as yourself. Double pay beyond the seventieth parallel!” + +“But, Mr Black,” said Mrs Barnett, “do you not yourself take +an interest a purely scientific interest, in getting beyond that +parallel?” + +“Of course, madam, of course I am anxious to get beyond it, but not +so terribly eager. According to our calculations, however, made with +absolute accuracy, the solar eclipse which I am ordered to watch will +only be total to an observer placed beyond the seventieth degree, and +on this account I share the Lieutenant’s impatience to determine the +position of Cape Bathurst.” + +“But I understand, Mr Black,” said Mrs Barnett, “that this solar +eclipse will not take place until the 18th July 1860?” + +“Yes, madam, on the 18th July 1860.” + +“And it is now only the 15th June 1859! So that the phenomenon will +not be visible for more than a year!” + +“I am quite aware of it, Mrs Barnett,” replied the astronomer; +“but if I had not started till next year I should have run a risk of +being too late.” + +“You would, Mr Black,” said Hobson, “and you did well to start a +year beforehand. You are now quite sure not to miss your eclipse. I +own that our journey from Fort Reliance has been accomplished under +exceptionally favourable circumstances. We have had little fatigue and +few delays. To tell you the truth, I did not expect to get to this part +of the coast until the middle of August; and if the eclipse had been +expected this year, instead of next; you really might have been too +late. Moreover, we do not yet know if we are beyond the seventieth +parallel.” + +“I do not in the least regret the journey I have taken in your +company, Lieutenant, and I shall patiently wait until next year for my +eclipse. The fair Phœbe, I fancy, is a sufficiently grand lady to be +waited for.” + +The next day, July 6th, a little after noon, Hobson and the astronomer +made their preparations for taking the exact bearings of Cape Bathurst. +The sun shone clearly enough for them to take the outlines exactly. At +this season of the year, too, it had reached its maximum height above +the horizon; and consequently its culmination, on its transit across the +meridian, would facilitate the work of the two observers. + +Already the night before, and the same morning, by raking different +altitudes, and by means of a calculation of right ascensions, the +Lieutenant and the astronomer had ascertained the longitude with great +accuracy. But it was about the latitude that Hobson was most anxious; +for what would the meridian of Cape Bathurst matter to him should it not +be situated beyond the seventieth parallel? + +Noon approached. The men of the expedition gathered round the observers +with their sextants ready in their hands. The brave fellows awaited +the result of the observation with an impatience which will be readily +understood. It was now to be decided whether they had come to the end +of their journey, or whether they must search still further for a spot +fulfilling the conditions imposed by the Company. + +Probably no good result would have followed upon further explorations, +According to the maps of North America-imperfect, it is true-the western +coast beyond Cape Bathurst sloped down below the seventieth parallel, +not again rising above it until it entered Russian America, where +the English had as yet no right to settle; so that Hobson had shown +considerable judgment in directing his course to Cape Bathurst after +a thorough examination of the maps of these northern regions. This +promontory is, in fact, the only one which juts out beyond the +seventieth parallel along the whole of the North American continent, +properly so called-that is to say, in English America. It remained to be +proved that it really occupied the position assigned to it in maps. + +At this moment the sun was approaching the culminating-point of its +course, and the two observers pointed the telescopes of their sextants +upon it. By means of inclined mirrors attached to the instruments, the +sun ought apparently to go back to the horizon itself; and the moment +when it seemed to touch it with the lower side of its disc would be +precisely that at which it would occupy the highest point of the +diurnal arc, and consequently the exact moment when it would pass +the meridian-in other words, it would be noon at the place where the +observation was taken. + +All watched in anxious silence. + +“Noon!” cried Jaspar Hobson and the astronomer at once. + +The telescopes were immediately lowered. The Lieutenant and Thomas +Black read on the graduated limbs the value of the angles they had just +obtained, and at once proceeded to note down their observations. + +A few minutes afterwards, Lieutenant Hobson rose and said, addressing +his companions + +“My friends, from this date, July 6th, I promise you double pay in the +name of the Hudson’s Bay Company!” + +“Hurrah! hurrah! hurrah for the Company!” shouted the worthy +companions of the Lieutenant with one voice. + +Cape Bathurst and its immediate neighbourhood were in very truth above +the seventieth degree of north latitude. + +We give the result of these simultaneous observations, which agreed to a +second. + +Longitude, 127° 36’ 12” west of the meridian of Greenwich. + +Latitude, 70° 44’ 37” north. + +And that very evening these hardy pioneers, encamped so far from the +inhabited world, watched the mighty luminary of day touch the edges of +the western horizon without dipping beneath it. + +For the first time they saw the shining of the midnight sun. + +CHAPTER XIII. FORT HOPE. The site of the new fort was now finally +determined on. It would be impossible to find a better situation than on +the level ground behind Cape Bathurst, on the eastern bank of the lagoon +Hobson determined to commence the construction of the principal house at +once. Meanwhile all must accommodate themselves as best they could; and +the sledges were ingeniously utilised to form a provisional encampment. + +His men being very skilful, the Lieutenant hoped to have the principal +house ready in a month. It was to be large enough to accommodate for a +time the nineteen persons of the party. Later, and before the excessive +cold set in, if there should be time, the barracks for the soldiers and +the magazines for the furs and skins were to be built. There was not +much chance of getting it all done before the end of September; and +after that date, the winter, with its first bitter frosts and long +nights, would arrest all further progress. + +Of the ten soldiers chosen by Captain Craventy, two-Marbre and +Sabine-were skilful hunters; the other eight handled the hatchet with as +much address as the musket. Like sailors, they could turn their hands +to anything, and were now to be treated more like workmen than soldiers, +for they were to build a fort which there was as yet no enemy to attack. +Petersen, Belcher, Rae, Garry, Pond, Hope, and Kellet formed a body of +clever, zealous carpenters, under the able superintendence of Mac-Nab, +a Scotchman from Stirling, who had had considerable experience in the +building both of houses and boats. The men were well provided with +tools-hatchets, centre-bits, adzes, planes, hand-saws, mallets, hammers, +chisels, &c. &c. Rae was most skilful at blacksmith’s work, and with +the aid of a little portable forge he was able to make all the pins, +tenons, bolts, nails, screws, nuts, &e., required in carpentry. They had +no mason in the party; but none was wanted, as all the buildings of the +factories in the north are of wood. Fortunately there were plenty of +trees about Cape Bathurst, although as Hobson had already remarked +to Mrs Barnett, there was not a rock, a stone, not even a flint or a +pebble, to be seen. The shore was strewn with innumerable quantities of +bivalve shells broken by the surf, and with seaweed or zoophytes, mostly +sea-urchins and asteriadæ; but the soil consisted entirely of earth and +sand, without a morsel of silica or broken granite; and the cape itself +was but an accumulation of soft earth, the particles of which were +scarcely held together by the vegetation with which it was clothed. + +In the afternoon of the same day, July 6th Hobson and Mac-Nab the +carpenter went to choose the site of the principal house on the plateau +at the foot of Cape Bathurst. From this point the view embraced the +lagoon and the western districts to a distance of ten or twelve miles. +On the right, about four miles off, towered icebergs of a considerable +height. partly draped in mist; whilst on the left stretched apparently +boundless plains, vast steppes which it would be impossible to +distinguish from the frozen surface of the lagoon or from the sea itself +in the winter. + +The spot chosen, Hobson and Mac-Nab set out the outer walls of the house +with the line. This outline formed a rectangle measuring sixty feet on +the larger side, and thirty on the smaller. The façade of the house +would therefore have a length of sixty feet it was to have a door and +three windows on the side of the promontory, where the inner court was +to be situated, and four windows on the side of the lagoon. The door was +to open at the left corner, instead of in the middle, of the back of +the house, for the sake of warmth. This arrangement would impede the +entrance of the outer air to the further rooms, and add considerably to +the comfort of the inmates of the fort. + +According to the simple plan agreed upon by the Lieutenant and his +master-carpenter, there were to be four compartments in the house: the +first to be an antechamber with a double door to keep out the wind; +the second to serve as a kitchen, that the cooking which would generate +damp, might be all done quite away from the living-rooms; the third, a +large hall, where the daily meals were to be served in common; and the +fourth, to be divided into several cabins, like the state-rooms on board +ship. + +The soldiers were to occupy the dining-hall provisionally, and a kind of +camp-bed was arranged for them at the end of the room. The Lieutenant, +Mrs Barnett, Thomas Black, Madge, Mrs Joliffe, Mrs Mac-Nab, and Mrs +Rae were to lodge in the cabins of the fourth compartment. They would +certainly be packed pretty closely; but it was only a temporary state +of things, and when the barracks were constructed, the principal house +would be reserved to the officer in command, his sergeant, Thomas Black, +Mrs Barnett, and her faithful Madge, who never left her. Then the fourth +compartment might perhaps be divided into three cabins, instead of four; +for to avoid corners as much as possible is a rule which should never be +forgotten by those who winter in high latitudes Nooks and corners +are, in fact, so many receptacles of ice. The partitions impede the +ventilation; and the moisture, generated in the air, freezes readily, +and makes the atmosphere of the rooms unhealthy causing grave maladies +to those who sleep in them. + +On this account many navigators who have to winter in the midst of ice +have one large room in the centre of their vessel, which is shared by +officers and sailors in common. For obvious reasons, however, Hobson +could not adopt this plan. + +From the preceding description we shall have seen that the future house +was to consist merely of a ground-floor. The roof was to be high, and +its sides to slope considerably, so that water could easily run off +them. The snow would, however, settle upon them; and when once they were +covered with it, the house would be, so to speak, hermetically closed, +and the inside temperature would be kept at the same mean height. Snow +is, in fact, a very bad conductor of beat: it prevents it from entering, +it is true; but, what is more important in an Arctic winter, it also +keeps it from getting out. + +The carpenter was to build two chimneys-one above the kitchen, the other +in connection with the stove of the large dining-room, which was to heat +it and the compartment containing the cabins. The architectural +effect of the whole would certainly be poor; but the house would be as +comfortable as possible, and what more could any one desire? + +Certainly an artist who had once seen it would not soon forget this +winter residence, set down in the gloomy Arctic twilight in the midst +of snow-drifts, half hidden by icicles, draped in white from roof to +foundation, its walls encrusted with snow, and the smoke from its fires +assuming strangely-contorted forms in the wind. + +But now to tell of the actual construction of this house, as yet +existing only in imagination. This, of course, was the business of +Mac-Nab and his men; and while the carpenters were at work, the foraging +party to whom the commissariat was entrusted would not be idle. There +was plenty for every one to do. + +The first step was to choose suitable timber, and a species of Scotch +fir was decided on, which grew conveniently upon the neighbouring hills, +and seemed altogether well adapted to the multifarious uses to which it +would be put. For in the rough and ready style of habitation which they +were planning, there could be no variety of material; and every part +of the house-outside and inside walls, flooring, ceiling, partitions, +rafters, ridges, framework, and tiling-would have to be contrived +of planks, beams, and timbers. As may readily be supposed, finished +workmanship was not necessary for such a description of building, and +Mac-Nab was able to proceed very rapidly without endangering the +safety of the building. About a hundred of these firs were chosen and +felled-they were neither barked nor squared-and formed so many timbers, +averaging some twenty feet in length. The axe and the chisel did not +touch them except at the ends, in order to form the tenons and mortises +by which they were to be secured to one another. Very few days sufficed +to complete this part of the work, and the timbers were brought down by +the dogs to the site fixed on for the principal building. To start with, +the site had been carefully levelled. The soil, a mixture of fine +earth and sand, had been beaten and consolidated with heavy blows. The +brushwood with which it was originally covered was burnt, and the thick +layer of ashes thus produced would prevent the damp from penetrating the +floors. A clean and dry foundation having been thus secured on which +to lay the first joists, upright posts were fixed at each corner of the +site, and at the extremities of the inside walls, to form the skeleton +of the building. The posts were sunk to a depth of some feet in the +ground, after their ends had been hardened in the fire; and were +slightly hollowed at each side to receive the crossbeams of the outer +wall, between which the openings for the doors and windows had been +arranged for. These posts were held together at the top by horizontal +beams well let into the mortises, and consolidating the whole building. +On these horizontal beams, which represented the architraves of the two +fronts, rested the high trusses of the roof, which overhung the walls +like the eaves of a chalet. Above this squared architrave were laid the +joists of the ceiling, and those of the floor upon the layer of ashes. + +The timbers, both in the inside and outside walls, were only laid side +by side. To insure their being properly joined, Rae the blacksmith +drove strong iron bolts through them at intervals; and when even this +contrivance proved insufficient to close the interstices as hermetically +as was necessary, Mac-Nab had recourse to calking, a process which +seamen find invaluable in rendering vessels water-tight; only as a +substitute for tow he used a sort of dry moss, with which the eastern +side of the cape was covered, driving it into the crevices with +calking-irons and a hammer, filling up each hollow with layers of hot +tar, obtained without difficulty from the pine-trees, and thus making +the walls and boarding impervious to the rain and damp of the winter +season. + +The door and windows in the two fronts were roughly but strongly built, +and the small panes of the latter glazed with isinglass, which, though +rough, yellow, and almost opaque, was yet the best substitute for glass +which the resources of the country afforded; and its imperfections +really mattered little, as the windows were sure to be always open in +fine weather; while during, the long night of the Arctic winter they +would be useless, and have to be kept closed and defended by heavy +shutters with strong bolts against the violence of the gales. Meanwhile +the house was being quickly fitted up inside. By means of a double door +between the outer and inner halls a too sudden change of temperature +was avoided, and the wind was prevented from blowing with unbroken force +into the rooms. The air-pumps, brought from Fort Reliance, were so fixed +as to let in fresh air whenever excessive cold prevented the opening of +doors or windows -one being made to eject the impure air from within, +the other to renew the supply; for the Lieutenant had given his whole +mind to this important matter. + +The principal cooking utensil was a large iron furnace, which had been +brought piecemeal from Fort Reliance, and which the carpenter put up +without any difficulty. The chimneys for the kitchen and ball, however, +seemed likely to tax the ingenuity of the workmen to the utmost, as +no material within their reach was strong enough for the purpose, and +stone, as we have said before, was nowhere to be found in the country +around Cape Bathurst. + +The difficulty appeared insurmountable, when the invincible Lieutenant +suggested that they should utilise the shells with which the shore was +strewed. + +“Make chimneys of shells!” cried the carpenter. + +“Yes, Mac-Nab,” replied Hobson; “we must collect the shells, +grind them, burn them, and make them into lime, then mould the lime into +bricks, and use them in the same way.” + +“Let us try the shells, by all means,” replied the carpenter; and +so the idea was put in practice at once, and many tons collected of +calcareous shells identical with those found in the lowest stratum of +the Tertiary formations. + +A furnace was constructed for the decomposition of the carbonate which +is so large an ingredient of these shells, and thus the lime required +was obtained in the space of a few hours. It would perhaps be too much +to say that the substance thus made was as entirely satisfactory as +if it had gone through all the usual processes; but it answered its +purpose, and strong conical chimneys soon adorned the roof, to the great +satisfaction of Mrs Paulina Barnett, who congratulated the originator of +the scheme warmly on its success, only adding laughingly, that she hoped +the chimneys would not smoke. + +“Of course they will smoke, madam,” replied Hobson coolly; “all +chimneys do!” + +All this was finished within a month, and on the 6th of August they were +to take possession of the new house. + +While Mac-Nab and his men were working so hard, the foraging party, +with the Lieutenant at its head, had been exploring the environs of Cape +Bathurst, and satisfied themselves that there would be no difficulty in +supplying the Company’s demands for fur and feathers, so soon as they +could set about hunting in earnest. In the meantime they prepared the +way for future sport, contenting themselves for the present with the +capture of a few couples of reindeer, which they intended to domesticate +for the sake of their milk and their young. They were kept in a paddock +about fifty yards from the house, and entrusted to the care of Mac-Nabs +wife, an Indian woman, well qualified to take charge of them. + +The care of the household fell to Mrs Paulina Barnett, and this good +woman, with Madge’s help, was invaluable in providing for all the +small wants, which would inevitably have escaped the notice of the men. + +After scouring the country within a radius of several miles, the +Lieutenant notified, as the result of his observations, that the +territory on which they had established themselves, and to which he gave +the name of Victoria Land, was a large peninsula about one hundred and +fifty square miles in extent, with very clearly-defined boundaries, +connected with the American continent by an isthmus, extending from +the lower end of Washburn Bay on the east, as fair as the corresponding +slope on the opposite coast. The Lieutenant next proceeded to ascertain +what were the resources of the lake and river, and found great reason to +be satisfied with the result of his examination. The shallow waters of +the lake teemed with trout, pike, and other available fresh-water fish; +and the little river was a favourite resort of salmon and shoals of +white bait and smelts. The supply of sea-fish was not so good; and +though many a grampus and whale passed by in the offing, the latter +probably flying from the harpoons of the Behring Strait fishermen there +were no means of capturing them unless one by chance happened to get +stranded on the coast; nor would Hobson allow any of the seals +which abounded on the western shore to be taken until a satisfactory +conclusion should be arrived at as to how to use them to the best +advantage. + +The colonists now considered themselves fairly installed stalled in +their new abode, and after due deliberation unanimously agreed to bestow +upon the settlement the name of Fort Good Hope. + +Alas! the auspicious title was never to be inscribed upon a map. The +undertaking, begun so bravely and with such prospects of success, was +destined never to be carried out, and another disaster would have to be +added to the long list of failures in Arctic enterprise. + +CHAPTER XIV. SOME EXCURSIONS. It did not take long to furnish the new +abode. A camp-bed was set up in the hall, and the carpenter Mac-Nab +constructed a most substantial table, around which were ranged fixed +benches. A few movable seats and two enormous presses completed the +furniture of this apartment. The inner room, which was also ready, was +divided by solid partitions into six dormitories, the two end ones +alone being lighted by windows looking to the front and back. The only +furniture was a bed and a table. Mrs Paulina Barnett and Madge were +installed in one which looked immediately out upon the lake. Hobson +offered the other with the window in it to Thomas Black, and the +astronomer took immediate possession of it. The Lieutenant’s own room +was a dark cell adjoining the hall, with no window but a bull’s eye +pierced through the partition. Mrs Joliffe, Mrs Mac-Nab, and Mrs Rae, +with their husbands, occupied the other dormitories. These good people +agreed so well together that it would have been a pity to separate them. +Moreover, an addition was expected shortly to the little colony; and +Mac-Nab had already gone so far as to secure the services of Mrs Barnett +as god-mother, an honour which gave the good woman much satisfaction. +The sledges had been entirely unloaded, and the bedding carried into +the different rooms. All utensils, stores, and provisions which were +not required for immediate use were stowed away in a garret, to which a +ladder gave access. The winter clothing-such as boots, overcoats, furs, +and skins-were also taken there, and protected from the damp in large +chests. As soon as these arrangements were completed, the Lieutenant +began to provide for the heating of the house. + +Knowing that the most energetic measures were necessary to combat the +severity of the Arctic winter, and that during the weeks of intensest +cold there would be no possibility of leaving the house to forage for +supplies, he ordered a quantity of fuel to be brought from the wooded +hills in the neighbourhood, and took care to obtain a plentiful store of +oil from the seals which abounded on the shore. + +In obedience to his orders, and under his directions, the house was +provided with a condensing apparatus which would receive the internal +moisture, and was so constructed that the ice which would form in it +could easily be removed. + +This question of heating was a very serious one to the Lieutenant. + +“I am a native of the Polar regions, madam,” he often said to Mrs +Barnett; “I have some experience in these matters, and I have read +over and over again books written by those who have wintered in these +latitudes. It is impossible to take too many precautions in preparing to +pass a winter in the Arctic regions, and nothing must be left to chance +where a single neglect may prove fatal to the enterprise.” + +“Very true, Mr Hobson,” replied Mrs Barnett; “and you have +evidently made up your mind to conquer the cold; but there is the food +to be thought of too.” + +“Yes, indeed; I have been thinking of that, and mean to make all +possible use of the produce of the country so as to economise our +stores. As soon as we can, we will make some foraging expeditions. We +need not think about the furs at present, for there will be plenty of +time during the winter to stock the Company’s depôts. Besides, the +furred animals have not got their winter clothing on yet, and the skins +would lose fifty per cent. of their value if taken now. Let us content +ourselves for the present with provisioning Fort Hope. Reindeer, elk, +- and any wapitis that may have ventured so far north are the only game +worth our notice just now; it will be no small undertaking to provide +food for twenty people and sixty dogs.” + +The Lieutenant loved order, and determined to do everything in the most +methodical manner, feeling confident that if his companions would help +him to the utmost of their power, nothing need be wanting to the success +of the expedition. + +The weather at this season was almost always fine, and might be expected +to continue so for five weeks longer, when the snow would begin to fall. +It was very important that the carpenters-should make all possible use +of the interval; and as soon as the principal house was finished, Hobson +set them to work to build an enormous kennel or shed in which to keep +the teams of dogs. This doghouse was built at the very foot of the +promontory, against the hill, and about forty yards to the right of +the house. Barracks for the accommodation of the men were to be built +opposite this kennel on the left, while the store and powder magazines +were to occupy the front of the enclosure. + +Hobson determined with almost excessive prudence to have the Factory +enclosed before the winter set in. A strong fence of pointed stakes, +planted firmly in the ground, was set up as a protection against +the inroads of wild animals or the hostilities of the natives. The +Lieutenant had not forgotten an outrage which had been committed along +the coast at no great distance from Fort Hope, and he well knew how +essential it was to be safe from a coup de main. The factory was +therefore entirely encircled, and at each extremity of the lagoon +Mac-Nab undertook to erect a wooden sentry-box commanding the +coast-line, from which a watch could be kept without any danger. The +men worked indefatigably, and it seemed likely that everything would be +finished before the cold season set in. + +In the meantime hunting parties were organised. The capture of seals +being put off for a more convenient season, the sportsmen prepared +to supply the fort with game, which might be dried and preserved for +consumption during the bad season. + +Accordingly Marbre and Sabine, sometimes accompanied by the Lieutenant +and Sergeant Long, whose experience was invaluable, scoured the country +daily for miles round; and it was no uncommon sight to see Mrs Paulina +Barnett join them and step briskly along shouldering her gun bravely, +and never allowing herself to be outstripped by her companions. + +Throughout the month of August these expeditions were continued with +great success, and the store of provisions increased rapidly. Marbre +and Sabine were skilled in all the artifices which sportsmen employ in +stalking their prey-particularly the reindeer, which are exceedingly +wary. How patiently they would face the wind lest the creature’s keen +sense of smell should warn it of their approach! and how cunningly they +lured it on to its destruction by displaying the magnificent antlers of +some former victim above the birch-bushes ! + +They found a useful alley (sic) in a certain little traitorous bird to +which the Indians have given the name of “monitor.” It is a kind of +daylight owl, about the size of a pigeon, and has earned its name by its +habit of calling the attention of hunters to their quarry, by uttering a +sharp note like the cry of a child. + +When about fifty reindeer, or, to give them their Indian name, +“caribous,” had been brought down by the guns, the flesh was cut +into long strips for food, the skins being kept to be tanned and used +for shoe-leather. + +Besides the caribous, there were also plenty of Polar hares, which +formed an agreeable addition to the larder. They were much less timorous +than the European species, and allowed themselves to be caught in great +numbers. They belong to the rodent family, and have long ears, brown +eyes, and a soft fur resembling swan’s down. They weigh from ten to +fifteen pounds each, and their flesh is excellent. Hundreds of them were +cared for winter use, and the remainder converted into excellent pies by +the skilful hands of Mrs Joliffe. + +While making provision for future wants, the daily supplies were not +neglected. In addition to the Polar hares, which underwent every variety +of culinary treatment from Mrs Joliffe, and won for her compliments +innumerable from hunters and workmen alike, many waterfowl figured in +the bill of fare. Besides the ducks which abounded on the shores of the +lagoon, large flocks of grouse congregated round the clumps of stunted +willows. They belong, as their zoological name implies, to the partridge +family, and might be aptly described as white partridges with long +black-spotted feathers in the tail. The Indians call them willow-fowl; +but to a European sportsman they are neither more nor less than +blackcock (Tetrao tetrix). When roasted slightly before a quick clear +fire they proved delicious. + +Then there were the supplies furnished by lake and stream. Sergeant +Long was a first-rate angler, and nothing could surpass the skill and +patience with which he whipped the water and cast his line. The faithful +Madge, another worthy disciple of Isaak Walton was perhaps his only +equal. Day after day the two sallied forth together rod in hand, to +spend the day in mute companionship by the river-side, whence they were +sure to return in triumph laden with some splendid specimens of the +salmon tribe. + +But to return to our sportsmen; they soon found that their hunting +excursions were not to be free from peril. Hobson perceived with some +alarm that bears were very numerous in the neighbourhood and that +scarcely a day passed without one or more of them being sighted. +Sometimes these unwelcome visitors belonged to the family of brown +bears, so common throughout the whole “Cursed Land; “but now and +then a solitary specimen of the formidable Polar bear warned the hunters +what dangers they might have to encounter so soon as the first frost +should drive great numbers of these fearful animals to the neighbourhood +of Cape Bathurst. Every book of Arctic explorations is full of accounts +of the frequent perils to which travellers and whalers are exposed from +the ferocity of these animals. + +Now and then, too, a distant pack of wolves was seen, which receded like +a wave at the approach of the hunters, or the sound of their bark +was heard as they followed the trail of a reindeer or wapiti. These +creatures were large grey wolves, about three feet high, with long +tails, whose fur becomes white in the winter. They abounded in this part +of the country, where food was plentiful; and frequented wooded spots, +where they lived in holes like foxes. During the temperate season, +when they could get as much as they wanted to eat, they were scarcely +dangerous, and fled with the characteristic cowardice of their race at +the first sign of pursuit; but when impelled by hunger, their numbers +rendered them very formidable; and from the fact of their lairs being +close at hand, they never left the country even in the depth of winter. + +One day the sportsmen returned to Fort Hope, bringing with them an +unpleasant-looking animal, which neither Mrs Paulina Barnett nor the +astronomer, Thomas Black, had ever before seen. It was a carnivorous +creature of the plantigrada family, and greatly resembled the American +glutton, being strongly built, with short legs, and, like all animals of +the feline tribe, a very supple back; its eyes were small and horny, and +it was armed with curved claws and formidable jaws. + +“What is this horrid creature?” inquired Mrs Paulina Barnett of +Sabine, who replied in his usual sententious manner— + +“A Scotchman would call it a ‘quick-hatch,’ an Indian an +‘okelcoo-haw-gew,’ and a Canadian a ‘carcajou.”’ + +“And what do you call it?” + +“A wolverene, ma’am,” returned Sabine, much delighted with the +elegant way in which he had rounded his sentence. + +The wolverene, as this strange quadruped is called by zoologists, lives +in hollow trees or rocky caves, whence it issues at night and creates +great havoc amongst beavers, musk-rats, and other rodents, sometimes +fighting with a fox or a wolf for its spoils. Its chief characteristics +are great cunning, immense muscular power, and an acute sense of smell. +It is found in very high latitudes; and the short fur with which it is +clothed becomes almost black in the winter months, and forms a large +item in the Company’s exports. + +During their excursions the settlers paid as much attention to the Flora +of the country as to its Fauna; but in those regions vegetation, has +necessarily a hard struggle for existence, as it must brave every season +of the year, whereas the animals are able to migrate to a warmer climate +during the winter. + +The hills on the eastern side, of the lake were well covered with pine +and fir trees; and Jaspar also noticed the “tacamahac,” a species of +poplar which grows to a great height and shoots forth yellowish leaves +which turn green in the autumn. These trees and larches were, however, +few and sickly looking, as if they found the oblique rays of the sun +insufficient to make them thrive. The black fir, or Norway spruce fir, +throve better, especially when situated in ravines well sheltered +from the north wind. The young shoots of this tree are very +valuable, yielding a favourite beverage known in North America as “ +spruce-beer.” A good crop of these branchlets was gathered in and +stored in the cellar of Fort Hope. There were also the dwarf birch, +a shrub about two feet high, native to very cold climates, and whole +thickets of cedars, which are so valuable for fuel. + +Of vegetables which could be easily grown and used for food, this barren +land yielded but few; and Mrs Joliffe, who took a great interest in “ +economic “ botany, only met with .two plants which were available in +cooking. + +One of these, a bulb, very difficult to classify, because its leaves +fall off just at the flowering season, turned out to be a wild leek, and +yielded a good crop of onions, each about the size of an egg. + +The other plant was that known throughout North America as “Labrador +tea;” it grew abundantly on the shores of the lagoon between the +clumps of willow and arbutus, and formed the principal food of the +Polar hares. Steeped in boiling water, and flavoured with a few drops of +brandy or gin, it formed an excellent beverage, and served to economise +the supply of China tea which the party had brought from Fort Reliance. + +Knowing the scarcity of vegetables, Jaspar Hobson had plenty of +seeds with him, chiefly sorrel and scurvy-grass (Cochlearia), the +antiscorbutic properties of which are invaluable in these latitudes. In +choosing the site of the settlement, such care bad been taken to find +a spot sheltered from the keen blasts, which shrivel vegetation like a +fire, that there was every chance of these seeds yielding a good crop in +the ensuing season. + +The dispensary of the new fort contained other antiscorbutics, in the +shape of casks of lemon and lime juice, both of which are absolutely +indispensable to an Arctic expedition. Still the greatest economy was +necessary with regard to the stores, as a long period of bad weather +might cut off the communication between Fort Hope and the southern +stations. + +CHAPTER XV. FIFTEEN MILES FROM CAPE BATHURST. September had now +commenced, and as upon the most favourable calculation only three more +weeks would intervene before the bad season set in and interrupted the +labours of the explorers, the greatest haste was necessary in completing +the new buildings, and Mac-Nab and his workmen surpassed themselves +in industry. The dog-house was on the eve of being finished, and very +little remained to be done to the palisading which was, to encircle the +fort. An inner court had been constructed, in the shape of a half-moon, +fenced with tall pointed stakes, fifteen feet high, to which a postern +gave entrance. Jaspar Hobson favoured the system of an unbroken +enclosure with detached forts (a great improvement upon the tactics of +Vauban and Cormontaigne), and knew that to make his defence complete +the summit of Cape Bathurst, which was the key of the position, must be +fortified; until that could be done, however, he thought the palisading +would be a sufficient protection, at least against quadrupeds. + +The next thing was to lay in a supply of oil and lights, and accordingly +an expedition was organised to a spot about fifteen miles distant where +seals were plentiful, Mrs Paulina Barnett being invited to accompany +the sportsmen, not indeed for the sake of watching the poor creatures +slaughtered, but to satisfy her curiosity with regard to the country +around Cape Bathurst, and to see some cliffs on that part of the +coast which were worthy of notice. The Lieutenant chose as his other +companions, Sergeant Long, and the soldiers Petersen, Hope, and Kellet, +and the party set off at eight o’clock in the morning in two sledges, +each drawn by six dogs, on which the bodies of the seals were to be +brought back. The weather was fine, but the fog which lay low along the +horizon veiled the rays of the sun, whose yellow disk was now beginning +to disappear for some hours during the night, a circumstance which +attracted the Lieutenant’s attention, for reasons which we will +explain. + +That part of the shore to the west of Cape Bathurst rises but a few +inches above the level of the sea, and the tides are-or are said +to be-very high in the Arctic Ocean-many navigators, such as Parry, +Franklin, the two Rosses, M’Clure, and M’Clintock, having observed +that when the sun and moon were in conjunction the waters were sometimes +twenty-five feet above the ordinary level. How then was it to be +explained that the sea did not at high tide inundate Cape Bathurst, +which possessed no natural defences such as cliffs or downs? What +was it, in fact, which prevented the entire submersion of the whole +district, and the meeting of the waters of the lake with those of the +Arctic Ocean? + +Jaspar Hobson could not refrain from remarking on this peculiarity to +Mrs Barnett, who replied somewhat hastily that she supposed that there +were-in spite of all that had been said to the contrary-no tides in the +Arctic Ocean. + +“On the contrary, madam,” said Hobson, “all navigators agree that +the ebb and flow of Polar seas are very distinctly marked, and it +is impossible to believe that they can have been mistaken on such a +subject.” + +“How is it, then,” inquired Mrs Barnett, “that this land is not +flooded when it is scarcely ten feet above the sea level at low tide?” + +“That is just what puzzles me,” said Hobson; “for I have been +attentively watching the tides all through this month, and during that +time they have not varied more than a foot, and I feel certain, that +even during the September equinox, they will not rise more than a foot +and a half all along the shores of Cape Bathurst.” + +“Can you not explain this phenomenon?” inquired Mrs Barnett. + +“Well, madam,” replied the Lieutenant, “two conclusions are open +to us, either of which I find it difficult to believe; such men as +Franklin, Parry, Ross, and others, are mistaken, and there are no tides +on this part of the American coast; or, as in the Mediterranean, to +which the waters of the Atlantic have not free ingress, the straits are +too narrow to be affected by the ocean currents.” + +“The latter would appear to be the more reasonable hypothesis, Mr +Hobson.” + +“It is not, however, thoroughly satisfactory,” said the Lieutenant, +“and I feel sure that if we could but find it, there is some simple +and natural explanation of the phenomenon.” + +After a monotonous journey along a flat and sandy shore, the party +reached their destination, and, having unharnessed the teams, they were +left behind lest they should startle the seals. + +At the first glance around them, all were equally struck with the +contrast between the appearance of this district and that of Cape +Bathurst. + +Here the coast line was broken and fretted, showing manifest traces +of its igneous origin; whereas the site of the fort was of sedimentary +formation and aqueous origin. Stone, so conspicuously absent at the +cape, was here plentiful; the black sand and porous lava were strewn +with huge boulders deeply imbedded in the soil, and there were large +quantities of the aluminium, silica, and felspar pebbles peculiar to the +crystalline strata of one class of igneous rocks. Glittering Labrador +stones, and many other kinds of felspar, red, green, and blue, were +sprinkled on the unfrequented beach, with grey and yellow pummice-stone, +and lustrous variegated obsidian. Tall cliffs, rising some two hundred +feet above the sea, frowned down upon the bay; and the Lieutenant +resolved to climb them, and obtain a good view of the eastern side +of the country. For this there was plenty of time, as but few of the +creatures they had come to seek were as yet to be seen, and the proper +time for the attack would be when they assembled for the afternoon +siesta in which the. amphibious mammalia always indulge. The Lieutenant, +however, quickly discovered that the animals frequenting this coast were +not, as he had been led to suppose, true seals, although they belonged +to the Phocidæ family, but morses or walruses, sometimes called +sea-cows. They resemble the seals in general form, but the canine teeth +of the upper jaw curved down-wards are much more largely developed. + +Following the coast line, which curved considerably, and to which they +gave the name of “ Walruses’ Bay,” the party soon reached the foot +of the cliff, and Petersen, Hope, and Kellet, took up their position +as sentinels on the little promontory, whilst Mrs Barnett, Hobson, and +Long, after promising not to lose sight of their comrades, and to be on +the look-out for their signal, proceeded to climb the cliff, the summit +of which they reached in about a quarter of an hour. From this position +they were able to survey the whole surrounding country; at their feet +lay the vast sea, stretching northwards as far as the eye .could +reach, its expanse so entirely unbroken by islands or icebergs that +the travellers came to the conclusion, that this portion of the Arctic +waters was navigable as far as Behring Straits, and that during the +summer season the North-West Passage to Cape Bathurst would, be open to +the Company’s ships. On the west, the aspect of the country explained +the presence of the volcanic débris on the shore; for at a distance +of about ten miles was a chain of granitic hills, of conical form, with +blunted crests, looking as if their summits had been cut off, and +with jagged tremulous outlines standing out against the sky. They bad +hitherto escaped the notice of our party, as they were concealed by the +cliffs on the Cape Bathurst side, and Jaspar Hobson examined them in +silence, but with great attention, before he proceeded to study the +eastern side, which consisted of a long strip of perfectly level +coast-line stretching away to Cape Bathurst. Any one provided with a +good field-glass would have been able to distinguish the fort of Good +Hope, and perhaps even the cloud of blue smoke, which was no doubt at +that very moment issuing from Mrs Joliffe’s kitchen chimney. + +The country behind them seemed to possess two entirely distinct +characters; to the east and south the cape was bounded by a vast plain, +many hundreds of square miles in extent, while behind the cliff, from +“Walruses’ Bay” to the mountains mentioned above, the country had +undergone terrible convulsions, showing clearly that it owed its origin +to volcanic eruptions. The Lieutenant was much struck with this marked +contrast, and Sergeant Long asked him whether he thought the mountains +on the western horizon were volcanoes. + +“Undoubtedly,” said Hobson; “all these pumice-stones and pebbles +have been discharged by them to this distance, and if we were to go two +or three miles farther, we should find ourselves treading upon nothing +but lava and ashes.” + +“Do you suppose,” inquired the Sergeant, “that all these volcanoes +are still active?” + +“That I cannot tell you yet.” + +“But there is no smoke issuing from any of them,” added the +Sergeant. + +“That proves nothing; your pipe is not always in your mouth, and it is +just the same with volcanoes, they are not always smoking.” + +“I see,” said the Sergeant; “but it is a great puzzle to me how +volcanoes can exist at all. on Polar continents.” + +“Well, there are not many of them !” said Mrs Barnett. + +“No, madam,” replied Jaspar, “but they are not so very rare +either; they are to be found in Jan Mayen’s Land, the Aleutian Isles, +Kamtchatka, Russian America, and Iceland, as well as in the Antarctic +circle, in Tierra del Fuego, and Australasia. They are the chimneys of +the great furnace in the centre of the earth, where Nature makes her +chemical experiments, and it appears to me that the Creator of all +things has taken care to place these safety-valves wherever they were +most needed.” + +“I suppose so,” replied the Sergeant; “and yet it does seem very +strange to find them in this icy climate.” + +“Why should they not be here as well as anywhere else, Sergeant? I +should say that ventilation holes are likely to be more numerous at the +Poles than at the Equator !” + +“Why so?” asked the Sergeant in much surprise. + +“Because, if these safety-valves are forced open by the pressure +of subterranean gases, it will most likely be at the spots where the +surface of the earth is thinest, and as the globe is flattened at the +poles, it would appear natural that-but Kellet is making signs to us,” +added the Lieutenant, breaking off abruptly; “will you join us, Mrs +Barnett?” + +“No, thank you. I will stay here until we return to the fort. I +don’t care to watch the walrus slaughtered!” + +“Very well,” replied Hobson, “only don’t forget to join us in an +hour’s time, meanwhile you can enjoy the view.” + +The beach was soon reached, and some hundred walrus had collected, +either waddling about on their clumsy webbed feet, or sleeping in family +groups. Some few of the larger males-creatures nearly four feet long, +clothed with very short reddish fur-kept guard over the herd. + +Great caution was required in approaching these formidable looking +animals, and the hunters took advantage of every bit of cover afforded +by rocks and inequalities of the ground, so as to get within easy range +of them and cut off their retreat to the sea. + +On land these creatures are clumsy and awkward, moving in jerks or with +creeping motions like huge caterpillars, but in water -their native +element—they are nimble and even graceful; indeed their strength is so +great, that they have been known to overturn the whalers in pursuit of +them. + +As the hunters drew near the sentinels took alarm, and raising their +heads looked searchingly around them; but before they could warn their +companions of danger, Hobson and Kellet rushed upon them from one side, +the Sergeant, Petersen, and Hope from the other, and after lodging a +ball in each of their bodies, despatched them with their spears, whilst +the rest of the herd plunged into the sea. + +The victory was an easy one; the five victims were very large and their +tusks, though slightly rough, of the best quality. They were chiefly +valuable, however, on account of the oil; of which-being in excellent +condition-they would yield a large quantity. The bodies were packed in +the sledges, and proved no light weight for the dogs. + +It was now one o’clock, and Mrs Barnett having joined them, the party +set out on foot-the sledges being full-to return to the fort. There were +but ten miles to be traversed, but ten miles in a straight line is a +weary journey, proving the truth of the adage “It’s a long lane that +has no turning.” They beguiled the tediousness of the way by chatting +pleasantly, and Mrs Barnett was ready to join in the conversation, or to +listen with interest to the accounts the worthy soldiers gave of former +adventures; but in spite of the brave struggle against ennui they +advanced but slowly, and the poor dogs found it hard work to drag the +heavily-laden sledges over the rough ground. Had it been covered with +frozen snow the distance would have been accomplished in a couple of +hours. + +The merciful Lieutenant often ordered a halt to give the teams +breathing-time, and the Sergeant remarked that it would be much more +convenient for the inhabitants of the fort, if the morses would settle a +little nearer Cape Bathurst. + +“They could not find a suitable spot,” replied the Lieutenant, with +a melancholy shake of the head. + +“Why not?” inquired Mrs Barnett with some surprise. + +“Because they only congregate where the slope of the beach is gradual +enough to allow of their creeping up easily from the sea. Now Cape +Bathurst rises abruptly, like a perpendicular wall, from water three +hundred fathoms deep. It is probable that ages ago portion of the +continent was rent away in some violent volcanic convulsion, and flung +into the Arctic Ocean. Hence the absence of morses on the beach of our +cape.” + +CHAPTER XVI. TWO SHOTS. The first half of September passed rapidly away. +Had Fort Hope been situated at the Pole itself, that is to say, twenty +degrees farther north, the polar night would have set in on the 21st of +that month But under the seventieth parallel the sun would be visible +above the horizon for another month. Nevertheless, the temperature was +already decidedly colder, the thermometer fell during the night to 31° +Fahrenheit; and thin coatings of ice appeared here and there, to be +dissolved again in the day-time. + +But the settlers were able to await the coming of winter without alarm; +they had a more than sufficient store of provisions, their supply of +dried venison had largely increased, another score of morses had been +killed, the tame rein-deer were warmly and comfortably housed, and +a huge wooden shed behind the house was filled with fuel. In short, +everything was prepared for the Polar night. + +And now all the wants of the inhabitants of the fort being provided +for, it was time to think of the interests of the Company. The Arctic +creatures had now assumed their winter furs, and were therefore of the +greatest value, and Hobson organised shooting parties for the remainder +of the fine weather, intending to set traps when the snow should prevent +further excursions. + +They would have plenty to do to satisfy the requirements of the Company, +for so far north it was of no use to depend on the Indians, who are +generally the purveyors of the factories. + +The first expedition was to the haunt of a family of beavers, long since +noted by the watchful Lieutenant, on a tributary of the stream already +referred to. It is true, the fur of the beaver is not now as valuable as +when it was used for hats, and fetched £16 per kilogramme (rather +more than 2 lb.); but it still commands a high price as the animal is +becoming very scarce, in consequence of the reckless way in which it has +been hunted. + +When the party reached their destination, the Lieutenant called Mrs +Barnett’s attention to the great ingenuity displayed by beavers in the +construction of their submarine city. There were some hundred animals in +the little colony now to be invaded, and they lived together in pairs in +the “holes” or “vaults” they had hollowed out near the stream. +They had already commenced their preparations for the winter, and were +hard at work constructing their dams and laying up their piles of wood. +A dam of admirable structure had already been built across the stream, +which was deep and rapid enough not to freeze far below the surface, +even in the severest weather. This dam, which was convex towards the +current, consisted of a collection of upright stakes interlaced with +branches and roots, the whole being cemented together and rendered +watertight with the clayey mud of the river, previously pounded by the +animals’ feet. The beavers use their tails-which are large and flat, +with scales instead of hair at the root-for plastering over their +buildings and beating the clay into shape. + +“The object of this dam,” said the Lieutenant to Mrs Barnett, “is +to secure to the beavers a sufficient depth of water at all seasons of +the year, and to enable the engineers of the tribe to build the round +huts called houses or lodges, the tops of which you can just see. They +are extremely solid structures, and the walls made of stick, clay, +roots, &c., are two feet thick., They can only be entered from below +the water, and their owners have therefore to dive when they go home-an +admirable arrangement for their protection. Each lodge contains two +stories; in the lower the winter stock of branches, bark, and roots, +is laid up, and the upper is the residence of the householder and his +family.” + +“There is, however, not a beaver in sight,” said Mrs Barnett; “is +this a deserted village?” + +“Oh no,” replied the Lieutenant, “the inhabitants are now all +asleep and resting; they only work in the night, and we mean to surprise +them in their holes.” + +This was, in fact, easily done, and in an hour’s time about a hundred +of the ill-fated rodents had been captured, twenty of which were of very +great value, their fur being black, and therefore especially esteemed. +That of the others was also long, glossy, and silky, but of a reddish +hue mixed with chestnut brown. Beneath the long fur, the beavers have a +second coat of close short hair of a greyish-white colour. + +The hunters returned to the fort much delighted with the result of +their expedition. The beavers’ skins were warehoused and labelled as +“parchments” or “young beavers,” according to their value. + +Excursions of a similar kind were carried on throughout the month of +September, and during the first half of October, with equally happy +results. + +A few badgers were taken, the skin being used as an ornament for the +collars of draught horses, and the hair for making brushes of every +variety. These carnivorous creatures belong to the bear family, and +the specimens obtained by Hobson were of the genus peculiar to North +America, sometimes called the Taxel badger. + +Another animal of the rodent family, nearly as industrious as the +beaver, largely contributed to the stores of the Company. This was the +musk-rat or musquash. Its head and body are about a foot long and its +tail ten inches. Its fur is in considerable demand. These creatures, +like the rest of their family, multiply with extreme rapidity, and a +great number were easily unearthed. + +In the pursuit of lynxes and wolverines or gluttons, fire-arms had to be +used. The lynx has all the suppleness and agility of the feline tribe +to which it belongs, and is formidable even to the rein-deer; Marbre and +Sabine were, however, well up to their work, and succeeded in killing +more than sixty of them. A few wolverines or gluttons were also +despatched, their fur is reddish-brown, and that of the lynx, light-red +with black spots; both are of considerable value. + +Very few ermines or stoats were seen, and Jaspar Hobson ordered his men +to spare any which happened to cross their path until the winter, when +they should have assumed their beautiful snow-white coats with the +one black spot at the tip of the tail. At present the upper fur +was reddish-brown and the under yellowish white, so that, as Sabine +expressed it, it was desirable to let them “ ripen,” or, in other +words,-to wait for the cold to bleach them. + +Their cousins, the polecats, however, which emit so disagreeable an +odour, fell victims in great numbers to the hunters, who either tracked +them to their homes in hollow trees, or shot them as they glided through +the branches. + +Martens, properly so-called, were hunted with great zeal. Their fur is +in considerable demand, although not so valuable as that of the sable, +which becomes a dark lustrous brown in the winter. The latter did not, +however, come in the way of our hunters, as it only frequents the north +of Europe and Asia as far as Kamtchatka, and is chiefly hunted by the +inhabitants of Siberia. They had to be content with the polecats and +pine-martens, called “ Canada- martens,” which frequent the shores +of the Arctic Ocean. + +All the weasels and martens are very difficult to catch; they wriggle +their long supple bodies through the smallest apertures with great ease, +and thus elude their pursuers. In the winter, however, they are easily +taken in traps, and Marbre and Sabine looked forward to make up for lost +time then, when, said they, “there shall be plenty of their furs in +the Company’s stores.” + +We have now only to mention the Arctic or blue and silver foxes, to +complete the list of animals which swelled the profits of the Hudson’s +Bay Company. + +The furs of these foxes are esteemed in the Russian and English markets +above all others, and that of the blue fox is the most valuable of all. +This pretty creature has a black muzzle, and the fur is not as one would +suppose blue, but whitish-brown; its great price-six times that of any +other kind-arises from its superior softness, thickness, and length. A +cloak belonging to the Emperor of Russia, composed entirely of fur from +the neck of the blue fox (the fur from the neck is considered better +than that from any other part), was shown at the London Exhibition of +1851, and valued at £3400 sterling. + +Several of these foxes were sighted at Cape Bathurst, but all escaped +the hunters; whilst only about a dozen silver foxes fell into their +hands. The fur of the latter-of a lustrous black dotted with white-is +much sought after in England and Russia, although it does not command so +high a price as that of the foxes mentioned above. + +One of the silver foxes captured was a splendid creature, with a +coal-black fur tipped with white at the extreme end of the tail, and +with a dash of the some on the forehead. The circumstances attending its +death deserve relation in detail, as they proved that Hobson was right +in the precautions he had taken + +On the morning of the 24th September, two sledges conveyed Mrs Barnett, +the Lieutenant, Sergeant Long. Marbre, and Sabine, to Walruses’ Bay. +Some traces of foxes had been noticed the evening before, amongst some +rocks clothed with scanty herbage and the direction taken by the animals +was very clearly indicated. The hunters followed up the trail of a large +animal, and were rewarded by bringing down a very fine silver fox. + +Several other animals of the same species were sighted, and the hunters +divided into two parties-Marbre and Sabine going after one foe, and +Mrs Barnett, Hobson, and the Sergeant, trying to cut off the retreat of +another fine animal hiding behind some rocks. + +Great caution and some artifice was necessary to deal with this crafty +animal, which took care not to expose itself to a shot. The pursuit +lasted for half-an-hour without success; but at last the poor creature, +with the sea on one side and its three enemies on the other, had +recourse in its desperation to a flying leap, thinking thus to escape +with its life. But Hobson was too quick for it; and as it bounded by +like a flash of lightning, it was struck by a shot, and to every one’s +surprise, the report of the Lieutenant’s gun was succeeded by that of +another, and a second ball entered the body of the fox, which fell to +the ground mortally wounded. + +“Hurrah! hurrah !” cried Hobson, “it is mine!” + +“And mine!” said another voice, and a stranger stept forward and +placed his foot upon the fox just as the Lieutenant was about to raise +it. + +Hobson drew back in astonishment. He thought the second ball had been +fired by the Sergeant, and found himself face to face with a stranger +whose gun was still smoking. + +The rivals gazed at each other in silence. + +The rest of the party now approached, and the stranger was quickly +joined by twelve comrades, four of whom were like himself “ Canadian +travellers,” and eight Chippeway Indians. + +The leader was a tall man-a fine specimen of his class-those Canadian +trappers described in the romances of Washington Irving, whose +competition Hobson had dreaded with such good reason. He wore the +traditional costume ascribed to his fellow-hunters by the great American +writer; a blanket loosely arranged about his person, a striped cotton +shirt, wide cloth trousers, leather gaiters, deerskin mocassins, and a +sash of checked woollen stuff round the waist, from which were suspended +his knife, tobacco-pouch, pipe, and a few useful tools. + +Hobson was right. The man before him was a Frenchman, or at least a +descendant of the French Canadians, perhaps an agent of the American +Company come to act as a spy on the settlers in the fort. The other four +Canadians wore a costume resembling that of their leader, but of coarser +materials. + +The Frenchman bowed politely to Mrs Barnett, and the Lieutenant was the +first to break the silence, during which he had not removed his eyes +from his rival’s face. + +“This fox is mine, sir,” he said quietly. + +“It is if you killed it !” replied the other in good English, but +with a slightly foreign accent. + +“Excuse me, sir,” replied Hobson rather sharply, “it is mine in +any case.” + +The stranger smiled. scornfully at this lofty reply, so exactly what +be expected from an agent of the Hudson’s Bay Company, which claims +supremacy over all the northern districts, from the Atlantic to the +Pacific. + +“Do you mean to say,” he said at last, gracefully toying with his +gun, “that you consider the Hudson’s Bay Company mistress of the +whole of North America?” + +“Of course I do,” said Hobson; “and if, as I imagine, you belong +to an American company— + +“To the St Louis Fur Company,” replied the stranger with a bow. + +“I think,” added the Lieutenant, “that you will find it difficult +to show the grants entitling you to any privileges here.” + +“Grants! privileges !” cried the Canadian scornfully, “old world +terms which are out of place in America !” + +“You are not now on American but on English ground,” replied the +Lieutenant proudly. + +“This is no time for such a discussion,” said the hunter rather +warmly. “We all know the old claims made by the English in general, +and the Hudson’s Bay Company in particular, to these hunting grounds; +but I expect coming events will soon alter this state of things, and +America will be America from the Straits of Magellan to the North Pole +!” + +“I do not agree with you,” replied Hobson dryly. + +“Well, sir, however that may be,” said the Canadian, “let us +suffer this international question to remain in abeyance for the +present. Whatever rights the Company may arrogate to itself, it is very +clear that in the extreme north of the continent, and especially on the +coast, the territory belongs to whoever occupies it. You have founded a +factory on Cape Bathurst, therefore we will respect your domain, and +you on your side will avoid ours, when the St Louis fur-traders have +established their projected fort at another point on the northern shore +of America.” + +The Lieutenant frowned at this speech, for he well knew what +complications would arise in the future when the Hudson’s Bay Company +would be compelled to struggle for supremacy with powerful rivals, and +that quarrelling and even bloodshed would ensue; he could not, however, +but acknowledge that this was not the time to begin the discussion, and +he was not sorry when the hunter, whose manners, to tell the truth, were +very polite, placed the dispute on another footing. + +“As for this present matter,” said the Canadian, “it is of minor +importance, and we must settle it according to the rules of the +chase. Our guns are of different calibre, and our balls can be easily +distinguished; let the fox belong to whichever of us really killed +it.” + +The proposition was a fair one, and the body of the victim was examined +accordingly. One ball had entered at the side, the other at the heart; +and the latter was from the gun of the Canadian. + +“The fox is your property, sir,” said Jaspar Hobson, vainly +endeavouring to conceal his chagrin at seeing this valuable spoil fall +into the enemy’s hands. + +The Canadian took it, but instead of throwing it over his shoulder and +carrying it off, he turned to Mrs Barnett, and said “ Ladies are +fond of beautiful furs, and although, perhaps, if they knew better what +dangers and difficulties have to be surmounted in order to obtain them, +they might not care so much about them, they are not likely to refuse +to wear them on that account, and I hope, madam, you will favour me by +accepting this one in remembrance of our meeting.” + +Mrs Barnett hesitated for a moment, but the gift was offered with +so much courtesy and kindliness of manner, that it would have seemed +churlish to refuse, and she therefore accepted it with many thanks. + +This little ceremony over, the stranger again bowed politely, and, +followed by his comrades, quickly disappeared behind the rocks, whilst +the Lieutenant and his party returned to Fort Good Hope. Hobson was very +silent and thoughtful all the way; for he could not but feel that the +existence of a rival company would greatly compromise the success of his +undertaking, and lead to many future difficulties. + +CHAPTER XVII. THE APPROACH OF WINTER. It was the 21st of September. The +sun was then passing through the autumnal equinox, that is to say, the +day and night were of equal length all over the world. These successive +alternations of light and darkness were hailed with delight by the +inhabitants of the fort. It is easier to sleep in the absence of the +sun, and darkness refreshes and strengthens the eyes, weary with the +unchanging brightness of several months of daylight. + +We know that during the equinox the tides are generally at their +greatest height; we have high water or flood, for the sun and moon +being in conjunction, their double influence is brought to bear upon the +waters. It was, therefore, necessary to note carefully the approaching +tide at Cape Bathurst. Jaspar Hobson had made bench marks some days +before, so as to estimate exactly the amount of vertical displacement of +the waters between high and low tide; he found, however, that in spite +of all the reports of previous observers, the combined solar and lunar +influence was hardly felt in this part of the Arctic Ocean. There +was scarcely any tide at all, and the statements of navigators on the +subject were contradicted. + +“There is certainly something unnatural here !” said Lieutenant +Hobson to himself. + +He did not in fact know what to think, but other cares soon occupied +his mind, and he did not long endeavour to get to the rights of this +singular peculiarity. + +On the 29th September the state of the atmosphere changed considerably. +The thermometer fell to 41° Fahrenheit, and the sky became covered with +clouds which were soon converted into heavy rain. The bad season was +approaching. + +Before the ground should be covered with snow, Mrs Joliffe was busy +sowing the seeds of Cochlearia (scurvy grass) and sorrel, in the hope +that as they were very hardy, and would be well protected from the +rigour of the winter by the snow itself, they would come up in the +spring. Her garden, consisting of several acres hidden behind the cliff +of the cape, had been prepared beforehand, and it was sown during the +last days of September. + +Hobson made his companions assume their winter garments before the +great cold set in, and all were soon suitably clothed in the linen under +vests, deerskin cloaks, sealskin pantaloons, fur bonnets, and waterproof +boots with which they were provided. We may also say that the rooms were +suitably dressed; the wooden walls were hung with skins, in order to +prevent the formation upon them of coats of ice in sudden falls of +temperature. About this time, Rae set up his condensers for collecting +the vapour suspended in the air, which were to be emptied twice a week. +The heat of the stove was regulated according to the variations of the +external temperature, so as to keep the thermometer of the rooms at 50° +Fahrenheit. The house would soon be covered with thick snow, which would +prevent any waste of the internal warmth, and by this combination of +natural and artificial protections they hoped to be able successfully to +contend with their two most formidable enemies, cold and damp. + +On the 2nd October the thermometer fell still lower, and the first snow +storm came on; there was but little wind, and there were therefore none +of those violent whirlpools of snow called drifts, but a vast white +carpet of uniform thickness soon clothed the cape, the enceinte of fort, +and the coast. The waters of the lake and sea, not yet petrified by +the icy hand of winter, were of a dull, gloomy, greyish hue, and on the +northern horizon the first icebergs stood out against the misty sky. The +blockade had not yet commenced, but nature was collecting her materials, +soon to be cemented by the cold into an impenetrable barrier. + +The “ young ice “ was rapidly forming on the liquid surfaces of sea +and lake. The lagoon was the first to freeze over; large whitish-grey +patches appeared here and there, signs of a hard frost setting in, +favoured by the calmness of the atmosphere. and after a night during +which the thermometer had remained at 15° Fahrenheit, the surface +of the lake was smooth and firm enough to satisfy the most fastidious +skaters of the Serpentine. On the verge of the horizon, the sky assumed +that peculiar appearance which whalers call ice-blink, and which is the +result of the glare of light reflected obliquely from the surface of +the ice against the opposite atmosphere. Vast tracts of the ocean became +gradually solidified, the ice-fields, formed by the accumulation of +icicles, became welded to the coast, presenting a surface broken and +distorted by the action of the waves, and contrasting strongly with the +smooth mirror of the lake. Here and there floated these long pieces, +scarcely cemented together at the edges, known as “ drift ice,” and +the “ hummocks,” or protuberances caused by the squeezing of one +piece against another, were also of frequent occurrence. + +In a few days the aspect of Cape Bathurst and the surrounding districts +was completely changed. Mrs Barnett’s delight and enthusiasm knew no +bounds; everything was new to her, and she would have thought no fatigue +or suffering too great to be endured for the sake of witnessing such a +spectacle. She could imagine nothing more sublime than this invasion of +winter with all its mighty forces, this conquest of the northern regions +by the cold. All trace of the distinctive features of the country had +disappeared; the land was metamorphosed, a new country was springing +into being before her admiring eyes, a country gifted with a grand and +touching beauty. Details were lost, only the large outlines were given, +scarcely marked out against the misty sky. One transformation scene +followed another with magic rapidity. The ocean, which but lately lifted +up its mighty waves, was hushed and still; the verdant soil of various +hues was replaced by a carpet of dazzling whiteness; the woods of trees +of different kinds were converted into groups of gaunt skeletons draped +in hoar-frost; the radiant orb of day had become a pale disc, languidly +running its allotted course in the thick fog, and visible but for a few +hours a day, whilst the sea horizon, no longer clearly cut against the +sky, was hidden by an endless chain of ice-bergs, broken into countless +rugged forms, and building up that impenetrable ice-wall, which Nature +has set up between the Pole and the bold explorers who endeavour to +reach it. + +We can well understand to how many discussions and conversations the +altered appearance of the country gave rise. Thomas Black was the only +one who remained indifferent to the sublime beauty of the scene. But +what could one expect of an astronomer so wrapped up in his one idea, +that he might be said to be present in the little colony in the body, +but absent in spirit? He lived in the contemplation of the heavenly +bodies, passing from the examination of one constellation to that of +another, roving in imagination through the vast realms of space, peopled +by countless radiant orbs, and fuming with rage when fogs or clouds +hid the objects of his devotion from his sight. Hobson consoled him +by promising him fine cold nights admirably suited to astronomical +observations, when he could watch the beautiful Aurora Borealis, the +lunar halos, and other phenomena of Polar countries worthy even of his +admiration. + +The cold was not at this time too intense; there was no wind, and it +is the wind which makes the cold so sharp and biting. Hunting was +vigorously carried on for some days. The magazines became stocked with +new furs, and fresh stores of provisions were laid up. Partridges and +ptarmigans on their way to the south passed over the fort in great +numbers, and supplied fresh and wholesome meat. Polar or Arctic hares +were plentiful, and had already assumed their white winter robes. About +a hundred of these rodents formed a valuable addition to the reserves of +the colony. + +There were also large flocks of the whistling swan or hooper, one of the +finest species of North America. The hunters killed several couples of +them, handsome birds, four or five feet in entire length, with white +plumage, touched with copper colour on the head and upper part of neck. +They were on their way to a more hospitable zone, where they could find +the aquatic plants and insects they required for food, and they sped +through the air at a rapid pace, for it is as much their native element +as water. Trumpeter swans, with a cry like the shrill tone of a clarion, +which are about the same size as the hoopers, but have black feet and +beaks, also passed in great numbers, but neither Marbre nor Sabine were +fortunate enough to bring down any of them. However, they shouted out +“au revoir” in significant tones, for they knew that they would +return with the first breezes of spring and that they could then be +easily caught. Their skin, plumage, and down, are all of great value, +and they are therefore eagerly hunted. In some favourable years tens of +thousands of them have been exported, fetching half a guinea a piece. + +During these excursions, which only lasted for a few hours, and were +often interrupted by bad weather, packs of wolves were often met with. +There was no need to go far to find them, for, rendered bold by hunger, +they already ventured close to the factory. Their scent is very keen, +and they were attracted by the smell from the kitchen. During the +night they could be heard howling in a threatening manner. Although +not dangerous individually, these carnivorous beasts are formidable in +packs, and the hunters therefore took care to be well armed when they +went beyond the enceinte of the fort. + +The bears were still more aggressive. Not a day passed without several +of these animals being seen. At night they would come close up to the +enclosure, and sane were even wounded with shot, but got off, staining +the snow with their blood, so that up to October 10th not one had left +its warm and valuable fur in the hands of the hunters. Hobson would not +have them molested, rightly judging that with such formidable creatures +it was best to remain on the defensive, and it was not improbable that, +urged on by hunger, they might attack Fort Hope before very long. Then +the little colony could defend itself, and provision its stores at the +same time. + +For a few days the weather continued dry and cold, the surface of the +snow was firm and suitable for walking, so that a few excursions were +made without difficulty along the coast on the south of the fort. The +Lieutenant was anxious to ascertain if the agents of the St Louis Fur +Company had left the country. No traces were, however, found of their +return march, and it was therefore concluded that they had gone down to +some southern fort to pass the winter by another route. + +The few fine days were soon over, and in the first week of November the +wind veered round to the south, making the temperature warmer, it is +true, but also bringing heavy snow-storms. The ground was soon covered +with a soft cushion several feet thick, which had to be cleared away +round the house every day, whilst a lane was made through it to the +postern, the shed, and the stable of the dogs and rein-deer. Excursions +became more and more rare, and it was impossible to walk without +snow-shoes. + +When the snow has become hardened by frost, it easily sustains the +weight of a man; but when it is soft and yielding, and the unfortunate +pedestrian sinks into it up to his knees, the snow-shoes used by Indians +are invaluable. + +Lieutenant Hobson and his companions were quite accustomed to walk in +them, and could glide about over the snow as rapidly as skaters on ice; +Mrs Barnett had early practised wearing them, and was quite as expert in +their use as the rest of the party. The frozen lake as well as the coast +was scoured by these indefatigable explorers, who were even able to +advance several miles from the shore on the solid surface of the ocean +now covered with ice several feet thick. It was, however, very tiring +work, for the ice-fields were rugged and uneven, strewn with piled-up +ridges of ice and hummocks which had to be turned. Further out a chain +of icebergs, some five hundred feet high, barred their progress. These +mighty icebergs, broken into fantastic and picturesque forms, were a +truly magnificent spectacle. Here they looked like the whitened ruins of +a town with curtains battered in, and monuments and columns overthrown; +there like some volcanic land torn and convulsed by earthquakes and +eruptions; a confusion of glaciers and glittering ice-peaks with snowy +ramparts and buttresses, valleys, and crevasses, mountains and hillocks, +tossed and distorted like the famous Alps of Switzerland. A few +scattered birds, petrels, guillemots, and puffins, lingering behind +their fellows, still enlivened the vast solitude with their piercing +cries; huge white bears roamed about amongst the hummocks, their +dazzling coats scarcely distinguishable from the shining ice-truly there +was enough to interest and excite our adventurous lady traveller, and +even Madge, the faithful Madge, shared the enthusiasm of her mistress. +How far, how very far, were both from the tropic zones of India or +Australia! + +The frozen ocean was firm enough to have allowed of the passage of a +park of artillery, or the erection of a monument, and many were the +excursions on its surface until the sudden lowering of the temperature +rendered all exertion so exhausting that they had to be discontinued. +The pedestrians were out of breath after taking a few steps, and the +dazzling whiteness of the glittering snow could not be endured by +the naked eye; indeed, the reverberation or flickering glare of the +undulatory reflection of the light from the surface of the snow, has +been known to cause several cases of blindness amongst the Esquimaux. + +A singular phenomenon due to the refraction of rays of light was now +observed: distances, depths, and heights lost their true proportions, +five or six yards of ice looked like two, and many were the falls and +ludicrous results of this optical illusion. + +On October 14th the thermometer marked 3° Fahrenheit below zero, a +severe temperature to endure, especially when the north wind blows +strongly. The air seemed to be made of needles, and those who ventured +out of the house were in great danger of being frost-bitten, when death +or mortification would ensue if the suspended circulation of the blood +were not restored by immediate friction with snow. Garry, Belcher, Hope, +and other members of the little community were attacked by frost-bite, +but the parts affected being rubbed in time they escaped without serious +injury. + +It will readily be understood that all manual labour had now become +impossible. The days were extremely short, the sun was only above +the horizon for a few hours and the actual winter, implying entire +confinement within doors, was about to commence. The last Arctic birds +forsook the gloomy shores of the Polar Sea, only a few pairs of those +speckled quails remained which the Indians appropriately call “ winter +birds,” because they wait in the Arctic regions until the commencement +of the Polar night, but they too were soon to take their departure. + +Lieutenant Hobson, therefore, urged on the setting of the traps +and snares which were to remain in different parts of Cape Bathurst +throughout the winter. + +These traps consisted merely of rough joists supported on a square, +formed of three pieces of wood so balanced as to fall on the least +touch--in fact, the same sort of trap as that used for snaring birds +in fields on a large scale. The end of the horizontal piece of wood was +baited with venison, and every animal of a moderate height, a fox or a +marten, for instance, which touched it with its paw, could not fail +to be crushed. Such were the traps set in the winter over a space of +several miles by the famous hunters whose adventurous life has been so +poetically described by Cooper. Some thirty of these snares were set +round Fort Hope, and were to be visited at pretty frequent intervals. + +On the 12th November a new member was born to the little colony. Mrs +Mac-Nab was safely confined of a fine healthy boy, of whom the head +carpenter was extremely proud. Mrs Barnett stood god-mother to the +child, which received the name of Michael Hope. The ceremony of baptism +was performed with considerable solemnity, and a kind of fête was held +in honour of the little creature which had just come into the world +beyond the 70th degree N. Lat. + +A few days afterwards, on November .20th, the sun sunk below the horizon +not to appear again for two months. The Polar night had commenced! + +CHAPTER XVIII. THE POLAR NIGHT. The long night was ushered in by a +violent storm. The cold was perhaps a little less severe, but the +air was very damp, and, in spite of every precaution, the humidity +penetrated into the house, and the condensers, which were emptied every +morning, contained several pounds of ice. + +Outside drifts whirled past like waterspouts-the snow seemed no longer +to fall horizontally but vertically. The Lieutenant was obliged to +insist upon the door being kept shut, for had it been opened the +passages would immediately have become blocked up. The explorers were +literally prisoners. + +The window shutters were hermetically closed, and the lamps were kept +burning through the long hours of the sleepless night. + +But although darkness reigned without, the noise of the tempest replaced +the silence usually so complete in these high latitudes. The roaring of +the wind between the house and the cliff never ceased for a moment, the +house trembled to its foundations, and had it not been for the solidity +of its construction, must have succumbed to the violence of the +hurricane. Fortunately the accumulation of snow round the walls broke +the force of the squall, and Mac-Nabs only fear was for the chimneys, +which were liable to be blown over. However, they remained firm, +although they had constantly to be freed from the snow which blocked up +the openings. + +In the midst of the whistling of the wind, loud reports were heard, of +which Mrs Barnett could not conjecture the cause. It was the falling +of icebergs in the offing. The echoes caught up the sounds, which were +rolled along like the reverberations of thunder. The ground shook as the +ice-fields split open, crushed by the falling of these mighty mountains, +and none but those thoroughly inured to the horrors of these wild +rugged climates could witness these strange phenomena without a shudder. +Lieutenant Hobson and his companions were accustomed to all these +things, and Mrs Barnett and Madge were gradually becoming so, and were, +besides, not altogether unfamiliar with those terrible winds which move +at the rate of forty miles an hour, and overturn twenty-four pounders. +Here, however, the darkness and the snow aggravated the dread might of +the storm; that which was not crushed was buried and smothered, and, +probably twelve hours after the commencement of the tempest, house, +kennel, shed, and enceinte would have disappeared beneath a bed of snow +of uniform thickness. + +The time was not wasted during this long imprisonment. All these good +people agreed together perfectly, and neither ill-humour nor ennui +marred the contentment of the little party shut up in such a narrow +space. They were used to life under similar conditions at Forts +Enterprise and Reliance, and there was nothing to excite Mrs Barnett’s +surprise in their ready accommodation of themselves to circumstances. + +Part of the day was occupied with work, part with reading and games. +Garments had to be made and mended, arms to be kept bright and in good +repair, boots to be manufactured, and the daily journal to be issued in +which Lieutenant Hobson recorded the slightest events of this northern +wintering-the weather, the temperature, the direction of the wind, the +appearance of meteors so frequent in the Polar regions, &c., &c. Then +the house had to be kept in order, the rooms must be swept, and the +stores of furs must be visited every day to see if they were free from +damp; the fires and stoves, too, required constant superintendence, +and perpetual vigilance was necessary to prevent the accumulation of +particles of moisture in the corners. + +To each one was assigned a task, the duty of each one was laid down in +rules fixed up in the large room, so that without being overworked, the +occupants of the fort were never without something to do. Thomas Black +screwed and unscrewed his instruments, and looked over his astronomical +calculations, remaining almost always shut up in his cabin, fretting +and fuming at the storm which prevented him from making nocturnal +observations. The three married women had also plenty to see to : Mrs +Mac-Nab busied herself with her baby who got on wonderfully, whilst Mrs +Joliffe, assisted by Mrs Rae, and with the Corporal always at her heels, +presided in the kitchen. + +When work was done the entire party assembled in the large room, +spending the whole of Sunday together. Reading was the chief amusement. +The Bible and some books of travels were the whole library of the fort; +but they were all the good folks required. Mrs Barnett generally read +aloud, and her audience listened with delight. The Bible and accounts +of adventures received a fresh charm when read out in her clear earnest +voice; her gestures were so expressive that imaginary persons seemed +to live when she spoke of them, and all were glad when she took up the +book. She was, in fact, the life and soul of the little community, eager +alike to give and receive instruction; she combined the charm and grace +of a woman with the energy of a man, and she consequently became the +idol of the rough soldiers, who would have willingly laid down their +lives in her service. Mrs Barnett shared everything with her companions, +never holding herself aloof or remaining shut up in her cabin, but +working zealously amongst the others, drawing out the most reticent by +her intelligent questions and warm sympathy. Good humour and good health +prevailed throughout the little community, and neither bands nor tongues +were idle. + +The storm, however, showed no signs of abating. The party had now been +confined to the house for three days, and the snow-drifts were as wild +and furious as ever. Lieutenant Hobson began to get anxious. It was +becoming imperatively necessary to renew the air of the rooms, which +was too much charged with carbonic acid. The light of the lamps began to +pale in the unhealthy atmosphere, and the air-pumps would not act, the +pipes being choked up with ice; they were not, in fact, intended to +be used when the house was buried in snow. It was necessary to take +counsel; the Lieutenant and Sergeant Long put their heads together, and +it was decided on November 23d that, as the wind beat with rather less +violence on the front of the house, one of the windows at the end of the +passage on that side should be opened. + +This was no light matter. It was easy enough to open the window from +inside, but the shutter outside was encrusted over with thick lumps of +ice, and resisted every effort to move it. It had to be taken off its +hinges, and the hard mass of snow was then attacked with pickaxe and +shovel; it was at least ten feet thick, and it was not until a kind of +channel bad been scooped out that the outer air was admitted. + +Hobson, the Sergeant, several soldiers, and Mrs Barnett herself ventured +to creep through this tunnel or channel, but not without considerable +difficulty, for the wind rushed in with fearful fury. + +What a scene was presented by Cape Bathurst and the surrounding plain. +It was mid-day, and but a few faint twilight rays glimmered upon +the southern horizon. The cold was not so intense as one would have +supposed, and the thermometer marked only 15° Fahrenheit above zero; +but the snow-drifts whirled along with terrific force, and all would +inevitably have been thrown to the ground, had not the snow in which +they were standing up to their waists helped to sustain them against +the gusts of wind. Everything around them was white, the walls of the +enceinte, and the whole of the house even to the roof were completely +covered over, and nothing but a few blue wreaths of smoke would have +betrayed the existence of a human habitation to a stranger. + +Under the circumstances the “ promenade “ was soon over; but Mrs +Barnett bad made good use of her time, and would never forget the awful +beauty of the Polar regions in a snow-storm, a beauty upon which few +women had been privileged to look. + +A few moments sufficed to renew the atmosphere of the house, and all +unhealthy vapours were quickly dispersed by the introduction of a pure +and refreshing current of air. + +The Lieutenant and his companions hurried in, and the window was again +closed; but after that the snow before it was removed every day for the +sake of ventilation. + +The entire week passed in a similar manner; fortunately the rein-deer +and dogs had plenty of food, so that there was no need to visit them. +The eight days during which the occupants of the fort were imprisoned so +closely, could not fail to be somewhat irksome to strong men, soldiers +and hunters, accustomed to plenty of exercise in the open air; and we +must own that listening to reading aloud gradually lost its charm, and +even cribbage became uninteresting. The last thought at night was a hope +that the tempest might have ceased in the morning, a hope disappointed +every day. Fresh snow constantly accumulated upon the windows, the wind +roared, the icebergs burst with a crash like thunder, the smoke was +forced back into the rooms, and there were no signs of a diminution of +the fury of the storm. + +At last, however, on the 28th November the Aneroid barometer in the +large room gave notice of an approaching change in the state of the +atmosphere. It rose rapidly, whilst the thermometer outside fell almost +suddenly to less than four degrees below zero. These were symptoms which +could not be mistaken, and on the 29th November the silence all around +the fort told that the tempest had ceased. + +Every one was eager to get out, tine confinement had lasted long enough. +The door could not be opened, and all had to get through the window, and +clear away the fresh accumulation of snow; this time, however, it was no +soft mass they had to remove, but compact blocks of ice, which required +pick-axes to break them up. + +It took about half-an-hour to clear a passage, and then every one in the +fort, except Mrs Mac-Nab, who was not yet up, hastened into the interior +court, glad once more to be able to walk about. + +The cold was still intense, but the wind having gone down it was +possible to endure it, although great care was necessary to escape +serious consequences on leaving the heated rooms for the open air, +the difference between the temperature inside and outside being some +fifty-four degrees. + +It was eight o’clock in the morning. Myriads of brilliant +constellations studded the sky, and at the zenith shone the Pole star. +Although in both hemispheres there are in reality but 5000 fixed +stars visible to the naked eye, their number appeared to the observers +incalculable. Exclamations of admiration burst involuntarily from the +lips of the delighted astronomer as he gazed into the cloudless heavens, +once more undimmed by mists or vapours. Never had a more beautiful sky +been spread out before the eyes of an astronomer. + +Whilst Thomas Black was raving in ecstasy, dead to all terrestrial +matters, his companions had wandered as far as the enceinte. The snow +was as hard as a rock, And so slippery that there were a good many +tumbles, but no serious injuries. + +It is needless to state that the court of the fort was completely filled +up. The roof of the house alone appeared above the white mass, the +surface of which had been worn smooth by the action of the wind; of the +palisade nothing was visible but the top of the stakes, and the least +nimble of the wild animals they dreaded could easily have climbed over +them. But what was to be done? It was no use to think of clearing away a +mass of frozen snow ten feet thick, extending over so large an extent of +ground. All they could attempt would be to dig away the ice inside the +enceinte, so as to form a kind of moat, the counterscarp of which would +protect the palisade. But alas the winter was only beginning, and a +fresh tempest might at any time fill in the ditch a few hours. + +Whilst the Lieutenant was examining the works, which could no more +protect his fort than a single sunbeam could melt the solid layer of +snow,-Mrs Joliffe suddenly exclaimed: + +“And our dogs! our reindeer!” + +It was indeed time to think about the poor animals. The dog house and +stable being lower than the house were probably entirely covered, and +the supply of air had perhaps been completely cut off. Some hurried to +the dog-house, others to the reindeer stable, and all fears were quickly +dispelled. The wall of ice, which connected the northern corner of the +house with the cliff, had partly protected the two buildings, and the +snow round them was not more than four feet thick, so that the apertures +left in the walls had not been closed up. The animals were all well, and +when the door was opened, the dogs rushed out barking with delight. + +The cold was so intense, that after an hour’s walk every one began to +think of the glowing stove in the large room at home. There was nothing +left to be done outside, the traps buried beneath ten feet of snow could +not be visited, so all returned to the house, the window, was closed, +and the party sat down to the dinner awaiting them with sharpened +appetites. + +We can readily imagine that the conversation turned on the intensity +of the cold, which had so rapidly converted the soft snow into a solid +mass. It was no light matter, and might to a certain extent compromise +the safety of the little colony. + +“But, Lieutenant,” said Mrs Barnett, “can we not count upon a few +days’ thaw-will not all this snow be rapidly converted into water?” + +“Oh no, madam,” replied Hobson, “a thaw at this time of year +is not at all likely. Indeed I expect the thermometer will fall still +lower, and it is very much to be regretted that we were unable to remove +the snow when it was soft.” + +What, you think the temperature likely to become much colder?” + +“I do most certainly, madam, 4° below zero-what is that at this +latitude?” + +“What would it be if we were at the Pole itself?” + +“The Pole, madam, is probably not the coldest point of the globe, +for most navigators agree that the sea is there open. From certain +peculiarities of its geographical position it would appear that a +certain spot on the shores of North Georgia, 95° longitude and 78° +latitude, has the coldest mean temperature in the world: 2° below zero +all the year round. It is, therefore, called the ‘pole of cold.’ “ + +“But,” said Mrs Barnett, “we are more than 8° further south than +that famous point.” + +“Well, I don’t suppose we shall suffer as much at Cape Bathurst as +we might have done in North Georgia. I only tell you of the ‘pole of +cold,’ that you may not confound it with the Pole properly so-called +when the lowness of the temperature is discussed. Great cold has besides +been experienced on other points of the globe. The difference is, that +the low temperature is not there maintained.” + +“To what places do you allude?” inquired Mrs Barnett; “I assure +you I take the greatest interest in this matter of degrees of cold.” + +“As far as I can remember, madam,” replied the Lieutenant, Arctic +explorers state that at Melville Island the temperature fell to 61° +below zero, and at Port Felix to 65°.” + +“But Melville Island and Port Felix are some degrees farther north +latitude than Cape Bathurst, are they not?” + +“Yes, madam, but in a certain sense we may say that their latitude +proves nothing. A combination of different atmospheric conditions is +requisite to produce intense cold. Local and other causes largely modify +climate. If I remember rightly in 1845 . . . Sergeant Long, you were at +Fort Reliance at that date? + +“Yes, sir,” replied Long. + +“Well, was it not in January of that year that the cold was so +excessive?” + +“Yes it was, I remember only too well that the thermometer marked 70° +below zero.” + +“What!” exclaimed Mrs Barnett, “at Fort Reliance, on the Great +Slave Lake?” + +“Yes, madam,” replied the Lieutenant, “and that was at 65° north +latitude only, which is the same parallel as that of Christiania and St +Petersburg.” + +“Then we must be prepared for everything.” + +“Yes, indeed, we must when we winter in Arctic countries.” + +During the 29th and 30th November, the cold did not decrease, and it +was necessary to keep up huge fires to prevent the freezing in all the +corners of the house of the moisture in the atmosphere. Fortunately +there was plenty of fuel, and it was not spared. A mean temperature of +52° Fahrenheit was maintained indoors in spite of the intensity of the +cold without. + +Thomas Black was so anxious to take stellar observations, now that the +sky was so clear, that he braved the rigour of the outside temperature, +hoping to be able to examine some of the magnificent constellations +twinkling on the zenith. But he was compelled to desist-his instruments +“burnt” his hands! ”Burnt“ is the only word to express the +sensation produced by touching a metallic body subjected to the +influence of intense cold. Exactly similar results are produced by +the sudden introduction of heat into an animate body, and the sudden +withdrawal of the same from it, as the astronomer found to his cost when +he left the skin of his fingers on his instruments. He had to give up +taking observations. + +However, the heavens made him the best amends in their power by +displaying the most beautiful and indescribable phenomena of a lunar +halo and an Aurora Borealis. + +The lunar halo was a white corona with a pale red edge encircling the +moon. This luminous meteor was about forty-five degrees in diameter, and +was the result of the diffraction of the lunar rays through the small +prismatic ice-crystals floating in the atmosphere. The queen of the +night shone with renewed splendour and heightened beauty from the centre +of the luminous ring, the colour and consistency of which resembled the +milky transparent lunar rainbows which have been so often described by +astronomers. + +Fifteen hours later the heavens were lit up by a magnificent Aurora +Borealis, the arch of which extended over more than a hundred +geographical degrees. The vertex of this arch was situated in the +magnetic meridian, and, as is often the case, the rays darted by +the luminous meteor were of all the colours of the rainbow, red +predominating. Here and there. the stars seemed to be floating in blood. +Glowing lines of throbbing colour spread from the dark segment on the +horizon, some of them passing the zenith and quenching the light of the +moon in their electric waves, which oscillated and trembled as if swept +by a current of air. + +No description could give an adequate idea of the glory which flushed +the northern sky, converting it into a vast dome of fire, but after +the magnificent spectacle had been enjoyed for about half an hour, it +suddenly disappeared-not fading gradually away after concentration of +its rays, or a diminution of its splendour, but dying abruptly, as if an +invisible hand had cut off the supply of electricity which gave it life. + +It was time it was over, for the sake of Thomas Black, for in another +five minutes he would have been frozen where he stood ! + +CHAPTER XIX. A NEIGHBOURLY VISIT. On the 2nd December; the intensity of +the cold decreased. The phenomena of the lunar halo and Aurora Borealis +were symptoms which a meteorologist would have been at no loss to +interpret. They implied the existence of a certain quantity of watery +vapour in the atmosphere, and the barometer fell slightly, whilst the +thermometer rose to 15° above zero. + +Although this temperature would have seemed very cold to the inhabitants +of a temperate zone, it was easily endured by the colonists. The absence +of wind made a great difference, and Hobson having noticed that the +upper layers of snow were becoming softer, ordered his men to clear +it away from the outer approaches of the enceinte. Mac-Nab and his +subordinates set to work zealously, and completed their task in a few +days. The traps were now uncovered and re-set. A good many footprints +showed that there were plenty of furred animals about the cape, and as +they could not get any other food, it was probable that the bait in the +snares would soon attract them. In accordance with the advice of Marbre +the hunter, a reindeer trap was constructed in the Esquimaux style. A +trench was dug twelve feet deep, and of a uniform width of ten feet. A +see-saw plank, which would rebound when lowered, was laid across it. +A bait of herbs was placed at one end of the plank, and any animal +venturing to take them, was inevitably flung to the bottom of the pit, +and the plank immediately returning to its former position, would allow +of the trapping of another animal in the same manner. Once in, there was +no getting out. The only difficulty Marbre had to contend with in making +his trap, was the extreme hardness of the ground to be dug out, but both +he and the Lieutenant were not a little surprised at finding beneath +some five feet of earth and sand a bed of snow, as hard as a rock, which +appeared to be very thick. + +After closely examining the geological structure of the ground, Hobson +observed: + +“This part of the coast must have been subjected to intense cold for +a considerable length of time a great many years ago. Probably the +ice rests on a bed of granite, and the earth and sand upon it have +accumulated gradually.” + +“Well, sir, our trap won’t be any the worse for that, the reindeer +will find a slippery wall, which it will be impossible for them to +climb.” + +Marbre was right, as the event proved. + +On the 5th September, he and Sabine were on their way to the trench, +when they heard loud growls. They stood still and listened. + +“It’s no reindeer making that noise, “said Marbre, “I know well +enough what creature has fallen into our pit.” + +“A bear?” replied Sabine. + +“Yes,” said Marbre, whose eyes glistened with delight. + +“Well,” remarked Sabine, “we won’t grumble at that, bears’ +steaks are as good as reindeers’, and we get the fur in! Come +along.” + +The two hunters were armed. They quickly slipped balls into their +guns, which were already loaded with lead, and hurried to the trap. +The see-saw plank had swung back into its place, but the bait had +disappeared, having probably been dragged down, into the trench. The +growls became louder and fiercer, and looking down the hunters saw that +it was indeed a bear they had taken. A huge mass was huddled together +in one corner of the pit, looking in the gloom like a pile of white fur +with two glittering eyes. The sides of the trench had been ploughed up +by the creature’s sharp claws, and had they been made of earth instead +of ice, it would certainly have managed to scramble out, but it could +get no hold on the slippery surface, and it had only managed to enlarge +its prison, not to escape from it. + +Under the circumstances the capture was easy. Two balls carefully aimed +put an end to the bear’s life, and the next thing to do was to get it +out of the pit. The two hunters returned to the fort for reinforcements, +and ten of the soldiers, provided with ropes, returned with them. It was +not without considerable difficulty that the body was hauled up. It was +a huge creature, six feet long, weighing six hundred pounds, and must +have possessed immense strength. It belonged to the sub-order of white +bears, and had the flattened head, long neck, short and slightly +curved claws, narrow muzzle, and smooth white fur characteristic of the +species. The edible portions of this valuable animal were confided to +Mrs Joliffe, and by her carefully prepared for the table. + +The next week the traps were in full activity. Some twenty martens were +taken, in all the beauty of their winter clothing, but only two or three +foxes. These cunning creatures divined the snare laid for them, and +scratching up the ground near the trap, they often managed to run off +with the bait without being caught. This made Sabine beside himself +with rage "for,” he said, “such a subterfuge was unworthy of a +respectable fox.” + +About the 10th December, the wind having veered round to the south-west, +the snow again began to fall, but not in thick flakes, or in large +quantities. The wind being high, however, the cold was severely felt, +and it was necessary to settle in-doors again, and resume domestic +occupations. Hobson distributed lime lozenges and lime juice to every +one as a precaution against the scorbutic affections, which damp cold +produces. No symptoms of scurvy had fortunately as yet appeared amongst +the occupants of the fort, thanks to the sanitary precautions taken. + +The winter solstice was now approaching, when the darkness of the Polar +night would be most profound, as the sun would be at the lowest maximum +point below the horizon of the northern hemisphere. At midnight the +southern edges of the long white plains were touched with a faint +glimmer of twilight, that was all, and it would be impossible to imagine +anything more melancholy than the gloomy stillness and darkness of the +vast expanse. + +Hobson felt more secure from the attacks of wild beasts, now that +the approaches to the enceinte had been cleared of snow, which was a +fortunate circumstance, as ominous growlings were heard, the nature of +which no one could mistake. + +There was no fear of visits from Indian hunters or Canadians at this +time of year, but an incident occurred proving that these districts were +not altogether depopulated even in the winter, and which was quite an +episode in the long dreary dark months. Some human beings still lingered +on the coast hunting morses and camping under the snow. They belonged +to the race of Esquimaux, "or eaters of raw flesh,” which is scattered +over the continent of North America, from Baffin’s Bay to Behring +Strait, seldom, however, advancing farther south than the Great Slave +Lake. + +On the morning of the 14th December, or rather nine hours before midday, +Sergeant Long, on his return from an excursion along the coast, ended +his report to the Lieutenant by saying, that if his eyes had not +deceived him, a tribe of nomads were encamped about four miles from the +fort, near a little cape jutting out from the coast. + +“What do you suppose these nomads are?” inquired Hobson. + +“Either men or morses,” replied the Sergeant. “There’s no +medium!” + +The brave Sergeant would have been considerably surprised if any one had +told him that some naturalists admit the existence of the “ medium,” +the idea of which he scouted; and certain savants have with some humour +classed the Esquimaux as an “ intermediate species “ between roan +and the sea-cow. + +Lieutenant Hobson, Mrs Barnett, Madge, and a few others at once went +to ascertain the truth of the report. Well wrapt up, and on their guard +against a sudden chill, their feet cased in furred boots, and guns and +hatchets in their hands, they issued from the postern, and made their +way over the frozen snow along the coast, strewn with masses of ice. + +The moon, already in the last quarter, shed a few faint rays through the +mists which shrouded the ice-fields. After marching for about an hour, +the Lieutenant began to think that the Sergeant had been mistaken, and +that what he had seen were morses, who had returned to their native +element through the holes in the ice which they always keep open. + +But Long, pointing to a grey wreath of smoke curling out of a conical +protuberance on the ice-field some hundred steps off, contented himself +with observing quietly— + +“The morses are smoking, then !” + +As he spoke some living creatures came out of the but dragging +themselves along the snow. They were Esquimaux, but whether male or +female none but a native could have said, for their costumes were all +exactly alike. + +Indeed, without in the least sharing the opinion of the naturalist +quoted above, any one might have taken the rough shaggy figures for +seals or some other amphibious animals. There were six of them-four +full-grown, and two children. Although very short, they were +broad-chested and muscular. They had the flat noses, long eye-lashes, +large mouths, thick lips, long black coarse hair, and beardless chins of +their race. Their costume consisted of a round coat made of the skin of +the walrus, a hood, boots, trousers, and mittens of the same material. +They gazed at the Europeans in silence. + +“Does any one understand Esquimaux?” inquired the Lieutenant. + +No one was acquainted with that idiom, and every one started when a +voice immediately exclaimed in English, “Welcome! welcome !” + +It was an Esquimaux, and, as they learned later, a woman, who, +approaching Mrs Barnett, held out her hand. + +The lady, much surprised, replied in a few words, which the native +girl readily understood, and the whole family was invited to follow the +Europeans to the fort. + +The Esquimaux looked searchingly at the strangers, and after a few +moments’ hesitation they accompanied the Lieutenant, keeping close +together, however: + +Arrived at the enceinte, the native woman, seeing the house, of the +existence of which she had had no idea, exclaimed— + +“House! snow-house!” + +She asked if it were made of snow, which was a natural question enough, +for the house was all but hidden beneath the white mass which covered +the ground. She was made to understand that it was built of wood; she +then turned and said a few words to her companions, who made signs of +acquiescence, and they all passed through the postern, and were taken to +the large room in the chief building. + +They removed their hoods, and it became possible to distinguish sexes. +There were two men, about forty or fifty years old, with yellowish-red +complexions, sharp teeth, and projecting cheek-bones, which gave them +something of the appearance of carnivorous animals; two women, still +young whose matted hair was adorned with the teeth and claws of Polar +bears; and two children, about five or six years old, poor little +creatures with intelligent faces, who looked about them with wide +wondering eyes. + +“I believe the Esquimaux are always hungry,” said Hobson, “so I +don’t suppose our guests would object to a slice of venison.” + +In obedience to the Lieutenant’s order, Joliffe brought some +reindeer-venison, which the poor creatures devoured with greedy avidity; +but the young woman who had answered in English behaved with greater +refinement, and watched Mrs Barnett and the women of the fort without +once removing her eyes from them. Presently noticing the baby in Mrs +Mac-Nabs arms; she rose and ran up to it, speaking to it in a soft +voice, and caressing it tenderly. + +Indeed if not exactly superior, the young girl was certainly more +civilised than her companions, which was especially noticeable when, +being attacked by a slight fit of coughing, she put her hand before her +mouth in the manner enjoined by the first rules of civilised society. + +This significant gesture did not escape any one, and Mrs Barnett, who +chatted for some time with the Esquimaux woman, learned from her in a +few short sentences that she had been for a year in the service of the +Danish governor of Upper Navik, whose wife was English, and that she had +left Greenland to follow her family to the hunting grounds. The two men +were her brothers; the other woman was her sister-in-law, married to one +of the men, and mother of the two children. They were all returning +from Melbourne Island, on the eastern coast of English America, and were +making for Point Barrow, on the western coast of Russian America, the +home of their tribe, and- were considerably astonished to find a factory +established on Cape Bathurst. Indeed the two men shook their heads when +they spoke of it. Did they disapprove of the construction of a fort +at this particular point of the coast? Did they think the situation +ill-chosen? In spite of all his endeavours, Hobson could get no +satisfactory reply to these questions, or rather he could not understand +the answers he received. + +The name of the young girl was Kalumah, and she seemed to have taken +a great fancy to Mrs Barnett. But sociable as she was, she appeared to +feel no regret at having left the governor of Upper Navik, and to be +sincerely attached to her relations. + +After refreshing themselves with the reindeer-venison, and drinking +half-a-pint of rum, in which the children had their share, the Esquimaux +took leave of their hosts; but before saying goodbye, the young girl +invited Mrs Barnett to visit their snow-hut, and the lady promised to do +so the next day, weather permitting. + +The next day was fine, and accompanied by Madge, Lieutenant Hobson, and +a few soldiers, well armed in case any bears should be prowling about, +Mrs Barnett set out for “ Cape Esquimaux,” as they had named the +spot where the little colony had encamped. + +Kalumah hastened forward to meet her friend of yesterday, and pointed +to the but with an, air of pride. It was a large cone of snow, with an +opening in the summit, through which the smoke from the fire inside +made its way. These snow-houses, called igloos in the language of the +Esquimaux, are constructed with great rapidity, and are admirably suited +to the climate. In them their owners can endure a temperature 40° +below zero, without fires, and without suffering much. In the summer +the Esquimaux encamp in tents made of seal and reindeer skins, which are +called tupics. + +It was no easy matter to get into this hut. The only opening was a hole +close to the ground, and it was necessary to creep through a kind of +passage three or four feet long, which is about the thickness of the +walls of these snow-houses. But a traveller by profession, a laureate of +the Royal Society, could not hesitate, and Mrs Paulina Barnett did not +hesitate! Followed by Madge, she bravely entered the narrow tunnel in +imitation of her guide. Lieutenant Hobson and his men dispensed with +paying their respects inside. + +And Mrs Barnett soon discovered that the chief difficulty was not +getting into the but, but remaining in it when there. The room was +heated by a fire, on which the bones of morses were burning; and the air +was full of the smell of the fetid oil of a lamp, of greasy garments, +and the flesh of the amphibious animals which form the chief article of +an Esquimaux’s diet. It was suffocating and sickening! Madge could not +stand it, and hurried out at once, but Mrs Barnett, rather than hurt the +feelings of the young native, showed superhuman courage, and extended +her visit over five long minutes!-five centuries! The two children and +their mother were at home, but the men had gone to hunt morses four or +five miles from their camp. + +Once out of the hut, Mrs Barnett drew a long sigh of relief, and the +colour returned to her blanched cheeks. + +“Well, madam,” inquired the Lieutenant, “what do you think of +Esquimaux houses?” + +“The ventilation leaves something to be desired !” she replied +simply. + +The interesting native family remained encamped near Cape Esquimaux for +eight days. The men passed twelve hours out of every twenty-four hunting +morses. With a patience which none but sportsmen could understand, they +would watch for the amphibious animals near the holes through which +they come up to the surface of the ice-field to breathe. When the morse +appears, a rope with a running noose is flung round its body a little +below the head, and it is dragged on to the ice-field, often with +considerable difficulty, and killed with hatchets. It is really more +like fishing than hunting. It is considered a great treat to drink +the warm blood of the walrus, and the Esquimaux often indulge in it to +excess. + +Kalumah came to the fort every day in spite of the severity of the +weather. She was never tired of going through the different rooms, and +watching Mrs Joliffe at her cooking or sewing. She asked the English +name of everything, and talked for hours together with Mrs Barnett, if +the term “talking” can be applied to an exchange of words after +long deliberation on both sides. When Mrs Barnett read aloud, Kalumah +listened with great attention, although she probably understood nothing +of what she heard. + +The young native girl had a sweet voice, and sometimes sang some strange +melancholy rhythmical songs with a peculiar metre, and, if we may so +express it, a frosty ring about them, peculiarly characteristic of their +origin. + +Mrs Barnett had the patience to translate one of these Greenland sagas, +which was sung to a sad air, interspersed with long pauses, and filled +with strange intervals, which produced an indescribable effect. We give +an English rendering of Mrs Barnett’s translation, which may give a +faint idea of this strange hyperborean poetry. + +GREENLAND SONG Dark Is the sky, The sun sinks wearily; My trembling +heart, with sorrow filled, Aches drearily ! My sweet child at my songs +is smiling still, While at his tender heart the icicles lie chill. Child +of my dreams I Thy love doth cheer me; The cruel biting frost I brave +But to be near thee! Ah me, Ah me, could these hot tears of mine But +melt the icicles around that heart of thine! Could we once more Meet +heart to heart, Thy little hands close clasped in mine, No more to part. +Then on thy chill heart rays from heaven above Should fall, and softly +melt it with the warmth of love! On the 20th December the Esquimaux +family came to take leave of the occupants of the fort. Kalumah was +sorry to part with Mrs Barnett, who would gladly have retained her in +her service, but the young native could not be persuaded to leave her +own people; she promised, however, to return to Fort Hope in the summer. + +Her farewell was touching. She presented Mrs Barnett with a copper +ring, and received in exchange a necklace of black beads, which +she immediately put on. Hobson gave the poor people a good stock of +provisions, which they packed in their sledge; and after a few words of +grateful acknowledgment from Kalumah, the whole party set out towards +the west, quickly disappearing in the thick fogs on the shore. + +CHAPTER XX. MERCURY FREEZES. A few days of dry calm weather favoured the +operations of the hunters, but they did not venture far from the fort; +the abundance of game rendered it unnecessary to do so, and Lieutenant +Hobson could justly congratulate himself on having chosen so favourable +a situation for the new settlement. A great number of furred animals of +all kinds were taken in the traps, and Sabine and Marbre killed a good +many Polar hares. Some twenty starving wolves were shot. Hunger rendered +the latter animals aggressive, and bands of them gathered about the +fort, filling the air with hoarse howls, and amongst the “ hummocks +“ on the ice-fields sometimes prowled huge bears, whose movements were +watched with great interest. + +On the 25th December all excursions had again to be given up. The wind +veered suddenly to the north, and the cold became exceedingly severe. +It was impossible to remain out of doors without being frost-bitten. The +Fahrenheit thermometer fell to 18° below zero, and the gale roared like +a volley of musketry. Hobson took care to provide the animals with food +enough to last several weeks. + +Christmas Day, the day of home-gatherings so dear to the heart of all +Englishmen, was kept with due solemnity. The colonists returned thanks +to God for preserving them through so many perils; and the workmen, +who had a holiday in honour of the day, afterwards assembled with their +masters and the ladies round a well-filled board, on which figured two +huge Christmas puddings. + +In the evening a huge bowl of punch flamed in the centre of the table; +the lamps were put out, and for a time the room was lighted only by +the livid flames of the spirit, the familiar objects assuming strange +fantastic forms. The spirits of the soldiers rose as they watched the +flickering illumination, and their excitement was not lessened after +imbibing some of the burning liquid. + +But now the flames began to pale; bluish tongues still fitfully licked +the plump sides of the national pudding for a few minutes, and then died +away. + +Strange to say, although the lamps had not been relit, the room did +not become dark on the extinction of the flames. A bright red light was +streaming through the window, which had passed unnoticed in the previous +illumination. + +The revellers started to their feet, and looked at each other in +astonishment. + +“A fire !” cried several. + +But unless the house itself were burning, there could not be a fire +anywhere near Cape Bathurst. + +The Lieutenant rushed to the window, and at once understood the cause of +the phenomenon. It was an eruption. + +Indeed, above the western cliffs beyond Walruses’ Bay the horizon +was on fire. The summits of the igneous hills, some miles from Cape +Bathurst, could not be seen; but the sheaf of flame shot up to a +considerable height, lighting up the whole country in a weird, unearthly +manner. + +“It is more beautiful than the Aurora Borealis!” exclaimed Mrs +Barnett. + +Thomas Black indignantly protested against this assertion. A terrestrial +phenomenon more beautiful than a meteor! But no one was disposed to +argue with him about it, for all hurried out, in spite of the bitter +gale and biting cold, to watch the glorious spectacle of the flashing +sheaf of flames standing out against the black background of the night +sky. + +Had not the mouths and ears of the party been cased in furs, they would +have been able to hear the rumbling noise of the eruption, and to tell +each other of the impressions made upon them by this magnificent sight; +but, as it was, they could neither speak nor hear. They might well be +content, however, with gazing upon such a glorious scene-a scene which +once looked upon could never be forgotten. The glowing sheets of +flames contrasted alike with the gloomy darkness of the heavens and the +dazzling whiteness of the far-stretching carpet of snow, and produced +effects of light and shade which no pen or pencil could adequately +portray. The throbbing reverberations spread beyond the zenith, +gradually quenching the light of all the stars. The white ground became +dashed with golden tints, the hummocks on the ice-field and the huge +icebergs in the background reflecting the glimmering colours like +so many glowing mirrors. The rays of light, striking on the edges or +surfaces of the ice, became bent and diffracted; the angles and varying +inclinations on which they fell fretting them into fringes of colour, +and reflecting them back with changed and heightened beauty. It was like +a fairy scene in which ice and snow combined to add éclat to a mêlee +of rays in which luminous waves rushed upon each other, breaking into +coloured ripples. + +But the excessive cold soon drove the admiring spectators back to their +warm dwelling, and many a nose paid dearly for the feast enjoyed by the +eyes. + +During the following days the cold became doubly severe. The mercurial +thermometer was of course no longer of any use for marking degrees, and +an alcohol thermometer had to be used. On the night of the 28th to the +29th December the column fell to 32° below zero. + +The stoves were piled up with fuel, but the temperature in the +house could not be maintained above 20° degrees. The bedrooms were +exceedingly cold, and ten feet from the stove, in the large room, its +heat could not be felt at all. The little baby had the warmest corner, +and its cradle was rocked in turn by those who came to the fire. Opening +doors or windows was strictly forbidden, as the vapour in the rooms +would immediately have been converted into snow, and in the passage the +breathing of the inmates already produced that result. Every now and +then dull reports were heard, which startled those unaccustomed to +living in such high latitudes. They were caused by the cracking of the +trunks of trees, of which the walls were composed under the influence of +the intense cold. The stock of rum and gin stowed away in the garret had +to be brought down into the sitting-room, as the alcohol was freezing +and sinking to the bottom of the bottles. The spruce-beer made from a +decoction of young fir-branchlets burst the barrels in which it was kept +as it froze, whilst all solid bodies resisted the introduction of +heat as if they were petrified. Wood burnt very slowly, and Hobson was +obliged to sacrifice some of the walrus-oil to quicken its combustion. +Fortunately the chimneys drew well, so that there was no disagreeable +smell inside, although for a long distance outside the air was +impregnated with the fetid odour of the smoke from Fort Hope, which a +casual observer might therefore have pronounced an unhealthy building. + +One symptom we must notice was the great thirst from which every one +suffered. To relieve it, different liquids had to be melted at the fire, +for it- would have been dangerous to eat ice. Another effect of the cold +was intense drowsiness, which Hobson earnestly entreated his companions +to resist. Some appeared unable to do so; but Mrs Barnett was invaluable +in setting an example of constant activity: always brave, she kept +herself awake, and encouraged others by her kindness, brightness, and +sympathy. Sometimes she read aloud accounts of travels, or sang some old +familiar English song, in the chorus of which all joined. These joyous +strains roused up the sleepers whether they would or no, and their +voices soon swelled the chorus. The long days of imprisonment passed +wearily by, and the Lieutenant, consulting the outside thermometer +through the windows, announced that the cold was still on the increase. +On the 31st December, the mercury was all frozen hard in the cistern of +the instrument, so that the temperature was 44° below freezing point. + +The next day, 1st January 1860, Lieutenant Hobson wished Mrs Barnett a +happy new year, and complimented her on the courage and good temper with +which she endured the miseries of this northern winter. The astronomer +was not forgotten in the universal interchange of good wishes amongst +the members of the little colony; but his only thought on entering +another year was, that it was the beginning of that in which the great +eclipse was to take place. Fortunately the general health still remained +good, and any symptoms of scurvy were promptly checked by the use of +lime-juice and lime-lozenges. + +It would not do, however, to rejoice too soon. The winter had still to +last three months. The sun would doubtless reappear above the horizon in +due time; but there was no reason to think that the cold had reached its +maximum intensity, especially as in most northern countries February is +the month during which the temperature falls lowest. However that might +be, there was no decrease in the severity of the weather during +the first days of the new year, and on the 8th January the alcohol +thermometer placed outside the window of the passage marked 66° below +zero. A few degrees more and the minimum temperature at Fort Reliance in +1835 would be reached! + +Jaspar Hobson grew more and more uneasy at the continued severity of the +cold. He began to fear that the furred animals would have to seek a less +rigorous climate further south, which would of course thwart all his +plans for hunting in the early spring. Moreover, he sometimes heard +subterranean rumblings, which were evidently connected with the volcanic +eruption. The western horizon still glowed with the reflection of the +burning lava, and it was evident that some great convulsion was going +on in the bowels of the earth. Might not the close vicinity of an active +volcano be dangerous to the new fort ? Such was the question which the +subterranean rumblings forced upon the mind of the Lieutenant, but he +kept his vague apprehensions to himself. + +Of course under these circumstances no one dreamt of leaving the house. +The animals were well provided for, and being accustomed to long fasts +in the winter, required no attention from their masters, so that there +really was no necessity for any exposure out of doors. It was difficult +enough to endure the inside temperature, even with the help of a +plentiful combustion of wood and oil; for, in spite of every precaution, +damp crept into the ill-ventilated rooms, and layers of ice, increasing +in thickness every day, were formed upon the beams. The condensers were +choked up, and one of them burst from the pressure of the ice. + +Lieutenant Hobson did not spare his fuel; he was, in fact, rather lavish +of it in his anxiety to raise the temperature, which, when the fires got +low-as of course sometimes happened-fell to 15° Fahrenheit. The men on +guard, who relieved each other every hour, had strict orders to keep up +the fires, and great was the dismay of the Lieutenant when Sergeant Long +said to him one day— + +“We shall be out of wood soon !” + +“Out of wood !” exclaimed Hobson. + +“I mean our stock is getting low, and we must lay in fresh stores +soon. Of course I know, though, that it will be at the risk of his life +that any one goes out in this cold !” + +“Yes,” replied Hobson. “It was a mistake not to build the wooden +shed close to the house, and to make no direct communication with it. I +see that now it is too late. I ought not to have forgotten that we +were going to winter beyond the seventieth parallel. But what’s done +can’t be undone. How long will the wood last?” + +“There is enough to feed the furnace and stove for another two or +three days,” replied the Sergeant. + +“Let us hope by that time that the severity of the cold may have +decreased, and that we may venture across the court of the fort without +danger.” + +“I doubt it, sir,” replied Long, shaking his head. “The atmosphere +is very clear, the wind is still in the north, and I shall not be +surprised if this temperature is maintained. for another fifteen +days-until the new moon, in fact.” + +“Well, my brave fellow,” said the Lieutenant, “we won’t die of +cold if we can help it, and the day we have to brave the outside air “ + +“We will brave it, sir,” said Long. + +Hobson pressed his subordinate’s hand, well knowing the poor +fellow’s devotion. + +We might fancy that Hobson and the Sergeant were exaggerating when they +alluded to fatal results from sudden exposure to the open air, but they +spoke from experience, gained from long residence in the rigorous Polar +regions. They had seen strong men fall fainting on the ice under similar +circumstances; their breath failed them, and they were taken up in a +state of suffocation. Incredible as such facts may appear, they have +been of frequent occurrence amongst those who have wintered in the +extreme north. In their journey along the shores of Hudson’s Bay in +1746, Moor and Smith saw many incidents of this kind,-some of their +companions were killed, struck down by the cold, and there can be no +doubt that sudden death may result from braving a temperature in which +mercury freezes. + +Such was the distressing state of things at Fort Hope, when a new danger +arose to aggravate the sufferings of the colonists. + +CHAPTER XXI. THE LARGE POLAR BEARS. The only one of the four windows +through which it was possible to look into the court of the fort was +that opening at the end of the entrance passage. The outside shutters +had not been closed; but before it could be seen through it had to +be washed with boiling water, as the panes were covered with a thick +coating of ice. This was done several times a day by the Lieutenant’s +orders, when the districts surrounding the fort were carefully examined, +and the state of the sky, and of the alcohol thermometer placed outside, +were accurately noted. + +On the 6th January, towards eleven o’clock in the morning, Kellet, +whose turn it was to look out, suddenly called the Sergeant, and +pointed to some moving masses indistinctly visible in the gloom. Long, +approaching the window observed quietly— + +“They are bears!” + +In fact half-a-dozen of these formidable animals had succeeded in +getting over the palisades, and, attracted by the smoke from the +chimneys, were advancing upon the house. + +On hearing of the approach of the bears, Hobson at once ordered +the window of the passage to be barricaded inside; it was the only +unprotected opening in the house, and when it was secured it appeared +impossible for the bears to effect an entrance. The window was, +therefore, quickly closed up with bars, which the carpenter Mac-Nab +wedged firmly in, leaving a narrow slit through which to watch the +movements of the unwelcome visitors. + +“Now,” observed the head carpenter, “these gentlemen can’t get +in without our permission, and we have time to hold a council of war.” + +“Well, Lieutenant,” exclaimed Mrs Barnett, “nothing has been +wanting to our northern winter! After the cold come the bears.” + +“Not after,” replied the Lieutenant, “but, which is a serious +matter, with the cold, and a cold ago intense that we cannot venture +outside! I really don’t know how we shall get rid .of these tiresome +brutes.” + +“I suppose they will soon get tired of prowling about,” said the +lady, “and return as they came.” + +Hobson shook his head as if he had his doubts. + +“You don’t know these animals, madam. They are famished with hunger, +and will not go until we make them!” + +“Are you anxious, then?” + +“Yes and no,” replied the Lieutenant. “I don’t think the bears +will get in; but neither do I see how we can get out, should it become +necessary for us to do so.” + +With these words Hobson turned to the window, and Mrs Barnett joined the +other women, who had gathered round the Sergeant, and were listening to +what he had to say about the bears. He spoke like a man well up in +his subject, for he had had many an encounter with these formidable +carnivorous creatures, which are often met with even towards the south, +where, however, they can be safely attacked, whilst here the siege would +be a regular blockade, for the cold would quite prevent any attempt at a +sortie. + +Throughout the whole day the movements of the bears were attentively +watched. Every now and then one of them would lay his great head against +the window-pane and an ominous growl was heard. + +The Lieutenant and the Sergeant took counsel together, and it was agreed +that if their enemies showed no sign of beating a retreat, they would +drill a few loopholes in the walls of the house, and fire at them. But +it was decided to put off this desperate measure for a day or two, as +it was desirable to avoid giving access to the outer air; the inside +temperature being already far too low. The walrus oil to be burnt was +frozen so hard that it had to be broken up with hatchets. + +The day passed without any incident. The bears went and came, prowling +round the house, but attempting no direct attack. Watch was kept all +night, and at four o’clock in the morning they seemed to have left the +court-at any rate, they were nowhere to be seen. + +But about seven o’clock Marbre went up to the loft to fetch some +provisions, and on his return announced that the bears were walking +about on the roof. + +Hobson, the Sergeant, Mac-Nab, and two or three soldiers seized their +arms, and rushed to the ladder in the passage, which. communicated with +the loft by a trap-door. The cold was, however, so intense in the loft +that the men could not hold the barrels of their guns, and their breath +froze as it left their lips and floated about them as snow. + +Marbre was right; the bears were all on the roof, and the sound of +their feet and their growls could be distinctly heard. Their great claws +caught in the laths of the roof beneath the ice, and there was some +danger that they might have sufficient strength to tear away the +woodwork. + +The Lieutenant and his men, becoming giddy and faint from the intense +cold, were soon obliged to go down, and Hobson announced the state of +affairs in as hopeful a tone as he could assume. + +“The bears,” he said, “are now upon the roof. We ourselves have +nothing to fear, as they can’t get into our rooms; but they may force +an entrance to the loft, and devour the furs stowed away there. Now +these furs belong to the Company, and it is our duty to preserve them +from injury I ask you then, my friends, to aid me in removing them to a +place of safety.” + +All eagerly volunteered, and relieving each other in parties of two or +three, for none could have supported the intense severity of the cold +for long at a time, they managed to carry all the furs into the large +room in about an hour. + +Whilst the work was proceeding, the bears continued their efforts to get +in, and tried to lift up the rafters of .the roof. In some places the +laths became broken by their weight, and poor Mac-Nab was in despair; he +had not reckoned upon such a contingency when he constructed the roof, +and expected to see it give way every moment. + +The day passed, however, without any change in the situation. The bears +did not get in; but a no less formidable enemy, the cold, gradually +penetrated into every room. The fires in the stoves burnt low; the fuel +in reserve was almost exhausted; and before twelve o’clock, the last +piece of wood would be burnt, and the genial warmth of the stove would +no longer cheer the unhappy colonists. + +Death would then await them-death in its most fearful form, from cold. +The poor creatures, huddled together round the stove, felt that their +own vital heat must soon become exhausted, but not a word of complaint +passed their lips. The women bore their sufferings with the greatest +heroism, and Mrs Mac-Nab pressed her baby convulsively to her ice-cold +breast. Some of the soldiers slept, or rather were wrapped in a heavy +torpor, which could scarcely be called sleep. + +At three o’clock in the morning Hobson consulted the thermometer +hanging in the large room, about ten feet from the stove. + +It marked 4° Fahrenheit below zero. + +The Lieutenant pressed his hand to his forehead, and looked mournfully +at his silent companions without a word. His half-condensed breath +shrouded his face in a white cloud, and he was standing rooted to the +spot when a hand was laid upon his shoulder. He started, and looked +round to see Mrs Barnett beside him. + +“Something must be done, Lieutenant Hobson !” exclaimed the +energetic woman; “we cannot die like this without an effort to save +ourselves !” + +“Yes,” replied the Lieutenant, feeling revived by the moral courage +of his companion--” yes, something must be done !” and he called +together Long, Mac-Nab, and Rae the blacksmith, as the bravest men in +his party. All, together with Mrs Barnett, hastened to the window, +and having washed the panes with boiling water, they consulted the +thermometer outside. + +“Seventy-two degrees !” cried Hobson. “My friends, two courses +only are open to us, we can risk our lives to get a fresh supply of +fuel, or we can burn the benches, beds, partition walls, and everything +in the house to feed our stoves for a few days longer. A desperate +alternative, for the cold may last for some time yet; there is no sign +of a change in the weather.” + +“Let us risk our lives to get fuel !” said Sergeant Long. + +All agreed that it would be the best course, and without another word +each one set to work to prepare for the emergency. + +The following were the precautions taken to save the lives of those who +were about to risk themselves for the sake of the general good :— + +The shed in which the wood was stored was about fifty steps on the left, +behind, the principal house. It was decided that one of the men should +try and run to the shed. He was to take one rope wound round his body, +and to carry another in his hand, one end of which was to be held by +one of his comrades. Once at the shed, he was to load one of the sledges +there with fuel, and tie one rope to the front, and the other to the +back of the vehicle, so that it could be dragged backwards and forwards +between the house and the shed without much danger. A tug violently +shaking one or the other cord would be the signal that the sledge was +filled with fuel at the shed, or unloaded at the house. + +A very clever plan, certainly; but two things might defeat it. The +door of the shed might be so blocked up with ice that it would be very +difficult to open it, or the bears might come down from the roof and +prowl about the court. Two risks to be run ! + +Long, Mac-Nab, and Rae, all three volunteered for the perilous service; +but the Sergeant reminded the other two that they were married, and +insisted upon being the first to venture. + +When the Lieutenant expressed a wish to go himself, Mrs Barnett said +earnestly, “You are our chief; you have no right to expose yourself. +Let Sergeant Long go.” + +Hobson could not but realise that his office imposed caution, and being +called upon to decide which of his companions should go, be chose the +Sergeant. Mrs Barnett pressed the brave man’s hand with ill-concealed +emotion; and the rest of the colonists, asleep or stupefied, knew +nothing of the attempt about to be made to save their lives. + +Two long ropes were got ready. The Sergeant wound one round his body +above the warm furs, worth some thousand pounds sterling, in which +he was encased, and tied the other to his belt, on which he hung a +tinder-box and a loaded revolver. Just before starting he swallowed down +half a glass of rum, as he said, “to insure a good load of wood.” + +Hobson, Rae, and Mac-Nab accompanied the brave fellow through the +kitchen, where the fire had just gone out, and into the passage. Rae +climbed up to the trap-door of the loft, and peeping through it, made +sure that the bears were still on the roof. The moment for action had +arrived. + +One door of the passage was open, and in spite of the thick furs in +which they were wrapped, all felt chilled to the very marrow of their +bones; and when the second door was pushed open, they recoiled for an +instant, panting for breath, whilst the moisture held in suspension in +the air of the passage covered the walls and the floor with fine snow. + +The weather outside was extremely dry, and the stars shone with +extraordinary brilliancy. Sergeant Long rushed out without a moment’s +hesitation, dragging the cord behind him, one end of which was held by +his companions; the outer door was pushed to, and Hobson, Mae-Nab, and +Rae went back to the passage and closed the second door, behind which +they waited. If Long did not return in a few minutes, they might +conclude that his enterprise had succeeded, and that, safe in the shed, +he was loading the first train with fuel. Ten minutes at the most ought +to suffice for this operation, if he had been able to get the door open. + +When the Sergeant was fairly off, Hobson and Mac-Nab walked together +towards the end of the passage. + +Meanwhile Rae had been watching the bears and the loft. It was so dark +that all hoped Long’s movements would escape the notice of the hungry +animals. + +Ten minutes elapsed, and the three watchers went back to the narrow +space between the two doors, waiting for the signal to be given to drag +in the sledge. + +Five minutes more. The cord remained motionless in their hands! Their +anxiety can be imagined. It was a quarter of an hour since the Sergeant +had started, plenty of time for all he had to do, and he had given no +signal. + +Hobson waited a few minutes longer, and then tightening his hold of the +end of the rope, he made a sign to his companions to pull with him. If +the load of wood were not quite ready, the Sergeant could easily stop it +from being dragged away. + +The rope was pulled vigorously. A heavy object seemed to slide along the +snow. In a few moments it reached the outer door. + +It was the body of the Sergeant, with the rope round his waist. Poor +Long had never reached the shed. He had fallen fainting to the ground, +and after twenty minutes’ exposure to such a temperature there was +little hope that he would revive. + +A cry of grief and despair burst from the lips of Mac-Nab and Rae. They +lifted their unhappy comrade from the ground, and carried him into the +passage; but as the Lieutenant was closing the outer door, something +pushed violently against it, and a horrible growl was heard. + +“Help!” cried Hobson. + +Mac-Nab and Rae rushed to their officer’s assistance; but Mrs Barnett +had been beforehand with them and was struggling with all her strength +to help Hobson to close the door. In vain; the monstrous brute, throwing +the whole weight of its body against it, would force its way into the +passage in another moment. + +Mrs Barnett, whose presence of mind did not forsake her now, seized one +of the pistols in the Lieutenant’s belt, and waiting quietly until +the animal shoved its head between the door and the wall, discharged the +contents into its open mouth. + +The bear fell backwards, mortally wounded no doubt, and the door was +shut and securely fastened. + +The body of the Sergeant was then carried into the large room. But, +alas! the fire was dying out. How was it possible to restore the vital +heat with no means of obtaining warmth? + +“I will go—I will go and fetch some wood !” cried the blacksmith +Rae. + +“Yes, Rae, we will go together!” exclaimed Mrs Barnett, whose +courage was unabated. + +“No, my friends, no!” cried Hobson; “you would fall victims to +the cold, or the bears, or both. Let us burn all there is to burn in the +house, and leave the rest to God !” + +And the poor half-frozen settlers rose and laid about them with their +hatchets like madmen. Benches, tables, and partition walls were thrown +down, broken up, crushed to pieces, and piled up in the stove of the +large room and kitchen furnace. Very soon good fires were burning, on +which a few drops of walrus-oil were poured, so that the temperature of +the rooms quickly rose a dozen degrees. + +Every effort was made to restore the Sergeant. He was rubbed with warm +rum, and gradually the circulation of his blood was restored. The white +blotches with which parts of his body were covered began to disappear; +but he had suffered dreadfully, and several hours elapsed before he +could articulate a word. He was laid in a warm bed, and Mrs Barnett and +Madge watched by him until the next morning. + +Meanwhile Hobson, Mac-Nab, and Rae consulted bow best to escape from +their terrible situation. It was impossible to shut their eyes to the +fact that in two days this fresh supply of fuel would be exhausted, and +then, if the cold continued, what would become of them all? The new moon +had risen forty-eight hours ago, and there was no sign of a change in +the weather! The north wind still swept the face of the country with its +icy breath; the barometer remained at “ fine dry weather; “and there +was not a vapour to be seen above the endless succession of ice-fields. +There was reason to fear that the intense cold would last a long time +yet, but what was to be done? Would it do to try once more to get to +the wood-shed, when the bears had been roused by the shot, and rendered +doubly dangerous? Would it be possible to attack these dreadful +creatures in the open air I No, it would be madness, and certain death +for all! + +Fortunately the temperature of the rooms had now become more bearable, +and in the morning Mrs Joliffe served up a breakfast of hot meat and +tea. Hot grog was served out, and the brave Sergeant was able to take +his share. The heat from the stoves warmed the bodies and reanimated the +drooping courage of the poor colonists, who were now ready to attack +the bears at a word from Hobson. But the Lieutenant, thinking the forces +unequally matched, would not risk the attempt; and it appeared likely +that the day would pass without any incident worthy of note, when at +about three o’clock in the afternoon a great noise was heard on the +top of the house. + +“There they are!” cried two or three soldiers, hastily arming +themselves with hatchets and pistols. + +It was evident that the bears had torn away one of the rafters of the +roof, and got into the loft. + +“Let every one remain where he is!” cried the Lieutenant. “Rae, +the trap !” + +The blacksmith rushed into the passage, scaled the ladder, and shut and +securely fastened the trap-door. + +A dreadful noise was now heard-growling, stamping of feet, and tearing +of claws. It was doubtful whether the danger of the anxious listeners +was increased, or the reverse. Some were of opinion that if all the +bears were in the loft, it would be easier to attack them. They would be +less formidable in a narrow space, and there would not be the same +risk of suffocation from cold. Of course a conflict with such fierce +creatures must still. be very perilous, but it no longer appeared so +desperate as before. + +It was now debated whether it would be better to go and attack the +besiegers, or to remain on the defensive. Only one soldier could get +through the narrow trap-door at a time, and this made Hobson hesitate, +and finally resolve to wait. The Sergeant and others, whose bravery none +could doubt, agreed that he was in the right, and it might be possible +that some new incident would occur to modify the situation. It was +almost impossible for the bears to break through the beams of the +ceiling, as they had the rafters of the roof, so that there was little +fear that they would get on to the ground-floor. + +The day passed by in anxious expectation, and at night no one could +sleep for the uproar made by the furious beasts. + +The next day, about nine o’clock, a fresh complication compelled +Hobson to take active steps. + +He knew that the pipes of the stove and kitchen furnace ran all along +the loft, and being made of lime-bricks but imperfectly cemented +together, they could not resist great pressure for any length of time. +Now some of the bears scratched at the masonry, whilst others leant +against the pipes for the sake of the warmth from the stove; so that +the bricks began to give way, and soon the stoves and furnace ceased to +draw. + +This really was an irreparable misfortune, which would have disheartened +less energetic men. But things were not yet at their worst. Whilst the +fire became lower and lower, a thick, nauseous, acrid smoke filled the +house; the pipes were broken, and the smoke soon became so thick that +the lamps went out. Hobson now saw that he must leave the house if he +wished to escape suffocation, but to leave the house would be to perish +with cold. At this fresh misfortune some of the women screamed; and +Hobson, seizing a hatchet, shouted in a loud voice + +“To the bears! to the bears, my friends !” + +It was the forlorn-hope. These terrible creatures must be destroyed. All +rushed into the passage and made for the ladder, Hobson leading the +way. The trap-door was opened, and a few shots were fired into the black +whirlpool of smoke. Mingled howls and screams were heard, and blood +began to flow on both sides; but the fearful conflict was waged in +profound darkness. + +In the midst of the mêlée a terrible rumbling sound suddenly drowned +the tumult, the ground became violently agitated, and the house rocked +as if it were being torn up from its foundations. The beams of the walls +separated, and through the openings Hobson and his companions saw the +terrified bears rushing away into the darkness, howling with rage and +fright. + +CHAPTER XXII. FIVE MONTHS MORE. A violent earthquake had shaken Cape +Bathurst. Such convulsions were probably frequent in this volcanic +region, and the connection between them and eruptions was once more +demonstrated. + +Hobson well understood the significance of what had occurred, and waited +in anxious suspense. He knew that the earth might open and swallow up +the little colony; but only one shock was felt, and that was rather a +rebound than a vertical upheaval, which made the house lean over towards +the lake, and burst open its walls. Immediately after this one shock, +the ground again became firm and motionless. + +The house, although damaged, was still habitable; the breaches in the +walls were quickly repaired, and the pipes of the chimneys were patched +together again somehow + +Fortunately the wounds the soldiers had received in their struggle with +the bears were slight, and merely required dressing. + +Two miserable days ensued, during which the woodwork of the beds and the +planks of the partition walls were burnt, and the most pressing repairs +executed by Mac-Nab and his men. The piles, well driven into the earth, +had not yielded; but it was evident that the earthquake had caused a +sinking of the level of the coast on which the fort was built, which +might seriously compromise the safety of the building. Hobson was most +anxious to ascertain the extent of the alteration of elevation, but the +pitiless cold prevented him from venturing outside. + +But at last there were symptoms of an approaching change in the weather. +The stars shone with rather less brilliancy, and on the 11th January +the barometer fell slightly; hazy vapours floated in the air, the +condensation of which would raise the temperature; and on the 12th +January the wind veered to the south-west, and snow fell at irregular +intervals. + +The thermometer outside suddenly rose to 15° above zero, and to the +frozen colonists it was like the beginning of spring. + +At eleven o’clock the same morning all were out of doors. They were +like a band of captives unexpectedly set free. They were, however, +absolutely forbidden to go beyond the enceinte of the fort, in case of +awkward meetings. + +The sun had not yet reappeared above the horizon, but it approached it +nearly enough to produce a long twilight, during which objects could be +distinctly seen to a distance of two miles; and Hobson’s first thought +was to ascertain what difference the earthquake had produced in the +appearance of the surrounding districts. + +Certain changes had been effected. The crest of the promontory of Cape +Bathurst had been broken off, and large pieces of the cliff had been +flung upon the beach. The whole mass of the cape seemed to have been +bent towards the lake, altering the elevation of the plateau on +which the fort was built. The soil on the west appeared to have been +depressed, whilst that on the east had been elevated. One of the results +of this change of level would unfortunately be, that when the thaw set +in, the waters of the lake and of Paulina river, in obedience to the +law, requiring liquids to maintain their level, would inundate a portion +of the western coast. The stream would probably scoop out another bed, +and the natural harbour at its mouth would be destroyed. The hills on +the eastern bank seemed to be considerably depressed, but the cliffs on +the west were too far off for any accurate observations to be made. The +important alteration produced by the earthquake may, in fact, be summed +up in a very few words : the horizontal character of the ground was +replaced by a slope from east to west. + +“Well, Lieutenant,” said Mrs Barnett, laughing, “you were good +enough to give my name to the port and river, and now there will be +neither Paulina river nor Port Barnett. I must say I have been hardly +used.” + +“Well, madam,” replied Hobson, “although the river is gone, the +lake remains, and we will call it Lake Barnett. I hope that it at least +will remain true to you.” + +Mr and Mrs Joliffe, on leaving the house, had hurried, one to the +doghouse, the other to the reindeer-stable. The dogs had not suffered +much from their lone, confinement, and rushed into the court barking +with delight. One reindeer had died, but the others, though thin, +appeared to be in good health. + +“Well, madam,” said the Lieutenant, “we have got through our +troubles better than we could have expected.” + +“I never despaired,” replied the lady. “The miseries of an Arctic +-winter would not conquer men like you and your companions.” + +“To own the truth, madam,” replied Hobson, “I never experienced +such intense cold before, in all the years I have spent in the north; +and if it had lasted many days longer we should all have been lost.” + +“The earthquake came in the nick of time then, not only to drive away +the bears, but also to modify the extremity of the cold?” + +“Perhaps so, madam. All natural phenomena influence each other to a +certain extent. But the volcanic structure of the soil makes me rather +uneasy. I cannot but regret the close vicinity of this active volcano. +If the lava from it cannot reach us, the earthquakes connected with it +can. Just look at our house now!” + +“Oh, all that can be put right when the fine weather comes, and +you will make it all the stronger for the painful experience you have +gained.” + +“Of course we shall, but meanwhile I am afraid you won’t find it +very comfortable.” + +“Are you speaking to me, Lieutenant? to an old traveller like me? I +shall imagine myself one of the crew of a small vessel, and now that it +does not pitch and toss, I shall have no fear of being sea-sick.” + +“What you say does not surprise me,” replied Hobson; “we all know +your grandeur of character, your moral courage and imperturbable good +temper. You have done much to help us all to bear our troubles, and I +thank you in my own name and that of my men.” + +“You flatter me, Lieutenant; you flatter me.” + +“No, no; I only say what every one thinks. But may I ask you one +question. You know that next June, Captain Craventy is to send us a +convoy with provisions, which will take back our furs to Fort Reliance. +I suppose our friend Thomas Black, after having seen his eclipse, will +return with the Captain’s men. Do you mean to accompany him?” + +“Do you mean to send me back?” asked the lady with a smile. + +“O madam !”— + +“Well, my superior officer,” replied Mrs Barnett, extending her +hand to the Lieutenant, “I shall ask you to allow me to spend another +winter at Fort Hope. Next year one of the Company’s ships will +probably anchor off Cape Bathurst, and I shall return in it. Having come +overland, I should like to go back by Behring Strait.” + +The Lieutenant was delighted with his companion’s decision. The two +had become sincerely attached to each other, and had many tastes and +qualities in common. The hour of separation could not fail to be painful +to both; and who could tell what further trials awaited `the colonists, +in which their combine, influence might sustain the courage of the rest? + +On the 20th January the sun at last reappeared, and the Polar night was +at an end. It only remained above the horizon for a few minutes, and +was greeted with joyous hurrahs by the settlers. From this date the days +gradually increased in length. + +Throughout the month of February, and until the 15th March, there were +abrupt transitions from fine to bad weather. The fine days were so cold +that the hunters could not go out; and in the bad weather snowstorms +kept them in. It was only between whiles that any outdoor work could +be done; and long excursions were out of the question. There was no +necessity for them, however, as the traps were in full activity. In the +latter end of the winter, martens, foxes, ermines, wolverines, and +other valuable animals were taken in large numbers, and the trappers had +plenty to do. + +In March an excursion was ventured on as far as Walruses’ Bay and it +was noticed that the earthquake had considerably altered the form of the +cliffs, which were much depressed; whilst the igneous hills beyond, +with their summits wrapped in mist, seemed to look larger and more +threatening than ever. + +About the 20th March the hunters sighted the first swans migrating from +the south, and uttering shrill cries as they flew. A few snow buntings +and winter hawks were also seen. But the ground was still covered with +thick layers of frozen snow, and the sun was powerless to melt the hard +surface of the lake and sea. + +The breaking up of the frost did not commence until early in April. The +ice burst with a noise like the discharge of artillery. + +Sudden changes took place in the appearance of the icebergs broken by +collisions, undermined by the action of the water once more set free, +huge masses rolled over with an awful crash, in consequence of the +displacement of their centre of gravity, causing fractures and fissures +in the ice-fields which greatly accelerated their breaking up. + +At this time the mean temperature was 32° above zero, so that the +upper layer of ice on the beach rapidly dissolved, whilst the chain of +icebergs, drifted along by the currents of the Polar Sea, gradually drew +back and became lost in the fogs on the horizon. On the 15th April the +sea was open, and a vessel from the Pacific Ocean coming through Behring +Strait, could certainly have skirted along the American coast, and have +anchored off Cape Bathurst. + +Whilst the ice was disappearing from the ocean, Lake Barnett was also +laying aside its slippery armour, much to the delight of the thousands +of ducks and other water-fowl which began to teem upon its banks. As +Hobson had foreseen, however, the level of the lake was affected by the +slope of the soil. That part of the beach which stretched away from the +enceinte of the fort, and was bounded on the east by wooded hills, had +increased considerably in extent; and Hobson estimated that the waters +of the lake had receded five hundred paces on the eastern bank. As a +natural consequence, the water on the western side had risen, and if not +held back by some natural barrier, would inundate the country. + +On the whole, it was fortunate that the slope was from east to west; for +had it been from west to east, the factory must have been submerged. + +The little river dried up as soon as the thaw set free its waters. It +might almost be said to have run back to its source, so abrupt was the +slope of its bed from north to south. + +“We have now to erase a river from the map of the Arctic regions,” +observed Hobson to his Sergeant. “It would have been embarrassing if +we had been dependent on the truant for drinkable water. Fortunately +we have still Lake Barnett, and I don’t suppose our thirsty men will +drain it quite dry.” + +“Yes, we’ve got the lake,” replied the Sergeant; “but do you +think its waters have remained sweet?” + +Hobson started and looked at his subordinate with knitted brows. It had +not occurred to him that a fissure in the ground might have established +a communication between the lake and the sea! Should it be so, ruin must +ensue, and the factory would inevitably have to be abandoned after all. + +The Lieutenant and Hobson rushed to the lake and found their fears +groundless. Its waters were still sweet. + +Early in May the snow had disappeared in several places, and a scanty +vegetation clothed the soil. Tiny mosses and slender grasses timidly +pushed up their stems above the ground, and the sorrel and cochlearia +seeds which Mrs Joliffe had planted began to sprout. The carpet of snow +had protected them through the bitter winter; but they had still to be +saved from the beaks of birds and the teeth of rodents. This arduous +and important task was confided to the worthy Corporal, who acquitted +himself of it with the zeal and devotion of a scarecrow in a kitchen +garden. + +The long days had now returned, and hunting was resumed. + +Hobson was anxious to have a good stock of furs for the agents from Fort +Reliance to take charge of when they arrived, as they would do in a +few weeks. Marbre, Sabine, and the others, therefore, commenced the +campaign. Their excursions were neither long nor fatiguing : they never +went further than two miles from Cape Bathurst, for they had never +before been in a district so well stocked with game; and they were both +surprised and delighted. Martens, reindeer, hares, caribous, foxes, and +ermines passed close to their guns. + +One thing, however, excited some regret in the minds of the colonists, +not a trace was to be seen of their old enemies the bears; and it +seemed as if they had taken all their relations with them. Perhaps +the earthquake had frightened them away, for they have a very delicate +nervous organisation, if such an expression can be applied to a mere +quadruped. It was a pity they were gone, for vengeance could not be +wreaked upon them. + +The month of May was very wet. Rain and snow succeeded each other. +The mean temperature was only 41° above zero. Fogs were of frequent +occurrence, and so thick that it would often have been imprudent to +go any distance from the fort. Petersen and Kellet once caused their +companions grave anxiety by disappearing for forty-eight hours. They had +lost their way, and turned to the south when they thought they were near +to Walruses’ Bay. They came back exhausted and half dead with hunger. + +June came at last, and with it really fine warm weather. The colonists +were able to leave off their winter clothing. They worked zealously at +repairing the house, the foundations of which had to be propped up; and +Hobson also ordered the construction of a large magazine at the southern +corner of the court. The quantity of game justified the expenditure +of time and labour involved : the number of furs collected was already +considerable, and it was necessary to have some place set aside in which +to keep them. + +The Lieutenant now expected every day the arrival of the detachment to +be sent by Captain Craventy. A good many things were still required for +the new settlement. The stores were getting low; and if the party had +left the fort in the beginning of May, they ought to reach Cape Bathurst +towards the middle of June. It will be remembered that the Captain and +his Lieutenant had fixed upon the cape as the spot of rendezvous, and +Hobson having constructed his fort on it, there was no fear of the +reinforcements failing to find him. + +From the 15th June the districts surrounding the cape were carefully +watched. The British flag waved from the summit of the cliff, and could +be seen at a considerable distance. It was probable that the convoy +would follow the Lieutenant’s example, and skirt along the coast from +Coronation Gulf. If not exactly the shortest, it was the surest route, +at a time when, the sea being free from ice, the coast-line could be +easily followed. + +When the month of June passed without the arrival of the expected party, +Hobson began to feel rather uneasy, especially as the country again +became wrapped in fogs. He began to fear that the agents might lose +their way, and often talked the matter over with Mrs Barnett, Mac-Nab, +and Rae. + +Thomas Black made no attempt to conceal his uneasiness, for he was +anxious to return with the party from Fort Reliance as soon as he had +seen his eclipse; and should anything keep them back from coming, he +would have to resign himself to another winter, a prospect which did not +please him at all; and in reply to his eager questions, Hobson could say +little to reassure him. + +The 4th July dawned. No news! Some men sent to the southeast to +reconnoitre, returned, bringing no tidings. + +Either the agents had never started, or they had lost their way. The +latter hypothesis was unfortunately the more probable. Hobson knew +Captain Craventy, and felt confident that he had sent off the convoy at +the time named. + +His increasing anxiety will therefore be readily understood. The fine +season was rapidly passing away. Another two months and the Arctic +winter, with its bitter winds, its whirlpools of snow, and its long +nights, would again set in. + +Hobson, as we well know, was not a man to yield to misfortune without a +struggle. Something must be done, and with the ready concurrence of the +astronomer the following plan was decided on. + +It was now the 5th July. In another fortnight-July 18th-the solar +eclipse was to take place, and after that Thomas Black would be free to +leave Fort Hope. It was therefore agreed that if by that time the agents +had not arrived, a convoy of a few men and four or five sledges should +leave the factory, and make for the Great Slave Lake, taking with them +some of the most valuable furs; and if no accident befell them, they +might hope to arrive at Fort Reliance in six weeks at the latest-that is +to say, towards the end of August. + +This matter settled, Thomas Black shrank back into his shell, and +became once more the man of one idea, awaiting the moment when the moon, +passing between the orb of day and “himself,” should totally eclipse +the disc of the sun. + +CHAPTER XXIII. THE ECLIPSE OF THE 18TH JULY 1860. The mists did not +disperse. The sun shone feebly through thick curtains of fog, and the +astronomer began to have a great dread lest the eclipse should not be +visible after all. Sometimes the fog was so dense that the summit of the +cape could not be seen from the court of the fort. + +Hobson got more and more uneasy. He had no longer any doubt that +the convoy had gone astray in the strange land; moreover, vague +apprehensions and sad forebodings increased his depression. He could not +look into the future with any confidence—why, he would have found it +impossible to explain. Everything apparently combined to reassure him. +In spite of the great rigour of the winter, his little colony was in +excellent health. No quarrels had arisen amongst the colonists, and +their zeal and enthusiasm was still unabated. The surrounding districts +were well stocked with game, the harvest of furs had surpassed his +expectations, and the Company might well be satisfied with the result +of the enterprise. Even if no fresh supply of provisions arrived, the +resources of the country were such that the prospect of a second winter +need awake no misgivings. Why, then, was Lieutenant Hobson losing hope +and confidence? + +He and Mrs Barnett had many a talk on the subject; and the latter did +all she could to raise the drooping spirits of the commanding officer, +urging upon him all the considerations enumerated above; and one day +walking with him along the beach, she pleaded the cause of Cape Bathurst +and the factory, built at the cost of-so much suffering, with more than +usual eloquence. + +“Yes, yes, madam, you are right,” replied Hobson; “but we +can’t help our presentiments. I am no visionary. Twenty times in my +soldier’s life I have been in critical circumstances, and have never +lost presence of mind for one instant; and now for the first time in my +life I am uneasy about the future. If I had to face a positive danger, I +should have no fear; but a vague uncertain peril of which I have only a +presentiment “ + +“What danger do you mean?” inquired Mrs Barnett; “a danger from +men, from animals, or the elements?” + +“Of animals I have no dread whatever, madam; it is for them to tremble +before the hunters of Cape Bathurst, nor do I fear men; these districts +are frequented by none but Esquimaux, and the Indians seldom venture so +far north.” + +“Besides, Lieutenant,” said Mrs Barnett, “the Canadians, whose +arrival you so much feared in the fine season, have never appeared.” + +“I am very sorry for it, madam.” + +“What! you regret the absence of the rivals who are so evidently +hostile to your Company?” + +“Madam, I am both glad and sorry that they have not come; that will +of course puzzle you. But observe that the expected convoy from Fort +Reliance has not arrived. It is the same with. the agents of the St +Louis Fur Company; they might have come, and they have not done so. Not +a single Esquimaux has visited this part of the coast during the summer +either”— + +“And what do you conclude from all this?” inquired Mrs Barnett. + +“I conclude that it is not so easy to get to Cape Bathurst or to Fort +Hope as we could wish.” + +The lady looked into the Lieutenant’s anxious face, struck with the +melancholy and significant intonation of the word easy. + +“Lieutenant Hobson,” she said earnestly, “if you fear neither +men nor animals, I must conclude that your anxiety has reference to the +elements.” + +“Madam,” he replied, “I do not know if my spirit be broken, or if +my presentiments blind me, but there seems to me to be something uncanny +about this district. If I had known it better I should not have +settled down in it. I have already called your attention to certain +peculiarities, which to me appear inexplicable; the total absence of +stones everywhere, and the clear-cut line of the coast. I can’t make +out about the primitive formation of this end of the continent. I +know that the vicinity of a volcano may cause some phenomena; but you +remember what I said to you on the subject of the tides?” + +“Oh yes, perfectly.” + +“Where the sea ought according to the observations of explorers in +these latitudes, to have risen fifteen or twenty feet, it has scarcely +risen one !” + +“Yes; but that you accounted for by the irregular distribution of land +and the narrowness of the straits.” + +“I tried to account for it, that is all,” replied Hobson; “but the +day before yesterday I noticed a still more extraordinary phenomenon, +which I cannot even try to explain, and I doubt if the greatest savants +could do so either.” + +Mrs Barnett looked inquiringly at Hobson. + +“What has happened?” she exclaimed. + +“Well, the day before yesterday, madam, when the moon was full, and +according to the almanac the tide ought to have been very high, the sea +did not even rise one foot, as it did before-it did not rise at all.” + +“Perhaps you may be mistaken observed Mrs Barnett. + +“I am not mistaken. I saw it with my own eyes. The day before +yesterday, July 4th, there was positively no tide on the coast of Cape +Bathurst.” + +“And what do you conclude from that?” inquired Mrs Barnett. + +“I conclude madam,” replied the Lieutenant, “either that the laws +of nature are changed, or that this district is very peculiarly situated +. . . or rather . . . I conclude nothing . . . I explain nothing . . . I +am puzzled. . . I do not understand it; and therefore . . . therefore I +am anxious.” + +Mrs Barnett asked no more questions. Evidently the total absence of +tides was as unnatural and inexplicable as would be the absence of the +sun from the meridian at noon. Unless the earthquake had so modified the +conformation of the coast of the Arctic regions as to account for it-but +no, such an idea could not be entertained by any one accustomed to note +terrestrial phenomena. + +As for supposing that the Lieutenant could be mistaken in his +observations, that was impossible; and that very day he and Mrs Barnett, +by means of beach-marks made on the beach, ascertained beyond all doubt +that whereas a year before the sea rose a foot, there was now no tide +whatever. + +The matter was kept a profound secret, as Hobson was unwilling to render +his companions anxious. But he might often be seen standing motionless +and silent upon the summit of the cape, gazing across the sea, which was +now open, and stretched away as far as the eye could reach. + +During the month of July hunting the furred animals was discontinued, as +the martens, foxes, and others had already lost their winter beauty. +No game was brought down but that required for food, such as caribous, +Polar hares, &c., which, strange to say, instead of being scared away by +the guns, continued to multiply near the fort. Mrs Barnett did not fail +to note this peculiar, and, as the event proved, significant fact. + +No change had taken place in the situation on the 15th July. No news +from Fort Reliance. The expected convoy did not arrive, and Hobson +resolved to execute his project of sending to Captain Craventy, as +Captain Craventy did not come to him. + +Of course none but Sergeant Long could be appointed to the command of +the little troop, although the faithful fellow would rather not have +been separated from his Lieutenant. A considerable time must necessarily +elapse before he could get back to Fort Hope. He would have to pass the +winter at Fort Reliance, and return the next summer. Eight months +at least! It is true either Mac-Nab or Rae could have taken the +Sergeant’s place; but then they were married, and the one being a +master carpenter, and the other the only blacksmith, the colonists could +not well have dispensed with their services. + +Such were the grounds on which the Lieutenant chose Long, and the +Sergeant submitted with military obedience. The four soldiers elected +to accompany him were Belcher, Pond, Petersen, and Kellet, who declared +their readiness to start. + +Four sledges and their teams of dogs were told off for the service. They +were to take a good stock of provisions, and the most valuable of the +furs. Foxes, ermines, martens, swans, lynxes, musk-rats, gluttons, &c., +all contributed to the precious convoy. The start was fixed for the +morning of the 19th July, the day after the eclipse. Of course Thomas +Black was to accompany the Sergeant, and one sledge was to convoy his +precious person and instruments. + +The worthy savant endured agonies of suspense in the few days preceding +the phenomenon which he awaited with so much impatience. He might well +be anxious; for one day it was fine and another wet, now mists obscured +the sun, or thick fogs hid it all together; and the wind veered to every +point of the horizon with provoking fickleness and uncertainty. What +if during the few moments of the eclipse the queen of the night and the +great orb of day should be wrapped in an opaque cloud at the critical +moment, so that he, the astronomer, Thomas Black, come so far to watch +the phenomenon, should be unable to see the luminous corona or the red +prominences! How terrible would be the disappointment! How many dangers, +how much suffering, how much fatigue, would have been gone through in +vain ! + +“To have come so far to see the moon, and not to see it!” he cried +in a comically piteous tone. + +No, he could not face the thought and early of an evening he would climb +to the summit of the cape and gaze into the heavens. The fair Phoebe +was nowhere to be seen; for it being three days before new moon, she was +accompanying the sun in his daily course, and her light was quenched in +his beams. + +Many a time did Thomas Black relieve his over-burdened heart by pouring +out his troubles to Mrs Barnett. The good lady felt sincerely sorry +for him, and one day, anxious to reassure him, she told him that the +barometer showed a certain tendency to rise, and reminded him that they +were in the fine season. + +The fine season !” cried the poor astronomer” shrugging his +shoulders. “Who can speak of a fine season in such a country as +this?” + +“Well, but, Mr Black,” said Mrs Barnett, “suppose, for the sake +of argument, that you miss this eclipse by any unlucky chance, I suppose +there will be another some day. The eclipse of July 18th will not be the +last of this century.” + +“No, madam, no,” returned Black; “there will be five more total +eclipses of the sun before 1900. One on the 31st December 1861, which +will be total for the Atlantic Ocean, the Mediterranean, and the Sahara +Desert; a second on the 22d December 1870, total for the Azores, the +south of Spain, Algeria, Sicily, and Turkey; a third on the 19th August +1887, total for the north-east of Germany, the south of Russia, and +Central Asia; a fourth on the 9th April 1896, visible in Greenland, +Lapland, and Siberia; and lastly, a fifth on the 28th May 1900, which +will be total for the United States, Spain, Algeria, and + +Egypt.” + +“Well, Mr Black,” resumed Mrs Barnett, “if you lose the eclipse of +the 18th July 1860, you can console yourself by looking forward to that +of the 31st December 1861. It will only be seventeen months !” + +“I can console myself, madam,” said the astronomer gravely, “by +looking forward to that of 1896. I shall have to wait not seventeen +months but thirty-six years !” + +“May I ask why?” + +“Because of all the eclipses, it alone-that of 9th August 1896-will +be total for places in high latitudes, such as Lapland, Siberia, or +Greenland.” + +“But what is the special interest of an observation taken in these +elevated latitudes?” + +“What special interest?” cried Thomas Black; why, a scientific +interest of the highest importance. Eclipses have very rarely been +watched near the Pole, where the sun, being very little above the +horizon, is considerably increased in size. The disc of the moon which +is to intervene between us and the sun is subject to a similar apparent +extension, and therefore it may be that the red prominences and the +luminous corona can be more thoroughly examined This, madam, is why +I have travelled all this distance to watch the eclipse above the +seventieth parallel. A similar opportunity will not occur until 1896, +and who can tell if I shall be alive then?” + +To this burst of enthusiasm there was no reply to be made; and the +astronomer’s anxiety and depression increased, for the inconstant +weather seemed more and more disposed to play him some ill-natured +trick. + +It was very fine on the 16th July, but the next day it was cloudy and +misty and Thomas Black became really ill. The feverish state he had been +in for so long seemed likely to result in a serious illness. Mrs Barnett +and Hobson tried in vain to soothe him, and Sergeant Long and the others +could not understand how it was possible to be so unhappy for love of +the moon.” + +At last the great day-the 18th July-dawned. According to the +calculations of astronomers, the total eclipse was to last four minutes +thirty-seven seconds-that is to say, from forty-three minutes fifteen +seconds past eleven to forty-seven minutes fifty-seven seconds past +eleven A.M. + +“What do I ask? what do I ask?” moaned the astronomer, tearing his +hair. “Only one little corner of the sky free from clouds! only the +small space in which the eclipse is to take place ! And for how long? +For four short minutes! After that, let it snow, let it thunder, let the +elements break loose in fury, I should care no more for it all than a +snail for a chronometer.” + +It is not to be denied that Thomas Black had some grounds for his +fears. It really seemed likely that observations would be impossible. At +daybreak the horizon was shrouded in mists Heavy clouds were coming up +from the south, and covering the very portion of the sky in which the +eclipse was to take place. But doubtless the patron saint of astronomers +had pity on poor Black, for towards eight o’clock a slight wind arose +and swept the mists and clouds from the sky, leaving it bright and +clear! + +A cry of gratitude burst from the lips of the astronomer, and his heart +beat high with newly-awakened hope. The sun shone brightly, and the +moon, so soon to darken it, was as yet invisible in its glorious beams. + +Thomas Black’s instruments were already carefully placed on the +promontory, and having pointed them towards the southern horizon, he +awaited the event with calmness restored, and the coolness necessary for +taking his observation. What was there left to fear? + +Nothing, unless it was that the sky might fall upon his head! At nine +o’clock there was not a cloud, not a vapour left upon the sky from the +zenith to the horizon. Never were circumstances more favourable to an +astronomical observation. + +The whole party were anxious to take part in the observation, and all +gathered round the astronomer on Cape Bathurst. Gradually the sun rose +above the horizon, describing an extended arc above the vast plain +stretching away to the south. No one spoke, but awaited the eclipse in +solemn silence. + +Towards half-past nine the eclipse commenced The disc of the moon +seemed to graze that of the sun. But the moon’s shadow was not to +fall completely on the earth, hiding the sun, until between forty three +minutes past eleven and forty-seven minutes fifty-seven seconds past +eleven. That was the time fixed in the almanacs, and every one knows +that no error can creep into them, established, verified, and controlled +as they are by the scientific men of all the observatories in the world. + +The astronomer had brought a good many glasses with him, and he +distributed them amongst his companions, that all might watch the +progress of the phenomenon without injury to the eyes. + +The brown disc of the moon gradually advanced, and terrestrial objects +began to assume a peculiar orange hue, whilst the atmosphere on tire +zenith completely changed colour. At a quarter-past ten half the disc +of the sun was darkened, and a few dogs which happened to be at liberty +showed signs of uneasiness and howled piteously. The wild ducks, +thinking night had come, began to utter sleepy calls -and to seek their +nests, and the mothers gathered their little ones under their wings. The +hush of eventide fell upon all animated nature. + +At eleven o’clock two-thirds of the sun were covered, and all +terrestrial objects became a kind of vinous red. A gloomy twilight set +in, to be succeeded during the four minutes of totality by absolute +darkness. A few planets, amongst t others Mercury and Venus, began +to appear, and some constellations—Caplet, [symbol] and [symbol] of +Taurus, and [symbol] of Orion. The darkness deepened every moment. + +Thomas Black remained motionless with his eye glued to the glass of +his instrument, eagerly watching the progress of the phenomenon. At +forty-three minutes past eleven the discs of the two luminaries ought +to be exactly opposite to each other, that of the moon completely hiding +that of the sun. + +“Forty-three minutes past eleven,” announced Hobson, who was +attentively watching the minute hand of his chronometer. + +Thomas Black remained motionless, stooping over his instrument. Half a +minute passed, and then the astronomer [astonomer] drew himself up, +with eyes distended and eager. Once more he bent over the telescope, and +cried in a choked voice— + +“She is going! she is going! The moon, the moon is going! She is +disappearing, running away !” + +True enough the disc of the moon was gliding away from that of the sun +without having completely covered it ! + +The astronomer had fallen backwards, completely overcome. The four +minutes were past. The luminous corona had not appeared ! + +“What is the matter?” inquired Hobson. + +“The matter is,” screamed the poor astronomer, “that the eclipse +was not total-not total for this portion of the globe! Do you hear? It +was not to-t-a-1! I say not to-t-a-l! !” + +“Then your almanacs are incorrect.” + +“Incorrect! Don’t tell that to me, if you please, Lieutenant Hobson +!” + +“But what then?” said Hobson, suddenly changing countenance. + +“Why,” said Black, “we are not after all on the seventieth +parallel !” + +“Only fancy !” cried Mrs Barnett. + +“We can soon prove it,” said the astronomer whose eyes flashed with +rage and disappointment. “The sun will pass the meridian in a few +minutes. . . . My sextant-quick . . . make haste !” + +One of the soldiers rushed to the house and fetched the instrument +required. + +The astronomer pointed it upon the sun; he watched the orb of day pass +the meridian, and rapidly noted down a few calculations. + +“What was the situation of Cape Bathurst a year ago when we took the +latitude?” he inquired. + +“Seventy degrees, forty-four minutes, and thirty-seven seconds,” +replied Hobson. + +“Well, sir, it is now seventy-three degrees, seven minutes, and twenty +seconds! You see we are not under the seventieth parallel ! + +“Or rather we are no longer there !” muttered Hobson. + +A sudden light had broken in upon his mind, all the phenomena hitherto +so inexplicable were now explained. + +Cape Bathurst had drifted three degrees farther north since the arrival +of the Lieutenant and his companions ! + +End of Part I PART II CONTENTS. I. + +A Floating Fort + +II. + +Where Are We? + +III. + +A Tour Of The Island + +IV. + +A Night Encampment + +V. + +From July 25th To August 20th + +VI. + +Ten Days Of Tempest + +VII. + +A Fire And A Cry + +VIII. + +Mrs. Paulina Barnett’s Excursion + +IX. + +Kalumah’s Adventures + +X. + +The Kamtchatka Current + +XI. + +A Communication From Lieutenant Hobson + +XII. + +A Chance To Be Tried + +XIII. + +Across The Ice-Field + +XIV. + +The Winter Months + +XV. + +A Last Exploring Expedition + +XVI. + +The Break-Up Of The Ice + +XVII. + +The Avalanche + +XVIII. + +All At Work + +XIX. + +Behring Sea + +XX. + +In The Offing + +XXI. + +The Island Becomes An Isle + +XXII. + +The Four Following Days + +XXIII. + +On A Piece Of Ice + +XXIV. + +Conclusion + + +CHAPTER I. A FLOATING FORT. And so Fort Hope, founded by Lieutenant +Hobson on the borders of the Polar Sea, had drifted! Was the courageous +agent of the Company to blame for this? No; any one might have been +deceived as he had been. No human prevision could have foreseen such a +calamity. He meant to build upon a rock, and he had not even built upon +sand. The peninsula of Victoria, which the best maps of English America +join to the American continent, had been torn suddenly away from it. +This peninsula was in fact nothing but an immense piece of ice, five +hundred square miles in extent, converted by successive deposits of sand +and earth into apparently solid ground well clothed with vegetation. +Connected with the mainland for thousands of centuries, the earthquake +of the 8th of January had dragged it away from its moorings, and it was +now a floating island, at the mercy of the winds and waves, and had been +carried along the Arctic Ocean by powerful currents for the last three +months! + +Yes, Fort Hope was built upon ice! Hobson at once understood the +mysterious change in their latitude. The isthmus—that is to say, +the neck of land which connected the peninsula of Victoria with +the mainland—had been snapped in two by a subterranean convulsion +connected with the eruption of the volcano some months before. As long +as the northern winter continued, the frozen sea maintained things as +they were; but when the thaw came, when the ice fields, melted beneath +the rays of the sun, and the huge icebergs, driven out into the offing, +drew back to the farthest limits of the horizon—when the sea at last +became open, the whole peninsula drifted away, with its woods, its +cliffs, its promontories, its inland lagoon, and its coast-line, under +the influence of a current about which nothing was known. For months +this drifting had been going on unnoticed by the colonists, who even +when hunting did not go far from Fort Hope. Beach-marks, if they had +been made, would have been useless; for heavy mists obscured everything +at a short distance, the ground remained apparently firm and motionless, +and there was, in short, nothing to hint to the Lieutenant and his men +that they had become islanders. The position of the new island with +regard to the rising and setting of the sun was the same as before. Had +the cardinal points changed their position, had the island turned round, +the Lieutenant, the astronomer, or Mrs Barnett, would certainly have +noticed and understood the change; but in its course the island had thus +far followed a parallel of latitude, and its motion, though rapid, had +been imperceptible. + +Although Hobson had no doubt of the moral and physical courage and +determination of his companions, he determined not to acquaint them +with the truth. It would be time enough to tell them of their altered +position when it had been thoroughly studied. Fortunately the good +fellows, soldiers or workmen, took little notice of the astronomical +observations, and not being able to see the consequences involved, they +did not trouble themselves about the change of latitude just announced. + +The Lieutenant determined to conceal his anxiety, and seeing no remedy +for the misfortune, mastered his emotion by a strong effort, and tried +to console Thomas Black, who was lamenting his disappointment and +tearing his hair. + +The astronomer had no doubt about the misfortune of which he was the +victim. Not having, like the Lieutenant, noticed the peculiarities +of the district, he did not look beyond the one fact in which he was +interested: on the day fixed, at the time named, the moon had not +completely eclipsed the sun. And what could he conclude but that, to the +disgrace of observatories, the almanacs were false, and that the long +desired eclipse, his own eclipse, Thomas Black’s, which he had come +so far and through so many dangers to see, had not been “total” for +this particular district under the seventieth parallel! No, no, it was +impossible to believe it; he could not face the terrible certainty, and +he was overwhelmed with disappointment. He was soon to learn the truth, +however. + +Meanwhile Hobson let his men imagine that the failure of the eclipse +could only interest himself and the astronomer, and they returned to +their ordinary occupations; but as they were leaving, Corporal Joliffe +stopped suddenly and said, touching his cap— + +“May I ask you one question, sir?” + +“Of course, Corporal; say on,” replied the Lieutenant, who wondered +what was coming. + +But Joliffe hesitated, and his little wife nudged his elbow. + +“Well, Lieutenant,” resumed the Corporal, “it’s just about +the seventieth degree of latitude—if we are not where we thought we +were.” + +The Lieutenant frowned. + +“Well,” he replied evasively, “we made a mistake in our reckoning, +... our first observation was wrong; ... but what does that concern +you?” + +“Please, sir, it’s because of the pay,” replied Joliffe with +a scowl. “You know well enough that the Company promised us double +pay.” + +Hobson drew a sigh of relief. It will be remembered that the men had +been promised higher pay if they succeeded in settling on or above the +seventieth degree north latitude, and Joliffe, who always had an eye to +the main chance, had looked upon the whole matter from a monetary point +of view, and was afraid the bounty would be withheld. + +“You needn’t be afraid,” said Hobson with a smile; “and you can +tell your brave comrades that our mistake, which is really inexplicable, +will not in the least prejudice your interests. We are not below, but +above the seventieth parallel, and so you will get your double pay.” + +“Thank you, sir, thank you,” replied Joliffe with a beaming face. +“It isn’t that we think much about money, but that the money sticks +to us.” + +And with this sage remark the men drew off, little dreaming what a +strange and fearful change had taken place in the position of the +country. + +Sergeant Long was about to follow the others when Hobson stopped him +with the words— + +“Remain here, Sergeant Long.” + +The subordinate officer turned on his heel and waited for the Lieutenant +to address him. + +All had now left the cape except Mrs Barnett, Madge, Thomas Black, and +the two officers. + +Since the eclipse Mrs Barnett had not uttered a word. She looked +inquiringly at Hobson, who tried to avoid meeting her eyes. + +For some time not another word was spoken. All involuntarily turned +towards the south, where the broken isthmus was situated; but from their +position they could only see the sea horizon on the north. Had Cape +Bathurst been situated a few hundred feet more above the level of the +ocean, they would have been able at a glance to ascertain the limits of +their island home. + +All were deeply moved at the sight of Fort Hope and all its occupants +borne away from all solid ground, and floating at the mercy of winds and +waves. + +“Then, Lieutenant,” said Mrs Barnett at last, “all the strange +phenomena you observed are now explained!” + +“Yes, madam,” he replied, “everything is explained. The peninsula +of Victoria, now an island, which we thought firm ground with an +immovable foundation, is nothing more than a vast sheet of ice welded +for centuries to the American continent. Gradually the wind has strewn +it with earth and sand, and scattered over them the seeds from which +have sprung the trees and mosses with which it is clothed. Rain-water +filled the lagoon, and produced the little river; vegetation transformed +the appearance of the ground; but beneath the lake, beneath the soil +of earth and sand—in a word, beneath our feet is a foundation of ice, +which floats upon the water by reason of its being specifically lighter +than it. Yes, it is a sheet of ice which bears us up, and is carrying us +away, and this is why we have not found a single flint or stone upon its +surface. This is why its shores are perpendicular, this is why we found +ice ten feet below the surface when we dug the reindeer pit—this, in +short, is why the tide was not noticeable on the peninsula, which rose +and sank with the ebb and flow of the waves!” + +“Everything is indeed explained,” said Mrs Barnett, “and your +presentiments did not deceive you; but can you explain why the tides, +which do not affect us at all now, were to a slight extent perceptible +on our arrival?” + +“Simply because, madam, on our arrival the peninsula was still +connected by means of its flexible isthmus with the American continent. +It offered a certain resistance to the current, and on its northern +shores the tide rose two feet beyond low-water mark, instead of the +twenty we reasonably expected. But from the moment when the earthquake +broke the connecting link, from the moment when the peninsula became an +island free from all control, it rose and sank with the ebb and flow of +the tide; and, as we noticed together at full moon a few days ago, no +sensible difference was produced on our shores.” + +In spite of his despair, Thomas Black listened attentively to +Hobson’s explanations, and could not but see the reasonableness of his +deductions, but he was furious at such a rare, unexpected, and, as he +said, “ridiculous” phenomenon occurring just so as to make him +miss the eclipse, and he said not a word, but maintained a gloomy, even +haughty silence. + +“Poor Mr Black,” said Mrs Barnett, “it must be owned that an +astronomer was never more hardly used than you since the world began!” + +“In any case, however,” said Hobson, turning to her, “we have +neither of us anything to reproach ourselves with. No one can find +fault with us. Nature alone is to blame. The earthquake cut off our +communication with the mainland, and converted our peninsula into a +floating island, and this explains why the furred and other animals +imprisoned like ourselves, have become so numerous round the fort!” + +“This, too, is why the rivals you so much dreaded have not visited us, +Lieutenant!” exclaimed Madge. + +“And this,” added the Sergeant, “accounts for the non-arrival of +the convoy sent to Cape Bathurst by Captain Craventy.” + +“And this is why,” said Mrs. Barnett, looking at the Lieutenant, +“I must give up all hope of returning to Europe this year at least!” + +The tone of voice in which the lady made this last remark showed that +she resigned herself to her fate more readily than could have been +expected. She seemed suddenly to have made up her mind to make the best +of the situation, which would no doubt give her an opportunity of making +a great many interesting observations. And after all, what good would +grumbling have done? Recriminations were worse than useless. They could +not have altered their position, or have checked the course of the +wandering island, and there was no means of reuniting it to a continent. +No; God alone could decide the future of Fort Hope. They must bow to His +will. + +CHAPTER II. WHERE ARE WE? It was necessary carefully to study the +unexpected and novel situation in which the agents of the Company now +found themselves, and Hobson did so with his chart before him. + +He could not ascertain the longitude of Victoria Island—the original +name being retained—until the next day, and the latitude had +already been taken. For the longitude, the altitude of the sun must be +ascertained before and after noon, and two hour angles must be measured. + +At two o’clock P.M. Hobson and Black took the height of the sun above +the horizon with the sextant, and they hoped to recommence the same +operation the next morning towards ten o’clock A.M., so as to be able +to infer from the two altitudes obtained the exact point of the Arctic +Ocean then occupied by their island. + +The party did not, however, at once return to the fort, but remained +talking together for some little time on the promontory. Madge declared +she was quite resigned, and evidently thought only of her mistress, at +whom she could not look without emotion; she could not bear to think of +the sufferings and trials her “dear girl” might have to go through +in the future. She was ready to lay down her life for “Paulina,” but +what good could that do now. She knew, however, that Mrs Barnett was not +a woman to sink under her misfortunes, and indeed at present there was +really no need for any one to despair. + +There was no immediate danger to be dreaded, and a catastrophe might +even yet be avoided. This Hobson carefully explained to his companions. + +Two dangers threatened the island floating along the coast of North +America, only two. + +It would be drawn by the currents of the open sea to the high Polar +latitudes, from which there is no return. + +Or the current would take it to the south, perhaps through the Behring +Strait into the Pacific Ocean. + +In the former contingency, the colonists, shut in by ice and surrounded +by impassable icebergs, would have no means of communication with their +fellow-creatures, and would die of cold and hunger in the solitudes of +the north. + +In the latter contingency, Victoria Island, driven by the currents to +the western waters of the Pacific, would gradually melt and go to pieces +beneath the feet of its inhabitants. + +In either case death would await the Lieutenant and his companions, and +the fort, erected at the cost of so much labour and suffering, would be +destroyed. + +But it was scarcely probable that either of these events would happen. +The season was already considerably advanced, and in less than three +months the sea would again be rendered motion less by the icy hand of +the Polar winter. The ocean would again be converted into an ice-field, +and by means of sledges they might get to the nearest land—the coast +of Russian America if the island remained in the east, or the coast of +Asia if it were driven to the west. + +“For,” added Hobson, “we have absolutely no control over our +floating island. Having no sail to hoist, as in a boat, we cannot guide +it in the least. Where it takes us we must go.” + +All that Hobson said was clear, concise, and to the point. There could +be no doubt that the bitter cold of winter would solder Victoria Island +to the vast ice-field, and it was highly probable that it would drift +neither too far north nor too far eouth. To have to cross a few hundred +miles of ice was no such terrible prospect for brave and resolute +men accustomed to long excursions in the Arctic regions. It would be +necessary, it was true, to abandon Fort Hope—the object of so many +hopes, and to lose the benefit of all their exertions, but what of that? +The factory, built upon a shifting soil, could be of no further use to +the Company. Sooner or later it would be swallowed up by the ocean, and +what was the good of useless regrets? It must, therefore, be deserted as +soon as circumstances should permit. + +The only thing against the safety of the colonists was—and the +Lieutenant dwelt long on this point—that during the eight or nine +weeks which must elapse before the solidification of the Arctic Ocean, +Victoria Island might be dragged too far north or south. + +Arctic explorers had often told of pieces of ice being drifted an +immense distance without any possibility of stopping them. + +Everything then depended on the force and direction of the currents from +the opening of Behring Strait; and it would be necessary carefully to +ascertain all that a chart of the Arctic Ocean could tell. Hobson had +such a chart, and invited all who were with him on the cape to come to +his room and look at it; but before going down to the fort he once more +urged upon them the necessity of keeping their situation a secret. + +“It is not yet desperate,” he said, “and it is therefore quite +unnecessary to damp the spirits of our comrades, who will perhaps not be +able to understand, as we do, all the chances in our favour.” + +“Would it not be prudent to build a boat large enough to hold us +all, and strong enough to carry us a few hundred miles over the sea?” +observed Mrs Barnett. + +“It would be prudent certainly,” said Hobson, “and we will do it. +I must think of some pretext for beginning the work at once, and give +the necessary orders to the head carpenter. But taking to a boat can +only be a forlorn hope when everything else has failed. We must try all +we can to avoid being on the island when the ice breaks up, and we must +make for the mainland as soon as ever the sea is frozen over.” + +Hobson was right. It would take about three months to build a thirty +or thirty-five ton vessel, and the sea would not be open when it was +finished. It would be very dangerous to embark the whole party when +the ice was breaking up all round, and he would be well out of his +difficulties if he could get across the ice to firm ground before the +next thaw set in. This was why Hobson thought a boat a forlorn hope, a +desperate makeshift, and every one agreed with him. + +Secrecy was once more promised, for it was felt that Hobson was the best +judge of the matter, and a few minutes later the five conspirators were +seated together in the large room of Fort Hope, which was then deserted, +eagerly examining an excellent map of the oceanic and atmospheric +currents of the Arctic Ocean, special attention being naturally given to +that part of the Polar Sea between Cape Bathurst and Behring Strait. + +Two principal currents divide the dangerous latitudes comprehended +between the Polar Circle and the imperfectly known zone, called the +North-West Passage since McClure’s daring discovery—at least only +two have been hitherto noticed by marine surveyors. + +One is called the Kamtchatka Current. It takes its rise in the offing +outside the peninsula of that name, follows the coast of Asia, and +passes through Behring Strait, touching Cape East, a promontory of +Siberia. After running due north for about six hundred miles from the +strait, it turns suddenly to the east, pretty nearly following the same +parallel as McClure’s Passage, and probably doing much to keep that +communication open for a few mouths in the warm season. + +The other current, called Behring Current, flows just the other way. +After running from east to west at about a hundred miles at the +most from the coast, it comes into collision, so to speak, with the +Kamtchatka Current at the opening of the strait, and turning to the +south approaches the shores of Russian America, crosses Behring Sea, +and finally breaks on the kind of circular dam formed by the Aleutian +Islands. + +Hobson’s map gave a very exact summary of the most recent nautical +observations, so that it could be relied on. + +The Lieutenant examined it carefully before speaking, and then pressing +his hand to his head, as if oppressed by some sad presentiment, he +observed— + +“Let us hope that fate will not take us to remote northern latitudes. +Our wandering island would run a risk of never returning.” + +“Why, Lieutenant?” broke in Mrs Barnett. + +“Why, madam?” replied Hobson; “look well at this part of the +Arctic Ocean, and you will readily understand why. Two currents, both +dangerous for us, run opposite ways. When they meet, the island must +necessarily become stationary, and that at a great distance from any +land. At that point it will have to remain for the winter, and when the +next thaw sets in, it will either follow the Kamtchatka Current to +the deserted regions of the north-west, or it will float down with the +Behring Current to be swallowed up by the Pacific Ocean.” + +“That will not happen, Lieutenant,” said Madge in a tone of earnest +conviction; “God would never permit that.” + +“I can’t make out,” said Mrs Barnett, “whereabouts in the Polar +Sea we are at this moment; for I see but one current from the offing of +Cape Bathurst which bears directly to the north-west, and that is the +dangerous Kamtchatka Current. Are you not afraid that it has us in +its fatal embrace, and is carrying us with it to the shores of North +Georgia?” + +“I think not,” replied Hobson, after a moment’s reflection. + +“Why not?” + +“Because it is a very rapid current, madam; and if we had been +following it for three months, we should have had some land in sight by +this time, and there is none, absolutely none!” + +“Where, then, do you suppose we are?” inquired Mrs Barnett. + +“Most likely between the Kamtchatka Current and the coast, perhaps in +some vast eddy unmarked upon the map.” + +“That cannot be, Lieutenant,” replied Mrs Barnett, quickly. + +“Why not, madam, why not?” + +“Because if Victoria Island were in an eddy, it would have veered +round to a certain extent, and our position with regard to the cardinal +points would have changed in the last three months, which is certainly +not the case.” + +“You are right, madam, you are quite right. The only explanation I can +think of is, that there is some other current, not marked on our map. +Oh, that to morrow were here that I might find out our longitude; really +this uncertainty is terrible!” + +“To-morrow will come,” observed Madge. + +There was nothing to do but to wait. The party therefore separated, +all returning to their ordinary occupations. Sergeant Long informed his +comrades that the departure for Fort Reliance, fixed for the next day, +was put off. He gave as reasons that the season was too far advanced +to get to the southern factory before the great cold set in, that the +astronomer was anxious to complete his meteorological observations, and +would therefore submit to another winter in the north, that game was so +plentiful provisions from Fort Reliance were not needed. &c., &c. But +about all these matters the brave fellows cared little. + +Lieutenant Hobson ordered his men to spare the furred animals in future, +and only to kill edible game, so as to lay up fresh stores for the +coming winter; he also forbade them to go more than two miles from the +fort, not wishing Marbre and Sabine to come suddenly upon a sea-horizon, +where the isthmus connecting the peninsula of Victoria with the mainland +was visible a few months before. The disappearance of the neck of land +would inevitably have betrayed everything. + +The day appeared endless to Lieutenant Hobson. Again and again he +returned to Cape Bathurst either alone, or accompanied by Mrs Barnett. +The latter, inured to danger, showed no fear; she even joked the +Lieutenant about his floating island being perhaps, after all, the +proper conveyance for going to the North Pole. “With a favourable +current might they not reach that hitherto inaccessible point of the +globe?” + +Lieutenant Hobson shook his head as he listened to his companion’s +fancy, and kept his eyes fixed upon the horizon, hoping to catch a +glimpse of some land, no matter what, in the distance. But no, sea and +sky met in an absolutely unbroken circular line, confirming Hobson’s +opinion that Victoria Island was drifting to the west rather than in any +other direction. + +“Lieutenant,” at last said Mrs Barnett, “don’t you mean to make +a tour of our island as soon as possible?” + +“Yes, madam, of course; as soon as I have taken our bearings, I mean +to ascertain the form and extent of our dominions. It seems, however, +that the fracture was made at the isthmus itself, so that the whole +peninsula has become an island.” + +“A strange destiny is ours, Lieutenant,” said Mrs Barnett. “Others +return from their travels to add new districts to geographical maps, but +we shall have to efface the supposed peninsula of Victoria!” + +The next day, July 18th, the sky was very clear, and at ten o’clock +in the morning Hobson obtained a satisfactory altitude of the sun, +and, comparing it with that of the observation of the day before, he +ascertained exactly the longitude in which they were. + +The island was then in 157° 37’ longitude west from Greenwich. + +The latitude obtained the day before at noon almost immediately after +the eclipse was, as we know, 73° 7’ 20” north. + +The spot was looked out on the map in the presence of Mrs Barnett and +Sergeant Long. + +It was indeed a most anxious moment, and the following result was +arrived at. + +The wandering island was moving in a westerly direction, borne along by +a current unmarked on the chart, and unknown to hydrographers, which was +evidently carrying it towards Behring Strait. All the dangers foreseen +by Hobson were then imminent, if Victoria Island did not again touch the +mainland before the winter. + +“But how far are we from the American continent? that is the most +important point just at present,” said Mrs Barnett. + +Hobson took his compasses, and carefully measured the narrowest part of +the sea between the coast and the seventieth parallel. + +“We are actually more than two hundred and fifty miles from Point +Barrow, the northernmost extremity of Russian America,” he replied. + +“We ought to know, then, how many miles the island has drifted since +it left the mainland,” said Sergeant Long. + +“Seven hundred miles at least,” replied Hobson, after having again +consulted the chart. + +“And at about what time do you suppose the drifting commenced?” + +“Most likely towards the end of April; the ice-field broke up then, +and the icebergs which escaped melting drew back to the north. We may, +therefore, conclude that Victoria Island has been moving along with +the current parallel with the coast at an average rate of ten miles a +day.” + +“No very rapid pace after all!” exclaimed Mrs Barnett. + +“Too fast, madam, when you think where we may be taken during the +two months in which the sea will remain open in this part of the Arctic +Ocean.” + +The three friends remained silent, and looked fixedly at the chart of +the fearful Polar regions, towards which they were being irresistibly +drawn, and which have hitherto successfully resisted all attempts to +explore them. + +“There is, then, nothing to be done? Nothing to try?” said Mrs +Barnett after a pause. + +“Nothing, madam,” replied Hobson; “nothing whatever. We must wait; +we must all pray for the speedy arrival of the Arctic winter generally +so much dreaded by sailors, but which alone can save us now. The winter +will bring ice, our only anchor of salvation, the only power which can +arrest the course of this wandering island.” + +CHAPTER III. A TOUR OF THE ISLAND. From that day, July 18th, it was +decided that the bearings should be taken as on board a vessel whenever +the state of the atmosphere rendered the operation possible. Was not the +island, in fact, a disabled ship, tossed about without sails or helm. + +The next day after taking the bearings, Hobson announced that without +change of latitude the island had advanced several miles farther west. +Mac-Nab was ordered to commence the construction of a huge boat, Hobson +telling him, in explanation, that he proposed making a reconnaissance of +the coast as far as Russian America next summer. The carpenter asked no +further questions, but proceeded to choose his wood, and fixed upon the +beach at the foot of Cape Bathurst as his dockyard, so that he might +easily be able to launch his vessel. + +Hobson intended to set out the same day on his excursion round the +island in which he and his comrades were imprisoned. Many changes might +take place in the configuration of this sheet of ice, subject as it was +to the influence of the variable temperature of the waves, and it was +important to determine its actual form at the present time, its area, +and its thickness in different parts. The point of rupture, which was +most likely at the isthmus itself, ought to be examined with special +care; the fracture being still fresh, it might be possible to ascertain +the exact arrangement of the stratified layers of ice and earth of which +the soil of the island was composed. + +But in the afternoon the sky clouded over suddenly, and a violent +squall, accompanied with thick mists, swept down upon the fort. +Presently torrents of rain fell, and large hailstones rattled on the +roof, whilst a few distant claps of thunder were heard, a phenomenon of +exceedingly rare occurrence in such elevated latitudes. + +Hobson was obliged to put off his trip, and wait until the fury of the +elements abated, but during the 20th, 2lst, and 22d July, no change +occurred. The storm raged, the floods of heaven were let loose, and the +waves broke upon the beach with a deafening roar. Liquid avalanches were +flung with such force upon Cape Bathurst, that there was reason to +dread that it might give way; its stability was, in fact, somewhat +problematical, as it consisted merely of an aggregation of sand and +earth, without any firm foundation. Vessels at sea might well be pitied +in this fearful gale, but the floating island was of too vast a bulk to +be affected by the agitation of the waves, and remained indifferent to +their fury. + +During the night of the 22d July the tempest suddenly ceased. A strong +breeze from the north-east dispelled the last mists upon the horizon. +The barometer rose a few degrees, and the weather appeared likely to +favour Hobson’s expedition. + +He was to be accompanied by Mrs Barnett and Sergeant Long, and expected +to be absent a day or two. The little party took some salt meat, +biscuits, and a few flasks of rum with them, and there was nothing in +their excursion to surprise the rest of the colonists. The days were +just then very long, the sun only disappearing below the horizon for a +few hours. + +There were no wild animals to be feared now. The bears seemed to have +fled by instinct from the peninsula whilst it was still connected with +the mainland, but to neglect no precaution each of the three explorers +was provided with a gun. The Lieutenant and his subordinate also carried +hatchets and ice-chisels, which a traveller in the Polar regions should +never be without. + +During the absence of the Lieutenant and the Sergeant, the command of +the fort fell to Corporal Joliffe, or rather to his little wife, and +Hobson knew that he could trust her. Thomas Black could not be depended +on; he would not even join the exploring party; he promised, however, +to watch the northern latitudes very carefully, and to note any change +which should take place in the sea or the position of the cape during +the absence of the Lieutenant. + +Mrs Barnett had endeavoured to reason with the unfortunate astronomer, +but he would listen to nothing. He felt that Nature had deceived him, +and that he could never forgive her. + +After many a hearty farewell, the Lieutenant and his two companions left +the fort by the postern gate, and, turning to the west, followed the +lengthened curve of the coast between Capes Bathurst and Esquimaux. + +It was eight o’clock in the morning; the oblique rays of the sun +struck upon the beach, and touched it with many a brilliant tint, +the angry billows of the sea were sinking to rest, and the birds, +ptarmigans, guillemots, puffins, and petrels, driven away by the storm, +were returning by thousands. Troops of ducks were hastening back to Lake +Barnett, flying close, although they knew it not, to Mrs Joliffe’s +saucepan. Polar hares, martens, musk rats, and ermines rose before the +travellers and fled at their approach, but not with any great appearance +of haste or terror. The animals evidently felt drawn towards their old +enemies by a common danger. + +“They know well enough that they are hemmed in by the sea and cannot +quit the island,” observed Hobson. + +“They are all in the habit of seeking warmer climates in the south in +the winter, are they not?” inquired Mrs Barnett. + +“Yes, madam, but unless they are presently able to cross the +ice-field, they will have to remain prisoners like ourselves, and I am +afraid the greater number will die of cold or hunger. + +“I hope they will be good enough to supply us with food for a long +time,” observed the Sergeant,” and I think it is very fortunate that +they had not the sense to run away before the rupture of the isthmus.” + +“The birds will, however, leave us?” added Mrs Barnett. + +“Oh yes, madam, everything with wings will go, they can traverse long +distances without fatigue, and, more fortunate than ourselves, they will +regain terra firma.” + +“Could we not use them as messengers?” asked Mrs Barnett. + +“A good idea, madam, a capital idea,” said Hobson. “We might +easily catch some hundreds of these birds, and tie a paper round their +necks with our exact situation written upon it. John Ross in 1848 tried +similar means to acquaint the survivors of the Franklin expedition with +the presence of his ships, the Enterprise and the Investigator in the +Polar seas. He caught some hundreds of white foxes in traps, rivetted a +copper collar round the neck of each with all the necessary information +engraved upon it, and then set them free in every direction.” + +“Perhaps some of the messengers may have fallen into the hands of the +shipwrecked wanderers.” + +“Perhaps so,” replied Hobson; “I know that an old fox was taken by +Captain Hatteras during his voyage of discovery, wearing a collar half +worn away and hidden beneath his thick white fur. What we cannot do with +the quadrupeds, we will do with the birds.” + +Chatting thus and laying plans for the future, the three explorers +continued to follow the coast. They noticed no change; the abrupt cliffs +covered with earth and sand showed no signs of a recent alteration in +the extent of the island. It was, however, to be feared that the vast +sheet of ice would be worn away at the base by the action of the warm +currents, and on this point Hobson was naturally anxious. + +By eleven o’clock in the morning the eight miles between Capes +Bathurst and Esquimaux had been traversed. A few traces of the +encampment of Kalumah’s party still remained; of course the snow huts +had entirely disappeared, but some cinders and walrus bones marked the +spot. + +The three explorers halted here for a short time, they intended to pass +the few short hours of the night at Walruses’ Bay, which they hoped +to reach In a few hours. They breakfasted seated on a slightly rising +ground covered with a scanty and stunted herbage. Before their eyes lay +the ocean bounded by a clearly-defined sea-horizon, without a sail or an +iceberg to break the monotony of the vast expanse of water. + +“Should you be very much surprised if some vessel came In sight now, +Lieutenant?” inquired Mrs Barnett. + +“I should be very agreeably surprised, madam,” replied Hobson. +“It is not at all uncommon for whalers to come as far north as +this, especially now that the Arctic Ocean is frequented by whales and +chacholots, but you must remember that it is the 23rd July, and the +summer is far advanced. The whole fleet of whaling vessels is probably +now in Gulf Kotzebue, at the entrance to the strait. Whalers shun the +sudden changes in the Arctic Ocean, and with good reason. They dread +being shut in the ice; and the icebergs, avalanches, and, ice-fields +they avoid, are the very things for which we earnestly pray.” + +“They will come, Lieutenant,” said Long; “have patience, in +another two months the waves will no longer break upon the shores of +Cape Esquimaux.” + +“Cape Esquimaux!” observed Mrs Barnett with a smile. “That name, +like those we gave to the other parts of the peninsula, may turn out +unfortunate too. We have lost Port Barnett and Paulina River; who can +tell whether Cape Esquimaux and Walruses’ Bay may not also disappear +in time?” + +“They too will disappear, madam,” replied Hobson, “and after +them the whole of Victoria Island, for nothing now connects it with a +continent, and it is doomed to destruction. This result is inevitable, +and our choice of geographical names will be thrown away; but +fortunately the Royal Society has not yet adopted them, and Sir Roderick +Murchison will have nothing to efface on his maps.” + +“One name he will,” exclaimed the Sergeant. + +“Which?” inquired Hobson. + +“Cape Bathurst,” replied Long. + +“Ah, yes, you are right. Cape Bathurst must now be removed from maps +of the Polar regions.” + +Two hours’ rest were all the explorers cared for, and at one o’clock +they prepared to resume their journey. + +Before starting Hobson once more looked round him from the summit of +Cape Esquimaux; but seeing nothing worthy of notice, he rejoined Mrs +Barnett and Sergeant Long. + +“Madam,” he said, addressing the lady, “you have not forgotten the +family of natives we met here last winter?” + +“Oh no, I have always held dear little Kalumah in friendly +remembrance. She promised to come and see us again at Fort Hope, but +she will not be able to do so. But why do you ask me about the natives +now?” + +“Because I remember something to which, much to my regret, I did not +at the time attach sufficient importance.” + +“What was that?” + +“You remember the uneasy surprise the men manifested at finding a big +a factory at the foot of Cape Bathurst.” + +“Oh yes, perfectly.” + +“You remember that I tried to make out what the natives meant, and +that I could not do so?” + +“Yes, I remember.” + +“Well,” added Hobsou, “I know now why they shook their heads. +From tradition, experience, or something, the Esquimaux knew what the +peninsula really was, they knew we had not built on firm ground. But as +things had probably remained as they were for centuries, they thought +there was no immediate danger, and that it was not worth while to +explain themselves.” + +“Very likely you are right,” replied Mrs Barnett; “but I feel sure +that Kalumah had no suspicion of her companion’s fears, or she would +have warned us.” + +Hobson quite agreed with Mrs Barnett, and Sergeant Long observed— + +“It really seems to have been by a kind of fatality that we settled +ourselves upon this peninsula just before it was torn away from the +mainland. I suppose, Lieutenant, that it had been connected for a very +long time, perhaps for centuries.” + +“You might say for thousands and thousands of years, Sergeant,” +replied Hobson. “Remember that the soil on which we are treading +has been brought here by the wind, little by little, that the sand has +accumulated grain by grain! Think of the time it must have taken for the +seeds of firs, willows, and arbutus to become shrubs and trees! Perhaps +the sheet of ice on which we float was welded to the continent before +the creation of man!” + +“Well,” cried Long, “it really might have waited a few centuries +longer before it drifted. How much anxiety and how many dangers we might +then have been spared!” + +Sergeant Long’s most sensible remark closed the conversation, and the +journey was resumed. + +From Cape Esquimaux to Walruses’ Bay the coast ran almost due south, +following the one hundred and twenty-seventh meridian. Looking behind +them they could see one corner of the lagoon, its waters sparkling in +the sunbeams, and a little beyond the wooded heights in which it was +framed. Large eagles soared above their heads, their cries and the loud +flapping of their wings breaking the stillness, and furred animals +of many kinds, martens, polecats, ermines, &c., crouching behind some +rising ground, or hiding amongst the stunted bushes and willows, gazed +inquiringly at the intruders. They seemed to understand that they had +nothing to fear. Hobson caught a glimpse of a few beavers wandering +about, evidently ill at ease, and puzzled at the disappearance of the +little river. With no ledges to shelter them, and no stream by which to +build a new home, they were doomed to die of cold when the severe frost +set in. Sergeant Long also saw a troop of wolves crossing the plain. + +It was evident that specimens of the whole Arctic Fauna were imprisoned +on the island, and there was every reason to fear that, when famished +with hunger, all the carnivorous beasts would be formidable enemies to +the occupants of Fort Hope. + +Fortunately, however, one race of animals appeared to be quite +unrepresented. Not a single white bear was seen! Once the Sergeant +thought he saw an enormous white mass moving about on the other side +of a clump of willows, but on close examination decided that he was +mistaken. + +The coast near Walruses’ Bay was, on the whole, only slightly elevated +above the sea-level, and in the distance the waves broke into running +foam as they do upon a sloping beach. It was to be feared that the +soil had little stability, but there was no means of judging of the +modifications which had taken place since their last visit, and Hobson +much regretted that he had not made bench marks about Cape Bathurst +before he left, that he might judge of the amount of sinking or +depression which took place. He determined, however, to take this +precaution on his return. + +It will be understood that, under the circumstances, the party did not +advance very rapidly. A pause was often made to examine the soil, or to +see if there were any sign of an approaching fracture on the coast, and +sometimes the explorers wandered inland for half a mile. Here and there +the Sergeant planted branches of willow or birch to serve as landmarks +for the future, especially wherever undermining seemed to be going on +rapidly and the solidity of the ground was doubtful. By this means it +would be easy to ascertain the changes which might take place. + +They did advance, however, and at three o’clock in the afternoon +they were only three miles from Walruses’ Bay, and Hobson called Mrs +Barnett’s attention to the important changes which had been effected +by the rupture of the isthmus. + +Formerly the south-western horizon was shut in by a long slightly +curved coast-line, formed by the shores of Liverpool Bay. Now a sea-line +bounded the view, the continent having disappeared. Victoria Island +ended in an abrupt angle where it had broken off, and all felt sure that +on turning round that angle the ocean would be spread out before them, +and that its waves would bathe the whole of the southern side of the +island, which was once the connecting-link between Walruses’ Bay and +Washburn Bay. + +Mrs Barnett could not look at the changed aspect of the scene without +emotion. She had expected it, and yet her heart beat almost audibly. +She gazed across the sea for the missing continent, which was now left +several hundred miles behind, and it rushed upon her mind with a fresh +shock that she would never set foot on America again. Her agitation was +indeed excusable, and it was shared by the Lieutenant and the Sergeant. + +All quickened their steps, eager to reach the abrupt angle in the south. +The ground rose slightly as they advanced, and the layers of earth +and sand became thicker; this of course was explained by the former +proximity of this part of the coast to the true continent. The thickness +of the crust of ice and of the layer of earth at the point of junction +increasing, as it probably did, every century, explained the long +resistance of the isthmus, which nothing but some extraordinary +convulsion could have overcome. Such a convulsion was the earthquake of +the 8th January, which, although it had only affected the continent of +North America, had sufficed to break the connecting-link, and to launch +Victoria Island upon the wide ocean. + +At four o’clock P.M., the angle was reached. Walruses’ Bay, formed +by an indentation of the firm ground, had disappeared! It had remained +behind with the continent + +“By my faith, madam!” exclaimed the Sergeant, “it’s lucky for +you we didn’t call it Paulina Barnett Bay!” + +“Yes,” replied the lady, “I begin to think I am an unlucky +godmother for newly-discovered places.” + +CHAPTER IV. A NIGHT ENCAMPMENT. And so Hobson had not been mistaken +about the point of rupture. It was the isthmus which had yielded in +the shock of the earthquake. Not a trace was to be seen of the American +continent, not a single cliff, even the volcano on the west had +disappeared. Nothing but the sea everywhere. + +The island on this side ended in a cape, coming to an almost sharp +point, and it was evident that the substratum of ice, fretted by +the warmer waters of the current and exposed to all the fury of the +elements, must rapidly dissolve. + +The explorers resumed their march, following the course of the fracture, +which ran from west to east in an almost straight line. Its edges were +not jagged or broken, but clear cut, as if the division had been made +with a sharp instrument, and here and there the conformation of the soil +could be easily examined. The banks- half ice, half sand and earth-rose +some ten feet from the water. They were perfectly perpendicular, without +the slightest slope, and in some places there were traces of recent +landslips. Sergeant Long pointed to several small blocks of ice floating +in the offing, and rapidly melting, which had evidently been broken off +from their island. The action of the warm surf would, of course, soon +eat away the new coast-line, which time had not yet clothed with a kind +of cement of snow and sand, such as covered the rest of the beach, and +altogether the state of things was very far from reassuring. + +Before taking any rest, Mrs Barnett, Hobson, and Long, were anxious to +finish their examination of the southern edge of the island. There would +be plenty of daylight, for the sun would not set until eleven o’clock +P.M. The briliant orb of day was slowly advancing along the western +horizon, and its oblique rays cast long shadows of themselves before the +explorers, who conversed at intervals after long silent pauses, during +which they gazed at the sea and thought of the dark future before them. + +Hobson intended to encamp for the night at Washburn Bay. When there +eighteen miles would have been traversed, and, if he were not mistaken, +half his circular journey would be accomplished. After a few hours’ +repose he meant to return to Fort Hope along the western coast. + +No fresh incident marked the exploration of the short distance between +Walruses’ Bay and Washburn Bay, and at seven o’clock in the evening +the spot chosen for the encampment was reached. A similar change had +taken place here. Of Washburn Bay, nothing remained but the curve +formed by the coast-line of the island, and which was once its northern +boundary. It stretched away without a break for seven miles to the cape +they had named Cape Michael. This side of the island did not appear to +have suffered at all in consequence of the rupture. The thickets of pine +and birch, massed a little behind the cape, were in their fullest beauty +at this time of year, and a good many furred animals were disporting +themselves on the plain. + +A halt was made at Washburn Bay, and the explorers were able to enjoy +an extended view on the south, although they could not see any great +distance on the north. The sun was so low on the horizon, that its rays +were intercepted by the rising ground on the west, and did not reach +the little bay. It was not, however, yet night, nor could it be called +twilight, as the sun had not set. + +“Lieutenant,” said Long, “if by some miracle a bell were now to +ring, what do you suppose it would mean?” + +“That it was supper-time,” replied Hobson. “Don’t you agree with +me, Mrs Barnett?” + +“Indeed I do,” replied the lady addressed, “and as our cloth is +spread for us, let us sit down. This moss, although slightly worn, will +suit us admirably, and was evidently intended for us by Providence.” + +The bag of provisions was opened; some salt meat, a hare paté from Mrs +Joliffe’s larder, with a few biscuits, formed their frugal supper. + +The meal was quickly over, and Hobson returned to the southwest angle of +the island, whilst Mrs Barnett rested at the foot of a low fir tree, and +Sergeant Long made ready the night quarters. + +The Lieutenant was anxious to examine the piece of ice which formed the +island, to ascertain, if possible, something of its structure. A little +bank, produced by a landslip, enabled him to step down to the level of +the sea, and from there he was able to look closely at the steep wall +which formed the coast. Where he stood the soil rose scarcely three feet +above the water. The upper part consisted of a thin layer of earth and +sand mixed with crushed shells; and the lower of hard, compact, and, if +we may so express it, “metallic” ice, strong enough to support the +upper soil of the island. + +This layer of ice was not more than one foot above the sea-level. In +consequence of the recent fracture, it was easy to see the regular +disposition of the sheets of ice piled up horizontally, and which had +evidently been produced by successive frosts in comparatively quieter +waters. + +We know that freezing commences on the surface of liquids, and as +the cold increases, the thickness of the crust becomes greater, the +solidification proceeding from the top downwards. That at least is the +case in waters that are at rest; it has, however, been observed that +the very reverse is the case in running waters-the ice forming at the +bottom, and subsequently rising to the surface. + +It was evident, then, that the floe which formed the foundation of +Victoria Island had been formed in calm waters on the shores of the +North American continent. The freezing had evidently commenced on +the surface, and the thaw would begin at the bottom, according to a +well-known law; so that the ice-field would gradually decrease in weight +as it became thawed by the warmer waters through which it was passing, +and the general level of the island would sink in proportion. + +This was the great danger. + +As we have just stated, Hobson noticed that the solid ice, the ice-field +properly so called, was only about one foot above the sea-level! We know +that four-fifths of a floating mass of ice are always submerged. For one +foot of an iceberg or ice-field above the water, there are four below +it. It must, however, be remarked that the density, or rather specific +weight of floating ice, varies considerably according to its mode +of formation or origin. The ice-masses which proceed from sea water, +porous, opaque, and tinged with blue or green, according as they are +struck by the rays of the sun, are lighter than ice formed from fresh +water. All things considered, and making due allowance for the weight of +the mineral and vegetable layer above the ice. Hobson concluded it to +be about four or five feet thick below the sea-level. The different +declivities of the island, the little hills and rising ground, would of +course only affect the upper soil, and it might reasonably be supposed +that the wandering island was not immersed more than five feet. + +This made Hobson very anxious. Only five feet! Setting aside the causes +of dissolution to which the ice-field might be subjected, would not the +slightest shock cause a rupture of the surface? Might not a rough sea or +a gale of wind cause a dislocation of the ice-field, which would lead to +its breaking up into small portions, and to its final decomposition? Oh +for the speedy arrival of the winter, with its bitter cold! Would that +the column of mercury were frozen in its cistern! Nothing but the rigour +of an Arctic winter could consolidate and thicken the foundation of +their island, and establish a means of communication between it and the +continent. + +Hobson returned to the halting-place little cheered by his discoveries, +and found Long busy making arrangements for the night; for he had no +idea of sleeping beneath the open sky, although Mrs Barnett declared +herself quite ready to do so. He told the Lieutenant that he intended to +dig a hole in the ice big enough to hold three persons—in fact to make +a kind of snow-hut, in which they would be protected from the cold night +air. + +“In the land of the Esquimaux,” he said, “nothing is wiser than to +do as the Esquimaux do.” + +Hobson approved, but advised the Sergeant not to dig too deeply, as the +ice was not more than five feet thick. + +Long set to work. With the aid of his hatchet and ice-chisel he had +soon cleared away the earth, and hollowed out a kind of passage sloping +gently down to the crust of ice. + +He next attacked the brittle mass, which had been covered over with sand +and earth for so many centuries. It would not take more than an hour to +hollow out a subterranean retreat, or rather a burrow with walls of +ice, which would keep in the heat, and therefore serve well for a +resting-place during the short night. + +Whilst Long was working away like a white ant, Hobson communicated the +result of his observations to Mrs Barnett. He did not disguise from her +that the construction of Victoria Island rendered him very uneasy. He +felt sure that the thinness of the ice would lead to the opening of +ravines on the surface before long; where, it would be impossible to +foresee, and of course it would be equally impossible to prevent them. +The wandering Island might at any moment settle down in consequence of +a change in its specific gravity, or break up into more or less numerous +islets, the duration of which must necessarily be ephemeral. He judged, +therefore, that it would be best for the members of the colony to keep +together as much as possible, and not to leave the fort, that they might +all share the same chances. + +Hobson was proceeding further to unfold his views when cries for help +were heard. + +Mrs Barnett started to her feet, and both looked round in every +direction, but nothing was to be seen. + +The cries were now redoubled, and Hobson exclaimed— + +“The Sergeant! the Sergeant!” + +And followed by Mrs Barnett, he rushed towards the burrow, and he had +scarcely reached the opening of the snow-house before he saw Sergeant +Long clutching with both hands at his knife, which he had stuck in the +wall of ice, and calling out loudly, although with the most perfect +self-possession. + +His head and arms alone were visible. Whilst he was digging, the ice had +given way suddenly beneath him, and he was plunged into water up to his +waist. + +Hobson merely said— + +“Keep hold!” + +And creeping through the passage, he was soon at the edge of the hole. +The poor Sergeant seized his hand, and he was soon rescued from his +perilous position. + +“Good God! Sergeant!” exclaimed Mrs Barnett; “what has +happened?” + +“Nothing,” replied Long, shaking himself like a wet spaniel, +“except that the ice gave way under me, and I took a compulsory +bath.” + +“You forgot what I told you about not digging too deeply, then,” +said Hobson. + +“Beg pardon, sir; I hadn’t cut through fifteen inches of the ice, +and I expect there was a kind of cavern where I was working-the ice +did not touch the water. It was just like going through a ceiling. If I +hadn’t been able to hang on by my knife, I should have slipped under +the island like a fool, and that would have been a pity, wouldn’t it, +madam?” + +“A very great pity, my brave fellow,” said Mrs Barnett, pressing his +hand. + +Long’s explanation was correct; for some reason or another—most +likely from an accumulation of air-the ice had formed a kind of vault +above the water, and of course it soon gave way under the weight of the +Sergeant and the blows of his chisel. + +The same thing might happen in other parts of the island, which was +anything but reassuring. Where could they be certain of treading on firm +ground? Might not the earth give way beneath their feet at any minute? +What heart, however brave, would not have sunk at the thought of the +thin partition between them and the awful gulf of the ocean? + +Sergeant Long, however, thought but little of his bath, and was ready +to begin mining in some other place. This Mrs Barnett would not allow. +A night in the open air would do her no harm; the shelter of the coppice +near would be protection enough for them all; and Sergeant Long was +obliged to submit. + +The camp was, therefore, moved back some thirty yards from the beach, +to a rising ground on which grew a few clumps of pines and willows which +could scarcely be called a wood. Towards ten o’clock the disc of the +sun began to dip below the horizon, and before it disappeared for the +few hours of the night a crackling fire of dead branches was blazing at +the camp. + +Long had now a fine opportunity of drying his legs, of which he gladly +availed himself. He and Hobson talked together earnestly until twilight +set in, and Mrs Barnett occasionally joined in the conversation, doing +the best she could to cheer the disheartened Lieutenant. The sky was +bright with stars, and the holy influence of the night could not fail +to calm his troubled spirit. The wind murmured softly amongst the pines; +even the sea appeared to be wrapt in slumber, its bosom slightly heaving +with the swell, which died away upon the beach with a faint rippling +sound. All creation was hushed, not even the wail of a sea bird broke +upon the ear, the crisp crackling of the dead branches was exchanged for +a steady flame, and nothing but the voices of the wanderers broke the +sublime, the awful silence of the night. + +“Who would imagine,” said Mrs Barnett, “that we were floating on +the surface of the ocean! It really requires an effort to realise it, +for the sea which is carrying us along in its fatal grasp appears to be +absolutely motionless!” + +“Yes, madam,” replied Hobson;” and if the floor of our carriage +were solid, if I did not know that sooner or later the keel of our boat +will be missing, that some day its hull will burst open, and finally, if +I knew where we are going, I should rather enjoy floating on the ocean +like this.” + +“Well, Lieutenant,” rejoined Mrs Barnett, “could there be a +pleasanter mode of travelling than ours? We feel no motion. Our island +has exactly the same speed as the current which is bearing it away. Is +it not like a balloon voyage in the air? What could be more delightful +than advancing with one’s house, garden, park, &c.? A wandering +island, with a solid insubmersible foundation, would really be the most +comfortable and wonderful conveyance that could possibly be imagined. I +have heard of hanging gardens. Perhaps some day floating parks will be +invented which will carry us all over the globe! Their size will render +them insensible to the action of the waves, they will have nothing +to fear from storms, and perhaps with a favourable wind they might be +guided by means of immense sails! What marvels of vegetation would be +spread before the eyes of the passengers when they passed from temperate +to torrid zones! With skilful pilots, well acquainted with the currents, +it might be possible to remain in one latitude, and enjoy a perpetual +spring.” + +Hobson could not help smiling at Mrs Barnett’s fancies. The brave +woman ran on with such an easy flow of words, she talked with as little +effort as Victoria Island moved. And was she not right? It would have +been a very pleasant mode of travelling if there had been no danger of +their conveyance melting and being swallowed up by the sea. + +The night passed on, and the explorers slept a few hours. At daybreak +they breakfasted, and thoroughly enjoyed their meal. The warmth and +rest had refreshed them, and they resumed their journey at about six +o’clock A.M. + +From Cape Michael to the former Port Barnett the coast ran in an almost +straight line from south to north for about eleven miles. There was +nothing worthy of note about it; the shores were low and pretty even all +the way, and seemed to have suffered no alteration since the breaking +of the isthmus. Long, in obedience to the Lieutenant, made bench marks +along the beach, that any future change might be easily noted. + +Hobson was naturally anxious to get back to Fort Hope the same day, and +Mrs Barnett was also eager to return to her friends. It was of course +desirable under the circumstances that the commanding officer should not +be long absent from the fort + +All haste was therefore made, and by taking a short cut they arrived at +noon at the little promontory which formerly protected Port Barnett from +the east winds. + +It was not more than eight miles from this point to Fort Hope, and +before four o’clock P.M the shouts of Corporal Joliffe welcomed their +return to the factory. + +CHAPTER V. FROM JULY 25TH TO AUGUST 20TH. Hobson’s first care on his +return to the fort, was to make inquiries of Thomas Black as to the +situation of the little colony. No change had taken place for the last +twenty-four hours, but, as subsequently appeared, the island had floated +one degree of latitude further south, whilst still retaining its motion +towards the west. It was now at the same distance from the equator as +Icy Cape, a little promontory of western Alaska, and two hundred miles +from the American coast. The speed of the current seemed to be less here +than in the eastern part of the Arctic Ocean, but the island continued +to advance, and, much to Hobson’s annoyance, towards the dreaded +Behring Strait. It was now only the 24th July, and a current of average +speed would carry it in another month through the strait and into the +heated waves of the Pacific, where it would melt “like a lump of sugar +in a glass of water.” + +Mrs Barnett acquainted Madge with the result of the exploration of the +island. She explained to her the arrangement of the layers of earth and +ice at the part where the isthmus had been broken off; told her that +the thickness of the ice below the sea level was estimated at five feet; +related the accident to Sergeant Long—in short, she made her fully +understand the reasons there were to fear the breaking up or sinking of +the ice field. + +The rest of the colony had, however, no suspicion of the truth; a +feeling of perfect security prevailed. It never occurred to any of the +brave fellows that Fort Hope was floating above an awful abyss, and +that the lives of all its inhabitants were in danger. All were in good +health, the weather was fine, and the climate pleasant and bracing. +The baby Michael got on wonderfully; he was beginning to toddle about +between the house and the palisade; and Corporal Joliffe, who was +extremely fond of him, was already beginning to teach him to hold a +gun, and to understand the first duties of a soldier. Oh, if Mrs Joliffe +would but present him with such a son! but, alas! the blessing of +children, for which he and his wife prayed every day, was as yet denied +to them. + +Meanwhile the soldiers had plenty to do. + +Mac-Nab and his men—Petersen, Belcher, Garry, Pond, and Hope—worked +zealously at the construction of a boat, a difficult task, likely to +occupy them for several months. But as their vessel would be of no use +until next year after the thaw, they neglected none of their duties at +the factory on its account. Hobson let things go on as if the future of +the factory were not compromised, and persevered in keeping the men in +ignorance. This serious question was often discussed by the officer and +his “staff,” and Mrs Barnett and Madge differed from their chief on +the subject. They thought it would be better to tell the whole truth; +the men were brave and energetic, not likely to yield to despair, and +the shock would not be great if they heard of it now, instead of only +when their situation was so hopeless that it could not be concealed. But +in spite of the justice of these remarks, Hobson would not yield, and +he was supported by Sergeant Long. Perhaps, after all, they were right; +they were both men of long experience, and knew the temper of their men. + +And so the work of provisioning and strengthening the fort proceeded. +The palisaded enceinte was repaired with new stakes, and made higher +in many places, so that it really formed a very strong fortification. +Mac-Nab also put into execution, with his chief’s approval, a plan he +had long had at heart. At the corners abutting on the lake he built two +little pointed sentry-boxes, which completed the defences; and Corporal +Joliffe anticipated with delight the time when he should be sent to +relieve guard: he felt that they gave a military look to the buildings, +and made them really imposing. + +The palisade was now completely finished, and Mac-Nab, remembering the +sufferings of the last winter, built a new wood shed close up against +the house itself, with a door of communication inside, so that there +would be no need to go outside at all. By this contrivance the fuel +would always be ready to hand. On the left side of the house, opposite +the shed, Mac-Nab constructed a large sleeping-room for the soldiers, so +that the camp-bed could be removed from the common room. This room +was also to be used for meals, and work. The three married couples had +private rooms walled off, so that the large house was relieved of them +as well as of all the other soldiers. A magazine for furs only was also +erected behind the house near the powder-magazine, leaving the loft free +for stores; and the rafters and ribs of the latter were bound with iron +cramps, that they might be able to resist all attacks. Mac-Nab also +intended to build a little wooden chapel, which had been included in +Hobson’s original plan of the factory; but its erection was put off +until the next summer. + +With what eager interest would the Lieutenant have once watched the +progress of his establishment! Had he been building on firm ground, +with what delight would he have watched the houses, sheds, and magazines +rising around him! He remembered the scheme of crowning Cape Bathurst +with a redoubt for the protection of Fort Hope with a sigh. The very +name of the factory, “Fort Hope,” made his heart sink within him; +for should it not more truly be called “Fort Despair?” + +These various works took up the whole summer, and there was no time for +ennui. The construction of the boat proceeded rapidly. Mac-Nab meant it +to be of about thirty tons measurement, which would make it large +enough to carry some twenty passengers several hundred miles in the fine +season. The carpenter had been fortunate enough to find some bent pieces +of wood, so that he was able quickly to form the first ribs of the +vessel, and soon the stern and sternpost, fixed to the keel, were upon +the dockyard at the foot of Cape Bathurst. + +Whilst the carpenters were busy with hatchets, saws, and adzes, the +hunters were eagerly hunting the reindeer and Polar hares, which +abounded near the fort. The Lieutenant, however, told Marbre and Sabine +not to go far away, stating as a reason, that until the buildings were +completed he did not wish to attract the notice of rivals. The truth +was, he did not wish the changes which had taken place to be noticed. + +One day Marbre inquired if it was not now time to go to Walruses’ +Bay, and get a fresh supply of morse-oil for burning, and Hobson replied +rather hastily— + +“No, Marbre; it would be useless.” + +The Lieutenant knew only too well that Walruses’ Bay was two hundred +miles away, and that there were no morses to be hunted on the island. + +It must not be supposed that Hobson considered the situation desperate +even now. He often assured Mrs Barnett, Madge, and Long that he was +convinced the island would hold together until the bitter cold of winter +should thicken its foundation and arrest its course at one and the same +time. + +After his journey of discovery, Hobson estimated exactly the area of +his new dominions. The island measured more than forty miles round, from +which its superficial area[r] would appear to be about one hundred and +forty miles at the least. By way of comparison, we may say that Victoria +Island was rather larger than St Helena, and its area was about the same +as that of Paris within the line of fortifications. If then it should +break up into fragments, the separate parts might still be of sufficient +size to be habitable for some time. + +When Mrs Barnett expressed her surprise that a floating ice-field could +be so large, Hobson replied by reminding her of the observations of +Arctic navigators. Parry, Penny, and Franklin had met with ice-fields +in the Polar seas one hundred miles long and fifty broad. Captain Kellet +abandoned his boat on an ice-field measuring at least three hundred +square miles, and what was Victoria Island compared to it? + +Its size was, however, sufficient to justify a hope that it would resist +the action of the warm currents until the cold weather set in. Hobson +would not allow himself to doubt; his despair arose rather from the +knowledge that the fruit of all his cares, anxieties, and dangers must +eventually be swallowed up by the deep, and it was no wonder that he +could take no interest in the works that were going on. + +Mrs Barnett kept up a good heart through it all; she encouraged her +comrades in their work, and took her share in it, as if she had still a +future to look forward to. Seeing what an interest Mrs Joliffe took in +her plants, she joined her every day in the garden. There was now a fine +crop of sorrel and scurvy-grass—thanks to the Corporal’s unwearying +exertions to keep off the birds of every kind, which congregated by +hundreds. + +The taming of the reindeer had been quite successful; there were now a +good many young, and little Michael had been partly brought up on the +milk of the mothers. There were now some thirty head in the herd which +grazed near the fort, and a supply of the herbage on which they feed was +dried and laid up for the winter. These useful animals, which are easily +domesticated, were already quite familiar with all the colonists, and +did not go far from the enceinte. Some of them were used in sledges to +carry timber backwards and forwards. A good many reindeer, still wild, +now fell into the trap half way between the fort and Port Barnett. It +will be remembered that a large bear was once taken in it; but nothing +of the kind occurred this season—none fell victims but the reindeer, +whose flesh was salted and laid by for future use. Twenty at least were +taken, which in the ordinary course of things would have gone down to +the south in the winter. + +One day, however, the reindeer-trap suddenly became useless in +consequence of the conformation of the soil. After visiting it as usual, +the hunter Marbre approached Hobson, and said to him in a significant +tone—— + +“I have just paid my daily visit to the reindeer-trap, sir.” + +“Well, Marbre, I hope you have been as successful to-day as yesterday, +and have caught a couple of reindeer,” replied Hobson. + +“No, sir, no,” replied Marbre, with some embarrassment. + +“Your trap has not yielded its ordinary contingent then?” + +“No, sir; and if any animal had fallen in, it would certainly have +been drowned!” + +“Drowned!” cried the Lieutenant, looking at the hunter with an +anxious expression. + +“Yes, sir,” replied Marbre, looking attentively at his superior, +“the pit is full of water.” + +“Ah!” said Hobson, in the tone of a man who attached no importance +to that, “you know your pit was partly hollowed out of ice; its walls +have melted with the heat of the sun, and then “—— + +“Beg pardon for interrupting you, sir,” said Marbre; “but the +water cannot have been produced by the melting of ice.” + +“Why not, Marbre?” “Because if it came from ice it would be sweet, +as you explained to me once before. Now the water in our pit is salt!” + +Master of himself as he was, Hobson could not help changing countenance +slightly, and he had not a word to say. + +“Besides,” added Marbre, “I wanted to sound the trench, to see how +deep the water was, and to my great surprise, I can tell you, I could +not find the bottom.” + +“Well, Marbre,” replied Hobson hastily, “there is nothing +so wonderful in that. Some fracture of the soil has established a +communication between the sea and the trap. So don’t be uneasy about +it, my brave fellow, but leave the trap alone for the present, and be +content with setting snares near the fort.” + +Marbre touched his cap respectfully, and turned on his heel, but not +before he had given his chief a searching glance. + +Hobson remained very thoughtful for a few moments. Marbre’s tidings +were of grave importance. It was evident that the bottom of the trench, +gradually melted by the warm waters of the sea, had given way. + +Hobson at once called the Sergeant, and having acquainted him with the +incident, they went together, unnoticed by their companions, to the +beach at the foot of Cape Bathurst, where they had made the bench-marks. + +They examined them carefully, and found that since they last did so, the +floating island had sunk six inches. + +“We are sinking gradually,” murmured Sergeant Long. “The ice is +wearing away.” + +“Oh for the winter! the winter!” cried Hobson, stamping his foot +upon the ground. + +But as yet, alas! there was no sign of the approach of the cold season. +The thermometer maintained a mean height of 59° Fahrenheit, and during +the few hours of the night the column of mercury scarcely went down +three degrees. + +Preparations for the approaching winter went on apace, and there +was really nothing wanting to Fort Hope, although it had not been +revictualled by Captain Craventy’s detachment. The long hours of the +Arctic night might be awaited in perfect security. The stores were of +course carefully husbanded. There still remained plenty of spirits, only +small quantities having been consumed; and there was a good stock of +biscuits, which, once gone, could not be replaced. Fresh venison and +salt meat were to be had in abundance, and with some antiscorbutic +vegetables, the diet was most healthy; and all the members of the little +colony were well. + +A good deal of timber was cut in the woods clothing the eastern slopes +of Lake Barnett. Many were the birch-trees, pines, and firs which fell +beneath the axe of Mac-Nab, and were dragged to the house by the tamed +reindeer. The carpenter did not spare the little forest, although he cut +his wood judiciously; for he never dreamt that timber might fail him, +imagining, as he did, Victoria Island to be a peninsula, and knowing the +districts near Cape Michael to be rich in different species of trees. + +Many a time did the unconscious carpenter congratulate his Lieutenant on +having chosen a spot so favoured by Heaven. Woods, game, furred animals, +a lagoon teeming with fish, plenty of herbs for the animals, and, as +Corporal Joliffe would have added, double pay for the men. Was not Cape +Bathurst a corner of a privileged land, the like of which was not to +be found in the whole Arctic regions? Truly Hobson was a favourite +of Heaven, and ought to return thanks to Providence every day for the +discovery of this unique spot. + +Ah, Mac-Nab, you little knew how you wrung the heart of your master when +you talked in that strain! + +The manufacture of winter garments was not neglected in the factory. Mrs +Barnett, Madge, Mrs Mac-Nab, Mrs Rae, and Mrs Joliffe—when she could +leave her fires—were alike indefatigable. Mrs Barnett knew that +they would all have to leave the fort in the depth of winter, and was +determined that every one should be warmly clothed. They would have to +face the bitterest cold for a good many days during the Polar night, if +Victoria Island should halt far from the continent. Boots and clothes +ought indeed to be strong and well made, for crossing some hundreds of +miles under such circumstances. Mrs Barnett and Madge devoted all their +energies to the matter in hand, and the furs, which they knew it would +be impossible to save, were turned to good account. They were used +double, so that the soft hair was both inside and outside of the +clothes; and when wearing them, the whole party would be as richly +attired as the grandest princesses, or the most wealthy ladies. Those +not in the secret were rather surprised at the free use made of the +Company’s property; but Hobson’s authority was not to be questioned, +and really martens, polecats, musk-rats, beavers, and foxes multiplied +with such rapidity near the fort, that all the furs used could easily +be replaced by a few shots, or the setting of a few traps; and when Mrs +Mac-Nab saw the beautiful ermine coat which had been made for her baby, +her delight was unbounded, and she no longer wondered at anything. + +So passed the days until the middle of the month of August. The weather +continued fine, and any mists which gathered on the horizon were quickly +dispersed by the sunbeams. + +Every day Hobson took the bearings, taking care, however, to go some +distance from the fort, that suspicions might not be aroused, and he +also visited different parts of the island, and was reassured by finding +that no important changes appeared to be taking place. + +On the 16th August Victoria Island was situated in 167° 27’ west +longitude, and 70° 49’ north latitude. It had, therefore, drifted +slightly to the south, but without getting any nearer to the American +coast, which curved considerably. + +The distance traversed by the island since the fracture of the isthmus, +or rather since the last thaw, could not be less than eleven or twelve +hundred miles to the west. + +But what was this distance compared to the vast extent of the ocean? +Had not boats been known to be drifted several thousands of miles by +currents? Was not this the case with the English ship Resolute, the +American brig Advance, and with the Fox, all of which were carried along +upon ice-fields until the winter arrested their advance? + +CHAPTER VI. TEN DAYS OF TEMPEST From the 17th to the 20th August the +weather continued fine, and the temperature moderate. The mists on the +horizon were not resolved into clouds, and altogether the weather +was exceptionally beautiful for such an elevated position. It will be +readily understood, however, that Hobson could take no pleasure in the +fineness of the climate. + +On the 21st August, however, the barometer gave notice of an approaching +change. The column of mercury suddenly fell considerably, the sun was +completely hidden at the moment of culmination, and Hobson was unable to +take his bearings. + +The next day the wind changed and blew strongly from the north-west, +torrents of rain falling at intervals. Meanwhile, however, the +temperature did not change to any sensible extent, the thermometer +remaining at 54° Fahrenheit. + +Fortunately the proposed works were now all finished, and MacNab had +completed the carcass of his boat, which was planked and ribbed. Hunting +might now be neglected a little, as the stores were complete, which was +fortunate, for the weather became very bad. The wind was high, the +rain incessant, and thick fogs rendered it impossible to go beyond the +enceinte of the fort. + +“What do you think of this change in the weather, Lieutenant?” +inquired Mrs Barnett on the morning of the 27th August; “might it not +be in our favour?” + +“I should not like to be sure of it, madam,” replied Hobson; “but +anything is better for us than the magnificent weather we have lately +had, during which the sun made the waters warmer and warmer. Then, too, +the wind from the north-west is so very strong that it may perhaps drive +us nearer to the American continent.” + +“Unfortunately,” observed Long, “we can’t take our bearings +every day now. It’s impossible to see either sun, moon, or stars in +this fog. Fancy attempting to take an altitude now!” + +“We shall see well enough to recognise America, if we get anywhere +near it,” said Mrs Barnett. “Whatever land we approach will be +welcome. It will most likely be some part of Russian America—probably +Western Alaska.” + +“You are right, madam,” said Hobson; “for, unfortunately, in the +whole Arctic Ocean there is not an island, an islet, or even a rock to +which we could fasten our vessel!” + +“Well,” rejoined Mrs Barnett, “why should not our conveyance take +us straight to the coasts of Asia? Might not the currents carry us past +the opening of Bearing Strait and land us on the shores of Siberia?” + +“No, madam, no,” replied Hobson; “our ice-field would soon meet +the Kamtchatka current, and be carried by it to the northwest. It is +more likely, however, that this wind will drive us towards the shores of +Russian America.” + +“We must keep watch, then,” said Mrs Barnett, “and ascertain our +position as soon as possible.” + +“We shall indeed keep watch,” replied Hobson, “although this fog +is very much against us If we should be driven on to the coast, the +shock will be felt even if we cannot see. Let’s hope the island will +not fall to pieces in this storm! That is at present our principal +danger. Well, when it comes we shall see what there is to be done, and +meanwhile we must wait patiently.” + +Of course this conversation was not held in the public room, where the +soldiers and women worked together. It was in her own room, with the +window looking out on the court, that Mrs Barnett received visitors. It +was almost impossible to see indoors even in the daytime, and the wind +could be heard rushing by outside like an avalanche. Fortunately, Cape +Bathurst protected the house from the north-east winds, but the sand and +earth from its summit were hurled down upon the roof with a noise like +the pattering of hail. Mac-Nab began to feel fresh uneasiness about his +chimneys, which it was absolutely necessary to keep in good order. With +the roaring of the wind was mingled that of the sea, as its huge waves +broke upon the beach. The storm had become a hurricane. + +In spite of the fury of the gale, Hobson determined on the morning of +the 28th of August to climb to the summit of Cape Bathurst, in order +to examine the state of the horizon, the sea, and the sky. He therefore +wrapped himself up, taking care to have nothing about him likely to give +hold the wind, and set out. + +He got to the foot of the cape without much difficulty. The sand and +earth blinded him, it is true, but protected by the cliff he had not +as yet actually faced the wind. The fatigue began when he attempted to +climb the almost perpendicular sides of the promontory; but by clutching +at the tufts of herbs with which they were covered, he managed to get to +the top, but there the fury of the gale was such that he could neither +remain standing nor seated; he was therefore forced to fling himself +upon his face behind the little coppice and cling to some shrubs, only +raising his head and shoulders above the ground. + +The appearance of sea and sky was indeed terrible. The spray dashed over +the Lieutenant’s head, and half-a-mile from the cape water and clouds +were confounded together in a thick mist. Low jagged rain-clouds were +chased along the heavens with giddy rapidity, and heavy masses of vapour +were piled upon the zenith. Every now and then an awful stillness fell +upon the land, and the only sounds were the breaking of the surf upon +the beach and the roaring of the angry billows; but then the tempest +recommenced with redoubled fury, and Hobson felt the cape tremble to its +foundations. Sometimes the rain poured down with such violence that it +resembled grape-shot. + +It was indeed a terrible hurricane from the very worst quarter of the +heavens. This north-east wind might blow for a long time and cause all +manner of havoc. Yet Hobson, who would generally have grieved over +the destruction around him, did not complain,—on the contrary, he +rejoiced; for if, as he hoped, the island held together, it must be +driven to the south-west by this wind, so much more powerful than the +currents. And the south-west meant land—hope—safety! Yes, for his +own sake, and for that of all with him, he hoped that the hurricane +would last until it had flung them upon the laud, no matter where. That +which would have been fatal to a ship was the best thing that could +happen to the floating island. + +For a quarter of an hour Hobson remained crouching upon the ground, +clutching at the shrubs like a drowning man at a spar, lashed by the +wind, drenched by the rain and the spray, struggling to estimate all the +chances of safety the storm might afford him. At the end of that time he +let himself slide down the cape, and fought his way to Fort Hope. + +Hobson’s first care was to tell his comrades that the hurricane was +not yet at its height, and that it would probably last a long time yet. +He announced these tidings with the manner of one bringing good news, +and every one looked at him in astonishment. Their chief officer really +seemed to take a delight in the fury of the elements. + +On the 30th Hobson again braved the tempest, not this time climbing the +cape, but going down to the beach. What was his joy at noticing some +long weeds floating on the top of the waves, of a kind which did not +grow on Victoria Island. Christopher Columbus’ delight was not greater +when he saw the sea-weed which told him of the proximity of land. + +The Lieutenant hurried back to the fort, and told Mrs Barnett and +Sergeant Long of his discovery. He had a good mind to tell every one the +whole truth now, but a strange presentiment kept him silent. + +The occupants of the fort had plenty to amuse them in the long days of +compulsory confinement. They went on improving the inside of the various +buildings, and dug trenches in the court to carry away the rain-water. +Mac-Nab, a hammer in one hand and a nail in the other, was always busy +at a job in some corner or another, and nobody took much note of the +tempest outside in the daytime; but at night it was impossible to sleep, +the wind beat upon the buildings like a battering-ram; between the +house and the cape sometimes whirled a huge waterspout of extraordinary +dimensions; the planks cracked, the beams seemed about to separate, and +there was danger of the whole structure tumbling down. Mac-Nab and his +men lived in a state of perpetual dread, and had to be continually on +the watch. + +Meanwhile, Hobson was uneasy about the stability of the island itself, +rather than that of the house upon it. The tempest became so violent, +and the sea so rough, that there was really a danger of the dislocation +of the ice-field. It seemed impossible for it to resist much longer, +diminished as it was in thickness and subject to the perpetual action of +the waves. It is true that its inhabitants did not feel any motion, on +account of its vast extent, but it suffered from it none the less. The +point at issue was simply:—Would the island last until it was flung +upon the coast, or would it fall to pieces before it touched firm +ground? + +There could be no doubt that thus far it had resisted. As the Lieutenant +explained to Mrs Barnett, had it already been broken, had the ice-field +already divided into a number of islets, the occupants of the fort must +have noticed it, for the different pieces would have been small enough +to be affected by the motion of the sea, and the people on any one of +them would have been pitched about like passengers on a boat. This +was not the case, and in his daily observations Lieutenant Hobson had +noticed no movement whatever, not so much as a trembling of the island, +which appeared as firm and motionless as when it was still connected by +its isthmus with the mainland. + +But the breaking up, which had not yet taken place, might happen at any +minute. + +Hobson was most anxious to ascertain whether Victoria Island, driven by +the north-west wind out of the current, had approached the continent. +Everything, in fact, depended upon this, which was their last chance +of safety. But without sun, moon, or stars, instruments were of course +useless, as no observations could be taken, and the exact position of +the island could not be determined. If, then, they were approaching +the land, they would only know it when the land came in sight, and +Hobson’s only means of ascertaining anything in time to be of any +service, was to get to the south of his dangerous dominions. The +position of Victoria Island with regard to the cardinal points had not +sensibly altered all the time. Cape Bathurst still pointed to the +north, as it did when it was the advanced post of North America. It was, +therefore, evident that if Victoria Island should come alongside of the +continent, it would touch it with its southern side,—the communication +would, in a word, be re-established by means of the broken isthmus; +it was, therefore, imperative to ascertain what was going on in that +direction. + +Hobson determined to go to Cape Michael, however terrible the storm +might be, but he meant to keep the real motive of his reconnaissance a +secret from his companions. Sergeant Long was to accompany him. + +About four o’clock P.M., on the 31st August, Hobson sent for the +Sergeant in his own room, that they might arrange together for all +eventualities. + +“Sergeant Long,” he began, “it is necessary that we should, +without delay, ascertain the position of Victoria Island, and above +all whether this wind has, as I hope, driven it near to the American +continent.” + +“I quite agree with you, sir,” replied Long, “and the sooner we +find out the better” + +“But it will necessitate our going down to the south of the island.” + +“I am ready, sir.” + +“I know, Sergeant, that you are always ready to do your duty, but you +will not go alone. Two of us ought to go, that we may be able to let our +comrades know if any land is in sight; and besides I must see for myself +... we will go together.” + +“When you like, Lieutenant, just when you think best.” + +“We will start this evening at nine o’clock, when everybody else has +gone to bed” + +“Yes, they would all want to come with us,” said Long, “and they +must not know why we go so far from the factory.” + +“No, they must not know,” replied Hobson, “and if I can, I will +keep the knowledge of our awful situation from them until the end.” + +“It is agreed then, sir?” + +“Yes. You will take a tinder-box and some touchwood [Footnote: A +fungus used as tinder (Polyporous igniarius).] with you, so that we +can make a signal if necessary—if land is in sight in the south, for +instance” + +“Yes, sir.” + +“We shall have a rough journey, Sergeant.” + +“What does that matter, sir, but by the way—the lady?” + +“I don’t think I shall tell her. She would want to go with us.” + +“And she could not,” said the Sergeant, “a woman could not battle +with such a gale. Just see how its fury is increasing at this moment!” + +Indeed the house was rocking to such an extent that it seemed likely to +be torn from its foundations. + +“No,” said Hobson, “courageous as she is, she could not, she ought +not to accompany us. But on second thought, it will be best to tell her +of our project. She ought to know in case any accident should befall +us” + +“Yes,” replied Long, “we ought not to keep anything from her, and +if we do not come back”.... + +“At nine o’clock then, Sergeant.” + +“At nine o’clock.” + +And with a military salute Sergeant Long retired. + +A few minutes later Hobson was telling Mrs Barnett of his scheme. As +he expected the brave woman insisted on accompanying him, and was quite +ready to face the tempest. Hobson did not dissuade her by dwelling on +the dangers of the expedition, he merely said that her presence was +necessary at the fort during his absence, and that her remaining would +set his mind at ease. If any accident happened to him it would be a +comfort to know that she would take his place. + +Mrs Barnett understood and said no more about going; but only urged +Hobson not to risk himself unnecessarily. To remember that he was the +chief officer, that his life was not his own, but necessary to the +safety of all. The Lieutenant promised to be as prudent as possible; but +added that the examination of the south of the island must be made at +once, and he would make it. The next day Mrs Barnett merely told her +companions that the Lieutenant and the Sergeant had gone to make a final +reconnaissance before the winter set in. + +CHAPTER VII. A FIRE AND A CRY. The Lieutenant and the Sergeant spent the +evening in the large room of the fort, where all were assembled except +the astronomer, who still remained shut up in his cabin. The men were +busy over their various occupations, some cleaning their arms, others +mending or sharpening their tools. The women were stitching away +industriously, and Mrs Paulina Barnett was reading aloud; but she was +often interrupted not only by the noise of the wind, which shook the +walls of the house like a battering-ram, but by the cries of the baby. +Corporal Joliffe, who had undertaken to amuse him, had enough to do. The +young gentleman had ridden upon his playmate’s knees until they were +worn out, and the Corporal at last put the indefatigable little cavalier +on the large table, where he rolled about to his heart’s content until +he fell asleep. + +At eight o’clock prayers were read as usual, the lamps were +extinguished, and all retired to rest. + +When every one was asleep, Hobson and Long crept cautiously across the +large room and gained the passage, where they found Mrs Barnett, who +wished to press their hands once more. + +“Till to-morrow,” she said to the Lieutenant. + +“Yes,” replied Hobson, “to-morrow, madam, without fail.” + +“But if you are delayed?” + +“You must wait patiently for us,” replied the Lieutenant, “for +if in examining the southern horizon we should see a fire, which is not +unlikely this dark night, we should know that we were near the coasts +of New Georgia, and then it would be desirable for me to ascertain our +position by daylight. In fact, we may be away forty eight hours. If, +however, we can get to Cape Michael before midnight, we shall be back at +the fort to-morrow evening. So wait patiently, madam, and believe that +we shall incur no unnecessary risk.” + +“But,” added the lady, “suppose you don’t get back to morrow, +suppose you are away more than two days?” + +“Then we shall not return at all,” replied Hobson simply. + +The door was opened, Mrs Barnett closed it behind the Lieutenant and +his companion and went back to her own room, where Madge awaited her, +feeling anxious and thoughtful. + +Hobson and Long made their way across the inner court through a +whirlwind which nearly knocked them down; but clinging to each other, +and leaning on their iron-bound staffs, they reached the postern gates, +and set out [beween] between the hills and the eastern bank of the +lagoon. + +A faint twilight enabled them to see their way. The moon, which was +new the night before, would not appear above the horizon, and there was +nothing to lessen the gloom of the darkness, which would, however, last +but a few hours longer. + +The wind and rain were as violent as ever. The Lieutenant and his +companion wore impervious boots and water-proof cloaks well pulled in at +the waist, and the hood completely covering their heads. Thus protected +they got along at a rapid pace, for the wind was behind them, and +sometimes drove them on rather faster than they cared to go. Talking was +quite out of the question, and they did not attempt it, for they were +deafened by the hurricane, and out of breath with the buffeting they +received. + +Hobson did not mean to follow the coast, the windings of which would +have taken him a long way round, and have brought him face to face with +the wind, which swept over the sea with nothing to break its fury. His +idea was to cut across in a straight line from Cape Bathurst to Cape +Michael, and he was provided with a pocket compass with which to +ascertain his bearings. He hoped by this means to cross the ten or +eleven miles between him and his goal, just before the twilight faded +and gave place to the two hours of real darkness. + +Bent almost double, with rounded shoulders and stooping heads, the two +pressed on. As long as they kept near the lake they did not meet the +gale full face, the little hills crowned with trees afforded them some +protection, the wind howled fearfully as it bent and distorted the +branches, almost tearing the trunks up by the roots; but it partly +exhausted its strength, and even the rain when it reached the explorers +was converted into impalpable mist, so that for about four miles they +did not suffer half as much as they expected to. + +But when they reached the southern skirts of the wood, where the hills +disappeared, and there were neither trees nor rising ground, the wind +swept along with awful force, and involuntarily they paused for a +moment. They were still six miles from Cape Michael. + +“We are going to have a bad time of it,” shouted Lieutenant Hobson +in the Sergeant’s ear. + +“Yes, the wind and rain will conspire to give us a good beating,” +answered Long. + +“I am afraid that now and then we shall have hail as well,” added +Hobson. + +“It won’t be as deadly as grape-shot,” replied Long coolly, “and +we have both been through that, and so forwards!” + +“Forwards, my brave comrade!” + +It was then ten o’clock. The twilight was fading away, dying as if +drowned in the mists or quenched by the wind and the rain. There was +still, however, some light, and the Lieutenant struck his flint, and +consulted his compass, passing a piece of burning touchwood over it, and +then, drawing his cloak more closely around him, he plunged after the +Sergeant across the unprotected plain. + +At the first step, both were flung violently to the ground, but they +managed to scramble up, and clinging to each other with their backs bent +like two old crippled peasants, they struck into a kind of ambling trot. + +There was a kind of awful grandeur in the storm to which neither was +insensible. Jagged masses of mist and ragged rain-clouds swept along +the ground. The loose earth and sand were whirled into the air and flung +down again like grape-shot, and the lips of Hobson and his companion +were wet with salt spray, although the sea was two or three miles +distant at least. + +During the rare brief pauses in the gale, they stopped and took breath, +whilst the Lieutenant ascertained their position as accurately as +possible. + +The tempest increased as the night advanced, the air and water seemed +to be absolutely confounded together, and low down on the horizon was +formed one of those fearful waterspouts which can overthrow houses, tear +up forests, and which the vessels whose safety they threaten attack with +artillery. It really seemed as if the ocean itself was being torn from +its bed and flung over the devoted little island. + +Hobson could not help wondering how it was that the ice-field which +supported it was not broken in a hundred places in this violent +convulsion of the sea, the roaring of which could be distinctly heard +where he stood. Presently Long, who was a few steps in advance, stopped +suddenly, and turning round managed to make the Lieutenant hear the +broken words— + +“Not that way!” + +“Why not?” + +“The sea!” + +“What, the sea! We cannot possibly have got to the southeast coast!” + +“Look, look, Lieutenant!” + +It was true, a vast sheet of water was indistinctly visible before them, +and large waves were rolling up and breaking at the Lieutenant’s feet. + +Hobson again had recourse to his flint, and with the aid of some lighted +touchwood consulted the needle of his compass very carefully. + +“No,” he said, “the sea is farther to the left, we have not yet +passed the wood between us and Cape Michael.” + +“Then it is”—— + +“It is a fracture of the island!” cried Hobson, as both were +compelled to fling themselves to the ground before the wind, “either +a large portion of our land has been broken off and drifted away, or a +gulf has been made, which we can go round. Forwards!” + +They struggled to their feet and turned to the right towards the +centre of the island. For about ten minutes they pressed on in silence, +fearing, not without reason, that all communication with the south of +the island would be found to be cut off. Presently, however, they no +longer heard the noise of the breakers. + +“It is only a gulf.” screamed Hobson in the Sergeant’s ear. “Let +us turn round.” + +And they resumed their original direction towards the south, but both +knew only too well that they had a fearful danger to face, for that +portion of the island on which they were was evidently cracked for a +long distance, and might at any moment separate entirely; should it do +so under the influence of the waves, they would inevitably be drifted +away, whither they knew not. Yet they did not hesitate, but plunged into +the mist, not even pausing to wonder if they should ever get back. + +What anxious forebodings must, however, have pressed upon the heart of +the Lieutenant. Could he now hope that the island would hold together +until the winter? had not the inevitable breaking up already commenced? +If the wind should not drive them on to the coast, were they not doomed +to perish very soon, to be swallowed up by the deep, leaving no trace +behind them? What a fearful prospect for all the unconscious inhabitants +of the fort! + +But through it all the two men, upheld by the consciousness of a duty to +perform, bravely struggled on against the gale, which nearly tore them +to pieces, along the new beach, the foam sometimes bathing their feet, +and presently gained the large wood which shut in Cape Michael. This +they would have to cross to get to the coast by the shortest route, +and they entered it in complete darkness, the wind thundering among the +branches over their heads. Everything seemed to be breaking to pieces +around them, the dislocated branches intercepted their passage, and +every moment they ran a risk of being crushed beneath a falling tree, or +they stumbled over a stump they had not been able to see in the gloom. +The noise of the waves on the other side of the wood was a sufficient +guide to their steps, and sometimes the furious breakers shook the +weakened ground beneath their feet. Holding each other’s hands lest +they should lose each other, supporting each other, and the one helping +the other up when he fell over some obstacle, they at last reached the +point for which they were bound. + +But the instant they quitted the shelter of the wood a perfect whirlwind +tore them asunder, and flung them upon the ground. + +“Sergeant, Sergeant! Where are you?” cried Hobson with all the +strength of his lungs. + +“Here, here!” roared Long in reply. + +And creeping on the ground they struggled to reach each other; but it +seemed as if a powerful hand rivetted them to the spot on which they had +fallen, and it was only after many futile efforts that they managed +to reach each other. Having done so, they tied their belts together to +prevent another separation, and crept along the sand to a little rising +ground crowned by a small clump of pines. Once there they were a little +more protected, and they proceeded to dig themselves a hole, in which +they crouched in a state of absolute exhaustion and prostration. + +It was half-past eleven o’clock P.M. + +For some minutes neither spoke. With eyes half closed they lay in a kind +of torpor, whilst the trees above them bent beneath the wind, and their +branches rattled like the bones of a skeleton. But yet again they roused +themselves from this fatal lethargy, and a few mouthfuls of rum from the +Sergeant’s flask revived them. + +“Let us hope these trees will hold,” at last observed Hobson. + +“And that our hole will not blow away with them,” added the +Sergeant, crouching in the soft sand. + +“Well!” said Hobson, “here we are at last, a few feet from Cape +Michael, and as we came to make observations, let us make them. I have +a presentiment, Sergeant, only a presentiment, remember, that we are not +far from firm ground!” + +Had the southern horizon been visible the two adventurers would have +been able to see two-thirds of it from their position; but it was too +dark to make out anything, and if the hurricane had indeed driven them +within sight of land, they would not be able to see it until daylight, +unless a fire should be lighted on the continent. + +As the Lieutenant had told Mrs Barnett, fishermen often visited that +part of North America, which is called New Georgia, and there are a good +many small native colonies, the members of which collect the teeth of +mammoths, these fossil elephants being very numerous in these +latitudes. A few degrees farther south, on the island of Sitka, rises +New-Archangel, the principal settlement in Russian America, and the +head-quarters of the Russian Fur Company, whose jurisdiction once +extended over the whole of the Aleutian Islands. The shores of the +Arctic Ocean are, however, the favourite resort of hunters, especially +since the Hudson’s Bay Company took a lease of the districts formerly +in the hands of the Russians; and Hobson, although he knew nothing +of the country, was well acquainted with the habits of those who were +likely to visit it at this time of the year, and was justified in +thinking that he might meet fellow-countrymen, perhaps even members of +his own Company, or, failing them, some native Indians, scouring the +coasts. + +But could the Lieutenant reasonably hope that Victoria Island had been +driven towards the coast? + +“Yes, a hundred times yes,” he repeated to the Sergeant again +and again. “For seven days a hurricane has been blowing from the +northeast, and although I know that the island is very flat, and there +is not much for the wind to take hold of, still all these little hills +and woods spread out like sails must have felt the influence of the wind +to a certain extent. Moreover, the sea which bears us along feels its +power, and large waves are certainly running in shore. It is impossible +for us to have remained in the current which was dragging us to the +west, we must have been driven out of it, and towards the south. Last +time we took our bearings we were two hundred miles from the coast, and +in seven days “—— + +“Your reasonings are very just, Lieutenant,” replied the Sergeant, +“and I feel that whether the wind helps us or not, God will not +forsake us. It cannot be His will that so many unfortunate creatures +should perish, and I put my trust in Him!” + +The two talked on in broken sentences, making each other hear above the +roaring of the storm, and struggling to pierce the gloom which closed +them in on every side; but they could see nothing, not a ray of light +broke the thick darkness. + +About half past one A.M. the hurricane ceased for a few minutes, whilst +the fury of the sea seemed to be redoubled, and the large waves, lashed +into foam, broke over each other with a roar like thunder. + +Suddenly Hobson seizing his companion’s arm shouted— + +“Sergeant, do you hear?” + +“What?” + +“The noise of the sea?” + +“Of course I do, sir,” replied Long, listening more attentively, +“and the sound of the breakers seems to me not”—— + +“Not exactly the same... isn’t it Sergeant; listen, listen, it +is like the sound of surf!... it seems as if the waves were breaking +against rocks!” + +Hobson and the Sergeant now listened intently, the monotonous sound +of the waves dashing against each other in the offing was certainly +exchanged for the regular rolling sound produced by the breaking of +water against a hard body; they heard the reverberating echoes which +told of the neighbourhood of rocks, and they knew that along the whole +of the coast of their island there was not a single stone, and nothing +more sonorous than the earth and sand of which it was composed! + +Could they have been deceived? The Sergeant tried to rise to listen +better, but he was immediately flung down by the hurricane, which +recommenced with renewed violence. The lull was over, and again the +noise of the waves was drowned in the shrill whistling of the wind, and +the peculiar echo could no longer be made out. + +The anxiety of the two explorers will readily be imagined. They again +crouched down in their hole, doubting whether it would not perhaps be +prudent to leave even this shelter, for they felt the sand giving +way beneath them, and the pines cracking at their very roots. They +persevered, however, in gazing towards the south, every nerve strained +to the utmost, in the effort to distinguish objects through the +darkness. + +The first grey twilight of the dawn might soon be expected to appear, +and a little before half-past two A.M. Long suddenly exclaimed: + +“I see it!” + +“What?” + +“A fire!” + +“A fire?” + +“Yes, there—over there!” + +And he pointed to the south-west. Was he mistaken? No, for Hobson also +made out a faint glimmer in the direction indicated. + +“Yes!” he cried, “yes, Sergeant, a fire; there is land there!” + +“Unless it is a fire on board ship,” replied Long. + +“A ship at sea in this weather!” exclaimed Hobson, “impossible! +No, no, there is land there, land I tell you, a few miles from us!” + +“Well, let us make a signal!” + +“Yes, Sergeant, we will reply to the fire on the mainland by a fire on +our island!” + +Of course neither Hobson nor Long had a torch, but above their heads +rose resinous pines distorted by the hurricane. + +“Your flint, Sergeant,” said Hobson. + +Long at once struck his flint, lighted the touchwood, and creeping along +the sand climbed to the foot of the thicket of firs, where he was soon +joined by the Lieutenant. There was plenty of deadwood about, and they +piled it up at the stems of the trees, set fire to it, and soon, the +wind helping them, they had the satisfaction of seeing the whole thicket +in a blaze + +“Ah!” said Hobson, “as we saw their fire, they will see ours!” + +The firs burnt with a lurid glare like a large torch. The dried resin in +the old trunks aided the conflagration, and they were rapidly consumed. +At last the crackling ceased, the flames died away, and all was +darkness. + +Hobson and Long looked in vain for an answering fire—nothing was to be +seen. For ten minutes they watched, hoping against hope, and were just +beginning to despair, when suddenly a cry was heard, a distinct cry for +help. It was a human voice, and it came from the sea. + +Hobson and Long, wild with eager anxiety, let themselves slide down to +the shore. + +The cry was not, however, repeated. + +The daylight was now gradually beginning to appear, and the violence of +the tempest seemed to be decreasing. Soon it was light enough for the +horizon to be examined. + +But there was no land in sight, sea and sky were still blended in one +unbroken circle. + +CHAPTER VIII. MRS. PAULINA BARNETT’S EXCURSION. The whole morning +Hobson and Sergeant Long wandered about the coast. The weather was much +improved, the rain had ceased, and the wind had veered round to +the south-east with extraordinary suddenness, without unfortunately +decreasing in violence, causing fresh anxiety to the Lieutenant, who +could no longer hope to reach the mainland. + +The south-east wind would drive the wandering island farther from the +continent, and fling it into the dangerous currents, which must drift it +to the north of the Arctic Ocean. + +How could they even be sure that they had really approached the coast +during the awful night just over. Might it not have been merely a fancy +of the Lieutenant’s? The air was now clear, and they could look round +a radius of several miles; yet there was nothing in the least resembling +land within sight. Might they not adopt the Sergeant’s suggestion, +that a ship had passed the island during the night, that the fire and +cry were alike signals of sailors in distress? And if it had been a +vessel, must it not have foundered in such a storm? + +Whatever the explanation there was no sign of a wreck to be seen either +in the offing or on the beach, and the waves, now driven along by the +wind from the land, were large enough to have overwhelmed any vessel. + +“Well, Lieutenant,” said Sergeant Long, “what is to be done?’“ + +“We must remain upon our island,” replied the Lieutenant, pressing +his hand to his brow; “we must remain on our island and wait for +winter; it alone can save us.” + +It was now mid-day, and Hobson, anxious to get back to Fort Hope before +the evening, at once turned towards Cape Bathurst. + +The wind, being now on their backs, helped them along as it had done +before. They could not help feeling very uneasy, as they were naturally +afraid that the island might have separated into two parts in the storm. +The gulf observed the night before might have spread farther, and if so +they would be cut off from their friends. + +They soon reached the wood they had crossed the night before. Numbers of +trees were lying on the ground, some with broken stems, others torn up +by the roots from the soft soil, which had not afforded them sufficient +support. The few which remained erect were stripped of their leaves, +and their naked branches creaked and moaned as the south-east wind swept +over them. + +Two miles beyond this desolated forest the wanderers arrived at the edge +of the gulf they had seen the night before without being able to judge +of its extent. They examined it carefully, and found that it was about +fifty feet wide, cutting the coast line straight across near Cape +Michael and what was formerly Fort Barnett, forming a kind of estuary +running more than a mile and a half inland. If the sea should again +become rough in a fresh storm, this gulf would widen more and more. + +Just as Hobson approached the beach, he saw a large piece of ice +separate from the island and float away! + +“Ah!” murmured Long, “that is the danger!” + +Both then turned hurriedly to the west, and walked as fast as they could +round the huge gulf, making direct for Fort Hope. + +They noticed no other changes by the way, and towards four o’clock +they crossed the court and found all their comrades at their usual +occupations. + +Hobson told his men that he had wished once more before the winter to +see if there were any signs of the approach of Captain Craventy’s +convoy, and that his expedition had been fruitless. + +“Then, sir,” observed Marbre, “I suppose we must give up all idea +of seeing our comrades from Fort Reliance for this year at least?” + +“I think you must,” replied Hobson simply, re-entering the public +room. + +Mrs Barnett and Madge were told of the two chief events of the +exploration: the fire and the cry. Hobson was quite sure that neither he +nor the Sergeant were mistaken. The fire had really been seen, the cry +had really been heard; and after a long consultation every one came to +the conclusion that a ship in distress had passed within sight during +the night, and that the island had not approached the American coast. + +The south-east wind quickly chased away the clouds and mists, so that +Hobson hoped to be able to take his bearings the next day. The night +was colder and a fine snow fell, which quickly covered the ground. This +first sign of winter was hailed with delight by all who knew of the +peril of their situation. + +On the 2nd September the sky gradually became free from vapours of all +kinds, and the sun again appeared. Patiently the Lieutenant awaited +its culmination; at noon he took the latitude, and two hours later a +calculation of hour-angles gave him the longitude. + +The following were the results obtained: Latitude, 70° 57’; +longitude, 170° 30’. + +So that, in spite of the violence of the hurricane, the island had +remained in much the same latitude, although it had been drifted +somewhat farther west. They were now abreast of Behring Strait, but four +hundred miles at least north of Capes East and Prince of Wales, which +jut out on either side at the narrowest part of the passage. + +The situation was, therefore, more dangerous than ever, as the island +was daily getting nearer to the dangerous Kamtchatka Current, which, if +it once seized it in its rapid waters, might carry it far away to the +north. Its fate would now soon be decided. It would either stop where +the two currents met, and there be shut in by the ice of the approaching +winter, or it would be drifted away and lost in the solitudes of the +remote hyperborean regions. + +Hobson was painfully moved on ascertaining the true state of things, and +being anxious to conceal his emotion, he shut himself up in his own room +and did not appear again that day. With his chart before him, he racked +his brains to find some way out of the difficulties with which be was +beset. + +The temperature fell some degrees farther the same day, and the mists, +which had collected above the south-eastern horizon the day before, +resolved themselves into snow during the night, so that the next day the +white carpet was two inches thick. Winter was coming at last. + +On September 3rd Mrs Barnett resolved to go a few miles along the coast +towards Cape Esquimaux. She wished to see for herself the changes lately +produced. If she had mentioned her project to the Lieutenant, he would +certainly have offered to accompany her; but she did not wish to disturb +him, and decided to go without him, taking Madge with her. There was +really nothing to fear, the only formidable animals, the bears, seemed +to have quite deserted the island after the earthquake; and two women +might, without danger, venture on a walk of a few hours without an +escort. + +Madge agreed at once to Mrs Barnett’s proposal, and without a word +to any one they set out at eight o’clock A.M., provided with an +ice-chisel, a flask of spirits, and a wallet of provisions. + +After leaving Cape Bathurst they turned to the west. The sun was already +dragging its slow course along the horizon, for at this time of year it +would only be a few degrees above it at its culmination. But its oblique +rays were clear and powerful, and the snow was already melting here and +there beneath their influence. + +The coast was alive with flocks of birds of many kinds; ptarmigans, +guillemots, puffins, wild geese, and ducks of every variety fluttered +about, uttering their various cries, skimming the surface of the sea +or of the lagoon, according as their tastes led them to prefer salt or +fresh water. + +Mrs Barnett had now a capital opportunity of seeing how many furred +animals haunted the neighbourhood of Fort Hope. Martens, ermines, +musk-rats, and foxes were numerous, and the magazines of the factory +might easily have been filled with their skins, but what good would that +be now? The inoffensive creatures, knowing that hunting was suspended, +went and came fearlessly, venturing close up to the palisade, and +becoming tamer every day. Their instinct doubtless told them that they +and their old enemies were alike prisoners on the island, and a common +danger bound them together. It struck Mrs Barnett as strange that +the two enthusiastic hunters—Marbre and Sabine—should obey the +Lieutenant’s orders to spare the furred animals without remonstrance +or complaint, and appeared not even to wish to shoot the valuable game +around them. It was true the foxes and others had not yet assumed +their winter robes, but this was not enough to explain the strange +indifference of the two hunters. + +Whilst walking at a good pace and talking over their strange situation, +Mrs Barnett and Madge carefully noted the peculiarities of the sandy +coast. The ravages recently made by the sea were distinctly visible. +Fresh landslips enabled them to see new fractures in the ice distinctly. +The strand, fretted away in many places, had sunk to an enormous extent, +and the waves washed along a level beach when the perpendicular shores +had once checked their advance. It was evident that parts of the island +were now only on a level with the ocean. + +“O Madge!” exclaimed Mrs Barnett, pointing to the long smooth tracts +on which the curling waves broke in rapid succession, “our situation +has indeed become aggravated by the awful storm! It is evident that the +level of the whole island is gradually becoming lower. It is now only +a question of time. Will the winter come soon enough to save us? +Everything depends upon that.” + +“The winter will come, my dear girl,” replied Madge with her usual +unshaken confidence. “We have already had two falls of snow. Ice is +[begininng] beginning to accumulate, and God will send it us in time, I +feel sure.” + +“You are right. Madge, we must have faith!” said Mrs Barnett. “We +women who do not trouble ourselves about the scientific reasons for +physical phenomena can hope, when men who are better informed, +perhaps, despair. That is one of our blessings, which our Lieutenant +unfortunately does not share. He sees the significance of facts, he +reflects, he calculates, he reckons up the time still remaining to us, +and I see that he is beginning to lose all hope.” + +“He is a brave, energetic man, for all that,” replied Madge. + +“Yes,” added Mrs Barnett, “and if it be in the power of man to +save us, he will do it.” + +By nine o’clock the two women had walked four miles. They were often +obliged to go inland for some little distance, to avoid parts of +the coast already invaded by the sea. Here and there the waves had +encroached half-a-mile beyond the former high-water line, and the +thickness of the ice-field had been considerably reduced. There was +danger that it would soon yield in many places, and that new bays would +be formed all along the coast. + +As they got farther from the fort Mrs Barnett noticed that the number of +furred animals decreased considerably. The poor creatures evidently felt +more secure near a human habitation. The only formidable animals which +had not been led by instinct to escape in time from the dangerous island +were a few wolves, savage beasts which even a common danger did not +conciliate. Mrs Barnett and Madge saw several wandering about on the +plains, but they did not approach, and soon disappeared behind the hills +on the south of the lagoon. + +“What will become of all these imprisoned animals,” said Madge, +“when all food fails them, and they are famished with hunger in the +winter?” + +“They will not be famished in a hurry, Madge,” replied Mrs Barnett, +“and we shall have nothing to fear from them; all the martens, +ermines, and Polar hares, which we spare will fall an easy prey to them. +That is not our danger; the brittle ground beneath our feet, which may +at any moment give way, is our real peril. Only look how the sea is +advancing here. It already covers half the plain, and the waves, still +comparatively warm, are eating away our island above and below at the +same time! If the cold does not stop it very soon, the sea will shortly +join the lake, and we shall lose our lagoon as we lost our river and our +port!” + +“Well, if that should happen it will indeed be an irreparable +misfortune!” exclaimed Madge. + +“Why?” asked Mrs Barnett, looking inquiringly at her companion. + +“Because we shall have no more fresh water,” replied Madge. + +“Oh, we shall not want for fresh water, Madge,” said Mrs Barnett; +“the rain, the snow, the ice, the icebergs of the ocean, the very +ice-field on which we float, will supply us with that; no, no, that is +not our danger.” + +About ten o’clock Mrs Barnett and Madge had readied the rising ground +above Cape Esquimaux, but at least two miles inland, for they had found +it impossible to follow the coast, worn away as it was by the sea. Being +rather tired with the many détours they had had to make, they decided +to rest a few minutes before setting off on their return to Fort Hope. A +little hill crowned by a clump of birch trees and a few shrubs afforded +a pleasant shelter, and a bank covered with yellow moss, from which the +snow had melted, served them as a seat. The little wallet was opened, +and they shared their simple repast like sisters. + +Half an hour later, Mrs Barnett proposed that they should climb +along the promontory to the sea, and find out the exact state of Cape +Esquimaux. She was anxious to know if the point of it had resisted the +storm, and Madge declared herself ready to follow “her dear girl” +wherever she went, but at the same time reminded her that they were +eight or nine miles from Cape Bathurst already, and that they must not +make Lieutenant Hobson uneasy by too long an absence. + +But some presentiment made Mrs Barnett insist upon doing as she +proposed, and she was right, as the event proved. It would only delay +them half an hour after all. + +They had not gone a quarter of a mile before Mrs Barnett stopped +suddenly, and pointed to some clear and regular impressions upon the +snow. These marks must have been made within the last nine or ten hours, +or the last fall of snow would have covered them over. + +“What animal has passed along here, I wonder?” said Madge. + +“It was not an animal,” said Mrs Barnett, bending down to examine +the marks more closely, “not a quadruped certainly, for its four feet +would have left impressions very different from these. Look, Madge, they +are the footprints of a human person!” + +“But who could have been here?” inquired Madge; “none of the +soldiers or women have left the fort, and we are on an island, remember. +You must be mistaken, my dear; but we will follow the marks, and see +where they lead us.” + +They did so, and fifty paces farther on both again paused. + +“Look, Madge, look!” cried Mrs Barnett, seizing her companion’s +arm, “and then say if I am mistaken.” + +Near the footprints there were marks of a heavy body having been dragged +along the snow, and the impression of a hand. + +“It is the hand of a woman or a child!” cried Madge. + +“Yes!” replied Mrs Barnett; “a woman or a child has fallen here +exhausted, and risen again to stumble farther on; look, the footprints +again, and father on more falls!” + +“Who, who could it have been?” exclaimed Madge. + +“How can I tell?” replied Mrs Barnett. “Some unfortunate creature +imprisoned like ourselves for three or four months perhaps. Or some +shipwrecked wretch flung upon the coast in the storm. You remember the +fire and the cry of which Sergeant Long and Lieutenant Hobson spoke. +Come, come, Madge, there may be some one in danger for us to save! + +And Mrs Barnett, dragging Madge with her, ran along following the +traces, and further on found that they were stained with blood. + +The brave, tender-hearted woman, had spoken of saving some one in +danger; had she then forgotten that there was no safety for any upon the +island, doomed sooner or later to be swallowed up by the ocean? + +The impressions on the ground led towards Cape Esquimaux. And the two +carefully traced them, but the footprints presently disappeared, whilst +the blood-stains increased, making an irregular pathway along the snow. +It was evident the poor wretch had been unable to walk farther, and had +crept along on hands and knees; here and there fragments of torn clothes +were scattered about, bits of sealskin and fur. + +“Come, come,” cried Mrs Barnett, whose heart beat violently. + +Madge followed her, they were only a few yards from Cape Esquimaux, +which now rose only a few feet upon the sea-level against the background +of the sky, and was quite deserted. + +The impressions now led them to the right of the cape, and running along +they soon climbed to the top, but there was still nothing, absolutely +nothing, to be seen. At the foot of the cape, where the slight ascent +began, the traces turned to the right, and led straight to the sea. + +Mrs Barnett was turning to the right also, but just as she was stepping +on to the beach, Madge, who had been following her and looking about +uneasily, caught hold of her hand, and exclaimed— + +“Stop! stop!” “No, Madge, no!” cried Mrs Barnett, who was drawn +along by a kind of instinct in spite of herself. + +“Stop, stop, and look!” cried Madge, tightening her hold on her +mistress’s hand. + +On the beach, about fifty paces from Cape Esquimaux, a large white mass +was moving about and growling angrily. + +It was an immense Polar bear, and the two women watched it with beating +hearts. It was pacing round and round a bundle of fur on the ground, +which it smelt at every now and then, lifting it up and letting it fall +again. The bundle of fur looked like the dead body of a walrus. + +Mrs Barnett and Madge did not know what to think, whether to advance +or to retreat, but presently as the body was moved about a kind of hood +fell back from the head, and some long locks of brown hair were thrown +over the snow. + +“It is a woman! a woman!” cried Mrs Barnett, eager to rush to her +assistance and find out if she were dead or alive! + +“Stop!” repeated Madge, holding her back; “the bear won’t harm +her.” + +And, indeed, the formidable creature merely turned the body over, and +showed no inclination of tearing it with its dreadful claws. It went +away and came back apparently uncertain what to do. It had not yet +perceived the two women who were so anxiously watching it. + +Suddenly a loud crack was heard. The earth shook, and it seemed as if +the whole of Cape Esquimaux were about to be plunged into the sea. + +A large piece of the island had broken away, and a huge piece of ice, +the centre of gravity of which had been displaced by the alteration in +its specific weight, drifted away, carrying with it the bear and the +body of the woman. + +Mrs Barnett screamed, and would have flung herself upon the broken +ice before it floated away, if Madge had not clutched her hand firmly, +saying quietly—— + +“Stop! stop!” + +At the noise produced by the breaking off of the piece of ice, the bear +started back with a fearful growl, and, leaving the body, rushed to the +side where the fracture had taken place; but he was already some forty +feet from the coast, and in his terror he ran round and round the islet, +tearing up the ground with his claws, and stamping the sand and snow +about him. + +Presently he returned to the motionless body, and, to the horror of the +two women, seized it by the clothes with his teeth, and carrying it to +the edge of the ice, plunged with it into the sea. + +Being a powerful swimmer, like the whole race of Arctic bears, he soon +gained the shores of the island. With a great exertion of strength +he managed to climb up the ice, and having reached the surface of the +island he quietly laid down the body he had brought with him. + +Mrs Barnett could no longer be held back, and, shaking off Madge’s +hold, she rushed to the beach, never thinking of the danger she ran in +facing a formidable carnivorous creature. + +The bear, seeing her approach, reared upon his hind legs, and came +towards her, but at about ten paces off he paused, shook his great head, +and turning round with a low growl, quietly walked away towards the +centre of the island, without once looking behind him. He, too, was +evidently affected by the mysterious fear which had tamed all the wild +animals on the island. + +Mrs Barnett was soon bending over the body stretched about the snow. + +A cry of astonishment burst from her lips: + +“Madge, Madge, come!” she exclaimed. + +Madge approached and looked long and fixedly at the inanimate body. It +was the young Esquimaux girl Kalumah! + +CHAPTER IX. KALUMAH’S ADVENTURES. Kalumah on the floating island, two +hundred miles from the American coast. It was almost incredible! + +The first thing to be ascertained was whether the poor creature still +breathed. Was it possible to restore her to life? Mrs Barnett loosened +her clothes, and found that her body was not yet quite cold. Her heart +beat very feebly, but it did beat. The blood they had seen came from a +slight wound in her hand; Madge bound it up with her handkerchief, and +the bleeding soon ceased. + +At the same time Mrs Barnett raised the poor girl’s head, and managed +to pour a few drops of rum between her parted lips. She then bathed her +forehead and temples with cold water, and waited. + +A few minutes passed by, and neither of the watchers were able to utter +a word, so anxious were they lest the faint spark of life remaining to +the young Esquimaux should be quenched. + +But at last Kalumah’s breast heaved with a faint sigh, her hands moved +feebly, and presently she opened her eyes, and recognising her preserver +she murmured— + +“Mrs Barnett! Mrs Barnett!” + +The lady was not a little surprised at hearing her own name. Had Kalumah +voluntarily sought the floating island, and did she expect to find her +old European friends on it? If so, how had she come to know it, and +how had she managed to reach the island, two hundred miles from the +mainland? How could she have guessed that the ice-field as bearing Mrs +Barnett and all the occupants of Fort Hope away from the American coast? +Really it all seemed quite inexplicable. + +“She lives—she will recover!” exclaimed Madge, who felt the vital +heat and pulsation returning to the poor bruised body. + +“Poor child, poor child’“ said Mrs Barnett, much affected; “she +murmured my name when she was at the point of death.” + +But now Kalumah again half opened her eyes, and looked about her with a +dreamy unsatisfied expression, presently, however, seeing Mrs Barnett, +her face brightened, the same name again burst from her lips, and +painfully raising her hand she let it fall on that of her friend. + +The anxious care of the two women soon revived Kalumah, whose extreme +exhaustion arose not only from fatigue but also from hunger. She had +eaten nothing for forty-eight hours. Some pieces of cold venison and +a little rum refreshed her, and she soon felt able to accompany her +newly-found friends to the fort. + +Before starting, however, Kalumah, seated on the sand between Mrs +Barnett and Madge, overwhelmed them with thanks and expressions of +attachment. Then she told her story: she had not forgotten the Europeans +of Fort Hope, and the thought of Mrs Paulina Barnett had been ever +present with her. It was not by chance, as we shall see, that she had +come to Victoria Island. + +The following is a brief summary of what Kalumah related to Mrs +Barnett:— + +Our readers will remember the young Esquimaux’s promise to come and +see her friends at Fort Hope again in the fine season of the next year. +The long Polar night being over, and the month of May having come round, +Kalumah set out to fulfil her pledge. She left Russian America, where +she had wintered, and accompanied by one of her brothers-in-law, started +for the peninsula of Victoria. + +Six weeks later, towards the middle of June, she got to that part of +British America which is near Cape Bathurst. She at once recognised the +volcanic mountains shutting in Liverpool Bay, and twenty miles farther +east she came to Walruses’ Bay, where her people had so often hunted +morses and seals. + +But beyond the bay on the north, there was nothing to be seen. The +coast suddenly sank to the south-east in an almost straight line. Cape +Esquimaux and Cape Bathurst had alike disappeared. + +Kalumah understood what had happened. Either the whole of the peninsula +had been swallowed up by the waves, or it was floating away as an +island, no one knew whither! + +Kalumah’s tears flowed fast at the loss of those whom she had come so +far to see. + +Her brother-in-law, however, had not appeared surprised at the +catastrophe. A kind of legend or tradition had been handed down amongst +the nomad tribes of North America, that Cape Bathurst did not form part +of the mainland, but had been joined on to it thousands of years before, +and would sooner or later be torn away in some convulsion of nature. +Hence the surprise at finding the factory founded by Hobson at the foot +of the cape. But with the unfortunate reserve characteristic of their +race, and perhaps also under the influence of that enmity which all +natives feel for those who settle in their country, they said nothing to +the Lieutenant, whose fort was already finished. Kalumah knew nothing of +this tradition, which after all rested on no trustworthy evidence, and +probably belonged to the many northern legends relating to the creation. +This was how it was that the colonists of Fort Hope were not warned of +the danger they ran in settling on such a spot. + +Had a word in season been spoken to Hobson he would certainly have gone +farther in search of some firmer foundation for his fort than this soil, +certain peculiarities of which he had noticed at the first. + +When Kalumah had made quite sure that all trace of Cape Bathurst was +gone, she explored the coast as far as the further side of Washburn Bay, +but without finding any sign of those she sought, and at last there was +nothing left for her to do but to return to the fisheries of Russian +America. + +She and her brother-in-law left Walruses’ Bay at the end of June, and +following the coast got back to New Georgia towards the end of July, +after an absolutely fruitless journey. + +Kalumah now gave up all hope of again seeing Mrs Barnett and the other +colonists of Fort Hope. She concluded that they had all been swallowed +up by the ocean long ago. + +At this part of her tale the young Esquimaux looked at Mrs Barnett with +eyes full of tears, and pressed her hand [affectionaly] affectionately, +and then she murmured her thanks to God for her own preservation through +the means of her friend. + +Kalumah on her return home resumed her customary occupations, and worked +with the rest of her tribe at the fisheries near Icy Cape, a point a +little above the seventieth parallel, and more than six hundred miles +from Cape Bathurst. + +Nothing worthy of note happened during the first half of the month of +April; but towards the end the storm began which had caused Hobson so +much uneasiness, and which had apparently extended its ravages over +the whole of the Arctic Ocean and beyond Behring Strait. It was equally +violent at Icy Cape and on Victoria Island, and, as the Lieutenant +ascertained in taking his bearings, the latter was then not more than +two hundred miles from the coast. + +As Mrs Barnett listened to Kalumah, her previous information enabled her +rapidly to find the key to the strange events which had taken place, and +to account for the arrival of the young native on the island. + +During the first days of the storm the Esquimaux of Icy Cape were +confined to their huts. They could neither get out nor fish. But during +the night of the 31st August a kind of presentiment led Kalumah to +venture down to the beach, and, braving the wind and rain in all their +fury, she peered anxiously through the darkness at the waves rising +mountains high. + +Presently she thought she saw a huge mass driven along by the hurricane +parallel with the coast. Gifted with extremely keen sight—as are all +these wandering tribes accustomed to the long dark Polar nights—she +felt sure that she was not mistaken. + +Something of vast bulk was passing two miles from the coast, and that +something could be neither a whale, a boat, nor, at this time of the +year, even an iceberg. + +But Kalumah did not stop to reason. The truth flashed upon her like +a revelation. Before her excited imagination rose the images of her +friends. She saw them all once more, Mrs Barnett, Madge, Lieutenant +Hobson, the baby she had covered with kisses at Fort Hope. Yes, they +were passing, borne along in the storm on a floating ice-field! + +Kalumah did not doubt or hesitate a moment. She felt that she must tell +the poor shipwrecked people, which she was sure they were, of the close +vicinity of the land. She ran to her hut, seized a torch of tow and +resin, such as the Esquimaux use when fishing at night, lit it and waved +it on the beach at the summit of Icy Cape. + +This was the fire which Hobson and Long had seen when crouching on Cape +Michael on the night of the 31st August. + +Imagine the delight and excitement of the young Esquimaux when a signal +replied to hers, when she saw the huge fire lit by Lieutenant Hobson, +the reflection of which reached the American coast, although he did not +dream that he was so near it. + +But it quickly went out, the lull in the storm only lasted a few +minutes, and the fearful gale, veering round to the south-east, swept +along with redoubled violence. + +Kalumah feared that her “prey,” so she called the floating island, +was about to escape her, and that it would not be driven on to the +shore. She saw it fading away, and knew that it would soon disappear in +the darkness and be lost to her on the boundless ocean. + +It was indeed a terrible moment for the young native, and she determined +at all hazards to let her friends know of their situation. There might +yet be time for them to take some steps for their deliverance, although +every hour took them farther from the continent. + +She did not hesitate a moment, her kayak was at hand, the frail bark in +which she had more than once braved the storms of the Arctic Ocean, she +pushed it down to the sea, hastily laced on the sealskin jacket fastened +to the canoe, and, the long paddle in her hand, she plunged into the +darkness. + +Mrs Barnett here pressed the brave child to her heart, and Madge shed +tears of sympathy. + +When launched upon the roaring ocean, Kalumah found the change of wind +in her favour. The waves dashed over her kayak, it is true, but they +were powerless to harm the light boat, which floated on their crests +like a straw. It was capsized several times, but a stroke of the paddle +righted it at once. + +After about an hour’s hard work, Kalumah could see the wandering +island more distinctly, and had no longer any doubt of effecting her +purpose, as she was but a quarter of a mile from the beach. + +It was then that she uttered the cry which Hobson and Long had heard. + +But, alas! Kalumah now felt herself being carried away towards the west +by a powerful current, which could take firmer hold of her kayak than of +the floating island! + +In vain she struggled to beat back with her paddle, the light boat +shot along like an arrow. She uttered scream after scream, but she was +unheard, for she was already far away, and when the day broke the coasts +of Alaska and the island she had wished to reach, were but two distant +masses on the horizon. + +Did she despair? Not yet. It was impossible to get back to the American +continent in the teeth of the terrible wind which was driving the island +before it at a rapid pace, taking it out two hundred miles in thirty-six +hours, and assisted by the current from the coast. + +There was but one thing left to do. To get to the island by keeping in +the same current which was drifting it away. + +But, alas! the poor girl’s strength was not equal to her courage, she +was faint from want of food, and, exhausted as she was, she could no +longer wield her paddle. + +For some hours she struggled on, and seemed to be approaching the +island, although those on it could not see her, as she was but a speck +upon the ocean. She struggled on until her stiffened arms and bleeding +hands fell powerless, and, losing consciousness, she was floated along +in her frail kayak at the mercy of winds and waves. + +She did not know how long this lasted, she remembered nothing more, +until a sudden shock roused her, her kayak had struck against something, +it opened beneath her, and she was plunged into cold water, the +freshness of which revived her. A few moments later, she was flung upon +the sand in a dying state by a large wave. + +This had taken place the night before, just before dawn—that is to +say, about two or three o’clock in the morning. Kalumah had then been +seventy hours at sea since she embarked! + +The young native had no idea where she had been thrown, whether on the +continent or on the floating island, which she had so bravely sought, +but she hoped the latter. Yes, hoped that she had reached her friends, +although she knew that the wind and current had driven them into the +open sea, and not towards the coast! + +The thought revived her, and, shattered as she was, she struggled to her +feet, and tried to follow the coast. + +She had, in fact, been providentially thrown on that portion of Victoria +Island which was formerly the upper corner of Walruses’ Bay. But, worn +away as it was by the waves, she did not recognise the land with which +she had once been familiar. + +She tottered on, stopped, and again struggled to advance; the beach +before her appeared endless, she had so often to go round where the sea +had encroached upon the sand. And so dragging herself along, stumbling +and scrambling up again, she at last approached the little wood where +Mrs. Barnett and Madge had halted that very morning. We know that the +two women found the footprints left by Kalumah in the snow not far from +this very spot, and it was at a short distance farther on that the poor +girl fell for the last time. Exhausted by fatigue and hunger, she still +managed to creep along on hands and knees for a few minutes longer. + +A great hope kept her from despair, for she had at last recognised Cape +Esquimaux, at the foot of which she and her people had encamped the year +before. She knew now that she was but eight miles from the factory, and +that she had only to follow the path she had so often traversed when she +went to visit her friends at Fort Hope. + +Yes, this hope sustained her, but she had scarcely reached the +beach when her forces entirely failed her, and she again lost all +consciousness. But for Mrs Barnett she would have died. + +“But, dear lady,” she added, “I knew that you would come to my +rescue, and that God would save me by your means.” + +We know the rest. We know the providential instinct which led Mrs +Barnett and Madge to explore this part of the coast on this very day, +and the presentiment which made them visit Cape Esquimaux after they had +rested, and before returning to Fort Hope. We know too—as Mrs Barnett +related to Kalumah— how the piece of ice had floated away, and how the +bear had acted under the circumstances. + +“And after all,” added Mrs Barnett with a smile, “it was not I who +saved you, but the good creature without whose aid you would never have +come back to us, and if ever we see him again we will treat him with the +respect due to your preserver.” + +During this long conversation Kalumah was rested and refreshed, and Mrs +Barnett proposed that they should return to the fort at once, as she +had already been too long away. The young girl immediately rose ready to +start. + +Mrs Barnett was indeed most anxious to tell the Lieutenant of all that +had happened during the night of the storm, when the wandering island +had neared the American continent, but she urged Kalumah to keep her +adventures secret, and to say nothing about the situation of the +island. She would naturally be supposed to have come along the coast, in +fulfilment of the promise she had made to visit her friends in the fine +season. Her arrival would tend only to strengthen the belief of the +colonists that no changes had taken place in the country around +Cape Bathurst, and to set at rest the doubts any of them might have +entertained. + +It was about three o’clock when Madge and Mrs Barnett, with Kalumah +hanging on her arm, set out towards the east, and before five o’clock +in the afternoon they all arrived at the postern of the fort. + +CHAPTER X. THE KAMTCHATKA CURRENT. We can readily imagine the reception +given to Kalumah by all at the fort. It seemed to them that the +communication with the outer world was reopened. Mrs Mac-Nab, Mrs Rae +and Mrs Joliffe overwhelmed her with caresses, but Kalumah’s first +thought was for the little child, she caught sight of him immediately, +and running to him covered him with kisses. + +The young native was charmed and touched with the hospitality of her +European hosts. A positive fête was held in her honour and every one +was delighted that she would have to remain at the fort for the winter, +the season being too far advanced for her to get back to the settlements +of Russian America before the cold set in. + +But if all the settlers were agreeably surprised at the appearance +of Kalumah, what must Lieutenant Hobson have thought when he saw her +leaning on Mrs Barnett’s arm. A sudden hope flashed across his mind +like lightning, and as quickly died away: perhaps in spite of the +evidence of his daily observations Victoria Island had run aground +somewhere on the continent unnoticed by any of them. + +Mrs Barnett read the Lieutenant’s thoughts in his face, and shook her +head sadly. + +He saw that no change had taken place in their situation, and waited +until Mrs Barnett was able to explain Kalumah’s appearance. + +A few minutes later he was walking along the beach with the lady, +listening with great interest to her account of Kalumah’s adventures. + +So he had been right in all his conjectures. The north-east hurricane +had driven the island out of the current. The ice-field had approached +within a mile at least of the American continent. It had not been a fire +on board ship which they had seen, or the cry of a shipwrecked mariner +which they had heard. The mainland had been close at hand, and had the +north-east wind blown hard for another hour Victoria Island would have +struck against the coast of Russian America. And then at this critical +moment a fatal, a terrible wind had driven the island away from the +mainland back to the open sea, and it was again in the grasp of the +irresistible current, and was being carried along with a speed which +nothing could check, the mighty south-east wind aiding its headlong +course, to that terribly dangerous spot where it would be exposed to +contrary attractions, either of which might lead to its destruction and +that of all the unfortunate people dragged along with it. + +For the hundredth time the Lieutenant and Mrs Barnett discussed all the +bearings of the case, and then Hobson inquired if any important changes +had taken place in the appearance of the districts between Cape Bathurst +and Walruses’ Bay? + +Mrs Barnett replied that in some places the level of the coast appeared +to be lowered, and that the waves now covered tracts of sand which +were formerly out of their reach. She related what had happened at Cape +Esquimaux, and the important fracture which had taken place at that part +of the coast. + +Nothing could have been less satisfactory. It was evident that the +ice-field forming the foundation of the island was breaking up. What +had happened at Cape Esquimaux might at any moment be reproduced at +Cape Bathurst. At any hour of the day or night the houses of the factory +might be swallowed up by the deep, and the only thing which could save +them was the winter, the bitter winter which was fortunately rapidly +approaching. + +The next day, September 4th, when Hobson took his bearings, he found +that the position of Victoria Island had not sensibly changed since +the day before. It had remained motionless between the two contrary +currents, which was on the whole the very best thing that could have +happened. + +“If only the cold would fix us where we are, if the ice wall would +shut us in, and the sea become petrified around us,” exclaimed Hobson, +“I should feel that our safety was assured. We are but two hundred +miles from the coast at this moment, and by venturing across the frozen +ice fields we might perhaps reach either Russian America or Kamtchatka. +Winter, winter at any price, let the winter set in, no matter how +rapidly.” + +Meanwhile, according to the Lieutenant’s orders, the preparations for +the winter were completed. Enough forage to last the dogs the whole of +the Polar night was stored up. They were all in good health, but getting +rather fat with having nothing to do. They could not be taken too much +care of, as they would have to work terribly hard in the journey across +the ice after the abandonment of Fort Hope. It was most important to +keep up their strength, and they were fed on raw reindeer venison, +plenty of which was easily attainable. + +The tame reindeer also prospered, their stable was comfortable, and a +good supply of moss was laid by for them in the magazines of the fort. +The females provided Mrs Joliffe with plenty of milk for her daily +culinary needs. + +The Corporal and his little wife had also sown fresh seeds, encouraged +by the success of the last in the warm season. The ground had been +prepared beforehand for the planting of scurvy-grass and Labrador +Tea. It was important that there should be no lack of these valuable +anti-scorbutics. + +The sheds were filled with wood up to the very roof. Winter might come +as soon as it liked now, and freeze the mercury in the cistern of the +thermometer, there was no fear that they would again be reduced to burn +their furniture as they had the year before. Mac-Nab and his men had +become wise by experience, and the chips left from the boat-building +added considerably to their stock of fuel. + +About this time a few animals were taken which had already assumed their +winter furs, such as martens, polecats, blue foxes, and ermines. Marbre +and Sabine had obtained leave from the Lieutenant to set some traps +outside the enceinte. He did not like to refuse them this permission, +lest they should become discontented, as he had really no reason to +assign for putting a stop to the collecting of furs, although he knew +full well that the destination of these harmless creatures could do +nobody any good. Their flesh was, however, useful for feeding the dogs, +and enabled them to economise the reindeer venison. + +All was now prepared for the winter, and the soldiers worked with an +energy which they would certainly not have shown if they had been told +the secret of their situation. + +During the next few days the bearings were taken with the greatest care, +but no change was noticeable in the situation of Victoria Island; +and Hobson, finding that it was motionless, began to have fresh hope. +Although there were as yet no symptoms of winter in inorganic nature, +the temperature maintaining a mean height of 49° Fahrenheit, some swans +flying to the south in search of a warmer climate was a good omen. Other +birds capable of a long-sustained flight over vast tracts of the ocean +began to desert the island. They knew full well that the continent of +America and of Asia, with their less severe climates and their plentiful +resources of every kind, were not far off, and that their wings were +strong enough to carry them there. A good many of these birds were +caught; and by Mrs Barnett’s advice the Lieutenant tied round their +necks a stiff cloth ticket, on which was inscribed the position of the +wandering island, and the names of its inhabitants. The birds were then +set free, and their captors watched them wing their way to the south +with envious eyes. + +Of course none were in the secret of the sending forth of these +messengers, except Mrs Barnett, Madge, Kalumah, Hobson, and Long. + +The poor quadrupeds were unable to seek their usual winter refuges in +the south. Under ordinary circumstances the reindeer, Polar hares, and +even the wolves would have left early in September for the shores of the +Great Bear and Slave Lakes, a good many degrees farther south; but now +the sea was an insurmountable barrier, and they, too, would have to wait +until the winter should render it passable. Led by instinct they had +doubtless tried to leave the island, but, turned back by the water, the +instinct of self-preservation had brought them to the neighbourhood +of Fort Hope, to be near the men who were once their hunters and +most formidable enemies, but were now, like themselves, rendered +comparatively inoffensive by their imprisonment. + +The observations of the 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 9th September, revealed +no alteration in the position of Victoria Island. The large eddy between +the two currents kept it stationary. Another fifteen days, another three +weeks of this state of things, and Hobson felt that they might be saved. + +But they were not yet out of danger, and many terrible, almost +supernatural, trials still awaited the inhabitants of Fort Hope. + +On the 10th of September observations showed a displacement of Victoria +Island. Only a slight displacement, but in a northerly direction. + +Hobson was in dismay; the island was finally in the grasp of the +Kamtchatka Current, and was drifting towards the unknown latitudes +where the large icebergs come into being; it was on its way to the vast +solitudes of the Arctic Ocean, interdicted to the human race, from which +there is no return. + +Hobson did not hide this new danger from those who were in the secret of +the situation. Mrs Barnett, Madge, Kalumah, and Sergeant Long received +this fresh blow with courage and resignation. + +“Perhaps,” said Mrs Barnett, “the island may stop even yet. +Perhaps it will move slowly. Let us hope on ... and wait! The winter is +not far off, and we are going to meet it. In any case God’s will be +done!” “My friends,” said Hobson earnestly, “do you not think I +ought now to tell our comrades. You see in what a terrible position +we are and all that may await us! Is it not taking too great a +responsibility to keep them in ignorance of the peril they are in?” + +“I should wait a little longer,” replied Mrs Barnett without +hesitation; “I would not give them all over to despair until the last +chance is gone.” + +“That is my opinion also,” said Long. + +Hobson had thought the same, and was glad to find that his companions +agreed with him in the matter. + +On the 11th and 12th September, the motion towards the north was more +noticeable. Victoria Island was drifting at a rate of from twelve to +thirteen miles a day, so that each day took them the same distance +farther from the land and nearer to the north. They were, in short, +following the decided course made by the Kamtchatka Current, and would +quickly pass that seventieth degree which once cut across the extremity +of Cape Bathurst, and beyond which no land of any kind was to be met +with in this part of the Arctic Ocean. + +Every day Hobson looked out their position on the map, and saw only too +clearly to what awful solitudes the wandering island was drifting. + +The only hope left consisted, as Mrs Barnett had said, in the fact that +they were going to meet the winter. In thus drifting towards the north +they would soon encounter those ice-cold waters, which would consolidate +and strengthen the foundations of the island. But if the danger of +being swallowed up by the waves was decreased, would not the unfortunate +colonists have an immense distance to traverse to get back from these +remote northern regions? Had the boat been finished, Lieutenant Hobson +would not have hesitated to embark the whole party in it, but in spite +of the zealous efforts of the carpenter it was not nearly ready, and +indeed it taxed Mac-Nab’s powers to the uttermost to construct a +vessel on which to trust the lives of twenty persons in such a dangerous +sea + +By the 16th September Victoria Island was between seventy-three and +eighty miles north of the spot where its course had been arrested for +a few days between the Behring and Kamtchatka Cur rents There were now, +however, many signs of the approach of winter Snow fell frequently +and in large flakes The column of mercury fell gradually The mean +temperature was still 44° Fahrenheit during the day, but at night it +fell to 32°. The sun described an extremely lengthened curve above +the horizon, not rising more than a few degrees even at noon, and +disappearing for eleven hours out of every twenty four. + +At last, on the night of the 16th September, the first signs of ice +appeared upon the sea in the shape of small isolated crystals like +snow, which stained the clear surface of the water As was noticed by the +famous explorer Scoresby, these crystals immediately calmed the waves, +like the oil which sailors pour upon the sea to produce a momentary +cessation of its agitation These crystals showed a tendency to weld +themselves together, but they were broken and separated by the motion of +the water as soon as they had combined to any extent. + +Hobson watched the appearance of the “young ice” with extreme +attention. He knew that twenty four hours would suffice to make the +ice-crust two or three inches thick, strong enough in fact to bear the +weight of a man He therefore expected that Victoria Island would shortly +be arrested in its course to the north. + +But the day ended the work of the night, and if the speed of the island +slackened during the darkness in consequence of the obstacles in its +path, they were removed in the next twelve hours, and the island was +carried rapidly along again by the powerful current. + +The distance from the northern regions became daily less, and nothing +could be done to lessen the evil. + +At the autumnal equinox on the 21st of September, the day and night were +of equal length, and from that date the night gradually became longer +and longer. The winter was coming at last, but it did not set in rapidly +or with any rigour Victoria Island was now nearly a degree farther north +than the seventieth parallel, and on this 21st September, a rotating +motion was for the first time noticed, a motion estimated by Hobson at +about a quarter of the circumference. + +Imagine the anxiety of the unfortunate Lieutenant. The secret he had so +long carefully kept was now about to be betrayed by nature to the least +clear sighted. Of course the rotation altered the cardinal points of the +island. Cape Bathurst no longer pointed to the north, but to the east. +The sun, moon, and stars rose and set on a different horizon, and it was +impossible that men like Mac-Nab, Rae, Marbre and others, accustomed to +note the signs of the heavens, could fail to be struck by the change, +and understand its meaning. + +To Hobson’s great satisfaction, however, the brave soldiers appeared +to notice nothing, the displacement with regard to the cardinal points +was not, it was true, very considerable, and it was often too foggy for +the rising and setting of the heavenly bodies to be accurately observed. + +Unfortunately the rotation appeared to be accompanied by an increase of +speed. From that date Victoria Island drifted at the rate of a mile an +hour. It advanced farther and farther north, farther and farther away +from all land. Hobson did not even yet despair, for it was not in his +nature to do so, but he felt confused and astray, and longed for the +winter with all his heart. + +At last the temperature began to fall still lower. Snow fell plentifully +on the 23d and 24th September, and increased the thickness of the +coating of ice on the sea. Gradually the vast ice-field was formed on +every side, the island in its advance continually broke it up, but each +day it became firmer and better able to resist. The sea succumbed to +the petrifying hand of winter, and became frozen as far as the eye could +reach, and on September 27th, when the bearings were taken, it was +found that Victoria Island had not moved since the day before. It was +imprisoned in a vast ice-field, it was motionless in longitude 177° +22’, and latitude 77° 57’—more than six hundred miles from any +continent. + +CHAPTER XI A COMMUNICATION FROM LIEUTENANT HOBSON. Such was the +situation. To use Sergeant Long’s expression, the island had “cast +anchor,” and was as stationary as when the isthmus connected it with +the mainland. But six hundred miles now separated it from inhabited +countries, six hundred miles which would have to be traversed in sledges +across the solidified surface of the sea, amongst the icebergs which the +cold would build up, in the bitterest months of the Arctic winter. + +It would be a fearful undertaking, but hesitation was impossible. The +winter, for which Lieutenant Hobson had so ardently longed, had come at +last, and arrested the fatal march of the island to the north. It would +throw a bridge six hundred miles long from their desolate home to the +continents on the south, and the new chances of safety must not be +neglected, every effort must be made to restore the colonists, so long +lost in the hyperborean regions, to their friends. + +As Hobson explained to his companions, it would be madness to linger +till the spring should again thaw the ice, which would be to abandon +themselves once more to the capricious Behring currents. They must wait +until the sea was quite firmly frozen over, which at the most would be +in another three or four weeks. Meanwhile the Lieutenant proposed making +frequent excursions on the ice-field encircling the island, in order to +ascertain its thickness, its suitability for the passage of sledges, and +the best route to take across it so as to reach the shores of Asia or +America. + +“Of course,” observed Hobson to Mrs Barnett and Sergeant Long, “we +would all rather make for Russian America than Asia, if a choice is open +to us.” + +“Kalumah will be very useful to us,” said Mrs Barnett, “for as a +native she will be thoroughly acquainted with the whole of Alaska.” + +“Yes, indeed,” replied Hobson, “her arrival was most fortunate for +us. Thanks to her, we shall be easily able to get to the settlement of +Fort Michael on Norton Sound, perhaps even to New Archangel, a good deal +farther south, where we can pass the rest of the winter.” + +“Poor Fort Hope!” exclaimed Mrs Barnett, “it goes to my heart to +think of abandoning it on this island. It has been built at the cost of +so much trouble and fatigue, everything about it has been so admirably +arranged by you, Lieutenant! I feel as if my heart would break when we +leave it finally.” + +“You will not suffer more than I shall, madam,” replied Hobson, +“and perhaps not so much. It is the chief work of my life; I have +devoted all my powers to the foundation of Fort Hope, so unfortunately +named, and I shall never cease to regret having to leave it. And what +will the Company say which confided this task to me, for after all I am` +but its humble agent.” + +“It will say,” cried Mrs Barnett with enthusiasm, “it will say +that you have done your duty, that you are not responsible for the +caprices of nature, which is ever more powerful than man. It will +understand that you could not foresee what has happened, for it was +beyond the penetration of the most far-sighted man, and it will know +that it owes the preservation of the whole party to your prudence and +moral courage.” + +“Thank you, madam,” replied the Lieutenant, pressing Mrs Barnett’s +hand, “thank you for your warm-hearted words. But I have had some +experience of men, and I know that success is always admired and failure +condemned. But the will of Heaven be done!” + +Sergeant Long, anxious to turn the Lieutenant from his melancholy +thoughts, now began to talk about the preparations for the approaching +departure, and asked if it was not time to tell his comrades the truth. + +“Let us wait a little longer,” replied Hobson. “We have saved the +poor fellows much anxiety and worry already, let us keep silent until +the day is fixed for the start, and then we will reveal the whole +truth.” + +This point being decided, the ordinary occupations of the factory went +on for a few weeks longer. + +How different was the situation of the colonists a year ago, when they +were all looking forward to the future in happy unconsciousness! + +A year ago the first symptoms of the cold season were appearing, even +as they were now. The “young ice” was gradually forming along the +coast. The lagoon, its waters being quieter than those of the sea, was +the first to freeze over. The temperature remained about one or two +degrees above freezing point in the day, and fell to three or four +degrees below in the night. Hobson again made his men assume their +winter garments, the linen vests and furs before described. The +condensers were again set up inside the house, the air vessel and +air-pumps were cleaned, the traps were set round the palisades on +different parts of Cape Bathurst, and Marbre and Sabine got plenty of +game, and finally the last touches were given to the inner rooms of the +principal house. + +Although Fort Hope was now about two degrees farther north than at the +same time the year before, there was no sensible difference in the state +of the temperature. The fact is, the distance between the seventieth and +seventy-second parallels is not great enough to affect the mean height +of the thermometer, on the contrary, it really seemed to be less cold +than at the beginning of the winter before. Perhaps, however, that was +because the colonists were now, to a certain extent, acclimatised. + +Certainly the winter did not set in so abruptly as last time. The +weather was very damp, and the atmosphere was always charged with +vapour, which fell now as rain now as snow. In Lieutenant Hobson’s +opinion, at least, it was not nearly cold enough. + +The sea froze all round the island, it is true, but not in a regular or +continuous sheet of ice. Large blackish patches here and there showed +that the icicles were not thoroughly cemented together. Loud resonant +noises were constantly heard, produced by the breaking of the ice +field when the rain melted the imperfectly welded edges of the blocks +composing it. There was no rapid accumulation of lump upon lump such as +is generally seen in intense cold. Icebergs and hummocks were few and +scattered, and no ice-wall as yet shut in the horizon. + +“This season would have been just the thing for the explorers of +the North West Passage, or the seekers of the North Pole,” repeated +Sergeant Long again and again, “but it is most unfavourable for us, +and very much against our ever getting back to our own land!” + +This went on throughout October, and Hobson announced that the mean +temperature was no lower than 32° Fahrenheit, and it is well known that +several days of cold, 7° or 8° below zero, are required for the sea to +freeze hard. + +Had proof been needed that the ice-field was impassable, a fact noticed +by Mrs Barnett and Hobson would have sufficed. + +The animals imprisoned in the island, the furred animals, reindeer, +wolves, &c., would have left the island had it been possible to cross +the sea, but they continued to gather in large numbers round the +factory, and to seek the vicinity of man. The wolves came actually +within musket-range of the enceinte to devour the martens and Polar +hares, which were their only food. The famished reindeer having neither +moss nor herbs on which to browse, roved about Cape Bathurst in herds. +A solitary bear, no doubt the one to which Mrs Barnett and Kalumah felt +they owed a debt of gratitude, often passed to and fro amongst the trees +of the woods, on the banks of the lagoon, and the presence of all these +animals, especially of the ruminants, which require an exclusively +vegetable diet, proved that flight was impossible. + +We have said that the thermometer remained at freezing point, and Hobson +found on consulting his journal that at the same time the year before, +it had already marked 20° Fahrenheit below zero, proving how unequally +cold is distributed in the capricious Polar regions. + +The colonists therefore did not suffer much, and were not confined to +the house at all. It was, however, very damp indeed, rain mixed with +snow fell constantly, and the falling of the barometer proved that the +atmosphere was charged with vapour. + +Throughout October the Lieutenant and Long made many excursions to +ascertain the state of the ice-field in the offing; one day they went to +Cape Michael, another to the edge of the former Walruses’ Bay, anxious +to see if it would be possible to cross to the continent of America or +Asia, or if the start would have to be put off. + +But the surface of the ice-field was covered with puddles of water, +and in some parts riddled with holes, which would certainly have been +impassable for sledges. It seemed as if it would be scarcely safe for a +single traveller to venture across the half-liquid, half-solid masses. +It was easy to see that the cold had been neither severe nor equally +maintained, for the ice consisted of an accumulation of sharp points, +crystals, prisms, polyhedrons, and figures of every variety, like +an aggregation of stalactites. It was more like a glacier than a +“field,” and even if it had been practicable, walking on it would +have been very tiring. + +Hobson and Long managed with great difficulty to scramble over a mile or +two towards the south, but at the expense of a vast amount of time, so +that they were compelled to admit that they must wait some time yet, and +they returned to Fort Hope disappointed and disheartened. + +The first days of November came, and the temperature fell a little, but +only a very few degrees, which was not nearly enough. Victoria Island +was wrapped in damp fogs, and the lamps had to be lit during the day. It +was necessary, however, to economise the oil as much as possible, as the +supply was running short. No fresh stores had been brought by Captain +Craventy’s promised convoy, and there were no more walruses to be +hunted. Should the dark winter be prolonged, the colonists would be +compelled to have recourse to the fat of animals, perhaps even to the +resin of the firs, to get a little light. The days were already very +short, and the pale disc of the sun, yielding no warmth, and deprived of +all its brightness, only appeared above the horizon for a few hours at +a time. Yes, winter had come with its mists, its rain, and its snow, but +without the long desired cold. + +On the 11th November something of a fête was held at Fort Hope. Mrs +Joliffe served up a few extras at dinner, for it was the anniversary of +the birth of little Michael Mac-Nab. He was now a year old, and was the +delight of everybody. He had large blue eyes and fair curly hair, like +his father, the head carpenter, who was very proud of the resemblance. +At dessert the baby was solemnly weighed. It was worth something to +see him struggling in the scales, and to hear his astonished cries! He +actually weighed thirty-four pounds! The announcement of this wonderful +weight was greeted with loud cheers, and Mrs Mac-Nab was congratulated +by everybody on her fine boy. Why Corporal Joliffe felt that he ought +to share the compliments it is difficult to imagine, unless it was as +a kind of foster-father or nurse to the baby. He had carried the child +about, dandled and rocked him so often, that he felt he had something to +do with his specific weight! + +The next day, November 12th, the sun did not appear above the horizon. +The long Polar night was beginning nine days sooner than it had done +the year before, in consequence of the difference in the latitude of +Victoria Island then and now. + +The disappearance of the sun did not, however, produce any change in the +state of the atmosphere. The temperature was as changeable as ever. The +thermometer fell one day and rose the next. Rain and snow succeeded each +other. The wind was soft, and did not settle in any quarter, but often +veered round to every point of the compass in the course of a single +day. The constant damp was very unhealthy, and likely to lead to +scorbutic affections amongst the colonists, but fortunately, although +the lime juice and lime lozenges were running short, and no fresh stock +had been obtained, the scurvy-grass and sorrel had yielded a very good +crop, and, by the advice of Lieutenant Hobson, a portion of them was +eaten daily. + +Every effort must, however, be made to get away from Fort Hope. Under +the circumstances, three months would scarcely be long enough for them +all to get to the nearest continent. It was impossible to risk being +overtaken by the thaw on the ice-field, and therefore if they started at +all it must be at the end of November. + +The journey would have been difficult enough, even if the ice had been +rendered solid everywhere by a severe winter, and in this uncertain +weather it was a most serious matter. + +On the 13th November, Hobson, Mrs Barnett, and the Sergeant met to +decide on the day of departure. The Sergeant was of opinion that they +ought to leave the island as soon as possible. + +“For,” he said, “we must make allowance for all the possible +delays during a march of six hundred miles. We ought to reach the +continent before March, or we may be surprised by the thaw, and then we +shall be in a worse predicament than we are on our island.” + +“But,” said Mrs Barnett, “is the sea firm enough for us to cross +it?” + +“I think it is,” said Long, “and the ice gets thicker every +day. The barometer, too, is gradually rising, and by the time our +preparations are completed, which will be in about another week, I +think, I hope that the really cold weather will have set in.” + +“The winter has begun very badly,” said Hobson, “in fact +everything seems to combine against us. Strange seasons have often +been experienced on these seas, I have heard of whalers being able to +navigate in places where, even in the summer at another time they would +not have had an inch of water beneath their keels. In my opinion there +is not a day to be lost, and I cannot sufficiently regret that the +ordinary temperature of these regions does not assist us.” + +“It will later,” said Mrs Barnett, “and we must be ready to take +advantage of every chance in our favour. When do you propose starting, +Lieutenant?” + +“At the end of November at the latest,” replied Hobson, “but if +in a week hence our preparations are finished, and the route appears +practicable, we will start then.” + +“Very well,” said Long, “we will get ready without losing an +instant.” + +“Then,” said Mrs Barnett, “you will now tell our companions of the +situation in which they are placed?” + +“Yes, madam, the moment to speak and the time for action have alike +arrived.” + +“And when do you propose enlightening them?” + +“At once. Sergeant Long,” he added, turning to his subordinate, who +at once drew himself up in a military attitude, “call all your men +together in the large room to receive a communication.” + +Sergeant Long touched his cap, and turning on his heel left the room +without a word. + +For some minutes Mrs Barnett and Hobson were left alone, but neither of +them spoke. + +The Sergeant quickly returned, and told Hobson that his orders were +executed. + +The Lieutenant and the lady at once went into the large room. All +the members of the colony, men and women, were assembled in the dimly +lighted room. + +Hobson came forward, and standing in the centre of the group said very +gravely— + +“My friends, until to-day I have felt it my duty, in order to spare +you useless anxiety, to conceal from you the situation of our fort. An +earthquake separated us from the continent. Cape Bathurst has broken +away from the mainland. Our peninsula is but an island of ice, a +wandering island”—— + +At this moment Marbre stepped forward, and said quietly. + +“We knew it, sir!” + +CHAPTER XII. A CHANCE TO BE TRIED. The brave fellows knew it then! And +that they might not add to the cares of their chief, they had pretended +to know nothing, and had worked away at the preparations for the winter +with the same zeal as the year before. + +Tears of emotion stood in Hobson’s eyes, and he made no attempt to +conceal them, but seizing Marbre’s outstretched hand, he pressed it in +his own. + +Yes, the soldiers all knew it, for Marbre had guessed it long ago. The +filling of the reindeer trap with salt water, the non-arrival of +the detachment from Fort Reliance, the observations of latitude and +longitude taken every day, which would have been useless on firm ground, +the precautions observed by Hobson to prevent any one seeing him take +the bearings, the fact of the animals remaining on the island after +winter had set in, and the change in the position of the cardinal points +during the last few days, which they had noticed at once, had all been +tokens easily interpreted by the inhabitants of Fort Hope. The arrival +of Kalumah had puzzled them, but they had concluded that she had been +thrown upon the island in the storm, and they were right, as we are +aware. + +Marbre, upon whom the truth had first dawned, confided his suspicions +to Mac-Nab the carpenter and Rae the blacksmith. All three faced the +situation calmly enough, and agreed that they ought to tell their +comrades and wives, but decided to let the Lieutenant think they knew +nothing, and to obey him without question as before. + +“You are indeed brave fellows, my friends,” exclaimed Mrs Barnett, +who was much touched by this delicate feeling, “you are true +soldiers!” + +“Our Lieutenant may depend upon us,” said Mac-Nab, “he has done +his duty, and we will do ours.” + +“I know you will, dear comrades,” said Hobson, “and if only Heaven +will help and not forsake us, we will help ourselves.” + +The Lieutenant then related all that had happened since the time when +the earthquake broke the isthmus, and converted the districts round Cape +Bathurst into an island. He told how, when the sea became free from ice +in the spring, the new island had been drifted more than two hundred +miles away from the coast by an unknown current, how the hurricane had +driven it back within sight of land, how it had again been carried away +in the night of the 31st August, and, lastly, how Kalumah had bravely +risked her life to come to the aid of her European friends. Then he +enumerated the changes the island had undergone, explaining how the +warmer waters had worn it away, and his fear that it might be carried +to the Pacific, or seized by the Kamtchatka Current, concluding his +narrative by stating that the wandering island had finally stopped on +the 27th of last September. + +The chart of the Arctic seas was then brought, and Hobson pointed out +the position occupied by the island—six hundred miles from all land. + +He ended by saying that the situation was extremely dangerous, that +the island would inevitably be crushed when the ice broke up, and that, +before having recourse to the boat—which could not be used until the +next summer—they must try to get back to the American continent by +crossing the ice-field. + +“We shall have six hundred miles to go in the cold and darkness of the +Polar night. It will be hard work, my friends, but you know as well as I +do that there can be no shrinking from the task.” + +“When you give the signal to start, Lieutenant, we will follow you,” +said Mac-Nab. + +All being of one mind, the preparations for departure were from that +date rapidly pushed forward. The men bravely faced the fact that they +would have six hundred miles to travel under very trying circumstances. +Sergeant Long superintended the works, whilst Hobson, the two hunters, +and Mrs Barnett, often went to test the firmness of the ice-field. +Kalumah frequently accompanied them, and her remarks, founded on +experience, might possibly be of great use to the Lieutenant. Unless +they were prevented they were to start on the 20th November, and there +was not a moment to lose. + +As Hobson had foreseen, the wind having risen, the temperature fell +slightly, and the column of mercury marked 24° Fahrenheit. + +Snow, which soon became hardened, replaced the rain of the preceding +days. A few more days of such cold and sledges could be used. The little +bay hollowed out of the cliffs of Cape Michael was partly filled with +ice and snow; but it must not be forgotten that its calmer waters +froze more quickly than those of the open sea, which were not yet in a +satisfactory condition. + +The wind continued to blow almost incessantly, and with considerable +violence, but the motion of waves interfered with the regular formation +and consolidation of the ice. Large pools of water occurred here and +there between the pieces of ice, and it was impossible to attempt to +cross it. + +“The weather is certainly getting colder,” observed Mrs Barnett +to Lieutenant Hobson, as they were exploring the south of the island +together on the 10th November, “the temperature is becoming lower and +lower, and these liquid spaces will soon freeze over.” + +“I think you are right, madam,” replied Hobson, “but the way in +which they will freeze over will not be very favourable to our plans. +The pieces of ice are small, and their jagged edges will stick up all +over the surface, making it very rough, so that if our sledges get over +it at all, it will only be with very great difficulty.” + +“But,” resumed Mrs Barnett, “if I am not mistaken, a heavy fall of +snow, lasting a few days or even a few hours, would suffice to level the +entire surface!” + +“Yes, yes,” replied Hobson, “but if snow should fall, it will be +because the temperature has risen; and if it rises, the ice-field will +break up again, so that either contingency will be against us!” + +“It really would be a strange freak of fortune if we should experience +a temperate instead of an Arctic winter in the midst of the Polar +Sea!” observed Mrs Barnett. + +“It has happened before, madam, it has happened before. Let me remind +you of the great severity of last cold season; now it has been noticed +that two long bitter winters seldom succeed each other, and the whalers +of the northern seas know it well. A bitter winter when we should have +been glad of a mild one, and a mild one when we so sorely need the +reverse. It must be owned, we have been strangely unfortunate thus +far! And when I think of six hundred miles to cross with women and a +child!”... + +And Hobson pointed to the vast white plain, with strange irregular +markings like guipure work, stretching away into the infinite + +“I know you will, dear comrades,” said Hobson, “and if only Heaven +will help and not forsake us, we will help ourselves.” + +The Lieutenant then related all that had happened since the time when +the earthquake broke the isthmus, and converted the districts round Cape +Bathurst into an island. He told how, when the sea became free from ice +in the spring, the new island had been drifted more than two hundred +miles away from the coast by an unknown current, how the hurricane had +driven it luck within sight of land, how it had again been carried away +in the night of the 31st August, and, lastly, how Kalumah had bravely +risked her life to come to the aid of her European friends. Then he +enumerated the changes the island had undergone, explaining how the +warmer waters had worn it away, and his fear that it might be carried +to the Pacific, or seized by the Kamtchatka Current, concluding his +narrative by stating that the wandering island had finally stopped on +the 27th of last September. + +The chart of the Arctic seas was then brought, and Hobson pointed out +the position occupied by the island—six hundred miles from all land. + +He ended by saying that the situation was extremely dangerous, that +the island would inevitably be crushed when the ice broke up, and that, +before having recourse to the boat—which could not be used until the +next summer—they must try to get back to the American continent by +crossing the ice-field. + +“We shall have six hundred miles to go in the cold and darkness of the +Polar night. It will be hard work, my friends but you know as well as I +do that there can be no shirking from the task” “When you give the +signal to start, Lieutenant, we will follow you,” said Mac-Nab. + +All being of one mind, the preparations for departure were from that +date rapidly pushed forward. The men bravely faced the fact that they +would have six hundred miles to travel under very trying circumstances. +Sergeant Long superintended the works, whilst Hobson, the two hunters, +and Mrs Barnett, often went to test the firmness of the ice-field +Kalumah frequently accompanied them, and her remarks, founded on +experience, might possibly be of great use to the Lieutenant. Unless +they were prevented they were to start on the 20th November, and there +was not a moment to lose. + +As Hobson had foreseen, the wind having risen, the temperature fell +slightly, and the column of mercury marked 24° Fahrenheit. + +Snow, which soon became hardened, replaced the rain of the preceding +days. A few more days of such cold and sledges could be used The little +bay hollowed out of the cliffs of Cape Michael was partly filled with +ice and snow, but it must not be forgotten that its calmer waters +froze more quickly than those of the open sea, which were not yet in a +satisfactory condition. + +The wind continued to blow almost incessantly, and with considerable +violence, but the motion of waves interfered with the regular formation +and consolidation of the ice. Large pools of water occurred here and +there between the pieces of ice, and it was impossible to attempt to +cross it. + +“The weather is certainly getting colder,” observed Mrs Barnett +to Lieutenant Hobson, as they were exploring the south of the island +together on the 10th November, “the temperature is becoming lower and +lower, and these liquid spaces will soon freeze over.” + +“I think you are right, madam,” replied Hobson, “but the way in +which they will freeze over will not be very favourable to our plans. +The pieces of ice are small, and their jagged edges will stick up all +over the surface, making it very rough, so that if our sledges get over +it at all, it will only be with very great difficulty.” + +“But,” resumed Mrs Barnett, “if I am not mistaken, a heavy fall of +snow, lasting a few days or even a few hours, would suffice to level the +entire surface!” + +“Yes, yes,” replied Hobson, “but if snow should fall, it will be +because the temperature has risen; and if it rises, the ice-field will +break up again, so that either contingency will be against us!” + +“It really would be a strange freak of fortune if we should experience +a temperate instead of an Arctic winter in the midst of the Polar +Sea!” observed Mrs Barnett. + +“It has happened before, madam, it has happened before. Let me remind +you of the great severity of last cold season; now it has been noticed +that two long bitter winters seldom succeed each other, and the whalers +of the northern seas know it well. A bitter winter when we should have +been glad of a mild one, and a mild one when we so sorely need the +reverse. It must be owned, we have been strangely unfortunate thus +far! And when I think of six hundred miles to cross with women and a +child!”... + +And Hobson pointed to the vast white plain, with strange irregular +markings like guipure work, stretching away into the infinite distance. +Sad and desolate enough it looked, the imperfectly frozen surface +cracking every now and then with an ominous sound. A pale moon, its +light half quenched in the damp mists, rose but a few degrees above the +gloomy horizon and shot a few faint beams upon the melancholy scene. +The half-darkness and the refraction combined doubled the size of every +object. Icebergs of moderate height assumed gigantic proportions, and +were in some cases distorted into the forms of fabulous monsters. Birds +passed overhead with loud flapping of wings, and in consequence of this +optical illusion the smallest of them appeared as large as a condor or +a vulture. In the midst of the icebergs yawned apparently huge black +tunnels, into which the boldest man would scarcely dare to venture, and +now and then sudden convulsions took place, as the icebergs, worn away +at the base, heeled over with a crash, the sonorous echoes taking up +the sounds and carrying them along. The rapid changes resembled the +transformation scenes of fairyland, and terrible indeed must all those +phenomena have appeared to the luckless colonists who were about to +venture across the ice-field! + +In spite of her moral and physical courage Mrs Barnett could not control +an involuntary shudder. Soul and body alike shrunk from the awful +prospect, and she was tempted to shut her eyes and stop her ears that +she might see and hear no more. When the moon was for a moment veiled +behind a heavy cloud, the gloom of the Polar landscape became still more +awe-inspiring, and before her mind’s eye rose a vision of the caravan +of men and women struggling across these vast solitudes in the midst of +hurricanes, snow-storms, avalanches, and in the thick darkness of the +Arctic night! + +Mrs Barnett, however, forced herself to look; she wished to accustom +her eyes to these scenes, and to teach herself not to shrink from facing +their terrors. But as she gazed a cry suddenly burst from her lips, and +seizing Hobson’s hand, she pointed to a huge object, of ill-defined +dimensions, moving about in the uncertain light, scarcely a hundred +paces from where they stood. + +It was a white monster of immense size, more than a hundred feet high. +It was pacing slowly along over the broken ice, bounding from one piece +to another, and beating the air with its huge feet, between which it +could have held ten large dogs at least. It, too, seemed to be seeking +a practicable path across the ice—it, too, seemed anxious to fly from +the doomed island. The ice gave way beneath its weight, and it had often +considerable difficulty in regaining its feet. + +The monster made its way thus for about a quarter of a mile across the +ice, and then, its farther progress being barred, it turned round and +advanced towards the spot where Mrs Barnett and the Lieutenant stood. + +Hobson seized the gun which was slung over his shoulder and presented +it at the animal, but almost immediately lowering the weapon, he said to +Mrs Barnett— + +“A bear, madam, only a bear, the size of which has been greatly +magnified by refraction.” + +It was, in fact, a Polar bear, and Mrs Barnett drew a long breath of +relief as she understood the optical illusion of which she had been the +victim. Then an idea struck her. + +“It is my bear!” she exclaimed, “the bear with the devotion of a +Newfoundland dog! Probably the only one still on the island. But what is +he doing here?” + +“He is trying to get away,” replied Hobson, shaking his head. “He +is trying to escape from this doomed island, and he cannot do so! He is +proving to us that we cannot pass where he has had to turn back!” + +Hobson was right, the imprisoned animal had tried to leave the island +and to get to the continent, and having failed it was returning to the +coast. Shaking its head and growling, it passed some twenty paces from +the two watchers, and, either not seeing them or disdaining to take +any notice of them, it walked heavily on towards Cape Michael, and soon +disappeared behind the rising ground. + +Lieutenant Hobson and Mrs Barnett returned sadly and silently to the +fort. + +The preparations for departure went on as rapidly, however, as if it +were possible to leave the island. Nothing was neglected to promote the +success of the undertaking, every possible danger had to be foreseen, +and not only had the ordinary difficulties and dangers of a journey +across the ice to be allowed for, but also the sudden changes of weather +peculiar to the Polar regions, which so obstinately resist every attempt +to explore them. + +The teams of dogs required special attention. They were allowed to run +about near the fort, that they might regain the activity of which too +long a rest had, to some extent, deprived them, and they were soon in a +condition to make a long march. + +The sledges were carefully examined and repaired. The rough surface +of the ice-field would give them many violent shocks, and they were +therefore thoroughly overhauled by Mac-Nab and his men, the inner +framework and the curved fronts being carefully repaired and +strengthened. + +Two large waggon sledges were built, one for the transport of +provisions, the other for the peltries. These were to be drawn by +the tamed reindeer, which had been well trained for the service. The +peltries or furs were articles of luxury with which it was not perhaps +quite prudent to burden the travellers, but Hobson was anxious to +consider the interests of the Company as much as possible, although he +was resolved to abandon them, en route, if they harassed or impeded his +march. No fresh risk was run of injury of the furs, for of course they +would have been lost if left at the factory. + +It was of course quite another matter with the provisions, of which a +good and plentiful supply was absolutely necessary. It was of no use to +count on the product of the chase this time. As soon as the passage of +the ice-field became practicable, all the edible game would get on +ahead and reach the mainland before the caravan. One waggon sledge was +therefore packed with salt meat, corned beef, hare patès, dried fish, +biscuits—the stock of which was unfortunately getting low—and an +ample reserve of sorrel, scurvy-grass, rum, spirits of wine, for making +warm drinks, &c. &c. Hobson would have been glad to take some fuel +with him, as he would not meet with a tree, a shrub, or a bit of moss +throughout the march of six hundred miles, nor could he hope for pieces +of wreck or timber cast up by the sea, but he did not dare to overload +his sledges with wood. Fortunately there was no lack of warm comfortable +garments, and in case of need they could draw upon the reserve of +peltries in the waggon. + +Thomas Black, who since his misfortune had altogether retired from +the world, shunning his companions, taking part in none of the +consultations, and remaining shut up in his own room, reappeared as soon +as the day of departure was definitely fixed. But even then he +attended to nothing but the sledge which was to carry his person, +his instruments, and his registers. Always very silent, it was now +impossible to get a word out of him. He had forgotten everything, even +that he was a scientific man, and since he had been deceived about the +eclipse, since the solution of the problem of the red prominences of +the moon had escaped him, he had taken no notice of any of the peculiar +phenomena of the high latitudes, such as the Aurora Borealis, halos, +parhelia, &c. + +During the last few days every one worked so hard that all was ready for +the start on the morning of the 18th November. + +But, alas! the ice-field was still impassable. Although the thermometer +had fallen slightly, the cold had not been severe enough to freeze the +surface of the sea, with any uniformity, and the snow which fell was +fine and intermittent. Hobson, Marbre, and Sabine went along the coast +every day from Cape Michael to what was once the corner of the old +Walruses’ Bay. They even ventured out about a mile and a half upon +the ice-field, but were compelled to admit that it was broken by +rents, crevasses, and fissures in every direction. Not only would it be +impossible for sledges to cross it, it was dangerous for unencumbered +pedestrians. Hobson and his two men underwent the greatest fatigue in +these short excursions, and more than once they ran a risk of being +unable to get back to Victoria Island across the ever-changing, +ever-moving blocks of ice. + +Really all nature seemed to be in league against the luckless colonists. + +On the 18th and 19th November, the thermometer rose, whilst the +barometer fell. Fatal results were to be feared from this change in +the state of the atmosphere. Whilst the cold decreased the sky became +covered with clouds, which presently resolved themselves into heavy rain +instead of the sadly-needed snow, the column of mercury standing at 34° +Fahrenheit. These showers of comparatively warm water melted the snow +and ice in many places, and the result can easily be imagined. It +really seemed as if a thaw were setting in, and there were symptoms of a +general breaking up of the ice-field. In spite of the dreadful weather, +however, Hobson went to the south of the island every day, and every day +returned more disheartened than before. + +On the 20th, a tempest resembling in violence that of the month before, +broke upon the gloomy Arctic solitudes, compelling the colonists to give +up going out, and to remain shut up in Fort Hope for two days. + +CHAPTER XIII. ACROSS THE ICE-FIELD. At last, on the 22d of November, the +weather moderated. In a few hours the storm suddenly ceased. The wind +veered round to the north, and the thermometer fell several degrees. A +few birds capable of a long-sustained flight took wing and disappeared. +There really seemed to be a likelihood that the temperature was at last +going to become what it ought to be at this time of the year in such an +elevated latitude. The colonists might well regret that it was not now +what it had been during the last cold season, when the column of mercury +fell to 72° Fahrenheit below zero. + +Hobson determined no longer to delay leaving Victoria Island, and on the +morning of the 22d the whole of the little colony was ready to leave the +island, which was now firmly welded to the ice-field, and by its means +connected with the American continent, six hundred miles away. + +At half-past eleven A.M., Hobson gave the signal of departure. The sky +was grey but clear, and lighted up from the horizon to the zenith by a +magnificent Aurora Borealis. The dogs were harnessed to the sledges, +and three couple of reindeer to the waggon sledges. Silently they +wended their way towards Cape Michael, where they would quit the island, +properly so called, for the ice-field. + +The caravan at first skirted along the wooded hill on the east of Lake +Barnett, but as they were rounding the coiner all paused to look round +for the last time at Cape Bathurst, which they were leaving never to +return. A few snow-encrusted rafters stood out in the light of the +Aurora Borealis, a few white lines marked the boundaries of the enceinte +of the factory, a—white mass here and there, a few blue wreaths of +smoke from the expiring fire never to be rekindled; this was all that +could be seen of Fort Hope, now useless and deserted, but erected at the +cost of so much labour and so much anxiety. + +“Farewell, farewell, to our poor Arctic home!” exclaimed Mrs. +Barnett, waving her hand for the last time; and all sadly and silently +resumed their journey. + +At one o’clock the detachment arrived at Cape Michael, after having +rounded the gulf which the cold had imperfectly frozen over. Thus far +the difficulties of the journey had not been very great, for the ground +of the island was smooth compared to the ice-field, which was strewn +with icebergs, hummocks, and packs, between which, practicable passes +had to be found at the cost of an immense amount of fatigue. + +Towards the evening of the same day the party had advanced several miles +on the ice-field, and a halt for the night was ordered; the encampment +was to be formed by hollowing out snow-houses in the Esquimaux style. +The work was quickly accomplished with the ice-chisels, and at eight +o’clock, after a salt meat supper, every one had crept into the holes, +which are much warmer than anybody would imagine. + +Before retiring, however, Mrs. Barnett asked the Lieutenant how far he +thought they had come. + +“Not more than ten miles, I think,” replied Hobson. + +“Ten from six hundred!” exclaimed Mrs Barnett. “At this rate, it +will take us three months to get to the American continent!” + +“Perhaps more, madam,” replied Hobson, “for we shall not be able +to get on faster than this. We are not travelling as we were last year +over the frozen plains between Fort Reliance and Cape Bathurst; but on a +distorted ice-field crushed by the pressure of the icebergs across which +there is no easy route. I expect to meet with almost insurmountable +difficulties on the way; may we be able to conquer them! It is not of +so much importance, however, to march quickly as to preserve our health, +and I shall indeed think myself fortunate if all my comrades answer to +their names in the roll-call on our arrival at Fort Reliance. Heaven +grant we may have all landed at some point, no matter where, of the +American continent in three months’ time; if so, we shall never be +able to return thanks enough.” + +The night passed without incident; but during the long vigil which he +kept, Hobson fancied he noticed certain ill-omened tremblings on the +spot he had chosen for his encampment, and could not but fear that the +vast ice-field was insufficiently cemented, and that there would be +numerous rents in the surface which would greatly impede his progress, +and render communication with firm ground very uncertain. Moreover, +before he started, he had observed that none of the animals had left +the vicinity of the fort, and they would certainly have sought a warmer +climate had not their instinct warned them of obstacles in their way. +Yet the Lieutenant felt that he had only done his duty in making this +attempt to restore his little colony to an inhabited land, before the +setting in of the thaw, and whether he succeeded or had to turn back he +would have no reason to reproach himself. + +The next day, November 23d, the detachment could not even advance ten +miles towards the east, so great were the difficulties met with. The +ice-field was fearfully distorted, and here and there many layers of ice +were piled one upon another, doubtless driven along by the irresistible +force of the ice-wall into the vast funnel of the Arctic Ocean. Hence +a confusion of masses of ice, which looked as if they had been suddenly +dropped by a hand incapable of holding them, and strewn about in every +direction. + +It was clear that a caravan of sledges, drawn by dogs and reindeer, +could not possibly get over these blocks; and it was equally clear that +a path could not be cut through them with the hatchet or ice-chisel. +Some of the icebergs assumed extraordinary forms, and there were groups +which looked like towns falling into ruins. Some towered three or four +hundred feet above the level of the ice-field, and were capped with +tottering masses of debris, which the slightest shake or shock or gust +of wind would bring down in avalanches. + +The greatest precautions were, therefore, necessary in rounding these +ice-mountains, and orders were given not to speak above a whisper, and +not to excite the dogs by cracking the whips in these dangerous passes. + +But an immense amount of time was lost in looking for practicable +passages, and the travellers were worn out with fatigue, often going +ten miles round before they could advance one in the required direction +towards the east. The only comfort was that the ground still remained +firm beneath their feet. + +On the 24th November, however, fresh obstacles arose, which Hobson +really feared, with considerable reason, would be insurmountable. + +After getting over one wall of ice which rose some twenty miles from +Victoria Island, the party found themselves on a much less undulating +ice-field, the different portions of which had evidently not been +subjected to any great pressure. It was clear that in consequence of the +direction of the currents the influence of the masses of permanent ice +in the north had not here been felt, and Hobson and his comrades soon +found that this ice-field was intersected with wide and deep crevasses +not yet frozen over. The temperature here was comparatively warm, and +the thermometer maintained a mean height of more than 34° Fahrenheit. +Salt water, as is well known, does not freeze so readily as fresh, but +requires several degrees of cold below freezing point before it becomes +solidified, and the sea was therefore still liquid. All the icebergs +and floes here had come from latitudes farther north, and, if we may so +express it, lived upon the cold they had brought with them. The whole +of the southern portion of the Arctic Ocean was most imperfectly frozen, +and a warm rain was falling, which hastened the dissolution of what ice +there was. + +On the 24th November the advance of the travellers was absolutely +arrested by a crevasse full of rough water strewn with small icicles—a +crevasse not more than a hundred feet wide, it is true, but probably +many miles long. + +For two whole hours the party skirted along the western edge of this +gap, in the hope of coming to the end of it and getting to the other +side, so as to resume their march to the east, but it was all in vain, +they were obliged to give it up and encamp on the wrong side. + +Hobson and Long, however, proceeded for another quarter of a mile along +the interminable crevasse, mentally cursing the mildness of the winter +which had brought them into such a strait. + +“We must pass somehow,” said Long, “for we can’t stay where we +are.” + +“Yes, yes,” replied the Lieutenant, “and we shall pass it, either +by going up to the north, or down to the south, it must end somewhere. +But after we have got round this we shall come to others, and so it will +go on perhaps for hundred of miles, as long as this uncertain and most +unfortunate weather continues!” + +“Well, Lieutenant, we must ascertain the truth once for all before we +resume our journey,” said the Sergeant. + +“We must indeed, Sergeant,” replied Hobson firmly, “or we shall +run a risk of not having crossed half the distance between us and +America after travelling five or six hundred miles out of our way. +Yes, before going farther, I must make quite sure of the state of the +ice-field, and that is what I am about to do.” + +And without another word Hobson stripped himself, plunged into the +half-frozen water, and being a powerful swimmer a few strokes soon +brought him to the other side of the crevasse, when he disappeared +amongst the icebergs. + +A few hours later the Lieutenant reached the encampment, to which Long +had already returned, in an exhausted condition. He took Mrs Barnett and +the Sergeant aside, and told them that the ice-field was impracticable, +adding— + +“Perhaps one man on foot without a sledge or any encumbrances might +get across, but for a caravan it is impossible. The crevasses increase +towards the east, and a boat would really be of more use than a sledge +if we wish to reach the American coast” + +“Well,” said Long, “if one man could cross, ought not one of us to +attempt it, and go and seek assistance for the rest.” + +“I thought of trying it myself,” replied Hobson. + +“You, Lieutenant!” + +“You, sir!” cried Mrs Barnett and Long in one breath. + +These two exclamations showed Hobson how unexpected and inopportune his +proposal appeared. How could he, the chief of the expedition, think of +deserting those confided to him, even although it was in their +interests and at great risk to himself. It was quite impossible, and the +Lieutenant did not insist upon it. + +“Yes,” he said, “I understand how it appears to you, my friends, +and I will not abandon you. It would, indeed, be quite useless for any +one to attempt the passage; he would not succeed, he would fall by the +way, and find a watery grave when the thaw sets in. And even suppose he +reached New Archangel, how could he come to our rescue? Would he charter +a vessel to seek for us? Suppose he did, it could not start until after +the thaw. And who can tell where the currents will then have taken +Victoria Island, either yet farther north or to the Behring Sea! + +“Yes, Lieutenant, you are right,” replied Long; “let us remain +together, and if we are to be saved in a boat, there is Mac-Nab’s on +Victoria Island, and for it at least we shall not have to wait!” + +Mrs Barnett had listened without saying a word, but she understood that +the ice-field being impassible. they had now nothing to depend on but +the carpenter’s boat, and that they would have to wait bravely for the +thaw. + +“What are you going to do, then?” she inquired at last. + +“Return to Victoria Island.” + +“Let us return then, and God be with us!” + +The rest of the travellers had now gathered round the Lieutenant, and he +laid his plans before them. + +At first all were disposed to rebel, the poor creatures had been +counting on getting back to their homes, and felt absolutely crushed at +the disappointment, but they soon recovered their dejection and declared +themselves ready to obey. + +Hobson then told them the results of the examination he had just made. +They learnt that the obstacles in their way on the east were so numerous +that it would be absolutely impossible to pass with the sledges and +their contents, and as the journey would last several months, the +provisions, &c., could not be dispensed with. + +“We are now,” added the Lieutenant, “cut off from all +communication with the mainland, and by going farther towards the east +we run a risk, after enduring great fatigues, of finding it impossible +to get back to the island, now our only refuge. If the thaw should +overtake us on the ice-field, we are lost. I have not disguised nor have +I exaggerated the truth, and I know, my friends, that I am speaking to +men who have found that I am not a man to turn back from difficulties. +But I repeat, the task we have set ourselves is impossible!” + +The men trusted their chief implicitly. They knew his courage and +energy, and felt as they listened to his words that it was indeed +impossible to cross the ice. It was decided to start on the return +journey to Fort Hope the next day, and it was accomplished under most +distressing circumstances. The weather was dreadful, squalls swept down +upon the ice-field, and rain fell in torrents. The difficulty of finding +the way in the darkness through the labyrinth of icebergs can well be +imagined! + +It took no less than four days and four nights to get back to the +island. Several teams of dogs with their sledges fell into the +crevasses, but thanks to Hobson’s skill, prudence, and devotion, he +lost not one of his party. But what terrible dangers and fatigues they +had to go through, and how awful was the prospect of another winter on +the wandering island to the unfortunate colonists! + +CHAPTER XIV. THE WINTER MONTHS. The party did not arrive at Fort Hope +until the 28th, after a most arduous journey. They had now nothing to +depend on but the boat, and that they could not use until the sea was +open, which would not be for six months. + +Preparations for another winter were therefore made. The sledges were +unloaded, the provisions put back in the pantry, and the clothes, arms, +furs, &c., in the magazines. The dogs returned to their dog-house, and +the reindeer to their stable. + +Great was the despair of Thomas Black at this return to seclusion. The +poor astronomer carried his instruments, his books, and his MSS. back to +his room, and more angry than ever with “the evil fate which pursued +him,” he held himself aloof from everything which went on in the +factory. + +All were again settled at their usual winter avocations the day after +their arrival, and the monotonous winter life once more commenced. +Needlework, mending the clothes, taking care of the furs, some of which +might yet be saved, the observation of the weather, the examination +of the ice-field, and reading aloud, were the daily occupations. Mrs +Barnett was, as before, the leader in everything, and her influence was +everywhere felt. If, as sometimes happened, now that all were uneasy +about the future, a slight disagreement occurred between any of the +soldiers, a few words from Mrs Barnett soon set matters straight, for +she had acquired wonderful power over the little world in which she +moved, and she always used it for the good of the community. + +Kalumah had become a great favourite with everybody, for she was always +pleasant and obliging. Mrs Barnett had undertaken her education, and +she got on quickly, for she was both intelligent and eager to learn. She +improved her English speaking, and also taught her to read and write +in that language. There were, however, twelve masters for Kalumah, all +eager to assist in this branch of her education, as the soldiers had +all been taught reading, writing, and arithmetic either in England or in +English colonies. + +The building of the boat proceeded rapidly, and it was to be planked and +decked before the end of the month. Mac-Nab and some of his men worked +hard in the darkness outside, with no light but the flames of burning +resin, whilst others were busy making the rigging in the magazines of +the factory. Although the season was now far advanced, the weather still +remained very undecided. The cold was sometimes intense, but owing to +the prevalence of west winds it never lasted long. + +Thus passed the whole of December, rain and intermittent falls of snow +succeeded each other, the temperature meanwhile varying from 26° to +34° Fahrenheit. The consumption of fuel was moderate, although there +was no need to economise it, the reserves being considerable. It was +otherwise with the oil, upon which they depended for light, for the +stock was getting so low that the Lieutenant could at last only allow +the lamps to be lit for a few hours every day. He tried using reindeer +fat for lighting the house, but the smell of it was so unbearable that +every one preferred being in the dark. All work had of course to be +given up for the time, and very tedious did the long dark hours appear. + +Some Auroræ Borealis and two or three lunar halos appeared at full +moon, and Thomas Black might now have minutely observed all these +phenomenon, and have made precise calculations on their intensity, their +coloration, connection with the electric state of the atmosphere, and +their influence upon the magnetic needle, &c. But the astronomer did not +even leave his room. His spirit was completely crushed. + +On the 30th December the light of the moon revealed a long circular line +of icebergs shutting in the horizon on the north and east of Victoria +Island. This was the ice-wall, the frozen masses of which were piled up +to a height of some three or four hundred feet. Two-thirds of the island +were hemmed in by this mighty barrier, and it seemed probable that the +blockade would become yet more complete. + +The sky was clear for the first week of January. The new year, 1861, +opened with very cold weather, and the column of mercury fell to 8° +Fahrenheit. It was the lowest temperature that had yet been experienced +in this singular winter, although it was anything but low for such a +high latitude. + +The Lieutenant felt it his duty once more to take the latitude and +longitude of the island by means of stellar observations, and found that +its position had not changed at all. + +About this time, in spite of all their economy, the oil seemed likely to +fail altogether. The sun would not appear above the horizon before early +in February, so that there was a month to wait, during which there was a +danger of the colonists having to remain in complete darkness. Thanks +to the young Esquimaux, however, a fresh supply of oil for the lamps was +obtained. + +On the 3rd January Kalumah walked to Cape Bathurst to examine the state +of the ice. All along the south of the island the ice-field was very +compact, the icicles of which it was composed were more firmly welded +together, there were no liquid spaces between them, and the surface of +the floe, though rough, was perfectly firm everywhere. This was no doubt +caused by the pressure of the chain of icebergs on the horizon, which +drove the ice towards the north, and squeezed it against the island. + +Although she saw no crevasses or rents, the young native noticed +many circular holes neatly cut in the ice, the use of which she knew +perfectly well. They were the holes kept open by seals imprisoned +beneath the solid crust of ice, and by which they came to the surface to +breathe and look for mosses under the snow on the coast. + +Kalumah knew that in the winter bears will crouch patiently near these +holes, and watching for the moment when the seal comes out of the water, +they rush upon it, hug it to death in their paws, and carry it off. She +knew, too, that the Esquimaux, not less patient than the bears, also +watch for the appearance of these animals, and throwing a running noose +over their heads when they push them up, drag them to the surface. + +What bears and Esquimaux could do might certainly also be done by +skilful hunters, and Kalumah hastened back to the fort to tell the +Lieutenant of what she had seen, feeling sure that where these holes +were seals were not far off. + +Hobson sent for the hunters, and the young native described to them +the way in which the Esquimaux capture these animals in the winter, and +begged them to try. + +She had not finished speaking before Sabine had a strong rope with a +running noose ready in his hand and accompanied by Hobson, Mrs Barnett, +Kalumah, and two or three soldiers, the hunters hurried to Cape +Bathurst, and whilst the women remained on the beach, the men made their +way to the holes pointed out by Kalumah. Each one was provided with a +rope, and stationed himself at a different hole. + +A long time of waiting ensued—no sign of the seals, but at last the +water in the hole Marbre had chosen began to bubble, and a head with +long tusks appeared. It was that of a walrus. Marbre flung his running +noose skilfully over its neck and pulled it tightly. His comrades rushed +to his assistance, and with some difficulty the huge beast was dragged +upon the ice, and despatched with hatchets. + +It was a great success, and the colonists were delighted with this novel +fishing. Other walruses were taken in the same way, and furnished plenty +of oil, which, though not strictly of the right sort, did very well for +the lamps, and there was no longer any lack of light in any of the rooms +of Fort Hope. + +The cold was even now not very severe, and had the colonists been on the +American mainland they could only have rejoiced in the mildness of the +winter. They were sheltered by the chain of icebergs from the north +and west winds, and the month of January passed on with the thermometer +never many degrees below freezing point, so that the sea round Victoria +Island was never frozen hard. Fissures of more or less extent broke the +regularity of the surface in the offing, as was proved by the continued +presence of the ruminants and furred animals near the factory, all of +which had become strangely tame, forming in fact part of the menagerie +of the colony. + +According to Hobson’s orders, all these creatures were unmolested. +It would have been useless to kill them, and a reindeer was only +occasionally slaughtered to obtain a fresh supply of venison. Some of +the furred animals even ventured into the enceinte, and they were not +driven away. The martens and foxes were in all the splendour of their +winter clothing, and under ordinary circumstances would have been of +immense value. These rodents found plenty of moss under the snow, thanks +to the mildness of the season, and did not therefore live upon the +reserves of the factory. + +It was with some apprehensions for the future that the end of the +winter was awaited, but Mrs Barnett did all in her power to brighten the +monotonous existence of her companions in exile. + +Only one incident occurred in the month of January, and that one was +distressing enough. On the 7th, Michael Mac-Nab was taken ill—severe +headache, great thirst and alternations of shivering and fever, soon +reduced the poor little fellow to a sad state. His mother and father, +and indeed all his friends, were in very great trouble. No one knew what +to do, as it was impossible to say what his illness was, but Madge, who +retained her senses about her, advised cooling drinks and poultices. +Kalumah was indefatigable, remaining day and night by her favourite’s +bedside, and refusing to take any rest. + +About the third day there was no longer any doubt as to the nature of +the malady. A rash came out all over the child’s body, and it was +evident that he had malignant scarlatina, which would certainly produce +internal inflammation. + +Children of a year old are rarely attacked with this terrible disease, +but cases do occasionally occur. The medicine-chest of the factory was +necessarily insufficiently stocked, but Madge, who had nursed several +patients through scarlet lever, remembered that tincture of belladonna +was recommended, and administered one or two drops to the little invalid +every day. The greatest care was taken lest he should catch cold; he +was at once removed to his parents’ room, and the rash soon came out +freely. Tiny red points appeared on his tongue, his lips, and even on +the globes of his eyes. Two days later his skin assumed a violet hue, +then it became white and fell off in scales. + +It was now that double care was required to combat the great internal +inflammation, which proved the severity of the attack, Nothing was +neglected, the boy was, in fact, admirably nursed, and on the 20th +January, twelve days after he was taken ill, he was pronounced out of +danger. + +Great was the joy in the factory. The baby was the child of the fort, +of the regiment! He was born in the terrible northern latitudes, in the +colony itself, he had been named Michael Hope, and he had come to be +regarded as a kind of talisman in the dangers and difficulties around, +and all felt sure that God would not take him from them. + +Poor Kalumah would certainly not have survived him had he died, but +he gradually recovered, and fresh hope seemed to come back when he was +restored to the little circle. + +The 23d of January was now reached, after all these distressing +alternations of hope and fear. The situation of Victoria Island had +not changed in the least, and it was still wrapped in the gloom of the +apparently interminable Polar night. Snow fell abundantly for some days, +and was piled up on the ground to the height of two feet. + +On the 27th a somewhat alarming visit was received at the fort. The +soldiers Belcher and Pond, when on guard in front of the enceinte in +the morning, saw a huge bear quietly advancing towards the fort. They +hurried into the large room, and told Mrs Barnett of the approach of the +formidable carnivorous beast. + +“Perhaps it is only our bear again,” observed Mrs Barnett to Hobson, +and accompanied by him, and followed by the Sergeant, Sabine, and some +soldiers provided with guns,—he fearlessly walked to the postern. + +The bear was now about two hundred paces off, and was walking along +without hesitation, as if he had some settled plan in view. + +“I know him!” cried Mrs Barnett, “it is your bear, Kalumah, your +preserver!” + +“Oh, don’t kill my bear!” exclaimed the young Esquimaux. + +“He shall not be killed,” said the Lieutenant, “don’t injure +him, my good fellows,” he added to the men, “he will probably return +as he came.” + +“But suppose he intends coming into the enceinte?” said Long, who +had his doubts as to the friendly propensities of Polar bears. + +“Let him come, Sergeant,” said Mrs Barnett, “he is a prisoner like +ourselves, and you know prisoners”— + +“Don’t eat each other,” added Hobson. “True, but only when they +belong to the same species For your sake, however, we will spare this +fellow-sufferer, and only defend ourselves if he attack us. I think, +however, it will be as prudent to go back to the House. We must not put +too strong a temptation in the way of our carnivorous friend!” + +This was certainly good advice, and all returned to the large room, the +windows were closed, but not the shutters. + +Through the panes the movements of the visitor were watched. The bear, +finding the postern unfastened, quietly pushed open the door, looked +in, carefully examined the premises, and finally entered the enceinte. +Having reached the centre, he examined the buildings around him, went +towards the reindeer stable and dog-house, listened for a moment to the +howlings of the dogs and the uneasy noises made by the reindeer, then +continued his walk round the palisade, and at last came and leant his +great head against one of the windows of the large room. + +To own the truth everybody started back, several of the soldiers seized +their guns, and Sergeant Long began to fear he had let the joke go too +far. + +But Kalumah came forward, and looked through the thin partition with her +sweet eyes. The bear seemed to recognise her, at least so she thought, +and doubtless satisfied with his inspection, he gave a hearty growl, and +turning away left the enceinte, as Hobson had prophesied, as he entered +it. + +This was the bear’s first and last visit to the fort, and on his +departure everything went on as quietly as before. + +The little boy’s recovery progressed favourably, and at the end of the +month he was as rosy and as bright as ever. + +At noon on the 3rd of February, the northern horizon was touched with +a faint glimmer of light which did not fade away for an hour, and the +yellow disc of the sun appeared for an instant for the first time since +the commencement of the long Polar night. + +CHAPTER XV. THE LAST EXPLORING EXPEDITION. From this date, February +3rd, the sun rose each day higher above the horizon, the nights were, +however, still very long, and, as is often the case in February, the +cold increased, the thermometer marking only 1º Fahrenheit, the lowest +temperature experienced throughout this extraordinary winter. + +“When does the thaw commence in these northern seas?” inquired Mrs +Barnett of the Lieutenant. + +“In ordinary seasons,” replied Hobson, “the ice does not break up +until early in May; but the winter has been so mild that unless a very +hard frost should now set in, the thaw may commence at the beginning of +April. At least that is my opinion.” “We shall still have two months +to wait then?” + +“Yes, two months, for it would not be prudent to launch our boat too +soon amongst the floating ice; and I think our best plan will be to wait +until our island has reached the narrowest part of Behring Strait, which +is not more than two hundred miles wide.” + +“What do you mean?” exclaimed Mrs Barnett, considerably surprised +at the Lieutenant’s reply. “Have you forgotten that it was the +Kamtchatka Current which brought us where we now are, and which may +seize us again when the thaw sets in and carry us yet farther north?” + +“I do not think it will, madam; indeed I feel quite sure that that +will not happen. The thaw always takes place in from north to south, and +although the Kamtchatka Current runs the other way, the ice always goes +down the Behring Current. Other reasons there are for my opinion which +I cannot now enumerate. But the icebergs invariably drift towards the +Pacific, and are there melted by its warmer waters. Ask Kalumah if I am +not right. She knows these latitudes well, and will tell you that the +thaw always proceeds from the north to the south.” + +Kalumah when questioned confirmed all that the Lieutenant had said, so +that it appeared probable that the island would be drifted to the south +like a huge ice-floe, that is to say, to the narrowest part of Behring +Strait, which is much frequented in the summer by the fishermen of New +Archangel, who are the most experienced mariners of those waters. +Making allowance for all delays they might then hope to set foot on the +continent before May, and although the cold had not been very intense +there was every reason to believe that the foundations of Victoria +Island had been thickened and strengthened by a fresh accumulation of +ice at the base, and that it would hold together for several months to +come. + +There was then nothing for the colonists to do but to wait +patiently,—still to wait! + +The convalescence of little Michael continued to progress favourably. On +the 20th of February he went out for the first time, forty days after +he was taken ill. By this we mean that he went from his bedroom into the +large room, where he was petted and made much of. His mother, acting by +Madge’s advice, put off weaning him for some little time, and he soon +got back his strength. The soldiers had made many little toys for him +during his illness, and he was now as happy as any child in the wide +world. + +The last week of February was very wet, rain and snow falling +alternately. A strong wind blew from the north-west, and the temperature +was low enough for large quantities of snow to fall; the gale, however, +increased in violence, and on the side of Cape Bathurst and the chain +of icebergs the noise of the tempest was deafening. The huge ice-masses +were flung against each other, and fell with a roar like that of +thunder. The ice on the north was compressed and piled up on the +shores of the island. There really seemed to be a danger that the cape +itself-which was but a kind of iceberg capped with earth and sand-would +be flung down. + +Some large pieces of ice, in spite of their weight, were driven to the +very foot of the palisaded enceinte; but fortunately for the factory +the cape retained its position; had it given way all the buildings must +inevitably have been crushed beneath it. + +It will be easily understood that the position of Victoria Island, at +the opening of a narrow strait about which the ice accumulated in large +quantities, was extremely perilous, for it might at any time be swept by +a horizontal avalanche, or crushed beneath the huge blocks of ice driven +inland from the offing, and so become engulfed before the thaw. This +was a new danger to be added to all the others already threatening the +little band. Mrs Barnett, seeing the awful power of the pressure in the +offing, and the violence with which the moving masses of ice crushed +upon each other, realised the full magnitude of the peril they would +all be in when the thaw commenced. She often mentioned her fears to the +Lieutenant, and he shook his head like a man who had no reply to make. + +Early in March the squall ceased, and the full extent of the +transformation of the ice-field was revealed. It seemed as if by a kind +of glissade the chain of icebergs had drawn nearer to the island. In +some parts it was not two miles distant, and it advanced like a glacier +on the move, with the difference that the latter has a descending +and the ice-wall a horizontal motion. Between the lofty chain of +ice-mountains the ice-field was fearfully distorted: strewn with +hummocks, broken obelisks, shattered blocks, overturned pyramids, it +resembled a tempest-tossed sea or a ruined town, in which not a building +or a monument had remained standing, and above it all the mighty +icebergs reared their snowy crests, standing out against the sky with +their pointed peaks, their rugged cones, and solid buttresses, forming a +fitting frame for the weird fantastic landscape at their feet. + +At this date the little vessel was quite finished. This boat was rather +heavy in shape, as might have been expected, but she did credit to +Mac-Nab, and shaped as she was like a barge at the bows, she ought the +better to withstand the shocks of the floating ice. She might have +been taken for one of those Dutch boats which venture upon the northern +waters. Her rig, which was completed, consisted, like that of a cutter, +of a mainsail and a jib carried on a single mast. The tent canvass of +the factory had been made use of for sailcloth. + +This boat would carry the whole colony, and if, as the Lieutenant hoped, +the island were drifted to Behring Strait, the vessel would easily make +her way to land, even from the widest part of the passage. There was +then nothing to be done but wait for the thaw. + +Hobson now decided to make a long excursion to the south to ascertain +the state of the ice-field, to see whether there were any signs of its +breaking up, to examine the chain of icebergs by which it was hemmed in, +to make sure, in short, whether it would really be useless to attempt to +cross to the American continent. Many incidents might occur, many fresh +dangers might arise before the thaw, and it would therefore be but +prudent to make a reconnaissance on the ice-field. + +The expedition was organised and the start fixed for March 7th. Hobson, +Mrs Barnett, Kalumah, Marbre, and Sabine were to go, and, if the route +should be practicable, they would try and find a passage across the +chain of icebergs. In any case, however, they were not to be absent for +more than forty-eight hours. + +A good stock of provisions was prepared, and, well provided for every +contingency, the little party left Fort Hope on the morning of the 7th +March aid turned towards Cape Michael. + +The thermometer then marked 32° Fahrenheit. The atmosphere was misty, +but the weather was perfectly calm. The sun was now above the horizon +for seven or eight hours a day, and its oblique rays afforded plenty of +light. + +At nine o’clock, after a short halt, the party descended the slope of +Cape Michael and made their way across the ice-fields in a southeasterly +direction. On this side the ice wall rose not three miles from the cape. + +The march was of course very slow. Every minute a crevasse had to be +turned, or a hummock too high to be climbed. It was evident that a +sledge could not have got over the rough distorted surface, which +consisted of an accumulation of blocks of ice of every shape and size, +some of which really seemed to retain their equilibrium by a miracle. +Others had been but recently overturned, as could be seen from the +clearly cut fractures and sharp corners. Not a sign was to be seen of +any living creature, no footprints told of the passage of man or beast, +and the very birds had deserted these awful solitudes. + +Mrs Barnett was astonished at the scene before her, and asked the +Lieutenant how they could possibly have crossed the ice-fields if they +had started in December, and he replied by reminding her that it +was then in a very different condition; the enormous pressure of the +advancing icebergs had not then commenced, the surface of the sea +was comparatively even, and the only danger was from its insufficient +solidification. The irregularities which now barred their passage did +not exist early in the winter. + +They managed, however, to advance towards the mighty ice-wall, Kalumah +generally leading the way. Like a chamois on the Alpine rocks, the +young girl firmly treaded the ice-masses with a swiftness of foot and an +absence of hesitation which was really marvellous. She knew by instinct +the best way through the labyrinth of icebergs, and was an unerring +guide to her companions. + +About noon the base of the ice-wall was reached, but it had taken three +hours to get over three miles. + +The icy barrier presented a truly imposing appearance, rising as it did +more than four hundred feet above the ice-field. The various strata of +which it was formed were clearly defined, and the glistening surface was +tinged with many a delicately-shaded hue. Jasper-like ribbons of green +and blue alternated with streaks and dashes of all the colours of the +rainbow, strewn with enamelled arabesques, sparkling crystals, and +delicate ice-flowers. No cliff, however strangely distorted, could give +any idea of this marvellous half opaque, half transparent ice-wall, +and no description could do justice to the wonderful effects of +chiara-oscuro produced upon it. + +It would not do, however, to approach too near to these beetling cliffs, +the solidity of which was very doubtful. Internal fractures and rents +were already commencing, the work of destruction and decomposition +was proceeding rapidly, aided by the imprisoned air-bubbles; and the +fragility of the huge structure, built up by the cold, was manifest to +every eye. It could not survive the Arctic winter, it was doomed to melt +beneath the sunbeams, and it contained material enough to feed large +rivers. + +Lieutenant Hobson had warned his companions of the danger of the +avalanches which constantly fall from the summits of the icebergs, and +they did not therefore go far along their base. That this prudence was +necessary was proved by the falling of a huge block, at two o’clock, +at the entrance to a kind of valley which they were about to cross. It +must have weighed more than a hundred tons, and it was dashed upon the +ice-field with a fearful crash, bursting like a bomb-shell. Fortunately +no one was hurt by the splinters. + +From two to five o’clock the explorers followed a narrow winding path +leading down amongst the icebergs; they were anxious to know if it led +right through them, but could not at once ascertain. In this valley, as +it might be called, they were able to examine the internal structure of +the icy barrier. The blocks of which it was built up were here arranged +with greater symmetry than outside. In some places trunks of trees were +seen embedded in the ice, all, however, of Tropical not Polar species, +which had evidently been brought to Arctic regions by the Gulf Stream, +and would be taken back to the ocean when the thaw should have converted +into water the ice which now held them in its chill embrace. + +At five o’clock it became too dark to go any further. The travellers +had not gone more than about two miles in the valley, but it was +so sinuous, that it was impossible to estimate exactly the distance +traversed. + +The signal to halt was given by the Lieutenant, and Marbre and Sabine +quickly dug out a grotto in the ice with their chisels, into which the +whole party crept, and after a good supper all were soon asleep. + +Every one was up at eight o’clock the next morning, and Hobson decided +to follow the valley for another mile, in the hope of finding out +whether it went right through the ice-wall. The direction of the pass, +judging from the position of the sun, had now changed from north to +south east, and as early as eleven o’clock the party came out on the +opposite side of the chain of icebergs. The passage was therefore proved +to run completely through the barrier. + +The aspect of the ice-field on the eastern side was exactly similar +to that on the west. The same confusion of ice-masses, the same +accumulation of hummocks and icebergs, as far as the eye could reach, +with occasional alternations of smooth surfaces of small extent, +intersected by numerous crevasses, the edges of which were already +melting fast. The same complete solitude, the same desertion, not a +bird, not an animal to be seen. + +Mrs Barnett climbed to the top of the hummock, and there remained for an +hour, gazing upon the sad and desolate Polar landscape before her. Her +thoughts involuntarily flew back to the miserable attempt to escape that +had been made five months before. Once more she saw the men and women of +the hapless caravan encamped in the darkness of these frozen solitudes, +or struggling against insurmountable difficulties to reach the mainland. + +At last the Lieutenant broke in upon her reverie, and said— + +“Madam, it is more than twenty-four hours since we left the fort. We +now know the thickness of the ice-wall, and as we promised not to be +away longer than forty-eight hours, I think it is time to retrace our +steps.” + +Mrs Barnett saw the justice of the Lieutenant’s remark. They had +ascertained that the barrier of ice was of moderate thickness, that it +would melt away quickly enough to allow of the passage of Mac-Nab’s +boat after the thaw, and it would therefore be well to hasten back lest +a snow-storm or change in the weather of any kind should render return +through the winding valley difficult. + +The party breakfasted and set out on the return journey about one +o’clock P.M. + +The night was passed as before in an ice-cavern, and the route resumed +at eight o’clock the next morning, March 9th. + +The travellers now turned their backs upon the sun, as they were making +for the west, but the weather was fine, and the orb of day, already high +in the heavens, flung some of its rays across the valley and lit up the +glittering ice-walls on either side. + +Mrs Barnett and Kalumah were a little behind the rest of the party +chatting together, and looking about them as they wound through the +narrow passages pointed out by Marbre and Sabine. They expected to get +out of the valley quickly, and be back at the fort before sunset, as +they had only two or three miles of the island to cross after leaving +the ice. This would be a few hours after the time fixed, but not long +enough to cause any serious anxiety to their friends at home. + +They made their calculation without allowing for an incident which no +human perspicacity could possibly have foreseen. + +It was about ten o’clock when Marbre and Sabine, who were some twenty +paces in advance of the rest, suddenly stopped and appeared to be +debating some point. When the others came up, Sabine was holding out +his compass to Marbre, who was staring at it with an expression of the +utmost astonishment. + +“What an extraordinary thing!” he exclaimed, and added, turning to +the Lieutenant— + +“Will you tell me, sir, the position of the island with regard to the +ice-wall, is it on the east or west?” + +“On the west,” replied Hobson, not a little surprised at the +question, “you know that well enough, Marbre” + +“I know it well enough! I know it well enough!” repeated Marbre, +shaking his head, “and if it is on the west, we are going wrong, and +away from the inland!” + +“What, away from the island!” exclaimed the Lieutenant, struck with +the hunter’s air of conviction. + +“We are indeed, sir,” said Marbre; “look at the compass; my name +is not Marbre if it does not show that we are walking towards the east +not the west!” + +“Impossible!” exclaimed Mrs Barnett. + +“Look, madam,” said Sabine. + +It was true. The needle pointed in exactly the opposite direction to +that expected. Hobson looked thoughtful and said nothing. + +“We must have made a mistake when we left the ice cavern this +morning,” observed Sabine, “we ought to have turned to the left +instead of to the right.” + +“No, no,” said Mrs Barnett, “I am sure we did not make a +mistake!” + +“But”——said Marbre. + +“But,” interrupted Mrs Barnett, “look at the sun. Does it no +longer rise in the east? Now as we turned our backs on it this morning, +and it is still behind us, we must be walking towards the west, so +that when we get out of the valley on the western side of the chain of +icebergs, we must come to the island we left there.” + +Marbre, struck dumb by this irrefutable argument, crossed his arms and +said no more. + +“Then if so,” said Sabine, “the sun and the compass are in +complete contradiction of each other?” + +“At this moment they are,” said Hobson, “and the reason is simple +enough; in these high northern latitudes, and in latitudes in the +neighbourhood of the magnetic pole, the compasses are sometimes +disturbed, and the deviation of their needles is so great as entirely to +mislead travellers.” + +“All right then,” said Marbre, “we have only to go on keeping our +backs to the sun.” + +“Certainly,” replied Lieutenant Hobson, “there can be no +hesitation which to choose, the sun or our compass, nothing disturbs the +sun.” + +The march was resumed, the sun was still behind them, and there was +really no objection to be made to Hobson’s theory, founded, as it was, +upon the position then occupied by the radiant orb of day. + +The little troop marched on, but they did not get out of the valley as +soon as they expected. Hobson had counted on leaving the ice-wall before +noon, and it was past two when they reached the opening of the narrow +pass. + +Strange as was this delay, it had not made any one uneasy, and the +astonishment of all can readily be imagined when, on stepping on to the +ice field, at the base of the chain of icebergs, no sign was to be seen +of Victoria Island, which ought to have been opposite to them. + +Yes!—The island, which on this side had been such a conspicuous +object, owing to the height of Cape Michael crowned with trees, had +disappeared. In its place stretched a vast ice-field lit up by the +sunbeams. + +All looked around them, and then at each other in amazement. + +“The island ought to be there!” cried Sabine. + +“But it is not there,” said Marbre. “Oh, sir—Lieutenant—where +is it? what has become of it?” + +But Hobson had not a word to say in reply, and Mrs Barnett was equally +dumfounded. + +Kalumah now approached Lieutenant Hobson, and touching his arm, she +said— + +“We went wrong in the valley, we went up it instead of down it, we +shall only get back to where we were yesterday by crossing the chain of +icebergs. Come, come!” + +Hobson and the others mechanically followed Kalumah, and trusting in +the young native’s sagacity, retraced their steps. Appearances were, +however, certainly against her, for they were now walking towards the +sun in an easterly direction. + +Kalumah did not explain her motives, but muttered as she went along— + +“Let us make haste!” + +All were quite exhausted, and could scarcely get along, when they found +themselves on the other side of the ice-wall, after a walk of three +hours. The night had now fallen, and it was too dark to see if the +island was there, but they were not long left in doubt. + +At about a hundred paces off, burning torches were moving about, whilst +reports of guns and shouts were heard. + +The explorers replied, and were soon joined by Sergeant Long and others, +amongst them Thomas Black, whose anxiety as to the fate of his friends +had at last roused him from his torpor. The poor fellows left on the +island had been in a terrible state of uneasiness, thinking that Hobson +and his party had lost their way. They were right, but what was it that +had made them think so? + +Twenty-four hours before, the immense ice-field and the island had +turned half round, and in consequence of this displacement they were no +longer on the west, but on the east of the ice-wall! + +CHAPTER XVI THE BREAK-UP OF THE ICE Two hours later all had returned to +Fort Hope, and the next day the sun for the first time shone upon that +part of the coast which was formerly on the west of the island. Kalumah, +to whom this phenomenon was familiar, had been right, and if the sun had +not been the guilty party neither had the compass! + +The position of Victoria Island with regard to the cardinal points was +again completely changed. Since it had broken loose from the mainland +the island—and not only the island, but the vast ice field in which it +was enclosed—had turned half round. This displacement proved that the +ice-field was not connected with the continent, and that the thaw would +soon set in. + +“Well, Lieutenant,” said Mrs. Barnett, “this change of front is +certainly in our favour. Cape Bathurst and Fort Hope are now turned +towards the north-east, in other words towards the point nearest to the +continent, and the ice-wall, through which our boat could only have made +its way by a difficult and dangerous passage, is no longer between +us and America. And so all is for the best, is it not?” added Mrs. +Barnett with a smile. + +“Indeed it is,” replied Hobson, who fully realised all that was +involved in this change of the position of Victoria Island. + +No incident occurred between the 10th and 21st March, but there were +indications of the approaching change of season. The temperature varied +from 43° to 50° Fahrenheit, and it appeared likely that the breaking +up of the ice would commence suddenly. Fresh crevasses opened, and the +unfrozen water flooded the surface of the ice. As the whalers poetically +express it, the “wounds of the ice-field bled copiously,” and the +opening of these “wounds” was accompanied by a sound like the roar +of artillery. A warm rain fell for several hours, and accelerated the +dissolution of the solid coating of the ocean. + +The birds, ptarmigans, puffins, ducks, &c., which had deserted the +island in the beginning of the winter, now returned in large numbers. +Marbre and Sabine killed a few of them, and on some were found the +tickets tied round their necks by the Lieutenant several months before. +Flocks of white trumpeter swans also reappeared, and filled the air with +their loud clarion tones; whilst the quadrupeds, rodents, and carnivora +alike continued to frequent the vicinity of the fort like tame domestic +animals. + +Whenever the state of the sky permitted, which was almost every day, +Hobson took the altitude of the sun. Sometimes Mrs Barnett, who had +become quite expert in handling the sextant, assisted him, or took the +observation in his stead. It was now most important to note the very +slightest changes in the latitude and longitude of the island. It was +still doubtful to which current it would be subject after the thaw, and +the question whether it would be drifted north or south was the chief +subject of the discussions between the Lieutenant and Mrs Barnett. + +The brave lady had always given proof of an energy superior to that of +most of her sex, and now she was to be seen every day braving fatigue, +and venturing on to the half decomposed, or “pancake” ice, in all +weathers, through snow or rain, and on her return to the factory ready +to cheer and help everybody, and to superintend all that was going on. +We must add that her efforts were ably seconded by the faithful Madge. + +Mrs Barnett had compelled herself to look the future firmly in the face, +and although she could not fail to fear for the safety of all, and +sad presentiments haunted her, she never allowed herself to betray any +uneasiness. Her courage and confidence never seemed to waver, she was +as ever the kind encouraging friend of each and all, and none could have +dreamt of the conflict of spirit going on beneath her quiet exterior +demeanour. Lieutenant Hobson’s admiration of her character was +unbounded, and he had also entire confidence in Kalumah, often trusting +to her natural instinct as implicitly as a hunter to that of his dog. + +The young Esquimaux was, in fact, very intelligent, and familiar from +babyhood with the phenomena of the Polar regions. On board a whaler she +might have advantageously replaced many an ice-master or pilot whose +business it is to guide a boat amongst the ice. + +Every day Kalumah went to examine the state of the ice-field. + +The nature of the noise produced by the breaking of the icebergs in the +distance was enough to tell her how far the decomposition had advanced. +No foot was surer than hers upon the ice, no one could spring more +lightly forwards than she when her instinct told her that the smooth +surface was rotten underneath, and she would scud across an ice-field +riddled with fissures without a moment’s hesitation. + +From the 20th to the 30th March, the thaw made rapid progress. Rain +fell abundantly and accelerated the dissolution of the ice. It was to be +hoped that the ice-field would soon open right across, and that in about +fifteen days Hobson would be able to steer his boat into the open sea. +He was determined to lose no time, as he did not know but that the +Kamtchatka Current might sweep the island to the north before it could +come under the influence of the Behring Current. + +“But,” Kalumah repeated again and again, “there is no fear of +that, the breaking up of the ice does not proceed upwards but downwards. +The danger is there!” she added, pointing to the south in the +direction of the vast Pacific Ocean. + +The young girl’s confidence on this point reassured Hobson, for he had +no reason now to dread the falling to pieces of the island in the warm +waters of the Pacific. He meant everybody to be on board the boat before +that could happen, and they would not have far to go to get to one +or the other continent, as the strait is in reality a kind of funnel +through which the waters flow between Cape East on the Asiatic side and +Cape Prince of Wales on the American. + +This will explain the eager attention with which the slightest change +in the position of the island was noticed. The bearings were taken every +day, and everything was prepared for an approaching and perhaps sudden +and hurried embarkation. + +Of course all the ordinary avocations of the factory were now +discontinued. There was no hunting or setting of traps. The magazines +were already piled up with furs, most of which would be lost. The +hunters and trappers had literally nothing to do; but Mac-Nab and +his men, having finished their boat, employed their leisure time in +strengthening the principal house of the fort, which would probably be +subjected to considerable pressure from the accumulation of ice on +the coast during the further progress of the thaw, unless indeed Cape +Bathurst should prove a sufficient protection. Strong struts were fixed +against the outside walls, vertical props were placed inside the rooms +to afford additional support to the beams of the ceiling, and the roof +was strengthened so that it could bear a considerable weight. These +various works were completed early in April, and their utility, or +rather their vital importance, was very soon manifested. + +Each day brought fresh symptoms of returning spring, which seemed likely +to set in early after this strangely mild Polar winter. A few tender +shoots appeared upon the trees, and the newly-thawed sap swelled the +bark of beeches, willows, and arbutus. Tiny mosses tinged with pale +green the slopes under the direct influence of the sunbeams; but they +were not likely to spread much, as the greedy rodents collected about +the fort pounced upon and devoured them almost before they were above +the ground. + +Great were the sufferings of Corporal Joliffe at this time. We know that +he had undertaken to protect the plot of ground cultivated by his wife. +Under ordinary circumstances he would merely have had to drive away +feathered pilferers, such as guillemots or puffins, from his sorrel and +scurvy grass. A scarecrow would have been enough to get rid of them, +still more the Corporal in person. But now all the rodents and ruminants +of the Arctic fauna combined to lay siege to his territory; reindeer, +Polar hares, musk-rats, shrews, martens, &c., braved all the threatening +gestures of the Corporal, and the poor man was in despair, for whilst he +was defending one end of his field the enemy was preying upon the other. + +It would certainly have been wiser to let the poor creatures enjoy +unmolested the crops which could be of no use to the colonists, as the +fort was to be so soon abandoned, and Mrs Barnett tried to persuade the +angry Corporal to do so, when he came to her twenty times a day with the +same wearisome tale, but he would not listen to her: + +“To lose the fruit of all our trouble!” he repeated; “to leave an +establishment which was prospering so well! To give up the plants Mrs +Joliffe and I sowed so carefully!... O madam, sometimes I feel disposed +to let you all go, and stay here with my wife! I am sure the Company +would give up all claim on the island to us”—— + +Mrs Barnett could not help laughing at this absurd speech, and sent the +Corporal to his little wife, who had long ago resigned herself to the +loss of her sorrel, scurvy grass, and other medicinal herbs. + +We must here remark, that the health of all the colonists remained good, +they had at least escaped illness; the baby, too, was now quite well +again, and throve admirably in the mild weather of the early spring. + +The thaw continued to proceed rapidly from the 2nd to the 5th April. The +weather was warm but cloudy, and rain fell frequently in large drops. +The wind blew from the south west, and was laden with the heated dust +of the continent. Unfortunately the sky was so hazy, that it was quite +impossible to take observations, neither sun, moon, nor stars could be +seen through the heavy mists, and this was the more provoking, as it +was of the greatest importance to note the slightest movements of the +island. + +It was on the night of the 7th April that the actual breaking up of the +ice commenced. In the morning the Lieutenant, Mrs Barnett, Kalumah, and +Sergeant Long, had climbed to the summit of Cape Bathurst, and saw +that a great change had taken place in the chain of icebergs. The huge +barrier had parted nearly in the middle, and now formed two separate +masses, the larger of which seemed to be moving northwards. + +Was it the Kamtchatka Current which produced this motion? Would the +floating island take the same direction? The intense anxiety of the +Lieutenant and his companions can easily be imagined. Their fate might +now be decided in a few hours, and if they should be drifted some +hundred miles to the north, it would be very difficult to reach the +continent in a vessel so small as theirs. + +Unfortunately it was impossible to ascertain the nature or extent of the +displacement which was going on. One thing was, however, evident, the +island was not yet moving, at least not in the same direction as the +ice-wall. It therefore seemed probable that whilst part of the ice field +was floating to the north, that portion immediately surrounding the +island still remained stationary. + +This displacement of the icebergs did not in the least alter the opinion +of the young Esquimaux. Kalumah still maintained that the thaw would +proceed from north to south, and that the ice wall would shortly feel +the influence of the Behring Current. To make herself more easily +understood, she traced the direction of the current on the sand with +a little piece of wood, and made signs that in following it the island +must approach the American continent. No argument could shake her +conviction on this point, and it was almost impossible not to feel +reassured when listening to the confident expressions of the intelligent +native girl. + +The events of the 8th, 9th, and 10th April, seemed, however, to prove +Kalumah to be in the wrong. The northern portion of the chain of +icebergs drifted farther and farther north. The breaking up of the ice +proceeded rapidly and with a great noise, and the ice field opened all +round the island with a deafening crash. Out of doors it was impossible +to hear one’s self speak, a ceaseless roar like that of artillery +drowned every other sound. + +About half a mile from the coast on that part of the island overlooked +by Cape Bathurst, the blocks of ice were already beginning to crowd +together, and to pile themselves upon each other. The ice-wall had +broken up into numerous separate icebergs, which were drifting towards +the north. At least it seemed as if they were moving in that direction. +Hobson became more and more uneasy, and nothing that Kalumah could say +reassured him. He replied by counter-arguments, which could not shake +her faith in her own belief. + +At last, on the morning of the 11th April, Hobson showed Kalumah the +last icebergs disappearing in the north, and again endeavoured to prove +to her that facts were against her. + +“No, no!” replied Kalumah, with an air of greater conviction than +ever, “no, the icebergs are not going to the north, but our island is +going to the south!” + +She might perhaps be right after all, and Hobson was much struck by +this last reply. It was really possible that the motion of the icebergs +towards the north was only apparent, and that Victoria Island, dragged +along with the ice-field, was drifting towards the strait. But it was +impossible to ascertain whether this were really the case, as neither +the latitude nor longitude could be taken. + +The situation was aggravated by a phenomenon peculiar to the Polar +regions, which rendered it still darker and more impossible to take +observations of any kind. + +At the very time of the breaking up of the ice, the temperature fell +several degrees. A dense mist presently enveloped the Arctic latitudes, +but not an ordinary mist. The soil was covered with a white crust, +totally distinct from hoar-frost—it was, in fact, a watery vapour +which congeals on its precipitation. The minute particles of which this +mist was composed formed a thick layer on trees, shrubs, the walls of +the fort, and any projecting surface which bristled with pyramidal or +prismatic crystals, the apexes of which pointed to the wind. + +Hobson at once understood the nature of this atmospheric phenomenon, +which whalers and explorers have often noticed in the spring in the +Polar regions. + +“It is not a mist or fog,” he said to his companions, “it is a +‘frost-rime’, a dense vapour which remains in a state of complete +congelation.” + +But whether a fog or a frozen mist this phenomenon was none the less to +be regretted, for it rose a hundred feet at least above the level of the +sea, and it was so opaque that the colonists could not see each other +when only two or three paces apart. + +Every one’s disappointment was very great. Nature really seemed +determined to try them to the uttermost. When the break up of the ice +had come at last, when the wandering island was to leave the spot in +which it had so long been imprisoned, and its movements ought to be +watched with the greatest care, this fog prevented all observations. + +This state of things continued for four days. The frost-rime did not +disappear until the 15th April, but on the morning of that date a strong +wind from the south rent it open and dispersed it. + +The sun shone brightly once more, and Hobson eagerly seized his +instruments. He took the altitude, and found that the exact position of +Victoria Island was then: Latitude, 69° 57’; longitude, 179° 33’. + +Kalumah was right, Victoria Island, in the grasp of the Behring Current, +was drifting towards the south. + +CHAPTER XVII. THE AVALANCHE. The colonists were then at last approaching +the more frequented latitudes of Behring Sea. There was no longer any +danger that they would be drifted to the north, and all they had to do +was to watch the displacement of the island, and to estimate the speed +of its motion, which would probably be very unequal, on account of +the obstacles in its path. Hobson most carefully noted every incident, +taking alternately solar and stellar altitudes, and the next day, April +16th, after ascertaining the bearings, he calculated that if its present +speed were maintained, Victoria Island would reach the Arctic Circle, +from which it was now separated at the most by four degrees of latitude, +towards the beginning of May. + +It was probable that, when the island reached the narrowest portion of +the strait, it would remain stationary until the thaw broke it up, the +boat would then be launched, and the colonists would set sail for the +American continent. + +Everything was ready for an immediate embarkation, and the inhabitants +of the island waited with greater patience and confidence than ever. +They felt, poor things, that the end of their trials was surely near at +last, and that nothing could prevent their landing on one side or the +other of the strait in a few days. + +This prospect cheered them up wonderfully, and the gaiety natural to +them all, which they had lost in the terrible anxiety they had so long +endured, was restored. The common meals were quite festal, as there +was no need for economising the stores under present circumstances. The +influence of the spring became more and more sensibly felt, and every +one enjoyed the balmy air, and breathed more freely than before. + +During the next few days, several excursions were made to the interior +of the island and along the coast. Everywhere the furred animals, &c., +still abounded, for even now they could not cross to the continent, +the connection between it and the ice-field being broken, and their +continued presence was a fresh proof that the island was no longer +stationary. + +No change had taken place on the island at Cape Esquimaux, Cape Michael, +along the coast, or on the wooded heights of the interior, and the banks +of the lagoon. The large gulf which had opened near Cape Michael during +the storm had closed in the winter, and there was no other fissure on +the surface of the soil. + +During these excursions, bands of wolves were seen scudding across parts +of the island. Of all the animals these fierce carnivorous beasts were +the only ones which the feeling of a common danger had not tamed. + +Kalumah’s preserver was seen several times. This worthy bear paced to +and fro on the deserted plains in melancholy mood, pausing in his walk +as the explorers passed, and sometimes following them to the fort, +knowing well that he had nothing to fear from them. + +On the 20th April Lieutenant Hobson ascertained that the wandering +island was still drifting to the south. All that remained of the +ice-wall, that is to say, the southern portion of the icebergs, followed +it, but as there were no bench marks, the changes of position could only +be estimated by astronomical observations. + +Hobson took several soundings in different parts of the ground, +especially at the foot of Cape Bathurst, and on the shores of the +lagoon. He was anxious to ascertain the thickness of the layer of ice +supporting the earth and sand, and found that it had not increased +during the winter, and that the general level of the island did not +appear to have risen higher above that of the sea. The conclusion he +drew from these facts was, that no time should be lost in getting away +from the fragile island, which would rapidly break up and dissolve in +the warmer waters of the Pacific. + +About the 25th April the bearing of the island was again changed, the +whole ice-field had moved round from east to west twelve points, so +that Cape Bathurst pointed to the north-west. The last remains of the +ice-wall now shut in the northern horizon, so that there could be no +doubt that the ice-field was moving freely in the strait, and that it +nowhere touched any land. + +The fatal moment was approaching. Diurnal or nocturnal observations gave +the exact position of the island, and consequently of the ice-field. On +the 30th of April, both were together drifting across Kotzebue Sound, +a large triangular gulf running some distance inland on the American +coast, and bounded on the south by Cape Prince of Wales, which might, +perhaps, arrest the course of the island if it should deviate in the +very least from the middle of the narrow pass. + +The weather was now pretty fine, and the column of mercury often marked +50° Fahrenheit. The colonists had left off their winter garments some +weeks before, and held themselves in constant readiness to leave the +island. Thomas Black had already transported his instruments and books +into the boat, which was waiting on the beach. A good many provisions +had also been embarked and some of the most valuable furs. + +On the 2d of May a very carefully taken observation showed that Victoria +Island had a tendency to drift towards the east, and consequently to +reach the American continent. This was fortunate, as they were now out +of danger of being taken any farther by the Kamtchatka Current, which, +as is well known, runs along the coast of Asia. At last the tide was +turning in favour of the colonists! + +“I think our bad fortune is at last at an end,” observed Sergeant +Long to Mrs Barnett, “and that our misfortunes are really over; I +don’t suppose there are any more dangers to be feared now.” + +“I quite agree with you,” replied Mrs Barnett, “and it is very +fortunate that we had to give up our journey across the ice-field a few +months ago; we ought to be very thankful that it was impassible!” + +Mrs Barnett was certainly justified in speaking as she did, for what +fearful fatigues and sufferings they would all have had to undergo in +crossing five hundred miles of ice in the darkness of the Polar night! + +On the 5th May, Hobson announced that Victoria Island had just +crossed the Arctic Circle. It had at last re-entered that zone of the +terrestrial sphere in which at one period of the year the sun does not +set. The poor people all felt that they were returning to the inhabited +globe. + +The event of crossing the Arctic Circle was celebrated in much the same +way as crossing the Equator for the first time would be on board ship, +and many a glass of spirits was drank in honour of the event. + +There was now nothing left to do but to wait till the broken and +half-melted ice should allow of the passage of the boat, which was to +bear the whole colony to the land. + +During the 7th May the island turned round to the extent of another +quarter of its circumference. Cape Bathurst now pointed due north, and +those masses of the old chain of icebergs which still remained standing +were now above it, so that it occupied much the same position as that +assigned to it in maps when it was united to the American continent. +The island had gradually turned completely round, and the sun had risen +successively on every point of its shores. + +The observations of the 8th May showed that the island had become +stationary near the middle of the passage, at least forty miles from +Cape Prince of Wales, so that land was now at a comparatively short +distance from it, and the safety of all seemed to be secured. + +In the evening a good supper was served in the large room, and the +healths of Mrs Barnett and of Lieutenant Hobson were proposed. + +The same night the Lieutenant determined to go and see if any changes +had taken place in the ice-field on the south, hoping that a practicable +passage might have been opened. + +Mrs Barnett was anxious to accompany him, but he persuaded her to rest a +little instead, and started off, accompanied only by Sergeant Long. + +Mrs Barnett, Madge, and Kalumah returned to the principal house after +seeing them off, and the soldiers and women had already gone to bed in +the different apartments assigned to them. + +It was a fine night, there was no moon, but the stars shone very +brightly, and as the ice-field vividly reflected their light, it was +possible to see for a considerable distance. + +It was nine o’clock when the two explorers left the fort and turned +towards that part of the coast between Port Barnett and Cape Michael. +They followed the beach for about two miles, and found the ice-field in +a state of positive chaos. The sea was one vast aggregation of crystals +of every size, it looked as if it had been petrified suddenly when +tossing in a tempest, and, alas, there was even now no free passage +between the ice-masses—it would be impossible for a boat to pass yet. + +Hobson and Long remained on the ice-field talking and looking about them +until midnight, and then seeing that there was still nothing to do but +to wait, they decided to go back to Fort Hope and rest for a few hours. + +They had gone some hundred paces, and had reached the dried-up bed of +Paulina River, when an unexpected noise arrested them. It was a distant +rumbling from the northern part of the ice-field, and it became louder +and louder until it was almost deafening. Something dreadful was going +on in the quarter from which it came, and Hobson fancied he felt the ice +beneath his feet trembling, which was certainly far from reassuring. + +“The noise comes from the chain of icebergs,” exclaimed Long, +“what can be going on there?” + +Hobson did not answer, but feeling dreadfully anxious he rushed towards +the fort dragging his companion after him. + +“To the fort! to the fort.” he cried at last, “the ice may have +opened, we may be able to launch our boat on the sea!” + +And the two ran as fast as ever they could towards Fort Hope by the +shortest way. + +A thousand conjectures crowded upon them. From what new phenomenon did +the unexpected noise proceed? Did the sleeping inhabitants of the fort +know what was going on? They must certainly have heard the noise, for, +in vulgar language, it was loud enough to wake the dead. + +Hobson and Long crossed the two miles between them and Fort Hope in +twenty minutes, but before they reached the enceinte they saw the men +and women they had left asleep hurrying away in terrified disorder, +uttering cries of despair. + +The carpenter Mac-Nab, seeing the Lieutenant, ran towards him with his +little boy in his arms. + +“Look, sir, look!” he cried, drawing his master towards a little +hill which rose a few yards behind the fort. + +Hobson obeyed, and saw that part of the ice-wall, which, when he left, +was two or three miles off in the offing, had fallen upon the coast of +the island. Cape Bathurst no longer existed, the mass of earth and +sand of which it was composed had been swept away by the icebergs and +scattered over the palisades. The principal house and all the buildings +connected with it on the north were buried beneath the avalanche. Masses +of ice were crowding upon each other and tumbling over with an awful +crash, crushing everything beneath them. It was like an army of icebergs +taking possession of the island. + +The boat which had been built at the foot of the cape was completely +destroyed. The last hope of the unfortunate colonists was gone! + +As they stood watching the awful scene, the buildings, formerly occupied +by the soldiers and women, and from which they had escaped in time, +gave way beneath an immense block of ice which fell upon them. A cry of +despair burst from the lips of the houseless outcasts. + +“And the others, where are they?” cried the Lieutenant in +heart-rending tones. + +“There!” replied Mac-Nab, pointing to the heap of sand, earth, and +ice, beneath which the principal house had entirely disappeared. + +Yes, the illustrious lady traveller, Madge, Kalumah, and Thomas Black, +were buried beneath the avalanche which had surprised them in their +sleep! + +CHAPTER XVIII. ALL AT WORK. Fearful catastrophe had occurred. The +ice-wall had been flung upon the wandering island, the volume below the +water being five times that of the projecting part, it had come under +the influence of the submarine currents, and, opening a way for itself +between the broken ice-masses, it had fallen bodily upon Victoria +Island, which, driven along by this mighty propelling force, was +drifting rapidly to the south. + +Mac-Nab and his companions, aroused by the noise of the avalanche +dashing down upon the dog-house, stable, and principal house, had been +able to escape in time, but now the work of destruction was complete. +Not a trace remained of the buildings in which they had slept, and +the island was bearing all its inhabitants with it to the unfathomable +depths of the ocean! Perhaps, however, Mrs Barnett, Madge, Kalumah, and +the astronomer, were still living! Dead or alive they must be dug out. + +At this thought Hobson recovered his composure and shouted— + +“Get shovels and pickaxes! The house is strong! it may have held +together! Let us set to work!” + +There were plenty of tools and pickaxes, but it was really impossible +to approach the enceinte. The masses of ice were rolling down from the +summits of the icebergs, and some parts of the ice-wall still towered +amongst the ruins two hundred feet above the island. The force with +which the tossing masses, which seemed to be surging all along the +northern horizon, were overthrown can be imagined; the whole coast +between the former Cape Bathurst and Cape Esquimaux was not only hemmed +in, but literally invaded by these moving mountains, which, impelled by +a force they could not resist, had already advanced more than a quarter +of a mile inland. + +Every moment the trembling of the ground and a loud report gave notice +that another of these masses had rolled over, and there was a danger +that the island would sink beneath the weight thrown upon it. A very +apparent lowering of the level had taken place all along that part of +the coast near Cape Bathurst, it was evidently gradually sinking down, +and the sea had already encroached nearly as far as the lagoon. + +The situation of the colonists was truly terrible, unable as they were +to attempt to save their companions, and driven from the enceinte by the +crashing avalanches, over which they had no power whatever. They could +only wait, a prey to the most awful forebodings. + +Day dawned at last, and how fearful a scene was presented by the +districts around Cape Bathurst! The horizon was shut in on every side by +ice-masses, but their advance appeared to be checked for the moment at +least. The ruins of the ice-wall were at rest, and it was only now and +then that a few blocks rolled down from the still tottering crests of +the remaining icebergs. But the whole mass—a great part of its volume +being sunk beneath the surface of the sea—was in the grasp of a +powerful current, and was driving the island along with it to the south, +that is to say, to the ocean, in the depths of which they would alike be +engulfed. + +Those who were thus borne along upon the island were not fully conscious +of the peril in which they stood. They had their comrades to save, and +amongst them the brave woman who had so won all their hearts, and for +whom they would gladly have laid down their lives. The time for action +had come, they could again approach the palisades, and there was not a +moment to lose, as the poor creatures had already been buried beneath +the avalanche for six hours. + +We have already said that Cape Bathurst no longer existed. Struck by a +huge iceberg it had fallen bodily upon the factory, breaking the boat +and crushing the dog-house and stable with the poor creatures in them. +The principal house next disappeared beneath the masses of earth and +sand, upon which rolled blocks of ice to a height of fifty or sixty +feet. The court of the fort was filled up, of the palisade not a post +was to be seen, and it was from beneath this accumulation of earth, +sand, and ice, that the victims were to be dug out. + +Before beginning to work Hobson called the head carpenter to him, and +asked if he thought the house could bear the weight of the avalanche. + +“I think so, sir,” replied Mac-Nab; “in fact, I may almost say +I am sure of it. You remember how we strengthened it, it has been +‘casemated,’ and the vertical beams between the ceilings and floors +must have offered great resistance; moreover, the layer of earth and +sand with which the roof was first covered must have broken the shock of +the fall of the blocks of ice from the icebergs.” “God grant you may +be right, Mac-Nab,” replied Hobson, “and that we may be spared the +great grief of losing our friends!” + +The Lieutenant then sent for Mrs Joliffe, and asked her if plenty of +provisions had been left in the house. + +“Oh, yes,” replied Mrs Joliffe, “there was plenty to eat in the +pantry and kitchen.” + +“And any water?” + +“Yes, water and rum too.” + +“All right, then,” said Hobson, “they will not be starved—but +how about air?” + +To this question Mac-Nab could make no reply, and if, as he hoped, the +house had not given way, the want of air would be the chief danger of +the four victims. By prompt measures, however, they might yet be saved, +and the first thing to be done was to open a communication with the +outer air. + +All set to work zealously, men and women alike seizing shovels and +pickaxes. The masses of ice, sand, and earth, were vigorously attacked +at the risk of provoking fresh downfalls; but the proceedings were ably +directed by Mac-Nab. + +It appeared to him best to begin at the top of the accumulated masses, +so as to roll down loose blocks on the side of the lagoon. The smaller +pieces were easily dealt with, with pick and crowbar, but the large +blocks had to be broken up. Some of great size were melted with the aid +of a large fire of resinous wood, and every means was tried to destroy +or get rid of the ice in the shortest possible time. + +But so great was the accumulation, that although all worked without +pause, except when they snatched a little food, there was no sensible +diminution in its amount when the sun disappeared below the horizon. It +was not, however, really of quite so great a height as before, and it +was determined to go on working from above through the night, and when +there was no longer any danger of fresh falls Mac-Nab hoped to be able +to sink a vertical shaft in the compact mass, so as to admit the outer +air to the house as soon as possible. + +All night long the party worked at the excavation, attacking the masses +with iron and heat, as the one or the other seemed more likely to be +effective. The men wielded the pickaxe whilst the women kept up the +fires; but all were animated by one purpose—the saving of the lives of +Mrs Barnett, Madge, Kalumah, and the astronomer. + +When morning dawned the poor creatures had been buried for thirty hours +in air necessarily very impure under so thick a cover. + +The progress made in the night had been so great that Mac-Nab prepared +to sink his shaft, which he meant to go straight down to the top of the +house; and which, according to his calculation, would not have to be +more than fifty feet deep. It would be easy enough to sink this +shaft through the twenty feet of ice; but great difficulty would +be experienced when the earth and sand were reached, as, being very +brittle, they would of course constantly fill in the shaft, and its +sides would therefore have to be lined. Long pieces of wood were +prepared for this purpose, and the boring proceeded. Only three +men could work at it together, and the soldiers relieved each other +constantly, so that the excavation seemed likely to proceed rapidly. + +As might be supposed the poor fellows alternated between hope and fear +when some obstacle delayed them. When a sudden fall undid their work +they felt discouraged, and nothing but Mac-Nab’s steady voice could +have rallied them. As the men toiled in turn at their weary task the +women stood watching them from the foot of a hill, saying little, but +often praying silently. They had now nothing to do but to prepare the +food, which the men devoured in their short intervals of repose. + +The boring proceeded without any very great difficulty, but the ice was +so hard that the progress was but slow. At the end of the second day +Mac-Nab had nearly reached the layer of earth and sand, and could not +hope to get to the top of the house before the end of the next day. + +Night fell, but the work was continued by the light of torches. A +“snow-house” was hastily dug out in one of the hummocks on the shore +as a temporary shelter for the women and the little boy. The wind had +veered to the south-west, and a cold rain began to fall, accompanied +with occasional squalls; but neither the Lieutenant nor his men dreamt +of leaving off work. + +Now began the worst part of the task. It was really impossible to bore +in the shifting masses of sand and earth, and it became necessary to +prop up the sides of the shaft with wood, the loose earth being drawn +to the surface in a bucket hung on a rope. Of course under the +circumstances the work could not proceed rapidly, falls might occur at +any moment, and the miners were in danger of being buried in their turn. + +Mac-Nab was generally the one to remain at the bottom of the narrow +shaft, directing the excavation, and frequently sounding with a long +pick, but as it met with no resistance, it was evident that it did not +reach the roof of the house. + +When the morning once more dawned, only ten feet had been excavated in +the mass of earth and sand, so that twenty remained to be bored through +before the roof of the house could be reached, that is to say, if it had +not given way, and still occupied the position it did before the fall of +the avalanche. + +It was now fifty-four hours since Mrs Barnett and her companions were +buried! + +Mac-Nab and the Lieutenant often wondered if they on their side had made +any effort to open a communication with the outer air. They felt sure +that with her usual courage, Mrs Barnett would have tried to find some +way out if her movements were free. Some tools had been left in the +house, and Kellet, one of the carpenter’s men, remembered leaving his +pickaxe in the kitchen. The prisoners might have broken open one of the +doors and begun to pierce a gallery across the layer of earth. But such +a gallery could only be driven in a horizontal direction, and would be +a much longer business than the sinking of a shaft from above, for +the masses flung down by the avalanche, although only sixty feet deep, +covered a space more than five hundred feet in diameter. Of course the +prisoners could not be aware of this fact, and if they should succeed in +boring their horizontal gallery, it would be eight days at least before +they could cut through the last layer of ice, and by that time they +would be totally deprived of air, if not of food. + +Nevertheless the Lieutenant carefully went over every portion of +the accumulation himself, and listened intently for any sounds of +subterranean digging, but he heard nothing. + +On the return of day the men toiled with fresh energy, bucket after +bucket was drawn to the surface of the shaft loaded with earth. The +clumsy wooden props answered admirably in keeping the earth from filling +in the pit, a few falls occurred, but they were rapidly checked, and no +fresh misfortunes occurred throughout the day, except that the soldier +Garry received a blow on the head from a falling block of ice. The wound +was not however severe, and he would not leave his work. + +At four o’clock the shaft was fifty feet deep altogether, having been +sunk through twenty feet of ice and thirty of sand and earth. + +It was at this depth that Mac-Nab had expected to reach the roof of the +house, if it had resisted the pressure of the avalanche. + +He was then at the bottom of the shaft, and his disappointment and +dismay can be imagined when, on driving his pickaxe into the ground as +far as it would go, it met with no resistance whatever. + +Sabine was with him, and for a few moments he remained with his arms +crossed, silently looking at his companion. + +“No roof then?” inquired the hunter. + +“Nothing whatever,” replied the carpenter, “but let us work on, +the roof has bent of course, but the floor of the loft cannot have given +way. Another ten feet and we shall come to that floor, or else”—— + +Mac-Nab did not finish his sentence, and the two resumed their work with +the strength of despair. + +At six o’clock in the evening, another ten or twelve feet had been dug +out. + +Mac-Nab sounded again, nothing yet, his pick still sunk in the shifting +earth, and flinging it from him, he buried his face in his hands and +muttered— + +“Poor things, poor things!” He then climbed to the opening of the +shaft by means of the wood-work. + +The Lieutenant and the Sergeant were together in greater anxiety than +ever, and taking them aside, the carpenter told them of his dreadful +disappointment. + +“Then,” observed Hobson, “the house must have been crushed by the +avalanche, and the poor people in it”—— + +“No!” cried the head-carpenter with earnest conviction, “no, it +cannot have been crushed, it must have resisted, strengthened as it was. +It cannot—it cannot have been crushed!” + +“Well, then, what has happened?” said the Lieutenant in a broken +voice, his eyes filling with tears. + +“Simply this,” replied Mac-Nab, “the house itself has remained +intact, but the ground on which it was built must have sunk. The house +has gone through the crust of ice which forms the foundation of the +island. It has not been crushed, but engulfed, and the poor creatures in +it”—— + +“Are drowned!” cried Long. + +“Yes, Sergeant, drowned without a moment’s notice—drowned like +passengers on a foundered vessel!” + +For some minutes the three men remained silent. Mac-Nab’s idea was +probably correct. Nothing was more likely than that the ice forming the +foundation of the island had given way under such enormous pressure. The +vertical props which supported the beams of the ceiling, and rested on +those of the floor, had evidently aided the catastrophe by their weight, +and the whole house had been engulfed. + +“Well, Mac-Nab,” said Hobson at last, “if we cannot find them +alive”—— + +“We must recover their bodies,” added the head carpenter. + +“And with these words Mac-Nab, accompanied by the Lieutenant, went +back to his work at the bottom of the shaft without a word to any of his +comrades of the terrible form his anxiety had now assumed. + +The excavation continued throughout the night, the men relieving each +other every hour, and Hobson and Mac-Nab watched them at work without a +moment’s rest. + +At three o’clock in the morning Kellet’s pickaxe struck against +something hard, which gave out a ringing sound. The head carpenter felt +it almost before he heard it. + +“We have reached them!” cried the soldier, “they are saved.” + +“Hold your tongue, and go on working,” replied the Lieutenant in a +choked voice. + +It was now seventy-six hours since the avalanche fell upon the house! + +Kellet and his companion Pond resumed their work. The shaft must have +nearly reached the level of the sea, and Mac-Nab therefore felt that all +hope was gone. + +In less than twenty minutes the hard body which Kellet had struck +was uncovered, and proved to be one of the rafters of the roof. The +carpenter flung himself to the bottom of the shaft, and seizing a +pickaxe sent the laths of the roof flying on every side. In a few +moments a large aperture was made, and a figure appeared at it which it +was difficult to recognise in the darkness. + +It was Kalumah! + +“Help! help!” she murmured feebly. + +Hobson let himself down through the opening, and found himself up to the +waist in ice-cold water. Strange to say, the roof had not given way, but +as Mac-Nab had supposed, the house had sunk, and was full of water. The +water did not, however, yet fill the loft, and was not more than a foot +above the floor. There was still a faint hope! + +The Lieutenant, feeling his way in the darkness, came across a +motionless body, and dragging it to the opening he consigned it to Pond +and Kellet. It was Thomas Black. + +Madge, also senseless, was next found; and she and the astronomer were +drawn up to the surface of the ground with ropes, where the open air +gradually restored them to consciousness. + +Mrs Barnett was still missing, but Kalumah led Hobson to the very end of +the loft, and there he found the unhappy lady motionless and insensible, +with her head scarcely out of the water. + +The Lieutenant lifted her in his arms and carried her to the opening, +and a few moments later he had reached the outer air with his burden, +followed by Mac-Nab with Kalumah. + +Every one gathered round Mrs Barnett in silent anxiety, and poor +Kalumah, exhausted as she was, flung herself across her friend’s body. + +Mrs Barnett still breathed, her heart still beat feebly, and revived by +the pure fresh air she at last opened her eyes. + +A cry of joy burst from every lip, a cry of gratitude to Heaven for the +great mercy vouchsafed, which was doubtless heard above. + +Day was now breaking in the east, the sun was rising above the horizon, +lighting up the ocean with its brilliant beams, and Mrs Barnett +painfully staggered to her feet. Looking round her from the summit of +the new mountain formed by the avalanche, which overlooked the whole +island, she murmured in a changed and hollow voice—— + +“The sea! the sea!” + +Yes, the ocean now encircled the wandering island, the sea was open at +last, and a true sea-horizon shut in the view from east to west. + +CHAPTER XIX. BEHRING SEA. The island, driven by the ice-wall, had then +drifted at a great speed into Behring Sea, after crossing the strait +without running aground on its shores! It was still hurrying on before +the icy barrier, which was in the grasp of a powerful submarine current, +hastening onwards on to its inevitable dissolution in the warmer waters +of the Pacific, and the boat on which all had depended was useless! + +As soon as Mrs Barnett had entirely recovered consciousness, she related +in a few words the history of the seventy-four hours spent in the house +now in the water. Thomas Black, Madge, and Kalumah had been aroused +by the crash of the avalanche, and had rushed to the doors or windows. +There was no longer any possibility of getting out, the mass of earth +and sand, which was but a moment before Cape Bathurst, completely +covered the house, and almost immediately afterwards the prisoners heard +the crash of the huge ice-masses which were flung upon the factory. + +In another quarter of an hour all felt that the house, whilst resisting +the enormous pressure, was sinking through the soil of the island. They +knew that the crust of the ice must have given way, and that the house +would fill with water! + +To seize a few provisions remaining in the pantry, and to take refuge in +the loft, was the work of a moment. This the poor creatures did from a +dim instinct of self-preservation, but what hope could they really +have of being saved! However, the loft seemed likely to resist, and two +blocks of ice abutting from the roof saved it from being immediately +crushed. + +Whilst thus imprisoned the poor creatures could hear the constant falls +from the icebergs, whilst the sea was gradually rising through the lower +rooms. They must either be crushed or drowned! + +But by little short of a miracle, the roof of the house, with its strong +framework, resisted the pressure, and after sinking a certain depth the +house remained stationary, with the water rather above the floor of the +loft. The prisoners were obliged to take refuge amongst the rafters +of the roof, and there they remained for many hours. Kalumah devoted +herself to the service of the others, and carried food to them through +the water. They could make no attempt to save themselves, succour could +only come from without. + +It was a terrible situation, for breathing was difficult in the vitiated +air deficient as it was in oxygen, and charged with a great excess of +carbonic acid.... A few hours later Hobson would only have found the +corpses of his friends! + +The horror of the position was increased by the gushing of the water +through the lower rooms, which convinced Mrs Barnett that the island was +drifting to the south. She had, in fact, guessed the whole truth; she +knew that the ice-wall had heeled over and fallen upon the island, and +concluded that the boat was destroyed. It was this last fact which gave +such terrible significance to her first words when she looked around her +after her swoon— + +“The sea! the sea!” + +Those about her, however, could think of nothing yet but the fact, that +they had saved her for whom they would have died, and with her Madge, +Kalumah, and Thomas Black. Thus far not one of those who had joined +the Lieutenant in his disastrous expedition had succumbed to any of the +fearful dangers through which they had passed. + +But matters were not yet at their worst, and fresh troubles were soon to +hasten the final catastrophe. + +Hobson’s first care after Mrs Barnett’s recovery was to take the +bearings of the inland. It was listless now to think of quitting it, as +the sea was open and their boat destroyed. A few ruins alone remained +of the mighty ice-wall, the upper portion of which had crushed Cape +Bathurst whilst the submerged base was driving the island to the south. + +The instruments and maps belonging to the astronomer were found in the +ruins of the house, and were fortunately uninjured. The weather was +cloudy, but Hobson succeeded in taking the altitude of the sun with +sufficient accuracy for his purpose. + +We give the result obtained at noon on the 12th May. Victoria Island was +then situated in longitude 168°12’ west of Greenwich, and in latitude +63°37’ N. The exact spot was looked out on the chart, and proved +to be in Norton Sound, between Cape Tchaplin on the Asiatic and Cape +Stephens on the American coast, but a hundred miles from either. + +“We must give up all hope of making the land of the continent then!” +said Mrs Barnett. + +“Yes, madam,” replied Hobson; “all hope of that is at an end; the +current is carrying us with great rapidity out into the offing, and our +only chance is, that we may pass within sight of a whaler.” + +“Well, but,” added Mrs Barnett, “if we cannot make the land +of either continent, might not the current drive us on to one of the +islands of Behring Sea?” + +There was, in fact, a slight possibility that such a thing might happen, +and all eagerly clutched at the hope, like a drowning man at a plank. +There are plenty of islands in Behring Sea, St Lawrence, St Matthew, +Nunivak, St Paul, George island, &c. The wandering island was in fact at +that moment not far from St Lawrence, which is of a considerable size, +and surrounded with islets; and should it pass it without stopping, +there was yet a hope that the cluster of the Aleutian Islands, bounding +Behring Sea on the south, might arrest its course. + +Yes! St Lawrence might be a harbour of refuge for the colonists, and if +it failed them, St Matthew, and the group of islets of which it is the +centre, would still be left. It would not do, however, to count upon +the Aleutian Islands, which were more than eight hundred miles away, +and which they might never reach. Long, long before they got so far, +Victoria Island, worn away by the warm sea-waves, and melted by the rays +of the sun, which was already in the sign of Gemini, would most likely +have sunk to the bottom of the ocean. + +There is, however, no fixed point beyond which floating ice does not +advance. It approaches nearer to the equator in the southern than in the +northern hemisphere. Icebergs have been seen off the Cape of Good Hope, +at about thirty-six degrees south latitude, but those which come down +from the Arctic Ocean have never passed forty degrees north latitude. +The weather conditions, which are of course variable, determine the +exact locality where ice will melt; in severe and prolonged winters it +remains solid in comparatively low latitudes, and vice versa in early +springs. + +Now the warm season of 1861 had set in very early, and this would +hasten the dissolution of Victoria Island. The waters of Behring Sea +had already changed from blue to green, as the great navigator +Hudson observed they always do on the approach of icebergs, so that a +catastrophe might be expected at any moment. + +Hobson determined to do his best to avert the coming misfortune, and +ordered a raft to be constructed which would carry the whole colony, +and might be guided to the continent somehow or other. There was every +chance of meeting vessels now that the whaling season had commenced, and +Mac-Nab was commissioned to make a large solid raft which would float +when Victoria Island was engulfed. + +But first of all, it was necessary to construct some shelter for the +homeless inhabitants of the island. The simple plan appeared to be +to dig out the old barracks, which had been built on to the principal +house, and the walls of which were still standing. Every one set to work +with a hearty good-will, and in a few days a shelter was provided from +the inclemencies of the fickle weather. + +Search was also made in the ruins of the large house, and a good +many articles of more or less value were saved from the submerged +rooms—tools, arms, furniture, the air pumps, and the air vessel, &c. + +On the 13th May all hope of drifting on to the island of St Lawrence had +to be abandoned. When the bearings were taken, it was found that they +were passing at a considerable distance to the east of that island; and, +as Hobson was well aware, currents do not run against natural obstacles, +but turn them, so that little hope could be entertained of thus +making the land. It is true the network of islands in the Catherine +Archipelago, scattered over several degrees of latitude, might stop the +island if it ever got so far. But, as we have before stated, that was +not probable, although it was advancing at great speed; for this speed +must decrease considerably when the ice-wall which was driving it along +should be broken away or dissolved, unprotected as it was from the heat +of the sun by any covering of earth or sand. + +Lieutenant Hobson, Mrs Barnett, Sergeant Long, and the head carpenter +often discussed these matters, and came to the conclusion that the +island could certainly never reach the Aleutian group with so many +chances against it. + +On the 14th May, Mac-Nab and his men commenced the construction of a +huge raft. It had to be as high as possible above the water, to prevent +the waves from breaking over it, so that it was really a formidable +undertaking. The blacksmith, Rae, had fortunately found a large number +of the iron bolts which had been brought from Fort Reliance, and they +were invaluable for firmly fastening together the different portions of +the framework of the raft. + +We must describe the novel site for the building of the raft suggested +by Lieutenant Hobson. Instead of joining the timbers and planks +together on the ground, they were joined on the surface of the lake. +The different pieces of wood were prepared on the banks, and launched +separately. They were then easily fitted together on the water. This +mode of proceeding had two advantages:— + +1. The carpenter would be able at once to judge of the point of +flotation, and the stability which should be given to the raft. 2. When +Victoria Island melted, the raft would already be floating, and would +not be liable to the shocks it would receive if on land when the +inevitable break-up came. + +Whilst these works were going on, Hobson would wander about on the +beach, either alone or with Mrs Barnett, examining the state of the sea, +and the ever-changing windings of the coast-line, worn by the constant +action of the waves. He would gaze upon the vast deserted ocean, from +which the very icebergs had now disappeared, watching, ever watching, +like a shipwrecked mariner, for the vessel which never came. The ocean +solitudes were only frequented by cetacea, which came to feed upon the +microscopic anima[l]culae which form their principal food, and abound in +the green waters. Now and then floating trees of different kinds, which +had been brought by the great ocean currents from warm latitudes, passed +the island on their way to the north. + +On the 16th May, Mrs Barnett and Madge were walking together on that +part of the island between the former Cape Bathurst and Port Barnett. It +was a fine warm day, and there had been no traces of snow on the ground +for some time; all that recalled the bitter cold of the Polar regions +were the relics left by the ice-wall on the northern part of the island; +but even these were rapidly melting, and every day fresh waterfalls +poured from their summits and bathed their sides. Very soon the sun +would have completely dissolved every atom of ice. + +Strange indeed was the aspect of Victoria Island. But for their terrible +anxiety, the colonists must have gazed at it with eager interest. The +ground was more prolific than it could have been in any former spring, +transferred as it was to milder latitudes. The little mosses and +tender flowers grew rapidly, and Mrs Joliffe’s garden was wonderfully +successful. The vegetation of every kind, hitherto checked by the rigour +of the Arctic winter, was not only more abundant, but more brilliantly +coloured. The hues of leaves and flowers were no longer pale and watery, +but warm and glowing, like the sunbeams which called them forth. The +arbutus, willow, birch, fir, and pine trees were clothed with +dark verdure; the sap—sometimes heated in a temperature of 68° +Fahrenheit—burst open the young buds; in a word, the Arctic landscape +was completely transformed, for the island was now beneath the same +parallel of latitude as Christiania or Stockholm, that is to say, in one +of the finest districts of the temperate zones. + +But Mrs Barnett had now no eyes for these wonderful phenomena of nature. +The shadow of the coming doom clouded her spirit. She shared the feeling +of depression manifested by the hundreds of animals now collected round +the factory. The foxes, martens, ermines, lynxes, beavers, musk-rats, +gluttons, and even the wolves, rendered less savage by their instinctive +knowledge of a common danger, approached nearer and nearer to their +old enemy man, as if man could save them. It was a tacit, a touching +acknowledgment of human superiority, under circumstances in which that +superiority could be of absolutely no avail. + +No! Mrs Barnett cared no longer for the beauties of nature, and gazed +without ceasing upon the boundless, pitiless, infinite ocean with its +unbroken horizon. + +“Poor Madge!” she said at last to her faithful companion; “it +was I who brought you to this terrible pass—you who have followed me +everywhere, and whose fidelity deserved a far different recompense! Can +you forgive me?” + +“There is but one thing I could never have forgiven you,” replied +Madge,—”a death I did not share!” + +“Ah, Madge!” cried Mrs Barnett, “if my death could save the lives +of all these poor people, how gladly would I die!” + +“My dear girl,” replied Madge, “have you lost all hope at last?” + +“I have indeed,” murmured Mrs Barnett, hiding her face on Madge’s +shoulder. + +The strong masculine nature had given way at last, and Mrs Barnett was +for a moment a feeble woman. Was not her emotion excusable in so awful a +situation? + +Mrs Barnett sobbed aloud, and large tears rolled down her cheeks. + +Madge kissed and caressed her, and tried all she could to reassure her; +and presently, raising her head, her poor mistress said— + +“Do not tell them, Madge, how I have given way—do not betray that I +have wept.” + +“Of course not,” said Madge, “and they would not believe me if I +did. It was but a moment’s weakness. Be yourself, dear girl; cheer up, +and take fresh courage.” + +“Do you mean to say you still hope yourself!” exclaimed Mrs Barnett, +looking anxiously into her companion’s face. + +“I still hope!” said Madge simply. + +But a few days afterwards, every chance of safety seemed to be indeed +gone, when the wandering island passed outside the St Matthew group, and +drifted away from the last land in Behring Sea! + +CHAPTER XX. IN THE OFFING. Victoria Island was now floating in the +widest part of Behring Sea, six hundred miles from the nearest of the +Aleutian Islands, and two hundred miles from the nearest land, which was +on the east. Supposing no accident happened, it would be three weeks at +least before this southern boundary of Behring Sea could be reached. + +Could the island last so long? Might it not burst open at any moment, +subject as it was even now to the constant action of tepid water, the +mean temperature of which was more than 50° Fahrenheit? + +Lieutenant Hobson pressed on the construction of the raft as rapidly as +possible, and the lower framework was already floating on the lagoon. +Mac-Nab wished to make it as strong as possible, for it would have a +considerable distance to go to reach the Aleutian Islands, unless they +were fortunate enough to meet with a whaler. + +No important alteration had lately taken place in the general +configuration of the island. Reconaissances were taken everyday, but +great caution was necessary, as a fracture of the ground might at any +moment cut off the explorers from the rest of the party. + +The wide gulf near Cape Michael, which the winter had closed, had +reopened gradually, and now ran a mile inland, as far as the dried-up +bed of the little river. It was probable that it was soon to extend to +the bed itself, which was of course of little thickness, having been +hollowed out by the stream. Should it do so, the whole district between +Cape Michael and Port Barnett, bounded on the west by the river bed, +would disappear—that is to say, the colonists would lose a good many +square miles of their domain. On this account Hobson warned every one +not to wander far, as a rough sea would be enough to bring about the +dreaded catastrophe. + +Soundings were, however, taken, in several places with a view to +ascertaining where the ice was thickest, and it was found that, near +Cape Bathurst, not only was the layer of earth and sand of greater +extent—which was of little importance—but the crust of ice was +thicker than anywhere else. This was a most fortunate circumstance, +and the holes made in sounding were kept open, so that the amount of +diminution in the base of the island could be estimated every day. This +diminution was slow but sure, and, making allowance for the unfortunate +fact that the island was drifting into warmer waters, it was decided +that it was impossible for it to last another three weeks. + +The next week, from the 19th to the 25th May, the weather was very bad. +A fearful storm broke over the island, accompanied by flash after +flash of lightning and peals of thunder. The sea rose high, lashed by +a powerful north-west wind, and its waves broke over the doomed island, +making it tremble ominously. The little colony were on the watch, ready +on an emergency to embark in the raft, the scaffolding of which was +nearly finished, and some provisions and fresh water were taken on +board. + +Rain heavy enough to penetrate to the ice-crust fell in large quantities +during this storm, and melted it in many places. On the slopes of some +of the hills the earth was washed away, leaving the white foundations +bare. These ravines were hastily filled up with soil to protect the ice +from the action of the warm air and rain, and but for this precaution +the soil would have been everywhere perforated. + +Great havoc was caused amongst the woods by this storm; the earth and +sand were washed away from the roots of the trees, which fell in large +numbers. In a single night the aspect of the country between the lake +and the former Port Barnett was completely changed. A few groups of +birch trees and thickets of firs alone remained—a fact significant of +approaching decomposition, which no human skill could prevent! Every one +knew and felt that the ephemeral inland was gradually succumbing—every +one, except perhaps Thomas Black, who was still gloomily indifferent to +all that was going on. + +On the 23d of May, during the storm, the hunter Sabine left the house in +the thick fog, and was nearly drowned in a large hole which had opened +during the night on the site formerly occupied by the principal house of +the factory. + +Hitherto, as we are aware, the house, three quarters submerged, and +buried beneath a mass of earth and sand, had remained fixed in the +ice-crust beneath the island; but now the sea had evidently enlarged the +crevasse, and the house with all it contained had sunk to rise no more. +Earth and sand were pouring through this fissure, at the bottom of which +surged the tempest-tossed waves + +Sabine’s comrades, hearing his cries, rushed to his assistance, and +were just in time to save him as he was still clinging to the slippery +walls of the abyss. He escaped with a ducking which might have had +tragic consequences. + +A little later the beams and planks of the house, which had slid under +the island, were seen floating about in the offing like the spars of a +wrecked vessel. This was the worst evil the storm had wrought, and would +compromise the solidity of the island yet more, as the waves would now +eat away the ice all round the crevasse. + +In the course of the 25th May, the wind veered to the north-east, +and although it blew strongly, it was no longer a hurricane; the rain +ceased, and the sea became calmer. After a quiet night the sun rose +upon the desolate scene, the Lieutenant was able to take the bearings +accurately, and obtained the following result:— + +At noon on the 25th May, Victoria Island was in latitude 56° 13’, and +longitude 170° 23’. + +It had therefore advanced at great speed, having drifted nearly eight +hundred miles since the breaking up of the ice set it free in Behring +Strait two months before. + +This great speed made the Lieutenant once more entertain a slight hope. +He pointed out the Aleutian Islands on the map to his comrades, and +said— + +“Look at these islands; they are not now two hundred miles from us, +and we may reach them in eight days.” + +“Eight days!” repeated Long, shaking his head; “eight days is a +long time.” + +“I must add,” continued Hobson, “that if our island had followed +the hundred and sixty-eighth meridian, it would already have reached +the parallel of these islands, but in consequence of a deviation of the +Behring current, it is bearing in a south-westerly direction.” + +The Lieutenant was right, the current seemed likely to drag the island +away from all land, even out of sight of the Aleutian Islands, which +only extend as far as the hundred and seventieth meridian. + +Mrs Barnett examined the map in silence. She saw the pencil-mark which +denoted the exact spot then occupied by the island. + +The map was made on a large scale, and the point representing the island +looked but a speck upon the vast expanse of the Behring Sea. She traced +back the route by which the island had come to its present position, +marvelling at the fatality, or rather the immutable law, by which the +currents which had borne it along had avoided all land, sheering +clear of islands, and never touching either continent; and she saw +the boundless Pacific Ocean, towards which she and all with her were +hurrying. + +She mused long upon this melancholy subject, and at last exclaimed +suddenly— + +“Could not the course of the island be controlled? Eight days at this +pace would bring us to the last island of the Aleutian group.” + +“Those eight days are in the hands of God,” replied Lieutenant +Hobson gravely; “we can exercise no control upon them. Help can only +come to us from above; there is nothing left for us to try.” + +“I know, I know!” said Mrs Barnett; “but Heaven helps those who +help themselves. Is there really nothing we can do?” + +Hobson shook his head doubtfully. His only hope was in the raft, and he +was undecided whether to embark every one on it at once, contrive some +sort of a sail with clothes, &c., and try to reach the nearest land, or +to wait yet a little longer. + +He consulted Sergeant Long, Mac-Nab, Rae, Marbre, and Sabine, in whom he +had great confidence, and all agreed that it would be unwise to abandon +the island before they were obliged. The raft, constantly swept as it +would be by the waves, could only be a last resource, and would not move +at half the pace of the island, still driven towards the south by the +remains of the ice-wall. The wind generally blew from the east, and +would be likely to drift the raft out into the offing away from all +land. They must still wait then, always wait; for the island was +drifting rapidly towards the Aleutians. When they really approached the +group they would be able to see what it would be best to do. + +This was certainly the wisest course to take. In eight days, if the +present speed were maintained, the island would either stop at the +southern boundary of Behring Sea, or be dragged to the south west to the +waters of the Pacific Ocean, where certain destruction awaited it. + +But the adverse fate which seemed all along to have followed the hapless +colonists had yet another blow in store for them: the speed on which +they counted was now to fail them, as everything else had done. + +During the night of the 26th May, the orientation of the island changed +once more; and this time the results of the displacement were extremely +serious. The island turned half round, and the icebergs still remaining +of the huge ice-wall, which had shut in the northern horizon, were now +on the south. + +In the morning the shipwrecked travellers—what name could be more +appropriate?—saw the sun rise above Cape Esquimaux instead of above +Port Barnett. + +Hardly a hundred yards off rose the icebergs, rapidly melting, but still +of a considerable size, which till then had driven the island before +them. The southern horizon was now partly shut in by them. + +What would be the consequences of this fresh change of position? Would +not the icebergs now float away from the island, with which they were no +longer connected? + +All were oppressed with a presentiment of some new misfortune, and +understood only too well what Kellet meant when he exclaimed— + +“This evening we shall have lost our screw!’“ + +By this Kellet meant that the icebergs, being before instead of behind +the island, would soon leave it, and as it was they which imparted to +it its rapid motion, in consequence of their very great draught of +water—their volume being six or seven feet below the sea level for +every one above—they would now go on without it, impelled by the +submarine current, whilst Victoria Island, not deep enough in the water +to come under the influence of the current, would be left floating +helplessly on the waves. + +Yes! Kellet was right; the island would then be like a vessel with +disabled masts and a broken screw. + +No one answered the soldier’s remark, and a quarter of an hour had +not elapsed before a loud cracking sound was heard. The summits of +the icebergs trembled, large masses broke away, and the icebergs, +irresistibly drawn along by the submarine current, drifted rapidly to +the south. + +CHAPTER XXI. THE ISLAND BECOMES AN ISLET. Three hours later the last +relics of the ice-wall had disappeared, proving that the island now +remained stationary, and that all the force of the current was deep down +below the waves, not on the surface of the sea. + +The bearings were taken at noon with the greatest care and twenty-four +hours later it was found that Victoria Island had not advanced one mile. + +The only remaining hope was that some vessel should sight the poor +shipwrecked creatures, either whilst still on the island, or after they +had taken to their raft. + +The island was now in 54° 33’ latitude, and 177° 19’ longitude, +several hundred miles from the nearest land, namely, the Aleutian +Islands. + +Hobson once more called his comrades together, and asked them what they +thought it would be best to do. + +All agreed that they should remain on the island until it broke up, as +it was too large to be affected by the state of the sea, and only take +to the raft when the dissolution actually commenced. Once on the frail +vessel, they must wait. + +Still wait! + +The raft was now finished. Mac-Nab had made one large shed or cabin big +enough to hold every one, and to afford some little shelter from the +weather. A mast had been prepared, which could be put up if necessary, +and the sails intended for the boat had long been ready. The whole +structure was strong, although clumsy; and if the wind were favourable, +and the sea not too rough, this rude assortment of planks and timbers +might save the lives of the whole party. + +“Nothing,” observed Mrs Barnett,—”nothing is impossible to Him +who rules the winds and waves.” + +Hobson carefully looked over the stores of provisions. The reserves had +been much damaged by the avalanche, but there were plenty of animals +still on the island, and the abundant shrubs and mosses supplied them +with food. A few reindeer and hares were slaughtered by the hunters, and +their flesh salted for future needs. + +The health of the colonists was on the whole good. They had suffered +little in the preceding mild winter, and all the mental trials they +had gone through had not affected their physical well-being. They were, +however, looking forward with something of a shrinking horror to the +moment when they would have to abandon their island home, or, to speak +more correctly, when it abandoned them. It was no wonder that they did +not like the thought of floating on the ocean in a rude structure of +wood subject to all the caprices of winds and waves. Even in tolerably +fine weather seas would be shipped and every one constantly drenched +with saltwater. Moreover, it must be remembered that the men were none +of them sailors, accustomed to navigation, and ready to risk their lives +on a few planks, but soldiers, trained for service on land. Their island +was fragile, it is true, and rested on a thin crust of ice; but then it +was covered with a productive soil, trees and shrubs flourished upon it, +its huge bulk rendered it insensible to the motion of the waves, and +it might have been supposed to be stationary. They had, in fact, become +attached to Victoria Island, on which they had lived nearly two years; +every inch of the ground had become familiar to them; they had tilled +the soil, and had come safely through so many perils in their wandering +home, that in leaving it they felt as if they were parting from an old +and sorely-tried friend. + +Hobson fully sympathised with the feelings of his men, and understood +their repugnance to embarking on the raft; but then he also knew that +the catastrophe could not now be deferred much longer, and ominous +symptoms already gave warning of its rapid approach. + +We will now describe this raft. It was thirty feet square, and its deck +rose two feet above the water. Its bulwarks would therefore keep out the +small but not the large waves. In the centre the carpenter had built a +regular deck-house, which would hold some twenty people. Round it were +large lockers for the provisions and water-casks, all firmly fixed to +the deck with iron bolts. The mast, thirty feet high, was fastened to +the deck-house, and strengthened with stays attached to the corners +of the raft. This mast was to have a square sail, which would only be +useful when the wind was aft. A sort of rudder was fixed to this rough +structure, the fittings of which were necessarily incomplete. + +Such was the raft constructed by the head carpenter, on which twenty-one +persons were to embark. It was floating peacefully on the little lake, +strongly moored to the shore. + +It was certainly constructed with more care than if it had been put +together in haste on a vessel at sea doomed to immediate destruction. It +was stronger and better fitted up; but, after all, it was but a raft. + +On the 1st June a new incident occurred. Hope, one of the soldiers, went +to fetch some water from the lake for culinary purposes, and when Mrs +Joliffe tasted it, she found that it was salt. She called Hope, and said +she wanted fresh, not salt water. + +The man replied that he had brought it from the lake as usual, and as he +and Mrs Joliffe were disputing about it, the Lieutenant happened to come +in. Hearing Hope’s repeated [asertions] assertions that he had fetched +the water from the lake, he turned pale and hurried to the lagoon. + +The waters were quite salt; the bottom of the lake had evidently given +way, and the sea had flowed in. + +The fact quickly became known, and every one was seized with a terrible +dread. + +“No more fresh water!” exclaimed all the poor creatures together. + +Lake Barnett had in fact disappeared, as Paulina River had done before. + +Lieutenant Hobson hastened to reassure his comrades about drinkable +water. + +“There will be plenty of ice, my friends,” he said. “We can always +melt a piece of our island, and,” he added, with a ghastly attempt at +a smile, “I don’t suppose we shall drink it all.” + +It is, in fact, well known that salt separates from sea-water +in freezing and evaporation. A few blocks of ice were therefore +“disinterred,” if we may so express it, and melted for daily use, +and to fill the casks on board the raft. + +It would not do, however, to neglect this fresh warning given by nature. +The invasion of the lake by the sea proved that the base of the island +was rapidly melting. At any moment the ground might give way, and Hobson +forbade his men to leave the factory, as they might be drifted away +before they were aware of it. + +The animals seemed more keenly alive than ever to approaching danger; +they gathered yet more closely round the firmer part, and after the +disappearance of the fresh water lake, they came to lick the blocks of +ice. They were all uneasy, and some seemed to be seized with madness, +especially the wolves, who rushed wildly towards the factory, and +dashed away again howling piteously. The furred animals remained huddled +together round the large well where the principal house had formerly +stood. There were several hundreds of them, of different species, +and the solitary bear roamed backwards and forwards, showing no more +hostility to the quadrupeds than to men. + +The number of birds, which had hitherto been considerable, now +decreased. During the last few days all those capable of long-sustained +flight—such as swans, &c, migrated towards the Aleutian Islands in the +south, where they would find a sure refuge. This significant and ominous +fact was noticed by Mrs Barnett and Madge, who were walking together on +the beach. + +“There is plenty of food for these birds on the island,” observed +Mrs Barnett, “and yet they leave it—they have a good reason, no +doubt.” + +“Yes,” replied Madge; “their instinct of self-preservation makes +them take flight, and they give us a warning by which we ought to +profit. The animals also appear more uneasy than usual.” + +Hobson now decided to take the greater part of the provisions and all +the camping apparatus on board the raft, and when that was done, to +embark with the whole party. + +The sea was, however, very rough, and the waters of the former +lake—now a kind of Mediterranean in miniature—were greatly agitated. +The waves, confined in the narrow space, dashed mountains high, and +broke violently upon the steep banks. The raft tossed up and down, and +shipped sea after sea. The embarkation of provisions, &c., had to be put +off. + +Every one wished to pass one more quiet night on land, and Hobson +yielded against his better judgment, determined, if it were calmer the +next day, to proceed with the embarkation. + +The night was more peaceful than had been expected; the wind went down, +and the sea became calmer; it had but been swept by one of those sudden +and brief hurricanes peculiar to these latitudes. + +At eight o’clock in the evening the tumult ceased, and a slight +surface agitation of the waters of lake and sea alone remained. + +It was some slight comfort that the island would not now be broken up +suddenly, as it must have done had the storm continued. Its dissolution +was, of course, still close at hand, but would not, it was hoped, be +sudden and abrupt. + +The storm was succeeded by a slight fog, which seemed likely to thicken +during the night. It came from the north, and owing to the changed +position of the island, would probably cover the greater part of it. + +Before going to bed, Hobson went down and examined the moorings of the +raft, which were fastened to some strong birch-trees. To make security +doubly sure, he tightened them, and the worst that could now happen +would be, that the raft would drift out on to the lagoon, which was not +large enough to be lost upon it. + +CHAPTER XXII. THE FOUR FOLLOWING DAYS. The night was calm, and in the +morning the Lieutenant resolved to order the embarkation of everything +and everybody that very day. He, therefore, went down to the lake to +look at the raft. + +The fog was still thick, but the sunbeams were beginning to struggle +through it. The clouds had been swept away by the hurricane of the +preceding day, and it seemed likely to be hot. + +When Hobson reached the banks of the lake, the fog was still too dense +for him to make out anything on its surface, and he was waiting for it +to clear away, when he was joined by Mrs Barnett, Madge, and several +others. + +The fog gradually cleared off, drawing back to the end of the lake, but +the raft was nowhere to be seen. + +Presently a gust of wind completely swept away the fog. + +The raft was gone! There was no longer a lake! The boundless ocean +stretched away before the astonished colonists! + +Hobson could not check a cry of despair; and when he and his companions +turned round and saw the sea on every side, they realised with a shock +of horror that their island was now nothing more than an islet! + +During the night six-sevenths of the district once belonging to Cape +Bathurst had silently floated away, without producing a shock of any +kind, so completely had the ice been worn away by the constant action +of the waves, the raft had drifted out into the offing, and those whose +last hope it had been could not see a sign of it on the desolate sea. + +The unfortunate colonists were now overwhelmed with despair; their last +hope gone, they were hanging above an awful abyss ready to swallow them +up; and some of the soldiers in a fit of madness were about to throw +themselves into the sea, when Mrs Barnett flung herself before them, +entreating them to desist. They yielded, some of them weeping like +children. + +The awful situation of the colonists was indeed manifest enough, and +we may well pity the Lieutenant surrounded by the miserable despairing +creatures. Twenty-one persons on an islet of ice which must quickly melt +beneath their feet! The wooded hills had disappeared with the mass +of the island now engulfed; not a tree was left. There was no wood +remaining but the planks of the rough lodging, which would not be nearly +enough to build a raft to hold so many. A few days of life were all +the colonists could now hope for; June had set in, the mean temperature +exceeded 68° Fahrenheit, and the islet must rapidly melt. + +As a forlorn hope, Hobson thought he would make a reconaissance of his +limited domain, and see if any part of it was thicker than where they +were all now encamped. In this excursion he was accompanied by Mrs +Barnett and Madge. + +“Do you still hope!” inquired the lady of her faithful companion. + +“I hope ever!” replied Madge. + +Mrs Barnett did not answer, but walked rapidly along the coast at the +Lieutenant’s side. No alteration had taken place between Cape Bathurst +and Cape Esquimaux, that is to say, for a distance of eight miles. It +was at Cape Esquimaux that the fracture had taken place, and running +inland, it followed a curved line as far as the beginning of the lagoon, +from which point the shores of the lake, now bathed by the waves of the +sea, formed the new coast-line. Towards the upper part of the lagoon +there was another fracture, running as far as the coast, between Cape +Bathurst and what was once Port Barnett, so that the islet was merely an +oblong strip, not more than a mile wide anywhere. + +Of the hundred and forty square miles which once formed the total +superficial area of the island, only twenty remained. + +Hobson most carefully examined the new conformation of the islet, +and found that its thickest part was still at the site of the former +factory. He decided, therefore, to retain the encampment where it was, +and, strange to say, the instinct of the quadrupeds still led them to +congregate about it. + +A great many of the animals had, however, disappeared with the rest of +the island, amongst them many of the dogs which had escaped the former +catastrophe. Most of the quadrupeds remaining were rodents; and the +bear, which seemed terribly puzzled, paced round and round the islet +like a caged animal. + +About five o’clock in the evening the three explorers returned to the +camp. The men and women were gathered together in gloomy silence in the +rough shelter still remaining to them, and Mrs Joliffe was preparing +some food. Sabine, who was less overcome than his comrades, was +wandering about in the hope of getting some fresh venison, and the +astronomer was sitting apart from every one, gazing at the sea in an +absent indifferent manner, as if nothing could ever rouse or astonish +him again. + +The Lieutenant imparted the results of his excursion to the whole party. +He told them that they were safer where they were than they would be +on any other spot, and he urged them not to wander about, as there were +signs of another approaching fracture half way between the camp and Cape +Esquimaux. The superficial area of the islet would soon be yet further +reduced, and they could do nothing, absolutely nothing. + +The day was really quite hot. The ice which had been “disinterred” +for drinkable water melted before it was brought near the fire. Thin +pieces of the ice crust of the steep beach fell off into the sea, and it +was evident that the general level of the islet was being lowered by the +constant wearing away of its base in the tepid waters. + +No one slept the next night. Who could have closed his eyes with the +knowledge that the abyss beneath might open at any moment?—who but the +little unconscious child who still smiled in his mother’s arms, and +was never for one instant out of them? + +The next morning, June 4th, the sun rose in a cloudless sky. No change +had taken place in the conformation of the islet during the night. + +In the course of this day a terrified blue fox rushed into the shed, +and could not be induced to leave it. The martens, ermines, polar hares, +musk-rats, and beavers literally swarmed upon the site of the former +factory. The wolves alone were unrepresented, and had probably all been +swallowed up with the rest of the island. The bear no longer wandered +from Cape Bathurst, and the furred animals seemed quite unconscious of +its presence; nor did the colonists notice it much, absorbed as they +were in the contemplation of the approaching doom, which had broken down +all the ordinary distinctions of race. + +A little before noon a sudden hope—too soon to end in +disappointment—revived the drooping spirits of the colonists. + +Sabine, who had been standing for some time on the highest part of the +islet looking at the sea, suddenly cried— + +“A boat! a boat!” + +It was as if an electric shock had suddenly ran through the group, for +all started up and rushed towards the hunter. + +The Lieutenant looked at him inquiringly, and the man pointed to a +white vapour on the horizon. Not a word was spoken, but all watched in +breathless silence as the form of a vessel gradually rose against the +sky. + +It was indeed a ship, and most likely a whaler. There was no doubt about +it, and at the end of an hour even the keel was visible. + +Unfortunately this vessel appeared on the east of the islet, that is to +say, on the opposite side to that from which the raft had drifted, so +that there could be no hope that it was coming to their rescue +after meeting with the raft, which would have suggested the fact of +fellow-creatures being in danger. + +The question now was, would those in this vessel perceive the islet? +Would they be able to make out signals on it? Alas! in broad daylight, +with a bright sun shining, it was not likely they would. Had it been +night some of the planks of the remaining shed might have made a fire +large enough to be seen at a considerable distance, but the boat would +probably have disappeared before the darkness set in; and, although it +seemed of little use, signals were made, and guns fired on the islet. + +The vessel was certainly approaching, and seemed to be a large +three-master, evidently a whaler from New Archangel, which was on its +way to Behring Strait after having doubled the peninsula of Alaska. +It was to the windward of the islet, and tacking to starboard with its +lower sails, top sails, and top-gallant sails all set. It was steadily +advancing to the north. A sailor would have seen at a glance that it was +not bearing towards the islet, but it might even yet perceive it, and +alter its course. + +“If it does see us,” whispered Hobson in Long’s ear, “it is more +likely to avoid us than to come nearer.” + +The Lieutenant was right, for there is nothing vessels dread more in +these latitudes than the approach of icebergs and ice-floes; they +look upon them as floating rocks, against which there is a danger of +striking, especially in the night, and they therefore hasten to change +their course when ice is sighted; and this vessel would most likely do +the same, if it noticed the islet at all. + +The alternations of hope and despair through which the anxious watchers +passed may be imagined, but cannot be described. Until two o’clock in +the afternoon they were able to believe that Heaven had at last taken +pity on them—that help was coming—that their safety was assured. The +vessel continued to approach in an oblique direction, and was presently +not more than six miles from the islet. Signal after signal was tried, +gun after gun fired, and some of the planks of the shed were burnt. + +All in vain—either they were not seen, or the vessel was anxious to +avoid the islet. + +At half-past two it luffed slightly, and bore away to the northeast. + +In another hour a white vapour was all that was visible, and that soon +disappeared. + +On this the soldier Kellet burst into a roar of hysterical laughter, and +flinging himself on the ground, rolled over and over like a madman. + +Mrs Barnett turned and looked Madge full in the face, as if to ask her +if she still hoped, and Madge turned away her head. + +On this same ill-fated day a crackling noise was heard, and the greater +part of the islet broke off, and plunged into the sea. The cries of the +drowning animals rent the air, and the islet was reduced to the narrow +strip between the site of the engulfed house and Cape Bathurst. It was +now merely a piece of ice. + +CHAPTER XXIII. ON A PIECE OF ICE. A piece of ice, a jagged triangular +strip of ice, measuring one hundred feet at its base, and scarcely five +hundred in its greatest extent; and on it twenty-one human beings, some +hundred furred animals, a few dogs, and a large bear, which was at this +moment crouching at the very edge! + +Yes! all the luckless colonists were there. Not one had yet been +swallowed up. The last rupture had occurred when they were all in the +shed. Thus far fate had spared them, probably that they might all perish +together. + +A silent sleepless night ensued. No one spoke or moved, for the +slightest shake or blow might suffice to break the ice. + +No one would touch the salt-meat served round by Mrs Joliffe. What would +be the good of eating? + +Nearly every one remained in the open air, feeling that it would be +better to be drowned in the open sea than in a narrow wooden shed. + +The next day, June 5th, the sun shone brightly down upon the heads of +the doomed band of wanderers. All were still silent, and seemed anxious +to avoid each other. Many gazed with troubled anxious eyes at the +perfect circle of the horizon, of which the miserable little strip of +ice formed the centre. But the sea was absolutely deserted—not a sail, +not an ice-floe, not an islet! Their own piece of ice was probably the +very last floating on the Behring Sea. + +The temperature continued to rise. The wind had gone down, and a +terrible calm had set in, a gentle swell heaved the surface of the sea, +and the morsel of earth and ice, which was all that was left of Victoria +Island, rose and sank without change of position, like a wreck—and +what was it but a wreck? + +But a wreck, a piece of woodwork, a broken mast, or a few planks, remain +floating; they offer some resistance to the waves, they will not melt; +but this bit of ice, this solidified water, must dissolve with the heat +of the sun! + +This piece of ice had formed the thickest part of the island, and this +will explain its having lasted so long. A layer of earth and plenty +of vegetation covered it, and the base of ice must have been of +considerable thickness. The long bitter Polar winters must have “fed +it with fresh ice,” in the countless centuries during which it was +connected with the mainland. Even now its mean height was five or six +feet above the sea level, and its base was probably of about the same +thickness. Although in these quiet waters it was not likely to be +broken, it could not fail gradually to melt, and the rapid dissolution +could actually be watched at the edges, for as the long waves licked +the sides, piece after piece of ground with its verdant covering sank to +rise no more. + +On this 5th June a fall of this nature occurred at about one o’clock +P.M., on the site of the shed itself, which was very near the edge of +the ice. There was fortunately no one in it at the time, and all that +was saved was a few planks, and two or three of the timbers of the +roofs. Most of the cooking utensils and all the astronomical instruments +were lost. The colonists were now obliged to take refuge on the highest +part of the islet, where nothing protected them from the weather, but +fortunately a few tools had been left there, with the air pumps and +the air-vessel, which Hobson had employed for catching a little of the +rain-water for drinking purposes, as he no longer dared to draw for a +supply upon the ice, every atom of which was of value. + +At about four o’clock P.M., the soldier Kellet, the same who had +already given signs of insanity, came to Mrs Barnett and said quietly— + +“I am going to drown myself, ma’am.” + +“What, Kellet?” exclaimed the lady. + +“I tell you I am going to drown myself,” replied the soldier. “I +have thought the matter well over: there is no escape for us, and I +prefer dying at once to waiting to be killed.” + +“Kellet!” said Mrs Barnett, taking the man’s hand and looking into +his face, which was strangely composed, “you will not do that?” + +“Yes, I will, ma’am; and as you have always been very good to us +all, I wanted to wish you good-bye. Good-bye, ma’am!” + +And Kellet turned towards the sea. Mrs Barnett, terrified at his manner, +threw herself upon him and held him back. Her cries brought Hobson and +Long to her assistance, and they did all in their power to dissuade the +unhappy man from carrying out his purpose, but he was not to be moved, +and merely shook his head. + +His mind was evidently disordered, and it was useless to reason with +him. It was a terrible moment, as his example might lead some of his +comrades to commit suicide also. At all hazards he must be prevented +from doing as he threatened. + +“Kellet,” said Mrs Barnett gently, with a half smile, “we have +always been very good friends, have we not?” + +“Yes, ma’am,” replied Kellet calmly. + +“Well, Kellet, if you like we will die together, but not to-day.” + +“What, ma’am?” + +“No, my brave fellow, I am not ready; but to-morrow, to-morrow if you +like.” + +The soldier looked more fixedly than ever at the courageous woman, and +seemed to hesitate an instant; then he cast a glance of fierce longing +at the sea, and passing his hand over his eyes, said— + +“To-morrow!” + +And without another word he quietly turned away and went back to his +comrades. + +“Poor fellow.” murmured Mrs Barnett; “I have asked him to wait +till to-morrow, and who can say whether we shall not all be drowned by +that time!” + +Throughout that night Hobson remained motionless upon the beach, +pondering whether there might not yet be some means to check the +dissolution of the islet—if it might not yet be possible to preserve +it until they came in sight of land of some sort. + +Mrs Barnett and Madge did not leave each other for an instant. Kalumah +crouched like a dog at the feet of her mistress, and tried to keep her +warm. Mrs Mac-Nab, wrapped in a few furs, the remains of the rich stores +of Fort Hope, had fallen into a kind of torpor, with her baby clasped in +her arms. + +The stars shone with extraordinary brilliancy, and no sounds broke the +stillness of the night but the rippling of the waves and the splash of +pieces of ice as they fell into the sea. The colonists, stretched upon +the ground in scattered groups, were as motionless as corpses on an +abandoned wreck. + +Sometimes Sergeant Long rose and peered into the night-mists, bat seeing +nothing, he resumed his horizontal position. The bear, looking like a +great white snowball, cowered motionless at the very edge of the strip +of ice. + +This night also passed away without any incident to modify the +situation. The grey morning dawned in the east, and the sun rose and +dispersed the shadows of the night. + +The Lieutenant’s first care, as soon as it was light, was to examine +the piece of ice. Its perimeter was still more reduced, and, alas! its +mean height above the sea level had sensibly diminished. The waves, +quiet as they were, washed over the greater part of it; the summit of +the little hill alone was still beyond their reach. + +Long, too, saw the changes which had taken place during the night, and +felt that all hope was gone. + +Mrs Barnett joined Lieutenant Hobson, and said to him— + +“It will be to-day then!” + +“Yes, madam, and you will keep your promise to Kellet!” + +“Lieutenant Hobson,” said the lady solemnly, “have we done all in +our power!” + +“We have, madam.” + +“Then God’s will be done!” + +One last attempt was, however, made during the day. A strong breeze set +in from the offing, that is to say, a wind bearing to the south-east, +the direction in which were situated the nearest of the Aleutian +Islands. How far off no one could say, as without instruments the +bearings of the island could not be taken. It was not likely to have +drifted far, however, unless under the influence of the current, as it +gave no hold to the wind. + +Still it was just possible that they might be nearer land than they +thought. If only a current, the direction of which it was impossible +to ascertain, had taken them nearer to the much-longed-for Aleutian +Islands, then, as the wind was bearing down upon those very islands, it +might drive the strip of ice before it if a sail of some kind could +be concocted. The ice had still several hours to float, and in several +hours the land might come in sight, or, if not the land, some coasting +or fishing vessel. + +A forlorn hope truly, but it suggested an idea to the Lieutenant which +he resolved to carry out. Could not a sail be contrived on the islet +as on an ordinary raft? There could be no difficulty in that; and when +Hobson suggested it to Mac-Nab, he exclaimed— + +“You are quite right, sir;” adding to his men, “bring out all the +canvas there is!” + +Every one was quite revived by this plan, slight as was the chance it +afforded, and all lent a helping hand, even Kellet, who had not yet +reminded Mrs Barnett of her promise. + +A beam, which had once formed part of the roof of the barracks, was sunk +deep into the earth and sand of which the little hill was composed, and +firmly fixed with ropes arranged like shrouds and a stay. A sail made +of all the clothes and coverlets still remaining fastened on to a strong +pole for a yard, was hoisted on the mast This sail, or rather collection +of sails, suitably set, swelled in the breeze, and by the wake it left, +it was evident that the strip of ice was rapidly moving towards the +south-east. + +It was a success, and every one was cheered with newly-awakened hope. +They were no longer stationary; they were advancing slowly, it was true, +but still they were advancing. The carpenter was particularly elated; +all eagerly scanned the horizon, and had they been told that no land +could be sighted, they would have refused to believe it. + +So it appeared, however; for the strip of ice floated along on the waves +for three hours in the centre of an absolutely circular and unbroken +horizon. The poor colonists still hoped on. + +Towards three o’clock, the Lieutenant took the Sergeant aside, and +said to him— + +“We are advancing at the cost of the solidity and duration of our +islet.” + +“What do you mean, sir?” + +“I mean that the ice is being rapidly fretted away as it moves along. +Its speed is hastening its dissolution, and since we set sail it has +diminished one-third.” + +“Are you quite sure?” + +“Absolutely certain. The ice is longer and flatter. Look, the sea la +not more than ten feet from the hill!” + +It was true, and the result was what might naturally have been expected +from the motion of the ice. + +“Sergeant,” resumed Hobson, “do you think we ought to take down +our sail?” + +“I think,” replied Long, after a moment’s reflection, “that we +should consult our comrades. We ought all to share the responsibility of +a decision now.” + +The Lieutenant bent his head in assent, and the two returned to their +old position on the little hill. + +Hobson put the case before the whole party. + +“The speed we have given to the ice,” he said, “is causing it to +wear away rapidly, and will perhaps hasten the inevitable catastrophe +by a few hours. My friends, you must decide whether we shall still go +on.” + +“Forwards!” cried all with one voice. + +So it was decided, and, as it turned out, the decision was fraught with +consequences of incalculable importance. + +At six o’clock P.M. Madge rose, and pointing to a point on the +south-east, cried— + +“Land!” + +Every one started up as if struck by lightning. Land there was indeed, +on the south-east, twelve miles from the island. + +“More sail! more sail!” shouted Hobson. + +He was understood, and fresh materials were hastily brought. On +the shrouds a sort of studding sail was rigged up of clothes, furs, +everything, in short, that could give hold to the wind. + +The speed increased as the wind freshened, but the ice was melting +everywhere; it trembled beneath the feet of the anxious watchers, and +might open at any moment. But they would not think of that; they were +buoyed up with hope; safety was at hand, on the land they were rapidly +nearing. They shouted—they made signals—they were in a delirium of +excitement. + +At half-past seven the ice was much nearer the land, but it was visibly +melting, and sinking rapidly; water was gushing from it, and the waves +were washing over it, sweeping off the terrified quadrupeds before the +eyes of the colonists. Every instant they expected the whole mass to +be engulfed, and it was necessary to lighten it like a sinking vessel. +Every means was tried to check the dissolution; the earth and sand were +carefully spread about, especially at the edges of the ice, to protect +it from the direct influence of the sunbeams; and furs were laid here +and there, as being bad conductors of heat. But it was all of no avail; +the lower portion of the ice began to crack, and several fissures opened +in the surface. It was now but a question of moments! + +Night set in, and there was nothing left for the poor colonists to do +to quicken the speed of the islet. Some of them tried to paddle about on +planks. The coast was still four miles to windward. + +It was a dark gloomy night, without any moon, and Hobson, whose heroic +courage did not even now fail him, shouted— + +“A signal, my friends! a signal!” A pile was made of all the +remaining combustibles—two or three planks and a beam. It was set fire +to, and bright flames soon shot up, but the strip of ice continued to +melt and sink. Presently the little hill alone remained above water, and +on it the despairing wretches, with the few animals left alive, huddled +together, the bear growling fiercely. + +The water was still rising, and there was no sign that any one on land +had seen the signal. In less than a quarter of an hour they must all be +swallowed up. + +Could nothing be done to make the ice last longer? In three hours, three +short hours, they might reach the land, which was now but three miles to +windward. + +“Oh!” cried Hobson, “if only I could stop the ice from melting! I +would give my life to know how! Yes, I would give my life!” + +“There is one way,” suddenly replied a voice. + +It was Thomas Black who spoke, the astronomer, who had not opened his +lips for so long, and who had long since appeared dead to all that was +going on. + +“Yes,” he continued, “there is one way of checking the dissolution +of the ice—there is one way of saving us all.” + +All gathered eagerly round the speaker, and looked at him inquiringly. +They thought they must have misheard what he said. + +“Well!” asked Hobson, “what way do you mean?” + +“To the pumps!” replied Black simply. + +Was he mad? Did he take the ice for a sinking vessel, with ten feet of +water in the hold? + +The air pumps were at hand, together with the air vessel, which Hobson +had been using as a reservoir for drinking water, but of what use could +they be? Could they harden the ice, which was melting all over? + +“He is mad!” exclaimed Long. + +“To the pumps!” repeated the astronomer; “fill the reservoir with +air!” + +“Do as he tells you!” cried Mrs Barnett. + +The pumps were attached to the reservoir, the cover of which was closed +and bolted. The pumps were then at once set to work, and the air was +condensed under the pressure of several atmospheres. Then Black, taking +one of the leather pipes connected with the reservoir, and opening the +cock, let the condensed air escape, walking round the ice wherever it +was melting. + +Every one was astonished at the effect produced. Wherever the air was +projected by the astronomer, the fissures filled up, and the surface +re-froze. + +“Hurrah! hurrah!” shouted all with one voice. + +It was tiring enough to work the pumps, but there were plenty of +volunteers. The edges of the ice were again solidified, as if under the +influence of intense cold. + +“You have saved us, Mr Black,” said Lieutenant Hobson. + +“Nothing could be more natural,” replied the astronomer quietly. + +Nothing, in fact, could have been more natural; and the physical effect +produced may be described as follows:— + +There were two reasons for the relegation:—First, under the pressure +of the air, the water vaporised on the surface of the ice produced +intense cold, and the compressed air in expanding abstracted the heat +from the thawed surface, which immediately re-froze. Wherever the ice +was opening the cold cemented the edges, so that it gradually regained +its original solidity. + +This went on for several hours, and the colonists, buoyed up by hope, +toiled on with unwearying zeal. + +They were nearing the coast, and when they were about a quarter of a +mile from it, the bear plunged into the sea, and swimming to the shore, +soon disappeared. + +A few minutes afterwards the ice ran aground upon a beach, and the +few animals still upon it hurried away in the darkness. The colonists +“disembarked,” and falling on their knees, returned thanks to God +for their miraculous deliverance. + +CHAPTER XXIV CONCLUSION. It was on the island of Blejinie, the last of +the Aleutian group, at the extreme south of Behring Sea, that all the +colonists of Fort Hope at last landed, after having traversed eighteen +hundred miles since the breaking-up of the ice. They were hospitably +received by some Aleutian fishermen who had hurried to their assistance, +and were soon able to communicate with some English agents of the +Hudson’s Bay Company. + +After all the details we have given, it is needless to dwell on the +courage and energy of the brave little band, which had proved itself +worthy of its noble leader. We know how all struggled with their +misfortunes, and how patiently they had submitted to the will of God. +We have seen Mrs Barnett cheering every one by her example and sympathy; +and we know that neither she nor those with her yielded to despair when +the peninsula on which Fort Hope had been built was converted into a +wandering island, when that island became an islet, and the islet a +strip of ice, nor even when that strip of ice was melting beneath the +combined influence of sun and waves. If the scheme of the Company was +a failure, if the new fort had perished, no one could possibly blame +Hobson or his companions, who had gone through such extraordinary and +unexpected trials. Of the nineteen persons under the Lieutenant’s +charge, not one was missing, and he had even two new members in his +little colony, Kalumah and Mrs Barnett’s godson, Michael Mac-Nab. + +Six days after their rescue the shipwrecked mariners arrived at New +Archangel, the capital of Russian America. + +Here the friends, bound together by so many dangers shared, must part, +probably for ever! Hobson and his men were to return to Fort Reliance +across English America, whilst Mrs Barnett, accompanied by Kalumah, who +would not leave her, Madge, and Thomas Black, intended to go back to +Europe via San Francisco and the United States. + +But whilst they were still altogether, the Lieutenant, addressing Mrs +Barnett, said with considerable emotion— + +“God bless you, madam, for all you have been to us. You have been our +comforter, our consoler, the very soul of our little world; and I thank +you in the name of all.” + +Three cheers for Mrs Barnett greeted this speech, and each soldier +begged to shake her by the hand, whilst the women embraced her +affectionately. + +The Lieutenant himself had conceived so warm an affection for the lady +who had so long been his friend and counsellor, that he could not bid +her good-bye without great emotion. + +“Can it be that we shall never meet again?” he exclaimed. + +“No, Lieutenant,” replied Mrs Barnett;” we must, we shall meet +again. If you do not come and see me in Europe, I will come back to you +at Fort Reliance, or to the new factory you will found some day yet.” + +On hearing this, Thomas Black, who had regained the use of his tongue +since he had landed on terra firma, came forward and said, with an air +of the greatest conviction— + +“Yes, we shall meet again in thirty-six years. My friends, I missed +the eclipse of 1860, but I will not miss that which will take place +under exactly similar conditions in the same latitudes in 1896. And +therefore I appoint a meeting with you, Lieutenant, and with you, +my dear madam, on the confines of the Arctic Ocean thirty six years +hence.” + +End of Part II + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fur Country, by Jules Verne + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FUR COUNTRY *** + +This file should be named 8991-0.txt or 8991-0.zip + +Produced by N. Wolcott + +Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US unless +a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not keep eBooks in +compliance with any particular paper edition. + +We are now trying to release all our eBooks one year in advance of +the official release dates, leaving time for better editing. 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FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END* + + + diff --git a/8991-0.zip b/8991-0.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5156b63 --- /dev/null +++ b/8991-0.zip diff --git a/8991-h.zip b/8991-h.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..35c7e16 --- /dev/null +++ b/8991-h.zip diff --git a/8991-h/8991-h.htm b/8991-h/8991-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..734fb3f --- /dev/null +++ b/8991-h/8991-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,23336 @@ +<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN"> +<html><head><title>The FurCountry by Jules Verne</title> + +<meta content="MSHTML 6.00.2600.0" name="GENERATOR"> + +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8"> + +<style type="text/css">BODY { + + BACKGROUND: #ffffec; FONT-FAMILY: Bookman Old Style + +} + +P { + + TEXT-INDENT: 2ex + +} + +H4 { + + TEXT-ALIGN: center + +} + +</style> + +</head> + + +<body> + + +<pre> +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fur Country, by Jules Verne +#31 in our series by Jules Verne + +Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the +copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing +this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook. + +This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project +Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the +header without written permission. + +Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the +eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is +important information about your specific rights and restrictions in +how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a +donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved. + + +**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** + +**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** + +*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!***** + + +Title: The Fur Country + Seventy Degrees North Latitude + +Author: Jules Verne + +Release Date: September, 2005 [EBook #8991] +Last Updated: December 31, 2018 + +Edition: 10 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: UTF-8 + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FUR COUNTRY *** + + + + +Produced by N. Wolcott + +Linked table of contents provided by David Widger + + + +</pre> + + +<h4>THE FUR COUNTRY by Jules Verne</h4> + +<p><b>[Redactor's Note:</b> <i>The Fur Country</i>(Number <b>V010</b> in the + +T&M numerical listing of Verne's works) is a translation of <i>Le Pays de + +fourrures</i> (1873) first published in England by Sampson and Low and in the + +United States by James Osgood (1874). The translation is by N. d'Anvers, a + +pseudonym for Mrs. Arthur Bell (d. 1933) who also translated other works of + +Jules Verne. Other translations of this work are by Henry Frith (George + +Routledge, 1879) and Edward Baxter (New Canada Press, 1987).</p> + +<p>A listing of the illustrations in the original editions is provided as well + +as a table of contents for each part. The illustrations are assigned numbers + +which refer to the part of the book, chapter, and order (a,b,c etc.) for use + +when an illustrated version is created.</p> + +<p>This redaction is by N. Wolcott (nwolcott2@post.harvard.edu) who assumes all + +responsibility for errors of omission or commission. <b>]</b></p> + +<hr> + +<br> + +<h4>THE FUR COUNTRY</h4> + +<h4>or</h4> + +<h4>Seventy Degrees North Latitude</h4> + +<p align="center"><i>Translated from the French of Jules Verne</i></p> + +<p align="center">BY</p> + +<p align="center">N. D'ANVERS</p> + +<p align="center">With One Hundred Illustrations</p> + +<p align="center">1874</p> + +<hr> + +<br> + +<h4 align="center">TO MY NEPHEWS</h4> + +<p align="center">HERBERT, EDGAR, AND ROBERT</p> + +<p align="center">This Translation</p> + +<p align="center">is</p> + +<p align="center">AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED,</p> + +<p align="right">N. D'ANVERS </p> + +<p>Clapham, 1873</p> + +<hr> + +<br> + +<h4>THE FUR COUNTRY.</h4> + +<h4>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.</h4> + +<table width="85%" border="1" align="center" cellspacing="1"> + + <tbody> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-01-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Mrs Joliffe served out slice after slice"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-01-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>Lieutenant Hobson and Sergeant Long</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-01-c</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"The Corporal, match in hand, awaited the order of his + + Captain"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-02-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>The arrival of Thomas Black</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-02-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>A savant thawed</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-03-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>Thomas Black introduces himself</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-04-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>The start from Fort Reliancce</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-04-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Lieutenant Hobson and the Sergeant led the way,"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-05-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>Corporal Joliffe proves his skill in driving,</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-05-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>The beginning of the thaw</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-05-c</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>The effects of the thaw</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-06-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>A wapiti duel</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-06-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"To the icebergs! to the icebergs!"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-06-c</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"There were bears prowling in the pass"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-07-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>The Hare Indians</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-08-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>A storm on the lake</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-08-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Hobson uttered a last despairing cry!"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-08-c</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>Saved!</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-09-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>The mouth of the Coppermine River</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-09-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Thousands of birds were shot"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-10-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>Traces of an encampment</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-11-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>The footprints of a dancer</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-11-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>A temporary encampment</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-12-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"I promise you double pay"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-12-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>The site of the fort</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-12-c</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>Collecting materials for the new factory</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-13-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>A hunting party</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-14-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>Sergeant Long and Madge fishing</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-14-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"From this position they were able," &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-15-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>A Morse Hunt</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-16-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>Walrus Bay</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-16-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>Two shots</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-16-c</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>Rival claimants</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-17-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"A new country was springing into being"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-17-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"A kind of fete was held"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-18-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Mrs Barnett read aloud"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-18-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"The dogs rushed out" &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-19-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"The body was hauled up" &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-19-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>Some living creatures came out of the hut</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-19-c</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"She ran up to it" &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-20-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"It is more beautiful than an Aurora Borealis!"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-21-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"The bears were walking about on the roof"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-21-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Mrs Barnett pressed the brave man's hand"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-21-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Mrs Barnett discharged the contents" &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-21-d</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Mingled howls and screams were heard"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-22-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Just look at our house now!"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-22-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"The ice burst" &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-22-c</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Its waters were still sweet" &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-23-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"He might be seen standing motionless and silent"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-23-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"All might watch the progress of the phenomenon"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-23-c</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Please, sir, it's because of the pay"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>I-23-d</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"He shook his fist at the sun"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-02-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"I think not"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-02-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"The carpenter fixed upon the beach" &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-02-c</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Thomas Black would not even join the exploring party"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-03-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"They breakfasted" &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-03-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Numerous furred animals" &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-04-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"He was able to look closely at the steep wall" &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-04-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Keep hold!"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-04-c</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Corporal Joliffe was extremely fond of him"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-05-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Thanks to the Corporal's unwearying exertions"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-05-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"We are sinking gradually"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-06-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Hobson remained crouching" &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-060b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"The Lieutenant promised" &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-07-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Not that way"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-07-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Sergeant! Where are you?"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-07-c</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"We saw their fire; they will see ours!"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-08-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Look, Madge, look!"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-08-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"The bear seized Kalumah by the clothes"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-08-c</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"It was the young Esquimaux girl Kalumah"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-09-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>She murmured, 'Mrs Barnett'</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-09-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"The waves dashed over her kayak"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-09-c</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"She covered him with kisses"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-10-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"The Lieutenant tied round their necks"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-10-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Hobson was in dismay"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-11-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"The wolves came within musket range"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-11-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"We knew it, sir!"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-12-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"It was a Polar bear"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-12-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Two large waggon sledges were built"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-13-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Some of the icebergs assumed extraordinary forms"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-13-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"We must pass somehow"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-14-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Marbre flung his running noose skilfully,"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-14-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Everybody started back"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-15-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"It was dashed upon the ice-field with a fearful crash"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-15-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"I think it is time to retrace our steps"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-16-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"It is a frost-rime"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-16-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"He took the altitude"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-17-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"When an unexpected noise"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-17-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"It was like an army of icebergs" &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-18-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Poor things! poor things!"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-18-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"And a figure appeared" &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-19-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Examining the state of the sea" &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-19-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Mrs Barnett sobbed aloud"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-20-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"The lower framework was already floating"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-20-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"He escaped with a ducking"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-21-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"The embarkation of provisions, &c., had to be put off"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-22-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"He tightened them," &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-22-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"Mrs Barnett turned and looked Madge full in the face"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-23-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"A beam . . . sunk deep into the earth" &c.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-23-b</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>"The colonists, falling on their knees, returned thanks to + + God"</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="15%" valign="middle"> + + <p>II-24-a</p></td> + + <td width="85%" valign="middle"> + + <p>Kalumah and the bear</p></td></tr></tbody></table><br> + +<hr> + +<br> + +<h4>CONTENTS<br>Part I</h4> + +<table width="75%" border="1" align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1"> + + <tbody> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#I">I</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>A Soiree at Fort Reliance</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#II">II</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>The Hudson's Bay Fur Company</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#III">III</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>A Savant Thawed</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#IV">IV</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>A Factory</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#V">V</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>From Fort Reliance to Fort enterprise</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#VI">VI</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>A Wapiti Duel</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#VII">VII</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>The Arctic Circle</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#VIII">VIII</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>The Great Bear Lake</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#IX">IX</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>A Storm on the Lake</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#X">X</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>A Retrospect</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#XI">XI</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>Along the Coast</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#XII">XII</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>The Midnight Sun</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#XIII">XIII</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>Fort Hope</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#XIV">XIV</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>Some Excursions</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#XV">XV</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>Fifteen Miles from Cape Bathurst</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#XVI">XVI</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>Two Shots</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#XVII">XVII</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>The Approach of Winter</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#XVIII">XVIII</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>The Polar Night</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#XIX">XIX</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>A Neighbourly Visit</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#XX">XX</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>Mercury Freezes</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#XXI">XXI</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>The Large Polar Bears</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#XXII">XXII</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>Five Months More</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="22%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#XXIII">XXIII</a></p></td> + + <td width="78%" valign="top"> + + <p>The Eclipse of the 18th June 1860</p></td></tr></tbody></table><br> + +<hr> + +<br> + +<a name="I" id="I"></a> + +<h4>CHAPTER I.</h4> + +<h4><i>A SOIREE AT FORT RELIANCE.</i></h4> + +<p>On the evening of the 17th March 1859, Captain Craventy gave a fete at Fort + +Reliance. Our readers must not at once imagine a grand entertainment, such as a + +court ball, or a musical soiree with a fine orchestra. Captain Craventy's + +reception was a very simple affair, yet he had spared no pains to give it + +<i>eclat</i>.</p> + +<p>In fact, under the auspices of Corporal Joliffe, the large room on the + +ground-floor was completely transformed. The rough walls, constructed of + +roughly-hewn trunks of trees piled up horizontally, were still visible, it is + +true, but their nakedness was disguised by arms and armour, borrowed from the + +arsenal of the fort, and by an English tent at each corner of the room. Two + +lamps suspended by chains, like chandeliers, and provided with tin reflectors, + +relieved the gloomy appearance of the blackened beams of the ceiling, and + +sufficiently illuminated the misty atmosphere of the room. The narrow windows, + +some of them mere loop-holes, were so encrusted with hoar-frost, that it was + +impossible to look through them; but two or three pieces of red bunting, tastily + +arranged about them, challenged the admiration of all who entered. The floor, of + +rough joists of wood laid parallel with each other, had been carefully swept by + +Corporal Joliffe. No sofas, chairs, or other modern furniture, impeded the free + +circulation of the guests. Wooden benches half fixed against the walls, huge + +blocks of wood cut with the axe, and two tables with clumsy legs, were all the + +appliances of luxury the saloon could boast of. But the partition wall, with a + +narrow door leading into the next room, was decorated in a style alike costly + +and picturesque. From the beams hung magnificent furs admirably arranged, the + +equal of which could not be seen in the more favoured regions of Regent Street + +or the Perspective-Newski. It seemed as if the whole fauna of the ice-bound + +North were here represented by their finest skins. The eye wandered from the + +furs of wolves, grey bears, polar bears, otters, wolverenes, beavers, muskrats, + +water pole-cats, ermines, and silver foxes; and above this display was an + +inscription in brilliantly-coloured and artistically shaped cardboard-the motto + +of the world-famous Hudson's Bay Company-</p> + +<p align="center">"PROPELLE CUTUM."</p> + +<p>"Really, Corporal Joliffe, you have surpassed yourself !" said Captain + +Craventy to his subordinate.</p> + +<p>"I think I have, I think I have !" replied the Corporal; "but honour to whom + +honour is due, Mrs Joliffe deserves part of your commendation; she assisted me + +in everything."</p> + +<p>"A wonderful woman, Corporal."</p> + +<p>"Her equal is not to be found, Captain."</p> + +<p>An immense brick and earthenware stove occupied the centre of the room, with + +a huge iron pipe passing from it through the ceiling, and conducting the dense + +black smoke into the outer air. This stove contained a roaring fire constantly + +fed with fresh shovelfuls of coal by the stoker, an old soldier specially + +appointed to the service. Now and then a gust of wind drove back a volume of + +smoke into the room, dimming the brightness of the lamps, and adding fresh + +blackness to the beams of the ceiling, whilst tongues of flame shot forth from + +the stove. But the guests of Fort Reliance thought little of this slight + +inconvenience; the stove warmed them, and they could not pay too dearly for its + +cheering heat, so terribly cold was it outside in the cutting north wind.</p> + +<p>The storm could be heard raging without, the snow fell fast, becoming rapidly + +solid and coating the already frosted window panes with fresh ice. The whistling + +wind made its way through the cranks and chinks of the doors and windows, and + +occasionally the rattling noise drowned every other sound. Presently an awful + +silence ensued. Nature seemed to be taking breath; but suddenly the squall + +recommenced with terrific fury. The house was shaken to its foundations, the + +planks cracked, the beams groaned. A stranger less accustomed than the + +<i>habitues</i> of the fort to the war of the elements, would have asked if the + +end of the world were come.</p> + +<p>But, with two exceptions, Captain Craventy's guests troubled themselves + +little about the weather, and if they had been outside they would have felt no + +more fear than the stormy petrels disporting themselves in the midst of the + +tempest. Two only of the assembled company did not belong to the ordinary + +society of the neighbourhood, two women, whom we shall introduce when we have + +enumerated Captain Craventy's other guests: these were, Lieutenant Jaspar + +Hobson, Sergeant Long, Corporal Joliffe, and his bright active Canadian wife, a + +certain Mac-Nab and his wife, both Scotch, John Rae, married to an Indian woman + +of the country, and some sixty soldiers or employes of the Hudson's Bay Company. + +The neighbouring forts also furnished their contingent of guests, for in these + +remote lands people look upon each other as neighbours although their homes may + +be a hundred miles apart. A good many employes or traders came from Fort + +Providence or Fort Resolution, of the Great Slave Lake district, and even from + +Fort Chippeway and Fort Liard further south. A rare break like this in the + +monotony of their secluded lives, in these hyberborean regions, was joyfully + +welcomed by all the exiles, and even a few Indian chiefs, about a dozen, had + +accepted Captain Craventy's invitation. They were not, however, accompanied by + +their wives, the luckless squaws being still looked upon as little better than + +slaves. The presence of these natives is accounted for by the fact that they are + +in constant intercourse with the traders, and supply the greater number of furs + +which pass through the hands of the Hudson's Bay Company, in exchange for other + +commodities. They are mostly Chippeway Indians, well grown men with hardy + +constitutions. Their complexions are of the peculiar reddish black colour always + +ascribed in Europe to the evil spirits of fairyland. They wear very picturesque + +cloaks of skins and mantles of fur, with a head-dress of eagle's feathers spread + +out like a lady's fan, and quivering with every motion of their thick black + +hair.</p> + +<p>Such was the company to whom the Captain was doing the honours of Fort + +Reliance. There was no dancing for want of music, but the "buffet" admirably + +supplied the want of the hired musicians of the European balls. On the table + +rose a pyramidal pudding made by Mrs Joliffe's own hands; it was an immense + +truncated cone, composed of flour, fat, rein-deer venison, and musk beef. The + +eggs, milk, and citron prescribed in recipe books were, it is true, wanting, but + +their absence was atoned for by its huge proportions. Mrs Joliffe served out + +slice after slice with liberal hands, yet there remained enough and to spare. + +Piles of sandwiches also figured on the table, in which ship biscuits took the + +place of thin slices of English bread and butter, and dainty morsels of corned + +beef that of the ham and stuffed veal of the old world. The sharp teeth of the + +Chippeway Indians made short work of the tough biscuits; and for drink there was + +plenty of whisky and gin handed round in little pewter pots, not to speak of a + +great bowl of punch which was to close the entertainment, and of which the + +Indians talked long afterwards in their wigwams.</p> + +<p>Endless were the compliments paid to the Joliffes that evening, but they + +deserved them; how zealously they waited on the guests, with what easy grace + +they distributed the refreshments! They did not need prompting, they anticipated + +the wishes of each one. The sandwiches were succeeded by slices of the + +inexhaustible pudding, the pudding by glasses of gin or whisky.</p> + +<p>"No, thank you, Mr Joliffe."</p> + +<p>"You are too good, Corporal; but let me have time to breathe."</p> + +<p>"Mrs Joliffe, I assure you, I can eat no more."</p> + +<p>"Corporal Joliffe, I am at your mercy."</p> + +<p>"No more, Mrs Joliffe, no more, thank you!"</p> + +<p>Such were the replies met with on every side by the zealous pair, but their + +powers of persuasion were such that the most reluctant yielded in the end. The + +quantities of food and drink consumed were really enormous. The hubbub of + +conversation increased. The soldiery and employes became excited. Here the talk + +was of hunting, there of trade. What plans were laid for next season! The entire + +fauna of the Arctic regions would scarcely supply game enough for these + +enterprising hunters. They already saw bears, foxes, and musk oxen, falling + +beneath their bullets, and pole-cats by hundreds caught in their traps. Their + +imagination pictured the costly furs piled up in the magazines of the Company, + +which was this year to realise hitherto unheard of profits. And whilst the + +spirits thus freely circulated inflamed the imagination of the Europeans, the + +large doses of Captain Craventy's "fire-water" imbibed by the Indians had an + +opposite effect. Too proud to show admiration, too cautious to make promises, + +the taciturn chiefs listened gravely and silently to the babel of voices around + +them.</p> + +<p>The captain enjoying the hurly burly, and pleased to see the poor people, + +brought back as it were to the civilised world, enjoying themselves so + +thoroughly, was here, there, and everywhere, answering all inquiries about the + +fete with the words</p> + +<p>"Ask Joliffe, ask Joliffe !"</p> + +<p>And they asked Joliffe, who had a gracious word for every body.</p> + +<p>Some of those employed in the garrison and civil service of Fort Reliance + +must here receive a few words of special notice, for they were presently to go + +through experiences of a most terrible nature, which no human perspicacity could + +possibly have foreseen. Amongst others we must name Lieutenant Jaspar Hobson, + +Sergeant Long, Corporal and Mrs Joliffe, and the two foreign women already + +alluded to, in whose honour Captain Craventy's fete was given.</p> + +<p>Jaspar Hobson was a man of forty years of age. He was short and slight, with + +little muscular power; but a force of will which carried him successfully + +through all trials, and enabled him to rise superior to adverse circumstances. + +He was " a child of the Company." His father, Major Hobson, an Irishman from + +Dublin, who had now been dead for some time, lived for many years at Fort + +Assiniboin with his wife. There Jaspar Hobson was born. His childhood and youth + +were spent at the foot of the Rocky Mountains. His father brought him up + +strictly, and he became a man in self-control and courage whilst yet a boy in + +years. Jaspar Hobson was no mere hunter, but a soldier, a brave and intelligent + +officer. During the struggles in Oregon of the Hudson's Bay Company with the + +rival companies of the Union, he distinguished himself by his zeal and + +intrepidity, and rapidly rose to the rank of lieutenant. His well-known merit + +led to his appointment to the command of an expedition to the north, the aim of + +which was to explore the northern shores of the Great Bear Lake, and to found a + +fort on the confines of the American continent. Jaspar Hobson was to set out on + +his journey early in April.</p> + +<p>If the lieutenant was the type of a good officer, Sergeant Long was that of a + +good soldier. He was a man of fifty years of age, with a rough beard that looked + +as if it were made of cocoa-nut fibre. Constitutionally brave, and disposed to + +obey rather than to command. He had no ambition but to obey the orders he + +received never questioning them, however strange they might appear, never + +reasoning for himself when on duty for the Company-a true machine in uniform; + +but a perfect machine, never wearing out; ever on the march, yet never showing + +signs of fatigue. Perhaps Sergeant Long was rather hard upon his men, as he was + +upon himself. He would not tolerate the slightest infraction of discipline, and + +mercilessly ordered men into confinement for the slightest neglect, whilst he + +himself had never been reprimanded. In a word, he was a man born to obey, and + +this self-annihilation suited his passive temperament. Men such as he are the + +materials of which a formidable army is formed. They are the arms of the + +service, obeying a single head. Is not this the only really powerful + +organisation? The two types of fabulous mythology, Briareus with a hundred arms + +and Hydra with a hundred heads, well represent the two kinds of armies; and in a + +conflict between them, which would be victorious? Briareus without a doubt !</p> + +<p>We have already made acquaintance with Corporal Joliffe. He was the busy bee + +of the party, but it was pleasant to hear him humming. He would have made a + +better major-domo than a soldier; and he was himself aware of this. So he called + +himself the " Corporal in charge of details," but he would have lost himself a + +hundred times amongst these details, had not little Mrs Joliffe guided him with + +a firm hand. So it came to pass, that Corporal Joliffe obeyed his wife without + +owning it, doubtless thinking to himself, like the philosopher Sancho, "a + +woman's advice is no such great thing, but he must be a fool who does not listen + +to it."</p> + +<p>It is now time to say a few words of the two foreign women already alluded to + +more than once. They were both about forty years old, and one of them well + +deserved to take first rank amongst celebrated female travellers. The name of + +Paulina Barnett, the rival of the Pfeiffers, Tinnis, and Haimaires of Hull, has + +been several times honourably mentioned at the meetings of the Royal + +Geographical Society. In her journeys up the Brahmaputra, as far as the + +mountains of Thibet, across an unknown corner of New Holland, from Swan Bay to + +the Gulf of Carpentaria, Paulina Barnett had given proof of the qualities of a + +great traveller. She had been a widow for fifteen years, and her passion for + +travelling led her constantly to explore new lands. She was tall, and her face, + +framed in long braids of hair, already touched with white, was full of energy. + +She was near-sighted, and a double eye-glass rested upon her long straight nose, + +with its mobile nostrils. We must confess that her walk was somewhat masculine, + +and her whole appearance was suggestive of moral power, rather than of female + +grace. She was an Englishwoman from Yorkshire, possessed of some fortune, the + +greater part of which was expended in adventurous expeditions, and some new + +scheme of exploration had now brought her to Fort Reliance. Having crossed the + +equinoctial regions, she was doubtless anxious to penetrate to the extreme + +limits of the hyperborean. Her presence at the fort was an event. The governor + +of the Company had given her a special letter of recommendation to Captain + +Craventy, according to which the latter was to do all in his power to forward + +the design of the celebrated traveller to reach the borders of the Arctic Ocean. + +A grand enterprise! To follow in the steps of Hearne, Mackenzie, Rae, Franklin, + +and others. What fatigues, what trials, what dangers would have to be gone + +through in the conflict with the terrible elements of the Polar climate! How + +could a woman dare to venture where so many explorers have drawn back or + +perished? But the stranger now shut up in Fort Reliance was no ordinary woman; + +she was Paulina Barnett, a laureate of the Royal Society.</p> + +<p>We must add that the celebrated traveller was accompanied by a servant named + +Madge. This faithful creature was not merely a servant, but a devoted and + +courageous friend, who lived only for her mistress. A Scotchwoman of the old + +type, whom a Caleb might have married without loss of dignity. Madge was about + +five years older than Mrs Barnett, and was tall and strongly built. The two were + +on the most intimate terms; Paulina looked upon Madge as an elder sister, and + +Madge treated Paulina as her daughter.</p> + +<p>It was in honour of Paulina Barnett that Captain Craventy was this evening + +treating his employes and the Chippeway Indians. In fact, the lady traveller was + +to join the expedition of Jaspar Hobson for the exploration of the north. It was + +for Paulina Barnett that the large saloon of the factory resounded with joyful + +hurrahs. And it was no wonder that the stove consumed a hundredweight of coal on + +this memorable evening, for the cold outside was twenty-four degrees Fahrenheit + +below zero, and Fort Reliance is situated in 61? 47' N. Lat., at least four + +degrees from the Polar circle.</p> +<a name="II" id="II"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER II.</h4> + +<h4><i>THE HUDSON'S BAY FUR COMPANY</i>.</h4> + +<p>"Captain Craventy?"</p> + +<p>"Mrs Barnett?"</p> + +<p>What do you think of your Lieutenant, Jaspar Hobson?"</p> + +<p>"I think he is an officer who will go far."</p> + +<p>"What do you mean by the words, Will go far? Do you mean that he will go + +beyond the Twenty-fourth parallel?"</p> + +<p>Captain Craventy could not help smiling at Mrs Paulina Barnett's question. + +They were talking together near the stove, whilst the guests were passing + +backwards and forwards between the eating and drinking tables.</p> + +<p>"Madam," replied the Captain, "all that a man can do, will be done by Jaspar + +Hobson. The Company has charged him to explore the north of their possessions, + +and to establish a factory as near as possible to the confines of the American + +continent, and he will establish it."</p> + +<p>"That is a great responsibility for Lieutenant Hobson !" said the + +traveller.</p> + +<p>"It is, madam, but Jaspar Hobson has never yet drawn back from a task imposed + +upon him, however formidable it may have appeared."</p> + +<p>"I can quite believe it, Captain," replied Mrs Barnett, "and we shall now see + +the Lieutenant at work. But what induces the Company to construct a fort on the + +shores of the Arctic Ocean?"</p> + +<p>"They have a powerful motive, madam," replied the Captain.</p> + +<p>"I may add a double motive. At no very distant date, Russia will probably + +cede her American possessions to the Government of the United States. [*1] When + +this cession has taken place, the Company will find access to the Pacific Ocean + +extremely difficult, unless the North-west passage discovered by Mc'Clure be + +practicable. [*1 Captain Craventy's prophecy has since been realised.] Fresh + +explorations will decide this, for the Admiralty is about to send a vessel which + +will coast along the North American continent, from Behring Strait to Coronation + +Gulf, on the eastern side of which the new-Art is to be established. If the + +enterprise succeed, this point will become an important factory, the centre of + +the northern fur trade. The transport of furs across the Indian territories + +involves a vast expenditure of time and money, whereas, if the new route be + +available, steamers will take them from the new fort to the Pacific Ocean in a + +few days."</p> + +<p>"That would indeed be an important result of the enterprise, if this + +North-west passage can really be used," replied Mrs Paulina Barnett; "but I + +think you spoke of a double motive."</p> + +<p>"I did, madam," said the Captain, "and I alluded to a matter of vital + +interest to the Company. But I must beg of you to allow me to explain to you in + +a few words how the present state of things came about, how it is in fact that + +the very source of the trade of this once flourishing Company is in danger of + +destruction."</p> + +<p>The Captain then proceeded to give a brief sketch of the history of the + +famous Hudson's Bay Company.</p> + +<p>In the earliest times men employed the skins and furs of animals as clothing. + +The fur trade is therefore of very great antiquity. Luxury in dress increased to + +such an extent, that sumptuary laws were enacted to control too great + +extravagance, especially in furs, for which there was a positive passion. Vair + +and the furs of Siberian squirrels were prohibited at the middle of the 12th + +century.</p> + +<p>In 1553 Russia founded several establishments in the northern steppes, and + +England lost no time in following her example. The trade in sables, ermines, and + +beavers, was carried on through the agency of the Samoiedes; but during the + +reign of Elizabeth, a royal decree restricted the use of costly furs to such an + +extent, that for several years this branch of industry was completely + +paralysed.</p> + +<p>On the 2nd May, 1670, a licence to trade in furs in the Hudson's Bay + +Territory was granted to the Company, which numbered several men of high rank + +amongst its shareholders : the Duke of York, the Duke of Albemarle, the Earl of + +Shaftesbury, &c. Its capital was then only ?8420. Private companies were + +formidable rivals to its success; and French agents, making Canada their + +headquarters, ventured on hazardous but most lucrative expeditions. The active + +competition of these bold hunters threatened the very existence of the infant + +Company.</p> + +<p>The conquest of Canada, however, somewhat lessened the danger of its + +position. Three years after the taking of Quebec, 1776, the fur trade received a + +new impulse. English traders became familiar with the difficulties of trade of + +this kind; they learned the customs of the country, the ways of the Indians and + +their system of exchange of goods, but for all this the Company as yet made no + +profits whatever. Moreover, towards 1784 some merchants of Montreal combined to + +explore the fur country, and founded that powerful North-west Company, which + +soon became the centre of the fur trade. In 1798 the new Company shipped furs to + +the value of no less than ?120,000, and the existence of the Hudson's Bay + +Company was again threatened.</p> + +<p>We must add, that the North-west Company shrank from no act, however + +iniquitous, if its interests were at stake. Its agents imposed on their own + +employes, speculated on the misery of the Indians, robbed them when they had + +themselves made them drunk, setting at defiance the Act of Parliament forbidding + +the sale of spirituous liquors on Indian territory; and consequently realising + +immense profits, in spite of the competition of the various Russian and American + +companies which had sprung up-the American Fur Company amongst others, founded + +in 1809, with a capital of a million of dollars, which was carrying on + +operations on the west of the Rocky Mountains.</p> + +<p>The Hudson's Bay Company was probably in greater danger of ruin than any + +other; but in 1821, after much discussion, a treaty was made, in accordance with + +which its old rival the North-west Company became amalgamated with it, the two + +receiving the common title of "The Hudson's Bay Fur Company."</p> + +<p>Now the only rival of this important association is the American St Louis Fur + +Company. The Hudson's Bay Company has numerous establishments scattered over a + +domain extending over 3,700,000 square miles. Its principal factories are + +situated on James Bay, at the mouth of the Severn, in the south, and towards the + +frontiers of Upper Canada, on Lakes Athapeskow, Winnipeg, Superior, Methye, + +Buffalo, and near the Colombia, Mackenzie, Saskatchewan, and Assiniboin rivers, + +&c. Fort York, commanding the course of the river Nelson, is the + +headquarters of the Company, and contains its principal fur depot. Moreover, in + +1842 it took a lease of all the Russian establishments in North America at an + +annual rent of ?40,000, so that it is now working on its own account the vast + +tracts of country between the Mississippi and the Pacific Ocean. It has sent out + +intrepid explorers in every direction: Hearne, towards the Polar Sea, in 1770, + +to the discovery of the Coppermine River; Franklin, in 1819 to 1822, along 5550 + +miles of the American coast; Mackenzie, who, after having discovered the river + +to which he gave his name, reached the shores of the Pacific at 52? 24' N. Lat. + +The following is a list of the quantities of skins and furs despatched to Europe + +by the Hudson's Bay Company in 1833-34, which will give an exact idea of the + +extent of its trade:-</p><pre> Beavers . . . . . . . . . . . 1,074 + + Skins and young Beavers,. . 92,288 + + Musk Rats,. . . . . . . . . 694,092 + + Badgers,. . . . . . . . . . 1,069 + + Bears,. . . . . . . . . . . 7,451 + + Ermines,. . . . . . . . . . 491 + + Foxes, . . . . . . . . . . . 9,937 + + Lynxes, . . . . . . . . . . 14,255 + + Sables, . . . . . . . . . . 64,490 + + Polecats, . . . . . . . . . 25,100 + + Otters, . . . . . . . . . . 22,303 + + Racoons,. . . . . . . . . . 713 + + Swans, . . . . . . . . . . 7,918 + + Wolves, . . . . . . . . . . 8,484 + + Wolverines, . . . . . . . . 1,571 + +</pre> + +<p>Such figures ought to bring in a large profit to the Hudson's Bay Company, + +but unfortunately they have not been maintained, and for the last twenty years + +have been decreasing.</p> + +<p>The cause of this decline was the subject of Captain Craventy's explanation + +to Mrs Paulina Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Until 1839, madam," said he, "the Company was in a flourishing condition. In + +that year the number of furs exported was 2,350,000, but since then the trade + +has gradually declined, and this number is now reduced by one-half at + +least."</p> + +<p>"But what do you suppose is the cause of this extraordinary decrease in the + +exportation of furs?" inquired Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"The depopulation of the hunting territories, caused by the activity, and, I + +must add, the want of foresight of the hunters. The game was trapped and killed + +without mercy. These massacres were conducted in the most reckless and + +short-sighted fashion. Even females with young and their little ones did not + +escape. The consequence is, that the animals whose fur is valuable have become + +extremely rare. The otter has almost entirely disappeared, and is only to be + +found near the islands of the North Pacific. Small colonies of beavers have + +taken refuge on the shores of the most distant rivers. It is the same with many + +other animals, compelled to flee before the invasion of the hunters. The traps, + +once crowded with game, are now empty. The price of skins is rising just when a + +great demand exists for furs. Hunters have gone away in disgust, leaving none + +but the most intrepid and indefatigable, who now penetrate to the very confines + +of the American continent."</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Mrs Paulina Barnett, "the fact of the fur-bearing animals having + +taken refuge beyond the polar circle, is a sufficient explanation of the + +Company's motive in founding a factory on the borders of the Arctic Ocean."</p> + +<p>"Not only so, madam," replied the Captain, "the Company is also compelled to + +seek a more northern centre of operations, for an Act of Parliament has lately + +greatly reduced its domain."</p> + +<p>"And the motive for this reduction?" inquired the traveller.</p> + +<p>"A very important question of political economy was involved, madam; one + +which could not fail greatly to interest the statesmen of Great Britain. In a + +word, the interests of the Company and those of civilisation are antagonistic. + +It is to the interest of the Company to keep the territory belonging to it in a + +wild uncultivated condition. Every attempt at clearing ground was pitilessly put + +a stop to, as it drove away the wild animals, so that the monopoly enjoyed by + +the Hudson's Bay Company was detrimental to all agricultural enterprise. All + +questions not immediately relating to their own particular trade, were + +relentlessly put aside by the governors of the association. It was this + +despotic, and, in a certain sense, immoral system, which provoked the measures + +taken by Parliament, and, in 1837, a commission appointed by the Colonial + +Secretary decided that it was necessary to annex to Canada all the territories + +suitable for cultivation, such as the Red River and Saskatchewan districts, and + +to leave to the Company only that portion of its land which appeared to be + +incapable of future civilisation. The next year the Company lost the western + +slopes of the Rocky Mountains, which it held direct from the Colonial Office, + +and you will now understand, madam, how the agents of the Company, having lost + +their power over their old territories, are determined before giving up their + +trade to try to work the little known countries of the north, and so open a + +communication with the Pacific by means of the North-west passage."</p> + +<p>Mrs Paulina Barnett was now well informed as to the ulterior projects of the + +celebrated Company. Captain Craventy had given her a graphic sketch of the + +situation, and it is probable he would have entered into further details, had + +not an incident cut short his harangue.</p> + +<p>Corporal Joliffe announced in a loud voice that, with Mrs Joliffe's + +assistance, he was about to mix the punch. This news was received as it + +deserved. The bowl-or rather, the basin-was filled with the precious liquid. It + +contained no less than ten pints of coarse rum. Sugar, measured out by Mrs + +Joliffe, was piled up at the bottom, and on the top floated slices of lemon + +shrivelled with age. Nothing remained to be done but to light this alcoholic + +lake, and the Corporal, match in hand, awaited the order of his Captain, as if + +he were about to spring a mine.</p> + +<p>"All right, Joliffe !" at last said Captain Craventy.</p> + +<p>The light was applied to the bowl, and in a moment the punch was in flames, + +whilst the guests applauded and clapped their hands. Ten minutes afterwards, + +full glasses of the delightful beverage were circulating amongst the guests, + +fresh bidders for them coming forward in endless succession, like speculators on + +the Stock Exchange.</p> + +<p>"Hurrah! hurrah! hurrah! three cheers for Mrs Barnett! A cheer for the + +Captain."</p> + +<p>In the midst of these joyful shouts cries were heard from outside. Silence + +immediately fell upon the company assembled.</p> + +<p>"Sergeant Long," said the Captain, "go and see what is the matter."</p> + +<p>And at his chief's order, the Sergeant, leaving his glass unfinished, left + +the room.</p> +<a name="III" id="III"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER III.</h4> + +<h4><i>A SAVANT THAWED.</i></h4> + +<p>Sergeant Long hastened to the narrow passage from which opened the outer door + +of the fort, and heard the cries redoubled, and combined with violent blows on + +the postern gate, surrounded by high walls, which gave access to the court. The + +Sergeant pushed open the door, and plunging into the snow, already a foot deep; + +he waded through it, although half-blinded by the cutting sleet, and nipped by + +the terrible cold.</p> + +<p>"What the devil does any one want at this time of night?" exclaimed the + +Sergeant to himself, as he mechanically removed the heavy bars of the gate; + +"none but Esquimaux would dare to brave such a temperature as this!"</p> + +<p>"Open! open! open!" they shouted from without.</p> + +<p>"I am opening," replied Sergeant Long, who really seemed to be a long time + +about it.</p> + +<p>At last the door swung open, and the Sergeant was almost upset by a sledge, + +drawn by six dogs, which dashed past him like a flash of lightning. Worthy + +Sergeant Long only just escaped being crushed, but he got up without a murmur, + +closed the gate, and returned to the house at his ordinary pace, that is to say, + +at the rate of seventy-five strides a minute.</p> + +<p>But Captain Craventy, Lieutenant Jaspar Hobson, and Corporal Joliffe were + +already outside, braving the intense cold, and staring at the sledge, white with + +snow, which had just drawn up in front of them.</p> + +<p>A man completely enveloped in furs now descended from it,</p> + +<p>"Fort Reliance?;" he inquired.</p> + +<p>"The same," replied the Captain.</p> + +<p>"Captain Craventy?"</p> + +<p>"Behold him! Who are you?"</p> + +<p>"A courier of the Company."</p> + +<p>"Are you alone?"</p> + +<p>"No, I bring a traveller."</p> + +<p>"A traveller! And what does he want?"</p> + +<p>"He is come to see the moon."</p> + +<p>At this reply, Captain Craventy said to himself the man must be a fool. But + +there was no time to announce this opinion, for the courier had taken an inert + +mass from the sledge, a kind of bag covered with snow, and was about to carry it + +into the house, when the Captain inquired</p> + +<p>"What is that bag?"</p> + +<p>"It is my traveller," replied the courier.</p> + +<p>"Who is this traveller?"</p> + +<p>"The astronomer, Thomas Black."</p> + +<p>"But he is frozen."</p> + +<p>"Well, he must be thawed."</p> + +<p>Thomas Black, carried by the Sergeant, the Corporal, and the courier, now + +made his entrance into the house of the fort, and was taken to a room on the + +first floor, the temperature of which was bearable, thanks to a glowing stove. + +He was laid upon a bed, and the Captain took his hand.</p> + +<p>It was literally frozen. The wrappers and furred mantles, in which Thomas + +Black was rolled up like a parcel requiring care, were removed, and revealed a + +man of about fifty. He was short and stout, his hair was already touched with + +grey, his beard was untrimmed, his eyes were closed, and his lips pressed + +together as if glued to one another. If he breathed at all, it was so slightly + +that the frost-work on the windows would not have been affected by it. Joliffe + +undressed him, and turned him rapidly on to his face and back again, with the + +words-</p> + +<p>"Come, come, sir, when do you mean to return to consciousness?"</p> + +<p>But the visitor who had arrived in so strange a manner showed no signs of + +returning life, and Corporal Joliffe could think of no better means to restore + +the lost vital heat than to give him a bath in the bowl of hot punch.</p> + +<p>Very happily for Thomas Black, however, Lieutenant Jaspar Hobson had another + +idea.</p> + +<p>"Snow, bring snow!" he cried.</p> + +<p>There was plenty of it in the court of Fort Reliance; and whilst the Sergeant + +went to fetch the snow, Joliffe removed all the astronomer's clothes. The body + +of the unfortunate man was covered with white frost-bitten patches. It was + +urgently necessary to restore the circulation of the blood in the affected + +portions. This result Jaspar Hobson hoped to obtain by vigorous friction with + +the snow. We know that this is the means generally employed in the polar + +countries to set going afresh the circulation of the blood arrested by the + +intense cold, even as the rivers are arrested in their courses by the icy touch + +of winter. Sergeant Loin soon returned, and he and Joliffe gave the new arrival + +such a rubbing as he had probably never before received. It was no soft and + +agreeable friction, but a vigorous shampooing most lustily performed, more like + +the scratching of a curry-comb than the caresses of a human hand.</p> + +<p>And during the operation the loquacious Corporal continued to exhort the + +unconscious traveller.</p> + +<p>"Come, come, sir. What do you mean by getting frozen like this. Now, don't be + +so obstinate !"</p> + +<p>Probably it was obstinacy which kept Thomas Black from deigning to show a + +sign of life. At the end of half an hour the rubbers began to despair, and were + +about to discontinue their exhausting efforts, when the poor man sighed several + +times.</p> + +<p>"He lives; he is coming to !" cried Jaspar Hobson.</p> + +<p>After having warmed the outside of his body, Corporal Joliffe hurried to do + +the same for the inside, and hastily fetched a few glasses of the punch. The + +traveller really felt much revived by them; the colour returned to his cheeks, + +expression to his eyes, and words to his lips, so that Captain Craventy began to + +hope that he should have an explanation from Thomas Black himself of his strange + +arrival at the fort in such a terrible condition.</p> + +<p>At last the traveller, well covered with wraps, rose on his elbow, and said + +in a voice still faint</p> + +<p>"Fort Reliance?"</p> + +<p>"The same," replied the Captain.</p> + +<p>"Captain Craventy?"</p> + +<p>"He is before you, and is happy to bid you welcome. But may I inquire what + +brings you to Fort Reliance?"</p> + +<p>"He is come to see the moon," replied the courier, who evidently thought this + +a happy answer.</p> + +<p>It satisfied Thomas Black too, for he bent his head in assent and + +resumed-</p> + +<p>"Lieutenant Hobson?"</p> + +<p>"I am here," replied the Lieutenant.</p> + +<p>"You have not yet started?"</p> + +<p>"Not. yet, sir."</p> + +<p>"Then," replied Thomas Black, "I have only to thank you, and to go to sleep + +until to-morrow morning."</p> + +<p>The Captain and his companions retired, leaving their strange visitor to his + +repose. Half an hour later the <i>fete</i> was at an end, and the guests had + +regained their respective homes, either in the different rooms of the fort, or + +the scattered houses outside the enceinte.</p> + +<p>The next day Thomas Black was rather better. His vigorous constitution had + +thrown off the effects of the terrible chill he had had. Any one else would have + +died from it; but he was not like other men.</p> + +<p>And now who was this astronomer? Where did he come from? Why had he + +undertaken this journey across the territories of the Company in the depth of + +winter? What did the courier's reply signify?- To see the moon! The moon could + +be seen anywhere; there was no need to come to the hyperborean regions to look + +at it!</p> + +<p>Such were the thoughts which passed through Captain Craventy's mind. But the + +next day, after an hour's talk with his new guest, he had learned all he wished + +to know.</p> + +<p>Thomas Black was an astronomer attached to the Greenwich Observatory, so + +brilliantly presided over by Professor Airy. Mr Black was no theorist, but a + +sagacious and intelligent observer; and in the twenty years during which he had + +devoted himself to astronomy, he had rendered great services to the science of + +ouranography. In private life he was a simple nonentity; he existed only for + +astronomy; he lived in the heavens, not upon the earth; and was a true + +descendant of the witty La Fontaine's savant who fell into a well. He could talk + +of nothing but stars and constellations. He ought to have lived in a telescope. + +As an observer be had not his rival; his patience was inexhaustible; he could + +watch for months for a cosmical phenomenon. He had a specialty of his own, too; + +he had studied luminous meteors and shooting stars, and his discoveries in this + +branch of astronomical science were considerable. When ever minute observations + +or exact measurements and definitions were required, Thomas Black was chosen for + +the service; for his clearness of sight was something remarkable. The power of + +observation is not given to everyone, and it will not therefore be surprising + +that the Greenwich astronomer should have been chosen for the mission we are + +about to describe, which involved results so interesting for selenographic + +science.</p> + +<p>We know that during a total eclipse of the sun the moon is surrounded by a + +luminous corona. But what is the origin of this corona? Is it a real substance? + +or is it only an effect of the diffraction of the sun's rays near the moon? This + +is a question which science has hitherto been unable to answer.</p> + +<p>As early as 1706 this luminous halo was scientifically described. The corona + +was minutely examined during the total eclipse of 1715 by Lonville and Halley, + +by Maraldi in 1724, by Antonio de'Ulloa in 1778, and by Bonditch and Ferrer in + +1806; but their theories were so contradictory that no definite conclusion could + +be arrived at. During the total eclipse of 1842, learned men of all + +nations-Airy, Arago, Keytal, Langier, Mauvais, Otto, Struve, Petit, Baily, + +&c.-endeavoured to solve the mystery of the origin of the phenomenon; but in + +spite of all their efforts, "the disagreement," says Arago, "of the observations + +taken in different places by skilful astronomers of one and the same eclipse, + +have involved the question in fresh obscurity, so that it is now impossible to + +come to any certain conclusion as to the cause of the phenomenon." Since this + +was written, other total eclipses have been studied with no better results.</p> + +<p>Yet the solution of the question is of such vast importance to selenographic + +science that no price would be too great to pay for it. A fresh opportunity was + +now about to occur to study the much-discussed corona. A total eclipse of the + +sun-total, at least, for the extreme north of America, for Spain and North + +Africa-was to take place on July 18th, 1860. It was arranged between the + +astronomers of different countries that simultaneous observations should be + +taken at the various points of the zone where the eclipse would be total. Thomas + +Black was chosen for the expedition to North America, and was now much in the + +same situation as the English astronomers who were transported to Norway and + +Sweden on the occasion of the eclipse of 1851.</p> + +<p>It will readily be imagined that Thomas Black seized with avidity the + +opportunity offered him of studying this luminous halo. He was also to examine + +into the nature of the red prominences which appear on different parts of the + +edge of the terrestrial satellite when the totality of the eclipse has + +commenced; and should he be able satisfactorily to establish their origin, he + +would be entitled to the applause of the learned men of all Europe.</p> + +<p>Thomas Black eagerly prepared for his journey. He obtained urgent letters of + +recommendation to the principal agents of the Hudson's Bay Company. He + +ascertained that an expedition was to go to the extreme north of the continent + +to found a new fort. It was an opportunity not to be lost; so he set out, + +crossed the Atlantic, landed at New York, traversed the lakes to the Red River + +settlement, and pressed on from fort to fort in a sledge, under the escort of a + +courier of the Company; in spite of the severity of the winter, braving all the + +dangers of a journey across the Arctic regions, and arriving at Fort Reliance on + +the 19th March in the condition we have described.</p> + +<p>Such was the explanation given by the astronomer to Captain Craventy. He at + +once placed himself entirely at Mr Black's service, but could not refrain from + +inquiring why he had been in such a great hurry to arrive, when the eclipse was + +not to take place until the following year, 1860?</p> + +<p>"But, Captain," replied the astronomer, "I heard that the Company was sending + +an expedition along the northern coast of America, and I did not wish to miss + +the departure of Lieutenant Hobson."</p> + +<p>"Mr Black," replied the Captain, "if the Lieutenant had already started, I + +should have felt it my duty to accompany you myself to the shores of the Polar + +Sea."</p> + +<p>And with fresh assurances of his willingness to serve him, the Captain again + +bade his new guest welcome to Fort Reliance.</p> +<a name="IV" id="IV"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER IV.</h4> + +<h4><i>A FACTORY.</i></h4> + +<p>One of the largest of the lakes beyond the 61st parallel is that called the + +Great Slave Lake; it is two hundred and fifty miles long by fifty across, and is + +situated exactly at 61? 25' N. lat. and 114? W. long. The surrounding districts + +slope down to it, and it completely fills a vast natural hollow. The position of + +the lake in the very centre of the hunting districts. once swarming with game, + +early attracted the attention of the Company. Numerous streams either take their + +rise from it or flow into it-the Mackenzie, the Athabasca, &c.; and several + +important forts have been constructed on its shores-Fort Providence on the + +north, and Fort Resolution on the south. Fort Reliance is situated on the + +north-east extremity, and is about three hundred miles from the Chesterfield + +inlet, a long narrow estuary formed by the waters of Hudson's Bay.</p> + +<p>The Great Slave Lake is dotted with little islands, the granite and gneiss of + +which they are formed jutting up in several places. Its northern banks are + +clothed with thick woods, shutting out the barren frozen district beyond, not + +inaptly called the "Cursed Land." The southern regions, on the other band, are + +flat, without a rise of any kind, and the soil is mostly calcareous. The large + +ruminants of the polar districts-the buffaloes or bisons, the flesh of which + +forms almost the only food of the Canadian and native hunters-seldom go further + +north than the Great Slave Lake.</p> + +<p>The trees on the northern shores of the lake form magnificent forests. We + +need not be astonished at meeting with such fine vegetation in this remote + +district. The Great Slave Lake is not really in a higher latitude than Stockholm + +or Christiania. We have only to remember that the isothermal lines, or belts of + +equal heat, along which heat is distributed in equal quantities, do not follow + +the terrestrial parallels, and that with the same latitude, America is ever so + +much colder than Europe. In April the streets of New York are still white with + +snow, yet the latitude of New York is nearly the same as that of the Azores. The + +nature of a country, its position with regard to the oceans, and even the + +conformation of its soil, all influence its climate.</p> + +<p>In summer Fort Reliance was surrounded with masses of verdure, refreshing to + +the sight after the long dreary winter. Timber was plentiful in these forests, + +which consisted almost entirely of poplar, pine, and birch. The islets on the + +lake produced very fine willows. Game was abundant in the underwood, even during + +the bad season. Further south the hunters from the fort successfully pursued + +bisons, elks, and Canadian porcupines, the flesh of which is excellent. The + +waters of the Slave Lake were full of fish; trout in them attained to an immense + +size, their weight often exceeding forty pounds. Pikes, voracious lobes, a sort + +of charr or grayling called " blue fish," and countless legions of tittamegs, + +the <i>Coregonus</i> of naturalists, disported themselves in the water, so that + +the inhabitants of Fort Reliance were well supplied with food. Nature provided + +for all their wants; and clothed in the skins of foxes, martens, bears, and + +other Arctic animals, they were able to brave the rigour of the winter.</p> + +<p>The fort, properly so called, consisted of a wooden house with a ground-floor + +and one upper storey. In it lived the commandant and his officers. The barracks + +for the soldiers, the magazines of the Company, and the offices where exchanges + +were made, surrounded this house. A little chapel, which wanted nothing but a + +clergyman, and a powder-magazine, completed the buildings of the settlement. The + +whole was surrounded by palisades twenty-five feet high, defended by a small + +bastion with a pointed roof at each of the four corners of the parallelogram + +formed by the enceinte. The fort was thus protected from surprise, a necessary + +precaution in the days when the Indians, instead of being the purveyors of the + +Company, fought for the independence of their native land, and when the agents + +and soldiers of rival associations disputed the possession of the rich fur + +country.</p> + +<p>At that time the Hudson's Bay Company employed about a million men on its + +territories. It held supreme authority over them, an authority which could even + +inflict death. The governors of the factories could regulate salaries, and + +arbitrarily fix the price of provisions and furs; and as a result of this + +irresponsible power, they often realised a profit of no less than three hundred + +per cent.</p> + +<p>We shall see from the following table, taken from the " Voyage of Captain + +Robert Lade," on what terms exchanges were formerly made with those Indians who + +have since become the best hunters of the Company. Beavers' skins were then the + +currency employed in buying and selling.</p> + +<p>The Indians paid-</p> + +<table width="90%" border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0"> + + <tbody> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p align="justify">For one gun,</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>10 beavers' skins</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>" half a pound of powder,</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>1 "</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>" four pounds of shot,</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>1 "</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>" one axe,</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>1 "</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>" six knives,</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>1 "</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>" one pound of glass beads,</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>1 "</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>" one laced coat,</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>6 "</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>" one coat not laced,</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>5 "</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>" one laced female dress,</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>6 "</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>" one pound of tobacco,</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>1 "</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>" one box of powder,</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>1 "</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>" one comb and one looking glass,</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>2 "</p></td></tr></tbody></table><br> + +<p>But a few years ago beaver-skins became so scarce that the currency had to be + +changed. Bison-furs are now the medium of trade. When an Indian presents himself + +at the fort, the agents of the Company give him as many pieces of wood as he + +brings skins, and he exchanges these pieces of wood for manufactured articles on + +the premises; and as the Company fix the price of the articles they buy and + +sell, they cannot fail to realise large profits.</p> + +<p>Such was the mode of proceeding in Fort Reliance and other factories; so that + +Mrs Paulina Barnett was able to watch the working of the system during her stay, + +which extended until the 16th April. Many a long talk did she have with + +Lieutenant Hobson, many were the projects they formed, and firmly were they both + +determined to allow no obstacle to check their advance. As for Thomas Black, he + +never opened his lips except when his own special mission was discussed. He was + +wrapped up in the subject of the luminous corona and red prominences of the + +moon; he lived but to solve the problem, and in the end made Mrs Paulina Barnett + +nearly as enthusiastic as himself. How eager the two were to cross the Arctic + +Circle, and how far off the 18th July 1860 appeared to both, but especially to + +the impatient Greenwich astronomer, can easily be imagined.</p> + +<p>The preparations for departure could not be commenced until the middle of + +March, and a month passed before they were completed. In fact, it was a + +formidable undertaking to organise such an expedition for crossing the Polar + +regions. Everything had to betaken with them-food, clothes, tools, arms, + +ammunition, and a nondescript collection of various requisites.</p> + +<p>The troops, under the command of Lieutenant Jaspar Hobson, were one chief and + +two subordinate officers, with ten soldiers, three of whom took their wives with + +them. They were all picked men, chosen by Captain Craventy on account of their + +energy and resolution. We append a list of the whole party:-</p> + +<table width="90%" border="1" align="center" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0"> + + <tbody> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>1. Lieutenant Jaspar Hobson.</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>11. Sabine, soldier.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>2. Sergeant Long.</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>12. Hope, do.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>3. Corporal Joliffe.</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>13. Kellet, do.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>4. Petersen, soldier</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>14. Mrs Rae </p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>5. Belcher, do.</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>15. Mrs Joliffe.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>6. Rae, do</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>16. Mrs Mac-Nab.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>7. Marbre, do</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>17. Mrs Paulina Barnett.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>8. Garry, do</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>18. Madge.</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>9. Pond, do</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>19. Thomas Black</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p>10. Mac-Nab, do.</p></td> + + <td width="50%" valign="top"> + + <p> </p></td></tr></tbody></table> + +<center></center><br> + +<p>In all, nineteen persons to be transported several hundreds of miles through + +a desert and imperfectly-known country.</p> + +<p>With this project in view, however, the Company had collected everything + +necessary for the expedition. A dozen sledges, with their teams of dogs, were in + +readiness. These primitive vehicles consisted of strong but light planks joined + +together by transverse bands. A piece of curved wood, turning up at the end like + +a skate, was fixed beneath the sledge, enabling it to cleave the snow without + +sinking deeply into it. Six swift and intelligent dogs, yoked two and two, and + +controlled by the long thong brandished by the driver, drew the sledges, and + +could go at a rate of fifteen miles an hour.</p> + +<p>The wardrobe of the travellers consisted of garments made of reindeer-skins, + +lined throughout with thick furs. All wore linen next the skin as a protection + +against the sudden changes of temperature frequent in these latitudes. Each one, + +officer or soldier, male or female, wore seal-skin boots sewn with twine, in the + +manufacture of which the natives excel. These boots are absolutely impervious, + +and are so flexible that they are admirably adapted for walking. Pine-wood + +snow-shoes, two or three feet long, capable of supporting the weight of a man on + +the most brittle snow, and enabling him to pass over it with the rapidity of a + +skater on ice, can be fastened to the soles of the seal-skin boots. Fur caps and + +deer-skin belts completed the costumes.</p> + +<p>For arms, Lieutenant Hobson had the regulation musketoons provided by the + +Company, pistols, ordnance sabres, and plenty of ammunition; for tools : axes, + +saws, adzes, and other instruments required in carpentering. Then there was the + +collection of all that would be needed for setting up a factory in the remote + +district for which they were bound : a stove; a smelting furnace, two airpumps + +for ventilation, an India-rubber boat, only inflated when required, &c., + +&c.</p> + +<p>The party might have relied for provisions on the hunters amongst them. Some + +of the soldiers were skilful trackers of game, and there were plenty of reindeer + +in the Polar regions. Whole tribes of Indians, or Esquimaux, deprived of bread + +and all other nourishment, subsist entirely on this venison, which is both + +abundant and palatable. But as delays and difficulties had to be allowed for, a + +certain quantity of provisions was taken with them. The flesh of the bison, elk, + +and deer, amassed in the large <i>battues</i> on the south of the lake; corned + +beef, which will keep for any length of time; and some Indian preparations, in + +which the flesh of animals, ground to powder, retains its nutritive properties + +in a very small bulk, requiring no cooking, and forming a very nourishing diet, + +were amongst the stores provided in case of need.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson likewise took several casks of rum and whisky; but he was + +firmly resolved to economise these spirits, so injurious to the health in cold + +latitudes, as much as possible. The Company had placed at his disposal a little + +portable medicine-chest, containing formidable quantities of lime-juice, lemons, + +and other simple remedies necessary to check, or if possible to prevent, the + +scorbutic affections which take such a terrible form in these regions.</p> + +<p>All the men had been chosen with great care; none were too stout or too thin, + +and all had for years been accustomed to the severity of the climate, and could + +therefore more easily endure the fatigues of an expedition to the Polar Sea. + +They were all brave, high-spirited fellows, who had taken service of their own + +accord. Double pay had been promised them during their stay at the confines of + +the American continent, should they succeed in making a settlement beyond the + +seventieth parallel.</p> + +<p>The sledge provided for Mrs Barnett and her faithful Madge was rather more + +comfortable than the others. She did not wish to be treated better than her + +travelling companions, but yielded to the urgent request of Captain Craventy, + +who was but carrying out the wishes of the Company.</p> + +<p>The vehicle which brought Thomas Black to Fort Reliance also conveyed him and + +his scientific apparatus from it. A few astronomical instruments, of which there + +were not many in those days-a telescope for his selenographic observations, a + +sextant for taking the latitude, a chronometer for determining the longitudes, a + +few maps, a few books, were all stored away in this sledge, and Thomas Black + +relied upon his faithful dogs to lose nothing by the way.</p> + +<p>Of course the food for the various teams was not forgotten. There were + +altogether no less than seventy-two dogs, quite a herd to provide for by the + +way, and it was the business of the hunters to cater for them. These strong + +intelligent animals were bought of the Chippeway Indians, who know well how to + +train them for their arduous calling.</p> + +<p>The little company was most skilfully organised. The zeal of Lieutenant + +Jaspar Hobson was beyond all praise. Proud of his mission, and devoted to his + +task; he neglected nothing which could insure success. Corporal Joliffe, always + +a busybody, exerted himself without producing any very tangible results; but his + +wife was most useful and devoted; and Mrs Paulina Barnett had already struck up + +a great friendship with the brisk little Canadian woman, whose fair hair and + +large soft eyes were so pleasant to look at.</p> + +<p>We need scarcely add that Captain Craventy did all in his power to further + +the enterprise. The instructions he had received from the Company showed what + +great importance they attached to the success of the expedition, and the + +establishment of a new factory beyond the seventieth parallel. We may therefore + +safely affirm that every human effort likely to insure success which could be + +made was made; but who could tell what insurmountable difficulties nature might + +place in the path of the brave Lieutenant I who could tell what awaited him and + +his devoted little band.</p> +<a name="V" id="V"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER V.</h4> + +<h4><i>FROM FORT RELIANCE TO FORT ENTERPRISE.</i></h4> + +<p>The first fine days came at last. The green carpet of the hills began to + +appear here and there where the snow had melted. A few migratory birds from the + +south-such as swans, bald-headed eagles, &c.-passed through the warmer air. + +The poplars, birches, and willows began to bud, and the redheaded ducks, of + +which there are so many species in North America, to skim the surface of the + +numerous pools formed by the melted snow. Guillemots, puffins, and eider ducks + +sought colder latitudes; and little shrews no bigger than a hazel-nut ventured + +from their holes, tracing strange figures on the ground with their tiny-pointed + +tails. It was intoxicating once more to breathe the fresh air of spring, and to + +bask in the sunbeams. Nature awoke once more from her heavy sleep in the long + +winter night, and smiled as she opened her eyes.</p> + +<p>The renovation of creation in spring is perhaps more impressive in the Arctic + +regions than in any other portion of the globe, on account of the greater + +contrast with what has gone before.</p> + +<p>The thaw was not, however, complete. The thermometer, it is true, marked 41? + +Fahrenheit above zero; but the mean temperature of the nights kept the surface + +of the snowy plains solid-a good thing for the passage of sledges, of which + +Jaspar Hobson meant to avail himself before the thaw became complete.</p> + +<p>The ice of the lake was still unbroken. During the last month several + +successful hunting expeditions had been made across the vast smooth plains, + +which were already frequented by game. Mrs Barnett was astonished at the skill + +with which the men used their snow-shoes, scudding along at the pace of a horse + +in full gallop. Following Captain Craventy's advice, the lady herself practised + +walking in these contrivances, and she soon became very expert in sliding over + +the snow.</p> + +<p>During the last few days several bands of Indians had arrived at the fort to + +exchange the spoils of the winter chase for manufactured goods. The season had + +been bad. There were a good many polecats and sables; but the furs of beavers, + +otters, lynxes, ermines, and foxes were scarce. It was therefore a wise step for + +the Company to endeavour to explore a new country, where the wild animals had + +hitherto escaped the rapacity of man.</p> + +<p>On the morning of the 16th April Lieutenant Jaspar Hobson and his party were + +ready to start. The route across the known districts, between the Slave Lake and + +that of the Great Bear beyond the Arctic Circle, was already determined. Jaspar + +Hobson was to make for Fort Confidence, on the northern extremity of the latter + +lake; and he was to revictual at Fort Enterprise, a station two hundred miles + +further to the north-west, on the shores of the Snare Lake, By travelling at the + +rate of fifteen miles a day the Lieutenant hoped to halt there about the + +beginning of May.</p> + +<p>From this point the expedition was to take the shortest route to Cape + +Bathurst, on the North American coast. It was agreed that in a year Captain + +Craventy should send a convoy with provisions to Cape Bathurst, and that a + +detachment of the Lieutenant's men was to go to meet this convoy, to guide it to + +the spot where the new fort was to be erected. This plan was a guarantee against + +any adverse circumstances, and left a means of communication with their + +fellow-creatures open to the Lieutenant and his voluntary companions in + +exile.</p> + +<p>On the 16th April dogs and sledges were awaiting the travellers at the + +postern gate. Captain Craventy called the men of the party together and said a + +few kind words to them. He urged them above all things to stand by one another + +in the perils they might be called upon to meet; reminded them that the + +enterprise upon which they were about to enter required self-denial and + +devotion, and that submission to their officers was an indispensable condition + +of success. Cheers greeted the Captain's speech, the adieux were quickly made, + +and each one took his place in the sledge assigned to him. Jaspar Hobson and + +Sergeant Long went first; then Mrs Paulina Barnett and Madge, the latter + +dexterously wielding the long Esquimaux whip, terminating in a stiff thong. + +Thomas Black and one of the soldiers, the Canadian, Petersen, occupied the third + +sledge ;and the others followed, Corporal and Mrs Joliffe bringing up the rear. + +According to the orders of Lieutenant Hobson, each driver kept as nearly as + +possible at the same distance from the preceding sledge, so as to avoid all + +confusion-a necessary precaution, as a collision between two sledges going at + +full speed, might have had disastrous results.</p> + +<p>On leaving Fort Reliance, Jaspar Hobson at once directed his course towards + +the north-west. The first thing to be done was to cross the large river + +connecting Lakes Slave and Wolmsley, which was, however, still frozen so hard as + +to be undistinguishable from the vast white plains around. A uniform carpet of + +snow covered the whole country, and the sledges, drawn by their swift teams, + +sped rapidly over the firm smooth surface.</p> + +<p>The weather was fine, but still very cold. The sun, scarce above the horizon, + +described a lengthened curve; and its rays, reflected on the snow, gave more + +light than heat. Fortunately not a breath of air stirred, and this lessened the + +severity of the cold, although the rapid pace of the sledges through the keen + +atmosphere must have been trying to any one not inured to the rigour of a Polar + +climate.</p> + +<p>"A good beginning," said Jaspar Hobson to the Sergeant, who sat motionless + +beside him as if rooted to his seat; "the journey has commenced favourably. The + +sky is cloudless; the temperature propitious, our equipages shoot along like + +express trains, and as long as this fine weather lasts we shall get on + +capitally. What do you think, Sergeant Long?"</p> + +<p>"I agree with you, Lieutenant," replied the Sergeant, who never differed from + +his chief.</p> + +<p>"Like myself, Sergeant, you are determined to push on as far north as + +possible-are you not?" resumed Lieutenant Hobson.</p> + +<p>"You have but to command to be obeyed, Lieutenant."</p> + +<p>"I know it, Sergeant; I know that with you to bear is to obey. Would that all + +our men understood as you do the importance of our mission, and would devote + +themselves body and soul to the interests of the Company! Ah, Sergeant Long, I + +know if I gave you an impossible order- "</p> + +<p>"Lieutenant, there is no such thing as an impossible order."</p> + +<p>"What? Suppose now I ordered you to go to the North Pole?"</p> + +<p>"Lieutenant, I should go !"</p> + +<p>"And to comeback!" added Jaspar Hobson with a smile.</p> + +<p>"I should come back," replied Sergeant Long simply.</p> + +<p>During this colloquy between Lieutenant Hobson and his Sergeant a slight + +ascent compelled the sledges to slacken speed, and Mrs Barnett and Madge also + +exchanged a few sentences. These two intrepid women, in their otter-skin caps + +and white bear-skin mantles, gazed in astonishment upon the rugged scenery + +around them, and at the white outlines of the huge glaciers standing out against + +the horizon. They had already left behind them the hills of the northern banks + +of the Slave Lake, with their summits crowned with the gaunt skeletons of trees. + +The vast plains stretched before them in apparently endless succession. The + +rapid flight and cries of a few birds of passage alone broke the monotony of the + +scene. Now and then a troop of swans, with plumage so white that the keenest + +sight could not distinguish them from the snow when they settled on the ground, + +rose into view in the clear blue atmosphere and pursued their journey to the + +north.</p> + +<p>"What an extraordinary country !" exclaimed Mrs Paulina Barnett. "What a + +difference between these Polar regions and the green prairies of Australia! You + +remember, Madge, how we suffered from the heat on the shores of the Gulf of + +Carpentaria-you remember the cloudless sky and the parching sunbeams?"</p> + +<p>My dear," replied Madge, "I have not the gift of remembering like you. You + +retain your impressions, I forget mine."</p> + +<p>"What, Madge !" cried Mrs Barnett, "you have forgotten the tropical heat of + +India arid Australia? You have no recollection of our agonies when water failed + +us in the desert, when the pitiless sun scorched us to the bone, when even the + +night brought us no relief from our sufferings !"</p> + +<p>"No, Paulina," replied Madge, wrapping her furs more closely round her, "no, + +I remember nothing. How could I now recollect the sufferings to which you + +allude-the heat, the agonies of thirst-when we are surrounded on every side by + +ice, and I have but to stretch my arm out of this sledge to pick up a handful of + +snow? You talk to me of heat, when we are freezing beneath our bearskins; you + +recall the broiling rays of the sun when its April beams cannot melt the icicles + +on our lips! No, child, no, don't try to persuade me it's hot anywhere else; + +don't tell me I ever complained of being too warm, for I sha'n't believe + +you!"</p> + +<p>Mrs Paulina Barnett could not help smiling.</p> + +<p>"So, poor Madge," she said, "you are very cold!"</p> + +<p>"Yes, child, I am cold; but I rather like this climate. I've no doubt it's + +very healthy, and I think North America will agree with me. It's really a very + +fine country !"</p> + +<p>"Yes, Madge; it is a fine country, and we have as yet seen none of the + +wonders it contains. But wait until we reach the Arctic Ocean; wait until the + +winter shuts us in with its gigantic icebergs and thick covering of snow; wait + +till the northern storms break over us, and the glories of the Aurora Borealis + +and of the splendid constellations of the Polar skies are spread out above our + +heads; wait till we have lived through the strange long six months' night, and + +then indeed you will understand the infinite variety, the infinite beauty, of + +our Creator's handiwork !"</p> + +<p>Thus spoke Mrs Paulina Barnett, carried away by her vivid imagination. She + +could see nothing but beauty in these deserted regions, with their rigorous + +climate. Her enthusiasm got the better for the time of her judgment. Her + +sympathy with nature enabled her to read the touching poetry of the ice-bound + +north-the poetry embodied in the Sagas, and sung by the bards of the time of + +Ossian. But Madge, more matter of fact than her mistress, disguised from herself + +neither the dangers of an expedition to the Arctic Ocean, nor the sufferings + +involved in wintering only thirty degrees at the most from the North Pole.</p> + +<p>And indeed the most robust had sometimes succumbed to the fatigues, + +privations, and mental and bodily agonies endured in this severe climate. Jaspar + +Hobson had not, it is true, to press on to the very highest latitudes of the + +globe,; he had not to reach the pole itself, or to follow in the steps of Parry, + +Ross, Mc'Clure, Kean, Morton, and others. But after once crossing the Arctic + +Circle, there is little variation in the temperature; it does not increase in + +coldness in proportion to the elevation reached. Granted that Jaspar Hobson did + +not think of going beyond the seventieth parallel, we must still remember that + +Franklin and his unfortunate companions died of cold and hunger before they had + +penetrated beyond 68? N. lat.</p> + +<p>Very different was the talk in the sledge occupied by Mr and Mrs Joliffe. + +Perhaps the gallant Corporal had too often drunk to the success of the + +expedition on starting; for, strange to say, he was disputing with his little + +wife. Yes, he was actually contradicting her, which never happened except under + +extraordinary circumstances!</p> + +<p>"No, Mrs Joliffe," he was saying, "no, you have nothing to fear. A sledge is + +not more difficult to guide than a pony-carriage, and the devil take me if I + +can't manage a team of dogs !"</p> + +<p>"I don't question your skill," replied Mrs Joliffe; "I only ask you not to go + +so fast. You are in front of the whole caravan now, and I hear Lieutenant Hobson + +calling out to you to resume your proper place behind."</p> + +<p>"Let him call, Mrs Joliffe, let him call."</p> + +<p>And the Corporal, urging on his dogs with a fresh cut of the whip, dashed + +along at still greater speed.</p> + +<p>"Take care, Joliffe," repeated his little wife; "not so fast, we are going + +down hill."</p> + +<p>"Down hill, Mrs Joliffe; you call that down hill? why, it's up hill!"</p> + +<p>"I tell you we are going down!" repeated poor Mrs Joliffe.</p> + +<p>"And I tell you we are going up; look how the dogs pull !"</p> + +<p>Whoever was right, the dogs became uneasy. The ascent was, in fact, pretty + +steep; the sledge dashed along at a reckless pace, and was already considerably + +in advance of the rest of the party. Mr and Mrs Joliffe bumped up and down every + +instant, the surface of the snow became more and more uneven, and the pair, + +flung first to one side and then to the other, knocked against each other and + +the sledge, and were horribly bruised and shaken. But the Corporal would listen + +neither to the advice of his wife nor to the shouts of Lieutenant Hobson. The + +latter, seeing the danger of this reckless course, urged on his own animals, and + +the rest of the caravan followed at a rapid pace.</p> + +<p>But the Corporal became more and more excited-the speed of his equipage + +delighted him. He shouted, he gesticulated, and flourished his long whip like an + +accomplished sportsman.</p> + +<p>"Wonderful things these whips!" he cried; "the Esquimaux wield them with + +unrivalled skill !"</p> + +<p>"But you are not an Esquimaux!" cried Mrs Joliffe, trying in vain to arrest + +the arm of her imprudent husband.</p> + +<p>"I have heard tell," resumed the Corporal-" I've heard tell that the + +Esquimaux can touch any dog they like in any part, that they can even cut out a + +bit of one of their ears with the stiff thong at the end of the whip. I am going + +to try."</p> + +<p>"Don't try, don't try, Joliffe !" screamed the poor little woman, frightened + +out of her wits.</p> + +<p>"Don't be afraid, Mrs Joliffe, don't be afraid; I know what I can do. The + +fifth dog on the right is misbehaving himself;. I will correct him a + +little!"</p> + +<p>But Corporal Joliffe was evidently not yet enough of an Esquimaux to be able + +to manage the whip with its thong four feet longer than the sledge; for it + +unrolled with an ominous hiss, and rebounding, twisted itself round Corporal + +Joliffe's own neck, sending his fur cap into the air, perhaps with one of his + +ears in it.</p> + +<p>At this moment the dogs flung themselves on one side, the sledge was + +overturned, and the pair were flung into the snow. Fortunately it was thick and + +soft, so that they escaped unhurt. But what a disgrace for the Corporal! how + +reproachfully his little wife looked at him, and how stern was the reprimand of + +Lieutenant Hobson!</p> + +<p>The sledge was picked up, but it was decided that henceforth the reins of the + +dogs, like those of the household, were to be in the hands of Mrs Joliffe. The + +crest-fallen Corporal was obliged to submit, and the interrupted journey was + +resumed.</p> + +<p>No incident worth mentioning occurred during the next fifteen days. The + +weather continued favourable, the cold was not too severe, and on the 1st May + +the expedition arrived at Fort Enterprise.</p> + +<p> :</p> +<a name="VI" id="VI"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER VI.</h4> + +<h4><i>A WAPITI DUEL.</i></h4> + +<p>Two hundred miles had been traversed since the expedition left Fort Reliance. + +The travellers, taking advantage of the long twilight, pressed on day and night, + +and were literally overcome with fatigue when they reached Fort Enterprise, near + +the shores of Lake Snare.</p> + +<p>This fort was no more than a depot of provisions, of little importance, + +erected a few years before by the Hudson's Bay Company. It served as a + +resting-place for the men taking the convoys of furs from the Great Bear Lake, + +some three hundred miles further to the north-west. About a dozen soldiers + +formed the garrison. The fort consisted of a wooden house surrounded by + +palisades. But few as were the comforts it offered, Lieutenant Hobson's + +companions gladly took refuge in it and rested there for two days.</p> + +<p>The gentle influence of the Arctic spring was beginning to be felt. Here and + +there the snow had melted, and the temperature of the nights was no longer below + +freezing point. A few delicate mosses and slender grasses clothed the rugged + +ground with their soft verdure; and from between the stones peeped the moist + +calices of tiny, almost colourless, flowers. These faint signs of reawakening + +vegetation, after the long night of winter, were refreshing to eyes weary of the + +monotonous whiteness of the snow; and the scattered specimens of the Flora of + +the Arctic regions were welcomed with delight.</p> + +<p>Mrs Paulina Barnett and Jaspar Hobson availed themselves of this leisure time + +to visit the shores of the little lake. They were both students and enthusiastic + +lovers of nature. Together they wandered amongst the ice masses, already + +beginning to break up, and the waterfalls created by the action of the rays of + +the sun. The surface itself of Lake Snare was still intact, not a crack denoted + +the approaching thaw; but it was strewn with the ruins of mighty icebergs, which + +assumed all manner of picturesque forms, and the beauty of which was heightened + +when the light, diffracted by the sharp edges of the ice, touched them with all + +manner of colours. One might have fancied that a rainbow, crushed in a powerful + +hand, bad been flung upon the ground, its fragments crossing each other as they + +fell.</p> + +<p>"What a beautiful scene!" exclaimed Mrs Paulina Barnett. "These prismatic + +effects vary at every change of our position. Does it not seem as if we were + +bending over the opening of an immense kaleidoscope, or are you already weary of + +a sight so new and interesting to me?"</p> + +<p>"No, madam," replied the Lieutenant; "although I was born and bred on this + +continent, its beauties never pall upon me. But if your enthusiasm is so great + +when you see this scenery with the sun shining upon it, what will it be when you + +are privileged to behold the terrible grandeur of the winter? To own the truth, + +I think the sun, so much thought of in temperate latitudes, spoils my Arctic + +home."</p> + +<p>"Indeed!" exclaimed Mrs Barnett, smiling at the Lieutenant's last remark; + +"for my part, I think the sun a capital travelling companion, and I shall not be + +disposed to grumble at the warmth it gives even in the Polar regions !"</p> + +<p>"Ah, madam," replied Jaspar Hobson, "I am one of those who think it best to + +visit Russia in the winter, and the Sahara Desert in the summer. You then see + +their peculiar characteristics to advantage. The sun is a star of the torrid and + +temperate zones, and is out of place thirty degrees from the North Pole. The + +true sky of this country is the pure frigid sky of winter, bright with + +constellations, and sometimes flushed with the glory of the Aurora Borealis. + +This land is the land of the night, not of the day; and you have yet to make + +acquaintance with the delights and marvels of the long Polar night."</p> + +<p>"Have you ever visited the temperate zones of Europe and America?" inquired + +Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam; and I admired them as they deserved. But I returned home with + +fresh love and enthusiasm for my native land. Cold is my element, and no merit + +is due to me for braving it. It has no power over me; and, like the Esquimaux. I + +can live for months together in a snow hut."</p> + +<p>"Really, Lieutenant Hobson, it is quite cheering to hear our dreaded enemy + +spoken of in such terms. I hope to prove myself worthy to be your companion, and + +wherever you venture, we will venture together."</p> + +<p>"I agree, madam, I agree; and may all the women and soldiers accompanying me + +show themselves as resolute as you. If so, God helping us, we shall indeed + +advance far."</p> + +<p>"You have nothing to complain of yet," observed the lady. "Not a single + +accident has occurred, the weather has been propitious, the cold not too + +severe-everything has combined to aid us."</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam; but the sun which you admire so much will soon create + +difficulties for us, and strew obstacles in our path."</p> + +<p>"What do you mean, Lieutenant Hobson?"</p> + +<p>"I mean that the heat will soon have changed the aspect of the country; that + +the melted ice will impede the sliding of the sledges; that the ground will + +become rough and uneven; that our panting dogs will no longer carry us along + +with the speed of an arrow; that the rivers and lakes will resume their liquid + +state, and that we shall have to ford or go round them. All these changes, + +madam, due to the influence of the solar rays, will cause delays, fatigue, and + +dangers, the very least of which will be the breaking of the brittle snow + +beneath our feet, or the falling of the avalanches from the summits of the + +icebergs. For all this we have to thank the gradual rise of the sun higher and + +higher above the horizon. Bear this in mind, madam: of the four elements of the + +old creation, only one is necessary to us here, the air; the other three, fire, + +earth, and water, are <i>de trop</i> in the Arctic regions."</p> + +<p>Of course the Lieutenant was exaggerating, and Mrs Barnett could easily have + +retorted with counter-arguments; but she liked to hear his raptures in praise of + +his beloved country, and she felt that his enthusiasm was a guarantee that he + +would shrink from no obstacle.</p> + +<p>Yet Jaspar Hobson was right when he said the sun would cause difficulties. + +This was seen when the party set out again on the 4th May, three days later. The + +thermometer, even in the coldest part of the night, marked more than 32? + +Fahrenheit. A complete thaw set in, the vast white sheet of snow resolved itself + +into water. The irregularities of the rocky soil caused constant jolting of the + +sledges, and the passengers were roughly shaken. The roads were so heavy that + +the dogs had to go at a slow trot, and the reins were therefore again entrusted + +to the hands of the imprudent Corporal</p> + +<p>Joliffe. Neither shouts nor flourishings of the whip had the slightest effect + +on the jaded animals.</p> + +<p>From time to time the travellers lightened the sledges by walking little way. + +This mode of locomotion suited the hunters, who were now gradually approaching + +the best districts for game in the whole of English America. Mrs Paulina Barnett + +and Madge took a great interest in the chase, whilst Thomas Black professed + +absolute indifference to all athletic exercise. He had not come all this + +distance to hunt the polecat or the ermine, but merely to look at the moon at + +the moment when her disc should cover that of the sun. When the queen of the + +night rose above the horizon, the impatient astronomer would gaze at her with + +eager eyes, and one day the Lieutenant said to him</p> + +<p>"It would be a bad look-out for you, Mr Black, if by any unlucky chance the + +moon should fail to keep her appointment on the 16th July 1860."</p> + +<p>"Lieutenant Hobson," gravely replied the astronomer, "if the moon were guilty + +of such a breach of good manners, I should indeed have cause to complain."</p> + +<p>The chief hunters of the expedition were the soldiers Marbre and Sabine, both + +very expert at their business. Their skill was wonderful; and the cleverest + +Indians would not have surpassed them in keenness of sight, precision of aim, or + +manual address. They were alike trappers and hunters, and were acquainted with + +all the nets and snares for taking sables, otters, wolves, foxes, bears, &c. + +No artifice was unknown to them, and Captain Craventy had shown his wisdom in + +choosing two such intelligent men to accompany the little troop.</p> + +<p>Whilst on the march however, Marbre and Sabine had no time for setting traps. + +They could not separate from the others for more than an hour or two at a time, + +and were obliged to be content with the game which passed within range of their + +rifles. Still they were fortunate enough to kill two of the large American + +ruminants, seldom met with in such elevated latitudes.</p> + +<p>On the morning of the 15th May the hunters asked permission to follow some + +fresh traces they had found, and the Lieutenant not only granted it, but himself + +accompanied them with Mrs Paulina Barnett, and they went several miles out of + +their route towards the east.</p> + +<p>The impressions were evidently the result of the passage of about + +half-a-dozen large deer. There could be no mistake about it; Marbre and Sabine + +were positive on that point, and could even have named the species to which the + +animals belonged.</p> + +<p>"You seem surprised to have met with traces of these animals here, + +Lieutenant," said Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Well, madam," replied Hobson, "this species is rarely seen beyond 57? N. + +lat. We generally hunt them at the south of the Slave Lake, where they feed upon + +the shoots of willows and poplars, and certain wild roses to which they are very + +partial."</p> + +<p>"I suppose these creatures, like those with valuable furs, have fled from the + +districts scoured by the hunters."</p> + +<p>"I see no other explanation of their presence at 65? N. lat.," replied the + +Lieutenant-"that is, if the men are not mistaken as to the origin of the + +footprints."</p> + +<p>"No, no, sir," cried Sabine; "Marbre and I are not mistaken. These traces + +were left by deer, the deer we hunters call red deer, and the natives + +wapitis."</p> + +<p>"He is quite right," added Marbre; "old trappers like us are not to be taken + +in; besides, don't you hear that peculiar whistling sound?"</p> + +<p>The party had now reached the foot of a little hill, and as the snow had + +almost disappeared from its sides they were able to climb it, and hastened to + +the summit, the peculiar whistling noticed by Marbre becoming louder, mingled + +with cries resembling the braying of an ass, and proving that the two hunters + +were not mistaken.</p> + +<p>Once at the top of the hill, the adventurers looked eagerly towards the east. + +The undulating plains were still white with snow, but its dazzling surface was + +here and there relieved with patches of stunted light green vegetation. A few + +gaunt shrubs stretched forth their bare and shrivelled branches, and huge + +icebergs with precipitous sides stood out against the grey background of the + +sky.</p> + +<p>"Wapitis! wapitis!-there they are !" cried Sabine and Marbre at once, + +pointing to a group of animals distinctly visible about a quarter of a mile to + +the east.</p> + +<p>"What are they doing?" asked Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"They are fighting, madam," replied Hobson; "they always do when the heat of + +the Polar sun inflames their blood-another deplorable result of the action of + +the radiant orb of day !"</p> + +<p>From where they stood the party could easily watch the group of wapitis. They + +were fine specimens of the family of deer known under the various names of stags + +with rounded antlers, American stags, roebucks, grey elks and red elks, &c. + +These graceful creatures have slender legs and brown skins with patches of red + +hair, the colour of which becomes darker in the warmer season. The fierce males + +are easily distinguished from the females by their fine white antlers, the + +latter being entirely without these ornaments. These wapitis were once very + +numerous all over North America, and the United States imported a great many; + +but clearings were begun on every side, the forest trees fell beneath the axe of + +the pioneer of civilisation, and the wapitis took refuge in the more peaceful + +districts of Canada; but they were soon again disturbed, and wandered to the + +shores of Hudson's Bay. So that although the wapiti thrives in a cold country, + +Lieutenant Hobson was right in saying that it seldom penetrates beyond 57? N. + +latitude; and the specimens now found had doubtless fled before the Chippeway + +Indians, who hunt them without mercy.</p> + +<p>The wapitis were so engrossed in their desperate struggle that they were + +unconscious of the approach of the hunters; but they would probably not have + +ceased fighting, had they been aware of it. Marbre and Sabine, aware of their + +peculiarity in this respect, might therefore have advanced fearlessly upon them, + +and have taken aim at leisure.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson suggested that they should do so.</p> + +<p>"Beg pardon, sir," replied Marbre; "but let us spare our powder and shot. + +These beasts are engaged in a war to the death, and we shall arrive in plenty of + +time to pick up the vanquished."</p> + +<p>"Have these wapitis a commercial value?" asked Mrs Paulina Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam," replied Hobson; "and their skin, which is not quite so thick as + +that of the elk, properly so called makes very valuable leather. By rubbing this + +skin with the fat and brains of the animal itself, it is rendered flexible, and + +neither damp nor dryness injures it. The Indians are therefore always eager to + +procure the skins of the wapitis."</p> + +<p>"Does not the flesh make admirable venison?"</p> + +<p>"Pretty good, madam; only pretty good. It is tough, and does not taste very + +nice; the fat becomes hard directly it is taken from the fire, and sticks to the + +teeth. It is certainly inferior as an article of food to the flesh of other + +deer; but when meat is scarce we are glad enough to eat it, and it supports life + +as well as anything else."</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett and Lieutenant Hobson had been chatting together for some + +minutes, when, with the exception of two, the wapitis suddenly ceased fighting. + +Was their rage satiated?- or had they perceived the hunters, and felt the + +approach of danger? Whatever the cause, all but two fine creatures fled a + +towards the east With incredible speed; in a few instants they were out of + +sight, and the swiftest horse could not have caught them up.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile, however, two magnificent specimens remained on the field of + +battle. Heads down, antlers to antlers, hind legs stretched and quivering, they + +butted at each other without a moment's pause. Like two wrestlers struggling for + +a prize which neither will yield, they would not separate, but whirled round and + +round together on their front legs as if riveted to one another. What implacable + +rage !" exclaimed Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Yes," replied the Lieutenant; "the wapitis really are most spiteful beasts. + +I have no doubt they are fighting out an old quarrel."</p> + +<p>"Would not this be the time to approach them, when they are blinded with + +rage?"</p> + +<p>"There's plenty of time, ma'am," said Sabine; "they won't escape us now. They + +will not stir from where they are when we are three steps from them, the rifles + +at our shoulders, and our fingers on the triggers !"</p> + +<p>Indeed? Yes, madam," added Hobson, who had carefully examined the wapitis + +after the hunter's remark; "and whether at our hands or from the teeth of + +wolves, those wapitis will meet death where they now stand."</p> + +<p>"I don't understand what you mean, Lieutenant," said Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Well, go nearer, madam," he replied; "don't be afraid of startling the + +animals; for, as our hunter says, they are no longer capable of flight."</p> + +<p>The four now descended the hill, and in a few minutes gained the theatre of + +the struggle. The wapitis had not moved. They were pushing at each other like a + +couple of rams, and seemed to be inseparably glued together.</p> + +<p>In fact, in the heat of the combat the antlers of the two creatures had + +become entangled together to such an extent that they could no longer separate + +without breaking them. This often happens in the hunting districts. It is not at + +all uncommon to find antlers thus connected lying on the ground; the poor + +encumbered animals soon die of hunger, or they become an easy prey to wild + +beasts.</p> + +<p>Two bullets put an end to the fight between the wapitis; and Marbre and + +Sabine taking immediate possession, carried off their skins to be subsequently + +prepared, leaving their bleeding carcasses to be devoured by wolves and + +bears.</p> +<a name="VII" id="VII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER VII.</h4> + +<h4><i>THE ARCTIC CIRCLE.</i></h4> + +<p>The expedition continued to advance towards the north-west; but the great + +inequalities of the ground made it hard work for the dogs to get along, and the + +poor creatures, who could hardly be held in when they started, were now quiet + +enough. Eight or ten miles a day were as much as they could accomplish, although + +Lieutenant Hobson urged them on to the utmost.</p> + +<p>He was anxious to get to Fort Confidence, on the further side of the Great + +Bear Lake, where he hoped to obtain some useful information. Had the Indians + +frequenting the northern banks of the lake been able to cross the districts on + +the shores of the sea? was the Arctic Ocean open at this time of year? These + +were grave questions, the reply to which would decide the fate of the new + +factory.</p> + +<p>The country through which the little troop was now passing was intersected by + +numerous streams, mostly tributaries of the two large rivers, the Mackenzie and + +Coppermine, which flow from the south to the north, and empty themselves into + +the Arctic Ocean. Lakes, lagoons, and numerous pools are formed between these + +two principal arteries; and as they were no longer frozen over, the sledges + +could not venture upon them, and were compelled to go around them, which caused + +considerable delay. Lieutenant Hobson was certainly right in saying that winter + +is the time to visit the hyperborean regions, for they are then far easier to + +traverse. Mrs Paulina Barnett had reason to own the justice of this assertion + +than once.</p> + +<p>This region, included in the "Cursed Land," was, besides, completely + +deserted, as are the greater portion of the districts of the extreme north of + +America. It has been estimated that there is but one inhabitant to every ten + +square miles. Besides the scattered natives, there are some few thousand agents + +or soldiers of the different fur-trading companies; but they mostly congregate + +in the southern districts and about the various factories. No human footprints + +gladdened the eyes of the travellers, the only traces on the sandy soil were + +those of ruminants and rodents. Now and then a fierce polar bear was seen, and + +Mrs Paulina Barnett expressed her surprise at not meeting more of these terrible + +carnivorous beasts, of whose daily attacks on whalers and persons shipwrecked in + +Baffin's Bay and on the coasts of Greenland and Spitzbergen she had read in the + +accounts of those who had wintered in the Arctic regions.</p> + +<p>"Wait for the winter, madam," replied the Lieutenant; "wait till the cold + +makes them hungry, and then you will perhaps see as many as you care about + +!"</p> + +<p>On the 23d May, after a long and fatiguing journey, the expedition at last + +reached the Arctic Circle. We know that this latitude 23? 27' 57" from the North + +Pole, forms the mathematical limit beyond which the rays of the sun do not + +penetrate in the winter, when the northern districts of the globe are turned + +away from the orb of day. Here, then, the travellers entered the true Arctic + +region, the northern Frigid Zone.</p> + +<p>The latitude had been very carefully obtained by means of most accurate + +instruments, which were handled with equal skill by the astronomer and by + +Lieutenant Hobson. Mrs Barnett was present at the operation, and had the + +satisfaction of hearing that she was at last about to cross the Arctic Circle. + +It was with a feeling of just pride that she received the intelligence.</p> + +<p>"You have already passed through the two Torrid Zones in your previous + +journeys," said the Lieutenant, "and now you are on the verge of the Arctic + +Circle. Few explorers have ventured into such totally different regions. Some, + +so to speak, have a specialty for hot countries, and choose Africa or Australia + +as the field for their investigations. Such were Barth, Burton, Livingstone + +Speke, Douglas, Stuart, &c. Others, on the contrary, have a passion for the + +Arctic regions, still so little known. Mackenzie, Franklin, Penny, Kane, Parry, + +Rae, &c., preceded us on our present journey; but we must congratulate you, + +Mrs Barnett, on being a more cosmopolitan traveller than all of them."</p> + +<p>"I must see everything or at least try to see everything, Lieutenant," + +replied. Mrs Paulina; "and I think the dangers and difficulties are about equal + +everywhere. Although we have not to dread the fevers of the unhealthy torrid + +regions, or the attacks of the fierce black races, in this Frigid Zone, the cold + +is a no less formidable enemy; and I suspect that the white bears we are liable + +to meet with here will give us quite as warm a reception as would the tigers of + +Thibet or the lions of Africa. In Torrid and Frigid Zones alike there are vast + +unexplored tracts which will long defy the efforts of the boldest + +adventurers."</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam," replied Jaspar Hobson; "but I think the hyperborean regions + +will longer resist thorough exploration. The natives are the chief obstacle in + +tropical regions, and I am well aware how many travellers have fallen victims to + +savages. But civilisation will necessarily subdue the wild races sooner or + +later; whereas in the Arctic and Antarctic Zones it is not the inhabitants who + +arrest the progress of the explorer, but Nature herself who repels those who + +approach her, and paralyses their energies with the bitter cold !"</p> + +<p>"You think, then, that the secrets of the most remote districts of Africa and + +Australia will have been fathomed before the Frigid Zone has been entirely + +examined?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam," replied the Lieutenant; "and I think my opinion is founded on + +facts. The most intrepid discoverers of the Arctic regions - Parry, Penny, + +Franklin, M'Clure, Dane, and Morton - did not get beyond 83? north latitude, + +seven degrees from the pole - whereas Australia has several times been crossed + +from south to north by the bold Stuart; and even Africa, with all its terrors, + +was traversed by Livingstone from the Bay of Loanga to the mouth of the Zambesi. + +We are, therefore, nearer to geographical knowledge of the equatorial countries + +than of the Polar districts."</p> + +<p>"Do you think that the Pole itself will ever be reached by man?" inquired Mrs + +Paulina Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Certainly," replied Hobson, adding with a smile, "by man or woman. But I + +think other means must be tried of reaching this point, where all the meridians + +of the globe cross each other, than those hitherto adopted by travellers. We + +hear of the open sea, of which certain explorers are said to have caught a + +glimpse. But if such a sea, free from ice, really exist, it is very difficult to + +get at, and no one can say positively whether it extends to the North Pole. For + +my part, I think an open sea would increase rather than lessen the difficulties + +of explorers. As for me, I would rather count upon firm footing, whether on ice + +or rock, all the way. Then I would organise successive expeditions, establishing + +depots of provisions and fuel nearer and nearer to the Pole; and so, with plenty + +of time, plenty of money, and perhaps the sacrifice of a good many lives, I + +should in the end solve the great scientific problem. I should, I think, at last + +reach the hitherto inaccessible goal !"</p> + +<p>"I think you are right, Lieutenant," said Mrs Barnett; "and if ever you try + +the experiment, I should not be afraid to join you, and would gladly go to set + +up the Union Jack at the North Pole. But that is not our present object."</p> + +<p>"Not our <i>immediate</i> object, madam," replied Hobson; "but when once the + +projects of the Company are realised, when the new fort has been erected on the + +confines of the American continent, it may become the natural starting-point of + +all expeditions to the north. Besides, should the fur-yielding animals, too + +zealously hunted, take refuge at the Pole, we should have to follow them."</p> + +<p>"Unless costly furs should go out of fashion," replied Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"O madam," cried the Lieutenant, "there will always be some pretty woman + +whose wish for a sable muff or an ermine tippet must be gratified !"</p> + +<p>"I am afraid so," said Mrs Barnett, laughing; "and probably the first + +discoverer of the Pole will have been led thither in pursuit of a sable or a + +silver fox."</p> + +<p>"That is my conviction," replied Hobson. " Such is human nature, and greed of + +gain will always carry a man further than zeal for science."</p> + +<p>"What! do <i>you</i> utter such sentiments?" exclaimed Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Well, madam, what am I but an <i>employe</i> of the Hudson's Bay Company? + +and does the Company risk its capital and agents with any other hope than an + +increase of profits?"</p> + +<p>"Lieutenant Hobson," said Mrs Barnett, "I think I know you well enough to + +assert that on occasion you would be ready to devote body and soul to science. + +If a purely geographical question called you to the Pole, I feel sure you would + +not hesitate to go. But," she added, with a smile, "the solution of this great + +problem is still far distant. We have but just reached the verge of the Arctic + +Circle, but I hope we may cross it without any very great difficulty."</p> + +<p>"That I fear is doubtful," said the Lieutenant, who had been attentively + +examining the sky during their conversation. "The weather has looked threatening + +for the last few days. Look at the uniformly grey hue of the heavens. That mist + +will presently resolve itself into snow; and if the wind should rise ever so + +little, we shall have to battle with a fearful storm. I wish we were at the + +Great Bear Lake !"</p> + +<p>"Do not let us lose any time, then," said Mrs Barnett, rising; "give the + +signal to start at once."</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant needed no urging. Had he been alone, or accompanied by a few + +men as energetic as himself, he would have pressed on day and night; but he was + +obliged to make allowance for the fatigue of others, although he never spared + +himself. He therefore granted a few hours of rest to his little party, and it + +was not until three in the afternoon that they again set out.</p> + +<p>Jaspar Hobson was not mistaken in prophesying a change in the weather. It + +came very soon. During the afternoon of the same day the mist became thicker, + +and assumed a yellowish and threatening hue. The Lieutenant, although very + +uneasy, allowed none of his anxiety to appear, but had a long consultation with + +Sergeant Long whilst the dogs of his sledge were laboriously preparing to + +start.</p> + +<p>Unfortunately, the district now to be traversed was very unsuitable for + +sledges. The ground was very uneven; ravines were of frequent occurrence; and + +masses of granite or half-thawed icebergs blocked up the road, causing constant + +delay. The poor dogs did their best, but the drivers' whips no longer produced + +any effect upon them.</p> + +<p>And so the Lieutenant and his men were often obliged to walk to rest the + +exhausted animals, to push the sledges, or even sometimes to lift them when the + +roughness of the ground threatened to upset them. The incessant fatigue was, + +however, borne by all without a murmur. Thomas Black alone, absorbed in his one + +idea, never got out of his sledge, and indeed be was so corpulent that all + +exertion was disagreeable to him.</p> + +<p>The nature of the soil changed from the moment of entering the Arctic Circle. + +Some geological convulsion had evidently upheaved the enormous blocks strewn + +upon the surface. The vegetation, too, was of a more distinctive character. + +Wherever they were sheltered from the keen north winds, the flanks of the hills + +were clothed not only with shrubs, but with large trees, all of the same species + +- pines, willows, and firs - proving by their presence that a certain amount of + +vegetative force is retained even in the Frigid Zone. Jaspar Hobson hoped to + +find such specimens of the Arctic Flora even on the verge of the Polar Sea; for + +these trees would supply him with wood to build his fort, and fuel to warm its + +inhabitants. The same thought passed through the minds of his companions, and + +they could not help wondering at the contrast between this comparatively fertile + +region, and the long white plains stretching between the Great Slave Lake and + +Fort Enterprise.</p> + +<p>At night the yellow mist became more opaque; the wind rose, the snow began to + +fall in large flakes, and the ground was soon covered with a thick white carpet. + +In less than an hour the snow was a foot deep, and as it did not freeze but + +remained in a liquid state, the sledges could only advance with extreme + +difficulty; the curved fronts stuck in the soft substance, and the dogs were + +obliged to stop again and again.</p> + +<p>Towards eight o'clock in the evening the wind became very boisterous. The + +snow, driven before it, was flung upon the ground or whirled in the air, forming + +one huge whirlpool. The dogs, beaten back by the squall and blinded with snow, + +could advance no further. The party was then in a narrow gorge between huge + +icebergs, over which the storm raged with fearful fury. Pieces of ice, broken + +off by the hurricane, were hurled into the pass; partial avalanches, any one of + +which could have crushed the sledges and their inmates, added to its dangers, + +and to press on became impossible. The Lieutenant no longer insisted, and after + +consulting with Sergeant Long, gave the order to halt. It was now necessary to + +find a shelter from the snow-drift; but this was no difficult matter to men + +accustomed to Polar expeditions. Jaspar Hobson and his men knew well what they + +had to do under the circumstances. It was not the first time they had been + +surprised by a tempest some hundred miles from the forts of the Company, without + +so much as an Esquimaux hut or Indian hovel in which to lay their heads.</p> + +<p>"To the icebergs! to the icebergs !" cried Jaspar Hobson.</p> + +<p>Every one understood what he meant. Snow houses were to be hollowed out of + +the frozen masses, or rather holes were to be dug, in which each person could + +cower until the storm was over. Knives and hatchets were soon at work on the + +brittle masses of ice, and in three-quarters of an hour some ten dens had been + +scooped out large enough to contain two or three persons each. The dogs were + +left to themselves, their own instinct leading them to find sufficient shelter + +under the snow.</p> + +<p>Before ten o'clock all the travellers were crouching in the snow houses, in + +groups of two or three, each choosing congenial companions. Mrs Barnett, Madge, + +and Lieutenant Hobson occupied one hut, Thomas Black and Sergeant Long another, + +and so on. These retreats were warm, if not comfortable; and the Esquimaux and + +Indians have no other refuge even in the bitterest cold. The adventurers could + +therefore fearlessly await the end of the storm as long as they took care not to + +let the openings of their holes become blocked up with the snow, which they had + +to shovel away every half hour. So violent was the storm that even the + +Lieutenant and his soldiers could scarcely set foot outside. Fortunately, all + +were provided with sufficient food, and were able to endure their beaver-like + +existence without suffering from cold or hunger</p> + +<p>For forty-eight hours the fury of the tempest continued to increase. The wind + +roared in the narrow pass, and tore off the tops of the icebergs. Loud reports, + +repeated twenty times by the echoes, gave notice of the fall of avalanches, and + +Jaspar Hobson began to fear that his further progress would be barred by the + +masses of <i>debris</i> accumulated between the mountains. Other sounds mingled + +with these reports, which Lieutenant Hobson knew too well, and he did not + +disguise from Mrs Barnett that bears were prowling about the pass. But + +fortunately these terrible animals were too much occupied with their own + +concerns to discover the retreat of the travellers; neither the dogs nor the + +sledges, buried in the snow, attracted their attention, and they passed on + +without doing any harm.</p> + +<p>The last night, that of the 25th or 26th May, was even more terrible. So + +great was the fury of the hurricane that a general overthrow of icebergs + +appeared imminent. A fearful death would then have awaited the unfortunate + +travellers beneath the ruins of the broken masses. The blocks of ice cracked + +with an awful noise, and certain oscillations gave warning that breaches had + +been made threatening their solidity. However, no great crash occurred, the huge + +mountains remained intact, and towards the end of the night one of those sudden + +changes so frequent in the Arctic regions took place; the tempest ceased + +suddenly beneath the influence of intense cold, and with the first dawn of day + +peace was restored.</p> +<a name="VIII" id="VIII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER VIII.</h4> + +<h4><i>THE GREAT BEAR LAKE.</i></h4> + +<p>This sudden increase of cold was most fortunate. Even in temperate climes + +there are generally three or four bitter days in May; and they were most + +serviceable now in consolidating the freshly-fallen snow, and making it + +practicable for sledges. Lieutenant Hobson, therefore, lost no time in resuming + +his journey, urging on the dogs to their utmost speed.</p> + +<p>The route was, however, slightly changed. Instead of bearing due north, the + +expedition advanced towards the west, following, so to speak, the curve of the + +Arctic Circle. The Lieutenant was most anxious to reach Fort Confidence, built + +on the northern extremity of the Great Bear Lake. These few cold days were of + +the greatest service to him; he advanced rapidly, no obstacle was encountered, + +and his little troop arrived at the factory on the 30th May.</p> + +<p>At this time Forts Confidence and Good Hope were the most advanced posts of + +the Company in the north. Fort Confidence was a most important position, built + +on the northern extremity of the lake, close to its waters, which being frozen + +over in winter, and navigable in summer, afforded easy access to Fort Franklin, + +on the southern shores, and promoted the coming and going of the Indian hunters + +with their daily spoils. Many were the hunting and fishing expeditions which + +started from Forts Confidence and Good Hope, especially from the former. The + +Great Bear Lake is quite a Mediterranean Sea, extending over several degrees of + +latitude and longitude. Its shape is very irregular : two promontories jut into + +it towards the centre, and the upper portion forms a triangle; its appearance, + +as a whole, much resembling the extended skin of a ruminant without the + +head.</p> + +<p>Fort Confidence was built at the end of the " right paw," at least two + +hundred miles from Coronation Gulf, one of the numerous estuaries which + +irregularly indent the coast of North America. It was therefore situated beyond + +the Arctic Circle, but three degrees south of the seventieth parallel, north of + +which the Hudson's Bay Company proposed forming a new settlement.</p> + +<p>Fort Confidence, as a whole, much resembled other factories further south. It + +consisted of a house for the officers, barracks for the soldiers, and magazines + +for the furs - all of wood, surrounded by palisades. The captain in command was + +then absent. He had gone towards the east on a hunting expedition with a few + +Indians and soldiers. The last season had not been good, costly furs had been + +scarce; but to make up for this the lake had supplied plenty of otter-skins. The + +stock of them had, however, just been sent to the central factories in the + +south, so that the magazines of Fort Confidence were empty on the arrival of our + +party.</p> + +<p>In the absence of the Captain a Sergeant did the honours of the fort to + +Jaspar Hobson and his companions. This second officer, Felton by name was a + +brother-in-law of Sergeant Long. He showed the greatest readiness to assist the + +views of the Lieutenant, who being anxious to rest his party, decided on + +remaining two or three days at Fort Confidence. In the absence of the little + +garrison there was plenty of room, and dogs and men were soon comfortably + +installed. The best room in the largest house was of course given to Mrs Paulina + +Barnett, who was delighted with the politeness of Sergeant Felton.</p> + +<p>Jaspar Hobson's first care was to ask Felton if any Indians from the north + +were then beating the shores of the Great Bear Lake</p> + +<p>"Yes, Lieutenant," replied the Sergeant; "we have just received notice of the + +encampment of a party of Hare Indians on the other northern extremity of the + +lake."</p> + +<p>"How far from here?" inquired Hobson.</p> + +<p>"About thirty miles," replied Sergeant Felton. "Do you wish to enter into + +communication with these Indians?"</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Hobson; they may be able to give me some valuable information + +about the districts bordering on the Arctic Ocean, and bounded by Cape Bathurst. + +Should the site be favourable, I propose constructing our new fort somewhere + +about there."</p> + +<p>"Well, Lieutenant, nothing is easier than to go to the Hare encampment."</p> + +<p>"Along the shores of the lake?"</p> + +<p>"No, across it; it is now free from ice, and the wind is favourable. We will + +place a cutter and a boatman at your service, and in a few hours you will be in + +the Indian settlement."</p> + +<p>"Thank you, Sergeant; to-morrow, then." Whenever you like, Lieutenant."</p> + +<p>The start was fixed for the next morning; and when Mrs Paulina Barnett heard + +of the plan, she begged the Lieutenant to allow her to accompany him, which of + +course he readily did.</p> + +<p>But now to tell how the rest of this first day was passed. Mrs Barnett, + +Hobson, two or three soldiers, Madge, Mrs Mac-Nab, and Joliffe explored the + +shores of the lake under the guidance of Felton. The neighbourhood was by no + +means barren of vegetation; the hills, now free from snow, were crowned by + +resinous trees of the Scotch pine species. These trees, which attain a height of + +some forty feet, supply the inhabitants of the forts with plenty of fuel through + +the long winter. Their thick trunks and dark gloomy branches form a striking + +feature of the landscape; but the regular clumps of equal height, sloping down + +to the very edge of the water, are somewhat monotonous. Between the groups of + +trees the soil was clothed with a sort of whitish weed, which perfumed the air + +with a sweet thymy odour. Sergeant Felton informed his guests that this plant + +was called the " herb of incense " on account of the fragrance it emits when + +burnt.</p> + +<p>Some hundred steps from the fort the party came to a little natural harbour + +shut in by high granite rocks, which formed an admirable protection from the + +heavy surf. Here was anchored the fleet of Fort Confidence, consisting of a + +single fishing-boat-the very one which was to take Mrs Barnett and Hobson to the + +Indian encampment the next day. From this harbour an extensive view was obtained + +of the lake; its waters slightly agitated by the wind, with its irregular shores + +broken by jagged capes and intersected by creeks. The wooded heights beyond, + +with here and there the rugged outline of a floating iceberg standing out + +against the clear blue air, formed the background on the north; whilst on the + +south a regular sea horizon, a circular line clearly cutting sky and water, and + +at this moment glittering in the sunbeams, bounded the sight.</p> + +<p>The whole scene was rich in animal and vegetable life. The surface of the + +water, the shores strewn with flints and blocks of granite, the slopes with + +their tapestry of herbs, the tree-crowned hill-tops, were all alike frequented + +by various specimens of the feathered tribe. Several varieties of ducks, + +uttering their different cries and calls, eider ducks, whistlers spotted + +redshanks, "old women," those loquacious birds whose beak is never closed, + +skimmed the surface of the lake. Hundreds of puffins and guillemots with + +outspread wings darted about in every direction, and beneath the trees strutted + +ospreys two feet high-a kind of hawk with a grey body, blue beak and claws, and + +orange-coloured eyes, which build their huge nests of marine plants in the + +forked branches of trees. The hunter Sabine managed to bring down a couple of + +these gigantic ospreys, which measured nearly six feet from tip to tip of their + +wings, and were therefore magnificent specimens of these migratory birds, who + +feed entirely on fish, and take refuge on the shores of the Gulf of Mexico when + +winter sets in, only visiting the higher latitudes of North America during the + +short summer.</p> + +<p>But the most interesting event of the day was the capture of an otter, the + +skin of which was worth several hundred roubles.</p> + +<p>The furs of these valuable amphibious creatures were once much sought after + +in China; and although the demand for them has considerably decreased in the + +Celestial Empire, they still command very high prices in the Russian market. + +Russian traders, ready to buy up sea-otter skins, travel all along the coasts of + +New Cornwall as far as the Arctic Ocean; and of course, thus hunted, the animal + +is becoming very rare. It has taken refuge further and further north, and the + +trackers have now to pursue it on the shores of the Kamtchatka Sea, and in the + +islands of the Behring Archipelago.</p> + +<p>"But," added Sergeant Felton, after the preceding explanation, "American + +inland otters are not to be despised, and those which frequent the Great Bear + +Lake are worth from ?50 to ?60 each."</p> + +<p>The Sergeant was right; magnificent otters are found in these waters, and he + +himself skilfully tracked and killed one in the presence of his visitors which + +was scarcely inferior in value to those from Kamtchatka itself. The creature + +measured three feet from the muzzle to the end of its tail; it had webbed feet, + +short legs, and its fur, darker on the upper than on the under part of its body, + +was long and silky.</p> + +<p>"A good shot, Sergeant," said Lieutenant Hobson, who with Mrs Barnett had + +been attentively examining the magnificent fur of the dead animal.</p> + +<p>"Yes, Lieutenant," replied Felton; "and if each day brought us such a skin as + +that, we should have nothing to complain of. But much time is wasted in watching + +these animals, who swim and dive with marvellous rapidity. We generally hunt + +them at night, as they very seldom venture from their homes in the trunks of + +trees or the holes of rocks in the daytime, and even expert hunters find it very + +difficult to discover their retreats."</p> + +<p>"And are these otters also becoming scarcer and scarcer?" inquired Mrs + +Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam," replied the Sergeant; "and when this species becomes extinct, + +the profits of the Company will sensibly decline. All the hunters try to obtain + +its fur, and the Americans in particular are formidable rivals to us. Did you + +not meet any American agents on your journey up, Lieutenant?"</p> + +<p>"Not one," replied Hobson. "Do they ever penetrate as far as this?"</p> + +<p>"Oh yes !" said the Sergeant; "and when you hear of their approach, I advise + +you to be on your guard."</p> + +<p>"Are these agents, then, highway robbers?" asked Mrs Paulina Barnett.</p> + +<p>"No, madam," replied the Sergeant; "but they are formidable rivals, and when + +game is scarce, hunters often come to blows about it. I daresay that if the + +Company's attempt to establish a fort on the verge of the Arctic Ocean be + +successful, its example will at once be followed by these Americans, whom Heaven + +confound!"</p> + +<p>"Bah!" exclaimed the Lieutenant; "the hunting districts are vast, and there's + +room beneath the sun for everybody. As for us, let's make a start to begin with. + +Let us press on as long as we have firm ground beneath our feet, and God be with + +us!"</p> + +<p>After a walk of three hours the visitors returned to Fort Confidence, where a + +good meal of fish and fresh venison awaited them. Sergeant Long did the honours + +of the table, and after a little pleasant conversation, all retired to rest to + +forget their fatigues in a healthy and refreshing sleep.</p> + +<p>The next day, May 31st, Mrs Barnett and Jaspar Hobson were on foot at five + +A.M. The Lieutenant intended to devote this day to visiting the Indian + +encampment, and obtaining as much useful information as possible. He asked + +Thomas Black to go with him, but the astronomer preferred to remain on <i>terra + +firma</i>. He wished to make a few astronomical observations, and to determine + +exactly the latitude and longitude of Fort Confidence; so that Mrs Barnett and + +Jaspar Hobson had to cross the lake alone, under the guidance of an old boatman + +named Norman, who had long been in the Company's service.</p> + +<p>The two travellers were accompanied by Sergeant Long as far as the little + +harbour, where they found old Norman ready to embark. Their little vessel was + +but an open fishing-boat, six feet long, rigged like a cutter, which one man + +could easily manage. The weather was beautiful, and the slight breeze blowing + +from the north-east was favourable to the crossing. Sergeant Felton took leave + +of his guests with many apologies for being unable to accompany them in the + +absence of his chief. The boat was let loose from its moorings, and tacking to + +starboard, shot across the clear waters of the lake.</p> + +<p>The little trip passed pleasantly enough. The taciturn old sailor sat silent + +in the stern of the boat with the tiller tucked under his arm. Mrs Barnett and + +Lieutenant Hobson, seated opposite to each other, examined with interest the + +scenery spread out before them. The boat skirted the northern shores of the lake + +at about three miles' distance, following a rectilinear direction, so that the + +wooded heights sloping gradually to the west were distinctly visible. From this + +side the district north of the lake appeared perfectly flat, and the horizon + +receded to a considerable distance. The whole of this coast contrasted strongly + +with the sharp angle, at the extremity of which rose Fort Confidence, framed in + +green pines. The flag of the Company was still visible floating from the tower + +of the fort. The oblique rays of the sun lit up the surface of the water, and + +striking on the floating icebergs, seemed to convert them into molten silver of + +dazzling brightness. No trace remained of the solid ice-mountains of the winter + +but these moving relies, which the solar rays could scarcely dissolve, and which + +seemed, as it were, to protest against the brilliant but not very powerful Polar + +sun, now describing a diurnal arc of considerable length.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett and the Lieutenant, as was their custom, communicated to each + +other the thoughts suggested by the strange scenes through which they were + +passing. They laid up a store of pleasant recollections for the future whilst + +the beat floated rapidly along upon the peaceful waves.</p> + +<p>The party started at six in the morning, and at nine they neared the point on + +the northern bank at which they were to land. The Indian encampment was situated + +at the north-west angle of the Great Bear Lake. Before ten o'clock old Norman + +ran the boat aground on a low bank at the foot of a cliff of moderate height. + +Mrs Barnett and the Lieutenant landed at once. Two or three Indians, with their + +chief, wearing gorgeous plumes, hastened to meet them, and addressed them in + +fairly intelligible English.</p> + +<p>These Hare Indians, like the Copper and Beaver Indians, all belong to the + +Chippeway race, and differ but little in customs and costumes from their + +fellow-tribes. They are in constant communication with the factories, and have + +become, so to speak, "Britainised" - at least as much so as is possible for + +savages. They bring the spoils of the chase to the forts, and there exchange + +them for the necessaries of life, which they no longer provide for themselves. + +They are in the pay of the Company, they live upon it, and it is not surprising + +that they have lost all originality. To find a native race as yet uninfluenced + +by contact with Europeans we must go to still higher latitudes, to the ice-bound + +regions frequented by the Esquimaux, who, like the Greenlanders, are the true + +children of Arctic lands.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett and Jaspar Hobson accompanied the Indians to their camp, about + +half a mile from the shore, and found some thirty natives there, men, women, and + +children, who supported themselves by hunting and fishing on the borders of the + +lake. These Indians had just come from the northernmost districts of the + +American continent, and were able to give the Lieutenant some valuable, although + +necessarily incomplete, information on the actual state of the sea-coast near + +the seventieth parallel. The Lieutenant heard with considerable satisfaction + +that a party of Americans or Europeans had been seen on the confines of the + +Polar Sea, and that it was open at this time of year. About Cape Bathurst, + +properly so called, the point for which he intended to make, the Hare Indians + +could tell him nothing. Their chief said, however, that the district between the + +Great Bear Lake and Cape Bathurst was very difficult to cross, being hilly and + +intersected by streams, at this season of the year free from ice. He advised the + +Lieutenant to go down the Coppermine river, from the north-east of the lake, + +which would take him to the coast by the shortest route. Once at the Arctic + +Ocean, it would be easy to skirt along its shores and to choose the best spot at + +Which to halt.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson thanked the Indian chief, and took leave after giving him a + +few presents. Then accompanied by Mrs Barnett, he explored the neighbourhood of + +the camp, not returning to the boat until nearly three o'clock in the + +afternoon.</p> +<a name="IX" id="IX"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER IX.</h4> + +<h4><i>A STORM ON THE LAKE.</i></h4> + +<p>The old sailor was impatiently awaiting the return of the travellers; for + +during the last hour the weather had changed, and the appearance of the sky was + +calculated to render any one accustomed to read the signs of the clouds uneasy. + +The sun was obscured by a thick mist, the wind had fallen, but - an ominous + +moaning was heard from the south of the lake. These symptoms of an approaching + +change of temperature were developed with all the rapidity peculiar to these + +elevated latitudes.</p> + +<p>"Let us be off, sir! let us be off!" cried old Norman, looking anxiously at + +the fog above his head. " Let us start without losing an instant. There are + +terrible signs in the air!"</p> + +<p>"Indeed," exclaimed the Lieutenant, "the appearance of the sky is quite + +changed, and we never noticed it, Mrs Barnett!"</p> + +<p>"Are you afraid of a storm?" inquired the lady of old Norman.</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam," replied the old sailor; "and the storms on the Great Bear Lake + +are often terrible. The hurricane rages as if upon the open Atlantic Ocean. This + +sudden fog bodes us no good; but the tempest may hold back for three or four + +hours, and by that time we shall be at Fort Confidence. Let us then start + +without a moment's delay, for the boat would not be safe near these rocks."</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant, feeling that the old man, accustomed as he was to navigate + +these waters, was better able to judge than himself, decided to follow his + +advice, and embarked at once with Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>But just as they were pushing off, old Norman, as if possessed by some sudden + +presentiment, murmured -</p> + +<p>"Perhaps it would be better to wait."</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson overheard these words, and looked inquiringly at the old + +boatman, already seated at the helm. Had he been alone he would not have + +hesitated to start, but as Mrs Barnett was with him caution was necessary. The + +lady at once saw and understood his hesitation.</p> + +<p>"Never mind about me, Lieutenant," she said; "act as if I were not present. + +Let us start immediately , as our brave guide suggests."</p> + +<p>"We are off, then," cried Norman, letting go the moorings, "to the fort by + +the shortest route."</p> + +<p>For about an hour the bark made little head. The sail, scarcely filled by the + +fitful breeze, flapped against the mast. The fog became thicker. The waves began + +to rise and the boat to rock considerably; for the approaching hurricane + +affected the water sooner than the atmosphere itself. The two travellers sat + +still and silent, whilst the old sailor peered into the darkness with bloodshot + +eyes. Prepared for all contingencies, he awaited the shock of the wind, ready to + +pay out rapidly should the attack be very violent. The conflict of the elements + +had not, however, as yet commenced; and all would have been well if they bad + +been able to advance, but after an hour's sail they were still only about two + +hours' distance from the Indian encampment. A few gusts of wind from the shore + +drove them out of their course, and the dense fog rendered it impossible for + +them to make out the coast-line. Should the wind settle in the north it would + +probably go hard with the light boat, which, unable to hold its own course, + +would be drifted out into the lake no one knew where.</p> + +<p>"We are scarcely advancing at all," said the Lieutenant to old Norman.</p> + +<p>"No, sir," replied Norman; "the wind is not strong enough to fill the sail, + +and if it were, I fear it comes from the wrong quarter. If so," he added, + +pointing to the south, "we may see Fort Franklin before Fort Confidence."</p> + +<p>"Well," said Mrs Barnett cheerfully, "our trip will have been all the more + +complete. This is a magnificent lake, well worth exploring from north to south. + +I suppose, Norman, one might get back even from Fort Franklin?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam, if we ever reach it," replied the old man. "But tempests lasting + +fifteen days are by no means rare on this lake; and if our bad luck should drive + +us to the south, it may be a month before Lieutenant Hobson again sees Fort + +Confidence."</p> + +<p>"Let us be careful, then," said the Lieutenant; "for such a delay, would + +hinder our projects very much. Do the best you can under the circumstances, and + +if you think it would be prudent, go back to the north. I don't suppose Mrs + +Barnett would mind a walk of twenty or twenty-five miles."</p> + +<p>I should be glad enough to go back to the north, Lieutenant," replied Norman, + +"if it were still possible. But look, the wind seems likely to settle against + +us. All I can attempt is to get to the cape on the north-east, and if it doesn't + +blow too hard, I hope to succeed."</p> + +<p>But at about half-past four the storm broke. The shrill whistling of the wind + +was heard far above their heads, but the state of the atmosphere prevented it + +from as yet descending upon the lake; this was, however, only delayed for a + +brief space of time. The cries of frightened birds flying through the fog + +mingled with the noise of the wind. Suddenly the mist was torn open, and + +revealed low jagged masses of rain-cloud chased towards the south. The fears of + +the old sailor were realised. The wind blew from the north, and it was not long + +before the travellers learned the meaning of a squall upon the lake.</p> + +<p>"Look out!" cried old Norman, tightening sail so as to get his boat ahead of + +the wind, whilst keeping her under control of the helm.</p> + +<p>The squall came. It caught the boat upon the flank, and it was turned over on + +its side; but recovering itself, it was flung upon the crest of a wave. The + +billows surged as if upon an open sea. The waters of the lake not being very + +deep, struck against the bottom and rebounded to an immense height.</p> + +<p>"Help! help!" cried old Norman, hurriedly struggling to haul down his + +sail.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett and Hobson endeavoured to come to his assistance, but without + +success, for they knew noticing of the management of a boat. Norman, unable to + +leave the helm, and the halliards being entangled at the top of the mast, could + +not take in the sail. Every moment the boat threatened to capsize, and heavy + +seas broke over its sides. The sky became blacker and blacker, cold rain mingled + +with snow fell in torrents, whilst the squall redoubled its fury, lashing the + +crests of the waves into foam.</p> + +<p>"Cut it! cut it!" screamed Norman above the roaring of the storm.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant, his cap blown away and his eyes blinded by the spray, seized + +Norman's knife and cut the halliard like a harp-string; but the wet cordage no + +longer acted in the grooves of the pulleys, and the yard remained attached to + +the top of the mast.</p> + +<p>Norman, totally unable to make head against the wind, now resolved to tack + +about for the south, dangerous as it would be to have the boat before the wind, + +pursued by waves advancing at double its speed. Yes, to tack, although this + +course would probably bring them all to the southern shores of the lake, far + +away from their destination.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant and his brave companion were well aware of the danger which + +threatened them. The frail boat could not long resist the blows of the waves, it + +would either be crushed or capsized; the lives of those within it were in the + +hands of God.</p> + +<p>But neither yielded to despair; clinging to the sides of the boat, wet to the + +skin, chilled to the bone by the cutting blast, they strove to gaze through the + +thick mist and fog. All trace of the land had disappeared, and so great was the + +obscurity that at a cable's length from the boat clouds and waves could not be + +distinguished from each other. Now and then the two travellers looked + +inquiringly into old Norman's face, who, with teeth set and hands clutching the + +tiller; tried to keep his boat as much as possible under wind.</p> + +<p>But the violence of the squall became such that the boat could not long + +maintain this course. The waves which struck its bow would soon have inevitably + +crushed it; the front planks were already beginning to separate, and when its + +whole weight was flung into the hollows of the waves it seemed as if it could + +rise no more.</p> + +<p>"We must tack, we must tack, whatever happens !" murmured the old sailor.</p> + +<p>And pushing the tiller and paying out sail, he turned the head of the boat to + +the south. The sail, stretched to the utmost, brought the boat round with giddy + +rapidity, and the immense waves, chased by the wind, threatened to engulf the + +little bark. This was the great danger of shifting with the wind right aft. The + +billows hurled themselves in rapid succession upon the boat, which could not + +evade them. It filled rapidly, and the water bad to be baled out without a + +moment's pause, or it must have foundered. As they got nearer and nearer to the + +middle of the lake the waves became rougher. Nothing there broke the fury of the + +wind; no clumps of trees, no hills, checked for a moment the headlong course of + +the hurricane. Now and then momentary glimpses were obtained through the fog of + +icebergs dancing like buoys upon the waves, and driven towards the south of the + +lake.</p> + +<p>It was half-past five. Neither Norman nor the Lieutenant had any idea of + +where they were, or whither they were going. They had lost all control over the + +boat, and were at the mercy of the winds and waves.</p> + +<p>And now at about a hundred feet behind the boat a huge wave upreared its + +foam-crowned crest, whilst in front a black whirlpool was formed by the sudden + +sinking of the water. All surface agitation, crushed by the wind, had + +disappeared around this awful gulf, which, growing deeper and blacker every + +moment, drew the devoted little vessel towards its fatal embrace. Ever nearer + +came the mighty wave, all lesser billows sinking into insignificance before it. + +It gained upon the boat, another moment and it would crush it to atoms. Norman, + +looking round, saw its approach; and Mrs Barnett and the Lieutenant, with eyes + +fixed and staring, awaited in fearful suspense the blow from which there was no + +escape. The wave broke over them with the noise of thunder; it enveloped the + +stern of the boat in foam, a fearful crash was heard, and a cry burst from the + +lips of the Lieutenant and his companion, smothered beneath the liquid mass.</p> + +<p>They thought that all was over, and that the boat had sunk; but no, it rose + +once more, although more than half filled with water.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant uttered a cry of despair. Where was Norman? The poor old + +sailor had disappeared !</p> + +<p>Mrs Paulina Barnett looked inquiringly at Hobson.</p> + +<p>"Norman!" he repeated, pointing to his empty place.</p> + +<p>"Unhappy man !" murmured Mrs Barnett; and at the risk of being flung from the + +boat rocking on the waves, the two started to their feet and looked around them. + +But they could see and hear nothing. No cry for help broke upon their ears. No + +dead body floated in the white foam. The old sailor had met his death in the + +element he loved so well.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett and Hobson sank back upon their seats. They were now alone, and + +must see to their own safety; but neither of them knew anything of the + +management of a boat, and even an experienced hand could scarcely have + +controlled it now. They were at the mercy of the waves, and the bark, with + +distended sail, swept along in mad career. What could the Lieutenant do to check + +or direct its course?</p> + +<p>What a terrible situation for our travellers, to be thus overtaken by a + +tempest in a frail bark which they could not manage !</p> + +<p>"We are lost!" said the Lieutenant.</p> + +<p>"No, Lieutenant," replied Mrs Barnett; "let us make another effort. Heaven + +helps those who help themselves !"</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson now for the first time realised with how intrepid a woman + +fate had thrown him.</p> + +<p>The first thing to be done was to get rid of the water which weighed down the + +boat. Another wave shipped would have filled it in a moment, and it must have + +sunk at once. The vessel lightened, it would have a better chance of rising on + +the waves; and the two set to work to bale out the water. This was no easy task; + +for fresh waves constantly broke over them, and the scoop could not be laid + +aside for an instant. Mrs Barnett was indefatigable, and the Lieutenant, leaving + +the baling to her, took the helm himself, and did the best he could to guide the + +boat with the wind right aft.</p> + +<p>To add to the danger, night, or rather darkness, for in these latitudes night + +only lasts a few hours at this time of year, fell upon them. Scarce a ray of + +light penetrated through the heavy clouds and fog. They could not see two yards + +before them, and the boat must have been dashed to pieces had it struck a + +floating iceberg. This danger was indeed imminent, for the loose ice-masses + +advance with such rapidity that it is impossible to get out of their way.</p> + +<p>"You have no control over the helm?" said Mrs Barnett in a slight lull of the + +storm.</p> + +<p>No, madam he replied; "and you must prep are for the worst."</p> + +<p>"I am ready!" replied the courageous woman simply.</p> + +<p>As she spoke a loud rippling sound was heard. The sail, torn away by the + +wind, disappeared like a white cloud. The boat sped rapidly along for a few + +instants, and then stopped suddenly, the waves buffeting it about like an + +abandoned wreck. Mrs Barnett and Hobson, flung to the bottom of the boat, + +bruised, shaken, and torn, felt that all was lost. Not a shred of canvas was + +left to aid in navigating the craft; and what with the spray, the snow, and the + +rain, they could scarcely see each other, whilst the uproar drowned their + +voices. Expecting every moment to perish, they remained for an hour in painful + +suspense, commending themselves to God, who alone could save them.</p> + +<p>Neither of them could have said how long they waited when they were aroused + +by a violent shock.</p> + +<p>The boat had just struck an enormous iceberg, a floating block with rugged, + +slippery sides, to which it would be impossible to cling.</p> + +<p>At this sudden blow, which could not have been parried, the bow of the boat + +was split open, and the water poured into it in torrents.</p> + +<p>"We are sinking! we are sinking !" cried Jasper Hobson.</p> + +<p>He was right. The boat was settling down; the water had already reached the + +seats.</p> + +<p>"Madam, madam, I am here! I will not leave you!" added the Lieutenant.</p> + +<p>"No, no," cried Mrs Barnett : "alone, you may save yourself; together, we + +should perish. Leave me! leave me!"</p> + +<p>"Never!" cried Hobson.</p> + +<p>But he had scarcely pronounced this word when the boat, struck by another + +wave, filled and sank.</p> + +<p>Both were drawn under water by the eddy caused by the sudden settling down of + +the boat, but in a few instants they rose to the surface. Hobson was a strong + +swimmer, and struck out with one arm, supporting his companion with the other. + +But it was evident that he could not long sustain a conflict with the furious + +waves, and that he must perish with her he wished to save.</p> + +<p>At this moment a strange sound attracted his attention. It was not the cry of + +a frightened bird, but the shout of a human voice! By one supreme effort Hobson + +raised himself above the waves and looked around him.</p> + +<p>But he could distinguish nothing in the thick fog. And yet he again beard + +cries, this time nearer to him. Some bold men were coming to his succour! Alas! + +if it were so, they would arrive too late. Encumbered by his clothes, the + +Lieutenant felt himself sinking with the unfortunate lady, whose head he could + +scarcely keep above the water. With a last despairing effort he uttered a + +heartrending cry and disappeared beneath the waves.</p> + +<p>It was, however, no mistake-he had heard voices. Three men, wandering about + +by the lake, had seen the boat in danger, and put off to its rescue. They were + +Esquimaux, the only men who could have hoped to weather such a storm, for theirs + +are the only boats constructed to escape destruction in these fearful + +tempests.</p> + +<p>The Esquimaux boat or <i>kayak is</i> a long pirogue raised at each end, made + +of a light framework of wood, covered with stretched seal-skins strongly + +stitched with the sinews of the Walrus. In the upper part of the boat; also + +covered with skins, is an opening in which the Esquimaux takes his place, + +fastening his waterproof jacket to the back of his seat; so that he is actually + +joined to his bark, which not a drop of water can penetrate. This light, + +easily-managed <i>kayak,</i> floating as it does, on the crests of the waves, + +can never be submerged; and if it be sometimes capsized, a blow of the paddle + +rights it again directly; so that it is able to live and make way in seas in + +which any other boat would certainly be dashed to pieces.</p> + +<p>The three Esquimaux, guided by the Lieutenant's last despairing cry, arrived + +at the scene of the wreck joints in time. Hobson and Mrs Barnett, already half + +drowned, felt themselves drawn up by powerful hands; but in the darkness they + +were unable to discover who were their deliverers. One of the men took the + +Lieutenant and laid him across his own boat, another did the sane for Mrs + +Barnett, and the three <i>kayaks,</i> skilfully managed with the paddles, six + +feet long, sped rapidly over the white foam.</p> + +<p>Half an hour afterwards, the shipwrecked travellers were lying on the sandy + +beach three miles above Fort Providence.</p> + +<p>The old sailor alone was missing !</p> +<a name="X" id="X"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER X.</h4> + +<h4><i>A RETROSPECT.</i></h4> + +<p>It was about ten o'clock the same night when Mrs Barnett and Lieutenant + +Hobson knocked at the postern gate of the fort. Great was the joy on seeing + +them, for they had been given up for lost; but this joy was turned to mourning + +at the news of the death of Norman. The brave fellow had been beloved by all, + +and his loss was sincerely mourned. The intrepid and devoted Esquimaux received + +phlegmatically the earnest expressions of gratitude of those they had saved, and + +coulot be persuaded to come to the fort. What they had done seemed to them + +only natural, and these were not the first persons they had rescued; so they + +quietly returned to their wild life of adventure on the lake, where they hunted + +the otters and water-birds day and night.</p> + +<p>For the next three nights the party rested. Hobson always intended to set out + +on June 2d; and on that day, all having recovered from their fatigues and the + +storm having abated, the order was given to start.</p> + +<p>Sergeant Felton had done all in his power to make his guests comfortable and + +to aid their enterprise; some of the jaded dogs were replaced by fresh animals, + +and now the Lieutenant found all his sledges drawn up in good order at the door + +of the enceinte, and awaiting the travellers.</p> + +<p>The adieux were soon over. Each one thanked Sergeant Felton for his + +hospitality, and Mrs Paulina Barnett was most profuse in her expressions of + +gratitude. A hearty shake of the hand between the Sergeant and his + +brother-in-law, Long, completed the leave-taking,</p> + +<p>Each pair got into the sledge assigned to them; but this time Mrs Barnett and + +the Lieutenant shared one vehicle, Madge and Sergeant Long following them.</p> + +<p>According to the advice of the Indian chief, Hobson determined to get to the + +coast by the shortest route, and to take a north-easterly direction. After + +consulting, his map, which merely gave a rough outline of the configuration of + +the country, it seemed best to him to descend the valley of the Coppermine, a + +large river which flows into Coronation Gulf.</p> + +<p>The distance between Fort Confidence and the mouth of this river is only a + +degree and a half-that is to say, about eighty-five or ninety miles. The deep + +hollow formed by the gulf is bounded on the north by Cape Krusenstein, and from + +it the coast juts out towards the north-west, ending in Cape Bathurst, which is + +above the seventieth parallel.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant, therefore, now changed the route he had hitherto followed, + +directing his course to the east, so as to reach the river in a few hours.</p> + +<p>In the afternoon of the next day, June 3d, the river was gained. It was now + +free from ice, and its clear and rapid waters flowed through a vast valley, + +intersected by numerous but easily fordable streams. The sledges advanced pretty + +rapidly, and as they went along, Hobson gave his companion some account of the + +country through which they were passing. A sincere friendship founded on mutual + +esteem, had sprung up between these two. Mrs Paulina Barnett was an earnest + +student with a special gift for discovery, and was therefore always glad to + +converse with travellers and explorers. Hobson, who knew his beloved North + +America by heart, was able to answer all her inquiries fully.</p> + +<p>"About ninety years ago," he said, "the territory through which the + +Coppermine flows was unknown, and we are indebted for its discovery to the + +agents of the Hudson's Bay Company. But as always happens in scientific matters, + +in seeking one thing, another was found. Columbus was trying to find Asia, and + +discovered America."</p> + +<p>"And what were the agents of the Hudson's Bay Company seeking? The famous + +North-West Passage?"</p> + +<p>"No, madam," replied the young Lieutenant. "A century ago the Company had no + +interest in the opening of a new route, which would have been more valuable to + +its rivals than to it. It is even said that in 1741 a certain Christopher + +Middleton, sent to explore these latitudes, was publicly charged with receiving + +a bribe of ?500 from the Company to say that there was not, and could not be, a + +sea passage between the oceans."</p> + +<p>"That was not much to the credit of the celebrated Company," said Mrs + +Barnett.</p> + +<p>"I do not defend it in the matter," replied Hobson; "and its interference was + +severely censured by Parliament in 1746, when a reward of ?20,000 was offered by + +the Government for the discovery of the passage in question. In that year two + +intrepid explorers, William Moor and Francis Smith, penetrated as far as Repulse + +Bay in the hope of discovering the much-longed-for passage. But they were + +unsuccessful, and returned to England after an absence of a year and a + +half."</p> + +<p>"But did not other captains follow in their steps, resolved to conquer where + +they had failed?" inquired Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"No, madam; and in spite of the large reward offered by Parliament, no + +attempt was made to resume explorations in English America until thirty years + +afterwards, when some agents of the Company took up the unfinished task of + +Captains Moor and Smith."</p> + +<p>"The Company had then relinquished the narrow-minded egotistical position it + +had taken up?"</p> + +<p>"No, madam, not yet. Samuel Hearne, the agent, only went to reconnoitre the + +position of a copper-mine which native miners had reported. On November 6, 1769, + +this agent left Fort Prince of Wales, on the river Churchill, near the western + +shores of Hudson's Bay. He pressed boldly on to the north-west; but the + +excessive cold and the exhaustion of his provisions compelled him to return + +without accomplishing anything. Fortunately he was not easily discouraged, and + +on February 23d of the next year he set out again, this time taking some Indians + +with him. Great hardships were endured in this second journey. The fish and game + +on which Hearne had relied often failed him; and he had once nothing to eat for + +seven days but wild fruit, bits of old leather, and burnt bones. He was again + +compelled to return to the fort a disappointed man. But he did not even yet + +despair, and started a third time, December 7th, 1770; and after a struggle of + +nineteen months, he discovered the Coppermine river, July 13th, 1772, the course + +of which he followed to its mouth. According to his own account, he saw the open + +sea, and in any case he was the first to penetrate to the northern coast of + +America."</p> + +<p>"But the North-West Passage-that is to say, the direct communication by sea + +between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans-was not then discovered?"</p> + +<p>"Oh no, madam," replied the Lieutenant; "and what countless adventurous + +sailors have since gone to seek it! Phipps in 1773, James Cook and Clerke in + +1776 to 1779, Kotzebue in 1815 to 1818, Ross, Parry, Franklin, and others have + +attempted this difficult task; but it was reserved to M'Clure in our own day to + +pass from one ocean to the other across the Polar Sea."</p> + +<p>"Well, Lieutenant, that was a geographical discovery of which we English may + +well be proud. But do tell me if the Hudson's Bay Company did not adopt more + +generous views, and send out some other explorer after the return of + +Hearne."</p> + +<p>"It did, madam; and it was thanks to it that Captain Franklin was able to + +accomplish his voyage of 1819 to 1822 between the river discovered by Hearne and + +Cape Turnagain. This expedition endured great fatigue and hardships; provisions + +often completely failed, and two Canadians were assassinated and eaten by their + +comrades. But in spite of all his sufferings, Captain Franklin explored no less + +than five thousand five hundred and fifty miles of the hitherto unknown coast of + +North America!"</p> + +<p>"He was indeed a man of energy," added Mrs Barnett; "and he gave proof of his + +great qualities in starting on a fresh Polar expedition after all he had gone + +through."</p> + +<p>"Yes," replied the Lieutenant; "and he met a terrible death in the land his + +own intrepidity had discovered. It has now been proved, however, that all his + +companions did not perish with him. Many are doubtless still wandering about on + +the vast ice-fields. I cannot think of their awful condition without a shudder. + +One day," be added earnestly, and with strange emotion-" one day I will search + +the unknown lands where the dreadful catastrophe took place, and- "</p> + +<p>"And," exclaimed Mrs Barnett, pressing his hand, "I will accompany you. Yes, + +this idea has occurred to me more than once, as it has to you; and my heart + +beats high when I think that fellow countrymen of my own-Englishmen-are awaiting + +succour."</p> + +<p>"Which will come too late for most of them, madam," said the Lieutenant; "but + +rest assured some will even yet be saved."</p> + +<p>"God grant it, Lieutenant!" replied Mrs Barnett; "and it appears to me that + +the agents of the Company, living as they do close to the coast, are better + +fitted than any one else to fulfil this duty of humanity."</p> + +<p>"I agree with you, madam; they are, as they have often proved, inured to the + +rigours of the Arctic climate. Was it not they who aided Captain Back in his + +voyage in 1834, when he discovered King William's Land, where Franklin met his + +fate? Was it not two of us, Dease and Simpson, who were sent by the Governor of + +Hudson's Bay to explore the shores of the Polar Sea in 1838, and whose + +courageous efforts first discovered Victoria Land? It is my opinion that the + +future reserves for the Hudson's Bay Company the final conquest of the Arctic + +regions. Gradually its factories are advancing further and further north, + +following the retreat of the fur-yielding animals; and one day a fort will be + +erected on the Pole itself, that mathematical point where meet all the meridians + +of the globe."</p> + +<p>During this and the succeeding journeys Jaspar Hobson related his own + +adventures since he entered the service of the Company his struggles with the + +agents of rival associations, and his efforts to explore the unknown districts + +of the north or west; and Mrs Barnett, on her side, told of her travels in the + +tropics. She spoke of all she had done, and of all she hoped still to + +accomplish; so that the long hours, lightened by pleasant conversation, passed + +rapidly away.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile the dogs advanced at full gallop towards the north. The Coppermine + +valley widened sensibly as they neared the Arctic Ocean. The hills on either + +side sank lower and lower, and only scattered clumps of resinous trees broke the + +monotony of the landscape. A few blocks of ice, drifted down by the river, still + +resisted the action of the sun; but each day their number decreased, and a + +canoe, or even a good-sized boat, might easily have descended the stream, the + +course of which was unimpeded by any natural barrier or aggregation of rocks. + +The bed of the Coppermine was both deep and wide; its waters were very clear, + +and being fed by the melted snow, flowed on at a considerable pace, never, + +however, forming dangerous rapids. Its course, at first very sinuous, became + +gradually less and less winding, and at last stretched along in a straight line + +for several miles. Its banks, composed of fine firm sand, and clothed in part + +with short dry herbage, were wide and level, so that the long train of sledges + +sped rapidly over them.</p> + +<p>The expedition travelled day and night-if we can speak of the night, when the + +sun, describing an almost horizontal circle, scarcely disappeared at all. The + +true night only lasted two hours, and the dawn succeeded the twilight almost + +immediately. The weather was fine; the sky clear, although somewhat misty on the + +horizon; and everything combined to favour the travellers.</p> + +<p>For two days they kept along the river-banks without meeting with any + +difficulties. They saw but few fur-bearing animals; but there were plenty of + +birds, which might have been counted by thousands. The absence of otters, + +sables, beavers, ermines, foxes, &c., did not trouble the Lieutenant much, + +for he supposed that they had been driven further north by over-zealous + +tracking; and indeed the marks of encampments, extinguished fires, &c., told + +of the more or less recent passage of native hunters. Hobson knew that he would + +have to penetrate a good deal further north, and that part only of his journey + +would be accomplished when he got to the mouth of the Coppermine river. He was + +therefore most eager to reach the limit of Hearne's exploration, and pressed on + +as rapidly as possible.</p> + +<p>Every one shared the Lieutenant's impatience, and resolutely resisted fatigue + +in order to reach the Arctic Ocean with the least possible delay. They were + +drawn onwards by an indefinable attraction; the glory of the unknown dazzled + +their sight. Probably real hardships would commence when they did arrive at the + +much-desired coast. But no matter, they longed to battle with difficulties, and + +to press straight onwards to their aim. The district they were now traversing + +could have no direct interest for them; the real exploration would only commence + +on the shores of the Arctic Ocean. Each one, then, would gladly hail the arrival + +in the elevated western districts for which they were bound, cut across though + +they were by the seventieth parallel of north latitude.</p> + +<p>On the 5th June, four days after leaving Fort Confidence the river widened + +considerably. The western banks, curving slightly, ran almost due north; whilst + +the eastern rounded off into the coastline, stretching away as far as the eye + +could reach.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson paused, and waving his hand to his companions, pointed to + +the boundless ocean.</p> +<a name="XI" id="XI"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XI.</h4> + +<h4><i>ALONG THE COAST.</i></h4> + +<p>Coronation Gulf, the large estuary dotted with the islands forming the Duke + +of York Archipelago, which the party had now reached, was a sheet of water with + +irregular banks, let in, as it were, into the North American continent. At its + +western angle opened the mouth of the Coppermine; and on the east a long narrow + +creek called Bathurst Inlet ran into the mainland, from which stretched the + +jagged broken coast with its pointed capes and rugged promontories, ending in + +that confusion of straits, sounds, and channels which gives such a strange + +appearance to the maps of North America. On the other side the coast turned + +abruptly to the north beyond the mouth of the Coppermine River, and ended in + +Cape Krusenstern.</p> + +<p>After consulting with Sergeant Long, Lieutenant Hobson decided to give his + +party a day's rest here.</p> + +<p>The exploration, properly so called, which was to enable the Lieutenant to + +fix upon a suitable site for the establishment of a fort, was now really about + +to begin. The Company had advised him to keep as much as possible above the + +seventieth parallel, and on the shores of the Arctic Ocean. To obey his orders + +Hobson was obliged to keep to the west; for on the east-with the exception, + +perhaps, of the land of Boothia, crossed by the seventieth parallel-the whole + +country belongs rather to the Arctic Circle, and the geographical conformation + +of Boothia is as yet but imperfectly known.</p> + +<p>After carefully ascertaining the latitude and longitude, and verifying his + +position by the map, the Lieutenant found that he was a hundred miles below the + +seventieth degree. But beyond Cape Krusenstern, the coast-line, running in a + +north-easterly direction, abruptly crosses the seventieth parallel at a sharp + +angle near the one hundred and thirtieth meridian, and at about the same + +elevation as Cape Bathurst, the spot named as a rendezvous by Captain Craventy. + +He must therefore make for that point, and should the site appear suitable the + +new fort would be erected there.</p> + +<p>"There," said the Lieutenant to his subordinate, Long, "we shall be in the + +position ordered by the Company. There the sea, open for a great part of the + +year, will allow the vessels from Behring Strait to come right up to the fort, + +bringing us fresh provisions and taking away our commodities."</p> + +<p>"Not to mention," added Sergeant Long, "that our men will be entitled to + +double pay all the time they are beyond the seventieth parallel."</p> + +<p>"Of course that is understood," replied Hobson; "and I daresay they will + +accept it without a murmur."</p> + +<p>"Well then, Lieutenant," said Long simply, "we have now only to start for + +Cape Bathurst."</p> + +<p>But as a day of rest had been promised, the start did not actually take place + +until the next day, June 6th.</p> + +<p>The second part of the journey would naturally be very different from the + +first. The rules with regard to the sledges keeping their rank need no longer be + +enforced, and each couple drove as it pleased them. Only short distances were + +traversed at a time; halts were made at every angle of the coast, and the party + +often walked. Lieutenant Hobson only urged two things upon his companions not to + +go further than three miles from the coast, and to rally their forces twice a + +day, at twelve o'clock and in the evening. At night they all encamped in + +tents.</p> + +<p>The weather continued very fine and the temperature moderate, maintaining a + +mean height of 59? Fahrenheit above zero. Two or three times sudden snowstorms + +came on; but they did not last long, and exercised no sensible influence upon + +the temperature.</p> + +<p>The whole of the American coast between Capes Krusenstern and Parry, + +comprising an extent of more than two hundred and fifty miles, was examined with + +the greatest care between the 6th and 20th of June. Geographical observations + +were accurately taken, and Hobson, most effectively aided by Thomas Black, was + +able to rectify certain errors in previous marine surveys; whilst the primary + +object of the expedition-the examination into the quality and quantity of the + +game in the surrounding districts-was not neglected.</p> + +<p>Were these lands well stocked with game? Could they count with certainty not + +only on a good supply of furs, but also of meat? Would the resources of the + +country provide a fort with provisions in the summer months at least? Such were + +the grave questions which Lieutenant Hobson had to solve, and which called for + +immediate attention. We give a summary of the conclusions at which he + +arrived.</p> + +<p>Game, properly so called, of the kind for which Corporal Joliffe amongst + +others had a special predilection, was not abundant. There were plenty of birds + +of the duck tribe; but only a few Polar hares, difficult of approach, poorly + +represented the rodents of the north. There seemed, however, to be a good many + +bears about. Marbre and Sabine had come upon the fresh traces of several. Some + +were even seen and tracked; but, as a rule, they kept at a respectful distance. + +In the winter, however, driven by famine from higher latitudes, there would + +probably be more than enough of these ravenous beasts prowling about the shores + +of the Arctic Ocean.</p> + +<p>"There is certainly no denying," said Corporal Joliffe, "that bear's flesh is + +very good eating when once it's in the larder; but there is something very + +problematical about it beforehand, and it's always just possible that the + +hunters themselves may meet the fate they intended for the bears!"</p> + +<p>This was true enough. It was no use counting upon the bears to provision + +their fort. Fortunately traces were presently found of herds of a far more + +useful animal, the flesh of which is the principal food of the Indians and + +Esquimaux. We allude to the reindeer; and Corporal Joliffe announced with the + +greatest satisfaction that there were plenty of these ruminants on this coast. + +The ground was covered with the lichen to which they are so partial, and which + +they cleverly dig out from under the snow.</p> + +<p>There could be no mistake as to the footprints left by the reindeer, as, like + +the camel, they have a small nail-like hoof with a convex surface. Large herds, + +sometimes numbering several thousand animals, are seen running wild in certain + +parts of America. Being easily domesticated, they are employed to draw sledges; + +and they also supply the factories with excellent milk, more nourishing than + +that of cows. Their dead bodies are not less useful. Their thick skin provides + +clothes, their hair makes very good thread, and their flesh is palatable; so + +that they are really the most valuable animals to be found in these latitudes, + +and Hobson, being assured of their presence, was relieved from half his + +anxiety.</p> + +<p>As he advanced he had also reason to be satisfied with regard to the + +fur-bearing animals. By the little streams rose many beaver lodges and musk-rat + +tunnels. Badgers, lynxes, ermines, wolverenes, sables, polecats, &c., + +frequented these districts, hitherto undisturbed by hunters. They had thus far + +come to no trace of the presence of man, and the animals had chosen their refuge + +well. Footprints were also found of the fine blue and silver foxes, which are + +becoming more and more rare, and the fur of which is worth its weight in gold. + +Sabine and Mac-Nab might many a time have shot a very valuable animal on this + +excursion, but the Lieutenant had wisely forbidden all hunting of the kind. He + +did not wish to alarm the animals before the approaching season-that is to say, + +before the winter months, when their furs become thicker and more beautiful. It + +was also desirable not to overload the sledges. The hunters saw the force of his + +reasoning; but for all that, their fingers itched when they came within + +shot-range of a sable or some valuable fox. Their Lieutenant's orders were, + +however, not to be disobeyed.</p> + +<p>Polar bears and birds were, therefore, all that the hunters had to practise + +upon in this second stage of their journey. The former, however, not yet + +rendered bold by hunger, soon scampered off, and no serious struggle with them + +ensued.</p> + +<p>The poor birds suffered for the enforced immunity of the quadrupeds. + +White-headed eagles, huge birds with a harsh screeching cry; fishing hawks, + +which build their nests in dead trees and migrate to the Arctic regions in the + +summer; snow buntings with pure white plumage, wild geese, which afford the best + +food of all the <i>Anseres</i> tribe; ducks with red heads and black breasts; + +ash-coloured crows, a kind of mocking jay of extreme ugliness; eider ducks; + +scoters or black divers, &c. &c., whose mingled cries awake the echoes + +of the Arctic regions, fell victims by hundreds to the unerring aim of Marbre + +and Sabine. These birds haunt the high latitudes by millions, and it would be + +impossible to form an accurate estimate of their number on the shores of the + +Arctic Ocean. Their flesh formed a very pleasant addition to the daily rations + +of biscuit and corned beef, and we can understand that the hunters laid up a + +good stock of them in the fifteen days during which they were debarred from + +attacking more valuable game.</p> + +<p>There would then be no lack of animal food; the magazines of the Company + +would be well stocked with game, and its offices filled with furs and traders; + +but something more was wanted to insure success to the undertaking. Would it be + +possible to obtain a sufficient supply of fuel to contend with the rigour of an + +Arctic winter at so elevated a latitude?</p> + +<p>Most fortunately the coast, was well wooded; the hills which sloped down + +towards the sea were crowned with green trees, amongst which the pine + +predominated. Some of the woods might even be called forests, and would + +constitute an admirable reserve of timber for the fort. Here and there Hobson + +noticed isolated groups of willows, poplars, dwarf birch-trees, and numerous + +thickets of arbutus. At this time of the warm season all these trees were + +covered with verdure, and were an unexpected and refreshing sight to eyes so + +long accustomed to the rugged, barren polar landscape. The ground at the foot of + +the hills was carpeted with a short herbage devoured with avidity by the + +reindeer, and forming their only sustenance in winter. On the whole, then, the + +Lieutenant had reason to congratulate himself on having chosen the north-west of + +the American continent for the foundation of a new settlement.</p> + +<p>We have said that these territories, so rich in animals, were apparently + +deserted by men. The travellers saw neither Esquimaux, who prefer the districts + +round Hudson's Bay, nor Indians, who seldom venture so far beyond the Arctic + +Circle. And indeed in these remote latitudes hunters may be overtaken by storms, + +or be suddenly surprised by winter, and cut off from all communication with + +their fellow-creatures. We can easily imagine that Lieutenant Hobson was by no + +means sorry not to meet any rival explorers. What he wanted was an unoccupied + +country, a deserted land, suitable as a refuge for the fur-bearing animals; and + +in this matter he had the full sympathy of Mrs Barnett, who, as the guest of the + +Company, naturally took a great interest in the success of its schemes.</p> + +<p>Fancy, then, the disappointment of the Lieutenant, when on the morning of the + +20th June he came to an encampment but recently abandoned.</p> + +<p>It was situated at the end of a narrow creek called Darnley Bay, of which + +Cape Parry is the westernmost point. There at the foot of a little hill were the + +stakes which had served to mark the limits of the camp, and heaps of cinders, + +the extinct embers of the fires.</p> + +<p>The whole party met at this encampment, and all understood how great a + +disappointment it involved for Lieutenant Hobson.</p> + +<p>"What a pity!" he exclaimed. "I would rather have met a whole family of polar + +bears!"</p> + +<p>"But I daresay the men who encamped here are already far off," said Mrs + +Barnett; "very likely they have returned to their usual hunting grounds."</p> + +<p>"That is as it may be," replied the Lieutenant. "If these be the traces of + +Esquimaux, they are more likely to have gone on than to have turned back; and if + +they be those of Indians, they are probably, like ourselves, seeking a new + +hunting district; and in either case it will be very unfortunate for us."</p> + +<p>"But," said Mrs Barnett, "cannot we find out to what race the travellers do + +belong? Can't we ascertain if they be Esquimaux or Indians from the south? I + +should think tribes of such a different origin, and of such dissimilar customs, + +would not encamp in the same manner."</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett was right; they might possibly solve the mystery after a thorough + +examination of the ground.</p> + +<p>Jaspar Hobson and others set to work, carefully examining every trace, every + +object left behind, every mark on the ground; but in vain, there was nothing to + +guide them to a decided opinion. The bones of some animals scattered about told + +them nothing, and the Lieutenant, much annoyed, was about to abandon the useless + +search, when he heard an exclamation from Mrs Joliffe, who had wandered a little + +way to the left.</p> + +<p>All hurried towards the young Canadian, who remained fixed to the spot, + +looking attentively at the ground before her.</p> + +<p>As her companions came up she said-</p> + +<p>"You are looking for traces, Lieutenant; well, here are some."</p> + +<p>And Mrs Joliffe pointed to a good many footprints clearly visible in the firm + +clay.</p> + +<p>These might reveal something; for the feet of the Indians and Esquimaux, as + +well as their boots, are totally different from each other.</p> + +<p>But what chiefly struck Lieutenant Hobson was the strange arrangement of + +these impressions. They were evidently made by a human foot, a shod foot; but, + +strange to say, the ball alone appeared to have touched the ground! The marks + +were very numerous, close together, often crossing one another, but confined to + +a very small circle.</p> + +<p>Jaspar Hobson called the attention of the rest of the party to this singular + +circumstance.</p> + +<p>"These were not made by a person walking," he said.</p> + +<p>"Nor by a person jumping," added Mrs Barnett; "for there is no mark of a + +heel."</p> + +<p>"No," said Mrs Joliffe; "these footprints were left by a dancer."</p> + +<p>She was right, as further examination proved. They were the marks left by a + +dancer, and a dancer engaged in some light and graceful exercise, for they were + +neither clumsy nor deep.</p> + +<p>But who could the light-hearted individual be who had been impelled to dance + +in this sprightly fashion some degrees above the Arctic Circle?</p> + +<p>"It was certainly not an Esquimaux," said the Lieutenant.</p> + +<p>"Nor an Indian," cried Corporal Joliffe.</p> + +<p>"No, it was a Frenchman," said Sergeant Long quietly.</p> + +<p>And all agreed that none but a Frenchman could have been capable of dancing + +on such a spot.</p> +<a name="XII" id="XII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XII.</h4> + +<h4><i>THE MIDNIGHT SUN.</i></h4> + +<p>Sergeant Long's assertion must appear to have been founded on insufficient + +evidence. That there had been dancing no one could deny, but that the dancer was + +a Frenchman, however probable, could not be considered proved.</p> + +<p>However, the Lieutenant shared the opinion of his subordinate, which did not + +appear too positive to any of the party, who all agreed in feeling sure that + +some travellers, with at least one compatriot of Vestris amongst them, had + +recently encamped on this spot.</p> + +<p>Of course Lieutenant Hobson was by no means pleased at this he was afraid of + +having been preceded by rivals in the north-western districts of English + +America; and secret as the Company had kept its scheme, it had doubtless been + +divulged in the commercial centres of Canada and the United States.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant resumed his interrupted march; but he was full of care and + +anxiety, although he would not now have dreamed of retracing his steps.</p> + +<p>"Frenchmen are then sometimes met with in these high latitudes?" was Mrs + +Barnett's natural question after this incident.</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam," replied the Lieutenant; "or if not exactly Frenchmen, the + +descendants of the masters of Canada when it belonged to France, which comes to + +much the same thing. These men are in fact our most formidable rivals."</p> + +<p>"But I thought," resumed Mrs Barnett, "that after the absorption by the + +Hudson's Bay Company of the old North-West Company, that it had no longer any + +rivals on the American continent."</p> + +<p>"Although there is no longer any important association for trading in furs + +except our own, there are a good many perfectly independent private companies, + +mostly American, which have retained French agents or their descendants in their + +employ."</p> + +<p>"Are these agents then held in such high esteem?" asked Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam, and with good reason. During the ninety-four years of French + +supremacy in Canada, French agents always proved themselves superior to ours. We + +must be just even to our rivals."</p> + +<p>"Especially to our rivals," added Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Yes, especially. . . At that time French hunters, starting from Montreal, + +their headquarters, pressed on to the north with greater hardihood than any + +others. They lived for years with the Indian tribes, sometimes intermarrying + +with them. The natives called them the 'Canadian travellers,' and were on the + +most intimate terms with them. They were bold, clever fellows, expert at + +navigating streams, light-hearted and merry, adapting themselves to + +circumstances with the easy flexibility of their race, and always ready to sing + +or dance."</p> + +<p>"And do you suppose that hunting is the only object of the party whose traces + +we have just discovered?"</p> + +<p>"I don't think any other hypotheses at all likely," replied Hobson. "They are + +sure to be seeking new hunting grounds. But as we cannot possibly stop them, we + +must make haste to begin our own operations, and compete boldly with all + +rivals."</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson was now prepared for the competition he could not prevent, + +and he urged on the march of his party as much as possible, hoping that his + +rivals might not follow him beyond the seventieth parallel.</p> + +<p>The expedition now descended towards the south for some twenty miles, in + +order the more easily to pass round Franklin Bay. The country was still covered + +with verdure, and the quadrupeds and birds already enumerated were as plentiful + +as ever; so that they could reasonably hope that the whole of the north-western + +coasts of the American continent were populated in the same manner.</p> + +<p>The ocean which bathed these shores stretched away as far as the eye could + +reach Recent atlases give no land beyond the north American coast-line, and it + +is only the icebergs which impede the free navigation of the open sea from + +Behring Strait to the Pole itself.</p> + +<p>On the 4th July the travellers skirted round another deep bay called Washburn + +Bay, and reached the furthest point of a little lake, until then imperfectly + +known, covering but a small extent of territory, scarcely two square miles-in + +fact it was rather a lagoon, or large pond of sweet water, than a lake.</p> + +<p>The sledges went on easily and rapidly, and the appearance of the country was + +most encouraging to the explorers. It seemed that the extremity of Cape Bathurst + +would be a most favourable site for the new fort, as with this lagoon behind + +them, and the sea open for four or five months in the warm season, and giving + +access to the great highway of Behring Strait, before them, it would be easy for + +the exiles to lay in fresh provisions and to export their commodities.</p> + +<p>On the 5th June, about three o'clock in the afternoon, the party at last + +halted at the extremity of Cape Bathurst. It remained to ascertain the exact + +position of this cape, which the maps place above the seventieth parallel. It + +was, however, impossible to rely upon the marine surveys of the coast, as they + +had never yet been made with exactitude. Jaspar Hobson decided to wait and + +ascertain the latitude and longitude.</p> + +<p>"What prevents us from settling here?" asked Corporal Joliffe. "You will own, + +Lieutenant, that it is a very inviting spot."</p> + +<p>"It will seem more inviting still if you get double pay here, my worthy + +Corporal," replied Hobson.</p> + +<p>"No doubt," said Joliffe; "and the orders of the Company must be obeyed."</p> + +<p>"Then wait patiently till to-morrow," added Hobson; "and if we find that Cape + +Bathurst is really beyond 70? north latitude, we will pitch our tent here."</p> + +<p>The site was indeed admirably suited for the foundation of a new settlement. + +The wooded heights surrounding the lagoon would supply plenty of pine, birch, + +and other woods for the construction of the fort, and for stocking, it with' + +fuel. The Lieutenant and some of his companions went to the very edge of the + +cape, and found that towards the west the coast-line formed a lengthened curve, + +beyond which icebergs of a considerable height shut out the view. The water of + +the lagoon, instead of being brackish as they expected from its close vicinity + +to the sea, was perfectly sweet; but had it not been so, drinkable water would + +not have failed the little colony, as a fresh and limpid stream ran a few yards + +to the south-east of Cape Bathurst, and emptied itself into the Arctic Ocean + +through a narrow inlet, which, protected by a singular accumulation of sand and + +earth instead of by rocks, would have afforded a refuge to several vessels from + +the winds of the offing, and might be turned to account for the anchorage of the + +ships which it was hoped would come to the new settlement from Behring Strait. + +Out of compliment to the lady of the party, and much to her delight, Lieutenant + +Hobson named the stream Paulina river, and the little harbour Port Barnett.</p> + +<p>By building the fort a little behind the actual cape, the principal house and + +the magazines would be quite sheltered from the coldest winds. The elevation of + +the cape would help to protect them from the snow-drifts, which sometimes + +completely bury large buildings beneath their heavy avalanches in a few hours. + +There was plenty of room between the foot of the promontory and the bank of the + +lagoon for all the constructions necessary to a fort. It could even be + +surrounded by palisades, which would break the shock of the icebergs; and the + +cape itself might be surrounded with a fortified redoubt, if the vicinity of + +rivals should render such a purely defensive erection necessary; and the + +Lieutenant, although with no idea of commencing anything of the kind as yet, + +naturally rejoiced at having met with an easily defensible position.</p> + +<p>The weather remained fine, and it was quite warm enough. There was not a + +cloud upon the sky; but, of course, the clear blue air of temperate and torrid + +zones could not be expected here, and the atmosphere was generally charged with + +a light mist. What would Cape Bathurst be like in the long winter night of four + +months when the ice-mountains became fixed and rigid, and the hoarse north wind + +swept down upon the icebergs in all its fury? None of the party gave a thought + +to that time now; for the weather was beautiful, the verdant landscape smiled, + +and the waves sparkled in the sunbeams, whilst the temperature remained warm and + +pleasant.</p> + +<p>A provisional camp, the sledges forming its only material, was arranged for + +the night on the banks of the lagoon; and towards evening Mrs Barnett, the + +Lieutenant, Sergeant Long, and even Thomas Black, explored the surrounding + +district in order to ascertain its resources. It appeared to be in every respect + +suitable; and Hobson was eager for the next day, that he might determine the + +exact situations, and find out if it fulfilled the conditions imposed by the + +Company.</p> + +<p>"Well, Lieutenant," said the astronomer when the examination was over, "this + +is really a charming spot, such as I should not have imagined could have existed + +beyond the Arctic Circle."</p> + +<p>"Ah, Mr Black!" cried Hobson, "the finest countries in the world are to be + +found here, and I am impatient to ascertain our latitude and longitude."</p> + +<p>"Especially the latitude," said the astronomer, whose eclipse was never out + +of his thoughts; "and I expect your brave companions are as eager as yourself. + +Double pay beyond the seventieth parallel!"</p> + +<p>"But, Mr Black," said Mrs Barnett, "do you not yourself take an interest a + +purely scientific interest, in getting beyond that parallel?"</p> + +<p>"Of course, madam, of course I am anxious to get beyond it, but not so + +terribly eager. According to our calculations, however, made with absolute + +accuracy, the solar eclipse which I am ordered to watch will only be total to an + +observer placed beyond the seventieth degree, and on this account I share the + +Lieutenant's impatience to determine the position of Cape Bathurst."</p> + +<p>"But I understand, Mr Black," said Mrs Barnett, "that this solar eclipse will + +not take place until the 18th July 1860?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam, on the 18th July 1860."</p> + +<p>"And it is now only the 15th June 1859! So that the phenomenon will not be + +visible for more than a year!"</p> + +<p>"I am quite aware of it, Mrs Barnett," replied the astronomer; "but if I had + +not started till next year I should have run a risk of being too late."</p> + +<p>"You would, Mr Black," said Hobson, "and you did well to start a year + +beforehand. You are now quite sure not to miss your eclipse. I own that our + +journey from Fort Reliance has been accomplished under exceptionally favourable + +circumstances. <i>We</i> have had little fatigue and few delays. To tell you the + +truth, I did not expect to get to this part of the coast until the middle of + +August; and if the eclipse had been expected this year, instead of next; you + +really might have been too late. Moreover, we do not yet know if we are beyond + +the seventieth parallel."</p> + +<p>"I do not in the least regret the journey I have taken in your company, + +Lieutenant, and I shall patiently wait until next year for my eclipse. The fair + +Phobe, I fancy, is a sufficiently grand lady to be waited for."</p> + +<p>The next day, July 6th, a little after noon, Hobson and the astronomer made + +their preparations for taking the exact bearings of Cape Bathurst. The sun shone + +clearly enough for them to take the outlines exactly. At this season of the + +year, too, it had reached its maximum height above the horizon; and consequently + +its culmination, on its transit across the meridian, would facilitate the work + +of the two observers.</p> + +<p>Already the night before, and the same morning, by raking different + +altitudes, and by means of a calculation of right ascensions, the Lieutenant and + +the astronomer had ascertained the longitude with great accuracy. But it was + +about the latitude that Hobson was most anxious; for what would the meridian of + +Cape Bathurst matter to him should it not be situated beyond the seventieth + +parallel?</p> + +<p>Noon approached. The men of the expedition gathered round the observers with + +their sextants ready in their hands. The brave fellows awaited the result of the + +observation with an impatience which will be readily understood. It was now to + +be decided whether they had come to the end of their journey, or whether they + +must search still further for a spot fulfilling the conditions imposed by the + +Company.</p> + +<p>Probably no good result would have followed upon further explorations, + +According to the maps of North America-imperfect, it is true-the western coast + +beyond Cape Bathurst sloped down below the seventieth parallel, not again rising + +above it until it entered Russian America, where the English had as yet no right + +to settle; so that Hobson had shown considerable judgment in directing his + +course to Cape Bathurst after a thorough examination of the maps of these + +northern regions. This promontory is, in fact, the only one which juts out + +beyond the seventieth parallel along the whole of the North American continent, + +properly so called-that is to say, in English America. It remained to be proved + +that it really occupied the position assigned to it in maps.</p> + +<p>At this moment the sun was approaching the culminating-point of its course, + +and the two observers pointed the telescopes of their sextants upon it. By means + +of inclined mirrors attached to the instruments, the sun ought apparently to go + +back to the horizon itself; and the moment when it seemed to touch it with the + +lower side of its disc would be precisely that at which it would occupy the + +highest point of the diurnal arc, and consequently the exact moment when it + +would pass the meridian-in other words, it would be noon at the place where the + +observation was taken.</p> + +<p>All watched in anxious silence.</p> + +<p>"Noon!" cried Jaspar Hobson and the astronomer at once.</p> + +<p>The telescopes were immediately lowered. The Lieutenant and Thomas Black read + +on the graduated limbs the value of the angles they had just obtained, and at + +once proceeded to note down their observations.</p> + +<p>A few minutes afterwards, Lieutenant Hobson rose and said, addressing his + +companions</p> + +<p>"My friends, from this date, July 6th, I promise you double pay in the name + +of the Hudson's Bay Company!"</p> + +<p>"Hurrah! hurrah! hurrah for the Company!" shouted the worthy companions of + +the Lieutenant with one voice.</p> + +<p>Cape Bathurst and its immediate neighbourhood were in very truth above the + +seventieth degree of north latitude.</p> + +<p>We give the result of these simultaneous observations, which agreed to a + +second.</p> + +<p>Longitude, 127? 36' 12" west of the meridian of Greenwich.</p> + +<p>Latitude, 70? 44' 37" north.</p> + +<p>And that very evening these hardy pioneers, encamped so far from the + +inhabited world, watched the mighty luminary of day touch the edges of the + +western horizon without dipping beneath it.</p> + +<p>For the first time they saw the shining of the midnight sun.</p> +<a name="XIII" id="XIII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XIII.</h4> + +<h4><i>FORT HOPE.</i></h4> + +<p>The site of the new fort was now finally determined on. It would be + +impossible to find a better situation than on the level ground behind Cape + +Bathurst, on the eastern bank of the lagoon Hobson determined to commence the + +construction of the principal house at once. Meanwhile all must accommodate + +themselves as best they could; and the sledges were ingeniously utilised to form + +a provisional encampment.</p> + +<p>His men being very skilful, the Lieutenant hoped to have the principal house + +ready in a month. It was to be large enough to accommodate for a time the + +nineteen persons of the party. Later, and before the excessive cold set in, if + +there should be time, the barracks for the soldiers and the magazines for the + +furs and skins were to be built. There was not much chance of getting it all + +done before the end of September; and after that date, the winter, with its + +first bitter frosts and long nights, would arrest all further progress.</p> + +<p>Of the ten soldiers chosen by Captain Craventy, two-Marbre and Sabine-were + +skilful hunters; the other eight handled the hatchet with as much address as the + +musket. Like sailors, they could turn their hands to anything, and were now to + +be treated more like workmen than soldiers, for they were to build a fort which + +there was as yet no enemy to attack. Petersen, Belcher, Rae, Garry, Pond, Hope, + +and Kellet formed a body of clever, zealous carpenters, under the able + +superintendence of Mac-Nab, a Scotchman from Stirling, who had had + +considerable experience in the building both of houses and boats. The men were + +well provided with tools-hatchets, centre-bits, adzes, planes, hand-saws, + +mallets, hammers, chisels, &c. &c. Rae was most skilful at blacksmith's + +work, and with the aid of a little portable forge he was able to make all the + +pins, tenons, bolts, nails, screws, nuts, &e., required in carpentry. They + +had no mason in the party; but none was wanted, as all the buildings of the + +factories in the north are of wood. Fortunately there were plenty of trees about + +Cape Bathurst, although as Hobson had already remarked to Mrs Barnett, there was + +not a rock, a stone, not even a flint or a pebble, to be seen. The shore was + +strewn with innumerable quantities of bivalve shells broken by the surf, and + +with seaweed or zoophytes, mostly sea-urchins and asteriada; but the soil + +consisted entirely of earth and sand, without a morsel of silica or broken + +granite; and the cape itself was but an accumulation of soft earth, the + +particles of which were scarcely held together by the vegetation with which it + +was clothed.</p> + +<p>In the afternoon of the same day, July 6th Hobson and Mac-Nab the carpenter + +went to choose the site of the principal house on the plateau at the foot of + +Cape Bathurst. From this point the view embraced the lagoon and the western + +districts to a distance of ten or twelve miles. On the right, about four miles + +off, towered icebergs of a considerable height. partly draped in mist; whilst on + +the left stretched apparently boundless plains, vast steppes which it would be + +impossible to distinguish from the frozen surface of the lagoon or from the sea + +itself in the winter.</p> + +<p>The spot chosen, Hobson and Mac-Nab set out the outer walls of the house with + +the line. This outline formed a rectangle measuring sixty feet on the larger + +side, and thirty on the smaller. The facade of the house would therefore have a + +length of sixty feet it was to have a door and three windows on the side of the + +promontory, where the inner court was to be situated, and four windows on the + +side of the lagoon. The door was to open at the left corner, instead of in the + +middle, of the back of the house, for the sake of warmth. This arrangement would + +impede the entrance of the outer air to the further rooms, and add considerably + +to the comfort of the inmates of the fort.</p> + +<p>According to the simple plan agreed upon by the Lieutenant and his + +master-carpenter, there were to be four compartments in the house: the first to + +be an antechamber with a double door to keep out the wind; the second to serve + +as a kitchen, that the cooking which would generate damp, might be all done + +quite away from the living-rooms; the third, a large hall, where the daily meals + +were to be served in common; and the fourth, to be divided into several cabins, + +like the state-rooms on board ship.</p> + +<p>The soldiers were to occupy the dining-hall provisionally, and a kind of + +camp-bed was arranged for them at the end of the room. The Lieutenant, Mrs + +Barnett, Thomas Black, Madge, Mrs Joliffe, Mrs Mac-Nab, and Mrs Rae were to + +lodge in the cabins of the fourth compartment. They would certainly be packed + +pretty closely; but it was only a temporary state of things, and when the + +barracks were constructed, the principal house would be reserved to the officer + +in command, his sergeant, Thomas Black, Mrs Barnett, and her faithful Madge, who + +never left her. Then the fourth compartment might perhaps be divided into three + +cabins, instead of four; for to avoid corners as much as possible is a rule + +which should never be forgotten by those who winter in high latitudes Nooks and + +corners are, in fact, so many receptacles of ice. The partitions impede the + +ventilation; and the moisture, generated in the air, freezes readily, and makes + +the atmosphere of the rooms unhealthy causing grave maladies to those who sleep + +in them.</p> + +<p>On this account many navigators who have to winter in the midst of ice have + +one large room in the centre of their vessel, which is shared by officers and + +sailors in common. For obvious reasons, however, Hobson could not adopt this + +plan.</p> + +<p>From the preceding description we shall have seen that the future house was + +to consist merely of a ground-floor. The roof was to be high, and its sides to + +slope considerably, so that water could easily run off them. The snow would, + +however, settle upon them; and when once they were covered with it, the house + +would be, so to speak, hermetically closed, and the inside temperature would be + +kept at the same mean height. Snow is, in fact, a very bad conductor of beat: it + +prevents it from entering, it is true; but, what is more important in an Arctic + +winter, it also keeps it from getting out.</p> + +<p>The carpenter was to build two chimneys-one above the kitchen, the other in + +connection with the stove of the large dining-room, which was to heat it and the + +compartment containing the cabins. The architectural effect of the whole would + +certainly be poor; but the house would be as comfortable as possible, and what + +more could any one desire?</p> + +<p>Certainly an artist who had once seen it would not soon forget this winter + +residence, set down in the gloomy Arctic twilight in the midst of snow-drifts, + +half hidden by icicles, draped in white from roof to foundation, its walls + +encrusted with snow, and the smoke from its fires assuming strangely-contorted + +forms in the wind.</p> + +<p>But now to tell of the actual construction of this house, as yet existing + +only in imagination. This, of course, was the business of Mac-Nab and his men; + +and while the carpenters were at work, the foraging party to whom the + +commissariat was entrusted would not be idle. There was plenty for every one to + +do.</p> + +<p>The first step was to choose suitable timber, and a species of Scotch fir was + +decided on, which grew conveniently upon the neighbouring hills, and seemed + +altogether well adapted to the multifarious uses to which it would be put. For + +in the rough and ready style of habitation which they were planning, there could + +be no variety of material; and every part of the house-outside and inside walls, + +flooring, ceiling, partitions, rafters, ridges, framework, and tiling-would have + +to be contrived of planks, beams, and timbers. As may readily be supposed, + +finished workmanship was not necessary for such a description of building, and + +Mac-Nab was able to proceed very rapidly without endangering the safety of the + +building. About a hundred of these firs were chosen and felled-they were neither + +barked nor squared-and formed so many timbers, averaging some twenty feet in + +length. The axe and the chisel did not touch them except at the ends, in order + +to form the tenons and mortises by which they were to be secured to one another. + +Very few days sufficed to complete this part of the work, and the timbers were + +brought down by the dogs to the site fixed on for the principal building. To + +start with, the site had been carefully levelled. The soil, a mixture of fine + +earth and sand, had been beaten and consolidated with heavy blows. The brushwood + +with which it was originally covered was burnt, and the thick layer of ashes + +thus produced would prevent the damp from penetrating the floors. A clean and + +dry foundation having been thus secured on which to lay the first joists, + +upright posts were fixed at each corner of the site, and at the extremities of + +the inside walls, to form the skeleton of the building. The posts were sunk to a + +depth of some feet in the ground, after their ends had been hardened in the + +fire; and were slightly hollowed at each side to receive the crossbeams of the + +outer wall, between which the openings for the doors and windows had been + +arranged for. These posts were held together at the top by horizontal beams well + +let into the mortises, and consolidating the whole building. On these horizontal + +beams, which represented the architraves of the two fronts, rested the high + +trusses of the roof, which overhung the walls like the eaves of a chalet. Above + +this squared architrave were laid the joists of the ceiling, and those of the + +floor upon the layer of ashes.</p> + +<p>The timbers, both in the inside and outside walls, were only laid side by + +side. To insure their being properly joined, Rae the blacksmith drove strong + +iron bolts through them at intervals; and when even this contrivance proved + +insufficient to close the interstices as hermetically as was necessary, Mac-Nab + +had recourse to calking, a process which seamen find invaluable in rendering + +vessels water-tight; only as a substitute for tow he used a sort of dry moss, + +with which the eastern side of the cape was covered, driving it into the + +crevices with calking-irons and a hammer, filling up each hollow with layers of + +hot tar, obtained without difficulty from the pine-trees, and thus making the + +walls and boarding impervious to the rain and damp of the winter season.</p> + +<p>The door and windows in the two fronts were roughly but strongly built, and + +the small panes of the latter glazed with isinglass, which, though rough, + +yellow, and almost opaque, was yet the best substitute for glass which the + +resources of the country afforded; and its imperfections really mattered little, + +as the windows were sure to be always open in fine weather; while during, the + +long night of the Arctic winter they would be useless, and have to be kept + +closed and defended by heavy shutters with strong bolts against the violence of + +the gales. Meanwhile the house was being quickly fitted up inside. By means of a + +double door between the outer and inner halls a too sudden change of temperature + +was avoided, and the wind was prevented from blowing with unbroken force into + +the rooms. The air-pumps, brought from Fort Reliance, were so fixed as to let in + +fresh air whenever excessive cold prevented the opening of doors or windows -one + +being made to eject the impure air from within, the other to renew the supply; + +for the Lieutenant had given his whole mind to this important matter.</p> + +<p>The principal cooking utensil was a large iron furnace, which had been + +brought piecemeal from Fort Reliance, and which the carpenter put up without any + +difficulty. The chimneys for the kitchen and ball, however, seemed likely to tax + +the ingenuity of the workmen to the utmost, as no material within their reach + +was strong enough for the purpose, and stone, as we have said before, was + +nowhere to be found in the country around Cape Bathurst.</p> + +<p>The difficulty appeared insurmountable, when the invincible Lieutenant + +suggested that they should utilise the shells with which the shore was + +strewed.</p> + +<p>"Make chimneys of shells!" cried the carpenter.</p> + +<p>"Yes, Mac-Nab," replied Hobson; "we must collect the shells, grind them, burn + +them, and make them into lime, then mould the lime into bricks, and use them in + +the same way."</p> + +<p>"Let us try the shells, by all means," replied the carpenter; and so the idea + +was put in practice at once, and many tons collected of calcareous shells + +identical with those found in the lowest stratum of the Tertiary formations.</p> + +<p>A furnace was constructed for the decomposition of the carbonate which is so + +large an ingredient of these shells, and thus the lime required was obtained in + +the space of a few hours. It would perhaps be too much to say that the substance + +thus made was as entirely satisfactory as if it had gone through all the usual + +processes; but it answered its purpose, and strong conical chimneys soon adorned + +the roof, to the great satisfaction of Mrs Paulina Barnett, who congratulated + +the originator of the scheme warmly on its success, only adding laughingly, that + +she hoped the chimneys would not smoke.</p> + +<p>"Of course they will smoke, madam," replied Hobson coolly; "all chimneys + +do!"</p> + +<p>All this was finished within a month, and on the 6th of August they were to + +take possession of the new house.</p> + +<p>While Mac-Nab and his men were working so hard, the foraging party, with the + +Lieutenant at its head, had been exploring the environs of Cape Bathurst, and + +satisfied themselves that there would be no difficulty in supplying the + +Company's demands for fur and feathers, so soon as they could set about hunting + +in earnest. In the meantime they prepared the way for future sport, contenting + +themselves for the present with the capture of a few couples of reindeer, which + +they intended to domesticate for the sake of their milk and their young. They + +were kept in a paddock about fifty yards from the house, and entrusted to the + +care of Mac-Nabs wife, an Indian woman, well qualified to take charge of + +them.</p> + +<p>The care of the household fell to Mrs Paulina Barnett, and this good woman, + +with Madge's help, was invaluable in providing for all the small wants, which + +would inevitably have escaped the notice of the men.</p> + +<p>After scouring the country within a radius of several miles, the Lieutenant + +notified, as the result of his observations, that the territory on which they + +had established themselves, and to which he gave the name of Victoria Land, was + +a large peninsula about one hundred and fifty square miles in extent, with very + +clearly-defined boundaries, connected with the American continent by an isthmus, + +extending from the lower end of Washburn Bay on the east, as fair as the + +corresponding slope on the opposite coast. The Lieutenant next proceeded to + +ascertain what were the resources of the lake and river, and found great reason + +to be satisfied with the result of his examination. The shallow waters of the + +lake teemed with trout, pike, and other available fresh-water fish; and the + +little river was a favourite resort of salmon and shoals of white bait and + +smelts. The supply of sea-fish was not so good; and though many a grampus and + +whale passed by in the offing, the latter probably flying from the harpoons of + +the Behring Strait fishermen there were no means of capturing them unless one by + +chance happened to get stranded on the coast; nor would Hobson allow any of the + +seals which abounded on the western shore to be taken until a satisfactory + +conclusion should be arrived at as to how to use them to the best advantage.</p> + +<p>The colonists now considered themselves fairly installed stalled in their new + +abode, and after due deliberation unanimously agreed to bestow upon the + +settlement the name of Fort Good Hope.</p> + +<p>Alas! the auspicious title was never to be inscribed upon a map. The + +undertaking, begun so bravely and with such prospects of success, was destined + +never to be carried out, and another disaster would have to be added to the long + +list of failures in Arctic enterprise.</p> +<a name="XIV" id="XIV"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XIV.</h4> + +<h4><i>SOME EXCURSIONS.</i></h4> + +<p>It did not take long to furnish the new abode. A camp-bed was set up in the + +hall, and the carpenter Mac-Nab constructed a most substantial table, around + +which were ranged fixed benches. A few movable seats and two enormous presses + +completed the furniture of this apartment. The inner room, which was also ready, + +was divided by solid partitions into six dormitories, the two end ones alone + +being lighted by windows looking to the front and back. The only furniture was a + +bed and a table. Mrs Paulina Barnett and Madge were installed in one which + +looked immediately out upon the lake. Hobson offered the other with the window + +in it to Thomas Black, and the astronomer took immediate possession of it. The + +Lieutenant's own room was a dark cell adjoining the hall, with no window but a + +bull's eye pierced through the partition. Mrs Joliffe, Mrs Mac-Nab, and Mrs Rae, + +with their husbands, occupied the other dormitories. These good people agreed so + +well together that it would have been a pity to separate them. Moreover, an + +addition was expected shortly to the little colony; and Mac-Nab had already gone + +so far as to secure the services of Mrs Barnett as god-mother, an honour which + +gave the good woman much satisfaction. The sledges had been entirely unloaded, + +and the bedding carried into the different rooms. All utensils, stores, and + +provisions which were not required for immediate use were stowed away in a + +garret, to which a ladder gave access. The winter clothing-such as boots, + +overcoats, furs, and skins-were also taken there, and protected from the damp in + +large chests. As soon as these arrangements were completed, the Lieutenant began + +to provide for the heating of the house.</p> + +<p>Knowing that the most energetic measures were necessary to combat the + +severity of the Arctic winter, and that during the weeks of intensest cold there + +would be no possibility of leaving the house to forage for supplies, he ordered + +a quantity of fuel to be brought from the wooded hills in the neighbourhood, and + +took care to obtain a plentiful store of oil from the seals which abounded on + +the shore.</p> + +<p>In obedience to his orders, and under his directions, the house was provided + +with a condensing apparatus which would receive the internal moisture, and was + +so constructed that the ice which would form in it could easily be removed.</p> + +<p>This question of heating was a very serious one to the Lieutenant.</p> + +<p>"I am a native of the Polar regions, madam," he often said to Mrs Barnett; "I + +have some experience in these matters, and I have read over and over again books + +written by those who have wintered in these latitudes. It is impossible to take + +too many precautions in preparing to pass a winter in the Arctic regions, and + +nothing must be left to chance where a single neglect may prove fatal to the + +enterprise."</p> + +<p>"Very true, Mr Hobson," replied Mrs Barnett; "and you have evidently made up + +your mind to conquer the cold; but there is the food to be thought of too."</p> + +<p>"Yes, indeed; I have been thinking of that, and mean to make all possible use + +of the produce of the country so as to economise our stores. As soon as we can, + +we will make some foraging expeditions. We need not think about the furs at + +present, for there will be plenty of time during the winter to stock the + +Company's depots. Besides, the furred animals have not got their winter clothing + +on yet, and the skins would lose fifty per cent. of their value if taken now. + +Let us content ourselves for the present with provisioning Fort Hope. Reindeer, + +elk, - and any wapitis that may have ventured so far north are the only game + +worth our notice just now; it will be no small undertaking to provide food for + +twenty people and sixty dogs."</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant loved order, and determined to do everything in the most + +methodical manner, feeling confident that if his companions would help him to + +the utmost of their power, nothing need be wanting to the success of the + +expedition.</p> + +<p>The weather at this season was almost always fine, and might be expected to + +continue so for five weeks longer, when the snow would begin to fall. It was + +very important that the carpenters-should make all possible use of the interval; + +and as soon as the principal house was finished, Hobson set them to work to + +build an enormous kennel or shed in which to keep the teams of dogs. This + +doghouse was built at the very foot of the promontory, against the hill, and + +about forty yards to the right of the house. Barracks for the accommodation of + +the men were to be built opposite this kennel on the left, while the store and + +powder magazines were to occupy the front of the enclosure.</p> + +<p>Hobson determined with almost excessive prudence to have the Factory enclosed + +before the winter set in. A strong fence of pointed stakes, planted firmly in + +the ground, was set up as a protection against the inroads of wild animals or + +the hostilities of the natives. The Lieutenant had not forgotten an outrage + +which had been committed along the coast at no great distance from Fort Hope, + +and he well knew how essential it was to be safe from a <i>coup de main</i>. The + +factory was therefore entirely encircled, and at each extremity of the lagoon + +Mac-Nab undertook to erect a wooden sentry-box commanding the coast-line, from + +which a watch could be kept without any danger. The men worked indefatigably, + +and it seemed likely that everything would be finished before the cold season + +set in.</p> + +<p>In the meantime hunting parties were organised. The capture of seals being + +put off for a more convenient season, the sportsmen prepared to supply the fort + +with game, which might be dried and preserved for consumption during the bad + +season.</p> + +<p>Accordingly Marbre and Sabine, sometimes accompanied by the Lieutenant and + +Sergeant Long, whose experience was invaluable, scoured the country daily for + +miles round; and it was no uncommon sight to see Mrs Paulina Barnett join them + +and step briskly along shouldering her gun bravely, and never allowing herself + +to be outstripped by her companions.</p> + +<p>Throughout the month of August these expeditions were continued with great + +success, and the store of provisions increased rapidly. Marbre and Sabine were + +skilled in all the artifices which sportsmen employ in stalking their + +prey-particularly the reindeer, which are exceedingly wary. How patiently they + +would face the wind lest the creature's keen sense of smell should warn it of + +their approach! and how cunningly they lured it on to its destruction by + +displaying the magnificent antlers of some former victim above the birch-bushes + +!</p> + +<p>They found a useful alley <i>(sic)</i> in a certain little traitorous bird to + +which the Indians have given the name of "monitor." It is a kind of daylight + +owl, about the size of a pigeon, and has earned its name by its habit of calling + +the attention of hunters to their quarry, by uttering a sharp note like the cry + +of a child.</p> + +<p>When about fifty reindeer, or, to give them their Indian name, "caribous," + +had been brought down by the guns, the flesh was cut into long strips for food, + +the skins being kept to be tanned and used for shoe-leather.</p> + +<p>Besides the caribous, there were also plenty of Polar hares, which formed an + +agreeable addition to the larder. They were much less timorous than the European + +species, and allowed themselves to be caught in great numbers. They belong to + +the rodent family, and have long ears, brown eyes, and a soft fur resembling + +swan's down. They weigh from ten to fifteen pounds each, and their flesh is + +excellent. Hundreds of them were cared for winter use, and the remainder + +converted into excellent pies by the skilful hands of Mrs Joliffe.</p> + +<p>While making provision for future wants, the daily supplies were not + +neglected. In addition to the Polar hares, which underwent every variety of + +culinary treatment from Mrs Joliffe, and won for her compliments innumerable + +from hunters and workmen alike, many waterfowl figured in the bill of fare. + +Besides the ducks which abounded on the shores of the lagoon, large flocks of + +grouse congregated round the clumps of stunted willows. They belong, as their + +zoological name implies, to the partridge family, and might be aptly described + +as white partridges with long black-spotted feathers in the tail. The Indians + +call them willow-fowl; but to a European sportsman they are neither more nor + +less than blackcock <i>(Tetrao tetrix).</i> When roasted slightly before a quick + +clear fire they proved delicious.</p> + +<p>Then there were the supplies furnished by lake and stream. Sergeant Long was + +a first-rate angler, and nothing could surpass the skill and patience with which + +he whipped the water and cast his line. The faithful Madge, another worthy + +disciple of Isaak Walton was perhaps his only equal. Day after day the two + +sallied forth together rod in hand, to spend the day in mute companionship by + +the river-side, whence they were sure to return in triumph laden with some + +splendid specimens of the salmon tribe.</p> + +<p>But to return to our sportsmen; they soon found that their hunting excursions + +were not to be free from peril. Hobson perceived with some alarm that bears were + +very numerous in the neighbourhood and that scarcely a day passed without one or + +more of them being sighted. Sometimes these unwelcome visitors belonged to the + +family of brown bears, so common throughout the whole "Cursed Land; "but now and + +then a solitary specimen of the formidable Polar bear warned the hunters what + +dangers they might have to encounter so soon as the first frost should drive + +great numbers of these fearful animals to the neighbourhood of Cape Bathurst. + +Every book of Arctic explorations is full of accounts of the frequent perils to + +which travellers and whalers are exposed from the ferocity of these animals.</p> + +<p>Now and then, too, a distant pack of wolves was seen, which receded like a + +wave at the approach of the hunters, or the sound of their bark was heard as + +they followed the trail of a reindeer or wapiti. These creatures were large grey + +wolves, about three feet high, with long tails, whose fur becomes white in the + +winter. They abounded in this part of the country, where food was plentiful; and + +frequented wooded spots, where they lived in holes like foxes. During the + +temperate season, when they could get as much as they wanted to eat, they were + +scarcely dangerous, and fled with the characteristic cowardice of their race at + +the first sign of pursuit; but when impelled by hunger, their numbers rendered + +them very formidable; and from the fact of their lairs being close at hand, they + +never left the country even in the depth of winter.</p> + +<p>One day the sportsmen returned to Fort Hope, bringing with them an + +unpleasant-looking animal, which neither Mrs Paulina Barnett nor the astronomer, + +Thomas Black, had ever before seen. It was a carnivorous creature of the + +plantigrada family, and greatly resembled the American glutton, being strongly + +built, with short legs, and, like all animals of the feline tribe, a very supple + +back; its eyes were small and horny, and it was armed with curved claws and + +formidable jaws.</p> + +<p>"What is this horrid creature?" inquired Mrs Paulina Barnett of Sabine, who + +replied in his usual sententious manner-</p> + +<p>"A Scotchman would call it a 'quick-hatch,' an Indian an 'okelcoo-haw-gew,' + +and a Canadian a 'carcajou."'</p> + +<p>"And what do you call it?"</p> + +<p>"A wolverene, ma'am," returned Sabine, much delighted with the elegant way in + +which he had rounded his sentence.</p> + +<p>The wolverene, as this strange quadruped is called by zoologists, lives in + +hollow trees or rocky caves, whence it issues at night and creates great havoc + +amongst beavers, musk-rats, and other rodents, sometimes fighting with a fox or + +a wolf for its spoils. Its chief characteristics are great cunning, immense + +muscular power, and an acute sense of smell. It is found in very high latitudes; + +and the short fur with which it is clothed becomes almost black in the winter + +months, and forms a large item in the Company's exports.</p> + +<p>During their excursions the settlers paid as much attention to the Flora of + +the country as to its Fauna; but in those regions vegetation, has necessarily a + +hard struggle for existence, as it must brave every season of the year, whereas + +the animals are able to migrate to a warmer climate during the winter.</p> + +<p>The hills on the eastern side, of the lake were well covered with pine and + +fir trees; and Jaspar also noticed the "tacamahac," a species of poplar which + +grows to a great height and shoots forth yellowish leaves which turn green in + +the autumn. These trees and larches were, however, few and sickly looking, as if + +they found the oblique rays of the sun insufficient to make them thrive. The + +black fir, or Norway spruce fir, throve better, especially when situated in + +ravines well sheltered from the north wind. The young shoots of this tree are + +very valuable, yielding a favourite beverage known in North America as " + +spruce-beer." A good crop of these branchlets was gathered in and stored in the + +cellar of Fort Hope. There were also the dwarf birch, a shrub about two feet + +high, native to very cold climates, and whole thickets of cedars, which are so + +valuable for fuel.</p> + +<p>Of vegetables which could be easily grown and used for food, this barren land + +yielded but few; and Mrs Joliffe, who took a great interest in " economic " + +botany, only met with .two plants which were available in cooking.</p> + +<p>One of these, a bulb, very difficult to classify, because its leaves fall off + +just at the flowering season, turned out to be a wild leek, and yielded a good + +crop of onions, each about the size of an egg.</p> + +<p>The other plant was that known throughout North America as "Labrador tea;" it + +grew abundantly on the shores of the lagoon between the clumps of willow and + +arbutus, and formed the principal food of the Polar hares. Steeped in boiling + +water, and flavoured with a few drops of brandy or gin, it formed an excellent + +beverage, and served to economise the supply of China tea which the party had + +brought from Fort Reliance.</p> + +<p>Knowing the scarcity of vegetables, Jaspar Hobson had plenty of seeds with + +him, chiefly sorrel and scurvy-grass (Cochlearia), the antiscorbutic properties + +of which are invaluable in these latitudes. In choosing the site of the + +settlement, such care bad been taken to find a spot sheltered from the keen + +blasts, which shrivel vegetation like a fire, that there was every chance of + +these seeds yielding a good crop in the ensuing season.</p> + +<p>The dispensary of the new fort contained other antiscorbutics, in the shape + +of casks of lemon and lime juice, both of which are absolutely indispensable to + +an Arctic expedition. Still the greatest economy was necessary with regard to + +the stores, as a long period of bad weather might cut off the communication + +between Fort Hope and the southern stations.</p> +<a name="XV" id="XV"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XV.</h4> + +<h4><i>FIFTEEN MILES FROM CAPE BATHURST.</i></h4> + +<p>September had now commenced, and as upon the most favourable calculation only + +three more weeks would intervene before the bad season set in and interrupted + +the labours of the explorers, the greatest haste was necessary in completing the + +new buildings, and Mac-Nab and his workmen surpassed themselves in industry. The + +dog-house was on the eve of being finished, and very little remained to be done + +to the palisading which was, to encircle the fort. An inner court had been + +constructed, in the shape of a half-moon, fenced with tall pointed stakes, + +fifteen feet high, to which a postern gave entrance. Jaspar Hobson favoured the + +system of an unbroken enclosure with detached forts (a great improvement upon + +the tactics of Vauban and Cormontaigne), and knew that to make his defence + +complete the summit of Cape Bathurst, which was the key of the position, must be + +fortified; until that could be done, however, he thought the palisading would be + +a sufficient protection, at least against quadrupeds.</p> + +<p>The next thing was to lay in a supply of oil and lights, and accordingly an + +expedition was organised to a spot about fifteen miles distant where seals were + +plentiful, Mrs Paulina Barnett being invited to accompany the sportsmen, not + +indeed for the sake of watching the poor creatures slaughtered, but to satisfy + +her curiosity with regard to the country around Cape Bathurst, and to see some + +cliffs on that part of the coast which were worthy of notice. The Lieutenant + +chose as his other companions, Sergeant Long, and the soldiers Petersen, Hope, + +and Kellet, and the party set off at eight o'clock in the morning in two + +sledges, each drawn by six dogs, on which the bodies of the seals were to be + +brought back. The weather was fine, but the fog which lay low along the horizon + +veiled the rays of the sun, whose yellow disk was now beginning to disappear for + +some hours during the night, a circumstance which attracted the Lieutenant's + +attention, for reasons which we will explain.</p> + +<p>That part of the shore to the west of Cape Bathurst rises but a few inches + +above the level of the sea, and the tides are-or are said to be-very high in the + +Arctic Ocean-many navigators, such as Parry, Franklin, the two Rosses, M'Clure, + +and M'Clintock, having observed that when the sun and moon were in conjunction + +the waters were sometimes twenty-five feet above the ordinary level. How then + +was it to be explained that the sea did not at high tide inundate Cape Bathurst, + +which possessed no natural defences such as cliffs or downs? What was it, in + +fact, which prevented the entire submersion of the whole district, and the + +meeting of the waters of the lake with those of the Arctic Ocean?</p> + +<p>Jaspar Hobson could not refrain from remarking on this peculiarity to Mrs + +Barnett, who replied somewhat hastily that she supposed that there were-in spite + +of all that had been said to the contrary-no tides in the Arctic Ocean.</p> + +<p>"On the contrary, madam," said Hobson, "all navigators agree that the ebb and + +flow of Polar seas are very distinctly marked, and it is impossible to believe + +that they can have been mistaken on such a subject."</p> + +<p>"How is it, then," inquired Mrs Barnett, "that this land is not flooded when + +it is scarcely ten feet above the sea level at low tide?"</p> + +<p>"That is just what puzzles me," said Hobson; "for I have been attentively + +watching the tides all through this month, and during that time they have not + +varied more than a foot, and I feel certain, that even during the September + +equinox, they will not rise more than a foot and a half all along the shores of + +Cape Bathurst."</p> + +<p>"Can you not explain this phenomenon?" inquired Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Well, madam," replied the Lieutenant, "two conclusions are open to us, + +either of which I find it difficult to believe; such men as Franklin, Parry, + +Ross, and others, are mistaken, and there are no tides on this part of the + +American coast; or, as in the Mediterranean, to which the waters of the Atlantic + +have not free ingress, the straits are too narrow to be affected by the ocean + +currents."</p> + +<p>"The latter would appear to be the more reasonable hypothesis, Mr + +Hobson."</p> + +<p>"It is not, however, thoroughly satisfactory," said the Lieutenant, "and I + +feel sure that if we could but find it, there is some simple and natural + +explanation of the phenomenon."</p> + +<p>After a monotonous journey along a flat and sandy shore, the party reached + +their destination, and, having unharnessed the teams, they were left behind lest + +they should startle the seals.</p> + +<p>At the first glance around them, all were equally struck with the contrast + +between the appearance of this district and that of Cape Bathurst.</p> + +<p>Here the coast line was broken and fretted, showing manifest traces of its + +igneous origin; whereas the site of the fort was of sedimentary formation and + +aqueous origin. Stone, so conspicuously absent at the cape, was here plentiful; + +the black sand and porous lava were strewn with huge boulders deeply imbedded in + +the soil, and there were large quantities of the aluminium, silica, and felspar + +pebbles peculiar to the crystalline strata of one class of igneous rocks. + +Glittering Labrador stones, and many other kinds of felspar, red, green, and + +blue, were sprinkled on the unfrequented beach, with grey and yellow + +pummice-stone, and lustrous variegated obsidian. Tall cliffs, rising some two + +hundred feet above the sea, frowned down upon the bay; and the Lieutenant + +resolved to climb them, and obtain a good view of the eastern side of the + +country. For this there was plenty of time, as but few of the creatures they had + +come to seek were as yet to be seen, and the proper time for the attack would be + +when they assembled for the afternoon siesta in which the. amphibious mammalia + +always indulge. The Lieutenant, however, quickly discovered that the animals + +frequenting this coast were not, as he had been led to suppose, true seals, + +although they belonged to the Phocida family, but morses or walruses, sometimes + +called sea-cows. They resemble the seals in general form, but the canine teeth + +of the upper jaw curved down-wards are much more largely developed.</p> + +<p>Following the coast line, which curved considerably, and to which they gave + +the name of " Walruses' Bay," the party soon reached the foot of the cliff, and + +Petersen, Hope, and Kellet, took up their position as sentinels on the little + +promontory, whilst Mrs Barnett, Hobson, and Long, after promising not to lose + +sight of their comrades, and to be on the look-out for their signal, proceeded + +to climb the cliff, the summit of which they reached in about a quarter of an + +hour. From this position they were able to survey the whole surrounding country; + +at their feet lay the vast sea, stretching northwards as far as the eye .could + +reach, its expanse so entirely unbroken by islands or icebergs that the + +travellers came to the conclusion, that this portion of the Arctic waters was + +navigable as far as Behring Straits, and that during the summer season the + +North-West Passage to Cape Bathurst would, be open to the Company's ships. On + +the west, the aspect of the country explained the presence of the volcanic + +<i>debris</i> on the shore; for at a distance of about ten miles was a chain of + +granitic hills, of conical form, with blunted crests, looking as if their + +summits had been cut off, and with jagged tremulous outlines standing out + +against the sky. They bad hitherto escaped the notice of our party, as they were + +concealed by the cliffs on the Cape Bathurst side, and Jaspar Hobson examined + +them in silence, but with great attention, before he proceeded to study the + +eastern side, which consisted of a long strip of perfectly level coast-line + +stretching away to Cape Bathurst. Any one provided with a good field-glass would + +have been able to distinguish the fort of Good Hope, and perhaps even the cloud + +of blue smoke, which was no doubt at that very moment issuing from Mrs Joliffe's + +kitchen chimney.</p> + +<p>The country behind them seemed to possess two entirely distinct characters; + +to the east and south the cape was bounded by a vast plain, many hundreds of + +square miles in extent, while behind the cliff, from "Walruses' Bay" to the + +mountains mentioned above, the country had undergone terrible convulsions, + +showing clearly that it owed its origin to volcanic eruptions. The Lieutenant + +was much struck with this marked contrast, and Sergeant Long asked him whether + +he thought the mountains on the western horizon were volcanoes.</p> + +<p>"Undoubtedly," said Hobson; "all these pumice-stones and pebbles have been + +discharged by them to this distance, and if we were to go two or three miles + +farther, we should find ourselves treading upon nothing but lava and ashes."</p> + +<p>"Do you suppose," inquired the Sergeant, "that all these volcanoes are still + +active?"</p> + +<p>"That I cannot tell you yet."</p> + +<p>"But there is no smoke issuing from any of them," added the Sergeant.</p> + +<p>"That proves nothing; your pipe is not always in your mouth, and it is just + +the same with volcanoes, they are not always smoking."</p> + +<p>"I see," said the Sergeant; "but it is a great puzzle to me how volcanoes can + +exist at all. on Polar continents."</p> + +<p>"Well, there are not many of them !" said Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"No, madam," replied Jaspar, "but they are not so very rare either; they are + +to be found in Jan Mayen's Land, the Aleutian Isles, Kamtchatka, Russian + +America, and Iceland, as well as in the Antarctic circle, in Tierra del Fuego, + +and Australasia. They are the chimneys of the great furnace in the centre of the + +earth, where Nature makes her chemical experiments, and it appears to me that + +the Creator of all things has taken care to place these safety-valves wherever + +they were most needed."</p> + +<p>"I suppose so," replied the Sergeant; "and yet it does seem very strange to + +find them in this icy climate."</p> + +<p>"Why should they not be here as well as anywhere else, Sergeant? I should say + +that ventilation holes are likely to be more numerous at the Poles than at the + +Equator !"</p> + +<p>"Why so?" asked the Sergeant in much surprise.</p> + +<p>"Because, if these safety-valves are forced open by the pressure of + +subterranean gases, it will most likely be at the spots where the surface of the + +earth is thinest, and as the globe is flattened at the poles, it would appear + +natural that-but Kellet is making signs to us," added the Lieutenant, breaking + +off abruptly; "will you join us, Mrs Barnett?"</p> + +<p>"No, thank you. I will stay here until we return to the fort. I don't care to + +watch the walrus slaughtered!"</p> + +<p>"Very well," replied Hobson, "only don't forget to join us in an hour's time, + +meanwhile you can enjoy the view."</p> + +<p>The beach was soon reached, and some hundred walrus had collected, either + +waddling about on their clumsy webbed feet, or sleeping in family groups. Some + +few of the larger males-creatures nearly four feet long, clothed with very short + +reddish fur-kept guard over the herd.</p> + +<p>Great caution was required in approaching these formidable looking animals, + +and the hunters took advantage of every bit of cover afforded by rocks and + +inequalities of the ground, so as to get within easy range of them and cut off + +their retreat to the sea.</p> + +<p>On land these creatures are clumsy and awkward, moving in jerks or with + +creeping motions like huge caterpillars, but in water -their native element-they + +are nimble and even graceful; indeed their strength is so great, that they have + +been known to overturn the whalers in pursuit of them.</p> + +<p>As the hunters drew near the sentinels took alarm, and raising their heads + +looked searchingly around them; but before they could warn their companions of + +danger, Hobson and Kellet rushed upon them from one side, the Sergeant, + +Petersen, and Hope from the other, and after lodging a ball in each of their + +bodies, despatched them with their spears, whilst the rest of the herd plunged + +into the sea.</p> + +<p>The victory was an easy one; the five victims were very large and their + +tusks, though slightly rough, of the best quality. They were chiefly valuable, + +however, on account of the oil; of which-being in excellent condition-they would + +yield a large quantity. The bodies were packed in the sledges, and proved no + +light weight for the dogs.</p> + +<p>It was now one o'clock, and Mrs Barnett having joined them, the party set out + +on foot-the sledges being full-to return to the fort. There were but ten miles + +to be traversed, but ten miles in a straight line is a weary journey, proving + +the truth of the adage "It's a long lane that has no turning." They beguiled the + +tediousness of the way by chatting pleasantly, and Mrs Barnett was ready to join + +in the conversation, or to listen with interest to the accounts the worthy + +soldiers gave of former adventures; but in spite of the brave struggle against + +<i>ennui</i> they advanced but slowly, and the poor dogs found it hard work to + +drag the heavily-laden sledges over the rough ground. Had it been covered with + +frozen snow the distance would have been accomplished in a couple of hours.</p> + +<p>The merciful Lieutenant often ordered a halt to give the teams + +breathing-time, and the Sergeant remarked that it would be much more convenient + +for the inhabitants of the fort, if the morses would settle a little nearer Cape + +Bathurst.</p> + +<p>"They could not find a suitable spot," replied the Lieutenant, with a + +melancholy shake of the head.</p> + +<p>"Why not?" inquired Mrs Barnett with some surprise.</p> + +<p>"Because they only congregate where the slope of the beach is gradual enough + +to allow of their creeping up easily from the sea. Now Cape Bathurst rises + +abruptly, like a perpendicular wall, from water three hundred fathoms deep. It + +is probable that ages ago portion of the continent was rent away in some violent + +volcanic convulsion, and flung into the Arctic Ocean. Hence the absence of + +morses on the beach of our cape."</p> +<a name="XVI" id="XVI"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XVI.</h4> + +<h4><i>TWO SHOTS.</i></h4> + +<p>The first half of September passed rapidly away. Had Fort Hope been situated + +at the Pole itself, that is to say, twenty degrees farther north, the polar + +night would have set in on the 21st of that month But under the seventieth + +parallel the sun would be visible above the horizon for another month. + +Nevertheless, the temperature was already decidedly colder, the thermometer fell + +during the night to 31? Fahrenheit; and thin coatings of ice appeared here and + +there, to be dissolved again in the day-time.</p> + +<p>But the settlers were able to await the coming of winter without alarm; they + +had a more than sufficient store of provisions, their supply of dried venison + +had largely increased, another score of morses had been killed, the tame + +rein-deer were warmly and comfortably housed, and a huge wooden shed behind the + +house was filled with fuel. In short, everything was prepared for the Polar + +night.</p> + +<p>And now all the wants of the inhabitants of the fort being provided for, it + +was time to think of the interests of the Company. The Arctic creatures had now + +assumed their winter furs, and were therefore of the greatest value, and Hobson + +organised shooting parties for the remainder of the fine weather, intending to + +set traps when the snow should prevent further excursions.</p> + +<p>They would have plenty to do to satisfy the requirements of the Company, for + +so far north it was of no use to depend on the Indians, who are generally the + +purveyors of the factories.</p> + +<p>The first expedition was to the haunt of a family of beavers, long since + +noted by the watchful Lieutenant, on a tributary of the stream already referred + +to. It is true, the fur of the beaver is not now as valuable as when it was used + +for hats, and fetched ?16 per kilogramme (rather more than 2 lb.); but it still + +commands a high price as the animal is becoming very scarce, in consequence of + +the reckless way in which it has been hunted.</p> + +<p>When the party reached their destination, the Lieutenant called Mrs Barnett's + +attention to the great ingenuity displayed by beavers in the construction of + +their submarine city. There were some hundred animals in the little colony now + +to be invaded, and they lived together in pairs in the "holes" or "vaults" they + +had hollowed out near the stream. They had already commenced their preparations + +for the winter, and were hard at work constructing their dams and laying up + +their piles of wood. A dam of admirable structure had already been built across + +the stream, which was deep and rapid enough not to freeze far below the surface, + +even in the severest weather. This dam, which was convex towards the current, + +consisted of a collection of upright stakes interlaced with branches and roots, + +the whole being cemented together and rendered watertight with the clayey mud of + +the river, previously pounded by the animals' feet. The beavers use their + +tails-which are large and flat, with scales instead of hair at the root-for + +plastering over their buildings and beating the clay into shape.</p> + +<p>"The object of this dam," said the Lieutenant to Mrs Barnett, "is to secure + +to the beavers a sufficient depth of water at all seasons of the year, and to + +enable the engineers of the tribe to build the round huts called houses or + +lodges, the tops of which you can just see. They are extremely solid structures, + +and the walls made of stick, clay, roots, &c., are two feet thick., They can + +only be entered from below the water, and their owners have therefore to dive + +when they go home-an admirable arrangement for their protection. Each lodge + +contains two stories; in the lower the winter stock of branches, bark, and + +roots, is laid up, and the upper is the residence of the householder and his + +family."</p> + +<p>"There is, however, not a beaver in sight," said Mrs Barnett; "is this a + +deserted village?"</p> + +<p>"Oh no," replied the Lieutenant, "the inhabitants are now all asleep and + +resting; they only work in the night, and we mean to surprise them in their + +holes."</p> + +<p>This was, in fact, easily done, and in an hour's time about a hundred of the + +ill-fated rodents had been captured, twenty of which were of very great value, + +their fur being black, and therefore especially esteemed. That of the others was + +also long, glossy, and silky, but of a reddish hue mixed with chestnut brown. + +Beneath the long fur, the beavers have a second coat of close short hair of a + +greyish-white colour.</p> + +<p>The hunters returned to the fort much delighted with the result of their + +expedition. The beavers' skins were warehoused and labelled as "parchments" or + +"young beavers," according to their value.</p> + +<p>Excursions of a similar kind were carried on throughout the month of + +September, and during the first half of October, with equally happy results.</p> + +<p>A few badgers were taken, the skin being used as an ornament for the collars + +of draught horses, and the hair for making brushes of every variety. These + +carnivorous creatures belong to the bear family, and the specimens obtained by + +Hobson were of the genus peculiar to North America, sometimes called the Taxel + +badger.</p> + +<p>Another animal of the rodent family, nearly as industrious as the beaver, + +largely contributed to the stores of the Company. This was the musk-rat or + +musquash. Its head and body are about a foot long and its tail ten inches. Its + +fur is in considerable demand. These creatures, like the rest of their family, + +multiply with extreme rapidity, and a great number were easily unearthed.</p> + +<p>In the pursuit of lynxes and wolverines or gluttons, fire-arms had to be + +used. The lynx has all the suppleness and agility of the feline tribe to which + +it belongs, and is formidable even to the rein-deer; Marbre and Sabine were, + +however, well up to their work, and succeeded in killing more than sixty of + +them. A few wolverines or gluttons were also despatched, their fur is + +reddish-brown, and that of the lynx, light-red with black spots; both are of + +considerable value.</p> + +<p>Very few ermines or stoats were seen, and Jaspar Hobson ordered his men to + +spare any which happened to cross their path until the winter, when they should + +have assumed their beautiful snow-white coats with the one black spot at the tip + +of the tail. At present the upper fur was reddish-brown and the under yellowish + +white, so that, as Sabine expressed it, it was desirable to let them " ripen," + +or, in other words,-to wait for the cold to bleach them.</p> + +<p>Their cousins, the polecats, however, which emit so disagreeable an odour, + +fell victims in great numbers to the hunters, who either tracked them to their + +homes in hollow trees, or shot them as they glided through the branches.</p> + +<p>Martens, properly so-called, were hunted with great zeal. Their fur is in + +considerable demand, although not so valuable as that of the sable, which + +becomes a dark lustrous brown in the winter. The latter did not, however, come + +in the way of our hunters, as it only frequents the north of Europe and Asia as + +far as Kamtchatka, and is chiefly hunted by the inhabitants of Siberia. They had + +to be content with the polecats and pine-martens, called " Canada- martens," + +which frequent the shores of the Arctic Ocean.</p> + +<p>All the weasels and martens are very difficult to catch; they wriggle their + +long supple bodies through the smallest apertures with great ease, and thus + +elude their pursuers. In the winter, however, they are easily taken in traps, + +and Marbre and Sabine looked forward to make up for lost time then, when, said + +they, "there shall be plenty of their furs in the Company's stores."</p> + +<p>We have now only to mention the Arctic or blue and silver foxes, to complete + +the list of animals which swelled the profits of the Hudson's Bay Company.</p> + +<p>The furs of these foxes are esteemed in the Russian and English markets above + +all others, and that of the blue fox is the most valuable of all. This pretty + +creature has a black muzzle, and the fur is not as one would suppose blue, but + +whitish-brown; its great price-six times that of any other kind-arises from its + +superior softness, thickness, and length. A cloak belonging to the Emperor of + +Russia, composed entirely of fur from the neck of the blue fox (the fur from the + +neck is considered better than that from any other part), was shown at the + +London Exhibition of 1851, and valued at ?3400 sterling.</p> + +<p>Several of these foxes were sighted at Cape Bathurst, but all escaped the + +hunters; whilst only about a dozen silver foxes fell into their hands. The fur + +of the latter-of a lustrous black dotted with white-is much sought after in + +England and Russia, although it does not command so high a price as that of the + +foxes mentioned above.</p> + +<p>One of the silver foxes captured was a splendid creature, with a coal-black + +fur tipped with white at the extreme end of the tail, and with a dash of the + +some on the forehead. The circumstances attending its death deserve relation in + +detail, as they proved that Hobson was right in the precautions he had taken</p> + +<p>On the morning of the 24th September, two sledges conveyed Mrs Barnett, the + +Lieutenant, Sergeant Long. Marbre, and Sabine, to Walruses' Bay. Some traces of + +foxes had been noticed the evening before, amongst some rocks clothed with + +scanty herbage and the direction taken by the animals was very clearly + +indicated. The hunters followed up the trail of a large animal, and were + +rewarded by bringing down a very fine silver fox.</p> + +<p>Several other animals of the same species were sighted, and the hunters + +divided into two parties-Marbre and Sabine going after one foe, and Mrs Barnett, + +Hobson, and the Sergeant, trying to cut off the retreat of another fine animal + +hiding behind some rocks.</p> + +<p>Great caution and some artifice was necessary to deal with this crafty + +animal, which took care not to expose itself to a shot. The pursuit lasted for + +half-an-hour without success; but at last the poor creature, with the sea on one + +side and its three enemies on the other, had recourse in its desperation to a + +flying leap, thinking thus to escape with its life. But Hobson was too quick for + +it; and as it bounded by like a flash of lightning, it was struck by a shot, and + +to every one's surprise, the report of the Lieutenant's gun was succeeded by + +that of another, and a second ball entered the body of the fox, which fell to + +the ground mortally wounded.</p> + +<p>"Hurrah! hurrah !" cried Hobson, "it is mine!"</p> + +<p>"And mine!" said another voice, and a stranger stept forward and placed his + +foot upon the fox just as the Lieutenant was about to raise it.</p> + +<p>Hobson drew back in astonishment. He thought the second ball had been fired + +by the Sergeant, and found himself face to face with a stranger whose gun was + +still smoking.</p> + +<p>The rivals gazed at each other in silence.</p> + +<p>The rest of the party now approached, and the stranger was quickly joined by + +twelve comrades, four of whom were like himself " Canadian travellers," and + +eight Chippeway Indians.</p> + +<p>The leader was a tall man-a fine specimen of his class-those Canadian + +trappers described in the romances of Washington Irving, whose competition + +Hobson had dreaded with such good reason. He wore the traditional costume + +ascribed to his fellow-hunters by the great American writer; a blanket loosely + +arranged about his person, a striped cotton shirt, wide cloth trousers, leather + +gaiters, deerskin mocassins, and a sash of checked woollen stuff round the + +waist, from which were suspended his knife, tobacco-pouch, pipe, and a few + +useful tools.</p> + +<p>Hobson was right. The man before him was a Frenchman, or at least a + +descendant of the French Canadians, perhaps an agent of the American Company + +come to act as a spy on the settlers in the fort. The other four Canadians wore + +a costume resembling that of their leader, but of coarser materials.</p> + +<p>The Frenchman bowed politely to Mrs Barnett, and the Lieutenant was the first + +to break the silence, during which he had not removed his eyes from his rival's + +face.</p> + +<p>"This fox is mine, sir," he said quietly.</p> + +<p>"It is if you killed it !" replied the other in good English, but with a + +slightly foreign accent.</p> + +<p>"Excuse me, sir," replied Hobson rather sharply, "it is mine in any + +case."</p> + +<p>The stranger smiled. scornfully at this lofty reply, so exactly what be + +expected from an agent of the Hudson's Bay Company, which claims supremacy over + +all the northern districts, from the Atlantic to the Pacific.</p> + +<p>"Do you mean to say," he said at last, gracefully toying with his gun, "that + +you consider the Hudson's Bay Company mistress of the whole of North + +America?"</p> + +<p>"Of course I do," said Hobson; "and if, as I imagine, you belong to an + +American company-</p> + +<p>"To the St Louis Fur Company," replied the stranger with a bow.</p> + +<p>"I think," added the Lieutenant, "that you will find it difficult to show the + +grants entitling you to any privileges here."</p> + +<p>"Grants! privileges !" cried the Canadian scornfully, "old world terms which + +are out of place in America !"</p> + +<p>"You are not now on American but on English ground," replied the Lieutenant + +proudly.</p> + +<p>"This is no time for such a discussion," said the hunter rather warmly. "We + +all know the old claims made by the English in general, and the Hudson's Bay + +Company in particular, to these hunting grounds; but I expect coming events will + +soon alter this state of things, and America will be America from the Straits of + +Magellan to the North Pole !"</p> + +<p>"I do not agree with you," replied Hobson dryly.</p> + +<p>"Well, sir, however that may be," said the Canadian, "let us suffer this + +international question to remain in abeyance for the present. Whatever rights + +the Company may arrogate to itself, it is very clear that in the extreme north + +of the continent, and especially on the coast, the territory belongs to whoever + +occupies it. You have founded a factory on Cape Bathurst, therefore we will + +respect your domain, and you on your side will avoid ours, when the St Louis + +fur-traders have established their projected fort at another point on the + +northern shore of America."</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant frowned at this speech, for he well knew what complications + +would arise in the future when the Hudson's Bay Company would be compelled to + +struggle for supremacy with powerful rivals, and that quarrelling and even + +bloodshed would ensue; he could not, however, but acknowledge that this was not + +the time to begin the discussion, and he was not sorry when the hunter, whose + +manners, to tell the truth, were very polite, placed the dispute on another + +footing.</p> + +<p>"As for this present matter," said the Canadian, "it is of minor importance, + +and we must settle it according to the rules of the chase. Our guns are of + +different calibre, and our balls can be easily distinguished; let the fox belong + +to whichever of us really killed it."</p> + +<p>The proposition was a fair one, and the body of the victim was examined + +accordingly. One ball had entered at the side, the other at the heart; and the + +latter was from the gun of the Canadian.</p> + +<p>"The fox is your property, sir," said Jaspar Hobson, vainly endeavouring to + +conceal his chagrin at seeing this valuable spoil fall into the enemy's + +hands.</p> + +<p>The Canadian took it, but instead of throwing it over his shoulder and + +carrying it off, he turned to Mrs Barnett, and said " Ladies are fond of + +beautiful furs, and although, perhaps, if they knew better what dangers and + +difficulties have to be surmounted in order to obtain them, they might not care + +so much about them, they are not likely to refuse to wear them on that account, + +and I hope, madam, you will favour me by accepting this one in remembrance of + +our meeting."</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett hesitated for a moment, but the gift was offered with so much + +courtesy and kindliness of manner, that it would have seemed churlish to refuse, + +and she therefore accepted it with many thanks.</p> + +<p>This little ceremony over, the stranger again bowed politely, and, followed + +by his comrades, quickly disappeared behind the rocks, whilst the Lieutenant and + +his party returned to Fort Good Hope. Hobson was very silent and thoughtful all + +the way; for he could not but feel that the existence of a rival company would + +greatly compromise the success of his undertaking, and lead to many future + +difficulties.</p> +<a name="XVII" id="XVII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XVII.</h4> + +<h4><i>THE APPROACH OF WINTER.</i></h4> + +<p>It was the 21st of September. The sun was then passing through the autumnal + +equinox, that is to say, the day and night were of equal length all over the + +world. These successive alternations of light and darkness were hailed with + +delight by the inhabitants of the fort. It is easier to sleep in the absence of + +the sun, and darkness refreshes and strengthens the eyes, weary with the + +unchanging brightness of several months of daylight.</p> + +<p>We know that during the equinox the tides are generally at their greatest + +height; we have high water or flood, for the sun and moon being in conjunction, + +their double influence is brought to bear upon the waters. It was, therefore, + +necessary to note carefully the approaching tide at Cape Bathurst. Jaspar Hobson + +had made bench marks some days before, so as to estimate exactly the amount of + +vertical displacement of the waters between high and low tide; he found, + +however, that in spite of all the reports of previous observers, the combined + +solar and lunar influence was hardly felt in this part of the Arctic Ocean. + +There was scarcely any tide at all, and the statements of navigators on the + +subject were contradicted.</p> + +<p>"There is certainly something unnatural here !" said Lieutenant Hobson to + +himself.</p> + +<p>He did not in fact know what to think, but other cares soon occupied his + +mind, and he did not long endeavour to get to the rights of this singular + +peculiarity.</p> + +<p>On the 29th September the state of the atmosphere changed considerably. The + +thermometer fell to 41? Fahrenheit, and the sky became covered with clouds which + +were soon converted into heavy rain. The bad season was approaching.</p> + +<p>Before the ground should be covered with snow, Mrs Joliffe was busy sowing + +the seeds of <i>Cochlearia</i> (scurvy grass) and sorrel, in the hope that as + +they were very hardy, and would be well protected from the rigour of the winter + +by the snow itself, they would come up in the spring. Her garden, consisting of + +several acres hidden behind the cliff of the cape, had been prepared beforehand, + +and it was sown during the last days of September.</p> + +<p>Hobson made his companions assume their winter garments before the great cold + +set in, and all were soon suitably clothed in the linen under vests, deerskin + +cloaks, sealskin pantaloons, fur bonnets, and waterproof boots with which they + +were provided. We may also say that the rooms were suitably dressed; the wooden + +walls were hung with skins, in order to prevent the formation upon them of coats + +of ice in sudden falls of temperature. About this time, Rae set up his + +condensers for collecting the vapour suspended in the air, which were to be + +emptied twice a week. The heat of the stove was regulated according to the + +variations of the external temperature, so as to keep the thermometer of the + +rooms at 50? Fahrenheit. The house would soon be covered with thick snow, which + +would prevent any waste of the internal warmth, and by this combination of + +natural and artificial protections they hoped to be able successfully to contend + +with their two most formidable enemies, cold and damp.</p> + +<p>On the 2nd October the thermometer fell still lower, and the first snow storm + +came on; there was but little wind, and there were therefore none of those + +violent whirlpools of snow called drifts, but a vast white carpet of uniform + +thickness soon clothed the cape, the <i>enceinte</i> of fort, and the coast. The + +waters of the lake and sea, not yet petrified by the icy hand of winter, were of + +a dull, gloomy, greyish hue, and on the northern horizon the first icebergs + +stood out against the misty sky. The blockade had not yet commenced, but nature + +was collecting her materials, soon to be cemented by the cold into an + +impenetrable barrier.</p> + +<p>The " young ice " was rapidly forming on the liquid surfaces of sea and lake. + +The lagoon was the first to freeze over; large whitish-grey patches appeared + +here and there, signs of a hard frost setting in, favoured by the calmness of + +the atmosphere. and after a night during which the thermometer had remained at + +15? Fahrenheit, the surface of the lake was smooth and firm enough to satisfy + +the most fastidious skaters of the Serpentine. On the verge of the horizon, the + +sky assumed that peculiar appearance which whalers call ice-blink, and which is + +the result of the glare of light reflected obliquely from the surface of the ice + +against the opposite atmosphere. Vast tracts of the ocean became gradually + +solidified, the ice-fields, formed by the accumulation of icicles, became welded + +to the coast, presenting a surface broken and distorted by the action of the + +waves, and contrasting strongly with the smooth mirror of the lake. Here and + +there floated these long pieces, scarcely cemented together at the edges, known + +as " drift ice," and the " hummocks," or protuberances caused by the squeezing + +of one piece against another, were also of frequent occurrence.</p> + +<p>In a few days the aspect of Cape Bathurst and the surrounding districts was + +completely changed. Mrs Barnett's delight and enthusiasm knew no bounds; + +everything was new to her, and she would have thought no fatigue or suffering + +too great to be endured for the sake of witnessing such a spectacle. She could + +imagine nothing more sublime than this invasion of winter with all its mighty + +forces, this conquest of the northern regions by the cold. All trace of the + +distinctive features of the country had disappeared; the land was metamorphosed, + +a new country was springing into being before her admiring eyes, a country + +gifted with a grand and touching beauty. Details were lost, only the large + +outlines were given, scarcely marked out against the misty sky. One + +transformation scene followed another with magic rapidity. The ocean, which but + +lately lifted up its mighty waves, was hushed and still; the verdant soil of + +various hues was replaced by a carpet of dazzling whiteness; the woods of trees + +of different kinds were converted into groups of gaunt skeletons draped in + +hoar-frost; the radiant orb of day had become a pale disc, languidly running its + +allotted course in the thick fog, and visible but for a few hours a day, whilst + +the sea horizon, no longer clearly cut against the sky, was hidden by an endless + +chain of ice-bergs, broken into countless rugged forms, and building up that + +impenetrable ice-wall, which Nature has set up between the Pole and the bold + +explorers who endeavour to reach it.</p> + +<p>We can well understand to how many discussions and conversations the altered + +appearance of the country gave rise. Thomas Black was the only one who remained + +indifferent to the sublime beauty of the scene. But what could one expect of an + +astronomer so wrapped up in his one idea, that he might be said to be present in + +the little colony in the body, but absent in spirit? He lived in the + +contemplation of the heavenly bodies, passing from the examination of one + +constellation to that of another, roving in imagination through the vast realms + +of space, peopled by countless radiant orbs, and fuming with rage when fogs or + +clouds hid the objects of his devotion from his sight. Hobson consoled him by + +promising him fine cold nights admirably suited to astronomical observations, + +when he could watch the beautiful Aurora Borealis, the lunar halos, and other + +phenomena of Polar countries worthy even of his admiration.</p> + +<p>The cold was not at this time too intense; there was no wind, and it is the + +wind which makes the cold so sharp and biting. Hunting was vigorously carried on + +for some days. The magazines became stocked with new furs, and fresh stores of + +provisions were laid up. Partridges and ptarmigans on their way to the south + +passed over the fort in great numbers, and supplied fresh and wholesome meat. + +Polar or Arctic hares were plentiful, and had already assumed their white winter + +robes. About a hundred of these rodents formed a valuable addition to the + +reserves of the colony.</p> + +<p>There were also large flocks of the whistling swan or hooper, one of the + +finest species of North America. The hunters killed several couples of them, + +handsome birds, four or five feet in entire length, with white plumage, touched + +with copper colour on the head and upper part of neck. They were on their way to + +a more hospitable zone, where they could find the aquatic plants and insects + +they required for food, and they sped through the air at a rapid pace, for it is + +as much their native element as water. Trumpeter swans, with a cry like the + +shrill tone of a clarion, which are about the same size as the hoopers, but have + +black feet and beaks, also passed in great numbers, but neither Marbre nor + +Sabine were fortunate enough to bring down any of them. However, they shouted + +out "au revoir" in significant tones, for they knew that they would return with + +the first breezes of spring and that they could then be easily caught. Their + +skin, plumage, and down, are all of great value, and they are therefore eagerly + +hunted. In some favourable years tens of thousands of them have been exported, + +fetching half a guinea a piece.</p> + +<p>During these excursions, which only lasted for a few hours, and were often + +interrupted by bad weather, packs of wolves were often met with. There was no + +need to go far to find them, for, rendered bold by hunger, they already ventured + +close to the factory. Their scent is very keen, and they were attracted by the + +smell from the kitchen. During the night they could be heard howling in a + +threatening manner. Although not dangerous individually, these carnivorous + +beasts are formidable in packs, and the hunters therefore took care to be well + +armed when they went beyond the enceinte of the fort.</p> + +<p>The bears were still more aggressive. Not a day passed without several of + +these animals being seen. At night they would come close up to the enclosure, + +and sane were even wounded with shot, but got off, staining the snow with their + +blood, so that up to October 10th not one had left its warm and valuable fur in + +the hands of the hunters. Hobson would not have them molested, rightly judging + +that with such formidable creatures it was best to remain on the defensive, and + +it was not improbable that, urged on by hunger, they might attack Fort Hope + +before very long. Then the little colony could defend itself, and provision its + +stores at the same time.</p> + +<p>For a few days the weather continued dry and cold, the surface of the snow + +was firm and suitable for walking, so that a few excursions were made without + +difficulty along the coast on the south of the fort. The Lieutenant was anxious + +to ascertain if the agents of the St Louis Fur Company had left the country. No + +traces were, however, found of their return march, and it was therefore + +concluded that they had gone down to some southern fort to pass the winter by + +another route.</p> + +<p>The few fine days were soon over, and in the first week of November the wind + +veered round to the south, making the temperature warmer, it is true, but also + +bringing heavy snow-storms. The ground was soon covered with a soft cushion + +several feet thick, which had to be cleared away round the house every day, + +whilst a lane was made through it to the postern, the shed, and the stable of + +the dogs and rein-deer. Excursions became more and more rare, and it was + +impossible to walk without snow-shoes.</p> + +<p>When the snow has become hardened by frost, it easily sustains the weight of + +a man; but when it is soft and yielding, and the unfortunate pedestrian sinks + +into it up to his knees, the snow-shoes used by Indians are invaluable.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson and his companions were quite accustomed to walk in them, + +and could glide about over the snow as rapidly as skaters on ice; Mrs Barnett + +had early practised wearing them, and was quite as expert in their use as the + +rest of the party. The frozen lake as well as the coast was scoured by these + +indefatigable explorers, who were even able to advance several miles from the + +shore on the solid surface of the ocean now covered with ice several feet thick. + +It was, however, very tiring work, for the ice-fields were rugged and uneven, + +strewn with piled-up ridges of ice and hummocks which had to be turned. Further + +out a chain of icebergs, some five hundred feet high, barred their progress. + +These mighty icebergs, broken into fantastic and picturesque forms, were a truly + +magnificent spectacle. Here they looked like the whitened ruins of a town with + +curtains battered in, and monuments and columns overthrown; there like some + +volcanic land torn and convulsed by earthquakes and eruptions; a confusion of + +glaciers and glittering ice-peaks with snowy ramparts and buttresses, valleys, + +and crevasses, mountains and hillocks, tossed and distorted like the famous Alps + +of Switzerland. A few scattered birds, petrels, guillemots, and puffins, + +lingering behind their fellows, still enlivened the vast solitude with their + +piercing cries; huge white bears roamed about amongst the hummocks, their + +dazzling coats scarcely distinguishable from the shining ice-truly there was + +enough to interest and excite our adventurous lady traveller, and even Madge, + +the faithful Madge, shared the enthusiasm of her mistress. How far, how very + +far, were both from the tropic zones of India or Australia!</p> + +<p>The frozen ocean was firm enough to have allowed of the passage of a park of + +artillery, or the erection of a monument, and many were the excursions on its + +surface until the sudden lowering of the temperature rendered all exertion so + +exhausting that they had to be discontinued. The pedestrians were out of breath + +after taking a few steps, and the dazzling whiteness of the glittering snow + +could not be endured by the naked eye; indeed, the <i>reverberation</i> or + +flickering glare of the undulatory reflection of the light from the surface of + +the snow, has been known to cause several cases of blindness amongst the + +Esquimaux.</p> + +<p>A singular phenomenon due to the refraction of rays of light was now + +observed: distances, depths, and heights lost their true proportions, five or + +six yards of ice looked like two, and many were the falls and ludicrous results + +of this optical illusion.</p> + +<p>On October 14th the thermometer marked 3? Fahrenheit below zero, a severe + +temperature to endure, especially when the north wind blows strongly. The air + +seemed to be made of needles, and those who ventured out of the house were in + +great danger of being frost-bitten, when death or mortification would ensue if + +the suspended circulation of the blood were not restored by immediate friction + +with snow. Garry, Belcher, Hope, and other members of the little community were + +attacked by frost-bite, but the parts affected being rubbed in time they escaped + +without serious injury.</p> + +<p>It will readily be understood that all manual labour had now become + +impossible. The days were extremely short, the sun was only above the horizon + +for a few hours and the actual winter, implying entire confinement within doors, + +was about to commence. The last Arctic birds forsook the gloomy shores of the + +Polar Sea, only a few pairs of those speckled quails remained which the Indians + +appropriately call " winter birds," because they wait in the Arctic regions + +until the commencement of the Polar night, but they too were soon to take their + +departure.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson, therefore, urged on the setting of the traps and snares + +which were to remain in different parts of Cape Bathurst throughout the + +winter.</p> + +<p>These traps consisted merely of rough joists supported on a square, formed of + +three pieces of wood so balanced as to fall on the least touch--in fact, the same + +sort of trap as that used for snaring birds in fields on a large scale. The end + +of the horizontal piece of wood was baited with venison, and every animal of a + +moderate height, a fox or a marten, for instance, which touched it with its paw, + +could not fail to be crushed. Such were the traps set in the winter over a space + +of several miles by the famous hunters whose adventurous life has been so + +poetically described by Cooper. Some thirty of these snares were set round Fort + +Hope, and were to be visited at pretty frequent intervals.</p> + +<p>On the 12th November a new member was born to the little colony. Mrs Mac-Nab + +was safely confined of a fine healthy boy, of whom the head carpenter was + +extremely proud. Mrs Barnett stood god-mother to the child, which received the + +name of Michael Hope. The ceremony of baptism was performed with considerable + +solemnity, and a kind of <i>fete</i> was held in honour of the little creature + +which had just come into the world beyond the 70th degree N. Lat.</p> + +<p>A few days afterwards, on November .20th, the sun sunk below the horizon not + +to appear again for two months. The Polar night had commenced!</p> +<a name="XVIII" id="XVIII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XVIII.</h4> + +<h4><i>THE POLAR NIGHT.</i></h4> + +<p>The long night was ushered in by a violent storm. The cold was perhaps a + +little less severe, but the air was very damp, and, in spite of every + +precaution, the humidity penetrated into the house, and the condensers, which + +were emptied every morning, contained several pounds of ice.</p> + +<p>Outside drifts whirled past like waterspouts-the snow seemed no longer to + +fall horizontally but vertically. The Lieutenant was obliged to insist upon the + +door being kept shut, for had it been opened the passages would immediately have + +become blocked up. The explorers were literally prisoners.</p> + +<p>The window shutters were hermetically closed, and the lamps were kept burning + +through the long hours of the sleepless night.</p> + +<p>But although darkness reigned without, the noise of the tempest replaced the + +silence usually so complete in these high latitudes. The roaring of the wind + +between the house and the cliff never ceased for a moment, the house trembled to + +its foundations, and had it not been for the solidity of its construction, must + +have succumbed to the violence of the hurricane. Fortunately the accumulation of + +snow round the walls broke the force of the squall, and Mac-Nabs only fear was + +for the chimneys, which were liable to be blown over. However, they remained + +firm, although they had constantly to be freed from the snow which blocked up + +the openings.</p> + +<p>In the midst of the whistling of the wind, loud reports were heard, of which + +Mrs Barnett could not conjecture the cause. It was the falling of icebergs in + +the offing. The echoes caught up the sounds, which were rolled along like the + +reverberations of thunder. The ground shook as the ice-fields split open, + +crushed by the falling of these mighty mountains, and none but those thoroughly + +inured to the horrors of these wild rugged climates could witness these strange + +phenomena without a shudder. Lieutenant Hobson and his companions were + +accustomed to all these things, and Mrs Barnett and Madge were gradually + +becoming so, and were, besides, not altogether unfamiliar with those terrible + +winds which move at the rate of forty miles an hour, and overturn twenty-four + +pounders. Here, however, the darkness and the snow aggravated the dread might of + +the storm; that which was not crushed was buried and smothered, and, probably + +twelve hours after the commencement of the tempest, house, kennel, shed, and + +enceinte would have disappeared beneath a bed of snow of uniform thickness.</p> + +<p>The time was not wasted during this long imprisonment. All these good people + +agreed together perfectly, and neither ill-humour nor <i>ennui</i> marred the + +contentment of the little party shut up in such a narrow space. They were used + +to life under similar conditions at Forts Enterprise and Reliance, and there was + +nothing to excite Mrs Barnett's surprise in their ready accommodation of + +themselves to circumstances.</p> + +<p>Part of the day was occupied with work, part with reading and games. Garments + +had to be made and mended, arms to be kept bright and in good repair, boots to + +be manufactured, and the daily journal to be issued in which Lieutenant Hobson + +recorded the slightest events of this northern wintering-the weather, the + +temperature, the direction of the wind, the appearance of meteors so frequent in + +the Polar regions, &c., &c. Then the house had to be kept in order, the + +rooms must be swept, and the stores of furs must be visited every day to see if + +they were free from damp; the fires and stoves, too, required constant + +superintendence, and perpetual vigilance was necessary to prevent the + +accumulation of particles of moisture in the corners.</p> + +<p>To each one was assigned a task, the duty of each one was laid down in rules + +fixed up in the large room, so that without being overworked, the occupants of + +the fort were never without something to do. Thomas Black screwed and unscrewed + +his instruments, and looked over his astronomical calculations, remaining almost + +always shut up in his cabin, fretting and fuming at the storm which prevented + +him from making nocturnal observations. The three married women had also plenty + +to see to : Mrs Mac-Nab busied herself with her baby who got on wonderfully, + +whilst Mrs Joliffe, assisted by Mrs Rae, and with the Corporal always at her + +heels, presided in the kitchen.</p> + +<p>When work was done the entire party assembled in the large room, spending the + +whole of Sunday together. Reading was the chief amusement. The Bible and some + +books of travels were the whole library of the fort; but they were all the good + +folks required. Mrs Barnett generally read aloud, and her audience listened with + +delight. The Bible and accounts of adventures received a fresh charm when read + +out in her clear earnest voice; her gestures were so expressive that imaginary + +persons seemed to live when she spoke of them, and all were glad when she took + +up the book. She was, in fact, the life and soul of the little community, eager + +alike to give and receive instruction; she combined the charm and grace of a + +woman with the energy of a man, and she consequently became the idol of the + +rough soldiers, who would have willingly laid down their lives in her service. + +Mrs Barnett shared everything with her companions, never holding herself aloof + +or remaining shut up in her cabin, but working zealously amongst the others, + +drawing out the most reticent by her intelligent questions and warm sympathy. + +Good humour and good health prevailed throughout the little community, and + +neither bands nor tongues were idle.</p> + +<p>The storm, however, showed no signs of abating. The party had now been + +confined to the house for three days, and the snow-drifts were as wild and + +furious as ever. Lieutenant Hobson began to get anxious. It was becoming + +imperatively necessary to renew the air of the rooms, which was too much charged + +with carbonic acid. The light of the lamps began to pale in the unhealthy + +atmosphere, and the air-pumps would not act, the pipes being choked up with ice; + +they were not, in fact, intended to be used when the house was buried in snow. + +It was necessary to take counsel; the Lieutenant and Sergeant Long put their + +heads together, and it was decided on November 23d that, as the wind beat with + +rather less violence on the front of the house, one of the windows at the end of + +the passage on that side should be opened.</p> + +<p>This was no light matter. It was easy enough to open the window from inside, + +but the shutter outside was encrusted over with thick lumps of ice, and resisted + +every effort to move it. It had to be taken off its hinges, and the hard mass of + +snow was then attacked with pickaxe and shovel; it was at least ten feet thick, + +and it was not until a kind of channel bad been scooped out that the outer air + +was admitted.</p> + +<p>Hobson, the Sergeant, several soldiers, and Mrs Barnett herself ventured to + +creep through this tunnel or channel, but not without considerable difficulty, + +for the wind rushed in with fearful fury.</p> + +<p>What a scene was presented by Cape Bathurst and the surrounding plain. It was + +mid-day, and but a few faint twilight rays glimmered upon the southern horizon. + +The cold was not so intense as one would have supposed, and the thermometer + +marked only 15? Fahrenheit above zero; but the snow-drifts whirled along with + +terrific force, and all would inevitably have been thrown to the ground, had not + +the snow in which they were standing up to their waists helped to sustain them + +against the gusts of wind. Everything around them was white, the walls of the + +enceinte, and the whole of the house even to the roof were completely covered + +over, and nothing but a few blue wreaths of smoke would have betrayed the + +existence of a human habitation to a stranger.</p> + +<p>Under the circumstances the " promenade " was soon over; but Mrs Barnett bad + +made good use of her time, and would never forget the awful beauty of the Polar + +regions in a snow-storm, a beauty upon which few women had been privileged to + +look.</p> + +<p>A few moments sufficed to renew the atmosphere of the house, and all + +unhealthy vapours were quickly dispersed by the introduction of a pure and + +refreshing current of air.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant and his companions hurried in, and the window was again + +closed; but after that the snow before it was removed every day for the sake of + +ventilation.</p> + +<p>The entire week passed in a similar manner; fortunately the rein-deer and + +dogs had plenty of food, so that there was no need to visit them. The eight days + +during which the occupants of the fort were imprisoned so closely, could not + +fail to be somewhat irksome to strong men, soldiers and hunters, accustomed to + +plenty of exercise in the open air; and we must own that listening to reading + +aloud gradually lost its charm, and even cribbage became uninteresting. The last + +thought at night was a hope that the tempest might have ceased in the morning, a + +hope disappointed every day. Fresh snow constantly accumulated upon the windows, + +the wind roared, the icebergs burst with a crash like thunder, the smoke was + +forced back into the rooms, and there were no signs of a diminution of the fury + +of the storm.</p> + +<p>At last, however, on the 28th November the Aneroid barometer in the large + +room gave notice of an approaching change in the state of the atmosphere. It + +rose rapidly, whilst the thermometer outside fell almost suddenly to less than + +four degrees below zero. These were symptoms which could not be mistaken, and on + +the 29th November the silence all around the fort told that the tempest had + +ceased.</p> + +<p>Every one was eager to get out, tine confinement had lasted long enough. The + +door could not be opened, and all had to get through the window, and clear away + +the fresh accumulation of snow; this time, however, it was no soft mass they had + +to remove, but compact blocks of ice, which required pick-axes to break them + +up.</p> + +<p>It took about half-an-hour to clear a passage, and then every one in the + +fort, except Mrs Mac-Nab, who was not yet up, hastened into the interior court, + +glad once more to be able to walk about.</p> + +<p>The cold was still intense, but the wind having gone down it was possible to + +endure it, although great care was necessary to escape serious consequences on + +leaving the heated rooms for the open air, the difference between the + +temperature inside and outside being some fifty-four degrees.</p> + +<p>It was eight o'clock in the morning. Myriads of brilliant constellations + +studded the sky, and at the zenith shone the Pole star. Although in both + +hemispheres there are in reality but 5000 fixed stars visible to the naked eye, + +their number appeared to the observers incalculable. Exclamations of admiration + +burst involuntarily from the lips of the delighted astronomer as he gazed into + +the cloudless heavens, once more undimmed by mists or vapours. Never had a more + +beautiful sky been spread out before the eyes of an astronomer.</p> + +<p>Whilst Thomas Black was raving in ecstasy, dead to all terrestrial matters, + +his companions had wandered as far as the enceinte. The snow was as hard as a + +rock, And so slippery that there were a good many tumbles, but no serious + +injuries.</p> + +<p>It is needless to state that the court of the fort was completely filled up. + +The roof of the house alone appeared above the white mass, the surface of which + +had been worn smooth by the action of the wind; of the palisade nothing was + +visible but the top of the stakes, and the least nimble of the wild animals they + +dreaded could easily have climbed over them. But what was to be done? It was no + +use to think of clearing away a mass of frozen snow ten feet thick, extending + +over so large an extent of ground. All they could attempt would be to dig away + +the ice inside the enceinte, so as to form a kind of moat, the counterscarp of + +which would protect the palisade. But alas the winter was only beginning, and a + +fresh tempest might at any time fill in the ditch a few hours.</p> + +<p>Whilst the Lieutenant was examining the works, which could no more protect + +his fort than a single sunbeam could melt the solid layer of snow,-Mrs Joliffe + +suddenly exclaimed:</p> + +<p>"And our dogs! our reindeer!"</p> + +<p>It was indeed time to think about the poor animals. The dog house and stable + +being lower than the house were probably entirely covered, and the supply of air + +had perhaps been completely cut off. Some hurried to the dog-house, others to + +the reindeer stable, and all fears were quickly dispelled. The wall of ice, + +which connected the northern corner of the house with the cliff, had partly + +protected the two buildings, and the snow round them was not more than four feet + +thick, so that the apertures left in the walls had not been closed up. The + +animals were all well, and when the door was opened, the dogs rushed out barking + +with delight.</p> + +<p>The cold was so intense, that after an hour's walk every one began to think + +of the glowing stove in the large room at home. There was nothing left to be + +done outside, the traps buried beneath ten feet of snow could not be visited, so + +all returned to the house, the window, was closed, and the party sat down to the + +dinner awaiting them with sharpened appetites.</p> + +<p>We can readily imagine that the conversation turned on the intensity of the + +cold, which had so rapidly converted the soft snow into a solid mass. It was no + +light matter, and might to a certain extent compromise the safety of the little + +colony.</p> + +<p>"But, Lieutenant," said Mrs Barnett, "can we not count upon a few days' + +thaw-will not all this snow be rapidly converted into water?"</p> + +<p>"Oh no, madam," replied Hobson, "a thaw at this time of year is not at all + +likely. Indeed I expect the thermometer will fall still lower, and it is very + +much to be regretted that we were unable to remove the snow when it was + +soft."</p> + +<p>What, you think the temperature likely to become much colder?"</p> + +<p>"I do most certainly, madam, 4? below zero-what is that at this + +latitude?"</p> + +<p>"What would it be if we were at the Pole itself?"</p> + +<p>"The Pole, madam, is probably not the coldest point of the globe, for most + +navigators agree that the sea is there open. From certain peculiarities of its + +geographical position it would appear that a certain spot on the shores of North + +Georgia, 95? longitude and 78? latitude, has the coldest mean temperature in the + +world: 2? below zero all the year round. It is, therefore, called the 'pole of + +cold.' "</p> + +<p>"But," said Mrs Barnett, "we are more than 8? further south than that famous + +point."</p> + +<p>"Well, I don't suppose we shall suffer as much at Cape Bathurst as we might + +have done in North Georgia. I only tell you of the 'pole of cold,' that you may + +not confound it with the Pole properly so-called when the lowness of the + +temperature is discussed. Great cold has besides been experienced on other + +points of the globe. The difference is, that the low temperature is not there + +maintained."</p> + +<p>"To what places do you allude?" inquired Mrs Barnett; "I assure you I take + +the greatest interest in this matter of degrees of cold."</p> + +<p>"As far as I can remember, madam," replied the Lieutenant, Arctic explorers + +state that at Melville Island the temperature fell to 61? below zero, and at + +Port Felix to 65?."</p> + +<p>"But Melville Island and Port Felix are some degrees farther north latitude + +than Cape Bathurst, are they not?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam, but in a certain sense we may say that their latitude proves + +nothing. A combination of different atmospheric conditions is requisite to + +produce intense cold. Local and other causes largely modify climate. If I + +remember rightly in 1845 . . . Sergeant Long, you were at Fort Reliance at that + +date?</p> + +<p>"Yes, sir," replied Long.</p> + +<p>"Well, was it not in January of that year that the cold was so + +excessive?"</p> + +<p>"Yes it was, I remember only too well that the thermometer marked 70? below + +zero."</p> + +<p>"What!" exclaimed Mrs Barnett, "at Fort Reliance, on the Great Slave + +Lake?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam," replied the Lieutenant, "and that was at 65? north latitude + +only, which is the same parallel as that of Christiania and St Petersburg."</p> + +<p>"Then we must be prepared for everything."</p> + +<p>"Yes, indeed, we must when we winter in Arctic countries."</p> + +<p>During the 29th and 30th November, the cold did not decrease, and it was + +necessary to keep up huge fires to prevent the freezing in all the corners of + +the house of the moisture in the atmosphere. Fortunately there was plenty of + +fuel, and it was not spared. A mean temperature of 52? Fahrenheit was maintained + +indoors in spite of the intensity of the cold without.</p> + +<p>Thomas Black was so anxious to take stellar observations, now that the sky + +was so clear, that he braved the rigour of the outside temperature, hoping to be + +able to examine some of the magnificent constellations twinkling on the zenith. + +But he was compelled to desist-his instruments "burnt" his hands! "Burnt" is the + +only word to express the sensation produced by touching a metallic body + +subjected to the influence of intense cold. Exactly similar results are produced + +by the sudden introduction of heat into an animate body, and the sudden + +withdrawal of the same from it, as the astronomer found to his cost when he left + +the skin of his fingers on his instruments. He had to give up taking + +observations.</p> + +<p>However, the heavens made him the best amends in their power by displaying + +the most beautiful and indescribable phenomena of a lunar halo and an Aurora + +Borealis.</p> + +<p>The lunar halo was a white corona with a pale red edge encircling the moon. + +This luminous meteor was about forty-five degrees in diameter, and was the + +result of the diffraction of the lunar rays through the small prismatic + +ice-crystals floating in the atmosphere. The queen of the night shone with + +renewed splendour and heightened beauty from the centre of the luminous ring, + +the colour and consistency of which resembled the milky transparent lunar + +rainbows which have been so often described by astronomers.</p> + +<p>Fifteen hours later the heavens were lit up by a magnificent Aurora Borealis, + +the arch of which extended over more than a hundred geographical degrees. The + +vertex of this arch was situated in the magnetic meridian, and, as is often the + +case, the rays darted by the luminous meteor were of all the colours of the + +rainbow, red predominating. Here and there. the stars seemed to be floating in + +blood. Glowing lines of throbbing colour spread from the dark segment on the + +horizon, some of them passing the zenith and quenching the light of the moon in + +their electric waves, which oscillated and trembled as if swept by a current of + +air.</p> + +<p>No description could give an adequate idea of the glory which flushed the + +northern sky, converting it into a vast dome of fire, but after the magnificent + +spectacle had been enjoyed for about half an hour, it suddenly disappeared-not + +fading gradually away after concentration of its rays, or a diminution of its + +splendour, but dying abruptly, as if an invisible hand had cut off the supply of + +electricity which gave it life.</p> + +<p>It was time it was over, for the sake of Thomas Black, for in another five + +minutes he would have been frozen where he stood !</p> +<a name="XIX" id="XIX"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XIX.</h4> + +<h4><i>A NEIGHBOURLY VISIT.</i></h4> + +<p>On the 2nd December; the intensity of the cold decreased. The phenomena of + +the lunar halo and Aurora Borealis were symptoms which a meteorologist would + +have been at no loss to interpret. They implied the existence of a certain + +quantity of watery vapour in the atmosphere, and the barometer fell slightly, + +whilst the thermometer rose to 15? above zero.</p> + +<p>Although this temperature would have seemed very cold to the inhabitants of a + +temperate zone, it was easily endured by the colonists. The absence of wind made + +a great difference, and Hobson having noticed that the upper layers of snow were + +becoming softer, ordered his men to clear it away from the outer approaches of + +the enceinte. Mac-Nab and his subordinates set to work zealously, and completed + +their task in a few days. The traps were now uncovered and re-set. A good many + +footprints showed that there were plenty of furred animals about the cape, and + +as they could not get any other food, it was probable that the bait in the + +snares would soon attract them. In accordance with the advice of Marbre the + +hunter, a reindeer trap was constructed in the Esquimaux style. A trench was + +dug twelve feet deep, and of a uniform width of ten feet. A see-saw plank, which + +would rebound when lowered, was laid across it. A bait of herbs was placed at + +one end of the plank, and any animal venturing to take them, was inevitably + +flung to the bottom of the pit, and the plank immediately returning to its + +former position, would allow of the trapping of another animal in the same + +manner. Once in, there was no getting out. The only difficulty Marbre had to + +contend with in making his trap, was the extreme hardness of the ground to be + +dug out, but both he and the Lieutenant were not a little surprised at finding + +beneath some five feet of earth and sand a bed of snow, as hard as a rock, which + +appeared to be very thick.</p> + +<p>After closely examining the geological structure of the ground, Hobson + +observed:</p> + +<p>"This part of the coast must have been subjected to intense cold for a + +considerable length of time a great many years ago. Probably the ice rests on a + +bed of granite, and the earth and sand upon it have accumulated gradually."</p> + +<p>"Well, sir, our trap won't be any the worse for that, the reindeer will find + +a slippery wall, which it will be impossible for them to climb."</p> + +<p>Marbre was right, as the event proved.</p> + +<p>On the 5th September, he and Sabine were on their way to the trench, when + +they heard loud growls. They stood still and listened.</p> + +<p>"It's no reindeer making that noise, "said Marbre, "I know well enough what + +creature has fallen into our pit."</p> + +<p>"A bear?" replied Sabine.</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Marbre, whose eyes glistened with delight.</p> + +<p>"Well," remarked Sabine, "we won't grumble at that, bears' steaks are as good + +as reindeers', and we get the fur in! Come along."</p> + +<p>The two hunters were armed. They quickly slipped balls into their guns, which + +were already loaded with lead, and hurried to the trap. The see-saw plank had + +swung back into its place, but the bait had disappeared, having probably been + +dragged down, into the trench. The growls became louder and fiercer, and looking + +down the hunters saw that it was indeed a bear they had taken. A huge mass was + +huddled together in one corner of the pit, looking in the gloom like a pile of + +white fur with two glittering eyes. The sides of the trench had been ploughed up + +by the creature's sharp claws, and had they been made of earth instead of ice, + +it would certainly have managed to scramble out, but it could get no hold on the + +slippery surface, and it had only managed to enlarge its prison, not to escape + +from it.</p> + +<p>Under the circumstances the capture was easy. Two balls carefully aimed put + +an end to the bear's life, and the next thing to do was to get it out of the + +pit. The two hunters returned to the fort for reinforcements, and ten of the + +soldiers, provided with ropes, returned with them. It was not without + +considerable difficulty that the body was hauled up. It was a huge creature, six + +feet long, weighing six hundred pounds, and must have possessed immense + +strength. It belonged to the sub-order of white bears, and had the flattened + +head, long neck, short and slightly curved claws, narrow muzzle, and smooth + +white fur characteristic of the species. The edible portions of this valuable + +animal were confided to Mrs Joliffe, and by her carefully prepared for the + +table.</p> + +<p>The next week the traps were in full activity. Some twenty martens were + +taken, in all the beauty of their winter clothing, but only two or three foxes. + +These cunning creatures divined the snare laid for them, and scratching up the + +ground near the trap, they often managed to run off with the bait without being + +caught. This made Sabine beside himself with rage "for," he said, "such a + +subterfuge was unworthy of a respectable fox."</p> + +<p>About the 10th December, the wind having veered round to the south-west, the + +snow again began to fall, but not in thick flakes, or in large quantities. The + +wind being high, however, the cold was severely felt, and it was necessary to + +settle in-doors again, and resume domestic occupations. Hobson distributed lime + +lozenges and lime juice to every one as a precaution against the scorbutic + +affections, which damp cold produces. No symptoms of scurvy had fortunately as + +yet appeared amongst the occupants of the fort, thanks to the sanitary + +precautions taken.</p> + +<p>The winter solstice was now approaching, when the darkness of the Polar night + +would be most profound, as the sun would be at the lowest maximum point below + +the horizon of the northern hemisphere. At midnight the southern edges of the + +long white plains were touched with a faint glimmer of twilight, that was all, + +and it would be impossible to imagine anything more melancholy than the gloomy + +stillness and darkness of the vast expanse.</p> + +<p>Hobson felt more secure from the attacks of wild beasts, now that the + +approaches to the enceinte had been cleared of snow, which was a fortunate + +circumstance, as ominous growlings were heard, the nature of which no one could + +mistake.</p> + +<p>There was no fear of visits from Indian hunters or Canadians at this time of + +year, but an incident occurred proving that these districts were not altogether + +depopulated even in the winter, and which was quite an episode in the long + +dreary dark months. Some human beings still lingered on the coast hunting morses + +and camping under the snow. They belonged to the race of Esquimaux, "or eaters + +of raw flesh," which is scattered over the continent of North America, from + +Baffin's Bay to Behring Strait, seldom, however, advancing farther south than + +the Great Slave Lake.</p> + +<p>On the morning of the 14th December, or rather nine hours before midday, + +Sergeant Long, on his return from an excursion along the coast, ended his report + +to the Lieutenant by saying, that if his eyes had not deceived him, a tribe of + +nomads were encamped about four miles from the fort, near a little cape jutting + +out from the coast.</p> + +<p>"What do you suppose these nomads are?" inquired Hobson.</p> + +<p>"Either men or morses," replied the Sergeant. "There's no medium!"</p> + +<p>The brave Sergeant would have been considerably surprised if any one had told + +him that some naturalists admit the existence of the " medium," the idea of + +which he scouted; and certain savants have with some humour classed the + +Esquimaux as an " intermediate species " between roan and the sea-cow.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson, Mrs Barnett, Madge, and a few others at once went to + +ascertain the truth of the report. Well wrapt up, and on their guard against a + +sudden chill, their feet cased in furred boots, and guns and hatchets in their + +hands, they issued from the postern, and made their way over the frozen snow + +along the coast, strewn with masses of ice.</p> + +<p>The moon, already in the last quarter, shed a few faint rays through the + +mists which shrouded the ice-fields. After marching for about an hour, the + +Lieutenant began to think that the Sergeant had been mistaken, and that what he + +had seen were morses, who had returned to their native element through the holes + +in the ice which they always keep open.</p> + +<p>But Long, pointing to a grey wreath of smoke curling out of a conical + +protuberance on the ice-field some hundred steps off, contented himself with + +observing quietly-</p> + +<p>"The morses are smoking, then !"</p> + +<p>As he spoke some living creatures came out of the but dragging themselves + +along the snow. They were Esquimaux, but whether male or female none but a + +native could have said, for their costumes were all exactly alike.</p> + +<p>Indeed, without in the least sharing the opinion of the naturalist quoted + +above, any one might have taken the rough shaggy figures for seals or some other + +amphibious animals. There were six of them-four full-grown, and two children. + +Although very short, they were broad-chested and muscular. They had the flat + +noses, long eye-lashes, large mouths, thick lips, long black coarse hair, and + +beardless chins of their race. Their costume consisted of a round coat made of + +the skin of the walrus, a hood, boots, trousers, and mittens of the same + +material. They gazed at the Europeans in silence.</p> + +<p>"Does any one understand Esquimaux?" inquired the Lieutenant.</p> + +<p>No one was acquainted with that idiom, and every one started when a voice + +immediately exclaimed in English, "Welcome! welcome !"</p> + +<p>It was an Esquimaux, and, as they learned later, a woman, who, approaching + +Mrs Barnett, held out her hand.</p> + +<p>The lady, much surprised, replied in a few words, which the native girl + +readily understood, and the whole family was invited to follow the Europeans to + +the fort.</p> + +<p>The Esquimaux looked searchingly at the strangers, and after a few moments' + +hesitation they accompanied the Lieutenant, keeping close together, however:</p> + +<p>Arrived at the enceinte, the native woman, seeing the house, of the existence + +of which she had had no idea, exclaimed-</p> + +<p>"House! snow-house!"</p> + +<p>She asked if it were made of snow, which was a natural question enough, for + +the house was all but hidden beneath the white mass which covered the ground. + +She was made to understand that it was built of wood; she then turned and said a + +few words to her companions, who made signs of acquiescence, and they all passed + +through the postern, and were taken to the large room in the chief building.</p> + +<p>They removed their hoods, and it became possible to distinguish sexes. There + +were two men, about forty or fifty years old, with yellowish-red complexions, + +sharp teeth, and projecting cheek-bones, which gave them something of the + +appearance of carnivorous animals; two women, still young whose matted hair was + +adorned with the teeth and claws of Polar bears; and two children, about five or + +six years old, poor little creatures with intelligent faces, who looked about + +them with wide wondering eyes.</p> + +<p>"I believe the Esquimaux are always hungry," said Hobson, "so I don't suppose + +our guests would object to a slice of venison."</p> + +<p>In obedience to the Lieutenant's order, Joliffe brought some + +reindeer-venison, which the poor creatures devoured with greedy avidity; but the + +young woman who had answered in English behaved with greater refinement, and + +watched Mrs Barnett and the women of the fort without once removing her eyes + +from them. Presently noticing the baby in Mrs Mac-Nabs arms; she rose and ran up + +to it, speaking to it in a soft voice, and caressing it tenderly.</p> + +<p>Indeed if not exactly superior, the young girl was certainly more civilised + +than her companions, which was especially noticeable when, being attacked by a + +slight fit of coughing, she put her hand before her mouth in the manner enjoined + +by the first rules of civilised society.</p> + +<p>This significant gesture did not escape any one, and Mrs Barnett, who chatted + +for some time with the Esquimaux woman, learned from her in a few short + +sentences that she had been for a year in the service of the Danish governor of + +Upper Navik, whose wife was English, and that she had left Greenland to follow + +her family to the hunting grounds. The two men were her brothers; the other + +woman was her sister-in-law, married to one of the men, and mother of the two + +children. They were all returning from Melbourne Island, on the eastern coast of + +English America, and were making for Point Barrow, on the western coast of + +Russian America, the home of their tribe, and- were considerably astonished to + +find a factory established on Cape Bathurst. Indeed the two men shook their + +heads when they spoke of it. Did they disapprove of the construction of a fort + +at this particular point of the coast? Did they think the situation ill-chosen? + +In spite of all his endeavours, Hobson could get no satisfactory reply to these + +questions, or rather he could not understand the answers he received.</p> + +<p>The name of the young girl was Kalumah, and she seemed to have taken a great + +fancy to Mrs Barnett. But sociable as she was, she appeared to feel no regret at + +having left the governor of Upper Navik, and to be sincerely attached to her + +relations.</p> + +<p>After refreshing themselves with the reindeer-venison, and drinking + +half-a-pint of rum, in which the children had their share, the Esquimaux took + +leave of their hosts; but before saying goodbye, the young girl invited Mrs + +Barnett to visit their snow-hut, and the lady promised to do so the next day, + +weather permitting.</p> + +<p>The next day was fine, and accompanied by Madge, Lieutenant Hobson, and a few + +soldiers, well armed in case any bears should be prowling about, Mrs Barnett set + +out for " Cape Esquimaux," as they had named the spot where the little colony + +had encamped.</p> + +<p>Kalumah hastened forward to meet her friend of yesterday, and pointed to the + +but with an, air of pride. It was a large cone of snow, with an opening in the + +summit, through which the smoke from the fire inside made its way. These + +snow-houses, called <i>igloos</i> in the language of the Esquimaux, are + +constructed with great rapidity, and are admirably suited to the climate. In + +them their owners can endure a temperature 40? below zero, without fires, and + +without suffering much. In the summer the Esquimaux encamp in tents made of seal + +and reindeer skins, which are called <i>tupics</i>.</p> + +<p>It was no easy matter to get into this hut. The only opening was a hole close + +to the ground, and it was necessary to creep through a kind of passage three or + +four feet long, which is about the thickness of the walls of these snow-houses. + +But a traveller by profession, a <i>laureate</i> of the Royal Society, could not + +hesitate, and Mrs Paulina Barnett did not hesitate! Followed by Madge, she + +bravely entered the narrow tunnel in imitation of her guide. Lieutenant Hobson + +and his men dispensed with paying their respects inside.</p> + +<p>And Mrs Barnett soon discovered that the chief difficulty was not getting + +into the but, but remaining in it when there. The room was heated by a fire, on + +which the bones of morses were burning; and the air was full of the smell of the + +fetid oil of a lamp, of greasy garments, and the flesh of the amphibious animals + +which form the chief article of an Esquimaux's diet. It was suffocating and + +sickening! Madge could not stand it, and hurried out at once, but Mrs Barnett, + +rather than hurt the feelings of the young native, showed superhuman courage, + +and extended her visit over five long minutes!-five centuries! The two children + +and their mother were at home, but the men had gone to hunt morses four or five + +miles from their camp.</p> + +<p>Once out of the hut, Mrs Barnett drew a long sigh of relief, and the colour + +returned to her blanched cheeks.</p> + +<p>"Well, madam," inquired the Lieutenant, "what do you think of Esquimaux + +houses?"</p> + +<p>"The ventilation leaves something to be desired !" she replied simply.</p> + +<p>The interesting native family remained encamped near Cape Esquimaux for eight + +days. The men passed twelve hours out of every twenty-four hunting morses. With + +a patience which none but sportsmen could understand, they would watch for the + +amphibious animals near the holes through which they come up to the surface of + +the ice-field to breathe. When the morse appears, a rope with a running noose is + +flung round its body a little below the head, and it is dragged on to the + +ice-field, often with considerable difficulty, and killed with hatchets. It is + +really more like fishing than hunting. It is considered a great treat to drink + +the warm blood of the walrus, and the Esquimaux often indulge in it to + +excess.</p> + +<p>Kalumah came to the fort every day in spite of the severity of the weather. + +She was never tired of going through the different rooms, and watching Mrs + +Joliffe at her cooking or sewing. She asked the English name of everything, and + +talked for hours together with Mrs Barnett, if the term "talking" can be applied + +to an exchange of words after long deliberation on both sides. When Mrs Barnett + +read aloud, Kalumah listened with great attention, although she probably + +understood nothing of what she heard.</p> + +<p>The young native girl had a sweet voice, and sometimes sang some strange + +melancholy rhythmical songs with a peculiar metre, and, if we may so express it, + +a frosty ring about them, peculiarly characteristic of their origin.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett had the patience to translate one of these Greenland sagas, which + +was sung to a sad air, interspersed with long pauses, and filled with strange + +intervals, which produced an indescribable effect. We give an English rendering + +of Mrs Barnett's translation, which may give a faint idea of this strange + +hyperborean poetry.</p> + +<blockquote> GREENLAND SONG</blockquote> + +<blockquote>Dark Is the sky,<br>The sun sinks wearily;<br>My trembling heart, + + with sorrow filled,<br>Aches drearily !<br>My sweet child at my songs is + + smiling still,<br>While at his tender heart the icicles lie chill.<br>Child of + + my dreams I<br>Thy love doth cheer me;<br>The cruel biting frost I + + brave<br>But to be near thee!<br>Ah me, Ah me, could these hot tears of + + mine<br>But melt the icicles around that heart of thine!<br>Could we once + + more<br>Meet heart to heart,<br>Thy little hands close clasped in mine,<br>No + + more to part.<br>Then on thy chill heart rays from heaven above<br>Should + + fall, and softly melt it with the warmth of love!</blockquote> + +<p>On the 20th December the Esquimaux family came to take leave of the occupants + +of the fort. Kalumah was sorry to part with Mrs Barnett, who would gladly have + +retained her in her service, but the young native could not be persuaded to + +leave her own people; she promised, however, to return to Fort Hope in the + +summer.</p> + +<p>Her farewell was touching. She presented Mrs Barnett with a copper ring, and + +received in exchange a necklace of black beads, which she immediately put on. + +Hobson gave the poor people a good stock of provisions, which they packed in + +their sledge; and after a few words of grateful acknowledgment from Kalumah, the + +whole party set out towards the west, quickly disappearing in the thick fogs on + +the shore.</p> +<a name="XX" id="XX"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XX.</h4> + +<h4><i>MERCURY FREEZES.</i></h4> + +<p>A few days of dry calm weather favoured the operations of the hunters, but + +they did not venture far from the fort; the abundance of game rendered it + +unnecessary to do so, and Lieutenant Hobson could justly congratulate himself on + +having chosen so favourable a situation for the new settlement. A great number + +of furred animals of all kinds were taken in the traps, and Sabine and Marbre + +killed a good many Polar hares. Some twenty starving wolves were shot. Hunger + +rendered the latter animals aggressive, and bands of them gathered about the + +fort, filling the air with hoarse howls, and amongst the " hummocks " on the + +ice-fields sometimes prowled huge bears, whose movements were watched with great + +interest.</p> + +<p>On the 25th December all excursions had again to be given up. The wind veered + +suddenly to the north, and the cold became exceedingly severe. It was impossible + +to remain out of doors without being frost-bitten. The Fahrenheit thermometer + +fell to 18? below zero, and the gale roared like a volley of musketry. Hobson + +took care to provide the animals with food enough to last several weeks.</p> + +<p>Christmas Day, the day of home-gatherings so dear to the heart of all + +Englishmen, was kept with due solemnity. The colonists returned thanks to God + +for preserving them through so many perils; and the workmen, who had a holiday + +in honour of the day, afterwards assembled with their masters and the ladies + +round a well-filled board, on which figured two huge Christmas puddings.</p> + +<p>In the evening a huge bowl of punch flamed in the centre of the table; the + +lamps were put out, and for a time the room was lighted only by the livid flames + +of the spirit, the familiar objects assuming strange fantastic forms. The + +spirits of the soldiers rose as they watched the flickering illumination, and + +their excitement was not lessened after imbibing some of the burning liquid.</p> + +<p>But now the flames began to pale; bluish tongues still fitfully licked the + +plump sides of the national pudding for a few minutes, and then died away.</p> + +<p>Strange to say, although the lamps had not been relit, the room did not + +become dark on the extinction of the flames. A bright red light was streaming + +through the window, which had passed unnoticed in the previous illumination.</p> + +<p>The revellers started to their feet, and looked at each other in + +astonishment.</p> + +<p>"A fire !" cried several.</p> + +<p>But unless the house itself were burning, there could not be a fire anywhere + +near Cape Bathurst.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant rushed to the window, and at once understood the cause of the + +phenomenon. It was an eruption.</p> + +<p>Indeed, above the western cliffs beyond Walruses' Bay the horizon was on + +fire. The summits of the igneous hills, some miles from Cape Bathurst, could not + +be seen; but the sheaf of flame shot up to a considerable height, lighting up + +the whole country in a weird, unearthly manner.</p> + +<p>"It is more beautiful than the Aurora Borealis!" exclaimed Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>Thomas Black indignantly protested against this assertion. A terrestrial + +phenomenon more beautiful than a meteor! But no one was disposed to argue with + +him about it, for all hurried out, in spite of the bitter gale and biting cold, + +to watch the glorious spectacle of the flashing sheaf of flames standing out + +against the black background of the night sky.</p> + +<p>Had not the mouths and ears of the party been cased in furs, they would have + +been able to hear the rumbling noise of the eruption, and to tell each other of + +the impressions made upon them by this magnificent sight; but, as it was, they + +could neither speak nor hear. They might well be content, however, with gazing + +upon such a glorious scene-a scene which once looked upon could never be + +forgotten. The glowing sheets of flames contrasted alike with the gloomy + +darkness of the heavens and the dazzling whiteness of the far-stretching carpet + +of snow, and produced effects of light and shade which no pen or pencil could + +adequately portray. The throbbing reverberations spread beyond the zenith, + +gradually quenching the light of all the stars. The white ground became dashed + +with golden tints, the hummocks on the ice-field and the huge icebergs in the + +background reflecting the glimmering colours like so many glowing mirrors. The + +rays of light, striking on the edges or surfaces of the ice, became bent and + +diffracted; the angles and varying inclinations on which they fell fretting them + +into fringes of colour, and reflecting them back with changed and heightened + +beauty. It was like a fairy scene in which ice and snow combined to add + +<i>eclat</i> to a <i>melee</i> of rays in which luminous waves rushed upon + +each other, breaking into coloured ripples.</p> + +<p>But the excessive cold soon drove the admiring spectators back to their warm + +dwelling, and many a nose paid dearly for the feast enjoyed by the eyes.</p> + +<p>During the following days the cold became doubly severe. The mercurial + +thermometer was of course no longer of any use for marking degrees, and an + +alcohol thermometer had to be used. On the night of the 28th to the 29th + +December the column fell to 32? below zero.</p> + +<p>The stoves were piled up with fuel, but the temperature in the house could + +not be maintained above 20? degrees. The bedrooms were exceedingly cold, and ten + +feet from the stove, in the large room, its heat could not be felt at all. The + +little baby had the warmest corner, and its cradle was rocked in turn by those + +who came to the fire. Opening doors or windows was strictly forbidden, as the + +vapour in the rooms would immediately have been converted into snow, and in the + +passage the breathing of the inmates already produced that result. Every now and + +then dull reports were heard, which startled those unaccustomed to living in + +such high latitudes. They were caused by the cracking of the trunks of trees, of + +which the walls were composed under the influence of the intense cold. The stock + +of rum and gin stowed away in the garret had to be brought down into the + +sitting-room, as the alcohol was freezing and sinking to the bottom of the + +bottles. The spruce-beer made from a decoction of young fir-branchlets burst the + +barrels in which it was kept as it froze, whilst all solid bodies resisted the + +introduction of heat as if they were petrified. Wood burnt very slowly, and + +Hobson was obliged to sacrifice some of the walrus-oil to quicken its + +combustion. Fortunately the chimneys drew well, so that there was no + +disagreeable smell inside, although for a long distance outside the air was + +impregnated with the fetid odour of the smoke from Fort Hope, which a casual + +observer might therefore have pronounced an unhealthy building.</p> + +<p>One symptom we must notice was the great thirst from which every one + +suffered. To relieve it, different liquids had to be melted at the fire, for it- + +would have been dangerous to eat ice. Another effect of the cold was intense + +drowsiness, which Hobson earnestly entreated his companions to resist. Some + +appeared unable to do so; but Mrs Barnett was invaluable in setting an example + +of constant activity: always brave, she kept herself awake, and encouraged + +others by her kindness, brightness, and sympathy. Sometimes she read aloud + +accounts of travels, or sang some old familiar English song, in the chorus of + +which all joined. These joyous strains roused up the sleepers whether they would + +or no, and their voices soon swelled the chorus. The long days of imprisonment + +passed wearily by, and the Lieutenant, consulting the outside thermometer + +through the windows, announced that the cold was still on the increase. On the + +31st December, the mercury was all frozen hard in the cistern of the + +instrument, so that the temperature was 44? below freezing point.</p> + +<p>The next day, 1st January 1860, Lieutenant Hobson wished Mrs Barnett a happy + +new year, and complimented her on the courage and good temper with which she + +endured the miseries of this northern winter. The astronomer was not forgotten + +in the universal interchange of good wishes amongst the members of the little + +colony; but his only thought on entering another year was, that it was the + +beginning of that in which the great eclipse was to take place. Fortunately the + +general health still remained good, and any symptoms of scurvy were promptly + +checked by the use of lime-juice and lime-lozenges.</p> + +<p>It would not do, however, to rejoice too soon. The winter had still to last + +three months. The sun would doubtless reappear above the horizon in due time; + +but there was no reason to think that the cold had reached its maximum + +intensity, especially as in most northern countries February is the month during + +which the temperature falls lowest. However that might be, there was no decrease + +in the severity of the weather during the first days of the new year, and on the + +8th January the alcohol thermometer placed outside the window of the passage + +marked 66? below zero. A few degrees more and the minimum temperature at Fort + +Reliance in 1835 would be reached!</p> + +<p>Jaspar Hobson grew more and more uneasy at the continued severity of the + +cold. He began to fear that the furred animals would have to seek a less + +rigorous climate further south, which would of course thwart all his plans for + +hunting in the early spring. Moreover, he sometimes heard subterranean + +rumblings, which were evidently connected with the volcanic eruption. The + +western horizon still glowed with the reflection of the burning lava, and it was + +evident that some great convulsion was going on in the bowels of the earth. + +Might not the close vicinity of an active volcano be dangerous to the new fort ? + +Such was the question which the subterranean rumblings forced upon the mind of + +the Lieutenant, but he kept his vague apprehensions to himself.</p> + +<p>Of course under these circumstances no one dreamt of leaving the house. The + +animals were well provided for, and being accustomed to long fasts in the + +winter, required no attention from their masters, so that there really was no + +necessity for any exposure out of doors. It was difficult enough to endure the + +inside temperature, even with the help of a plentiful combustion of wood and + +oil; for, in spite of every precaution, damp crept into the ill-ventilated + +rooms, and layers of ice, increasing in thickness every day, were formed upon + +the beams. The condensers were choked up, and one of them burst from the + +pressure of the ice.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson did not spare his fuel; he was, in fact, rather lavish of + +it in his anxiety to raise the temperature, which, when the fires got low-as of + +course sometimes happened-fell to 15? Fahrenheit. The men on guard, who relieved + +each other every hour, had strict orders to keep up the fires, and great was the + +dismay of the Lieutenant when Sergeant Long said to him one day-</p> + +<p>"We shall be out of wood soon !"</p> + +<p>"Out of wood !" exclaimed Hobson.</p> + +<p>"I mean our stock is getting low, and we must lay in fresh stores soon. Of + +course I know, though, that it will be at the risk of his life that any one goes + +out in this cold !"</p> + +<p>"Yes," replied Hobson. "It was a mistake not to build the wooden shed close + +to the house, and to make no direct communication with it. I see that now it is + +too late. I ought not to have forgotten that we were going to winter beyond the + +seventieth parallel. But what's done can't be undone. How long will the wood + +last?"</p> + +<p>"There is enough to feed the furnace and stove for another two or three + +days," replied the Sergeant.</p> + +<p>"Let us hope by that time that the severity of the cold may have decreased, + +and that we may venture across the court of the fort without danger."</p> + +<p>"I doubt it, sir," replied Long, shaking his head. "The atmosphere is very + +clear, the wind is still in the north, and I shall not be surprised if this + +temperature is maintained. for another fifteen days-until the new moon, in + +fact."</p> + +<p>"Well, my brave fellow," said the Lieutenant, "we won't die of cold if we can + +help it, and the day we have to brave the outside air "</p> + +<p>"We will brave it, sir," said Long.</p> + +<p>Hobson pressed his subordinate's hand, well knowing the poor fellow's + +devotion.</p> + +<p>We might fancy that Hobson and the Sergeant were exaggerating when they + +alluded to fatal results from sudden exposure to the open air, but they spoke + +from experience, gained from long residence in the rigorous Polar regions. They + +had seen strong men fall fainting on the ice under similar circumstances; their + +breath failed them, and they were taken up in a state of suffocation. Incredible + +as such facts may appear, they have been of frequent occurrence amongst those + +who have wintered in the extreme north. In their journey along the shores of + +Hudson's Bay in 1746, Moor and Smith saw many incidents of this kind,-some of + +their companions were killed, struck down by the cold, and there can be no doubt + +that sudden death may result from braving a temperature in which mercury + +freezes.</p> + +<p>Such was the distressing state of things at Fort Hope, when a new danger + +arose to aggravate the sufferings of the colonists.</p> +<a name="XXI" id="XXI"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XXI.</h4> + +<h4><i>THE LARGE POLAR BEARS.</i></h4> + +<p>The only one of the four windows through which it was possible to look into + +the court of the fort was that opening at the end of the entrance passage. The + +outside shutters had not been closed; but before it could be seen through it had + +to be washed with boiling water, as the panes were covered with a thick coating + +of ice. This was done several times a day by the Lieutenant's orders, when the + +districts surrounding the fort were carefully examined, and the state of the + +sky, and of the alcohol thermometer placed outside, were accurately noted.</p> + +<p>On the 6th January, towards eleven o'clock in the morning, Kellet, whose turn + +it was to look out, suddenly called the Sergeant, and pointed to some moving + +masses indistinctly visible in the gloom. Long, approaching the window observed + +quietly-</p> + +<p>"They are bears!"</p> + +<p>In fact half-a-dozen of these formidable animals had succeeded in getting + +over the palisades, and, attracted by the smoke from the chimneys, were + +advancing upon the house.</p> + +<p>On hearing of the approach of the bears, Hobson at once ordered the window of + +the passage to be barricaded inside; it was the only unprotected opening in the + +house, and when it was secured it appeared impossible for the bears to effect an + +entrance. The window was, therefore, quickly closed up with bars, which the + +carpenter Mac-Nab wedged firmly in, leaving a narrow slit through which to watch + +the movements of the unwelcome visitors.</p> + +<p>"Now," observed the head carpenter, "these gentlemen can't get in without our + +permission, and we have time to hold a council of war."</p> + +<p>"Well, Lieutenant," exclaimed Mrs Barnett, "nothing has been wanting to our + +northern winter! After the cold come the bears."</p> + +<p>"Not after," replied the Lieutenant, "but, which is a serious matter, + +<i>with</i> the cold, and a cold ago intense that we cannot venture outside! I + +really don't know how we shall get rid .of these tiresome brutes."</p> + +<p>"I suppose they will soon get tired of prowling about," said the lady, "and + +return as they came."</p> + +<p>Hobson shook his head as if he had his doubts.</p> + +<p>"You don't know these animals, madam. They are famished with hunger, and will + +not go until we make them!"</p> + +<p>"Are you anxious, then?"</p> + +<p>"Yes and no," replied the Lieutenant. "I don't think the bears will get in; + +but neither do I see how we can get out, should it become necessary for us to do + +so."</p> + +<p>With these words Hobson turned to the window, and Mrs Barnett joined the + +other women, who had gathered round the Sergeant, and were listening to what he + +had to say about the bears. He spoke like a man well up in his subject, for he + +had had many an encounter with these formidable carnivorous creatures, which + +are often met with even towards the south, where, however, they can be safely + +attacked, whilst here the siege would be a regular blockade, for the cold would + +quite prevent any attempt at a sortie.</p> + +<p>Throughout the whole day the movements of the bears were attentively watched. + +Every now and then one of them would lay his great head against the window-pane + +and an ominous growl was heard.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant and the Sergeant took counsel together, and it was agreed that + +if their enemies showed no sign of beating a retreat, they would drill a few + +loopholes in the walls of the house, and fire at them. But it was decided to put + +off this desperate measure for a day or two, as it was desirable to avoid giving + +access to the outer air; the inside temperature being already far too low. The + +walrus oil to be burnt was frozen so hard that it had to be broken up with + +hatchets.</p> + +<p>The day passed without any incident. The bears went and came, prowling round + +the house, but attempting no direct attack. Watch was kept all night, and at + +four o'clock in the morning they seemed to have left the court-at any rate, they + +were nowhere to be seen.</p> + +<p>But about seven o'clock Marbre went up to the loft to fetch some provisions, + +and on his return announced that the bears were walking about on the roof.</p> + +<p>Hobson, the Sergeant, Mac-Nab, and two or three soldiers seized their arms, + +and rushed to the ladder in the passage, which. communicated with the loft by a + +trap-door. The cold was, however, so intense in the loft that the men could not + +hold the barrels of their guns, and their breath froze as it left their lips and + +floated about them as snow.</p> + +<p>Marbre was right; the bears were all on the roof, and the sound of their feet + +and their growls could be distinctly heard. Their great claws caught in the + +laths of the roof beneath the ice, and there was some danger that they might + +have sufficient strength to tear away the woodwork.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant and his men, becoming giddy and faint from the intense cold, + +were soon obliged to go down, and Hobson announced the state of affairs in as + +hopeful a tone as he could assume.</p> + +<p>"The bears," he said, "are now upon the roof. We ourselves have nothing to + +fear, as they can't get into our rooms; but they may force an entrance to the + +loft, and devour the furs stowed away there. Now these furs belong to the + +Company, and it is our duty to preserve them from injury I ask you then, my + +friends, to aid me in removing them to a place of safety."</p> + +<p>All eagerly volunteered, and relieving each other in parties of two or three, + +for none could have supported the intense severity of the cold for long at a + +time, they managed to carry all the furs into the large room in about an + +hour.</p> + +<p>Whilst the work was proceeding, the bears continued their efforts to get in, + +and tried to lift up the rafters of .the roof. In some places the laths became + +broken by their weight, and poor Mac-Nab was in despair; he had not reckoned + +upon such a contingency when he constructed the roof, and expected to see it + +give way every moment.</p> + +<p>The day passed, however, without any change in the situation. The bears did + +not get in; but a no less formidable enemy, the cold, gradually penetrated into + +every room. The fires in the stoves burnt low; the fuel in reserve was almost + +exhausted; and before twelve o'clock, the last piece of wood would be burnt, and + +the genial warmth of the stove would no longer cheer the unhappy colonists.</p> + +<p>Death would then await them-death in its most fearful form, from cold. The + +poor creatures, huddled together round the stove, felt that their own vital heat + +must soon become exhausted, but not a word of complaint passed their lips. The + +women bore their sufferings with the greatest heroism, and Mrs Mac-Nab pressed + +her baby convulsively to her ice-cold breast. Some of the soldiers slept, or + +rather were wrapped in a heavy torpor, which could scarcely be called sleep.</p> + +<p>At three o'clock in the morning Hobson consulted the thermometer hanging in + +the large room, about ten feet from the stove.</p> + +<p>It marked 4? Fahrenheit below zero.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant pressed his hand to his forehead, and looked mournfully at his + +silent companions without a word. His half-condensed breath shrouded his face in + +a white cloud, and he was standing rooted to the spot when a hand was laid upon + +his shoulder. He started, and looked round to see Mrs Barnett beside him.</p> + +<p>"Something must be done, Lieutenant Hobson !" exclaimed the energetic woman; + +"we cannot die like this without an effort to save ourselves !"</p> + +<p>"Yes," replied the Lieutenant, feeling revived by the moral courage of his + +companion--" yes, something must be done !" and he called together Long, Mac-Nab, + +and Rae the blacksmith, as the bravest men in his party. All, together with Mrs + +Barnett, hastened to the window, and having washed the panes with boiling water, + +they consulted the thermometer outside.</p> + +<p>"Seventy-two degrees !" cried Hobson. "My friends, two courses only are open + +to us, we can risk our lives to get a fresh supply of fuel, or we can burn the + +benches, beds, partition walls, and everything in the house to feed our stoves + +for a few days longer. A desperate alternative, for the cold may last for some + +time yet; there is no sign of a change in the weather."</p> + +<p>"Let us risk our lives to get fuel !" said Sergeant Long.</p> + +<p>All agreed that it would be the best course, and without another word each + +one set to work to prepare for the emergency.</p> + +<p>The following were the precautions taken to save the lives of those who were + +about to risk themselves for the sake of the general good :-</p> + +<p>The shed in which the wood was stored was about fifty steps on the left, + +behind, the principal house. It was decided that one of the men should try and + +run to the shed. He was to take one rope wound round his body, and to carry + +another in his hand, one end of which was to be held by one of his comrades. + +Once at the shed, he was to load one of the sledges there with fuel, and tie one + +rope to the front, and the other to the back of the vehicle, so that it could be + +dragged backwards and forwards between the house and the shed without much + +danger. A tug violently shaking one or the other cord would be the signal that + +the sledge was filled with fuel at the shed, or unloaded at the house.</p> + +<p>A very clever plan, certainly; but two things might defeat it. The door of + +the shed might be so blocked up with ice that it would be very difficult to open + +it, or the bears might come down from the roof and prowl about the court. Two + +risks to be run !</p> + +<p>Long, Mac-Nab, and Rae, all three volunteered for the perilous service; but + +the Sergeant reminded the other two that they were married, and insisted upon + +being the first to venture.</p> + +<p>When the Lieutenant expressed a wish to go himself, Mrs Barnett said + +earnestly, "You are our chief; you have no right to expose yourself. Let + +Sergeant Long go."</p> + +<p>Hobson could not but realise that his office imposed caution, and being + +called upon to decide which of his companions should go, be chose the Sergeant. + +Mrs Barnett pressed the brave man's hand with ill-concealed emotion; and the + +rest of the colonists, asleep or stupefied, knew nothing of the attempt about to + +be made to save their lives.</p> + +<p>Two long ropes were got ready. The Sergeant wound one round his body above + +the warm furs, worth some thousand pounds sterling, in which he was encased, and + +tied the other to his belt, on which he hung a tinder-box and a loaded revolver. + +Just before starting he swallowed down half a glass of rum, as he said, "to + +insure a good load of wood."</p> + +<p>Hobson, Rae, and Mac-Nab accompanied the brave fellow through the kitchen, + +where the fire had just gone out, and into the passage. Rae climbed up to the + +trap-door of the loft, and peeping through it, made sure that the bears were + +still on the roof. The moment for action had arrived.</p> + +<p>One door of the passage was open, and in spite of the thick furs in which + +they were wrapped, all felt chilled to the very marrow of their bones; and when + +the second door was pushed open, they recoiled for an instant, panting for + +breath, whilst the moisture held in suspension in the air of the passage covered + +the walls and the floor with fine snow.</p> + +<p>The weather outside was extremely dry, and the stars shone with extraordinary + +brilliancy. Sergeant Long rushed out without a moment's hesitation, dragging the + +cord behind him, one end of which was held by his companions; the outer door was + +pushed to, and Hobson, Mae-Nab, and Rae went back to the passage and closed the + +second door, behind which they waited. If Long did not return in a few minutes, + +they might conclude that his enterprise had succeeded, and that, safe in the + +shed, he was loading the first train with fuel. Ten minutes at the most ought to + +suffice for this operation, if he had been able to get the door open.</p> + +<p>When the Sergeant was fairly off, Hobson and Mac-Nab walked together towards + +the end of the passage.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile Rae had been watching the bears and the loft. It was so dark that + +all hoped Long's movements would escape the notice of the hungry animals.</p> + +<p>Ten minutes elapsed, and the three watchers went back to the narrow space + +between the two doors, waiting for the signal to be given to drag in the + +sledge.</p> + +<p>Five minutes more. The cord remained motionless in their hands! Their anxiety + +can be imagined. It was a quarter of an hour since the Sergeant had started, + +plenty of time for all he had to do, and he had given no signal.</p> + +<p>Hobson waited a few minutes longer, and then tightening his hold of the end + +of the rope, he made a sign to his companions to pull with him. If the load of + +wood were not quite ready, the Sergeant could easily stop it from being dragged + +away.</p> + +<p>The rope was pulled vigorously. A heavy object seemed to slide along the + +snow. In a few moments it reached the outer door.</p> + +<p>It was the body of the Sergeant, with the rope round his waist. Poor Long had + +never reached the shed. He had fallen fainting to the ground, and after twenty + +minutes' exposure to such a temperature there was little hope that he would + +revive.</p> + +<p>A cry of grief and despair burst from the lips of Mac-Nab and Rae. They + +lifted their unhappy comrade from the ground, and carried him into the passage; + +but as the Lieutenant was closing the outer door, something pushed violently + +against it, and a horrible growl was heard.</p> + +<p>"Help!" cried Hobson.</p> + +<p>Mac-Nab and Rae rushed to their officer's assistance; but Mrs Barnett had + +been beforehand with them and was struggling with all her strength to help + +Hobson to close the door. In vain; the monstrous brute, throwing the whole + +weight of its body against it, would force its way into the passage in another + +moment.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett, whose presence of mind did not forsake her now, seized one of + +the pistols in the Lieutenant's belt, and waiting quietly until the animal + +shoved its head between the door and the wall, discharged the contents into its + +open mouth.</p> + +<p>The bear fell backwards, mortally wounded no doubt, and the door was shut and + +securely fastened.</p> + +<p>The body of the Sergeant was then carried into the large room. But, alas! the + +fire was dying out. How was it possible to restore the vital heat with no means + +of obtaining warmth?</p> + +<p>"I will go-I will go and fetch some wood !" cried the blacksmith Rae.</p> + +<p>"Yes, Rae, we will go together!" exclaimed Mrs Barnett, whose courage was + +unabated.</p> + +<p>"No, my friends, no!" cried Hobson; "you would fall victims to the cold, or + +the bears, or both. Let us burn all there is to burn in the house, and leave the + +rest to God !"</p> + +<p>And the poor half-frozen settlers rose and laid about them with their + +hatchets like madmen. Benches, tables, and partition walls were thrown down, + +broken up, crushed to pieces, and piled up in the stove of the large room and + +kitchen furnace. Very soon good fires were burning, on which a few drops of + +walrus-oil were poured, so that the temperature of the rooms quickly rose a + +dozen degrees.</p> + +<p>Every effort was made to restore the Sergeant. He was rubbed with warm rum, + +and gradually the circulation of his blood was restored. The white blotches with + +which parts of his body were covered began to disappear; but he had suffered + +dreadfully, and several hours elapsed before he could articulate a word. He was + +laid in a warm bed, and Mrs Barnett and Madge watched by him until the next + +morning.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile Hobson, Mac-Nab, and Rae consulted bow best to escape from their + +terrible situation. It was impossible to shut their eyes to the fact that in two + +days this fresh supply of fuel would be exhausted, and then, if the cold + +continued, what would become of them all? The new moon had risen forty-eight + +hours ago, and there was no sign of a change in the weather! The north wind + +still swept the face of the country with its icy breath; the barometer remained + +at " fine dry weather; "and there was not a vapour to be seen above the endless + +succession of ice-fields. There was reason to fear that the intense cold would + +last a long time yet, but what was to be done? Would it do to try once more to + +get to the wood-shed, when the bears had been roused by the shot, and rendered + +doubly dangerous? Would it be possible to attack these dreadful creatures in the + +open air I No, it would be madness, and certain death for all!</p> + +<p>Fortunately the temperature of the rooms had now become more bearable, and in + +the morning Mrs Joliffe served up a breakfast of hot meat and tea. Hot grog was + +served out, and the brave Sergeant was able to take his share. The heat from the + +stoves warmed the bodies and reanimated the drooping courage of the poor + +colonists, who were now ready to attack the bears at a word from Hobson. But the + +Lieutenant, thinking the forces unequally matched, would not risk the attempt; + +and it appeared likely that the day would pass without any incident worthy of + +note, when at about three o'clock in the afternoon a great noise was heard on + +the top of the house.</p> + +<p>"There they are!" cried two or three soldiers, hastily arming themselves with + +hatchets and pistols.</p> + +<p>It was evident that the bears had torn away one of the rafters of the roof, + +and got into the loft.</p> + +<p>"Let every one remain where he is!" cried the Lieutenant. "Rae, the trap + +!"</p> + +<p>The blacksmith rushed into the passage, scaled the ladder, and shut and + +securely fastened the trap-door.</p> + +<p>A dreadful noise was now heard-growling, stamping of feet, and tearing of + +claws. It was doubtful whether the danger of the anxious listeners was + +increased, or the reverse. Some were of opinion that if all the bears were in + +the loft, it would be easier to attack them. They would be less formidable in a + +narrow space, and there would not be the same risk of suffocation from cold. Of + +course a conflict with such fierce creatures must still. be very perilous, but + +it no longer appeared so desperate as before.</p> + +<p>It was now debated whether it would be better to go and attack the besiegers, + +or to remain on the defensive. Only one soldier could get through the narrow + +trap-door at a time, and this made Hobson hesitate, and finally resolve to wait. + +The Sergeant and others, whose bravery none could doubt, agreed that he was in + +the right, and it might be possible that some new incident would occur to modify + +the situation. It was almost impossible for the bears to break through the beams + +of the ceiling, as they had the rafters of the roof, so that there was little + +fear that they would get on to the ground-floor.</p> + +<p>The day passed by in anxious expectation, and at night no one could sleep for + +the uproar made by the furious beasts.</p> + +<p>The next day, about nine o'clock, a fresh complication compelled Hobson to + +take active steps.</p> + +<p>He knew that the pipes of the stove and kitchen furnace ran all along the + +loft, and being made of lime-bricks but imperfectly cemented together, they + +could not resist great pressure for any length of time. Now some of the bears + +scratched at the masonry, whilst others leant against the pipes for the sake of + +the warmth from the stove; so that the bricks began to give way, and soon the + +stoves and furnace ceased to draw.</p> + +<p>This really was an irreparable misfortune, which would have disheartened less + +energetic men. But things were not yet at their worst. Whilst the fire became + +lower and lower, a thick, nauseous, acrid smoke filled the house; the pipes were + +broken, and the smoke soon became so thick that the lamps went out. Hobson now + +saw that he must leave the house if he wished to escape suffocation, but to + +leave the house would be to perish with cold. At this fresh misfortune some of + +the women screamed; and Hobson, seizing a hatchet, shouted in a loud voice</p> + +<p>"To the bears! to the bears, my friends !"</p> + +<p>It was the forlorn-hope. These terrible creatures must be destroyed. All + +rushed into the passage and made for the ladder, Hobson leading the way. The + +trap-door was opened, and a few shots were fired into the black whirlpool of + +smoke. Mingled howls and screams were heard, and blood began to flow on both + +sides; but the fearful conflict was waged in profound darkness.</p> + +<p>In the midst of the <i>melee</i> a terrible rumbling sound suddenly drowned the + +tumult, the ground became violently agitated, and the house rocked as if it were + +being torn up from its foundations. The beams of the walls separated, and + +through the openings Hobson and his companions saw the terrified bears rushing + +away into the darkness, howling with rage and fright.</p> +<a name="XXII" id="XXII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XXII.</h4> + +<h4><i>FIVE MONTHS MORE.</i></h4> + +<p>A violent earthquake had shaken Cape Bathurst. Such convulsions were probably + +frequent in this volcanic region, and the connection between them and eruptions + +was once more demonstrated.</p> + +<p>Hobson well understood the significance of what had occurred, and waited in + +anxious suspense. He knew that the earth might open and swallow up the little + +colony; but only one shock was felt, and that was rather a rebound than a + +vertical upheaval, which made the house lean over towards the lake, and burst + +open its walls. Immediately after this one shock, the ground again became firm + +and motionless.</p> + +<p>The house, although damaged, was still habitable; the breaches in the walls + +were quickly repaired, and the pipes of the chimneys were patched together again + +somehow</p> + +<p>Fortunately the wounds the soldiers had received in their struggle with the + +bears were slight, and merely required dressing.</p> + +<p>Two miserable days ensued, during which the woodwork of the beds and the + +planks of the partition walls were burnt, and the most pressing repairs executed + +by Mac-Nab and his men. The piles, well driven into the earth, had not yielded; + +but it was evident that the earthquake had caused a sinking of the level of the + +coast on which the fort was built, which might seriously compromise the safety + +of the building. Hobson was most anxious to ascertain the extent of the + +alteration of elevation, but the pitiless cold prevented him from venturing + +outside.</p> + +<p>But at last there were symptoms of an approaching change in the weather. The + +stars shone with rather less brilliancy, and on the 11th January the barometer + +fell slightly; hazy vapours floated in the air, the condensation of which would + +raise the temperature; and on the 12th January the wind veered to the + +south-west, and snow fell at irregular intervals.</p> + +<p>The thermometer outside suddenly rose to 15? above zero, and to the frozen + +colonists it was like the beginning of spring.</p> + +<p>At eleven o'clock the same morning all were out of doors. They were like a + +band of captives unexpectedly set free. They were, however, absolutely forbidden + +to go beyond the enceinte of the fort, in case of awkward meetings.</p> + +<p>The sun had not yet reappeared above the horizon, but it approached it nearly + +enough to produce a long twilight, during which objects could be distinctly seen + +to a distance of two miles; and Hobson's first thought was to ascertain what + +difference the earthquake had produced in the appearance of the surrounding + +districts.</p> + +<p>Certain changes had been effected. The crest of the promontory of Cape + +Bathurst had been broken off, and large pieces of the cliff had been flung upon + +the beach. The whole mass of the cape seemed to have been bent towards the lake, + +altering the elevation of the plateau on which the fort was built. The soil on + +the west appeared to have been depressed, whilst that on the east had been + +elevated. One of the results of this change of level would unfortunately be, + +that when the thaw set in, the waters of the lake and of Paulina river, in + +obedience to the law, requiring liquids to maintain their level, would inundate + +a portion of the western coast. The stream would probably scoop out another bed, + +and the natural harbour at its mouth would be destroyed. The hills on the + +eastern bank seemed to be considerably depressed, but the cliffs on the west + +were too far off for any accurate observations to be made. The important + +alteration produced by the earthquake may, in fact, be summed up in a very few + +words : the horizontal character of the ground was replaced by a slope from east + +to west.</p> + +<p>"Well, Lieutenant," said Mrs Barnett, laughing, "you were good enough to give + +my name to the port and river, and now there will be neither Paulina river nor + +Port Barnett. I must say I have been hardly used."</p> + +<p>"Well, madam," replied Hobson, "although the river is gone, the lake remains, + +and we will call it Lake Barnett. I hope that it at least will remain true to + +you."</p> + +<p>Mr and Mrs Joliffe, on leaving the house, had hurried, one to the doghouse, + +the other to the reindeer-stable. The dogs had not suffered much from their + +lone, confinement, and rushed into the court barking with delight. One reindeer + +had died, but the others, though thin, appeared to be in good health.</p> + +<p>"Well, madam," said the Lieutenant, "we have got through our troubles better + +than we could have expected."</p> + +<p>"I never despaired," replied the lady. "The miseries of an Arctic -winter + +would not conquer men like you and your companions."</p> + +<p>"To own the truth, madam," replied Hobson, "I never experienced such intense + +cold before, in all the years I have spent in the north; and if it had lasted + +many days longer we should all have been lost."</p> + +<p>"The earthquake came in the nick of time then, not only to drive away the + +bears, but also to modify the extremity of the cold?"</p> + +<p>"Perhaps so, madam. All natural phenomena influence each other to a certain + +extent. But the volcanic structure of the soil makes me rather uneasy. I cannot + +but regret the close vicinity of this active volcano. If the lava from it cannot + +reach us, the earthquakes connected with it can. Just look at our house + +now!"</p> + +<p>"Oh, all that can be put right when the fine weather comes, and you will make + +it all the stronger for the painful experience you have gained."</p> + +<p>"Of course we shall, but meanwhile I am afraid you won't find it very + +comfortable."</p> + +<p>"Are you speaking to me, Lieutenant? to an old traveller like me? I shall + +imagine myself one of the crew of a small vessel, and now that it does not pitch + +and toss, I shall have no fear of being sea-sick."</p> + +<p>"What you say does not surprise me," replied Hobson; "we all know your + +grandeur of character, your moral courage and imperturbable good temper. You + +have done much to help us all to bear our troubles, and I thank you in my own + +name and that of my men."</p> + +<p>"You flatter me, Lieutenant; you flatter me."</p> + +<p>"No, no; I only say what every one thinks. But may I ask you one question. + +You know that next June, Captain Craventy is to send us a convoy with + +provisions, which will take back our furs to Fort Reliance. I suppose our friend + +Thomas Black, after having seen his eclipse, will return with the Captain's men. + +Do you mean to accompany him?"</p> + +<p>"Do you mean to send me back?" asked the lady with a smile.</p> + +<p>"O madam !"-</p> + +<p>"Well, my superior officer," replied Mrs Barnett, extending her hand to the + +Lieutenant, "I shall ask you to allow me to spend another winter at Fort Hope. + +Next year one of the Company's ships will probably anchor off Cape Bathurst, and + +I shall return in it. Having come overland, I should like to go back by Behring + +Strait."</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant was delighted with his companion's decision. The two had + +become sincerely attached to each other, and had many tastes and qualities in + +common. The hour of separation could not fail to be painful to both; and who + +could tell what further trials awaited `the colonists, in which their combine, + +influence might sustain the courage of the rest?</p> + +<p>On the 20th January the sun at last reappeared, and the Polar night was at an + +end. It only remained above the horizon for a few minutes, and was greeted with + +joyous hurrahs by the settlers. From this date the days gradually increased in + +length.</p> + +<p>Throughout the month of February, and until the 15th March, there were abrupt + +transitions from fine to bad weather. The fine days were so cold that the + +hunters could not go out; and in the bad weather snowstorms kept them in. It was + +only between whiles that any outdoor work could be done; and long excursions + +were out of the question. There was no necessity for them, however, as the traps + +were in full activity. In the latter end of the winter, martens, foxes, ermines, + +wolverines, and other valuable animals were taken in large numbers, and the + +trappers had plenty to do.</p> + +<p>In March an excursion was ventured on as far as Walruses' Bay and it was + +noticed that the earthquake had considerably altered the form of the cliffs, + +which were much depressed; whilst the igneous hills beyond, with their summits + +wrapped in mist, seemed to look larger and more threatening than ever.</p> + +<p>About the 20th March the hunters sighted the first swans migrating from the + +south, and uttering shrill cries as they flew. A few snow buntings and winter + +hawks were also seen. But the ground was still covered with thick layers of + +frozen snow, and the sun was powerless to melt the hard surface of the lake and + +sea.</p> + +<p>The breaking up of the frost did not commence until early in April. The ice + +burst with a noise like the discharge of artillery.</p> + +<p>Sudden changes took place in the appearance of the icebergs broken by + +collisions, undermined by the action of the water once more set free, huge + +masses rolled over with an awful crash, in consequence of the displacement of + +their centre of gravity, causing fractures and fissures in the ice-fields which + +greatly accelerated their breaking up.</p> + +<p>At this time the mean temperature was 32? above zero, so that the upper layer + +of ice on the beach rapidly dissolved, whilst the chain of icebergs, drifted + +along by the currents of the Polar Sea, gradually drew back and became lost in + +the fogs on the horizon. On the 15th April the sea was open, and a vessel from + +the Pacific Ocean coming through Behring Strait, could certainly have skirted + +along the American coast, and have anchored off Cape Bathurst.</p> + +<p>Whilst the ice was disappearing from the ocean, Lake Barnett was also laying + +aside its slippery armour, much to the delight of the thousands of ducks and + +other water-fowl which began to teem upon its banks. As Hobson had foreseen, + +however, the level of the lake was affected by the slope of the soil. That part + +of the beach which stretched away from the enceinte of the fort, and was bounded + +on the east by wooded hills, had increased considerably in extent; and Hobson + +estimated that the waters of the lake had receded five hundred paces on the + +eastern bank. As a natural consequence, the water on the western side had risen, + +and if not held back by some natural barrier, would inundate the country.</p> + +<p>On the whole, it was fortunate that the slope was from east to west; for had + +it been from west to east, the factory must have been submerged.</p> + +<p>The little river dried up as soon as the thaw set free its waters. It might + +almost be said to have run back to its source, so abrupt was the slope of its + +bed from north to south.</p> + +<p>"We have now to erase a river from the map of the Arctic regions," observed + +Hobson to his Sergeant. "It would have been embarrassing if we had been + +dependent on the truant for drinkable water. Fortunately we have still Lake + +Barnett, and I don't suppose our thirsty men will drain it quite dry."</p> + +<p>"Yes, we've got the lake," replied the Sergeant; "but do you think its waters + +have remained sweet?"</p> + +<p>Hobson started and looked at his subordinate with knitted brows. It had not + +occurred to him that a fissure in the ground might have established a + +communication between the lake and the sea! Should it be so, ruin must ensue, + +and the factory would inevitably have to be abandoned after all.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant and Hobson rushed to the lake and found their fears + +groundless. Its waters were still sweet.</p> + +<p>Early in May the snow had disappeared in several places, and a scanty + +vegetation clothed the soil. Tiny mosses and slender grasses timidly pushed up + +their stems above the ground, and the sorrel and cochlearia seeds which Mrs + +Joliffe had planted began to sprout. The carpet of snow had protected them + +through the bitter winter; but they had still to be saved from the beaks of + +birds and the teeth of rodents. This arduous and important task was confided to + +the worthy Corporal, who acquitted himself of it with the zeal and devotion of a + +scarecrow in a kitchen garden.</p> + +<p>The long days had now returned, and hunting was resumed.</p> + +<p>Hobson was anxious to have a good stock of furs for the agents from Fort + +Reliance to take charge of when they arrived, as they would do in a few weeks. + +Marbre, Sabine, and the others, therefore, commenced the campaign. Their + +excursions were neither long nor fatiguing : they never went further than two + +miles from Cape Bathurst, for they had never before been in a district so well + +stocked with game; and they were both surprised and delighted. Martens, + +reindeer, hares, caribous, foxes, and ermines passed close to their guns.</p> + +<p>One thing, however, excited some regret in the minds of the colonists, not a + +trace was to be seen of their old enemies the bears; and it seemed as if they + +had taken all their relations with them. Perhaps the earthquake had frightened + +them away, for they have a very delicate nervous organisation, if such an + +expression can be applied to a mere quadruped. It was a pity they were gone, for + +vengeance could not be wreaked upon them.</p> + +<p>The month of May was very wet. Rain and snow succeeded each other. The mean + +temperature was only 41? above zero. Fogs were of frequent occurrence, and so + +thick that it would often have been imprudent to go any distance from the fort. + +Petersen and Kellet once caused their companions grave anxiety by disappearing + +for forty-eight hours. They had lost their way, and turned to the south when + +they thought they were near to Walruses' Bay. They came back exhausted and half + +dead with hunger.</p> + +<p>June came at last, and with it really fine warm weather. The colonists were + +able to leave off their winter clothing. They worked zealously at repairing the + +house, the foundations of which had to be propped up; and Hobson also ordered + +the construction of a large magazine at the southern corner of the court. The + +quantity of game justified the expenditure of time and labour involved : the + +number of furs collected was already considerable, and it was necessary to have + +some place set aside in which to keep them.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant now expected every day the arrival of the detachment to be + +sent by Captain Craventy. A good many things were still required for the new + +settlement. The stores were getting low; and if the party had left the fort in + +the beginning of May, they ought to reach Cape Bathurst towards the middle of + +June. It will be remembered that the Captain and his Lieutenant had fixed upon + +the cape as the spot of rendezvous, and Hobson having constructed his fort on + +it, there was no fear of the reinforcements failing to find him.</p> + +<p>From the 15th June the districts surrounding the cape were carefully watched. + +The British flag waved from the summit of the cliff, and could be seen at a + +considerable distance. It was probable that the convoy would follow the + +Lieutenant's example, and skirt along the coast from Coronation Gulf. If not + +exactly the shortest, it was the surest route, at a time when, the sea being + +free from ice, the coast-line could be easily followed.</p> + +<p>When the month of June passed without the arrival of the expected party, + +Hobson began to feel rather uneasy, especially as the country again became + +wrapped in fogs. He began to fear that the agents might lose their way, and + +often talked the matter over with Mrs Barnett, Mac-Nab, and Rae.</p> + +<p>Thomas Black made no attempt to conceal his uneasiness, for he was anxious to + +return with the party from Fort Reliance as soon as he had seen his eclipse; and + +should anything keep them back from coming, he would have to resign himself to + +another winter, a prospect which did not please him at all; and in reply to his + +eager questions, Hobson could say little to reassure him.</p> + +<p>The 4th July dawned. No news! Some men sent to the southeast to reconnoitre, + +returned, bringing no tidings.</p> + +<p>Either the agents had never started, or they had lost their way. The latter + +hypothesis was unfortunately the more probable. Hobson knew Captain Craventy, + +and felt confident that he had sent off the convoy at the time named.</p> + +<p>His increasing anxiety will therefore be readily understood. The fine season + +was rapidly passing away. Another two months and the Arctic winter, with its + +bitter winds, its whirlpools of snow, and its long nights, would again set + +in.</p> + +<p>Hobson, as we well know, was not a man to yield to misfortune without a + +struggle. Something must be done, and with the ready concurrence of the + +astronomer the following plan was decided on.</p> + +<p>It was now the 5th July. In another fortnight-July 18th-the solar eclipse was + +to take place, and after that Thomas Black would be free to leave Fort Hope. It + +was therefore agreed that if by that time the agents had not arrived, a convoy + +of a few men and four or five sledges should leave the factory, and make for the + +Great Slave Lake, taking with them some of the most valuable furs; and if no + +accident befell them, they might hope to arrive at Fort Reliance in six weeks at + +the latest-that is to say, towards the end of August.</p> + +<p>This matter settled, Thomas Black shrank back into his shell, and became once + +more the man of one idea, awaiting the moment when the moon, passing between the + +orb of day and "himself," should totally eclipse the disc of the sun.</p> +<a name="XXIII" id="XXIII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XXIII.</h4> + +<h4><i>THE ECLIPSE OF THE 18TH JULY 1860.</i></h4> + +<p>The mists did not disperse. The sun shone feebly through thick curtains of + +fog, and the astronomer began to have a great dread lest the eclipse should not + +be visible after all. Sometimes the fog was so dense that the summit of the cape + +could not be seen from the court of the fort.</p> + +<p>Hobson got more and more uneasy. He had no longer any doubt that the convoy + +had gone astray in the strange land; moreover, vague apprehensions and sad + +forebodings increased his depression. He could not look into the future with any + +confidence-why, he would have found it impossible to explain. Everything + +apparently combined to reassure him. In spite of the great rigour of the winter, + +his little colony was in excellent health. No quarrels had arisen amongst the + +colonists, and their zeal and enthusiasm was still unabated. The surrounding + +districts were well stocked with game, the harvest of furs had surpassed his + +expectations, and the Company might well be satisfied with the result of the + +enterprise. Even if no fresh supply of provisions arrived, the resources of the + +country were such that the prospect of a second winter need awake no misgivings. + +Why, then, was Lieutenant Hobson losing hope and confidence?</p> + +<p>He and Mrs Barnett had many a talk on the subject; and the latter did all she + +could to raise the drooping spirits of the commanding officer, urging upon him + +all the considerations enumerated above; and one day walking with him along the + +beach, she pleaded the cause of Cape Bathurst and the factory, built at the cost + +of-so much suffering, with more than usual eloquence.</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes, madam, you are right," replied Hobson; "but we can't help our + +presentiments. I am no visionary. Twenty times in my soldier's life I have been + +in critical circumstances, and have never lost presence of mind for one instant; + +and now for the first time in my life I am uneasy about the future. If I had to + +face a positive danger, I should have no fear; but a vague uncertain peril of + +which I have only a presentiment "</p> + +<p>"What danger do you mean?" inquired Mrs Barnett; "a danger from men, from + +animals, or the elements?"</p> + +<p>"Of animals I have no dread whatever, madam; it is for them to tremble before + +the hunters of Cape Bathurst, nor do I fear men; these districts are frequented + +by none but Esquimaux, and the Indians seldom venture so far north."</p> + +<p>"Besides, Lieutenant," said Mrs Barnett, "the Canadians, whose arrival you so + +much feared in the fine season, have never appeared."</p> + +<p>"I am very sorry for it, madam."</p> + +<p>"What! you regret the absence of the rivals who are so evidently hostile to + +your Company?"</p> + +<p>"Madam, I am both glad and sorry that they have not come; that will of course + +puzzle you. But observe that the expected convoy from Fort Reliance has not + +arrived. It is the same with. the agents of the St Louis Fur Company; they might + +have come, and they have not done so. Not a single Esquimaux has visited this + +part of the coast during the summer either"-</p> + +<p>"And what do you conclude from all this?" inquired Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"I conclude that it is not so <i>easy</i> to get to Cape Bathurst or to Fort + +Hope as we could wish."</p> + +<p>The lady looked into the Lieutenant's anxious face, struck with the + +melancholy and significant intonation of the word <i>easy.</i></p> + +<p>"Lieutenant Hobson," she said earnestly, "if you fear neither men nor + +animals, I must conclude that your anxiety has reference to the elements."</p> + +<p>"Madam," he replied, "I do not know if my spirit be broken, or if my + +presentiments blind me, but there seems to me to be something uncanny about this + +district. If I had known it better I should not have settled down in it. I have + +already called your attention to certain peculiarities, which to me appear + +inexplicable; the total absence of stones everywhere, and the clear-cut line of + +the coast. I can't make out about the primitive formation of this end of the + +continent. I know that the vicinity of a volcano may cause some phenomena; but + +you remember what I said to you on the subject of the tides?"</p> + +<p>"Oh yes, perfectly."</p> + +<p>"Where the sea ought according to the observations of explorers in these + +latitudes, to have risen fifteen or twenty feet, it has scarcely risen one + +!"</p> + +<p>"Yes; but that you accounted for by the irregular distribution of land and + +the narrowness of the straits."</p> + +<p>"I <i>tried</i> to account for it, that is all," replied Hobson; "but the day + +before yesterday I noticed a still more extraordinary phenomenon, which I cannot + +even try to explain, and I doubt if the greatest <i>savants</i> could do so + +either."</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett looked inquiringly at Hobson.</p> + +<p>"What has happened?" she exclaimed.</p> + +<p>"Well, the day before yesterday, madam, when the moon was full, and according + +to the almanac the tide ought to have been very high, the sea did not even rise + +one foot, as it did before-it did not <i>rise</i> at all."</p> + +<p>"Perhaps you may be mistaken observed Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"I am not mistaken. I saw it with my own eyes. The day before yesterday, July + +4th, there was positively no tide on the coast of Cape Bathurst."</p> + +<p>"And what do you conclude from that?" inquired Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"I conclude madam," replied the Lieutenant, "either that the laws of nature + +are changed, or that this district is very peculiarly situated . . . or rather . + +. . I conclude nothing . . . I explain nothing . . . I am puzzled. . . I do not + +understand it; and therefore . . . therefore I am anxious."</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett asked no more questions. Evidently the total absence of tides was + +as unnatural and inexplicable as would be the absence of the sun from the + +meridian at noon. Unless the earthquake had so modified the conformation of the + +coast of the Arctic regions as to account for it-but no, such an idea could not + +be entertained by any one accustomed to note terrestrial phenomena.</p> + +<p>As for supposing that the Lieutenant could be mistaken in his observations, + +that was impossible; and that very day he and Mrs Barnett, by means of + +beach-marks made on the beach, ascertained beyond all doubt that whereas a year + +before the sea rose a foot, there was now no tide whatever.</p> + +<p>The matter was kept a profound secret, as Hobson was unwilling to render his + +companions anxious. But he might often be seen standing motionless and silent + +upon the summit of the cape, gazing across the sea, which was now open, and + +stretched away as far as the eye could reach.</p> + +<p>During the month of July hunting the furred animals was discontinued, as the + +martens, foxes, and others had already lost their winter beauty. No game was + +brought down but that required for food, such as caribous, Polar hares, &c., + +which, strange to say, instead of being scared away by the guns, continued to + +multiply near the fort. Mrs Barnett did not fail to note this peculiar, and, as + +the event proved, significant fact.</p> + +<p>No change had taken place in the situation on the 15th July. No news from + +Fort Reliance. The expected convoy did not arrive, and Hobson resolved to + +execute his project of sending to Captain Craventy, as Captain Craventy did not + +come to him.</p> + +<p>Of course none but Sergeant Long could be appointed to the command of the + +little troop, although the faithful fellow would rather not have been separated + +from his Lieutenant. A considerable time must necessarily elapse before he could + +get back to Fort Hope. He would have to pass the winter at Fort Reliance, and + +return the next summer. Eight months at least! It is true either Mac-Nab or Rae + +could have taken the Sergeant's place; but then they were married, and the one + +being a master carpenter, and the other the only blacksmith, the colonists could + +not well have dispensed with their services.</p> + +<p>Such were the grounds on which the Lieutenant chose Long, and the Sergeant + +submitted with military obedience. The four soldiers elected to accompany him + +were Belcher, Pond, Petersen, and Kellet, who declared their readiness to + +start.</p> + +<p>Four sledges and their teams of dogs were told off for the service. They were + +to take a good stock of provisions, and the most valuable of the furs. Foxes, + +ermines, martens, swans, lynxes, musk-rats, gluttons, &c., all contributed + +to the precious convoy. The start was fixed for the morning of the 19th July, + +the day after the eclipse. Of course Thomas Black was to accompany the Sergeant, + +and one sledge was to convoy his precious person and instruments.</p> + +<p>The worthy savant endured agonies of suspense in the few days preceding the + +phenomenon which he awaited with so much impatience. He might well be anxious; + +for one day it was fine and another wet, now mists obscured the sun, or thick + +fogs hid it all together; and the wind veered to every point of the horizon with + +provoking fickleness and uncertainty. What if during the few moments of the + +eclipse the queen of the night and the great orb of day should be wrapped in an + +opaque cloud at the critical moment, so that he, the astronomer, Thomas Black, + +come so far to watch the phenomenon, should be unable to see the luminous corona + +or the red prominences! How terrible would be the disappointment! How many + +dangers, how much suffering, how much fatigue, would have been gone through in + +vain !</p> + +<p>"To have come so far to see the moon, and not to see it!" he cried in a + +comically piteous tone.</p> + +<p>No, he could not face the thought and early of an evening he would climb to + +the summit of the cape and gaze into the heavens. The fair Phoebe was nowhere to + +be seen; for it being three days before new moon, she was accompanying the sun + +in his daily course, and her light was quenched in his beams.</p> + +<p>Many a time did Thomas Black relieve his over-burdened heart by pouring out + +his troubles to Mrs Barnett. The good lady felt sincerely sorry for him, and one + +day, anxious to reassure him, she told him that the barometer showed a certain + +tendency to rise, and reminded him that they were in the fine season.</p> + +<p>The fine season !" cried the poor astronomer" shrugging his shoulders. "Who + +can speak of a fine season in such a country as this?"</p> + +<p>"Well, but, Mr Black," said Mrs Barnett, "suppose, for the sake of argument, + +that you miss this eclipse by any unlucky chance, I suppose there will be + +another some day. The eclipse of July 18th will not be the last of this + +century."</p> + +<p>"No, madam, no," returned Black; "there will be five more total eclipses of + +the sun before 1900. One on the 31st December 1861, which will be total for the + +Atlantic Ocean, the Mediterranean, and the Sahara Desert; a second on the 22d + +December 1870, total for the Azores, the south of Spain, Algeria, Sicily, and + +Turkey; a third on the 19th August 1887, total for the north-east of Germany, + +the south of Russia, and Central Asia; a fourth on the 9th April 1896, visible + +in Greenland, Lapland, and Siberia; and lastly, a fifth on the 28th May 1900, + +which will be total for the United States, Spain, Algeria, and</p> + +<p>Egypt."</p> + +<p>"Well, Mr Black," resumed Mrs Barnett, "if you lose the eclipse of the 18th + +July 1860, you can console yourself by looking forward to that of the 31st + +December 1861. It will only be seventeen months !"</p> + +<p>"I can console myself, madam," said the astronomer gravely, "by looking + +forward to that of 1896. I shall have to wait not seventeen months but + +thirty-six years !"</p> + +<p>"May I ask why?"</p> + +<p>"Because of all the eclipses, it alone-that of 9th August 1896-will be total + +for places in high latitudes, such as Lapland, Siberia, or Greenland."</p> + +<p>"But what is the special interest of an observation taken in these elevated + +latitudes?"</p> + +<p>"What special interest?" cried Thomas Black; why, a scientific interest of + +the highest importance. Eclipses have very rarely been watched near the Pole, + +where the sun, being very little above the horizon, is considerably increased in + +size. The disc of the moon which is to intervene between us and the sun is + +subject to a similar apparent extension, and therefore it may be that the red + +prominences and the luminous corona can be more thoroughly examined This, madam, + +is why I have travelled all this distance to watch the eclipse above the + +seventieth parallel. A similar opportunity will not occur until 1896, and who + +can tell if I shall be alive then?"</p> + +<p>To this burst of enthusiasm there was no reply to be made; and the + +astronomer's anxiety and depression increased, for the inconstant weather seemed + +more and more disposed to play him some ill-natured trick.</p> + +<p>It was very fine on the 16th July, but the next day it was cloudy and misty + +and Thomas Black became really ill. The feverish state he had been in for so + +long seemed likely to result in a serious illness. Mrs Barnett and Hobson tried + +in vain to soothe him, and Sergeant Long and the others could not understand how + +it was possible to be so unhappy for love of the moon."</p> + +<p>At last the great day-the 18th July-dawned. According to the calculations of + +astronomers, the total eclipse was to last four minutes thirty-seven + +seconds-that is to say, from forty-three minutes fifteen seconds past eleven to + +forty-seven minutes fifty-seven seconds past eleven A.M.</p> + +<p>"What do I ask? what do I ask?" moaned the astronomer, tearing his hair. + +"Only one little corner of the sky free from clouds! only the small space in + +which the eclipse is to take place ! And for how long? For four short minutes! + +After that, let it snow, let it thunder, let the elements break loose in fury, I + +should care no more for it all than a snail for a chronometer."</p> + +<p>It is not to be denied that Thomas Black had some grounds for his fears. It + +really seemed likely that observations would be impossible. At daybreak the + +horizon was shrouded in mists Heavy clouds were coming up from the south, and + +covering the very portion of the sky in which the eclipse was to take place. But + +doubtless the patron saint of astronomers had pity on poor Black, for towards + +eight o'clock a slight wind arose and swept the mists and clouds from the sky, + +leaving it bright and clear!</p> + +<p>A cry of gratitude burst from the lips of the astronomer, and his heart beat + +high with newly-awakened hope. The sun shone brightly, and the moon, so soon to + +darken it, was as yet invisible in its glorious beams.</p> + +<p>Thomas Black's instruments were already carefully placed on the promontory, + +and having pointed them towards the southern horizon, he awaited the event with + +calmness restored, and the coolness necessary for taking his observation. What + +was there left to fear?</p> + +<p>Nothing, unless it was that the sky might fall upon his head! At nine o'clock + +there was not a cloud, not a vapour left upon the sky from the zenith to the + +horizon. Never were circumstances more favourable to an astronomical + +observation.</p> + +<p>The whole party were anxious to take part in the observation, and all + +gathered round the astronomer on Cape Bathurst. Gradually the sun rose above the + +horizon, describing an extended arc above the vast plain stretching away to the + +south. No one spoke, but awaited the eclipse in solemn silence.</p> + +<p>Towards half-past nine the eclipse commenced The disc of the moon seemed to + +graze that of the sun. But the moon's <i>shadow</i> was not to fall completely + +on the earth, hiding the sun, until between forty three minutes past eleven and + +forty-seven minutes fifty-seven seconds past eleven. That was the time fixed in + +the almanacs, and every one knows that no error can creep into them, + +established, verified, and controlled as they are by the scientific men of all + +the observatories in the world.</p> + +<p>The astronomer had brought a good many glasses with him, and he distributed + +them amongst his companions, that all might watch the progress of the phenomenon + +without injury to the eyes.</p> + +<p>The brown disc of the moon gradually advanced, and terrestrial objects began + +to assume a peculiar orange hue, whilst the atmosphere on tire zenith completely + +changed colour. At a quarter-past ten half the disc of the sun was darkened, and + +a few dogs which happened to be at liberty showed signs of uneasiness and howled + +piteously. The wild ducks, thinking night had come, began to utter sleepy calls + +-and to seek their nests, and the mothers gathered their little ones under their + +wings. The hush of eventide fell upon all animated nature.</p> + +<p>At eleven o'clock two-thirds of the sun were covered, and all terrestrial + +objects became a kind of vinous red. A gloomy twilight set in, to be succeeded + +during the four minutes of totality by absolute darkness. A few planets, amongst + +t others Mercury and Venus, began to appear, and some constellations-Caplet, + +[symbol] and [symbol] of Taurus, and [symbol] of Orion. The darkness deepened + +every moment.</p> + +<p>Thomas Black remained motionless with his eye glued to the glass of his + +instrument, eagerly watching the progress of the phenomenon. At forty-three + +minutes past eleven the discs of the two luminaries ought to be exactly opposite + +to each other, that of the moon completely hiding that of the sun.</p> + +<p>"Forty-three minutes past eleven," announced Hobson, who was attentively + +watching the minute hand of his chronometer.</p> + +<p>Thomas Black remained motionless, stooping over his instrument. Half a minute + +passed, and then the astronomer [astonomer] drew himself up, with eyes distended + +and eager. Once more he bent over the telescope, and cried in a choked + +voice-</p> + +<p>"She is going! she is going! The moon, the moon is going! She is + +disappearing, running away !"</p> + +<p>True enough the disc of the moon was gliding away from that of the sun + +without having completely covered it !</p> + +<p>The astronomer had fallen backwards, completely overcome. The four minutes + +were past. The luminous corona had not appeared !</p> + +<p>"What is the matter?" inquired Hobson.</p> + +<p>"The matter is," screamed the poor astronomer, "that the eclipse was not + +total-not total for this portion of the globe! Do you hear? It was not + + to-t-a-1! I say not to-t-a-l! !"</p> + +<p>"Then your almanacs are incorrect."</p> + +<p>"Incorrect! Don't tell that to me, if you please, Lieutenant Hobson !"</p> + +<p>"But what then?" said Hobson, suddenly changing countenance.</p> + +<p>"Why," said Black, "we are not after all on the seventieth parallel !"</p> + +<p>"Only fancy !" cried Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"We can soon prove it," said the astronomer whose eyes flashed with rage and + +disappointment. "The sun will pass the meridian in a few minutes. . . . My + +sextant-quick . . . make haste !"</p> + +<p>One of the soldiers rushed to the house and fetched the instrument + +required.</p> + +<p>The astronomer pointed it upon the sun; he watched the orb of day pass the + +meridian, and rapidly noted down a few calculations.</p> + +<p>"What was the situation of Cape Bathurst a year ago when we took the + +latitude?" he inquired.</p> + +<p>"Seventy degrees, forty-four minutes, and thirty-seven seconds," replied + +Hobson.</p> + +<p>"Well, sir, it is now seventy-three degrees, seven minutes, and twenty + +seconds! You see we are not under the seventieth parallel !</p> + +<p>"Or rather we are no longer there !" muttered Hobson.</p> + +<p>A sudden light had broken in upon his mind, all the phenomena hitherto so + +inexplicable were now explained.</p> + +<p>Cape Bathurst had drifted three degrees farther north since the arrival of + +the Lieutenant and his companions !</p> + +<h4>End of Part I</h4> + +<h4>PART II<br>CONTENTS.</h4> + +<table width="90%" border="1" align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1"> + + <tbody> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BI">I</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>A Floating Fort</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BII">II</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>Where Are We?</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BIII">III</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>A Tour Of The Island</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BIV">IV</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>A Night Encampment</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BV">V</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>From July 25th To August 20th</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BVI">VI</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>Ten Days Of Tempest</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BVII">VII</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>A Fire And A Cry</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BVIII">VIII</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>Mrs. Paulina Barnett's Excursion</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BIX">IX</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>Kalumah's Adventures</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BX">X</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>The Kamtchatka Current</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BXI">XI</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>A Communication From Lieutenant Hobson</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BXII">XII</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>A Chance To Be Tried</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BXIII">XIII</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>Across The Ice-Field</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BXIV">XIV</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>The Winter Months</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BXV">XV</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>A Last Exploring Expedition</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BXVI">XVI</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>The Break-Up Of The Ice</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BXVII">XVII</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>The Avalanche</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BXVIII">XVIII</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>All At Work</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BXIX">XIX</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>Behring Sea</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BXX">XX</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>In The Offing</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BXXI">XXI</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>The Island Becomes An Isle</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BXXII">XXII</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>The Four Following Days</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BXXIII">XXIII</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>On A Piece Of Ice</p></td></tr> + + <tr> + + <td width="16%" valign="top"> + + <p><a href="#BXXIV">XXIV</a></p></td> + + <td width="84%" valign="top"> + + <p>Conclusion</p></td></tr></tbody></table><br> + +<h4>CHAPTER I.</h4> +<p> +<a name="BI" id="BI"></a> +</p> +<h4><i>A FLOATING FORT.</i></h4> + +<p>And so Fort Hope, founded by Lieutenant Hobson on the borders of the Polar + +Sea, had drifted! Was the courageous agent of the Company to blame for this? No; + +any one might have been deceived as he had been. No human prevision could have + +foreseen such a calamity. He meant to build upon a rock, and he had not even + +built upon sand. The peninsula of Victoria, which the best maps of English + +America join to the American continent, had been torn suddenly away from it. + +This peninsula was in fact nothing but an immense piece of ice, five hundred + +square miles in extent, converted by successive deposits of sand and earth into + +apparently solid ground well clothed with vegetation. Connected with the + +mainland for thousands of centuries, the earthquake of the 8th of January had + +dragged it away from its moorings, and it was now a floating island, at the + +mercy of the winds and waves, and had been carried along the Arctic Ocean by + +powerful currents for the last three months!</p> + +<p>Yes, Fort Hope was built upon ice! Hobson at once understood the mysterious + +change in their latitude. The isthmus-that is to say, the neck of land which + +connected the peninsula of Victoria with the mainland-had been snapped in two by + +a subterranean convulsion connected with the eruption of the volcano some months + +before. As long as the northern winter continued, the frozen sea maintained + +things as they were; but when the thaw came, when the ice fields, melted beneath + +the rays of the sun, and the huge icebergs, driven out into the offing, drew + +back to the farthest limits of the horizon-when the sea at last became open, the + +whole peninsula drifted away, with its woods, its cliffs, its promontories, its + +inland lagoon, and its coast-line, under the influence of a current about which + +nothing was known. For months this drifting had been going on unnoticed by the + +colonists, who even when hunting did not go far from Fort Hope. Beach-marks, if + +they had been made, would have been useless; for heavy mists obscured everything + +at a short distance, the ground remained apparently firm and motionless, and + +there was, in short, nothing to hint to the Lieutenant and his men that they had + +become islanders. The position of the new island with regard to the rising and + +setting of the sun was the same as before. Had the cardinal points changed their + +position, had the island turned round, the Lieutenant, the astronomer, or Mrs + +Barnett, would certainly have noticed and understood the change; but in its + +course the island had thus far followed a parallel of latitude, and its motion, + +though rapid, had been imperceptible.</p> + +<p>Although Hobson had no doubt of the moral and physical courage and + +determination of his companions, he determined not to acquaint them with the + +truth. It would be time enough to tell them of their altered position when it + +had been thoroughly studied. Fortunately the good fellows, soldiers or workmen, + +took little notice of the astronomical observations, and not being able to see + +the consequences involved, they did not trouble themselves about the change of + +latitude just announced.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant determined to conceal his anxiety, and seeing no remedy for + +the misfortune, mastered his emotion by a strong effort, and tried to console + +Thomas Black, who was lamenting his disappointment and tearing his hair.</p> + +<p>The astronomer had no doubt about the misfortune of which he was the victim. + +Not having, like the Lieutenant, noticed the peculiarities of the district, he + +did not look beyond the one fact in which he was interested: on the day fixed, + +at the time named, the moon had not completely eclipsed the sun. And what could + +he conclude but that, to the disgrace of observatories, the almanacs were false, + +and that the long desired eclipse, his own eclipse, Thomas Black's, which he had + +come so far and through so many dangers to see, had not been "total" for this + +particular district under the seventieth parallel! No, no, it was impossible to + +believe it; he could not face the terrible certainty, and he was overwhelmed + +with disappointment. He was soon to learn the truth, however.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile Hobson let his men imagine that the failure of the eclipse could + +only interest himself and the astronomer, and they returned to their ordinary + +occupations; but as they were leaving, Corporal Joliffe stopped suddenly and + +said, touching his cap-</p> + +<p>"May I ask you one question, sir?"</p> + +<p>"Of course, Corporal; say on," replied the Lieutenant, who wondered what was + +coming.</p> + +<p>But Joliffe hesitated, and his little wife nudged his elbow.</p> + +<p>"Well, Lieutenant," resumed the Corporal, "it's just about the seventieth + +degree of latitude-if we are not where we thought we were."</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant frowned.</p> + +<p>"Well," he replied evasively, "we made a mistake in our reckoning, ... our + +first observation was wrong; ... but what does that concern you?"</p> + +<p>"Please, sir, it's because of the pay," replied Joliffe with a scowl. "You + +know well enough that the Company promised us double pay."</p> + +<p>Hobson drew a sigh of relief. It will be remembered that the men had been + +promised higher pay if they succeeded in settling on or above the seventieth + +degree north latitude, and Joliffe, who always had an eye to the main chance, + +had looked upon the whole matter from a monetary point of view, and was afraid + +the bounty would be withheld.</p> + +<p>"You needn't be afraid," said Hobson with a smile; "and you can tell your + +brave comrades that our mistake, which is really inexplicable, will not in the + +least prejudice your interests. We are not below, but above the seventieth + +parallel, and so you will get your double pay."</p> + +<p>"Thank you, sir, thank you," replied Joliffe with a beaming face. "It isn't + +that we think much about money, but that the money sticks to us."</p> + +<p>And with this sage remark the men drew off, little dreaming what a strange + +and fearful change had taken place in the position of the country.</p> + +<p>Sergeant Long was about to follow the others when Hobson stopped him with the + +words-</p> + +<p>"Remain here, Sergeant Long."</p> + +<p>The subordinate officer turned on his heel and waited for the Lieutenant to + +address him.</p> + +<p>All had now left the cape except Mrs Barnett, Madge, Thomas Black, and the + +two officers.</p> + +<p>Since the eclipse Mrs Barnett had not uttered a word. She looked inquiringly + +at Hobson, who tried to avoid meeting her eyes.</p> + +<p>For some time not another word was spoken. All involuntarily turned towards + +the south, where the broken isthmus was situated; but from their position they + +could only see the sea horizon on the north. Had Cape Bathurst been situated a + +few hundred feet more above the level of the ocean, they would have been able at + +a glance to ascertain the limits of their island home.</p> + +<p>All were deeply moved at the sight of Fort Hope and all its occupants borne + +away from all solid ground, and floating at the mercy of winds and waves.</p> + +<p>"Then, Lieutenant," said Mrs Barnett at last, "all the strange phenomena you + +observed are now explained!"</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam," he replied, "everything is explained. The peninsula of + +Victoria, now an island, which we thought firm ground with an immovable + +foundation, is nothing more than a vast sheet of ice welded for centuries to the + +American continent. Gradually the wind has strewn it with earth and sand, and + +scattered over them the seeds from which have sprung the trees and mosses with + +which it is clothed. Rain-water filled the lagoon, and produced the little + +river; vegetation transformed the appearance of the ground; but beneath the + +lake, beneath the soil of earth and sand-in a word, beneath our feet is a + +foundation of ice, which floats upon the water by reason of its being + +specifically lighter than it. Yes, it is a sheet of ice which bears us up, and + +is carrying us away, and this is why we have not found a single flint or stone + +upon its surface. This is why its shores are perpendicular, this is why we found + +ice ten feet below the surface when we dug the reindeer pit-this, in short, is + +why the tide was not noticeable on the peninsula, which rose and sank with the + +ebb and flow of the waves!"</p> + +<p>"Everything is indeed explained," said Mrs Barnett, "and your presentiments + +did not deceive you; but can you explain why the tides, which do not affect us + +at all now, were to a slight extent perceptible on our arrival?"</p> + +<p>"Simply because, madam, on our arrival the peninsula was still connected by + +means of its flexible isthmus with the American continent. It offered a certain + +resistance to the current, and on its northern shores the tide rose two feet + +beyond low-water mark, instead of the twenty we reasonably expected. But from + +the moment when the earthquake broke the connecting link, from the moment when + +the peninsula became an island free from all control, it rose and sank with the + +ebb and flow of the tide; and, as we noticed together at full moon a few days + +ago, no sensible difference was produced on our shores."</p> + +<p>In spite of his despair, Thomas Black listened attentively to Hobson's + +explanations, and could not but see the reasonableness of his deductions, but he + +was furious at such a rare, unexpected, and, as he said, "ridiculous" phenomenon + +occurring just so as to make him miss the eclipse, and he said not a word, but + +maintained a gloomy, even haughty silence.</p> + +<p>"Poor Mr Black," said Mrs Barnett, "it must be owned that an astronomer was + +never more hardly used than you since the world began!"</p> + +<p>"In any case, however," said Hobson, turning to her, "we have neither of us + +anything to reproach ourselves with. No one can find fault with us. Nature alone + +is to blame. The earthquake cut off our communication with the mainland, and + +converted our peninsula into a floating island, and this explains why the furred + +and other animals imprisoned like ourselves, have become so numerous round the + +fort!"</p> + +<p>"This, too, is why the rivals you so much dreaded have not visited us, + +Lieutenant!" exclaimed Madge.</p> + +<p>"And this," added the Sergeant, "accounts for the non-arrival of the convoy + +sent to Cape Bathurst by Captain Craventy."</p> + +<p>"And this is why," said Mrs. Barnett, looking at the Lieutenant, "I must give + +up all hope of returning to Europe this year at least!"</p> + +<p>The tone of voice in which the lady made this last remark showed that she + +resigned herself to her fate more readily than could have been expected. She + +seemed suddenly to have made up her mind to make the best of the situation, + +which would no doubt give her an opportunity of making a great many interesting + +observations. And after all, what good would grumbling have done? Recriminations + +were worse than useless. They could not have altered their position, or have + +checked the course of the wandering island, and there was no means of reuniting + +it to a continent. No; God alone could decide the future of Fort Hope. They must + +bow to His will.</p> +<a name="BII" id="BII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER II.</h4> + +<h4><i>WHERE ARE WE?</i></h4> + +<p>It was necessary carefully to study the unexpected and novel situation in + +which the agents of the Company now found themselves, and Hobson did so with his + +chart before him.</p> + +<p>He could not ascertain the longitude of Victoria Island-the original name + +being retained-until the next day, and the latitude had already been taken. For + +the longitude, the altitude of the sun must be ascertained before and after + +noon, and two hour angles must be measured.</p> + +<p>At two o'clock P.M. Hobson and Black took the height of the sun above the + +horizon with the sextant, and they hoped to recommence the same operation the + +next morning towards ten o'clock A.M., so as to be able to infer from the two + +altitudes obtained the exact point of the Arctic Ocean then occupied by their + +island.</p> + +<p>The party did not, however, at once return to the fort, but remained talking + +together for some little time on the promontory. Madge declared she was quite + +resigned, and evidently thought only of her mistress, at whom she could not look + +without emotion; she could not bear to think of the sufferings and trials her + +"dear girl" might have to go through in the future. She was ready to lay down + +her life for "Paulina," but what good could that do now. She knew, however, that + +Mrs Barnett was not a woman to sink under her misfortunes, and indeed at present + +there was really no need for any one to despair.</p> + +<p>There was no immediate danger to be dreaded, and a catastrophe might even yet + +be avoided. This Hobson carefully explained to his companions.</p> + +<p>Two dangers threatened the island floating along the coast of North America, + +only two.</p> + +<p>It would be drawn by the currents of the open sea to the high Polar + +latitudes, from which there is no return.</p> + +<p>Or the current would take it to the south, perhaps through the Behring Strait + +into the Pacific Ocean.</p> + +<p>In the former contingency, the colonists, shut in by ice and surrounded by + +impassable icebergs, would have no means of communication with their + +fellow-creatures, and would die of cold and hunger in the solitudes of the + +north.</p> + +<p>In the latter contingency, Victoria Island, driven by the currents to the + +western waters of the Pacific, would gradually melt and go to pieces beneath the + +feet of its inhabitants.</p> + +<p>In either case death would await the Lieutenant and his companions, and the + +fort, erected at the cost of so much labour and suffering, would be + +destroyed.</p> + +<p>But it was scarcely probable that either of these events would happen. The + +season was already considerably advanced, and in less than three months the sea + +would again be rendered motion less by the icy hand of the Polar winter. The + +ocean would again be converted into an ice-field, and by means of sledges they + +might get to the nearest land-the coast of Russian America if the island + +remained in the east, or the coast of Asia if it were driven to the west.</p> + +<p>"For," added Hobson, "we have absolutely no control over our floating island. + +Having no sail to hoist, as in a boat, we cannot guide it in the least. Where it + +takes us we must go."</p> + +<p>All that Hobson said was clear, concise, and to the point. There could be no + +doubt that the bitter cold of winter would solder Victoria Island to the vast + +ice-field, and it was highly probable that it would drift neither too far north + +nor too far eouth. To have to cross a few hundred miles of ice was no such + +terrible prospect for brave and resolute men accustomed to long excursions in + +the Arctic regions. It would be necessary, it was true, to abandon Fort Hope-the + +object of so many hopes, and to lose the benefit of all their exertions, but + +what of that? The factory, built upon a shifting soil, could be of no further + +use to the Company. Sooner or later it would be swallowed up by the ocean, and + +what was the good of useless regrets? It must, therefore, be deserted as soon as + +circumstances should permit.</p> + +<p>The only thing against the safety of the colonists was-and the Lieutenant + +dwelt long on this point-that during the eight or nine weeks which must elapse + +before the solidification of the Arctic Ocean, Victoria Island might be dragged + +too far north or south.</p> + +<p>Arctic explorers had often told of pieces of ice being drifted an immense + +distance without any possibility of stopping them.</p> + +<p>Everything then depended on the force and direction of the currents from the + +opening of Behring Strait; and it would be necessary carefully to ascertain all + +that a chart of the Arctic Ocean could tell. Hobson had such a chart, and + +invited all who were with him on the cape to come to his room and look at it; + +but before going down to the fort he once more urged upon them the necessity of + +keeping their situation a secret.</p> + +<p>"It is not yet desperate," he said, "and it is therefore quite unnecessary to + +damp the spirits of our comrades, who will perhaps not be able to understand, as + +we do, all the chances in our favour."</p> + +<p>"Would it not be prudent to build a boat large enough to hold us all, and + +strong enough to carry us a few hundred miles over the sea?" observed Mrs + +Barnett.</p> + +<p>"It would be prudent certainly," said Hobson, "and we will do it. I must + +think of some pretext for beginning the work at once, and give the necessary + +orders to the head carpenter. But taking to a boat can only be a forlorn hope + +when everything else has failed. We must try all we can to avoid being on the + +island when the ice breaks up, and we must make for the mainland as soon as ever + +the sea is frozen over."</p> + +<p>Hobson was right. It would take about three months to build a thirty or + +thirty-five ton vessel, and the sea would not be open when it was finished. It + +would be very dangerous to embark the whole party when the ice was breaking up + +all round, and he would be well out of his difficulties if he could get across + +the ice to firm ground before the next thaw set in. This was why Hobson thought + +a boat a forlorn hope, a desperate makeshift, and every one agreed with him.</p> + +<p>Secrecy was once more promised, for it was felt that Hobson was the best + +judge of the matter, and a few minutes later the five conspirators were seated + +together in the large room of Fort Hope, which was then deserted, eagerly + +examining an excellent map of the oceanic and atmospheric currents of the Arctic + +Ocean, special attention being naturally given to that part of the Polar Sea + +between Cape Bathurst and Behring Strait.</p> + +<p>Two principal currents divide the dangerous latitudes comprehended between + +the Polar Circle and the imperfectly known zone, called the North-West Passage + +since McClure's daring discovery-at least only two have been hitherto noticed by + +marine surveyors.</p> + +<p>One is called the Kamtchatka Current. It takes its rise in the offing outside + +the peninsula of that name, follows the coast of Asia, and passes through + +Behring Strait, touching Cape East, a promontory of Siberia. After running due + +north for about six hundred miles from the strait, it turns suddenly to the + +east, pretty nearly following the same parallel as McClure's Passage, and + +probably doing much to keep that communication open for a few mouths in the warm + +season.</p> + +<p>The other current, called Behring Current, flows just the other way. After + +running from east to west at about a hundred miles at the most from the coast, + +it comes into collision, so to speak, with the Kamtchatka Current at the opening + +of the strait, and turning to the south approaches the shores of Russian + +America, crosses Behring Sea, and finally breaks on the kind of circular dam + +formed by the Aleutian Islands.</p> + +<p>Hobson's map gave a very exact summary of the most recent nautical + +observations, so that it could be relied on.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant examined it carefully before speaking, and then pressing his + +hand to his head, as if oppressed by some sad presentiment, he observed-</p> + +<p>"Let us hope that fate will not take us to remote northern latitudes. Our + +wandering island would run a risk of never returning."</p> + +<p>"Why, Lieutenant?" broke in Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Why, madam?" replied Hobson; "look well at this part of the Arctic Ocean, + +and you will readily understand why. Two currents, both dangerous for us, run + +opposite ways. When they meet, the island must necessarily become stationary, + +and that at a great distance from any land. At that point it will have to remain + +for the winter, and when the next thaw sets in, it will either follow the + +Kamtchatka Current to the deserted regions of the north-west, or it will float + +down with the Behring Current to be swallowed up by the Pacific Ocean."</p> + +<p>"That will not happen, Lieutenant," said Madge in a tone of earnest + +conviction; "God would never permit that."</p> + +<p>"I can't make out," said Mrs Barnett, "whereabouts in the Polar Sea we are at + +this moment; for I see but one current from the offing of Cape Bathurst which + +bears directly to the north-west, and that is the dangerous Kamtchatka Current. + +Are you not afraid that it has us in its fatal embrace, and is carrying us with + +it to the shores of North Georgia?"</p> + +<p>"I think not," replied Hobson, after a moment's reflection.</p> + +<p>"Why not?"</p> + +<p>"Because it is a very rapid current, madam; and if we had been following it + +for three months, we should have had some land in sight by this time, and there + +is none, absolutely none!"</p> + +<p>"Where, then, do you suppose we are?" inquired Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Most likely between the Kamtchatka Current and the coast, perhaps in some + +vast eddy unmarked upon the map."</p> + +<p>"That cannot be, Lieutenant," replied Mrs Barnett, quickly.</p> + +<p>"Why not, madam, why not?"</p> + +<p>"Because if Victoria Island were in an eddy, it would have veered round to a + +certain extent, and our position with regard to the cardinal points would have + +changed in the last three months, which is certainly not the case."</p> + +<p>"You are right, madam, you are quite right. The only explanation I can think + +of is, that there is some other current, not marked on our map. Oh, that to + +morrow were here that I might find out our longitude; really this uncertainty is + +terrible!"</p> + +<p>"To-morrow will come," observed Madge.</p> + +<p>There was nothing to do but to wait. The party therefore separated, all + +returning to their ordinary occupations. Sergeant Long informed his comrades + +that the departure for Fort Reliance, fixed for the next day, was put off. He + +gave as reasons that the season was too far advanced to get to the southern + +factory before the great cold set in, that the astronomer was anxious to + +complete his meteorological observations, and would therefore submit to another + +winter in the north, that game was so plentiful provisions from Fort Reliance + +were not needed. &c., &c. But about all these matters the brave fellows + +cared little.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson ordered his men to spare the furred animals in future, and + +only to kill edible game, so as to lay up fresh stores for the coming winter; he + +also forbade them to go more than two miles from the fort, not wishing Marbre + +and Sabine to come suddenly upon a sea-horizon, where the isthmus connecting the + +peninsula of Victoria with the mainland was visible a few months before. The + +disappearance of the neck of land would inevitably have betrayed everything.</p> + +<p>The day appeared endless to Lieutenant Hobson. Again and again he returned to + +Cape Bathurst either alone, or accompanied by Mrs Barnett. The latter, inured to + +danger, showed no fear; she even joked the Lieutenant about his floating island + +being perhaps, after all, the proper conveyance for going to the North Pole. + +"With a favourable current might they not reach that hitherto inaccessible point + +of the globe?"</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson shook his head as he listened to his companion's fancy, and + +kept his eyes fixed upon the horizon, hoping to catch a glimpse of some land, no + +matter what, in the distance. But no, sea and sky met in an absolutely unbroken + +circular line, confirming Hobson's opinion that Victoria Island was drifting to + +the west rather than in any other direction.</p> + +<p>"Lieutenant," at last said Mrs Barnett, "don't you mean to make a tour of our + +island as soon as possible?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam, of course; as soon as I have taken our bearings, I mean to + +ascertain the form and extent of our dominions. It seems, however, that the + +fracture was made at the isthmus itself, so that the whole peninsula has become + +an island."</p> + +<p>"A strange destiny is ours, Lieutenant," said Mrs Barnett. "Others return + +from their travels to add new districts to geographical maps, but we shall have + +to efface the supposed peninsula of Victoria!"</p> + +<p>The next day, July 18th, the sky was very clear, and at ten o'clock in the + +morning Hobson obtained a satisfactory altitude of the sun, and, comparing it + +with that of the observation of the day before, he ascertained exactly the + +longitude in which they were.</p> + +<p>The island was then in 157? 37' longitude west from Greenwich.</p> + +<p>The latitude obtained the day before at noon almost immediately after the + +eclipse was, as we know, 73? 7' 20" north.</p> + +<p>The spot was looked out on the map in the presence of Mrs Barnett and + +Sergeant Long.</p> + +<p>It was indeed a most anxious moment, and the following result was arrived + +at.</p> + +<p>The wandering island was moving in a westerly direction, borne along by a + +current unmarked on the chart, and unknown to hydrographers, which was evidently + +carrying it towards Behring Strait. All the dangers foreseen by Hobson were then + +imminent, if Victoria Island did not again touch the mainland before the + +winter.</p> + +<p>"But how far are we from the American continent? that is the most important + +point just at present," said Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>Hobson took his compasses, and carefully measured the narrowest part of the + +sea between the coast and the seventieth parallel.</p> + +<p>"We are actually more than two hundred and fifty miles from Point Barrow, the + +northernmost extremity of Russian America," he replied.</p> + +<p>"We ought to know, then, how many miles the island has drifted since it left + +the mainland," said Sergeant Long.</p> + +<p>"Seven hundred miles at least," replied Hobson, after having again consulted + +the chart.</p> + +<p>"And at about what time do you suppose the drifting commenced?"</p> + +<p>"Most likely towards the end of April; the ice-field broke up then, and the + +icebergs which escaped melting drew back to the north. We may, therefore, + +conclude that Victoria Island has been moving along with the current parallel + +with the coast at an average rate of ten miles a day."</p> + +<p>"No very rapid pace after all!" exclaimed Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Too fast, madam, when you think where we may be taken during the two months + +in which the sea will remain open in this part of the Arctic Ocean."</p> + +<p>The three friends remained silent, and looked fixedly at the chart of the + +fearful Polar regions, towards which they were being irresistibly drawn, and + +which have hitherto successfully resisted all attempts to explore them.</p> + +<p>"There is, then, nothing to be done? Nothing to try?" said Mrs Barnett after + +a pause.</p> + +<p>"Nothing, madam," replied Hobson; "nothing whatever. We must wait; we must + +all pray for the speedy arrival of the Arctic winter generally so much dreaded + +by sailors, but which alone can save us now. The winter will bring ice, our only + +anchor of salvation, the only power which can arrest the course of this + +wandering island."</p> +<a name="BIII" id="BIII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER III.</h4> + +<h4><i>A TOUR OF THE ISLAND</i>.</h4> + +<p>From that day, July 18th, it was decided that the bearings should be taken as + +on board a vessel whenever the state of the atmosphere rendered the operation + +possible. Was not the island, in fact, a disabled ship, tossed about without + +sails or helm.</p> + +<p>The next day after taking the bearings, Hobson announced that without change + +of latitude the island had advanced several miles farther west. Mac-Nab was + +ordered to commence the construction of a huge boat, Hobson telling him, in + +explanation, that he proposed making a reconnaissance of the coast as far as + +Russian America next summer. The carpenter asked no further questions, but + +proceeded to choose his wood, and fixed upon the beach at the foot of Cape + +Bathurst as his dockyard, so that he might easily be able to launch his + +vessel.</p> + +<p>Hobson intended to set out the same day on his excursion round the island in + +which he and his comrades were imprisoned. Many changes might take place in the + +configuration of this sheet of ice, subject as it was to the influence of the + +variable temperature of the waves, and it was important to determine its actual + +form at the present time, its area, and its thickness in different parts. The + +point of rupture, which was most likely at the isthmus itself, ought to be + +examined with special care; the fracture being still fresh, it might be possible + +to ascertain the exact arrangement of the stratified layers of ice and earth of + +which the soil of the island was composed.</p> + +<p>But in the afternoon the sky clouded over suddenly, and a violent squall, + +accompanied with thick mists, swept down upon the fort. Presently torrents of + +rain fell, and large hailstones rattled on the roof, whilst a few distant claps + +of thunder were heard, a phenomenon of exceedingly rare occurrence in such + +elevated latitudes.</p> + +<p>Hobson was obliged to put off his trip, and wait until the fury of the + +elements abated, but during the 20th, 2lst, and 22d July, no change occurred. + +The storm raged, the floods of heaven were let loose, and the waves broke upon + +the beach with a deafening roar. Liquid avalanches were flung with such force + +upon Cape Bathurst, that there was reason to dread that it might give way; its + +stability was, in fact, somewhat problematical, as it consisted merely of an + +aggregation of sand and earth, without any firm foundation. Vessels at sea might + +well be pitied in this fearful gale, but the floating island was of too vast a + +bulk to be affected by the agitation of the waves, and remained indifferent to + +their fury.</p> + +<p>During the night of the 22d July the tempest suddenly ceased. A strong breeze + +from the north-east dispelled the last mists upon the horizon. The barometer + +rose a few degrees, and the weather appeared likely to favour Hobson's + +expedition.</p> + +<p>He was to be accompanied by Mrs Barnett and Sergeant Long, and expected to be + +absent a day or two. The little party took some salt meat, biscuits, and a few + +flasks of rum with them, and there was nothing in their excursion to surprise + +the rest of the colonists. The days were just then very long, the sun only + +disappearing below the horizon for a few hours.</p> + +<p>There were no wild animals to be feared now. The bears seemed to have fled by + +instinct from the peninsula whilst it was still connected with the mainland, but + +to neglect no precaution each of the three explorers was provided with a gun. + +The Lieutenant and his subordinate also carried hatchets and ice-chisels, which + +a traveller in the Polar regions should never be without.</p> + +<p>During the absence of the Lieutenant and the Sergeant, the command of the + +fort fell to Corporal Joliffe, or rather to his little wife, and Hobson knew + +that he could trust her. Thomas Black could not be depended on; he would not + +even join the exploring party; he promised, however, to watch the northern + +latitudes very carefully, and to note any change which should take place in the + +sea or the position of the cape during the absence of the Lieutenant.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett had endeavoured to reason with the unfortunate astronomer, but he + +would listen to nothing. He felt that Nature had deceived him, and that he could + +never forgive her.</p> + +<p>After many a hearty farewell, the Lieutenant and his two companions left the + +fort by the postern gate, and, turning to the west, followed the lengthened + +curve of the coast between Capes Bathurst and Esquimaux.</p> + +<p>It was eight o'clock in the morning; the oblique rays of the sun struck upon + +the beach, and touched it with many a brilliant tint, the angry billows of the + +sea were sinking to rest, and the birds, ptarmigans, guillemots, puffins, and + +petrels, driven away by the storm, were returning by thousands. Troops of ducks + +were hastening back to Lake Barnett, flying close, although they knew it not, to + +Mrs Joliffe's saucepan. Polar hares, martens, musk rats, and ermines rose before + +the travellers and fled at their approach, but not with any great appearance of + +haste or terror. The animals evidently felt drawn towards their old enemies by a + +common danger.</p> + +<p>"They know well enough that they are hemmed in by the sea and cannot quit the + +island," observed Hobson.</p> + +<p>"They are all in the habit of seeking warmer climates in the south in the + +winter, are they not?" inquired Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam, but unless they are presently able to cross the ice-field, they + +will have to remain prisoners like ourselves, and I am afraid the greater number + +will die of cold or hunger.</p> + +<p>"I hope they will be good enough to supply us with food for a long time," + +observed the Sergeant," and I think it is very fortunate that they had not the + +sense to run away before the rupture of the isthmus."</p> + +<p>"The birds will, however, leave us?" added Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Oh yes, madam, everything with wings will go, they can traverse long + +distances without fatigue, and, more fortunate than ourselves, they will regain + +<i>terra firma</i>."</p> + +<p>"Could we not use them as messengers?" asked Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"A good idea, madam, a capital idea," said Hobson. "We might easily catch + +some hundreds of these birds, and tie a paper round their necks with our exact + +situation written upon it. John Ross in 1848 tried similar means to acquaint the + +survivors of the Franklin expedition with the presence of his ships, the + +<i>Enterprise</i> and the <i>Investigator</i> in the Polar seas. He caught some + +hundreds of white foxes in traps, rivetted a copper collar round the neck of + +each with all the necessary information engraved upon it, and then set them free + +in every direction."</p> + +<p>"Perhaps some of the messengers may have fallen into the hands of the + +shipwrecked wanderers."</p> + +<p>"Perhaps so," replied Hobson; "I know that an old fox was taken by Captain + +Hatteras during his voyage of discovery, wearing a collar half worn away and + +hidden beneath his thick white fur. What we cannot do with the quadrupeds, we + +will do with the birds."</p> + +<p>Chatting thus and laying plans for the future, the three explorers continued + +to follow the coast. They noticed no change; the abrupt cliffs covered with + +earth and sand showed no signs of a recent alteration in the extent of the + +island. It was, however, to be feared that the vast sheet of ice would be worn + +away at the base by the action of the warm currents, and on this point Hobson + +was naturally anxious.</p> + +<p>By eleven o'clock in the morning the eight miles between Capes Bathurst and + +Esquimaux had been traversed. A few traces of the encampment of Kalumah's party + +still remained; of course the snow huts had entirely disappeared, but some + +cinders and walrus bones marked the spot.</p> + +<p>The three explorers halted here for a short time, they intended to pass the + +few short hours of the night at Walruses' Bay, which they hoped to reach In a + +few hours. They breakfasted seated on a slightly rising ground covered with a + +scanty and stunted herbage. Before their eyes lay the ocean bounded by a + +clearly-defined sea-horizon, without a sail or an iceberg to break the monotony + +of the vast expanse of water.</p> + +<p>"Should you be very much surprised if some vessel came In sight now, + +Lieutenant?" inquired Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"I should be very agreeably surprised, madam," replied Hobson. "It is not at + +all uncommon for whalers to come as far north as this, especially now that the + +Arctic Ocean is frequented by whales and chacholots, but you must remember that + +it is the 23rd July, and the summer is far advanced. The whole fleet of whaling + +vessels is probably now in Gulf Kotzebue, at the entrance to the strait. Whalers + +shun the sudden changes in the Arctic Ocean, and with good reason. They dread + +being shut in the ice; and the icebergs, avalanches, and, ice-fields they avoid, + +are the very things for which we earnestly pray."</p> + +<p>"They will come, Lieutenant," said Long; "have patience, in another two + +months the waves will no longer break upon the shores of Cape Esquimaux."</p> + +<p>"Cape Esquimaux!" observed Mrs Barnett with a smile. "That name, like those + +we gave to the other parts of the peninsula, may turn out unfortunate too. We + +have lost Port Barnett and Paulina River; who can tell whether Cape Esquimaux + +and Walruses' Bay may not also disappear in time?"</p> + +<p>"They too will disappear, madam," replied Hobson, "and after them the whole + +of Victoria Island, for nothing now connects it with a continent, and it is + +doomed to destruction. This result is inevitable, and our choice of geographical + +names will be thrown away; but fortunately the Royal Society has not yet adopted + +them, and Sir Roderick Murchison will have nothing to efface on his maps."</p> + +<p>"One name he will," exclaimed the Sergeant.</p> + +<p>"Which?" inquired Hobson.</p> + +<p>"Cape Bathurst," replied Long.</p> + +<p>"Ah, yes, you are right. Cape Bathurst must now be removed from maps of the + +Polar regions."</p> + +<p>Two hours' rest were all the explorers cared for, and at one o'clock they + +prepared to resume their journey.</p> + +<p>Before starting Hobson once more looked round him from the summit of Cape + +Esquimaux; but seeing nothing worthy of notice, he rejoined Mrs Barnett and + +Sergeant Long.</p> + +<p>"Madam," he said, addressing the lady, "you have not forgotten the family of + +natives we met here last winter?"</p> + +<p>"Oh no, I have always held dear little Kalumah in friendly remembrance. She + +promised to come and see us again at Fort Hope, but she will not be able to do + +so. But why do you ask me about the natives now?"</p> + +<p>"Because I remember something to which, much to my regret, I did not at the + +time attach sufficient importance."</p> + +<p>"What was that?"</p> + +<p>"You remember the uneasy surprise the men manifested at finding a big a + +factory at the foot of Cape Bathurst."</p> + +<p>"Oh yes, perfectly."</p> + +<p>"You remember that I tried to make out what the natives meant, and that I + +could not do so?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, I remember."</p> + +<p>"Well," added Hobsou, "I know now why they shook their heads. From tradition, + +experience, or something, the Esquimaux knew what the peninsula really was, they + +knew we had not built on firm ground. But as things had probably remained as + +they were for centuries, they thought there was no immediate danger, and that it + +was not worth while to explain themselves."</p> + +<p>"Very likely you are right," replied Mrs Barnett; "but I feel sure that + +Kalumah had no suspicion of her companion's fears, or she would have warned + +us."</p> + +<p>Hobson quite agreed with Mrs Barnett, and Sergeant Long observed-</p> + +<p>"It really seems to have been by a kind of fatality that we settled ourselves + +upon this peninsula just before it was torn away from the mainland. I suppose, + +Lieutenant, that it had been connected for a very long time, perhaps for + +centuries."</p> + +<p>"You might say for thousands and thousands of years, Sergeant," replied + +Hobson. "Remember that the soil on which we are treading has been brought here + +by the wind, little by little, that the sand has accumulated grain by grain! + +Think of the time it must have taken for the seeds of firs, willows, and arbutus + +to become shrubs and trees! Perhaps the sheet of ice on which we float was + +welded to the continent before the creation of man!"</p> + +<p>"Well," cried Long, "it really might have waited a few centuries longer + +before it drifted. How much anxiety and how many dangers we might then have been + +spared!"</p> + +<p>Sergeant Long's most sensible remark closed the conversation, and the journey + +was resumed.</p> + +<p>From Cape Esquimaux to Walruses' Bay the coast ran almost due south, + +following the one hundred and twenty-seventh meridian. Looking behind them they + +could see one corner of the lagoon, its waters sparkling in the sunbeams, and a + +little beyond the wooded heights in which it was framed. Large eagles soared + +above their heads, their cries and the loud flapping of their wings breaking the + +stillness, and furred animals of many kinds, martens, polecats, ermines, + +&c., crouching behind some rising ground, or hiding amongst the stunted + +bushes and willows, gazed inquiringly at the intruders. They seemed to + +understand that they had nothing to fear. Hobson caught a glimpse of a few + +beavers wandering about, evidently ill at ease, and puzzled at the disappearance + +of the little river. With no ledges to shelter them, and no stream by which to + +build a new home, they were doomed to die of cold when the severe frost set in. + +Sergeant Long also saw a troop of wolves crossing the plain.</p> + +<p>It was evident that specimens of the whole Arctic Fauna were imprisoned on + +the island, and there was every reason to fear that, when famished with hunger, + +all the carnivorous beasts would be formidable enemies to the occupants of Fort + +Hope.</p> + +<p>Fortunately, however, one race of animals appeared to be quite unrepresented. + +Not a single white bear was seen! Once the Sergeant thought he saw an enormous + +white mass moving about on the other side of a clump of willows, but on close + +examination decided that he was mistaken.</p> + +<p>The coast near Walruses' Bay was, on the whole, only slightly elevated above + +the sea-level, and in the distance the waves broke into running foam as they do + +upon a sloping beach. It was to be feared that the soil had little stability, + +but there was no means of judging of the modifications which had taken place + +since their last visit, and Hobson much regretted that he had not made bench + +marks about Cape Bathurst before he left, that he might judge of the amount of + +sinking or depression which took place. He determined, however, to take this + +precaution on his return.</p> + +<p>It will be understood that, under the circumstances, the party did not + +advance very rapidly. A pause was often made to examine the soil, or to see if + +there were any sign of an approaching fracture on the coast, and sometimes the + +explorers wandered inland for half a mile. Here and there the Sergeant planted + +branches of willow or birch to serve as landmarks for the future, especially + +wherever undermining seemed to be going on rapidly and the solidity of the + +ground was doubtful. By this means it would be easy to ascertain the changes + +which might take place.</p> + +<p>They did advance, however, and at three o'clock in the afternoon they were + +only three miles from Walruses' Bay, and Hobson called Mrs Barnett's attention + +to the important changes which had been effected by the rupture of the + +isthmus.</p> + +<p>Formerly the south-western horizon was shut in by a long slightly curved + +coast-line, formed by the shores of Liverpool Bay. Now a sea-line bounded the + +view, the continent having disappeared. Victoria Island ended in an abrupt angle + +where it had broken off, and all felt sure that on turning round that angle the + +ocean would be spread out before them, and that its waves would bathe the whole + +of the southern side of the island, which was once the connecting-link between + +Walruses' Bay and Washburn Bay.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett could not look at the changed aspect of the scene without + +emotion. She had expected it, and yet her heart beat almost audibly. She gazed + +across the sea for the missing continent, which was now left several hundred + +miles behind, and it rushed upon her mind with a fresh shock that she would + +never set foot on America again. Her agitation was indeed excusable, and it was + +shared by the Lieutenant and the Sergeant.</p> + +<p>All quickened their steps, eager to reach the abrupt angle in the south. The + +ground rose slightly as they advanced, and the layers of earth and sand became + +thicker; this of course was explained by the former proximity of this part of + +the coast to the true continent. The thickness of the crust of ice and of the + +layer of earth at the point of junction increasing, as it probably did, every + +century, explained the long resistance of the isthmus, which nothing but some + +extraordinary convulsion could have overcome. Such a convulsion was the + +earthquake of the 8th January, which, although it had only affected the + +continent of North America, had sufficed to break the connecting-link, and to + +launch Victoria Island upon the wide ocean.</p> + +<p>At four o'clock P.M., the angle was reached. Walruses' Bay, formed by an + +indentation of the firm ground, had disappeared! It had remained behind with the + +continent</p> + +<p>"By my faith, madam!" exclaimed the Sergeant, "it's lucky for you we didn't + +call it Paulina Barnett Bay!"</p> + +<p>"Yes," replied the lady, "I begin to think I am an unlucky godmother for + +newly-discovered places."</p> +<a name="BIV" id="BIV"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER IV.</h4> + +<h4><i>A NIGHT ENCAMPMENT.</i></h4> + +<p>And so Hobson had not been mistaken about the point of rupture. It was the + +isthmus which had yielded in the shock of the earthquake. Not a trace was to be + +seen of the American continent, not a single cliff, even the volcano on the west + +had disappeared. Nothing but the sea everywhere.</p> + +<p>The island on this side ended in a cape, coming to an almost sharp point, and + +it was evident that the substratum of ice, fretted by the warmer waters of the + +current and exposed to all the fury of the elements, must rapidly dissolve.</p> + +<p>The explorers resumed their march, following the course of the fracture, + +which ran from west to east in an almost straight line. Its edges were not + +jagged or broken, but clear cut, as if the division had been made with a sharp + +instrument, and here and there the conformation of the soil could be easily + +examined. The banks- half ice, half sand and earth-rose some ten feet from the + +water. They were perfectly perpendicular, without the slightest slope, and in + +some places there were traces of recent landslips. Sergeant Long pointed to + +several small blocks of ice floating in the offing, and rapidly melting, which + +had evidently been broken off from their island. The action of the warm surf + +would, of course, soon eat away the new coast-line, which time had not yet + +clothed with a kind of cement of snow and sand, such as covered the rest of the + +beach, and altogether the state of things was very far from reassuring.</p> + +<p>Before taking any rest, Mrs Barnett, Hobson, and Long, were anxious to finish + +their examination of the southern edge of the island. There would be plenty of + +daylight, for the sun would not set until eleven o'clock P.M. The briliant orb + +of day was slowly advancing along the western horizon, and its oblique rays cast + +long shadows of themselves before the explorers, who conversed at intervals + +after long silent pauses, during which they gazed at the sea and thought of the + +dark future before them.</p> + +<p>Hobson intended to encamp for the night at Washburn Bay. When there eighteen + +miles would have been traversed, and, if he were not mistaken, half his circular + +journey would be accomplished. After a few hours' repose he meant to return to + +Fort Hope along the western coast.</p> + +<p>No fresh incident marked the exploration of the short distance between + +Walruses' Bay and Washburn Bay, and at seven o'clock in the evening the spot + +chosen for the encampment was reached. A similar change had taken place here. Of + +Washburn Bay, nothing remained but the curve formed by the coast-line of the + +island, and which was once its northern boundary. It stretched away without a + +break for seven miles to the cape they had named Cape Michael. This side of the + +island did not appear to have suffered at all in consequence of the rupture. The + +thickets of pine and birch, massed a little behind the cape, were in their + +fullest beauty at this time of year, and a good many furred animals were + +disporting themselves on the plain.</p> + +<p>A halt was made at Washburn Bay, and the explorers were able to enjoy an + +extended view on the south, although they could not see any great distance on + +the north. The sun was so low on the horizon, that its rays were intercepted by + +the rising ground on the west, and did not reach the little bay. It was not, + +however, yet night, nor could it be called twilight, as the sun had not set.</p> + +<p>"Lieutenant," said Long, "if by some miracle a bell were now to ring, what do + +you suppose it would mean?"</p> + +<p>"That it was supper-time," replied Hobson. "Don't you agree with me, Mrs + +Barnett?"</p> + +<p>"Indeed I do," replied the lady addressed, "and as our cloth is spread for + +us, let us sit down. This moss, although slightly worn, will suit us admirably, + +and was evidently intended for us by Providence."</p> + +<p>The bag of provisions was opened; some salt meat, a hare pate from Mrs + +Joliffe's larder, with a few biscuits, formed their frugal supper.</p> + +<p>The meal was quickly over, and Hobson returned to the southwest angle of the + +island, whilst Mrs Barnett rested at the foot of a low fir tree, and Sergeant + +Long made ready the night quarters.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant was anxious to examine the piece of ice which formed the + +island, to ascertain, if possible, something of its structure. A little bank, + +produced by a landslip, enabled him to step down to the level of the sea, and + +from there he was able to look closely at the steep wall which formed the coast. + +Where he stood the soil rose scarcely three feet above the water. The upper part + +consisted of a thin layer of earth and sand mixed with crushed shells; and the + +lower of hard, compact, and, if we may so express it, "metallic" ice, strong + +enough to support the upper soil of the island.</p> + +<p>This layer of ice was not more than one foot above the sea-level. In + +consequence of the recent fracture, it was easy to see the regular disposition + +of the sheets of ice piled up horizontally, and which had evidently been + +produced by successive frosts in comparatively quieter waters.</p> + +<p>We know that freezing commences on the surface of liquids, and as the cold + +increases, the thickness of the crust becomes greater, the solidification + +proceeding from the top downwards. That at least is the case in waters that are + +at rest; it has, however, been observed that the very reverse is the case in + +running waters-the ice forming at the bottom, and subsequently rising to the + +surface.</p> + +<p>It was evident, then, that the floe which formed the foundation of Victoria + +Island had been formed in calm waters on the shores of the North American + +continent. The freezing had evidently commenced on the surface, and the thaw + +would begin at the bottom, according to a well-known law; so that the ice-field + +would gradually decrease in weight as it became thawed by the warmer waters + +through which it was passing, and the general level of the island would sink in + +proportion.</p> + +<p>This was the great danger.</p> + +<p>As we have just stated, Hobson noticed that the solid ice, the ice-field + +properly so called, was only about one foot above the sea-level! We know that + +four-fifths of a floating mass of ice are always submerged. For one foot of an + +iceberg or ice-field above the water, there are four below it. It must, however, + +be remarked that the density, or rather specific weight of floating ice, varies + +considerably according to its mode of formation or origin. The ice-masses which + +proceed from sea water, porous, opaque, and tinged with blue or green, according + +as they are struck by the rays of the sun, are lighter than ice formed from + +fresh water. All things considered, and making due allowance for the weight of + +the mineral and vegetable layer above the ice. Hobson concluded it to be about + +four or five feet thick below the sea-level. The different declivities of the + +island, the little hills and rising ground, would of course only affect the + +upper soil, and it might reasonably be supposed that the wandering island was + +not immersed more than five feet.</p> + +<p>This made Hobson very anxious. Only five feet! Setting aside the causes of + +dissolution to which the ice-field might be subjected, would not the slightest + +shock cause a rupture of the surface? Might not a rough sea or a gale of wind + +cause a dislocation of the ice-field, which would lead to its breaking up into + +small portions, and to its final decomposition? Oh for the speedy arrival of the + +winter, with its bitter cold! Would that the column of mercury were frozen in + +its cistern! Nothing but the rigour of an Arctic winter could consolidate and + +thicken the foundation of their island, and establish a means of communication + +between it and the continent.</p> + +<p>Hobson returned to the halting-place little cheered by his discoveries, and + +found Long busy making arrangements for the night; for he had no idea of + +sleeping beneath the open sky, although Mrs Barnett declared herself quite ready + +to do so. He told the Lieutenant that he intended to dig a hole in the ice big + +enough to hold three persons-in fact to make a kind of snow-hut, in which they + +would be protected from the cold night air.</p> + +<p>"In the land of the Esquimaux," he said, "nothing is wiser than to do as the + +Esquimaux do."</p> + +<p>Hobson approved, but advised the Sergeant not to dig too deeply, as the ice + +was not more than five feet thick.</p> + +<p>Long set to work. With the aid of his hatchet and ice-chisel he had soon + +cleared away the earth, and hollowed out a kind of passage sloping gently down + +to the crust of ice.</p> + +<p>He next attacked the brittle mass, which had been covered over with sand and + +earth for so many centuries. It would not take more than an hour to hollow out a + +subterranean retreat, or rather a burrow with walls of ice, which would keep in + +the heat, and therefore serve well for a resting-place during the short + +night.</p> + +<p>Whilst Long was working away like a white ant, Hobson communicated the result + +of his observations to Mrs Barnett. He did not disguise from her that the + +construction of Victoria Island rendered him very uneasy. He felt sure that the + +thinness of the ice would lead to the opening of ravines on the surface before + +long; where, it would be impossible to foresee, and of course it would be + +equally impossible to prevent them. The wandering Island might at any moment + +settle down in consequence of a change in its specific gravity, or break up into + +more or less numerous islets, the duration of which must necessarily be + +ephemeral. He judged, therefore, that it would be best for the members of the + +colony to keep together as much as possible, and not to leave the fort, that + +they might all share the same chances.</p> + +<p>Hobson was proceeding further to unfold his views when cries for help were + +heard.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett started to her feet, and both looked round in every direction, + +but nothing was to be seen.</p> + +<p>The cries were now redoubled, and Hobson exclaimed-</p> + +<p>"The Sergeant! the Sergeant!"</p> + +<p>And followed by Mrs Barnett, he rushed towards the burrow, and he had + +scarcely reached the opening of the snow-house before he saw Sergeant Long + +clutching with both hands at his knife, which he had stuck in the wall of ice, + +and calling out loudly, although with the most perfect self-possession.</p> + +<p>His head and arms alone were visible. Whilst he was digging, the ice had + +given way suddenly beneath him, and he was plunged into water up to his + +waist.</p> + +<p>Hobson merely said-</p> + +<p>"Keep hold!"</p> + +<p>And creeping through the passage, he was soon at the edge of the hole. The + +poor Sergeant seized his hand, and he was soon rescued from his perilous + +position.</p> + +<p>"Good God! Sergeant!" exclaimed Mrs Barnett; "what has happened?"</p> + +<p>"Nothing," replied Long, shaking himself like a wet spaniel, "except that the + +ice gave way under me, and I took a compulsory bath."</p> + +<p>"You forgot what I told you about not digging too deeply, then," said + +Hobson.</p> + +<p>"Beg pardon, sir; I hadn't cut through fifteen inches of the ice, and I + +expect there was a kind of cavern where I was working-the ice did not touch the + +water. It was just like going through a ceiling. If I hadn't been able to hang + +on by my knife, I should have slipped under the island like a fool, and that + +would have been a pity, wouldn't it, madam?"</p> + +<p>"A very great pity, my brave fellow," said Mrs Barnett, pressing his + +hand.</p> + +<p>Long's explanation was correct; for some reason or another-most likely from + +an accumulation of air-the ice had formed a kind of vault above the water, and + +of course it soon gave way under the weight of the Sergeant and the blows of his + +chisel.</p> + +<p>The same thing might happen in other parts of the island, which was anything + +but reassuring. Where could they be certain of treading on firm ground? Might + +not the earth give way beneath their feet at any minute? What heart, however + +brave, would not have sunk at the thought of the thin partition between them and + +the awful gulf of the ocean?</p> + +<p>Sergeant Long, however, thought but little of his bath, and was ready to + +begin mining in some other place. This Mrs Barnett would not allow. A night in + +the open air would do her no harm; the shelter of the coppice near would be + +protection enough for them all; and Sergeant Long was obliged to submit.</p> + +<p>The camp was, therefore, moved back some thirty yards from the beach, to a + +rising ground on which grew a few clumps of pines and willows which could + +scarcely be called a wood. Towards ten o'clock the disc of the sun began to dip + +below the horizon, and before it disappeared for the few hours of the night a + +crackling fire of dead branches was blazing at the camp.</p> + +<p>Long had now a fine opportunity of drying his legs, of which he gladly + +availed himself. He and Hobson talked together earnestly until twilight set in, + +and Mrs Barnett occasionally joined in the conversation, doing the best she + +could to cheer the disheartened Lieutenant. The sky was bright with stars, and + +the holy influence of the night could not fail to calm his troubled spirit. The + +wind murmured softly amongst the pines; even the sea appeared to be wrapt in + +slumber, its bosom slightly heaving with the swell, which died away upon the + +beach with a faint rippling sound. All creation was hushed, not even the wail of + +a sea bird broke upon the ear, the crisp crackling of the dead branches was + +exchanged for a steady flame, and nothing but the voices of the wanderers broke + +the sublime, the awful silence of the night.</p> + +<p>"Who would imagine," said Mrs Barnett, "that we were floating on the surface + +of the ocean! It really requires an effort to realise it, for the sea which is + +carrying us along in its fatal grasp appears to be absolutely motionless!"</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam," replied Hobson;" and if the floor of our carriage were solid, + +if I did not know that sooner or later the keel of our boat will be missing, + +that some day its hull will burst open, and finally, if I knew where we are + +going, I should rather enjoy floating on the ocean like this."</p> + +<p>"Well, Lieutenant," rejoined Mrs Barnett, "could there be a pleasanter mode + +of travelling than ours? We feel no motion. Our island has exactly the same + +speed as the current which is bearing it away. Is it not like a balloon voyage + +in the air? What could be more delightful than advancing with one's house, + +garden, park, &c.? A wandering island, with a solid insubmersible + +foundation, would really be the most comfortable and wonderful conveyance that + +could possibly be imagined. I have heard of hanging gardens. Perhaps some day + +floating parks will be invented which will carry us all over the globe! Their + +size will render them insensible to the action of the waves, they will have + +nothing to fear from storms, and perhaps with a favourable wind they might be + +guided by means of immense sails! What marvels of vegetation would be spread + +before the eyes of the passengers when they passed from temperate to torrid + +zones! With skilful pilots, well acquainted with the currents, it might be + +possible to remain in one latitude, and enjoy a perpetual spring."</p> + +<p>Hobson could not help smiling at Mrs Barnett's fancies. The brave woman ran + +on with such an easy flow of words, she talked with as little effort as Victoria + +Island moved. And was she not right? It would have been a very pleasant mode of + +travelling if there had been no danger of their conveyance melting and being + +swallowed up by the sea.</p> + +<p>The night passed on, and the explorers slept a few hours. At daybreak they + +breakfasted, and thoroughly enjoyed their meal. The warmth and rest had + +refreshed them, and they resumed their journey at about six o'clock A.M.</p> + +<p>From Cape Michael to the former Port Barnett the coast ran in an almost + +straight line from south to north for about eleven miles. There was nothing + +worthy of note about it; the shores were low and pretty even all the way, and + +seemed to have suffered no alteration since the breaking of the isthmus. Long, + +in obedience to the Lieutenant, made bench marks along the beach, that any + +future change might be easily noted.</p> + +<p>Hobson was naturally anxious to get back to Fort Hope the same day, and Mrs + +Barnett was also eager to return to her friends. It was of course desirable + +under the circumstances that the commanding officer should not be long absent + +from the fort</p> + +<p>All haste was therefore made, and by taking a short cut they arrived at noon + +at the little promontory which formerly protected Port Barnett from the east + +winds.</p> + +<p>It was not more than eight miles from this point to Fort Hope, and before + +four o'clock P.M the shouts of Corporal Joliffe welcomed their return to the + +factory.</p> +<a name="BV" id="BV"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER V.</h4> + +<h4><i>FROM JULY 25TH TO AUGUST 20TH.</i></h4> + +<p>Hobson's first care on his return to the fort, was to make inquiries of + +Thomas Black as to the situation of the little colony. No change had taken place + +for the last twenty-four hours, but, as subsequently appeared, the island had + +floated one degree of latitude further south, whilst still retaining its motion + +towards the west. It was now at the same distance from the equator as Icy Cape, + +a little promontory of western Alaska, and two hundred miles from the American + +coast. The speed of the current seemed to be less here than in the eastern part + +of the Arctic Ocean, but the island continued to advance, and, much to Hobson's + +annoyance, towards the dreaded Behring Strait. It was now only the 24th July, + +and a current of average speed would carry it in another month through the + +strait and into the heated waves of the Pacific, where it would melt "like a + +lump of sugar in a glass of water."</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett acquainted Madge with the result of the exploration of the + +island. She explained to her the arrangement of the layers of earth and ice at + +the part where the isthmus had been broken off; told her that the thickness of + +the ice below the sea level was estimated at five feet; related the accident to + +Sergeant Long-in short, she made her fully understand the reasons there were to + +fear the breaking up or sinking of the ice field.</p> + +<p>The rest of the colony had, however, no suspicion of the truth; a feeling of + +perfect security prevailed. It never occurred to any of the brave fellows that + +Fort Hope was floating above an awful abyss, and that the lives of all its + +inhabitants were in danger. All were in good health, the weather was fine, and + +the climate pleasant and bracing. The baby Michael got on wonderfully; he was + +beginning to toddle about between the house and the palisade; and Corporal + +Joliffe, who was extremely fond of him, was already beginning to teach him to + +hold a gun, and to understand the first duties of a soldier. Oh, if Mrs Joliffe + +would but present him with such a son! but, alas! the blessing of children, for + +which he and his wife prayed every day, was as yet denied to them.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile the soldiers had plenty to do.</p> + +<p>Mac-Nab and his men-Petersen, Belcher, Garry, Pond, and Hope-worked zealously + +at the construction of a boat, a difficult task, likely to occupy them for + +several months. But as their vessel would be of no use until next year after the + +thaw, they neglected none of their duties at the factory on its account. Hobson + +let things go on as if the future of the factory were not compromised, and + +persevered in keeping the men in ignorance. This serious question was often + +discussed by the officer and his "staff," and Mrs Barnett and Madge differed + +from their chief on the subject. They thought it would be better to tell the + +whole truth; the men were brave and energetic, not likely to yield to despair, + +and the shock would not be great if they heard of it now, instead of only when + +their situation was so hopeless that it could not be concealed. But in spite of + +the justice of these remarks, Hobson would not yield, and he was supported by + +Sergeant Long. Perhaps, after all, they were right; they were both men of long + +experience, and knew the temper of their men.</p> + +<p>And so the work of provisioning and strengthening the fort proceeded. The + +palisaded enceinte was repaired with new stakes, and made higher in many places, + +so that it really formed a very strong fortification. Mac-Nab also put into + +execution, with his chief's approval, a plan he had long had at heart. At the + +corners abutting on the lake he built two little pointed sentry-boxes, which + +completed the defences; and Corporal Joliffe anticipated with delight the time + +when he should be sent to relieve guard: he felt that they gave a military look + +to the buildings, and made them really imposing.</p> + +<p>The palisade was now completely finished, and Mac-Nab, remembering the + +sufferings of the last winter, built a new wood shed close up against the house + +itself, with a door of communication inside, so that there would be no need to + +go outside at all. By this contrivance the fuel would always be ready to hand. + +On the left side of the house, opposite the shed, Mac-Nab constructed a large + +sleeping-room for the soldiers, so that the camp-bed could be removed from the + +common room. This room was also to be used for meals, and work. The three + +married couples had private rooms walled off, so that the large house was + +relieved of them as well as of all the other soldiers. A magazine for furs only + +was also erected behind the house near the powder-magazine, leaving the loft + +free for stores; and the rafters and ribs of the latter were bound with iron + +cramps, that they might be able to resist all attacks. Mac-Nab also intended to + +build a little wooden chapel, which had been included in Hobson's original plan + +of the factory; but its erection was put off until the next summer.</p> + +<p>With what eager interest would the Lieutenant have once watched the progress + +of his establishment! Had he been building on firm ground, with what delight + +would he have watched the houses, sheds, and magazines rising around him! He + +remembered the scheme of crowning Cape Bathurst with a redoubt for the + +protection of Fort Hope with a sigh. The very name of the factory, "Fort Hope," + +made his heart sink within him; for should it not more truly be called "Fort + +Despair?"</p> + +<p>These various works took up the whole summer, and there was no time for + +ennui. The construction of the boat proceeded rapidly. Mac-Nab meant it to be of + +about thirty tons measurement, which would make it large enough to carry some + +twenty passengers several hundred miles in the fine season. The carpenter had + +been fortunate enough to find some bent pieces of wood, so that he was able + +quickly to form the first ribs of the vessel, and soon the stern and sternpost, + +fixed to the keel, were upon the dockyard at the foot of Cape Bathurst.</p> + +<p>Whilst the carpenters were busy with hatchets, saws, and adzes, the hunters + +were eagerly hunting the reindeer and Polar hares, which abounded near the fort. + +The Lieutenant, however, told Marbre and Sabine not to go far away, stating as a + +reason, that until the buildings were completed he did not wish to attract the + +notice of rivals. The truth was, he did not wish the changes which had taken + +place to be noticed.</p> + +<p>One day Marbre inquired if it was not now time to go to Walruses' Bay, and + +get a fresh supply of morse-oil for burning, and Hobson replied rather + +hastily-</p> + +<p>"No, Marbre; it would be useless."</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant knew only too well that Walruses' Bay was two hundred miles + +away, and that there were no morses to be hunted on the island.</p> + +<p>It must not be supposed that Hobson considered the situation desperate even + +now. He often assured Mrs Barnett, Madge, and Long that he was convinced the + +island would hold together until the bitter cold of winter should thicken its + +foundation and arrest its course at one and the same time.</p> + +<p>After his journey of discovery, Hobson estimated exactly the area of his new + +dominions. The island measured more than forty miles round, from which its + +superficial area[r] would appear to be about one hundred and forty miles at the + +least. By way of comparison, we may say that Victoria Island was rather larger + +than St Helena, and its area was about the same as that of Paris within the line + +of fortifications. If then it should break up into fragments, the separate parts + +might still be of sufficient size to be habitable for some time.</p> + +<p>When Mrs Barnett expressed her surprise that a floating ice-field could be so + +large, Hobson replied by reminding her of the observations of Arctic navigators. + +Parry, Penny, and Franklin had met with ice-fields in the Polar seas one hundred + +miles long and fifty broad. Captain Kellet abandoned his boat on an ice-field + +measuring at least three hundred square miles, and what was Victoria Island + +compared to it?</p> + +<p>Its size was, however, sufficient to justify a hope that it would resist the + +action of the warm currents until the cold weather set in. Hobson would not + +allow himself to doubt; his despair arose rather from the knowledge that the + +fruit of all his cares, anxieties, and dangers must eventually be swallowed up + +by the deep, and it was no wonder that he could take no interest in the works + +that were going on.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett kept up a good heart through it all; she encouraged her comrades + +in their work, and took her share in it, as if she had still a future to look + +forward to. Seeing what an interest Mrs Joliffe took in her plants, she joined + +her every day in the garden. There was now a fine crop of sorrel and + +scurvy-grass-thanks to the Corporal's unwearying exertions to keep off the birds + +of every kind, which congregated by hundreds.</p> + +<p>The taming of the reindeer had been quite successful; there were now a good + +many young, and little Michael had been partly brought up on the milk of the + +mothers. There were now some thirty head in the herd which grazed near the fort, + +and a supply of the herbage on which they feed was dried and laid up for the + +winter. These useful animals, which are easily domesticated, were already quite + +familiar with all the colonists, and did not go far from the enceinte. Some of + +them were used in sledges to carry timber backwards and forwards. A good many + +reindeer, still wild, now fell into the trap half way between the fort and Port + +Barnett. It will be remembered that a large bear was once taken in it; but + +nothing of the kind occurred this season-none fell victims but the reindeer, + +whose flesh was salted and laid by for future use. Twenty at least were taken, + +which in the ordinary course of things would have gone down to the south in the + +winter.</p> + +<p>One day, however, the reindeer-trap suddenly became useless in consequence of + +the conformation of the soil. After visiting it as usual, the hunter Marbre + +approached Hobson, and said to him in a significant tone--</p> + +<p>"I have just paid my daily visit to the reindeer-trap, sir."</p> + +<p>"Well, Marbre, I hope you have been as successful to-day as yesterday, and + +have caught a couple of reindeer," replied Hobson.</p> + +<p>"No, sir, no," replied Marbre, with some embarrassment.</p> + +<p>"Your trap has not yielded its ordinary contingent then?"</p> + +<p>"No, sir; and if any animal had fallen in, it would certainly have been + +drowned!"</p> + +<p>"Drowned!" cried the Lieutenant, looking at the hunter with an anxious + +expression.</p> + +<p>"Yes, sir," replied Marbre, looking attentively at his superior, "the pit is + +full of water."</p> + +<p>"Ah!" said Hobson, in the tone of a man who attached no importance to that, + +"you know your pit was partly hollowed out of ice; its walls have melted with + +the heat of the sun, and then "--</p> + +<p>"Beg pardon for interrupting you, sir," said Marbre; "but the water cannot + +have been produced by the melting of ice."</p> + +<p>"Why not, Marbre?" "Because if it came from ice it would be sweet, as you + +explained to me once before. Now the water in our pit is salt!"</p> + +<p>Master of himself as he was, Hobson could not help changing countenance + +slightly, and he had not a word to say.</p> + +<p>"Besides," added Marbre, "I wanted to sound the trench, to see how deep the + +water was, and to my great surprise, I can tell you, I could not find the + +bottom."</p> + +<p>"Well, Marbre," replied Hobson hastily, "there is nothing so wonderful in + +that. Some fracture of the soil has established a communication between the sea + +and the trap. So don't be uneasy about it, my brave fellow, but leave the trap + +alone for the present, and be content with setting snares near the fort."</p> + +<p>Marbre touched his cap respectfully, and turned on his heel, but not before + +he had given his chief a searching glance.</p> + +<p>Hobson remained very thoughtful for a few moments. Marbre's tidings were of + +grave importance. It was evident that the bottom of the trench, gradually melted + +by the warm waters of the sea, had given way.</p> + +<p>Hobson at once called the Sergeant, and having acquainted him with the + +incident, they went together, unnoticed by their companions, to the beach at the + +foot of Cape Bathurst, where they had made the bench-marks.</p> + +<p>They examined them carefully, and found that since they last did so, the + +floating island had sunk six inches.</p> + +<p>"We are sinking gradually," murmured Sergeant Long. "The ice is wearing + +away."</p> + +<p>"Oh for the winter! the winter!" cried Hobson, stamping his foot upon the + +ground.</p> + +<p>But as yet, alas! there was no sign of the approach of the cold season. The + +thermometer maintained a mean height of 59? Fahrenheit, and during the few hours + +of the night the column of mercury scarcely went down three degrees.</p> + +<p>Preparations for the approaching winter went on apace, and there was really + +nothing wanting to Fort Hope, although it had not been revictualled by Captain + +Craventy's detachment. The long hours of the Arctic night might be awaited in + +perfect security. The stores were of course carefully husbanded. There still + +remained plenty of spirits, only small quantities having been consumed; and + +there was a good stock of biscuits, which, once gone, could not be replaced. + +Fresh venison and salt meat were to be had in abundance, and with some + +antiscorbutic vegetables, the diet was most healthy; and all the members of the + +little colony were well.</p> + +<p>A good deal of timber was cut in the woods clothing the eastern slopes of + +Lake Barnett. Many were the birch-trees, pines, and firs which fell beneath the + +axe of Mac-Nab, and were dragged to the house by the tamed reindeer. The + +carpenter did not spare the little forest, although he cut his wood judiciously; + +for he never dreamt that timber might fail him, imagining, as he did, Victoria + +Island to be a peninsula, and knowing the districts near Cape Michael to be rich + +in different species of trees.</p> + +<p>Many a time did the unconscious carpenter congratulate his Lieutenant on + +having chosen a spot so favoured by Heaven. Woods, game, furred animals, a + +lagoon teeming with fish, plenty of herbs for the animals, and, as Corporal + +Joliffe would have added, double pay for the men. Was not Cape Bathurst a corner + +of a privileged land, the like of which was not to be found in the whole Arctic + +regions? Truly Hobson was a favourite of Heaven, and ought to return thanks to + +Providence every day for the discovery of this unique spot.</p> + +<p>Ah, Mac-Nab, you little knew how you wrung the heart of your master when you + +talked in that strain!</p> + +<p>The manufacture of winter garments was not neglected in the factory. Mrs + +Barnett, Madge, Mrs Mac-Nab, Mrs Rae, and Mrs Joliffe-when she could leave her + +fires-were alike indefatigable. Mrs Barnett knew that they would all have to + +leave the fort in the depth of winter, and was determined that every one should + +be warmly clothed. They would have to face the bitterest cold for a good many + +days during the Polar night, if Victoria Island should halt far from the + +continent. Boots and clothes ought indeed to be strong and well made, for + +crossing some hundreds of miles under such circumstances. Mrs Barnett and Madge + +devoted all their energies to the matter in hand, and the furs, which they knew + +it would be impossible to save, were turned to good account. They were used + +double, so that the soft hair was both inside and outside of the clothes; and + +when wearing them, the whole party would be as richly attired as the grandest + +princesses, or the most wealthy ladies. Those not in the secret were rather + +surprised at the free use made of the Company's property; but Hobson's authority + +was not to be questioned, and really martens, polecats, musk-rats, beavers, and + +foxes multiplied with such rapidity near the fort, that all the furs used could + +easily be replaced by a few shots, or the setting of a few traps; and when Mrs + +Mac-Nab saw the beautiful ermine coat which had been made for her baby, her + +delight was unbounded, and she no longer wondered at anything.</p> + +<p>So passed the days until the middle of the month of August. The weather + +continued fine, and any mists which gathered on the horizon were quickly + +dispersed by the sunbeams.</p> + +<p>Every day Hobson took the bearings, taking care, however, to go some distance + +from the fort, that suspicions might not be aroused, and he also visited + +different parts of the island, and was reassured by finding that no important + +changes appeared to be taking place.</p> + +<p>On the 16th August Victoria Island was situated in 167? 27' west longitude, + +and 70? 49' north latitude. It had, therefore, drifted slightly to the south, + +but without getting any nearer to the American coast, which curved + +considerably.</p> + +<p>The distance traversed by the island since the fracture of the isthmus, or + +rather since the last thaw, could not be less than eleven or twelve hundred + +miles to the west.</p> + +<p>But what was this distance compared to the vast extent of the ocean? Had not + +boats been known to be drifted several thousands of miles by currents? Was not + +this the case with the English ship <i>Resolute</i>, the American brig + +<i>Advance</i>, and with the <i>Fox</i>, all of which were carried along upon + +ice-fields until the winter arrested their advance?</p> +<a name="BVI" id="BVI"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER VI.</h4> + +<h4><i>TEN DAYS OF TEMPEST</i></h4> + +<p>From the 17th to the 20th August the weather continued fine, and the + +temperature moderate. The mists on the horizon were not resolved into clouds, + +and altogether the weather was exceptionally beautiful for such an elevated + +position. It will be readily understood, however, that Hobson could take no + +pleasure in the fineness of the climate.</p> + +<p>On the 21st August, however, the barometer gave notice of an approaching + +change. The column of mercury suddenly fell considerably, the sun was completely + +hidden at the moment of culmination, and Hobson was unable to take his + +bearings.</p> + +<p>The next day the wind changed and blew strongly from the north-west, torrents + +of rain falling at intervals. Meanwhile, however, the temperature did not change + +to any sensible extent, the thermometer remaining at 54? Fahrenheit.</p> + +<p>Fortunately the proposed works were now all finished, and MacNab had + +completed the carcass of his boat, which was planked and ribbed. Hunting might + +now be neglected a little, as the stores were complete, which was fortunate, for + +the weather became very bad. The wind was high, the rain incessant, and thick + +fogs rendered it impossible to go beyond the enceinte of the fort.</p> + +<p>"What do you think of this change in the weather, Lieutenant?" inquired Mrs + +Barnett on the morning of the 27th August; "might it not be in our favour?"</p> + +<p>"I should not like to be sure of it, madam," replied Hobson; "but anything is + +better for us than the magnificent weather we have lately had, during which the + +sun made the waters warmer and warmer. Then, too, the wind from the north-west + +is so very strong that it may perhaps drive us nearer to the American + +continent."</p> + +<p>"Unfortunately," observed Long, "we can't take our bearings every day now. + +It's impossible to see either sun, moon, or stars in this fog. Fancy attempting + +to take an altitude now!"</p> + +<p>"We shall see well enough to recognise America, if we get anywhere near it," + +said Mrs Barnett. "Whatever land we approach will be welcome. It will most + +likely be some part of Russian America-probably Western Alaska."</p> + +<p>"You are right, madam," said Hobson; "for, unfortunately, in the whole Arctic + +Ocean there is not an island, an islet, or even a rock to which we could fasten + +our vessel!"</p> + +<p>"Well," rejoined Mrs Barnett, "why should not our conveyance take us straight + +to the coasts of Asia? Might not the currents carry us past the opening of + +Bearing Strait and land us on the shores of Siberia?"</p> + +<p>"No, madam, no," replied Hobson; "our ice-field would soon meet the + +Kamtchatka current, and be carried by it to the northwest. It is more likely, + +however, that this wind will drive us towards the shores of Russian + +America."</p> + +<p>"We must keep watch, then," said Mrs Barnett, "and ascertain our position as + +soon as possible."</p> + +<p>"We shall indeed keep watch," replied Hobson, "although this fog is very much + +against us If we should be driven on to the coast, the shock will be felt even + +if we cannot see. Let's hope the island will not fall to pieces in this storm! + +That is at present our principal danger. Well, when it comes we shall see what + +there is to be done, and meanwhile we must wait patiently."</p> + +<p>Of course this conversation was not held in the public room, where the + +soldiers and women worked together. It was in her own room, with the window + +looking out on the court, that Mrs Barnett received visitors. It was almost + +impossible to see indoors even in the daytime, and the wind could be heard + +rushing by outside like an avalanche. Fortunately, Cape Bathurst protected the + +house from the north-east winds, but the sand and earth from its summit were + +hurled down upon the roof with a noise like the pattering of hail. Mac-Nab began + +to feel fresh uneasiness about his chimneys, which it was absolutely necessary + +to keep in good order. With the roaring of the wind was mingled that of the sea, + +as its huge waves broke upon the beach. The storm had become a hurricane.</p> + +<p>In spite of the fury of the gale, Hobson determined on the morning of the + +28th of August to climb to the summit of Cape Bathurst, in order to examine the + +state of the horizon, the sea, and the sky. He therefore wrapped himself up, + +taking care to have nothing about him likely to give hold the wind, and set + +out.</p> + +<p>He got to the foot of the cape without much difficulty. The sand and earth + +blinded him, it is true, but protected by the cliff he had not as yet actually + +faced the wind. The fatigue began when he attempted to climb the almost + +perpendicular sides of the promontory; but by clutching at the tufts of herbs + +with which they were covered, he managed to get to the top, but there the fury + +of the gale was such that he could neither remain standing nor seated; he was + +therefore forced to fling himself upon his face behind the little coppice and + +cling to some shrubs, only raising his head and shoulders above the ground.</p> + +<p>The appearance of sea and sky was indeed terrible. The spray dashed over the + +Lieutenant's head, and half-a-mile from the cape water and clouds were + +confounded together in a thick mist. Low jagged rain-clouds were chased along + +the heavens with giddy rapidity, and heavy masses of vapour were piled upon the + +zenith. Every now and then an awful stillness fell upon the land, and the only + +sounds were the breaking of the surf upon the beach and the roaring of the angry + +billows; but then the tempest recommenced with redoubled fury, and Hobson felt + +the cape tremble to its foundations. Sometimes the rain poured down with such + +violence that it resembled grape-shot.</p> + +<p>It was indeed a terrible hurricane from the very worst quarter of the + +heavens. This north-east wind might blow for a long time and cause all manner of + +havoc. Yet Hobson, who would generally have grieved over the destruction around + +him, did not complain,-on the contrary, he rejoiced; for if, as he hoped, the + +island held together, it must be driven to the south-west by this wind, so much + +more powerful than the currents. And the south-west meant land-hope-safety! Yes, + +for his own sake, and for that of all with him, he hoped that the hurricane + +would last until it had flung them upon the laud, no matter where. That which + +would have been fatal to a ship was the best thing that could happen to the + +floating island.</p> + +<p>For a quarter of an hour Hobson remained crouching upon the ground, clutching + +at the shrubs like a drowning man at a spar, lashed by the wind, drenched by the + +rain and the spray, struggling to estimate all the chances of safety the storm + +might afford him. At the end of that time he let himself slide down the cape, + +and fought his way to Fort Hope.</p> + +<p>Hobson's first care was to tell his comrades that the hurricane was not yet + +at its height, and that it would probably last a long time yet. He announced + +these tidings with the manner of one bringing good news, and every one looked at + +him in astonishment. Their chief officer really seemed to take a delight in the + +fury of the elements.</p> + +<p>On the 30th Hobson again braved the tempest, not this time climbing the cape, + +but going down to the beach. What was his joy at noticing some long weeds + +floating on the top of the waves, of a kind which did not grow on Victoria + +Island. Christopher Columbus' delight was not greater when he saw the sea-weed + +which told him of the proximity of land.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant hurried back to the fort, and told Mrs Barnett and Sergeant + +Long of his discovery. He had a good mind to tell every one the whole truth now, + +but a strange presentiment kept him silent.</p> + +<p>The occupants of the fort had plenty to amuse them in the long days of + +compulsory confinement. They went on improving the inside of the various + +buildings, and dug trenches in the court to carry away the rain-water. Mac-Nab, + +a hammer in one hand and a nail in the other, was always busy at a job in some + +corner or another, and nobody took much note of the tempest outside in the + +daytime; but at night it was impossible to sleep, the wind beat upon the + +buildings like a battering-ram; between the house and the cape sometimes whirled + +a huge waterspout of extraordinary dimensions; the planks cracked, the beams + +seemed about to separate, and there was danger of the whole structure tumbling + +down. Mac-Nab and his men lived in a state of perpetual dread, and had to be + +continually on the watch.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile, Hobson was uneasy about the stability of the island itself, rather + +than that of the house upon it. The tempest became so violent, and the sea so + +rough, that there was really a danger of the dislocation of the ice-field. It + +seemed impossible for it to resist much longer, diminished as it was in + +thickness and subject to the perpetual action of the waves. It is true that its + +inhabitants did not feel any motion, on account of its vast extent, but it + +suffered from it none the less. The point at issue was simply:-Would the island + +last until it was flung upon the coast, or would it fall to pieces before it + +touched firm ground?</p> + +<p>There could be no doubt that thus far it had resisted. As the Lieutenant + +explained to Mrs Barnett, had it already been broken, had the ice-field already + +divided into a number of islets, the occupants of the fort must have noticed it, + +for the different pieces would have been small enough to be affected by the + +motion of the sea, and the people on any one of them would have been pitched + +about like passengers on a boat. This was not the case, and in his daily + +observations Lieutenant Hobson had noticed no movement whatever, not so much as + +a trembling of the island, which appeared as firm and motionless as when it was + +still connected by its isthmus with the mainland.</p> + +<p>But the breaking up, which had not yet taken place, might happen at any + +minute.</p> + +<p>Hobson was most anxious to ascertain whether Victoria Island, driven by the + +north-west wind out of the current, had approached the continent. Everything, in + +fact, depended upon this, which was their last chance of safety. But without + +sun, moon, or stars, instruments were of course useless, as no observations + +could be taken, and the exact position of the island could not be determined. + +If, then, they were approaching the land, they would only know it when the land + +came in sight, and Hobson's only means of ascertaining anything in time to be of + +any service, was to get to the south of his dangerous dominions. The position of + +Victoria Island with regard to the cardinal points had not sensibly altered all + +the time. Cape Bathurst still pointed to the north, as it did when it was the + +advanced post of North America. It was, therefore, evident that if Victoria + +Island should come alongside of the continent, it would touch it with its + +southern side,-the communication would, in a word, be re-established by means of + +the broken isthmus; it was, therefore, imperative to ascertain what was going on + +in that direction.</p> + +<p>Hobson determined to go to Cape Michael, however terrible the storm might be, + +but he meant to keep the real motive of his reconnaissance a secret from his + +companions. Sergeant Long was to accompany him.</p> + +<p>About four o'clock P.M., on the 31st August, Hobson sent for the Sergeant in + +his own room, that they might arrange together for all eventualities.</p> + +<p>"Sergeant Long," he began, "it is necessary that we should, without delay, + +ascertain the position of Victoria Island, and above all whether this wind has, + +as I hope, driven it near to the American continent."</p> + +<p>"I quite agree with you, sir," replied Long, "and the sooner we find out the + +better"</p> + +<p>"But it will necessitate our going down to the south of the island."</p> + +<p>"I am ready, sir."</p> + +<p>"I know, Sergeant, that you are always ready to do your duty, but you will + +not go alone. Two of us ought to go, that we may be able to let our comrades + +know if any land is in sight; and besides I must see for myself ... we will go + +together."</p> + +<p>"When you like, Lieutenant, just when you think best."</p> + +<p>"We will start this evening at nine o'clock, when everybody else has gone to + +bed"</p> + +<p>"Yes, they would all want to come with us," said Long, "and they must not + +know why we go so far from the factory."</p> + +<p>"No, they must not know," replied Hobson, "and if I can, I will keep the + +knowledge of our awful situation from them until the end."</p> + +<p>"It is agreed then, sir?"</p> + +<p>"Yes. You will take a tinder-box and some touchwood [Footnote: A fungus used + +as tinder (<i>Polyporous igniarius</i>).] with you, so that we can make a signal + +if necessary-if land is in sight in the south, for instance"</p> + +<p>"Yes, sir."</p> + +<p>"We shall have a rough journey, Sergeant."</p> + +<p>"What does that matter, sir, but by the way-the lady?"</p> + +<p>"I don't think I shall tell her. She would want to go with us."</p> + +<p>"And she could not," said the Sergeant, "a woman could not battle with such a + +gale. Just see how its fury is increasing at this moment!"</p> + +<p>Indeed the house was rocking to such an extent that it seemed likely to be + +torn from its foundations.</p> + +<p>"No," said Hobson, "courageous as she is, she could not, she ought not to + +accompany us. But on second thought, it will be best to tell her of our project. + +She ought to know in case any accident should befall us"</p> + +<p>"Yes," replied Long, "we ought not to keep anything from her, and if we do + +not come back"....</p> + +<p>"At nine o'clock then, Sergeant."</p> + +<p>"At nine o'clock."</p> + +<p>And with a military salute Sergeant Long retired.</p> + +<p>A few minutes later Hobson was telling Mrs Barnett of his scheme. As he + +expected the brave woman insisted on accompanying him, and was quite ready to + +face the tempest. Hobson did not dissuade her by dwelling on the dangers of the + +expedition, he merely said that her presence was necessary at the fort during + +his absence, and that her remaining would set his mind at ease. If any accident + +happened to him it would be a comfort to know that she would take his place.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett understood and said no more about going; but only urged Hobson + +not to risk himself unnecessarily. To remember that he was the chief officer, + +that his life was not his own, but necessary to the safety of all. The + +Lieutenant promised to be as prudent as possible; but added that the examination + +of the south of the island must be made at once, and he would make it. The next + +day Mrs Barnett merely told her companions that the Lieutenant and the Sergeant + +had gone to make a final reconnaissance before the winter set in.</p> +<a name="BVII" id="BVII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER VII.</h4> + +<h4><i>A FIRE AND A CRY.</i></h4> + +<p>The Lieutenant and the Sergeant spent the evening in the large room of the + +fort, where all were assembled except the astronomer, who still remained shut up + +in his cabin. The men were busy over their various occupations, some cleaning + +their arms, others mending or sharpening their tools. The women were stitching + +away industriously, and Mrs Paulina Barnett was reading aloud; but she was often + +interrupted not only by the noise of the wind, which shook the walls of the + +house like a battering-ram, but by the cries of the baby. Corporal Joliffe, who + +had undertaken to amuse him, had enough to do. The young gentleman had ridden + +upon his playmate's knees until they were worn out, and the Corporal at last put + +the indefatigable little cavalier on the large table, where he rolled about to + +his heart's content until he fell asleep.</p> + +<p>At eight o'clock prayers were read as usual, the lamps were extinguished, and + +all retired to rest.</p> + +<p>When every one was asleep, Hobson and Long crept cautiously across the large + +room and gained the passage, where they found Mrs Barnett, who wished to press + +their hands once more.</p> + +<p>"Till to-morrow," she said to the Lieutenant.</p> + +<p>"Yes," replied Hobson, "to-morrow, madam, without fail."</p> + +<p>"But if you are delayed?"</p> + +<p>"You must wait patiently for us," replied the Lieutenant, "for if in + +examining the southern horizon we should see a fire, which is not unlikely this + +dark night, we should know that we were near the coasts of New Georgia, and then + +it would be desirable for me to ascertain our position by daylight. In fact, we + +may be away forty eight hours. If, however, we can get to Cape Michael before + +midnight, we shall be back at the fort to-morrow evening. So wait patiently, + +madam, and believe that we shall incur no unnecessary risk."</p> + +<p>"But," added the lady, "suppose you don't get back to morrow, suppose you are + +away more than two days?"</p> + +<p>"Then we shall not return at all," replied Hobson simply.</p> + +<p>The door was opened, Mrs Barnett closed it behind the Lieutenant and his + +companion and went back to her own room, where Madge awaited her, feeling + +anxious and thoughtful.</p> + +<p>Hobson and Long made their way across the inner court through a whirlwind + +which nearly knocked them down; but clinging to each other, and leaning on their + +iron-bound staffs, they reached the postern gates, and set out [beween] between + +the hills and the eastern bank of the lagoon.</p> + +<p>A faint twilight enabled them to see their way. The moon, which was new the + +night before, would not appear above the horizon, and there was nothing to + +lessen the gloom of the darkness, which would, however, last but a few hours + +longer.</p> + +<p>The wind and rain were as violent as ever. The Lieutenant and his companion + +wore impervious boots and water-proof cloaks well pulled in at the waist, and + +the hood completely covering their heads. Thus protected they got along at a + +rapid pace, for the wind was behind them, and sometimes drove them on rather + +faster than they cared to go. Talking was quite out of the question, and they + +did not attempt it, for they were deafened by the hurricane, and out of breath + +with the buffeting they received.</p> + +<p>Hobson did not mean to follow the coast, the windings of which would have + +taken him a long way round, and have brought him face to face with the wind, + +which swept over the sea with nothing to break its fury. His idea was to cut + +across in a straight line from Cape Bathurst to Cape Michael, and he was + +provided with a pocket compass with which to ascertain his bearings. He hoped by + +this means to cross the ten or eleven miles between him and his goal, just + +before the twilight faded and gave place to the two hours of real darkness.</p> + +<p>Bent almost double, with rounded shoulders and stooping heads, the two + +pressed on. As long as they kept near the lake they did not meet the gale full + +face, the little hills crowned with trees afforded them some protection, the + +wind howled fearfully as it bent and distorted the branches, almost tearing the + +trunks up by the roots; but it partly exhausted its strength, and even the rain + +when it reached the explorers was converted into impalpable mist, so that for + +about four miles they did not suffer half as much as they expected to.</p> + +<p>But when they reached the southern skirts of the wood, where the hills + +disappeared, and there were neither trees nor rising ground, the wind swept + +along with awful force, and involuntarily they paused for a moment. They were + +still six miles from Cape Michael.</p> + +<p>"We are going to have a bad time of it," shouted Lieutenant Hobson in the + +Sergeant's ear.</p> + +<p>"Yes, the wind and rain will conspire to give us a good beating," answered + +Long.</p> + +<p>"I am afraid that now and then we shall have hail as well," added Hobson.</p> + +<p>"It won't be as deadly as grape-shot," replied Long coolly, "and we have both + +been through that, and so forwards!"</p> + +<p>"Forwards, my brave comrade!"</p> + +<p>It was then ten o'clock. The twilight was fading away, dying as if drowned in + +the mists or quenched by the wind and the rain. There was still, however, some + +light, and the Lieutenant struck his flint, and consulted his compass, passing a + +piece of burning touchwood over it, and then, drawing his cloak more closely + +around him, he plunged after the Sergeant across the unprotected plain.</p> + +<p>At the first step, both were flung violently to the ground, but they managed + +to scramble up, and clinging to each other with their backs bent like two old + +crippled peasants, they struck into a kind of ambling trot.</p> + +<p>There was a kind of awful grandeur in the storm to which neither was + +insensible. Jagged masses of mist and ragged rain-clouds swept along the ground. + +The loose earth and sand were whirled into the air and flung down again like + +grape-shot, and the lips of Hobson and his companion were wet with salt spray, + +although the sea was two or three miles distant at least.</p> + +<p>During the rare brief pauses in the gale, they stopped and took breath, + +whilst the Lieutenant ascertained their position as accurately as possible.</p> + +<p>The tempest increased as the night advanced, the air and water seemed to be + +absolutely confounded together, and low down on the horizon was formed one of + +those fearful waterspouts which can overthrow houses, tear up forests, and which + +the vessels whose safety they threaten attack with artillery. It really seemed + +as if the ocean itself was being torn from its bed and flung over the devoted + +little island.</p> + +<p>Hobson could not help wondering how it was that the ice-field which supported + +it was not broken in a hundred places in this violent convulsion of the sea, the + +roaring of which could be distinctly heard where he stood. Presently Long, who + +was a few steps in advance, stopped suddenly, and turning round managed to make + +the Lieutenant hear the broken words-</p> + +<p>"Not that way!"</p> + +<p>"Why not?"</p> + +<p>"The sea!"</p> + +<p>"What, the sea! We cannot possibly have got to the southeast coast!"</p> + +<p>"Look, look, Lieutenant!"</p> + +<p>It was true, a vast sheet of water was indistinctly visible before them, and + +large waves were rolling up and breaking at the Lieutenant's feet.</p> + +<p>Hobson again had recourse to his flint, and with the aid of some lighted + +touchwood consulted the needle of his compass very carefully.</p> + +<p>"No," he said, "the sea is farther to the left, we have not yet passed the + +wood between us and Cape Michael."</p> + +<p>"Then it is"--</p> + +<p>"It is a fracture of the island!" cried Hobson, as both were compelled to + +fling themselves to the ground before the wind, "either a large portion of our + +land has been broken off and drifted away, or a gulf has been made, which we can + +go round. Forwards!"</p> + +<p>They struggled to their feet and turned to the right towards the centre of + +the island. For about ten minutes they pressed on in silence, fearing, not + +without reason, that all communication with the south of the island would be + +found to be cut off. Presently, however, they no longer heard the noise of the + +breakers.</p> + +<p>"It is only a gulf." screamed Hobson in the Sergeant's ear. "Let us turn + +round."</p> + +<p>And they resumed their original direction towards the south, but both knew + +only too well that they had a fearful danger to face, for that portion of the + +island on which they were was evidently cracked for a long distance, and might + +at any moment separate entirely; should it do so under the influence of the + +waves, they would inevitably be drifted away, whither they knew not. Yet they + +did not hesitate, but plunged into the mist, not even pausing to wonder if they + +should ever get back.</p> + +<p>What anxious forebodings must, however, have pressed upon the heart of the + +Lieutenant. Could he now hope that the island would hold together until the + +winter? had not the inevitable breaking up already commenced? If the wind should + +not drive them on to the coast, were they not doomed to perish very soon, to be + +swallowed up by the deep, leaving no trace behind them? What a fearful prospect + +for all the unconscious inhabitants of the fort!</p> + +<p>But through it all the two men, upheld by the consciousness of a duty to + +perform, bravely struggled on against the gale, which nearly tore them to + +pieces, along the new beach, the foam sometimes bathing their feet, and + +presently gained the large wood which shut in Cape Michael. This they would have + +to cross to get to the coast by the shortest route, and they entered it in + +complete darkness, the wind thundering among the branches over their heads. + +Everything seemed to be breaking to pieces around them, the dislocated branches + +intercepted their passage, and every moment they ran a risk of being crushed + +beneath a falling tree, or they stumbled over a stump they had not been able to + +see in the gloom. The noise of the waves on the other side of the wood was a + +sufficient guide to their steps, and sometimes the furious breakers shook the + +weakened ground beneath their feet. Holding each other's hands lest they should + +lose each other, supporting each other, and the one helping the other up when he + +fell over some obstacle, they at last reached the point for which they were + +bound.</p> + +<p>But the instant they quitted the shelter of the wood a perfect whirlwind tore + +them asunder, and flung them upon the ground.</p> + +<p>"Sergeant, Sergeant! Where are you?" cried Hobson with all the strength of + +his lungs.</p> + +<p>"Here, here!" roared Long in reply.</p> + +<p>And creeping on the ground they struggled to reach each other; but it seemed + +as if a powerful hand rivetted them to the spot on which they had fallen, and it + +was only after many futile efforts that they managed to reach each other. Having + +done so, they tied their belts together to prevent another separation, and crept + +along the sand to a little rising ground crowned by a small clump of pines. Once + +there they were a little more protected, and they proceeded to dig themselves a + +hole, in which they crouched in a state of absolute exhaustion and + +prostration.</p> + +<p>It was half-past eleven o'clock P.M.</p> + +<p>For some minutes neither spoke. With eyes half closed they lay in a kind of + +torpor, whilst the trees above them bent beneath the wind, and their branches + +rattled like the bones of a skeleton. But yet again they roused themselves from + +this fatal lethargy, and a few mouthfuls of rum from the Sergeant's flask + +revived them.</p> + +<p>"Let us hope these trees will hold," at last observed Hobson.</p> + +<p>"And that our hole will not blow away with them," added the Sergeant, + +crouching in the soft sand.</p> + +<p>"Well!" said Hobson, "here we are at last, a few feet from Cape Michael, and + +as we came to make observations, let us make them. I have a presentiment, + +Sergeant, only a presentiment, remember, that we are not far from firm + +ground!"</p> + +<p>Had the southern horizon been visible the two adventurers would have been + +able to see two-thirds of it from their position; but it was too dark to make + +out anything, and if the hurricane had indeed driven them within sight of land, + +they would not be able to see it until daylight, unless a fire should be lighted + +on the continent.</p> + +<p>As the Lieutenant had told Mrs Barnett, fishermen often visited that part of + +North America, which is called New Georgia, and there are a good many small + +native colonies, the members of which collect the teeth of mammoths, these + +fossil elephants being very numerous in these latitudes. A few degrees farther + +south, on the island of Sitka, rises New-Archangel, the principal settlement in + +Russian America, and the head-quarters of the Russian Fur Company, whose + +jurisdiction once extended over the whole of the Aleutian Islands. The shores of + +the Arctic Ocean are, however, the favourite resort of hunters, especially since + +the Hudson's Bay Company took a lease of the districts formerly in the hands of + +the Russians; and Hobson, although he knew nothing of the country, was well + +acquainted with the habits of those who were likely to visit it at this time of + +the year, and was justified in thinking that he might meet fellow-countrymen, + +perhaps even members of his own Company, or, failing them, some native Indians, + +scouring the coasts.</p> + +<p>But could the Lieutenant reasonably hope that Victoria Island had been driven + +towards the coast?</p> + +<p>"Yes, a hundred times yes," he repeated to the Sergeant again and again. "For + +seven days a hurricane has been blowing from the northeast, and although I know + +that the island is very flat, and there is not much for the wind to take hold + +of, still all these little hills and woods spread out like sails must have felt + +the influence of the wind to a certain extent. Moreover, the sea which bears us + +along feels its power, and large waves are certainly running in shore. It is + +impossible for us to have remained in the current which was dragging us to the + +west, we must have been driven out of it, and towards the south. Last time we + +took our bearings we were two hundred miles from the coast, and in seven days + +"--</p> + +<p>"Your reasonings are very just, Lieutenant," replied the Sergeant, "and I + +feel that whether the wind helps us or not, God will not forsake us. It cannot + +be His will that so many unfortunate creatures should perish, and I put my trust + +in Him!"</p> + +<p>The two talked on in broken sentences, making each other hear above the + +roaring of the storm, and struggling to pierce the gloom which closed them in on + +every side; but they could see nothing, not a ray of light broke the thick + +darkness.</p> + +<p>About half past one A.M. the hurricane ceased for a few minutes, whilst the + +fury of the sea seemed to be redoubled, and the large waves, lashed into foam, + +broke over each other with a roar like thunder.</p> + +<p>Suddenly Hobson seizing his companion's arm shouted-</p> + +<p>"Sergeant, do you hear?"</p> + +<p>"What?"</p> + +<p>"The noise of the sea?"</p> + +<p>"Of course I do, sir," replied Long, listening more attentively, "and the + +sound of the breakers seems to me not"--</p> + +<p>"Not exactly the same... isn't it Sergeant; listen, listen, it is like the + +sound of surf!... it seems as if the waves were breaking against rocks!"</p> + +<p>Hobson and the Sergeant now listened intently, the monotonous sound of the + +waves dashing against each other in the offing was certainly exchanged for the + +regular rolling sound produced by the breaking of water against a hard body; + +they heard the reverberating echoes which told of the neighbourhood of rocks, + +and they knew that along the whole of the coast of their island there was not a + +single stone, and nothing more sonorous than the earth and sand of which it was + +composed!</p> + +<p>Could they have been deceived? The Sergeant tried to rise to listen better, + +but he was immediately flung down by the hurricane, which recommenced with + +renewed violence. The lull was over, and again the noise of the waves was + +drowned in the shrill whistling of the wind, and the peculiar echo could no + +longer be made out.</p> + +<p>The anxiety of the two explorers will readily be imagined. They again + +crouched down in their hole, doubting whether it would not perhaps be prudent to + +leave even this shelter, for they felt the sand giving way beneath them, and the + +pines cracking at their very roots. They persevered, however, in gazing towards + +the south, every nerve strained to the utmost, in the effort to distinguish + +objects through the darkness.</p> + +<p>The first grey twilight of the dawn might soon be expected to appear, and a + +little before half-past two A.M. Long suddenly exclaimed:</p> + +<p>"I see it!"</p> + +<p>"What?"</p> + +<p>"A fire!"</p> + +<p>"A fire?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, there-over there!"</p> + +<p>And he pointed to the south-west. Was he mistaken? No, for Hobson also made + +out a faint glimmer in the direction indicated.</p> + +<p>"Yes!" he cried, "yes, Sergeant, a fire; there is land there!"</p> + +<p>"Unless it is a fire on board ship," replied Long.</p> + +<p>"A ship at sea in this weather!" exclaimed Hobson, "impossible! No, no, there + +is land there, land I tell you, a few miles from us!"</p> + +<p>"Well, let us make a signal!"</p> + +<p>"Yes, Sergeant, we will reply to the fire on the mainland by a fire on our + +island!"</p> + +<p>Of course neither Hobson nor Long had a torch, but above their heads rose + +resinous pines distorted by the hurricane.</p> + +<p>"Your flint, Sergeant," said Hobson.</p> + +<p>Long at once struck his flint, lighted the touchwood, and creeping along the + +sand climbed to the foot of the thicket of firs, where he was soon joined by the + +Lieutenant. There was plenty of deadwood about, and they piled it up at the + +stems of the trees, set fire to it, and soon, the wind helping them, they had + +the satisfaction of seeing the whole thicket in a blaze</p> + +<p>"Ah!" said Hobson, "as we saw their fire, they will see ours!"</p> + +<p>The firs burnt with a lurid glare like a large torch. The dried resin in the + +old trunks aided the conflagration, and they were rapidly consumed. At last the + +crackling ceased, the flames died away, and all was darkness.</p> + +<p>Hobson and Long looked in vain for an answering fire-nothing was to be seen. + +For ten minutes they watched, hoping against hope, and were just beginning to + +despair, when suddenly a cry was heard, a distinct cry for help. It was a human + +voice, and it came from the sea.</p> + +<p>Hobson and Long, wild with eager anxiety, let themselves slide down to the + +shore.</p> + +<p>The cry was not, however, repeated.</p> + +<p>The daylight was now gradually beginning to appear, and the violence of the + +tempest seemed to be decreasing. Soon it was light enough for the horizon to be + +examined.</p> + +<p>But there was no land in sight, sea and sky were still blended in one + +unbroken circle.</p> +<a name="BVIII" id="BVIII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER VIII.</h4> + +<h4><i>MRS. PAULINA BARNETT'S EXCURSION.</i></h4> + +<p>The whole morning Hobson and Sergeant Long wandered about the coast. The + +weather was much improved, the rain had ceased, and the wind had veered round to + +the south-east with extraordinary suddenness, without unfortunately decreasing + +in violence, causing fresh anxiety to the Lieutenant, who could no longer hope + +to reach the mainland.</p> + +<p>The south-east wind would drive the wandering island farther from the + +continent, and fling it into the dangerous currents, which must drift it to the + +north of the Arctic Ocean.</p> + +<p>How could they even be sure that they had really approached the coast during + +the awful night just over. Might it not have been merely a fancy of the + +Lieutenant's? The air was now clear, and they could look round a radius of + +several miles; yet there was nothing in the least resembling land within sight. + +Might they not adopt the Sergeant's suggestion, that a ship had passed the + +island during the night, that the fire and cry were alike signals of sailors in + +distress? And if it had been a vessel, must it not have foundered in such a + +storm?</p> + +<p>Whatever the explanation there was no sign of a wreck to be seen either in + +the offing or on the beach, and the waves, now driven along by the wind from the + +land, were large enough to have overwhelmed any vessel.</p> + +<p>"Well, Lieutenant," said Sergeant Long, "what is to be done?'"</p> + +<p>"We must remain upon our island," replied the Lieutenant, pressing his hand + +to his brow; "we must remain on our island and wait for winter; it alone can + +save us."</p> + +<p>It was now mid-day, and Hobson, anxious to get back to Fort Hope before the + +evening, at once turned towards Cape Bathurst.</p> + +<p>The wind, being now on their backs, helped them along as it had done before. + +They could not help feeling very uneasy, as they were naturally afraid that the + +island might have separated into two parts in the storm. The gulf observed the + +night before might have spread farther, and if so they would be cut off from + +their friends.</p> + +<p>They soon reached the wood they had crossed the night before. Numbers of + +trees were lying on the ground, some with broken stems, others torn up by the + +roots from the soft soil, which had not afforded them sufficient support. The + +few which remained erect were stripped of their leaves, and their naked branches + +creaked and moaned as the south-east wind swept over them.</p> + +<p>Two miles beyond this desolated forest the wanderers arrived at the edge of + +the gulf they had seen the night before without being able to judge of its + +extent. They examined it carefully, and found that it was about fifty feet wide, + +cutting the coast line straight across near Cape Michael and what was formerly + +Fort Barnett, forming a kind of estuary running more than a mile and a half + +inland. If the sea should again become rough in a fresh storm, this gulf would + +widen more and more.</p> + +<p>Just as Hobson approached the beach, he saw a large piece of ice separate + +from the island and float away!</p> + +<p>"Ah!" murmured Long, "that is the danger!"</p> + +<p>Both then turned hurriedly to the west, and walked as fast as they could + +round the huge gulf, making direct for Fort Hope.</p> + +<p>They noticed no other changes by the way, and towards four o'clock they + +crossed the court and found all their comrades at their usual occupations.</p> + +<p>Hobson told his men that he had wished once more before the winter to see if + +there were any signs of the approach of Captain Craventy's convoy, and that his + +expedition had been fruitless.</p> + +<p>"Then, sir," observed Marbre, "I suppose we must give up all idea of seeing + +our comrades from Fort Reliance for this year at least?"</p> + +<p>"I think you must," replied Hobson simply, re-entering the public room.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett and Madge were told of the two chief events of the exploration: + +the fire and the cry. Hobson was quite sure that neither he nor the Sergeant + +were mistaken. The fire had really been seen, the cry had really been heard; and + +after a long consultation every one came to the conclusion that a ship in + +distress had passed within sight during the night, and that the island had not + +approached the American coast.</p> + +<p>The south-east wind quickly chased away the clouds and mists, so that Hobson + +hoped to be able to take his bearings the next day. The night was colder and a + +fine snow fell, which quickly covered the ground. This first sign of winter was + +hailed with delight by all who knew of the peril of their situation.</p> + +<p>On the 2nd September the sky gradually became free from vapours of all kinds, + +and the sun again appeared. Patiently the Lieutenant awaited its culmination; at + +noon he took the latitude, and two hours later a calculation of hour-angles gave + +him the longitude.</p> + +<p>The following were the results obtained: Latitude, 70? 57'; longitude, 170? + +30'.</p> + +<p>So that, in spite of the violence of the hurricane, the island had remained + +in much the same latitude, although it had been drifted somewhat farther west. + +They were now abreast of Behring Strait, but four hundred miles at least north + +of Capes East and Prince of Wales, which jut out on either side at the narrowest + +part of the passage.</p> + +<p>The situation was, therefore, more dangerous than ever, as the island was + +daily getting nearer to the dangerous Kamtchatka Current, which, if it once + +seized it in its rapid waters, might carry it far away to the north. Its fate + +would now soon be decided. It would either stop where the two currents met, and + +there be shut in by the ice of the approaching winter, or it would be drifted + +away and lost in the solitudes of the remote hyperborean regions.</p> + +<p>Hobson was painfully moved on ascertaining the true state of things, and + +being anxious to conceal his emotion, he shut himself up in his own room and did + +not appear again that day. With his chart before him, he racked his brains to + +find some way out of the difficulties with which be was beset.</p> + +<p>The temperature fell some degrees farther the same day, and the mists, which + +had collected above the south-eastern horizon the day before, resolved + +themselves into snow during the night, so that the next day the white carpet was + +two inches thick. Winter was coming at last.</p> + +<p>On September 3rd Mrs Barnett resolved to go a few miles along the coast + +towards Cape Esquimaux. She wished to see for herself the changes lately + +produced. If she had mentioned her project to the Lieutenant, he would certainly + +have offered to accompany her; but she did not wish to disturb him, and decided + +to go without him, taking Madge with her. There was really nothing to fear, the + +only formidable animals, the bears, seemed to have quite deserted the island + +after the earthquake; and two women might, without danger, venture on a walk of + +a few hours without an escort.</p> + +<p>Madge agreed at once to Mrs Barnett's proposal, and without a word to any one + +they set out at eight o'clock A.M., provided with an ice-chisel, a flask of + +spirits, and a wallet of provisions.</p> + +<p>After leaving Cape Bathurst they turned to the west. The sun was already + +dragging its slow course along the horizon, for at this time of year it would + +only be a few degrees above it at its culmination. But its oblique rays were + +clear and powerful, and the snow was already melting here and there beneath + +their influence.</p> + +<p>The coast was alive with flocks of birds of many kinds; ptarmigans, + +guillemots, puffins, wild geese, and ducks of every variety fluttered about, + +uttering their various cries, skimming the surface of the sea or of the lagoon, + +according as their tastes led them to prefer salt or fresh water.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett had now a capital opportunity of seeing how many furred animals + +haunted the neighbourhood of Fort Hope. Martens, ermines, musk-rats, and foxes + +were numerous, and the magazines of the factory might easily have been filled + +with their skins, but what good would that be now? The inoffensive creatures, + +knowing that hunting was suspended, went and came fearlessly, venturing close up + +to the palisade, and becoming tamer every day. Their instinct doubtless told + +them that they and their old enemies were alike prisoners on the island, and a + +common danger bound them together. It struck Mrs Barnett as strange that the two + +enthusiastic hunters-Marbre and Sabine-should obey the Lieutenant's orders to + +spare the furred animals without remonstrance or complaint, and appeared not + +even to wish to shoot the valuable game around them. It was true the foxes and + +others had not yet assumed their winter robes, but this was not enough to + +explain the strange indifference of the two hunters.</p> + +<p>Whilst walking at a good pace and talking over their strange situation, Mrs + +Barnett and Madge carefully noted the peculiarities of the sandy coast. The + +ravages recently made by the sea were distinctly visible. Fresh landslips + +enabled them to see new fractures in the ice distinctly. The strand, fretted + +away in many places, had sunk to an enormous extent, and the waves washed along + +a level beach when the perpendicular shores had once checked their advance. It + +was evident that parts of the island were now only on a level with the + +ocean.</p> + +<p>"O Madge!" exclaimed Mrs Barnett, pointing to the long smooth tracts on which + +the curling waves broke in rapid succession, "our situation has indeed become + +aggravated by the awful storm! It is evident that the level of the whole island + +is gradually becoming lower. It is now only a question of time. Will the winter + +come soon enough to save us? Everything depends upon that."</p> + +<p>"The winter will come, my dear girl," replied Madge with her usual unshaken + +confidence. "We have already had two falls of snow. Ice is [begininng] beginning + +to accumulate, and God will send it us in time, I feel sure."</p> + +<p>"You are right. Madge, we must have faith!" said Mrs Barnett. "We women who + +do not trouble ourselves about the scientific reasons for physical phenomena can + +hope, when men who are better informed, perhaps, despair. That is one of our + +blessings, which our Lieutenant unfortunately does not share. He sees the + +significance of facts, he reflects, he calculates, he reckons up the time still + +remaining to us, and I see that he is beginning to lose all hope."</p> + +<p>"He is a brave, energetic man, for all that," replied Madge.</p> + +<p>"Yes," added Mrs Barnett, "and if it be in the power of man to save us, he + +will do it."</p> + +<p>By nine o'clock the two women had walked four miles. They were often obliged + +to go inland for some little distance, to avoid parts of the coast already + +invaded by the sea. Here and there the waves had encroached half-a-mile beyond + +the former high-water line, and the thickness of the ice-field had been + +considerably reduced. There was danger that it would soon yield in many places, + +and that new bays would be formed all along the coast.</p> + +<p>As they got farther from the fort Mrs Barnett noticed that the number of + +furred animals decreased considerably. The poor creatures evidently felt more + +secure near a human habitation. The only formidable animals which had not been + +led by instinct to escape in time from the dangerous island were a few wolves, + +savage beasts which even a common danger did not conciliate. Mrs Barnett and + +Madge saw several wandering about on the plains, but they did not approach, and + +soon disappeared behind the hills on the south of the lagoon.</p> + +<p>"What will become of all these imprisoned animals," said Madge, "when all + +food fails them, and they are famished with hunger in the winter?"</p> + +<p>"They will not be famished in a hurry, Madge," replied Mrs Barnett, "and we + +shall have nothing to fear from them; all the martens, ermines, and Polar hares, + +which we spare will fall an easy prey to them. That is not our danger; the + +brittle ground beneath our feet, which may at any moment give way, is our real + +peril. Only look how the sea is advancing here. It already covers half the + +plain, and the waves, still comparatively warm, are eating away our island above + +and below at the same time! If the cold does not stop it very soon, the sea will + +shortly join the lake, and we shall lose our lagoon as we lost our river and our + +port!"</p> + +<p>"Well, if that should happen it will indeed be an irreparable misfortune!" + +exclaimed Madge.</p> + +<p>"Why?" asked Mrs Barnett, looking inquiringly at her companion.</p> + +<p>"Because we shall have no more fresh water," replied Madge.</p> + +<p>"Oh, we shall not want for fresh water, Madge," said Mrs Barnett; "the rain, + +the snow, the ice, the icebergs of the ocean, the very ice-field on which we + +float, will supply us with that; no, no, that is not our danger."</p> + +<p>About ten o'clock Mrs Barnett and Madge had readied the rising ground above + +Cape Esquimaux, but at least two miles inland, for they had found it impossible + +to follow the coast, worn away as it was by the sea. Being rather tired with the + +many <i>detours</i> they had had to make, they decided to rest a few minutes + +before setting off on their return to Fort Hope. A little hill crowned by a + +clump of birch trees and a few shrubs afforded a pleasant shelter, and a bank + +covered with yellow moss, from which the snow had melted, served them as a seat. + +The little wallet was opened, and they shared their simple repast like + +sisters.</p> + +<p>Half an hour later, Mrs Barnett proposed that they should climb along the + +promontory to the sea, and find out the exact state of Cape Esquimaux. She was + +anxious to know if the point of it had resisted the storm, and Madge declared + +herself ready to follow "her dear girl" wherever she went, but at the same time + +reminded her that they were eight or nine miles from Cape Bathurst already, and + +that they must not make Lieutenant Hobson uneasy by too long an absence.</p> + +<p>But some presentiment made Mrs Barnett insist upon doing as she proposed, and + +she was right, as the event proved. It would only delay them half an hour after + +all.</p> + +<p>They had not gone a quarter of a mile before Mrs Barnett stopped suddenly, + +and pointed to some clear and regular impressions upon the snow. These marks + +must have been made within the last nine or ten hours, or the last fall of snow + +would have covered them over.</p> + +<p>"What animal has passed along here, I wonder?" said Madge.</p> + +<p>"It was not an animal," said Mrs Barnett, bending down to examine the marks + +more closely, "not a quadruped certainly, for its four feet would have left + +impressions very different from these. Look, Madge, they are the footprints of a + +human person!"</p> + +<p>"But who could have been here?" inquired Madge; "none of the soldiers or + +women have left the fort, and we are on an island, remember. You must be + +mistaken, my dear; but we will follow the marks, and see where they lead + +us."</p> + +<p>They did so, and fifty paces farther on both again paused.</p> + +<p>"Look, Madge, look!" cried Mrs Barnett, seizing her companion's arm, "and + +then say if I am mistaken."</p> + +<p>Near the footprints there were marks of a heavy body having been dragged + +along the snow, and the impression of a hand.</p> + +<p>"It is the hand of a woman or a child!" cried Madge.</p> + +<p>"Yes!" replied Mrs Barnett; "a woman or a child has fallen here exhausted, + +and risen again to stumble farther on; look, the footprints again, and father on + +more falls!"</p> + +<p>"Who, who could it have been?" exclaimed Madge.</p> + +<p>"How can I tell?" replied Mrs Barnett. "Some unfortunate creature imprisoned + +like ourselves for three or four months perhaps. Or some shipwrecked wretch + +flung upon the coast in the storm. You remember the fire and the cry of which + +Sergeant Long and Lieutenant Hobson spoke. Come, come, Madge, there may be some + +one in danger for us to save!</p> + +<p>And Mrs Barnett, dragging Madge with her, ran along following the traces, and + +further on found that they were stained with blood.</p> + +<p>The brave, tender-hearted woman, had spoken of saving some one in danger; had + +she then forgotten that there was no safety for any upon the island, doomed + +sooner or later to be swallowed up by the ocean?</p> + +<p>The impressions on the ground led towards Cape Esquimaux. And the two + +carefully traced them, but the footprints presently disappeared, whilst the + +blood-stains increased, making an irregular pathway along the snow. It was + +evident the poor wretch had been unable to walk farther, and had crept along on + +hands and knees; here and there fragments of torn clothes were scattered about, + +bits of sealskin and fur.</p> + +<p>"Come, come," cried Mrs Barnett, whose heart beat violently.</p> + +<p>Madge followed her, they were only a few yards from Cape Esquimaux, which now + +rose only a few feet upon the sea-level against the background of the sky, and + +was quite deserted.</p> + +<p>The impressions now led them to the right of the cape, and running along they + +soon climbed to the top, but there was still nothing, absolutely nothing, to be + +seen. At the foot of the cape, where the slight ascent began, the traces turned + +to the right, and led straight to the sea.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett was turning to the right also, but just as she was stepping on to + +the beach, Madge, who had been following her and looking about uneasily, caught + +hold of her hand, and exclaimed-</p> + +<p>"Stop! stop!" "No, Madge, no!" cried Mrs Barnett, who was drawn along by a + +kind of instinct in spite of herself.</p> + +<p>"Stop, stop, and look!" cried Madge, tightening her hold on her mistress's + +hand.</p> + +<p>On the beach, about fifty paces from Cape Esquimaux, a large white mass was + +moving about and growling angrily.</p> + +<p>It was an immense Polar bear, and the two women watched it with beating + +hearts. It was pacing round and round a bundle of fur on the ground, which it + +smelt at every now and then, lifting it up and letting it fall again. The bundle + +of fur looked like the dead body of a walrus.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett and Madge did not know what to think, whether to advance or to + +retreat, but presently as the body was moved about a kind of hood fell back from + +the head, and some long locks of brown hair were thrown over the snow.</p> + +<p>"It is a woman! a woman!" cried Mrs Barnett, eager to rush to her assistance + +and find out if she were dead or alive!</p> + +<p>"Stop!" repeated Madge, holding her back; "the bear won't harm her."</p> + +<p>And, indeed, the formidable creature merely turned the body over, and showed + +no inclination of tearing it with its dreadful claws. It went away and came back + +apparently uncertain what to do. It had not yet perceived the two women who were + +so anxiously watching it.</p> + +<p>Suddenly a loud crack was heard. The earth shook, and it seemed as if the + +whole of Cape Esquimaux were about to be plunged into the sea.</p> + +<p>A large piece of the island had broken away, and a huge piece of ice, the + +centre of gravity of which had been displaced by the alteration in its specific + +weight, drifted away, carrying with it the bear and the body of the woman.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett screamed, and would have flung herself upon the broken ice before + +it floated away, if Madge had not clutched her hand firmly, saying quietly--</p> + +<p>"Stop! stop!"</p> + +<p>At the noise produced by the breaking off of the piece of ice, the bear + +started back with a fearful growl, and, leaving the body, rushed to the side + +where the fracture had taken place; but he was already some forty feet from the + +coast, and in his terror he ran round and round the islet, tearing up the ground + +with his claws, and stamping the sand and snow about him.</p> + +<p>Presently he returned to the motionless body, and, to the horror of the two + +women, seized it by the clothes with his teeth, and carrying it to the edge of + +the ice, plunged with it into the sea.</p> + +<p>Being a powerful swimmer, like the whole race of Arctic bears, he soon gained + +the shores of the island. With a great exertion of strength he managed to climb + +up the ice, and having reached the surface of the island he quietly laid down + +the body he had brought with him.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett could no longer be held back, and, shaking off Madge's hold, she + +rushed to the beach, never thinking of the danger she ran in facing a formidable + +carnivorous creature.</p> + +<p>The bear, seeing her approach, reared upon his hind legs, and came towards + +her, but at about ten paces off he paused, shook his great head, and turning + +round with a low growl, quietly walked away towards the centre of the island, + +without once looking behind him. He, too, was evidently affected by the + +mysterious fear which had tamed all the wild animals on the island.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett was soon bending over the body stretched about the snow.</p> + +<p>A cry of astonishment burst from her lips:</p> + +<p>"Madge, Madge, come!" she exclaimed.</p> + +<p>Madge approached and looked long and fixedly at the inanimate body. It was + +the young Esquimaux girl Kalumah!</p> +<a name="BIX" id="BIX"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER IX.</h4> + +<h4><i>KALUMAH'S ADVENTURES.</i></h4> + +<p>Kalumah on the floating island, two hundred miles from the American coast. It + +was almost incredible!</p> + +<p>The first thing to be ascertained was whether the poor creature still + +breathed. Was it possible to restore her to life? Mrs Barnett loosened her + +clothes, and found that her body was not yet quite cold. Her heart beat very + +feebly, but it did beat. The blood they had seen came from a slight wound in her + +hand; Madge bound it up with her handkerchief, and the bleeding soon ceased.</p> + +<p>At the same time Mrs Barnett raised the poor girl's head, and managed to pour + +a few drops of rum between her parted lips. She then bathed her forehead and + +temples with cold water, and waited.</p> + +<p>A few minutes passed by, and neither of the watchers were able to utter a + +word, so anxious were they lest the faint spark of life remaining to the young + +Esquimaux should be quenched.</p> + +<p>But at last Kalumah's breast heaved with a faint sigh, her hands moved + +feebly, and presently she opened her eyes, and recognising her preserver she + +murmured-</p> + +<p>"Mrs Barnett! Mrs Barnett!"</p> + +<p>The lady was not a little surprised at hearing her own name. Had Kalumah + +voluntarily sought the floating island, and did she expect to find her old + +European friends on it? If so, how had she come to know it, and how had she + +managed to reach the island, two hundred miles from the mainland? How could she + +have guessed that the ice-field as bearing Mrs Barnett and all the occupants of + +Fort Hope away from the American coast? Really it all seemed quite + +inexplicable.</p> + +<p>"She lives-she will recover!" exclaimed Madge, who felt the vital heat and + +pulsation returning to the poor bruised body.</p> + +<p>"Poor child, poor child'" said Mrs Barnett, much affected; "she murmured my + +name when she was at the point of death."</p> + +<p>But now Kalumah again half opened her eyes, and looked about her with a + +dreamy unsatisfied expression, presently, however, seeing Mrs Barnett, her face + +brightened, the same name again burst from her lips, and painfully raising her + +hand she let it fall on that of her friend.</p> + +<p>The anxious care of the two women soon revived Kalumah, whose extreme + +exhaustion arose not only from fatigue but also from hunger. She had eaten + +nothing for forty-eight hours. Some pieces of cold venison and a little rum + +refreshed her, and she soon felt able to accompany her newly-found friends to + +the fort.</p> + +<p>Before starting, however, Kalumah, seated on the sand between Mrs Barnett and + +Madge, overwhelmed them with thanks and expressions of attachment. Then she told + +her story: she had not forgotten the Europeans of Fort Hope, and the thought of + +Mrs Paulina Barnett had been ever present with her. It was not by chance, as we + +shall see, that she had come to Victoria Island.</p> + +<p>The following is a brief summary of what Kalumah related to Mrs Barnett:-</p> + +<p>Our readers will remember the young Esquimaux's promise to come and see her + +friends at Fort Hope again in the fine season of the next year. The long Polar + +night being over, and the month of May having come round, Kalumah set out to + +fulfil her pledge. She left Russian America, where she had wintered, and + +accompanied by one of her brothers-in-law, started for the peninsula of + +Victoria.</p> + +<p>Six weeks later, towards the middle of June, she got to that part of British + +America which is near Cape Bathurst. She at once recognised the volcanic + +mountains shutting in Liverpool Bay, and twenty miles farther east she came to + +Walruses' Bay, where her people had so often hunted morses and seals.</p> + +<p>But beyond the bay on the north, there was nothing to be seen. The coast + +suddenly sank to the south-east in an almost straight line. Cape Esquimaux and + +Cape Bathurst had alike disappeared.</p> + +<p>Kalumah understood what had happened. Either the whole of the peninsula had + +been swallowed up by the waves, or it was floating away as an island, no one + +knew whither!</p> + +<p>Kalumah's tears flowed fast at the loss of those whom she had come so far to + +see.</p> + +<p>Her brother-in-law, however, had not appeared surprised at the catastrophe. A + +kind of legend or tradition had been handed down amongst the nomad tribes of + +North America, that Cape Bathurst did not form part of the mainland, but had + +been joined on to it thousands of years before, and would sooner or later be + +torn away in some convulsion of nature. Hence the surprise at finding the + +factory founded by Hobson at the foot of the cape. But with the unfortunate + +reserve characteristic of their race, and perhaps also under the influence of + +that enmity which all natives feel for those who settle in their country, they + +said nothing to the Lieutenant, whose fort was already finished. Kalumah knew + +nothing of this tradition, which after all rested on no trustworthy evidence, + +and probably belonged to the many northern legends relating to the creation. + +This was how it was that the colonists of Fort Hope were not warned of the + +danger they ran in settling on such a spot.</p> + +<p>Had a word in season been spoken to Hobson he would certainly have gone + +farther in search of some firmer foundation for his fort than this soil, certain + +peculiarities of which he had noticed at the first.</p> + +<p>When Kalumah had made quite sure that all trace of Cape Bathurst was gone, + +she explored the coast as far as the further side of Washburn Bay, but without + +finding any sign of those she sought, and at last there was nothing left for her + +to do but to return to the fisheries of Russian America.</p> + +<p>She and her brother-in-law left Walruses' Bay at the end of June, and + +following the coast got back to New Georgia towards the end of July, after an + +absolutely fruitless journey.</p> + +<p>Kalumah now gave up all hope of again seeing Mrs Barnett and the other + +colonists of Fort Hope. She concluded that they had all been swallowed up by the + +ocean long ago.</p> + +<p>At this part of her tale the young Esquimaux looked at Mrs Barnett with eyes + +full of tears, and pressed her hand [affectionaly] affectionately, and then she + +murmured her thanks to God for her own preservation through the means of her + +friend.</p> + +<p>Kalumah on her return home resumed her customary occupations, and worked with + +the rest of her tribe at the fisheries near Icy Cape, a point a little above the + +seventieth parallel, and more than six hundred miles from Cape Bathurst.</p> + +<p>Nothing worthy of note happened during the first half of the month of April; + +but towards the end the storm began which had caused Hobson so much uneasiness, + +and which had apparently extended its ravages over the whole of the Arctic Ocean + +and beyond Behring Strait. It was equally violent at Icy Cape and on Victoria + +Island, and, as the Lieutenant ascertained in taking his bearings, the latter + +was then not more than two hundred miles from the coast.</p> + +<p>As Mrs Barnett listened to Kalumah, her previous information enabled her + +rapidly to find the key to the strange events which had taken place, and to + +account for the arrival of the young native on the island.</p> + +<p>During the first days of the storm the Esquimaux of Icy Cape were confined to + +their huts. They could neither get out nor fish. But during the night of the + +31st August a kind of presentiment led Kalumah to venture down to the beach, + +and, braving the wind and rain in all their fury, she peered anxiously through + +the darkness at the waves rising mountains high.</p> + +<p>Presently she thought she saw a huge mass driven along by the hurricane + +parallel with the coast. Gifted with extremely keen sight-as are all these + +wandering tribes accustomed to the long dark Polar nights-she felt sure that she + +was not mistaken.</p> + +<p>Something of vast bulk was passing two miles from the coast, and that + +something could be neither a whale, a boat, nor, at this time of the year, even + +an iceberg.</p> + +<p>But Kalumah did not stop to reason. The truth flashed upon her like a + +revelation. Before her excited imagination rose the images of her friends. She + +saw them all once more, Mrs Barnett, Madge, Lieutenant Hobson, the baby she had + +covered with kisses at Fort Hope. Yes, they were passing, borne along in the + +storm on a floating ice-field!</p> + +<p>Kalumah did not doubt or hesitate a moment. She felt that she must tell the + +poor shipwrecked people, which she was sure they were, of the close vicinity of + +the land. She ran to her hut, seized a torch of tow and resin, such as the + +Esquimaux use when fishing at night, lit it and waved it on the beach at the + +summit of Icy Cape.</p> + +<p>This was the fire which Hobson and Long had seen when crouching on Cape + +Michael on the night of the 31st August.</p> + +<p>Imagine the delight and excitement of the young Esquimaux when a signal + +replied to hers, when she saw the huge fire lit by Lieutenant Hobson, the + +reflection of which reached the American coast, although he did not dream that + +he was so near it.</p> + +<p>But it quickly went out, the lull in the storm only lasted a few minutes, and + +the fearful gale, veering round to the south-east, swept along with redoubled + +violence.</p> + +<p>Kalumah feared that her "prey," so she called the floating island, was about + +to escape her, and that it would not be driven on to the shore. She saw it + +fading away, and knew that it would soon disappear in the darkness and be lost + +to her on the boundless ocean.</p> + +<p>It was indeed a terrible moment for the young native, and she determined at + +all hazards to let her friends know of their situation. There might yet be time + +for them to take some steps for their deliverance, although every hour took them + +farther from the continent.</p> + +<p>She did not hesitate a moment, her kayak was at hand, the frail bark in which + +she had more than once braved the storms of the Arctic Ocean, she pushed it down + +to the sea, hastily laced on the sealskin jacket fastened to the canoe, and, the + +long paddle in her hand, she plunged into the darkness.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett here pressed the brave child to her heart, and Madge shed tears + +of sympathy.</p> + +<p>When launched upon the roaring ocean, Kalumah found the change of wind in her + +favour. The waves dashed over her kayak, it is true, but they were powerless to + +harm the light boat, which floated on their crests like a straw. It was capsized + +several times, but a stroke of the paddle righted it at once.</p> + +<p>After about an hour's hard work, Kalumah could see the wandering island more + +distinctly, and had no longer any doubt of effecting her purpose, as she was but + +a quarter of a mile from the beach.</p> + +<p>It was then that she uttered the cry which Hobson and Long had heard.</p> + +<p>But, alas! Kalumah now felt herself being carried away towards the west by a + +powerful current, which could take firmer hold of her kayak than of the floating + +island!</p> + +<p>In vain she struggled to beat back with her paddle, the light boat shot along + +like an arrow. She uttered scream after scream, but she was unheard, for she was + +already far away, and when the day broke the coasts of Alaska and the island she + +had wished to reach, were but two distant masses on the horizon.</p> + +<p>Did she despair? Not yet. It was impossible to get back to the American + +continent in the teeth of the terrible wind which was driving the island before + +it at a rapid pace, taking it out two hundred miles in thirty-six hours, and + +assisted by the current from the coast.</p> + +<p>There was but one thing left to do. To get to the island by keeping in the + +same current which was drifting it away.</p> + +<p>But, alas! the poor girl's strength was not equal to her courage, she was + +faint from want of food, and, exhausted as she was, she could no longer wield + +her paddle.</p> + +<p>For some hours she struggled on, and seemed to be approaching the island, + +although those on it could not see her, as she was but a speck upon the ocean. + +She struggled on until her stiffened arms and bleeding hands fell powerless, + +and, losing consciousness, she was floated along in her frail kayak at the mercy + +of winds and waves.</p> + +<p>She did not know how long this lasted, she remembered nothing more, until a + +sudden shock roused her, her kayak had struck against something, it opened + +beneath her, and she was plunged into cold water, the freshness of which revived + +her. A few moments later, she was flung upon the sand in a dying state by a + +large wave.</p> + +<p>This had taken place the night before, just before dawn-that is to say, about + +two or three o'clock in the morning. Kalumah had then been seventy hours at sea + +since she embarked!</p> + +<p>The young native had no idea where she had been thrown, whether on the + +continent or on the floating island, which she had so bravely sought, but she + +hoped the latter. Yes, hoped that she had reached her friends, although she knew + +that the wind and current had driven them into the open sea, and not towards the + +coast!</p> + +<p>The thought revived her, and, shattered as she was, she struggled to her + +feet, and tried to follow the coast.</p> + +<p>She had, in fact, been providentially thrown on that portion of Victoria + +Island which was formerly the upper corner of Walruses' Bay. But, worn away as + +it was by the waves, she did not recognise the land with which she had once been + +familiar.</p> + +<p>She tottered on, stopped, and again struggled to advance; the beach before + +her appeared endless, she had so often to go round where the sea had encroached + +upon the sand. And so dragging herself along, stumbling and scrambling up again, + +she at last approached the little wood where Mrs. Barnett and Madge had halted + +that very morning. We know that the two women found the footprints left by + +Kalumah in the snow not far from this very spot, and it was at a short distance + +farther on that the poor girl fell for the last time. Exhausted by fatigue and + +hunger, she still managed to creep along on hands and knees for a few minutes + +longer.</p> + +<p>A great hope kept her from despair, for she had at last recognised Cape + +Esquimaux, at the foot of which she and her people had encamped the year before. + +She knew now that she was but eight miles from the factory, and that she had + +only to follow the path she had so often traversed when she went to visit her + +friends at Fort Hope.</p> + +<p>Yes, this hope sustained her, but she had scarcely reached the beach when her + +forces entirely failed her, and she again lost all consciousness. But for Mrs + +Barnett she would have died.</p> + +<p>"But, dear lady," she added, "I knew that you would come to my rescue, and + +that God would save me by your means."</p> + +<p>We know the rest. We know the providential instinct which led Mrs Barnett and + +Madge to explore this part of the coast on this very day, and the presentiment + +which made them visit Cape Esquimaux after they had rested, and before returning + +to Fort Hope. We know too-as Mrs Barnett related to Kalumah- how the piece of + +ice had floated away, and how the bear had acted under the circumstances.</p> + +<p>"And after all," added Mrs Barnett with a smile, "it was not I who saved you, + +but the good creature without whose aid you would never have come back to us, + +and if ever we see him again we will treat him with the respect due to your + +preserver."</p> + +<p>During this long conversation Kalumah was rested and refreshed, and Mrs + +Barnett proposed that they should return to the fort at once, as she had already + +been too long away. The young girl immediately rose ready to start.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett was indeed most anxious to tell the Lieutenant of all that had + +happened during the night of the storm, when the wandering island had neared the + +American continent, but she urged Kalumah to keep her adventures secret, and to + +say nothing about the situation of the island. She would naturally be supposed + +to have come along the coast, in fulfilment of the promise she had made to visit + +her friends in the fine season. Her arrival would tend only to strengthen the + +belief of the colonists that no changes had taken place in the country around + +Cape Bathurst, and to set at rest the doubts any of them might have + +entertained.</p> + +<p>It was about three o'clock when Madge and Mrs Barnett, with Kalumah hanging + +on her arm, set out towards the east, and before five o'clock in the afternoon + +they all arrived at the postern of the fort.</p> +<a name="BX" id="BX"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER X.</h4> + +<h4><i>THE KAMTCHATKA CURRENT</i>.</h4> + +<p>We can readily imagine the reception given to Kalumah by all at the fort. It + +seemed to them that the communication with the outer world was reopened. Mrs + +Mac-Nab, Mrs Rae and Mrs Joliffe overwhelmed her with caresses, but Kalumah's + +first thought was for the little child, she caught sight of him immediately, and + +running to him covered him with kisses.</p> + +<p>The young native was charmed and touched with the hospitality of her European + +hosts. A positive <i>fete</i> was held in her honour and every one was delighted + +that she would have to remain at the fort for the winter, the season being too + +far advanced for her to get back to the settlements of Russian America before + +the cold set in.</p> + +<p>But if all the settlers were agreeably surprised at the appearance of + +Kalumah, what must Lieutenant Hobson have thought when he saw her leaning on Mrs + +Barnett's arm. A sudden hope flashed across his mind like lightning, and as + +quickly died away: perhaps in spite of the evidence of his daily observations + +Victoria Island had run aground somewhere on the continent unnoticed by any of + +them.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett read the Lieutenant's thoughts in his face, and shook her head + +sadly.</p> + +<p>He saw that no change had taken place in their situation, and waited until + +Mrs Barnett was able to explain Kalumah's appearance.</p> + +<p>A few minutes later he was walking along the beach with the lady, listening + +with great interest to her account of Kalumah's adventures.</p> + +<p>So he had been right in all his conjectures. The north-east hurricane had + +driven the island out of the current. The ice-field had approached within a mile + +at least of the American continent. It had not been a fire on board ship which + +they had seen, or the cry of a shipwrecked mariner which they had heard. The + +mainland had been close at hand, and had the north-east wind blown hard for + +another hour Victoria Island would have struck against the coast of Russian + +America. And then at this critical moment a fatal, a terrible wind had driven + +the island away from the mainland back to the open sea, and it was again in the + +grasp of the irresistible current, and was being carried along with a speed + +which nothing could check, the mighty south-east wind aiding its headlong + +course, to that terribly dangerous spot where it would be exposed to contrary + +attractions, either of which might lead to its destruction and that of all the + +unfortunate people dragged along with it.</p> + +<p>For the hundredth time the Lieutenant and Mrs Barnett discussed all the + +bearings of the case, and then Hobson inquired if any important changes had + +taken place in the appearance of the districts between Cape Bathurst and + +Walruses' Bay?</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett replied that in some places the level of the coast appeared to be + +lowered, and that the waves now covered tracts of sand which were formerly out + +of their reach. She related what had happened at Cape Esquimaux, and the + +important fracture which had taken place at that part of the coast.</p> + +<p>Nothing could have been less satisfactory. It was evident that the ice-field + +forming the foundation of the island was breaking up. What had happened at Cape + +Esquimaux might at any moment be reproduced at Cape Bathurst. At any hour of the + +day or night the houses of the factory might be swallowed up by the deep, and + +the only thing which could save them was the winter, the bitter winter which was + +fortunately rapidly approaching.</p> + +<p>The next day, September 4th, when Hobson took his bearings, he found that the + +position of Victoria Island had not sensibly changed since the day before. It + +had remained motionless between the two contrary currents, which was on the + +whole the very best thing that could have happened.</p> + +<p>"If only the cold would fix us where we are, if the ice wall would shut us + +in, and the sea become petrified around us," exclaimed Hobson, "I should feel + +that our safety was assured. We are but two hundred miles from the coast at this + +moment, and by venturing across the frozen ice fields we might perhaps reach + +either Russian America or Kamtchatka. Winter, winter at any price, let the + +winter set in, no matter how rapidly."</p> + +<p>Meanwhile, according to the Lieutenant's orders, the preparations for the + +winter were completed. Enough forage to last the dogs the whole of the Polar + +night was stored up. They were all in good health, but getting rather fat with + +having nothing to do. They could not be taken too much care of, as they would + +have to work terribly hard in the journey across the ice after the abandonment + +of Fort Hope. It was most important to keep up their strength, and they were fed + +on raw reindeer venison, plenty of which was easily attainable.</p> + +<p>The tame reindeer also prospered, their stable was comfortable, and a good + +supply of moss was laid by for them in the magazines of the fort. The females + +provided Mrs Joliffe with plenty of milk for her daily culinary needs.</p> + +<p>The Corporal and his little wife had also sown fresh seeds, encouraged by the + +success of the last in the warm season. The ground had been prepared beforehand + +for the planting of scurvy-grass and Labrador Tea. It was important that there + +should be no lack of these valuable anti-scorbutics.</p> + +<p>The sheds were filled with wood up to the very roof. Winter might come as + +soon as it liked now, and freeze the mercury in the cistern of the thermometer, + +there was no fear that they would again be reduced to burn their furniture as + +they had the year before. Mac-Nab and his men had become wise by experience, and + +the chips left from the boat-building added considerably to their stock of + +fuel.</p> + +<p>About this time a few animals were taken which had already assumed their + +winter furs, such as martens, polecats, blue foxes, and ermines. Marbre and + +Sabine had obtained leave from the Lieutenant to set some traps outside the + +enceinte. He did not like to refuse them this permission, lest they should + +become discontented, as he had really no reason to assign for putting a stop to + +the collecting of furs, although he knew full well that the destination of these + +harmless creatures could do nobody any good. Their flesh was, however, useful + +for feeding the dogs, and enabled them to economise the reindeer venison.</p> + +<p>All was now prepared for the winter, and the soldiers worked with an energy + +which they would certainly not have shown if they had been told the secret of + +their situation.</p> + +<p>During the next few days the bearings were taken with the greatest care, but + +no change was noticeable in the situation of Victoria Island; and Hobson, + +finding that it was motionless, began to have fresh hope. Although there were as + +yet no symptoms of winter in inorganic nature, the temperature maintaining a + +mean height of 49? Fahrenheit, some swans flying to the south in search of a + +warmer climate was a good omen. Other birds capable of a long-sustained flight + +over vast tracts of the ocean began to desert the island. They knew full well + +that the continent of America and of Asia, with their less severe climates and + +their plentiful resources of every kind, were not far off, and that their wings + +were strong enough to carry them there. A good many of these birds were caught; + +and by Mrs Barnett's advice the Lieutenant tied round their necks a stiff cloth + +ticket, on which was inscribed the position of the wandering island, and the + +names of its inhabitants. The birds were then set free, and their captors + +watched them wing their way to the south with envious eyes.</p> + +<p>Of course none were in the secret of the sending forth of these messengers, + +except Mrs Barnett, Madge, Kalumah, Hobson, and Long.</p> + +<p>The poor quadrupeds were unable to seek their usual winter refuges in the + +south. Under ordinary circumstances the reindeer, Polar hares, and even the + +wolves would have left early in September for the shores of the Great Bear and + +Slave Lakes, a good many degrees farther south; but now the sea was an + +insurmountable barrier, and they, too, would have to wait until the winter + +should render it passable. Led by instinct they had doubtless tried to leave the + +island, but, turned back by the water, the instinct of self-preservation had + +brought them to the neighbourhood of Fort Hope, to be near the men who were once + +their hunters and most formidable enemies, but were now, like themselves, + +rendered comparatively inoffensive by their imprisonment.</p> + +<p>The observations of the 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 9th September, revealed no + +alteration in the position of Victoria Island. The large eddy between the two + +currents kept it stationary. Another fifteen days, another three weeks of this + +state of things, and Hobson felt that they might be saved.</p> + +<p>But they were not yet out of danger, and many terrible, almost supernatural, + +trials still awaited the inhabitants of Fort Hope.</p> + +<p>On the 10th of September observations showed a displacement of Victoria + +Island. Only a slight displacement, but in a northerly direction.</p> + +<p>Hobson was in dismay; the island was finally in the grasp of the Kamtchatka + +Current, and was drifting towards the unknown latitudes where the large icebergs + +come into being; it was on its way to the vast solitudes of the Arctic Ocean, + +interdicted to the human race, from which there is no return.</p> + +<p>Hobson did not hide this new danger from those who were in the secret of the + +situation. Mrs Barnett, Madge, Kalumah, and Sergeant Long received this fresh + +blow with courage and resignation.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps," said Mrs Barnett, "the island may stop even yet. Perhaps it will + +move slowly. Let us hope on ... and wait! The winter is not far off, and we are + +going to meet it. In any case God's will be done!" "My friends," said Hobson + +earnestly, "do you not think I ought now to tell our comrades. You see in what a + +terrible position we are and all that may await us! Is it not taking too great a + +responsibility to keep them in ignorance of the peril they are in?"</p> + +<p>"I should wait a little longer," replied Mrs Barnett without hesitation; "I + +would not give them all over to despair until the last chance is gone."</p> + +<p>"That is my opinion also," said Long.</p> + +<p>Hobson had thought the same, and was glad to find that his companions agreed + +with him in the matter.</p> + +<p>On the 11th and 12th September, the motion towards the north was more + +noticeable. Victoria Island was drifting at a rate of from twelve to thirteen + +miles a day, so that each day took them the same distance farther from the land + +and nearer to the north. They were, in short, following the decided course made + +by the Kamtchatka Current, and would quickly pass that seventieth degree which + +once cut across the extremity of Cape Bathurst, and beyond which no land of any + +kind was to be met with in this part of the Arctic Ocean.</p> + +<p>Every day Hobson looked out their position on the map, and saw only too + +clearly to what awful solitudes the wandering island was drifting.</p> + +<p>The only hope left consisted, as Mrs Barnett had said, in the fact that they + +were going to meet the winter. In thus drifting towards the north they would + +soon encounter those ice-cold waters, which would consolidate and strengthen the + +foundations of the island. But if the danger of being swallowed up by the waves + +was decreased, would not the unfortunate colonists have an immense distance to + +traverse to get back from these remote northern regions? Had the boat been + +finished, Lieutenant Hobson would not have hesitated to embark the whole party + +in it, but in spite of the zealous efforts of the carpenter it was not nearly + +ready, and indeed it taxed Mac-Nab's powers to the uttermost to construct a + +vessel on which to trust the lives of twenty persons in such a dangerous sea</p> + +<p>By the 16th September Victoria Island was between seventy-three and eighty + +miles north of the spot where its course had been arrested for a few days + +between the Behring and Kamtchatka Cur rents There were now, however, many signs + +of the approach of winter Snow fell frequently and in large flakes The column of + +mercury fell gradually The mean temperature was still 44? Fahrenheit during the + +day, but at night it fell to 32?. The sun described an extremely lengthened + +curve above the horizon, not rising more than a few degrees even at noon, and + +disappearing for eleven hours out of every twenty four.</p> + +<p>At last, on the night of the 16th September, the first signs of ice appeared + +upon the sea in the shape of small isolated crystals like snow, which stained + +the clear surface of the water As was noticed by the famous explorer Scoresby, + +these crystals immediately calmed the waves, like the oil which sailors pour + +upon the sea to produce a momentary cessation of its agitation These crystals + +showed a tendency to weld themselves together, but they were broken and + +separated by the motion of the water as soon as they had combined to any + +extent.</p> + +<p>Hobson watched the appearance of the "young ice" with extreme attention. He + +knew that twenty four hours would suffice to make the ice-crust two or three + +inches thick, strong enough in fact to bear the weight of a man He therefore + +expected that Victoria Island would shortly be arrested in its course to the + +north.</p> + +<p>But the day ended the work of the night, and if the speed of the island + +slackened during the darkness in consequence of the obstacles in its path, they + +were removed in the next twelve hours, and the island was carried rapidly along + +again by the powerful current.</p> + +<p>The distance from the northern regions became daily less, and nothing could + +be done to lessen the evil.</p> + +<p>At the autumnal equinox on the 21st of September, the day and night were of + +equal length, and from that date the night gradually became longer and longer. + +The winter was coming at last, but it did not set in rapidly or with any rigour + +Victoria Island was now nearly a degree farther north than the seventieth + +parallel, and on this 21st September, a rotating motion was for the first time + +noticed, a motion estimated by Hobson at about a quarter of the + +circumference.</p> + +<p>Imagine the anxiety of the unfortunate Lieutenant. The secret he had so long + +carefully kept was now about to be betrayed by nature to the least clear + +sighted. Of course the rotation altered the cardinal points of the island. Cape + +Bathurst no longer pointed to the north, but to the east. The sun, moon, and + +stars rose and set on a different horizon, and it was impossible that men like + +Mac-Nab, Rae, Marbre and others, accustomed to note the signs of the heavens, + +could fail to be struck by the change, and understand its meaning.</p> + +<p>To Hobson's great satisfaction, however, the brave soldiers appeared to + +notice nothing, the displacement with regard to the cardinal points was not, it + +was true, very considerable, and it was often too foggy for the rising and + +setting of the heavenly bodies to be accurately observed.</p> + +<p>Unfortunately the rotation appeared to be accompanied by an increase of + +speed. From that date Victoria Island drifted at the rate of a mile an hour. It + +advanced farther and farther north, farther and farther away from all land. + +Hobson did not even yet despair, for it was not in his nature to do so, but he + +felt confused and astray, and longed for the winter with all his heart.</p> + +<p>At last the temperature began to fall still lower. Snow fell plentifully on + +the 23d and 24th September, and increased the thickness of the coating of ice on + +the sea. Gradually the vast ice-field was formed on every side, the island in + +its advance continually broke it up, but each day it became firmer and better + +able to resist. The sea succumbed to the petrifying hand of winter, and became + +frozen as far as the eye could reach, and on September 27th, when the bearings + +were taken, it was found that Victoria Island had not moved since the day + +before. It was imprisoned in a vast ice-field, it was motionless in longitude + +177? 22', and latitude 77? 57'-more than six hundred miles from any + +continent.</p> +<a name="BXI" id="BXI"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XI</h4> + +<h4><i>A COMMUNICATION FROM LIEUTENANT HOBSON</i>.</h4> + +<p>Such was the situation. To use Sergeant Long's expression, the island had + +"cast anchor," and was as stationary as when the isthmus connected it with the + +mainland. But six hundred miles now separated it from inhabited countries, six + +hundred miles which would have to be traversed in sledges across the solidified + +surface of the sea, amongst the icebergs which the cold would build up, in the + +bitterest months of the Arctic winter.</p> + +<p>It would be a fearful undertaking, but hesitation was impossible. The winter, + +for which Lieutenant Hobson had so ardently longed, had come at last, and + +arrested the fatal march of the island to the north. It would throw a bridge six + +hundred miles long from their desolate home to the continents on the south, and + +the new chances of safety must not be neglected, every effort must be made to + +restore the colonists, so long lost in the hyperborean regions, to their + +friends.</p> + +<p>As Hobson explained to his companions, it would be madness to linger till the + +spring should again thaw the ice, which would be to abandon themselves once more + +to the capricious Behring currents. They must wait until the sea was quite + +firmly frozen over, which at the most would be in another three or four weeks. + +Meanwhile the Lieutenant proposed making frequent excursions on the ice-field + +encircling the island, in order to ascertain its thickness, its suitability for + +the passage of sledges, and the best route to take across it so as to reach the + +shores of Asia or America.</p> + +<p>"Of course," observed Hobson to Mrs Barnett and Sergeant Long, "we would all + +rather make for Russian America than Asia, if a choice is open to us."</p> + +<p>"Kalumah will be very useful to us," said Mrs Barnett, "for as a native she + +will be thoroughly acquainted with the whole of Alaska."</p> + +<p>"Yes, indeed," replied Hobson, "her arrival was most fortunate for us. Thanks + +to her, we shall be easily able to get to the settlement of Fort Michael on + +Norton Sound, perhaps even to New Archangel, a good deal farther south, where we + +can pass the rest of the winter."</p> + +<p>"Poor Fort Hope!" exclaimed Mrs Barnett, "it goes to my heart to think of + +abandoning it on this island. It has been built at the cost of so much trouble + +and fatigue, everything about it has been so admirably arranged by you, + +Lieutenant! I feel as if my heart would break when we leave it finally."</p> + +<p>"You will not suffer more than I shall, madam," replied Hobson, "and perhaps + +not so much. It is the chief work of my life; I have devoted all my powers to + +the foundation of Fort Hope, so unfortunately named, and I shall never cease to + +regret having to leave it. And what will the Company say which confided this + +task to me, for after all I am` but its humble agent."</p> + +<p>"It will say," cried Mrs Barnett with enthusiasm, "it will say that you have + +done your duty, that you are not responsible for the caprices of nature, which + +is ever more powerful than man. It will understand that you could not foresee + +what has happened, for it was beyond the penetration of the most far-sighted + +man, and it will know that it owes the preservation of the whole party to your + +prudence and moral courage."</p> + +<p>"Thank you, madam," replied the Lieutenant, pressing Mrs Barnett's hand, + +"thank you for your warm-hearted words. But I have had some experience of men, + +and I know that success is always admired and failure condemned. But the will of + +Heaven be done!"</p> + +<p>Sergeant Long, anxious to turn the Lieutenant from his melancholy thoughts, + +now began to talk about the preparations for the approaching departure, and + +asked if it was not time to tell his comrades the truth.</p> + +<p>"Let us wait a little longer," replied Hobson. "We have saved the poor + +fellows much anxiety and worry already, let us keep silent until the day is + +fixed for the start, and then we will reveal the whole truth."</p> + +<p>This point being decided, the ordinary occupations of the factory went on for + +a few weeks longer.</p> + +<p>How different was the situation of the colonists a year ago, when they were + +all looking forward to the future in happy unconsciousness!</p> + +<p>A year ago the first symptoms of the cold season were appearing, even as they + +were now. The "young ice" was gradually forming along the coast. The lagoon, its + +waters being quieter than those of the sea, was the first to freeze over. The + +temperature remained about one or two degrees above freezing point in the day, + +and fell to three or four degrees below in the night. Hobson again made his men + +assume their winter garments, the linen vests and furs before described. The + +condensers were again set up inside the house, the air vessel and air-pumps were + +cleaned, the traps were set round the palisades on different parts of Cape + +Bathurst, and Marbre and Sabine got plenty of game, and finally the last touches + +were given to the inner rooms of the principal house.</p> + +<p>Although Fort Hope was now about two degrees farther north than at the same + +time the year before, there was no sensible difference in the state of the + +temperature. The fact is, the distance between the seventieth and seventy-second + +parallels is not great enough to affect the mean height of the thermometer, on + +the contrary, it really seemed to be less cold than at the beginning of the + +winter before. Perhaps, however, that was because the colonists were now, to a + +certain extent, acclimatised.</p> + +<p>Certainly the winter did not set in so abruptly as last time. The weather was + +very damp, and the atmosphere was always charged with vapour, which fell now as + +rain now as snow. In Lieutenant Hobson's opinion, at least, it was not nearly + +cold enough.</p> + +<p>The sea froze all round the island, it is true, but not in a regular or + +continuous sheet of ice. Large blackish patches here and there showed that the + +icicles were not thoroughly cemented together. Loud resonant noises were + +constantly heard, produced by the breaking of the ice field when the rain melted + +the imperfectly welded edges of the blocks composing it. There was no rapid + +accumulation of lump upon lump such as is generally seen in intense cold. + +Icebergs and hummocks were few and scattered, and no ice-wall as yet shut in the + +horizon.</p> + +<p>"This season would have been just the thing for the explorers of the North + +West Passage, or the seekers of the North Pole," repeated Sergeant Long again + +and again, "but it is most unfavourable for us, and very much against our ever + +getting back to our own land!"</p> + +<p>This went on throughout October, and Hobson announced that the mean + +temperature was no lower than 32? Fahrenheit, and it is well known that several + +days of cold, 7? or 8? below zero, are required for the sea to freeze hard.</p> + +<p>Had proof been needed that the ice-field was impassable, a fact noticed by + +Mrs Barnett and Hobson would have sufficed.</p> + +<p>The animals imprisoned in the island, the furred animals, reindeer, wolves, + +&c., would have left the island had it been possible to cross the sea, but + +they continued to gather in large numbers round the factory, and to seek the + +vicinity of man. The wolves came actually within musket-range of the enceinte to + +devour the martens and Polar hares, which were their only food. The famished + +reindeer having neither moss nor herbs on which to browse, roved about Cape + +Bathurst in herds. A solitary bear, no doubt the one to which Mrs Barnett and + +Kalumah felt they owed a debt of gratitude, often passed to and fro amongst the + +trees of the woods, on the banks of the lagoon, and the presence of all these + +animals, especially of the ruminants, which require an exclusively vegetable + +diet, proved that flight was impossible.</p> + +<p>We have said that the thermometer remained at freezing point, and Hobson + +found on consulting his journal that at the same time the year before, it had + +already marked 20? Fahrenheit below zero, proving how unequally cold is + +distributed in the capricious Polar regions.</p> + +<p>The colonists therefore did not suffer much, and were not confined to the + +house at all. It was, however, very damp indeed, rain mixed with snow fell + +constantly, and the falling of the barometer proved that the atmosphere was + +charged with vapour.</p> + +<p>Throughout October the Lieutenant and Long made many excursions to ascertain + +the state of the ice-field in the offing; one day they went to Cape Michael, + +another to the edge of the former Walruses' Bay, anxious to see if it would be + +possible to cross to the continent of America or Asia, or if the start would + +have to be put off.</p> + +<p>But the surface of the ice-field was covered with puddles of water, and in + +some parts riddled with holes, which would certainly have been impassable for + +sledges. It seemed as if it would be scarcely safe for a single traveller to + +venture across the half-liquid, half-solid masses. It was easy to see that the + +cold had been neither severe nor equally maintained, for the ice consisted of an + +accumulation of sharp points, crystals, prisms, polyhedrons, and figures of + +every variety, like an aggregation of stalactites. It was more like a glacier + +than a "field," and even if it had been practicable, walking on it would have + +been very tiring.</p> + +<p>Hobson and Long managed with great difficulty to scramble over a mile or two + +towards the south, but at the expense of a vast amount of time, so that they + +were compelled to admit that they must wait some time yet, and they returned to + +Fort Hope disappointed and disheartened.</p> + +<p>The first days of November came, and the temperature fell a little, but only + +a very few degrees, which was not nearly enough. Victoria Island was wrapped in + +damp fogs, and the lamps had to be lit during the day. It was necessary, + +however, to economise the oil as much as possible, as the supply was running + +short. No fresh stores had been brought by Captain Craventy's promised convoy, + +and there were no more walruses to be hunted. Should the dark winter be + +prolonged, the colonists would be compelled to have recourse to the fat of + +animals, perhaps even to the resin of the firs, to get a little light. The days + +were already very short, and the pale disc of the sun, yielding no warmth, and + +deprived of all its brightness, only appeared above the horizon for a few hours + +at a time. Yes, winter had come with its mists, its rain, and its snow, but + +without the long desired cold.</p> + +<p>On the 11th November something of a fete was held at Fort Hope. Mrs Joliffe + +served up a few extras at dinner, for it was the anniversary of the birth of + +little Michael Mac-Nab. He was now a year old, and was the delight of everybody. + +He had large blue eyes and fair curly hair, like his father, the head carpenter, + +who was very proud of the resemblance. At dessert the baby was solemnly weighed. + +It was worth something to see him struggling in the scales, and to hear his + +astonished cries! He actually weighed thirty-four pounds! The announcement of + +this wonderful weight was greeted with loud cheers, and Mrs Mac-Nab was + +congratulated by everybody on her fine boy. Why Corporal Joliffe felt that he + +ought to share the compliments it is difficult to imagine, unless it was as a + +kind of foster-father or nurse to the baby. He had carried the child about, + +dandled and rocked him so often, that he felt he had something to do with his + +specific weight!</p> + +<p>The next day, November 12th, the sun did not appear above the horizon. The + +long Polar night was beginning nine days sooner than it had done the year + +before, in consequence of the difference in the latitude of Victoria Island then + +and now.</p> + +<p>The disappearance of the sun did not, however, produce any change in the + +state of the atmosphere. The temperature was as changeable as ever. The + +thermometer fell one day and rose the next. Rain and snow succeeded each other. + +The wind was soft, and did not settle in any quarter, but often veered round to + +every point of the compass in the course of a single day. The constant damp was + +very unhealthy, and likely to lead to scorbutic affections amongst the + +colonists, but fortunately, although the lime juice and lime lozenges were + +running short, and no fresh stock had been obtained, the scurvy-grass and sorrel + +had yielded a very good crop, and, by the advice of Lieutenant Hobson, a portion + +of them was eaten daily.</p> + +<p>Every effort must, however, be made to get away from Fort Hope. Under the + +circumstances, three months would scarcely be long enough for them all to get to + +the nearest continent. It was impossible to risk being overtaken by the thaw on + +the ice-field, and therefore if they started at all it must be at the end of + +November.</p> + +<p>The journey would have been difficult enough, even if the ice had been + +rendered solid everywhere by a severe winter, and in this uncertain weather it + +was a most serious matter.</p> + +<p>On the 13th November, Hobson, Mrs Barnett, and the Sergeant met to decide on + +the day of departure. The Sergeant was of opinion that they ought to leave the + +island as soon as possible.</p> + +<p>"For," he said, "we must make allowance for all the possible delays during a + +march of six hundred miles. We ought to reach the continent before March, or we + +may be surprised by the thaw, and then we shall be in a worse predicament than + +we are on our island."</p> + +<p>"But," said Mrs Barnett, "is the sea firm enough for us to cross it?"</p> + +<p>"I think it is," said Long, "and the ice gets thicker every day. The + +barometer, too, is gradually rising, and by the time our preparations are + +completed, which will be in about another week, I think, I hope that the really + +cold weather will have set in."</p> + +<p>"The winter has begun very badly," said Hobson, "in fact everything seems to + +combine against us. Strange seasons have often been experienced on these seas, I + +have heard of whalers being able to navigate in places where, even in the summer + +at another time they would not have had an inch of water beneath their keels. In + +my opinion there is not a day to be lost, and I cannot sufficiently regret that + +the ordinary temperature of these regions does not assist us."</p> + +<p>"It will later," said Mrs Barnett, "and we must be ready to take advantage of + +every chance in our favour. When do you propose starting, Lieutenant?"</p> + +<p>"At the end of November at the latest," replied Hobson, "but if in a week + +hence our preparations are finished, and the route appears practicable, we will + +start then."</p> + +<p>"Very well," said Long, "we will get ready without losing an instant."</p> + +<p>"Then," said Mrs Barnett, "you will now tell our companions of the situation + +in which they are placed?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam, the moment to speak and the time for action have alike + +arrived."</p> + +<p>"And when do you propose enlightening them?"</p> + +<p>"At once. Sergeant Long," he added, turning to his subordinate, who at once + +drew himself up in a military attitude, "call all your men together in the large + +room to receive a communication."</p> + +<p>Sergeant Long touched his cap, and turning on his heel left the room without + +a word.</p> + +<p>For some minutes Mrs Barnett and Hobson were left alone, but neither of them + +spoke.</p> + +<p>The Sergeant quickly returned, and told Hobson that his orders were + +executed.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant and the lady at once went into the large room. All the members + +of the colony, men and women, were assembled in the dimly lighted room.</p> + +<p>Hobson came forward, and standing in the centre of the group said very + +gravely-</p> + +<p>"My friends, until to-day I have felt it my duty, in order to spare you + +useless anxiety, to conceal from you the situation of our fort. An earthquake + +separated us from the continent. Cape Bathurst has broken away from the + +mainland. Our peninsula is but an island of ice, a wandering island"--</p> + +<p>At this moment Marbre stepped forward, and said quietly.</p> + +<p>"We knew it, sir!"</p> +<a name="BXII" id="BXII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XII.</h4> + +<h4><i>A CHANCE TO BE TRIED.</i></h4> + +<p>The brave fellows knew it then! And that they might not add to the cares of + +their chief, they had pretended to know nothing, and had worked away at the + +preparations for the winter with the same zeal as the year before.</p> + +<p>Tears of emotion stood in Hobson's eyes, and he made no attempt to conceal + +them, but seizing Marbre's outstretched hand, he pressed it in his own.</p> + +<p>Yes, the soldiers all knew it, for Marbre had guessed it long ago. The + +filling of the reindeer trap with salt water, the non-arrival of the detachment + +from Fort Reliance, the observations of latitude and longitude taken every day, + +which would have been useless on firm ground, the precautions observed by Hobson + +to prevent any one seeing him take the bearings, the fact of the animals + +remaining on the island after winter had set in, and the change in the position + +of the cardinal points during the last few days, which they had noticed at once, + +had all been tokens easily interpreted by the inhabitants of Fort Hope. The + +arrival of Kalumah had puzzled them, but they had concluded that she had been + +thrown upon the island in the storm, and they were right, as we are aware.</p> + +<p>Marbre, upon whom the truth had first dawned, confided his suspicions to + +Mac-Nab the carpenter and Rae the blacksmith. All three faced the situation + +calmly enough, and agreed that they ought to tell their comrades and wives, but + +decided to let the Lieutenant think they knew nothing, and to obey him without + +question as before.</p> + +<p>"You are indeed brave fellows, my friends," exclaimed Mrs Barnett, who was + +much touched by this delicate feeling, "you are true soldiers!"</p> + +<p>"Our Lieutenant may depend upon us," said Mac-Nab, "he has done his duty, and + +we will do ours."</p> + +<p>"I know you will, dear comrades," said Hobson, "and if only Heaven will help + +and not forsake us, we will help ourselves."</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant then related all that had happened since the time when the + +earthquake broke the isthmus, and converted the districts round Cape Bathurst + +into an island. He told how, when the sea became free from ice in the spring, + +the new island had been drifted more than two hundred miles away from the coast + +by an unknown current, how the hurricane had driven it back within sight of + +land, how it had again been carried away in the night of the 31st August, and, + +lastly, how Kalumah had bravely risked her life to come to the aid of her + +European friends. Then he enumerated the changes the island had undergone, + +explaining how the warmer waters had worn it away, and his fear that it might be + +carried to the Pacific, or seized by the Kamtchatka Current, concluding his + +narrative by stating that the wandering island had finally stopped on the 27th + +of last September.</p> + +<p>The chart of the Arctic seas was then brought, and Hobson pointed out the + +position occupied by the island-six hundred miles from all land.</p> + +<p>He ended by saying that the situation was extremely dangerous, that the + +island would inevitably be crushed when the ice broke up, and that, before + +having recourse to the boat-which could not be used until the next summer-they + +must try to get back to the American continent by crossing the ice-field.</p> + +<p>"We shall have six hundred miles to go in the cold and darkness of the Polar + +night. It will be hard work, my friends, but you know as well as I do that there + +can be no shrinking from the task."</p> + +<p>"When you give the signal to start, Lieutenant, we will follow you," said + +Mac-Nab.</p> + +<p>All being of one mind, the preparations for departure were from that date + +rapidly pushed forward. The men bravely faced the fact that they would have six + +hundred miles to travel under very trying circumstances. Sergeant Long + +superintended the works, whilst Hobson, the two hunters, and Mrs Barnett, often + +went to test the firmness of the ice-field. Kalumah frequently accompanied them, + +and her remarks, founded on experience, might possibly be of great use to the + +Lieutenant. Unless they were prevented they were to start on the 20th November, + +and there was not a moment to lose.</p> + +<p>As Hobson had foreseen, the wind having risen, the temperature fell slightly, + +and the column of mercury marked 24? Fahrenheit.</p> + +<p>Snow, which soon became hardened, replaced the rain of the preceding days. A + +few more days of such cold and sledges could be used. The little bay hollowed + +out of the cliffs of Cape Michael was partly filled with ice and snow; but it + +must not be forgotten that its calmer waters froze more quickly than those of + +the open sea, which were not yet in a satisfactory condition.</p> + +<p>The wind continued to blow almost incessantly, and with considerable + +violence, but the motion of waves interfered with the regular formation and + +consolidation of the ice. Large pools of water occurred here and there between + +the pieces of ice, and it was impossible to attempt to cross it.</p> + +<p>"The weather is certainly getting colder," observed Mrs Barnett to Lieutenant + +Hobson, as they were exploring the south of the island together on the 10th + +November, "the temperature is becoming lower and lower, and these liquid spaces + +will soon freeze over."</p> + +<p>"I think you are right, madam," replied Hobson, "but the way in which they + +will freeze over will not be very favourable to our plans. The pieces of ice are + +small, and their jagged edges will stick up all over the surface, making it very + +rough, so that if our sledges get over it at all, it will only be with very + +great difficulty."</p> + +<p>"But," resumed Mrs Barnett, "if I am not mistaken, a heavy fall of snow, + +lasting a few days or even a few hours, would suffice to level the entire + +surface!"</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes," replied Hobson, "but if snow should fall, it will be because the + +temperature has risen; and if it rises, the ice-field will break up again, so + +that either contingency will be against us!"</p> + +<p>"It really would be a strange freak of fortune if we should experience a + +temperate instead of an Arctic winter in the midst of the Polar Sea!" observed + +Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"It has happened before, madam, it has happened before. Let me remind you of + +the great severity of last cold season; now it has been noticed that two long + +bitter winters seldom succeed each other, and the whalers of the northern seas + +know it well. A bitter winter when we should have been glad of a mild one, and a + +mild one when we so sorely need the reverse. It must be owned, we have been + +strangely unfortunate thus far! And when I think of six hundred miles to cross + +with women and a child!"...</p> + +<p>And Hobson pointed to the vast white plain, with strange irregular markings + +like <i>guipure</i> work, stretching away into the infinite</p> + +<p>"I know you will, dear comrades," said Hobson, "and if only Heaven will help + +and not forsake us, we will help ourselves."</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant then related all that had happened since the time when the + +earthquake broke the isthmus, and converted the districts round Cape Bathurst + +into an island. He told how, when the sea became free from ice in the spring, + +the new island had been drifted more than two hundred miles away from the coast + +by an unknown current, how the hurricane had driven it luck within sight of + +land, how it had again been carried away in the night of the 31st August, and, + +lastly, how Kalumah had bravely risked her life to come to the aid of her + +European friends. Then he enumerated the changes the island had undergone, + +explaining how the warmer waters had worn it away, and his fear that it might be + +carried to the Pacific, or seized by the Kamtchatka Current, concluding his + +narrative by stating that the wandering island had finally stopped on the 27th + +of last September.</p> + +<p>The chart of the Arctic seas was then brought, and Hobson pointed out the + +position occupied by the island-six hundred miles from all land.</p> + +<p>He ended by saying that the situation was extremely dangerous, that the + +island would inevitably be crushed when the ice broke up, and that, before + +having recourse to the boat-which could not be used until the next summer-they + +must try to get back to the American continent by crossing the ice-field.</p> + +<p>"We shall have six hundred miles to go in the cold and darkness of the Polar + +night. It will be hard work, my friends but you know as well as I do that there + +can be no shirking from the task" "When you give the signal to start, + +Lieutenant, we will follow you," said Mac-Nab.</p> + +<p>All being of one mind, the preparations for departure were from that date + +rapidly pushed forward. The men bravely faced the fact that they would have six + +hundred miles to travel under very trying circumstances. Sergeant Long + +superintended the works, whilst Hobson, the two hunters, and Mrs Barnett, often + +went to test the firmness of the ice-field Kalumah frequently accompanied them, + +and her remarks, founded on experience, might possibly be of great use to the + +Lieutenant. Unless they were prevented they were to start on the 20th November, + +and there was not a moment to lose.</p> + +<p>As Hobson had foreseen, the wind having risen, the temperature fell slightly, + +and the column of mercury marked 24? Fahrenheit.</p> + +<p>Snow, which soon became hardened, replaced the rain of the preceding days. A + +few more days of such cold and sledges could be used The little bay hollowed out + +of the cliffs of Cape Michael was partly filled with ice and snow, but it must + +not be forgotten that its calmer waters froze more quickly than those of the + +open sea, which were not yet in a satisfactory condition.</p> + +<p>The wind continued to blow almost incessantly, and with considerable + +violence, but the motion of waves interfered with the regular formation and + +consolidation of the ice. Large pools of water occurred here and there between + +the pieces of ice, and it was impossible to attempt to cross it.</p> + +<p>"The weather is certainly getting colder," observed Mrs Barnett to Lieutenant + +Hobson, as they were exploring the south of the island together on the 10th + +November, "the temperature is becoming lower and lower, and these liquid spaces + +will soon freeze over."</p> + +<p>"I think you are right, madam," replied Hobson, "but the way in which they + +will freeze over will not be very favourable to our plans. The pieces of ice are + +small, and their jagged edges will stick up all over the surface, making it very + +rough, so that if our sledges get over it at all, it will only be with very + +great difficulty."</p> + +<p>"But," resumed Mrs Barnett, "if I am not mistaken, a heavy fall of snow, + +lasting a few days or even a few hours, would suffice to level the entire + +surface!"</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes," replied Hobson, "but if snow should fall, it will be because the + +temperature has risen; and if it rises, the ice-field will break up again, so + +that either contingency will be against us!"</p> + +<p>"It really would be a strange freak of fortune if we should experience a + +temperate instead of an Arctic winter in the midst of the Polar Sea!" observed + +Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"It has happened before, madam, it has happened before. Let me remind you of + +the great severity of last cold season; now it has been noticed that two long + +bitter winters seldom succeed each other, and the whalers of the northern seas + +know it well. A bitter winter when we should have been glad of a mild one, and a + +mild one when we so sorely need the reverse. It must be owned, we have been + +strangely unfortunate thus far! And when I think of six hundred miles to cross + +with women and a child!"...</p> + +<p>And Hobson pointed to the vast white plain, with strange irregular markings + +like <i>guipure</i> work, stretching away into the infinite distance. Sad and + +desolate enough it looked, the imperfectly frozen surface cracking every now and + +then with an ominous sound. A pale moon, its light half quenched in the damp + +mists, rose but a few degrees above the gloomy horizon and shot a few faint + +beams upon the melancholy scene. The half-darkness and the refraction combined + +doubled the size of every object. Icebergs of moderate height assumed gigantic + +proportions, and were in some cases distorted into the forms of fabulous + +monsters. Birds passed overhead with loud flapping of wings, and in consequence + +of this optical illusion the smallest of them appeared as large as a condor or a + +vulture. In the midst of the icebergs yawned apparently huge black tunnels, into + +which the boldest man would scarcely dare to venture, and now and then sudden + +convulsions took place, as the icebergs, worn away at the base, heeled over with + +a crash, the sonorous echoes taking up the sounds and carrying them along. The + +rapid changes resembled the transformation scenes of fairyland, and terrible + +indeed must all those phenomena have appeared to the luckless colonists who were + +about to venture across the ice-field!</p> + +<p>In spite of her moral and physical courage Mrs Barnett could not control an + +involuntary shudder. Soul and body alike shrunk from the awful prospect, and she + +was tempted to shut her eyes and stop her ears that she might see and hear no + +more. When the moon was for a moment veiled behind a heavy cloud, the gloom of + +the Polar landscape became still more awe-inspiring, and before her mind's eye + +rose a vision of the caravan of men and women struggling across these vast + +solitudes in the midst of hurricanes, snow-storms, avalanches, and in the thick + +darkness of the Arctic night!</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett, however, forced herself to look; she wished to accustom her eyes + +to these scenes, and to teach herself not to shrink from facing their terrors. + +But as she gazed a cry suddenly burst from her lips, and seizing Hobson's hand, + +she pointed to a huge object, of ill-defined dimensions, moving about in the + +uncertain light, scarcely a hundred paces from where they stood.</p> + +<p>It was a white monster of immense size, more than a hundred feet high. It was + +pacing slowly along over the broken ice, bounding from one piece to another, and + +beating the air with its huge feet, between which it could have held ten large + +dogs at least. It, too, seemed to be seeking a practicable path across the + +ice-it, too, seemed anxious to fly from the doomed island. The ice gave way + +beneath its weight, and it had often considerable difficulty in regaining its + +feet.</p> + +<p>The monster made its way thus for about a quarter of a mile across the ice, + +and then, its farther progress being barred, it turned round and advanced + +towards the spot where Mrs Barnett and the Lieutenant stood.</p> + +<p>Hobson seized the gun which was slung over his shoulder and presented it at + +the animal, but almost immediately lowering the weapon, he said to Mrs + +Barnett-</p> + +<p>"A bear, madam, only a bear, the size of which has been greatly magnified by + +refraction."</p> + +<p>It was, in fact, a Polar bear, and Mrs Barnett drew a long breath of relief + +as she understood the optical illusion of which she had been the victim. Then an + +idea struck her.</p> + +<p>"It is my bear!" she exclaimed, "the bear with the devotion of a Newfoundland + +dog! Probably the only one still on the island. But what is he doing here?"</p> + +<p>"He is trying to get away," replied Hobson, shaking his head. "He is trying + +to escape from this doomed island, and he cannot do so! He is proving to us that + +we cannot pass where he has had to turn back!"</p> + +<p>Hobson was right, the imprisoned animal had tried to leave the island and to + +get to the continent, and having failed it was returning to the coast. Shaking + +its head and growling, it passed some twenty paces from the two watchers, and, + +either not seeing them or disdaining to take any notice of them, it walked + +heavily on towards Cape Michael, and soon disappeared behind the rising + +ground.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson and Mrs Barnett returned sadly and silently to the + +fort.</p> + +<p>The preparations for departure went on as rapidly, however, as if it were + +possible to leave the island. Nothing was neglected to promote the success of + +the undertaking, every possible danger had to be foreseen, and not only had the + +ordinary difficulties and dangers of a journey across the ice to be allowed for, + +but also the sudden changes of weather peculiar to the Polar regions, which so + +obstinately resist every attempt to explore them.</p> + +<p>The teams of dogs required special attention. They were allowed to run about + +near the fort, that they might regain the activity of which too long a rest had, + +to some extent, deprived them, and they were soon in a condition to make a long + +march.</p> + +<p>The sledges were carefully examined and repaired. The rough surface of the + +ice-field would give them many violent shocks, and they were therefore + +thoroughly overhauled by Mac-Nab and his men, the inner framework and the curved + +fronts being carefully repaired and strengthened.</p> + +<p>Two large waggon sledges were built, one for the transport of provisions, the + +other for the peltries. These were to be drawn by the tamed reindeer, which had + +been well trained for the service. The peltries or furs were articles of luxury + +with which it was not perhaps quite prudent to burden the travellers, but Hobson + +was anxious to consider the interests of the Company as much as possible, + +although he was resolved to abandon them, <i>en route</i>, if they harassed or + +impeded his march. No fresh risk was run of injury of the furs, for of course + +they would have been lost if left at the factory.</p> + +<p>It was of course quite another matter with the provisions, of which a good + +and plentiful supply was absolutely necessary. It was of no use to count on the + +product of the chase this time. As soon as the passage of the ice-field became + +practicable, all the edible game would get on ahead and reach the mainland + +before the caravan. One waggon sledge was therefore packed with salt meat, + +corned beef, hare pates, dried fish, biscuits-the stock of which was + +unfortunately getting low-and an ample reserve of sorrel, scurvy-grass, rum, + +spirits of wine, for making warm drinks, &c. &c. Hobson would have been + +glad to take some fuel with him, as he would not meet with a tree, a shrub, or a + +bit of moss throughout the march of six hundred miles, nor could he hope for + +pieces of wreck or timber cast up by the sea, but he did not dare to overload + +his sledges with wood. Fortunately there was no lack of warm comfortable + +garments, and in case of need they could draw upon the reserve of peltries in + +the waggon.</p> + +<p>Thomas Black, who since his misfortune had altogether retired from the world, + +shunning his companions, taking part in none of the consultations, and remaining + +shut up in his own room, reappeared as soon as the day of departure was + +definitely fixed. But even then he attended to nothing but the sledge which was + +to carry his person, his instruments, and his registers. Always very silent, it + +was now impossible to get a word out of him. He had forgotten everything, even + +that he was a scientific man, and since he had been deceived about the eclipse, + +since the solution of the problem of the red prominences of the moon had escaped + +him, he had taken no notice of any of the peculiar phenomena of the high + +latitudes, such as the Aurora Borealis, halos, parhelia, &c.</p> + +<p>During the last few days every one worked so hard that all was ready for the + +start on the morning of the 18th November.</p> + +<p>But, alas! the ice-field was still impassable. Although the thermometer had + +fallen slightly, the cold had not been severe enough to freeze the surface of + +the sea, with any uniformity, and the snow which fell was fine and intermittent. + +Hobson, Marbre, and Sabine went along the coast every day from Cape Michael to + +what was once the corner of the old Walruses' Bay. They even ventured out about + +a mile and a half upon the ice-field, but were compelled to admit that it was + +broken by rents, crevasses, and fissures in every direction. Not only would it + +be impossible for sledges to cross it, it was dangerous for unencumbered + +pedestrians. Hobson and his two men underwent the greatest fatigue in these + +short excursions, and more than once they ran a risk of being unable to get back + +to Victoria Island across the ever-changing, ever-moving blocks of ice.</p> + +<p>Really all nature seemed to be in league against the luckless colonists.</p> + +<p>On the 18th and 19th November, the thermometer rose, whilst the barometer + +fell. Fatal results were to be feared from this change in the state of the + +atmosphere. Whilst the cold decreased the sky became covered with clouds, which + +presently resolved themselves into heavy rain instead of the sadly-needed snow, + +the column of mercury standing at 34? Fahrenheit. These showers of comparatively + +warm water melted the snow and ice in many places, and the result can easily be + +imagined. It really seemed as if a thaw were setting in, and there were symptoms + +of a general breaking up of the ice-field. In spite of the dreadful weather, + +however, Hobson went to the south of the island every day, and every day + +returned more disheartened than before.</p> + +<p>On the 20th, a tempest resembling in violence that of the month before, broke + +upon the gloomy Arctic solitudes, compelling the colonists to give up going out, + +and to remain shut up in Fort Hope for two days.</p> +<a name="BXIII" id="BXIII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XIII.</h4> + +<h4><i>ACROSS THE ICE-FIELD.</i></h4> + +<p>At last, on the 22d of November, the weather moderated. In a few hours the + +storm suddenly ceased. The wind veered round to the north, and the thermometer + +fell several degrees. A few birds capable of a long-sustained flight took wing + +and disappeared. There really seemed to be a likelihood that the temperature was + +at last going to become what it ought to be at this time of the year in such an + +elevated latitude. The colonists might well regret that it was not now what it + +had been during the last cold season, when the column of mercury fell to 72? + +Fahrenheit below zero.</p> + +<p>Hobson determined no longer to delay leaving Victoria Island, and on the + +morning of the 22d the whole of the little colony was ready to leave the island, + +which was now firmly welded to the ice-field, and by its means connected with + +the American continent, six hundred miles away.</p> + +<p>At half-past eleven A.M., Hobson gave the signal of departure. The sky was + +grey but clear, and lighted up from the horizon to the zenith by a magnificent + +Aurora Borealis. The dogs were harnessed to the sledges, and three couple of + +reindeer to the waggon sledges. Silently they wended their way towards Cape + +Michael, where they would quit the island, properly so called, for the + +ice-field.</p> + +<p>The caravan at first skirted along the wooded hill on the east of Lake + +Barnett, but as they were rounding the coiner all paused to look round for the + +last time at Cape Bathurst, which they were leaving never to return. A few + +snow-encrusted rafters stood out in the light of the Aurora Borealis, a few + +white lines marked the boundaries of the enceinte of the factory, a-white mass + +here and there, a few blue wreaths of smoke from the expiring fire never to be + +rekindled; this was all that could be seen of Fort Hope, now useless and + +deserted, but erected at the cost of so much labour and so much anxiety.</p> + +<p>"Farewell, farewell, to our poor Arctic home!" exclaimed Mrs. Barnett, waving + +her hand for the last time; and all sadly and silently resumed their + +journey.</p> + +<p>At one o'clock the detachment arrived at Cape Michael, after having rounded + +the gulf which the cold had imperfectly frozen over. Thus far the difficulties + +of the journey had not been very great, for the ground of the island was smooth + +compared to the ice-field, which was strewn with icebergs, hummocks, and packs, + +between which, practicable passes had to be found at the cost of an immense + +amount of fatigue.</p> + +<p>Towards the evening of the same day the party had advanced several miles on + +the ice-field, and a halt for the night was ordered; the encampment was to be + +formed by hollowing out snow-houses in the Esquimaux style. The work was quickly + +accomplished with the ice-chisels, and at eight o'clock, after a salt meat + +supper, every one had crept into the holes, which are much warmer than anybody + +would imagine.</p> + +<p>Before retiring, however, Mrs. Barnett asked the Lieutenant how far he + +thought they had come.</p> + +<p>"Not more than ten miles, I think," replied Hobson.</p> + +<p>"Ten from six hundred!" exclaimed Mrs Barnett. "At this rate, it will take us + +three months to get to the American continent!"</p> + +<p>"Perhaps more, madam," replied Hobson, "for we shall not be able to get on + +faster than this. We are not travelling as we were last year over the frozen + +plains between Fort Reliance and Cape Bathurst; but on a distorted ice-field + +crushed by the pressure of the icebergs across which there is no easy route. I + +expect to meet with almost insurmountable difficulties on the way; may we be + +able to conquer them! It is not of so much importance, however, to march quickly + +as to preserve our health, and I shall indeed think myself fortunate if all my + +comrades answer to their names in the roll-call on our arrival at Fort Reliance. + +Heaven grant we may have all landed at some point, no matter where, of the + +American continent in three months' time; if so, we shall never be able to + +return thanks enough."</p> + +<p>The night passed without incident; but during the long vigil which he kept, + +Hobson fancied he noticed certain ill-omened tremblings on the spot he had + +chosen for his encampment, and could not but fear that the vast ice-field was + +insufficiently cemented, and that there would be numerous rents in the surface + +which would greatly impede his progress, and render communication with firm + +ground very uncertain. Moreover, before he started, he had observed that none of + +the animals had left the vicinity of the fort, and they would certainly have + +sought a warmer climate had not their instinct warned them of obstacles in their + +way. Yet the Lieutenant felt that he had only done his duty in making this + +attempt to restore his little colony to an inhabited land, before the setting in + +of the thaw, and whether he succeeded or had to turn back he would have no + +reason to reproach himself.</p> + +<p>The next day, November 23d, the detachment could not even advance ten miles + +towards the east, so great were the difficulties met with. The ice-field was + +fearfully distorted, and here and there many layers of ice were piled one upon + +another, doubtless driven along by the irresistible force of the ice-wall into + +the vast funnel of the Arctic Ocean. Hence a confusion of masses of ice, which + +looked as if they had been suddenly dropped by a hand incapable of holding them, + +and strewn about in every direction.</p> + +<p>It was clear that a caravan of sledges, drawn by dogs and reindeer, could not + +possibly get over these blocks; and it was equally clear that a path could not + +be cut through them with the hatchet or ice-chisel. Some of the icebergs assumed + +extraordinary forms, and there were groups which looked like towns falling into + +ruins. Some towered three or four hundred feet above the level of the ice-field, + +and were capped with tottering masses of debris, which the slightest shake or + +shock or gust of wind would bring down in avalanches.</p> + +<p>The greatest precautions were, therefore, necessary in rounding these + +ice-mountains, and orders were given not to speak above a whisper, and not to + +excite the dogs by cracking the whips in these dangerous passes.</p> + +<p>But an immense amount of time was lost in looking for practicable passages, + +and the travellers were worn out with fatigue, often going ten miles round + +before they could advance one in the required direction towards the east. The + +only comfort was that the ground still remained firm beneath their feet.</p> + +<p>On the 24th November, however, fresh obstacles arose, which Hobson really + +feared, with considerable reason, would be insurmountable.</p> + +<p>After getting over one wall of ice which rose some twenty miles from Victoria + +Island, the party found themselves on a much less undulating ice-field, the + +different portions of which had evidently not been subjected to any great + +pressure. It was clear that in consequence of the direction of the currents the + +influence of the masses of permanent ice in the north had not here been felt, + +and Hobson and his comrades soon found that this ice-field was intersected with + +wide and deep crevasses not yet frozen over. The temperature here was + +comparatively warm, and the thermometer maintained a mean height of more than + +34? Fahrenheit. Salt water, as is well known, does not freeze so readily as + +fresh, but requires several degrees of cold below freezing point before it + +becomes solidified, and the sea was therefore still liquid. All the icebergs and + +floes here had come from latitudes farther north, and, if we may so express it, + +lived upon the cold they had brought with them. The whole of the southern + +portion of the Arctic Ocean was most imperfectly frozen, and a warm rain was + +falling, which hastened the dissolution of what ice there was.</p> + +<p>On the 24th November the advance of the travellers was absolutely arrested by + +a crevasse full of rough water strewn with small icicles-a crevasse not more + +than a hundred feet wide, it is true, but probably many miles long.</p> + +<p>For two whole hours the party skirted along the western edge of this gap, in + +the hope of coming to the end of it and getting to the other side, so as to + +resume their march to the east, but it was all in vain, they were obliged to + +give it up and encamp on the wrong side.</p> + +<p>Hobson and Long, however, proceeded for another quarter of a mile along the + +interminable crevasse, mentally cursing the mildness of the winter which had + +brought them into such a strait.</p> + +<p>"We must pass somehow," said Long, "for we can't stay where we are."</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes," replied the Lieutenant, "and we shall pass it, either by going up + +to the north, or down to the south, it must end somewhere. But after we have got + +round this we shall come to others, and so it will go on perhaps for hundred of + +miles, as long as this uncertain and most unfortunate weather continues!"</p> + +<p>"Well, Lieutenant, we must ascertain the truth once for all before we resume + +our journey," said the Sergeant.</p> + +<p>"We must indeed, Sergeant," replied Hobson firmly, "or we shall run a risk of + +not having crossed half the distance between us and America after travelling + +five or six hundred miles out of our way. Yes, before going farther, I must make + +quite sure of the state of the ice-field, and that is what I am about to + +do."</p> + +<p>And without another word Hobson stripped himself, plunged into the + +half-frozen water, and being a powerful swimmer a few strokes soon brought him + +to the other side of the crevasse, when he disappeared amongst the icebergs.</p> + +<p>A few hours later the Lieutenant reached the encampment, to which Long had + +already returned, in an exhausted condition. He took Mrs Barnett and the + +Sergeant aside, and told them that the ice-field was impracticable, adding-</p> + +<p>"Perhaps one man on foot without a sledge or any encumbrances might get + +across, but for a caravan it is impossible. The crevasses increase towards the + +east, and a boat would really be of more use than a sledge if we wish to reach + +the American coast"</p> + +<p>"Well," said Long, "if one man could cross, ought not one of us to attempt + +it, and go and seek assistance for the rest."</p> + +<p>"I thought of trying it myself," replied Hobson.</p> + +<p>"You, Lieutenant!"</p> + +<p>"You, sir!" cried Mrs Barnett and Long in one breath.</p> + +<p>These two exclamations showed Hobson how unexpected and inopportune his + +proposal appeared. How could he, the chief of the expedition, think of deserting + +those confided to him, even although it was in their interests and at great risk + +to himself. It was quite impossible, and the Lieutenant did not insist upon + +it.</p> + +<p>"Yes," he said, "I understand how it appears to you, my friends, and I will + +not abandon you. It would, indeed, be quite useless for any one to attempt the + +passage; he would not succeed, he would fall by the way, and find a watery grave + +when the thaw sets in. And even suppose he reached New Archangel, how could he + +come to our rescue? Would he charter a vessel to seek for us? Suppose he did, it + +could not start until after the thaw. And who can tell where the currents will + +then have taken Victoria Island, either yet farther north or to the Behring + +Sea!</p> + +<p>"Yes, Lieutenant, you are right," replied Long; "let us remain together, and + +if we are to be saved in a boat, there is Mac-Nab's on Victoria Island, and for + +it at least we shall not have to wait!"</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett had listened without saying a word, but she understood that the + +ice-field being impassible. they had now nothing to depend on but the + +carpenter's boat, and that they would have to wait bravely for the thaw.</p> + +<p>"What are you going to do, then?" she inquired at last.</p> + +<p>"Return to Victoria Island."</p> + +<p>"Let us return then, and God be with us!"</p> + +<p>The rest of the travellers had now gathered round the Lieutenant, and he laid + +his plans before them.</p> + +<p>At first all were disposed to rebel, the poor creatures had been counting on + +getting back to their homes, and felt absolutely crushed at the disappointment, + +but they soon recovered their dejection and declared themselves ready to + +obey.</p> + +<p>Hobson then told them the results of the examination he had just made. They + +learnt that the obstacles in their way on the east were so numerous that it + +would be absolutely impossible to pass with the sledges and their contents, and + +as the journey would last several months, the provisions, &c., could not be + +dispensed with.</p> + +<p>"We are now," added the Lieutenant, "cut off from all communication with the + +mainland, and by going farther towards the east we run a risk, after enduring + +great fatigues, of finding it impossible to get back to the island, now our only + +refuge. If the thaw should overtake us on the ice-field, we are lost. I have not + +disguised nor have I exaggerated the truth, and I know, my friends, that I am + +speaking to men who have found that I am not a man to turn back from + +difficulties. But I repeat, the task we have set ourselves is impossible!"</p> + +<p>The men trusted their chief implicitly. They knew his courage and energy, and + +felt as they listened to his words that it was indeed impossible to cross the + +ice. It was decided to start on the return journey to Fort Hope the next day, + +and it was accomplished under most distressing circumstances. The weather was + +dreadful, squalls swept down upon the ice-field, and rain fell in torrents. The + +difficulty of finding the way in the darkness through the labyrinth of icebergs + +can well be imagined!</p> + +<p>It took no less than four days and four nights to get back to the island. + +Several teams of dogs with their sledges fell into the crevasses, but thanks to + +Hobson's skill, prudence, and devotion, he lost not one of his party. But what + +terrible dangers and fatigues they had to go through, and how awful was the + +prospect of another winter on the wandering island to the unfortunate + +colonists!</p> +<a name="BXIV" id="BXIV"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XIV.</h4> + +<h4><i>THE WINTER MONTHS</i>.</h4> + +<p>The party did not arrive at Fort Hope until the 28th, after a most arduous + +journey. They had now nothing to depend on but the boat, and that they could not + +use until the sea was open, which would not be for six months.</p> + +<p>Preparations for another winter were therefore made. The sledges were + +unloaded, the provisions put back in the pantry, and the clothes, arms, furs, + +&c., in the magazines. The dogs returned to their dog-house, and the + +reindeer to their stable.</p> + +<p>Great was the despair of Thomas Black at this return to seclusion. The poor + +astronomer carried his instruments, his books, and his MSS. back to his room, + +and more angry than ever with "the evil fate which pursued him," he held himself + +aloof from everything which went on in the factory.</p> + +<p>All were again settled at their usual winter avocations the day after their + +arrival, and the monotonous winter life once more commenced. Needlework, mending + +the clothes, taking care of the furs, some of which might yet be saved, the + +observation of the weather, the examination of the ice-field, and reading aloud, + +were the daily occupations. Mrs Barnett was, as before, the leader in + +everything, and her influence was everywhere felt. If, as sometimes happened, + +now that all were uneasy about the future, a slight disagreement occurred + +between any of the soldiers, a few words from Mrs Barnett soon set matters + +straight, for she had acquired wonderful power over the little world in which + +she moved, and she always used it for the good of the community.</p> + +<p>Kalumah had become a great favourite with everybody, for she was always + +pleasant and obliging. Mrs Barnett had undertaken her education, and she got on + +quickly, for she was both intelligent and eager to learn. She improved her + +English speaking, and also taught her to read and write in that language. There + +were, however, twelve masters for Kalumah, all eager to assist in this branch of + +her education, as the soldiers had all been taught reading, writing, and + +arithmetic either in England or in English colonies.</p> + +<p>The building of the boat proceeded rapidly, and it was to be planked and + +decked before the end of the month. Mac-Nab and some of his men worked hard in + +the darkness outside, with no light but the flames of burning resin, whilst + +others were busy making the rigging in the magazines of the factory. Although + +the season was now far advanced, the weather still remained very undecided. The + +cold was sometimes intense, but owing to the prevalence of west winds it never + +lasted long.</p> + +<p>Thus passed the whole of December, rain and intermittent falls of snow + +succeeded each other, the temperature meanwhile varying from 26? to 34? + +Fahrenheit. The consumption of fuel was moderate, although there was no need to + +economise it, the reserves being considerable. It was otherwise with the oil, + +upon which they depended for light, for the stock was getting so low that the + +Lieutenant could at last only allow the lamps to be lit for a few hours every + +day. He tried using reindeer fat for lighting the house, but the smell of it was + +so unbearable that every one preferred being in the dark. All work had of course + +to be given up for the time, and very tedious did the long dark hours + +appear.</p> + +<p>Some Aurora Borealis and two or three lunar halos appeared at full moon, and + +Thomas Black might now have minutely observed all these phenomenon, and have + +made precise calculations on their intensity, their coloration, connection with + +the electric state of the atmosphere, and their influence upon the magnetic + +needle, &c. But the astronomer did not even leave his room. His spirit was + +completely crushed.</p> + +<p>On the 30th December the light of the moon revealed a long circular line of + +icebergs shutting in the horizon on the north and east of Victoria Island. This + +was the ice-wall, the frozen masses of which were piled up to a height of some + +three or four hundred feet. Two-thirds of the island were hemmed in by this + +mighty barrier, and it seemed probable that the blockade would become yet more + +complete.</p> + +<p>The sky was clear for the first week of January. The new year, 1861, opened + +with very cold weather, and the column of mercury fell to 8? Fahrenheit. It was + +the lowest temperature that had yet been experienced in this singular winter, + +although it was anything but low for such a high latitude.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant felt it his duty once more to take the latitude and longitude + +of the island by means of stellar observations, and found that its position had + +not changed at all.</p> + +<p>About this time, in spite of all their economy, the oil seemed likely to fail + +altogether. The sun would not appear above the horizon before early in February, + +so that there was a month to wait, during which there was a danger of the + +colonists having to remain in complete darkness. Thanks to the young Esquimaux, + +however, a fresh supply of oil for the lamps was obtained.</p> + +<p>On the 3rd January Kalumah walked to Cape Bathurst to examine the state of + +the ice. All along the south of the island the ice-field was very compact, the + +icicles of which it was composed were more firmly welded together, there were no + +liquid spaces between them, and the surface of the floe, though rough, was + +perfectly firm everywhere. This was no doubt caused by the pressure of the chain + +of icebergs on the horizon, which drove the ice towards the north, and squeezed + +it against the island.</p> + +<p>Although she saw no crevasses or rents, the young native noticed many + +circular holes neatly cut in the ice, the use of which she knew perfectly well. + +They were the holes kept open by seals imprisoned beneath the solid crust of + +ice, and by which they came to the surface to breathe and look for mosses under + +the snow on the coast.</p> + +<p>Kalumah knew that in the winter bears will crouch patiently near these holes, + +and watching for the moment when the seal comes out of the water, they rush upon + +it, hug it to death in their paws, and carry it off. She knew, too, that the + +Esquimaux, not less patient than the bears, also watch for the appearance of + +these animals, and throwing a running noose over their heads when they push them + +up, drag them to the surface.</p> + +<p>What bears and Esquimaux could do might certainly also be done by skilful + +hunters, and Kalumah hastened back to the fort to tell the Lieutenant of what + +she had seen, feeling sure that where these holes were seals were not far + +off.</p> + +<p>Hobson sent for the hunters, and the young native described to them the way + +in which the Esquimaux capture these animals in the winter, and begged them to + +try.</p> + +<p>She had not finished speaking before Sabine had a strong rope with a running + +noose ready in his hand and accompanied by Hobson, Mrs Barnett, Kalumah, and two + +or three soldiers, the hunters hurried to Cape Bathurst, and whilst the women + +remained on the beach, the men made their way to the holes pointed out by + +Kalumah. Each one was provided with a rope, and stationed himself at a different + +hole.</p> + +<p>A long time of waiting ensued-no sign of the seals, but at last the water in + +the hole Marbre had chosen began to bubble, and a head with long tusks appeared. + +It was that of a walrus. Marbre flung his running noose skilfully over its neck + +and pulled it tightly. His comrades rushed to his assistance, and with some + +difficulty the huge beast was dragged upon the ice, and despatched with + +hatchets.</p> + +<p>It was a great success, and the colonists were delighted with this novel + +fishing. Other walruses were taken in the same way, and furnished plenty of oil, + +which, though not strictly of the right sort, did very well for the lamps, and + +there was no longer any lack of light in any of the rooms of Fort Hope.</p> + +<p>The cold was even now not very severe, and had the colonists been on the + +American mainland they could only have rejoiced in the mildness of the winter. + +They were sheltered by the chain of icebergs from the north and west winds, and + +the month of January passed on with the thermometer never many degrees below + +freezing point, so that the sea round Victoria Island was never frozen hard. + +Fissures of more or less extent broke the regularity of the surface in the + +offing, as was proved by the continued presence of the ruminants and furred + +animals near the factory, all of which had become strangely tame, forming in + +fact part of the menagerie of the colony.</p> + +<p>According to Hobson's orders, all these creatures were unmolested. It would + +have been useless to kill them, and a reindeer was only occasionally slaughtered + +to obtain a fresh supply of venison. Some of the furred animals even ventured + +into the enceinte, and they were not driven away. The martens and foxes were in + +all the splendour of their winter clothing, and under ordinary circumstances + +would have been of immense value. These rodents found plenty of moss under the + +snow, thanks to the mildness of the season, and did not therefore live upon the + +reserves of the factory.</p> + +<p>It was with some apprehensions for the future that the end of the winter was + +awaited, but Mrs Barnett did all in her power to brighten the monotonous + +existence of her companions in exile.</p> + +<p>Only one incident occurred in the month of January, and that one was + +distressing enough. On the 7th, Michael Mac-Nab was taken ill-severe headache, + +great thirst and alternations of shivering and fever, soon reduced the poor + +little fellow to a sad state. His mother and father, and indeed all his friends, + +were in very great trouble. No one knew what to do, as it was impossible to say + +what his illness was, but Madge, who retained her senses about her, advised + +cooling drinks and poultices. Kalumah was indefatigable, remaining day and night + +by her favourite's bedside, and refusing to take any rest.</p> + +<p>About the third day there was no longer any doubt as to the nature of the + +malady. A rash came out all over the child's body, and it was evident that he + +had malignant scarlatina, which would certainly produce internal + +inflammation.</p> + +<p>Children of a year old are rarely attacked with this terrible disease, but + +cases do occasionally occur. The medicine-chest of the factory was necessarily + +insufficiently stocked, but Madge, who had nursed several patients through + +scarlet lever, remembered that tincture of belladonna was recommended, and + +administered one or two drops to the little invalid every day. The greatest care + +was taken lest he should catch cold; he was at once removed to his parents' + +room, and the rash soon came out freely. Tiny red points appeared on his tongue, + +his lips, and even on the globes of his eyes. Two days later his skin assumed a + +violet hue, then it became white and fell off in scales.</p> + +<p>It was now that double care was required to combat the great internal + +inflammation, which proved the severity of the attack, Nothing was neglected, + +the boy was, in fact, admirably nursed, and on the 20th January, twelve days + +after he was taken ill, he was pronounced out of danger.</p> + +<p>Great was the joy in the factory. The baby was the child of the fort, of the + +regiment! He was born in the terrible northern latitudes, in the colony itself, + +he had been named Michael Hope, and he had come to be regarded as a kind of + +talisman in the dangers and difficulties around, and all felt sure that God + +would not take him from them.</p> + +<p>Poor Kalumah would certainly not have survived him had he died, but he + +gradually recovered, and fresh hope seemed to come back when he was restored to + +the little circle.</p> + +<p>The 23d of January was now reached, after all these distressing alternations + +of hope and fear. The situation of Victoria Island had not changed in the least, + +and it was still wrapped in the gloom of the apparently interminable Polar + +night. Snow fell abundantly for some days, and was piled up on the ground to the + +height of two feet.</p> + +<p>On the 27th a somewhat alarming visit was received at the fort. The soldiers + +Belcher and Pond, when on guard in front of the enceinte in the morning, saw a + +huge bear quietly advancing towards the fort. They hurried into the large room, + +and told Mrs Barnett of the approach of the formidable carnivorous beast.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps it is only our bear again," observed Mrs Barnett to Hobson, and + +accompanied by him, and followed by the Sergeant, Sabine, and some soldiers + +provided with guns,-he fearlessly walked to the postern.</p> + +<p>The bear was now about two hundred paces off, and was walking along without + +hesitation, as if he had some settled plan in view.</p> + +<p>"I know him!" cried Mrs Barnett, "it is your bear, Kalumah, your + +preserver!"</p> + +<p>"Oh, don't kill my bear!" exclaimed the young Esquimaux.</p> + +<p>"He shall not be killed," said the Lieutenant, "don't injure him, my good + +fellows," he added to the men, "he will probably return as he came."</p> + +<p>"But suppose he intends coming into the enceinte?" said Long, who had his + +doubts as to the friendly propensities of Polar bears.</p> + +<p>"Let him come, Sergeant," said Mrs Barnett, "he is a prisoner like ourselves, + +and you know prisoners"-</p> + +<p>"Don't eat each other," added Hobson. "True, but only when they belong to the + +same species For your sake, however, we will spare this fellow-sufferer, and + +only defend ourselves if he attack us. I think, however, it will be as prudent + +to go back to the House. We must not put too strong a temptation in the way of + +our carnivorous friend!"</p> + +<p>This was certainly good advice, and all returned to the large room, the + +windows were closed, but not the shutters.</p> + +<p>Through the panes the movements of the visitor were watched. The bear, + +finding the postern unfastened, quietly pushed open the door, looked in, + +carefully examined the premises, and finally entered the enceinte. Having + +reached the centre, he examined the buildings around him, went towards the + +reindeer stable and dog-house, listened for a moment to the howlings of the dogs + +and the uneasy noises made by the reindeer, then continued his walk round the + +palisade, and at last came and leant his great head against one of the windows + +of the large room.</p> + +<p>To own the truth everybody started back, several of the soldiers seized their + +guns, and Sergeant Long began to fear he had let the joke go too far.</p> + +<p>But Kalumah came forward, and looked through the thin partition with her + +sweet eyes. The bear seemed to recognise her, at least so she thought, and + +doubtless satisfied with his inspection, he gave a hearty growl, and turning + +away left the enceinte, as Hobson had prophesied, as he entered it.</p> + +<p>This was the bear's first and last visit to the fort, and on his departure + +everything went on as quietly as before.</p> + +<p>The little boy's recovery progressed favourably, and at the end of the month + +he was as rosy and as bright as ever.</p> + +<p>At noon on the 3rd of February, the northern horizon was touched with a faint + +glimmer of light which did not fade away for an hour, and the yellow disc of the + +sun appeared for an instant for the first time since the commencement of the + +long Polar night.</p> +<a name="BXV" id="BXV"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XV.</h4> + +<h4><i>THE LAST EXPLORING EXPEDITION.</i></h4> + +<p>From this date, February 3rd, the sun rose each day higher above the horizon, + +the nights were, however, still very long, and, as is often the case in + +February, the cold increased, the thermometer marking only 1o Fahrenheit, the + +lowest temperature experienced throughout this extraordinary winter.</p> + +<p>"When does the thaw commence in these northern seas?" inquired Mrs Barnett of + +the Lieutenant.</p> + +<p>"In ordinary seasons," replied Hobson, "the ice does not break up until early + +in May; but the winter has been so mild that unless a very hard frost should now + +set in, the thaw may commence at the beginning of April. At least that is my + +opinion." "We shall still have two months to wait then?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, two months, for it would not be prudent to launch our boat too soon + +amongst the floating ice; and I think our best plan will be to wait until our + +island has reached the narrowest part of Behring Strait, which is not more than + +two hundred miles wide."</p> + +<p>"What do you mean?" exclaimed Mrs Barnett, considerably surprised at the + +Lieutenant's reply. "Have you forgotten that it was the Kamtchatka Current which + +brought us where we now are, and which may seize us again when the thaw sets in + +and carry us yet farther north?"</p> + +<p>"I do not think it will, madam; indeed I feel quite sure that that will not + +happen. The thaw always takes place in from north to south, and although the + +Kamtchatka Current runs the other way, the ice always goes down the Behring + +Current. Other reasons there are for my opinion which I cannot now enumerate. + +But the icebergs invariably drift towards the Pacific, and are there melted by + +its warmer waters. Ask Kalumah if I am not right. She knows these latitudes + +well, and will tell you that the thaw always proceeds from the north to the + +south."</p> + +<p>Kalumah when questioned confirmed all that the Lieutenant had said, so that + +it appeared probable that the island would be drifted to the south like a huge + +ice-floe, that is to say, to the narrowest part of Behring Strait, which is much + +frequented in the summer by the fishermen of New Archangel, who are the most + +experienced mariners of those waters. Making allowance for all delays they might + +then hope to set foot on the continent before May, and although the cold had not + +been very intense there was every reason to believe that the foundations of + +Victoria Island had been thickened and strengthened by a fresh accumulation of + +ice at the base, and that it would hold together for several months to come.</p> + +<p>There was then nothing for the colonists to do but to wait patiently,-still + +to wait!</p> + +<p>The convalescence of little Michael continued to progress favourably. On the + +20th of February he went out for the first time, forty days after he was taken + +ill. By this we mean that he went from his bedroom into the large room, where he + +was petted and made much of. His mother, acting by Madge's advice, put off + +weaning him for some little time, and he soon got back his strength. The + +soldiers had made many little toys for him during his illness, and he was now as + +happy as any child in the wide world.</p> + +<p>The last week of February was very wet, rain and snow falling alternately. A + +strong wind blew from the north-west, and the temperature was low enough for + +large quantities of snow to fall; the gale, however, increased in violence, and + +on the side of Cape Bathurst and the chain of icebergs the noise of the tempest + +was deafening. The huge ice-masses were flung against each other, and fell with + +a roar like that of thunder. The ice on the north was compressed and piled up on + +the shores of the island. There really seemed to be a danger that the cape + +itself-which was but a kind of iceberg capped with earth and sand-would be flung + +down.</p> + +<p>Some large pieces of ice, in spite of their weight, were driven to the very + +foot of the palisaded enceinte; but fortunately for the factory the cape + +retained its position; had it given way all the buildings must inevitably have + +been crushed beneath it.</p> + +<p>It will be easily understood that the position of Victoria Island, at the + +opening of a narrow strait about which the ice accumulated in large quantities, + +was extremely perilous, for it might at any time be swept by a horizontal + +avalanche, or crushed beneath the huge blocks of ice driven inland from the + +offing, and so become engulfed before the thaw. This was a new danger to be + +added to all the others already threatening the little band. Mrs Barnett, seeing + +the awful power of the pressure in the offing, and the violence with which the + +moving masses of ice crushed upon each other, realised the full magnitude of the + +peril they would all be in when the thaw commenced. She often mentioned her + +fears to the Lieutenant, and he shook his head like a man who had no reply to + +make.</p> + +<p>Early in March the squall ceased, and the full extent of the transformation + +of the ice-field was revealed. It seemed as if by a kind of <i>glissade</i> the + +chain of icebergs had drawn nearer to the island. In some parts it was not two + +miles distant, and it advanced like a glacier on the move, with the difference + +that the latter has a descending and the ice-wall a horizontal motion. Between + +the lofty chain of ice-mountains the ice-field was fearfully distorted: strewn + +with hummocks, broken obelisks, shattered blocks, overturned pyramids, it + +resembled a tempest-tossed sea or a ruined town, in which not a building or a + +monument had remained standing, and above it all the mighty icebergs reared + +their snowy crests, standing out against the sky with their pointed peaks, their + +rugged cones, and solid buttresses, forming a fitting frame for the weird + +fantastic landscape at their feet.</p> + +<p>At this date the little vessel was quite finished. This boat was rather heavy + +in shape, as might have been expected, but she did credit to Mac-Nab, and shaped + +as she was like a barge at the bows, she ought the better to withstand the + +shocks of the floating ice. She might have been taken for one of those Dutch + +boats which venture upon the northern waters. Her rig, which was completed, + +consisted, like that of a cutter, of a mainsail and a jib carried on a single + +mast. The tent canvass of the factory had been made use of for sailcloth.</p> + +<p>This boat would carry the whole colony, and if, as the Lieutenant hoped, the + +island were drifted to Behring Strait, the vessel would easily make her way to + +land, even from the widest part of the passage. There was then nothing to be + +done but wait for the thaw.</p> + +<p>Hobson now decided to make a long excursion to the south to ascertain the + +state of the ice-field, to see whether there were any signs of its breaking up, + +to examine the chain of icebergs by which it was hemmed in, to make sure, in + +short, whether it would really be useless to attempt to cross to the American + +continent. Many incidents might occur, many fresh dangers might arise before the + +thaw, and it would therefore be but prudent to make a reconnaissance on the + +ice-field.</p> + +<p>The expedition was organised and the start fixed for March 7th. Hobson, Mrs + +Barnett, Kalumah, Marbre, and Sabine were to go, and, if the route should be + +practicable, they would try and find a passage across the chain of icebergs. In + +any case, however, they were not to be absent for more than forty-eight + +hours.</p> + +<p>A good stock of provisions was prepared, and, well provided for every + +contingency, the little party left Fort Hope on the morning of the 7th March aid + +turned towards Cape Michael.</p> + +<p>The thermometer then marked 32? Fahrenheit. The atmosphere was misty, but the + +weather was perfectly calm. The sun was now above the horizon for seven or eight + +hours a day, and its oblique rays afforded plenty of light.</p> + +<p>At nine o'clock, after a short halt, the party descended the slope of Cape + +Michael and made their way across the ice-fields in a southeasterly direction. + +On this side the ice wall rose not three miles from the cape.</p> + +<p>The march was of course very slow. Every minute a crevasse had to be turned, + +or a hummock too high to be climbed. It was evident that a sledge could not have + +got over the rough distorted surface, which consisted of an accumulation of + +blocks of ice of every shape and size, some of which really seemed to retain + +their equilibrium by a miracle. Others had been but recently overturned, as + +could be seen from the clearly cut fractures and sharp corners. Not a sign was + +to be seen of any living creature, no footprints told of the passage of man or + +beast, and the very birds had deserted these awful solitudes.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett was astonished at the scene before her, and asked the Lieutenant + +how they could possibly have crossed the ice-fields if they had started in + +December, and he replied by reminding her that it was then in a very different + +condition; the enormous pressure of the advancing icebergs had not then + +commenced, the surface of the sea was comparatively even, and the only danger + +was from its insufficient solidification. The irregularities which now barred + +their passage did not exist early in the winter.</p> + +<p>They managed, however, to advance towards the mighty ice-wall, Kalumah + +generally leading the way. Like a chamois on the Alpine rocks, the young girl + +firmly treaded the ice-masses with a swiftness of foot and an absence of + +hesitation which was really marvellous. She knew by instinct the best way + +through the labyrinth of icebergs, and was an unerring guide to her + +companions.</p> + +<p>About noon the base of the ice-wall was reached, but it had taken three hours + +to get over three miles.</p> + +<p>The icy barrier presented a truly imposing appearance, rising as it did more + +than four hundred feet above the ice-field. The various strata of which it was + +formed were clearly defined, and the glistening surface was tinged with many a + +delicately-shaded hue. Jasper-like ribbons of green and blue alternated with + +streaks and dashes of all the colours of the rainbow, strewn with enamelled + +arabesques, sparkling crystals, and delicate ice-flowers. No cliff, however + +strangely distorted, could give any idea of this marvellous half opaque, half + +transparent ice-wall, and no description could do justice to the wonderful + +effects of <i>chiara-oscuro</i> produced upon it.</p> + +<p>It would not do, however, to approach too near to these beetling cliffs, the + +solidity of which was very doubtful. Internal fractures and rents were already + +commencing, the work of destruction and decomposition was proceeding rapidly, + +aided by the imprisoned air-bubbles; and the fragility of the huge structure, + +built up by the cold, was manifest to every eye. It could not survive the Arctic + +winter, it was doomed to melt beneath the sunbeams, and it contained material + +enough to feed large rivers.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson had warned his companions of the danger of the avalanches + +which constantly fall from the summits of the icebergs, and they did not + +therefore go far along their base. That this prudence was necessary was proved + +by the falling of a huge block, at two o'clock, at the entrance to a kind of + +valley which they were about to cross. It must have weighed more than a hundred + +tons, and it was dashed upon the ice-field with a fearful crash, bursting like a + +bomb-shell. Fortunately no one was hurt by the splinters.</p> + +<p>From two to five o'clock the explorers followed a narrow winding path leading + +down amongst the icebergs; they were anxious to know if it led right through + +them, but could not at once ascertain. In this valley, as it might be called, + +they were able to examine the internal structure of the icy barrier. The blocks + +of which it was built up were here arranged with greater symmetry than outside. + +In some places trunks of trees were seen embedded in the ice, all, however, of + +Tropical not Polar species, which had evidently been brought to Arctic regions + +by the Gulf Stream, and would be taken back to the ocean when the thaw should + +have converted into water the ice which now held them in its chill embrace.</p> + +<p>At five o'clock it became too dark to go any further. The travellers had not + +gone more than about two miles in the valley, but it was so sinuous, that it was + +impossible to estimate exactly the distance traversed.</p> + +<p>The signal to halt was given by the Lieutenant, and Marbre and Sabine quickly + +dug out a grotto in the ice with their chisels, into which the whole party + +crept, and after a good supper all were soon asleep.</p> + +<p>Every one was up at eight o'clock the next morning, and Hobson decided to + +follow the valley for another mile, in the hope of finding out whether it went + +right through the ice-wall. The direction of the pass, judging from the position + +of the sun, had now changed from north to south east, and as early as eleven + +o'clock the party came out on the opposite side of the chain of icebergs. The + +passage was therefore proved to run completely through the barrier.</p> + +<p>The aspect of the ice-field on the eastern side was exactly similar to that + +on the west. The same confusion of ice-masses, the same accumulation of hummocks + +and icebergs, as far as the eye could reach, with occasional alternations of + +smooth surfaces of small extent, intersected by numerous crevasses, the edges of + +which were already melting fast. The same complete solitude, the same desertion, + +not a bird, not an animal to be seen.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett climbed to the top of the hummock, and there remained for an + +hour, gazing upon the sad and desolate Polar landscape before her. Her thoughts + +involuntarily flew back to the miserable attempt to escape that had been made + +five months before. Once more she saw the men and women of the hapless caravan + +encamped in the darkness of these frozen solitudes, or struggling against + +insurmountable difficulties to reach the mainland.</p> + +<p>At last the Lieutenant broke in upon her reverie, and said-</p> + +<p>"Madam, it is more than twenty-four hours since we left the fort. We now know + +the thickness of the ice-wall, and as we promised not to be away longer than + +forty-eight hours, I think it is time to retrace our steps."</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett saw the justice of the Lieutenant's remark. They had ascertained + +that the barrier of ice was of moderate thickness, that it would melt away + +quickly enough to allow of the passage of Mac-Nab's boat after the thaw, and it + +would therefore be well to hasten back lest a snow-storm or change in the + +weather of any kind should render return through the winding valley + +difficult.</p> + +<p>The party breakfasted and set out on the return journey about one o'clock + +P.M.</p> + +<p>The night was passed as before in an ice-cavern, and the route resumed at + +eight o'clock the next morning, March 9th.</p> + +<p>The travellers now turned their backs upon the sun, as they were making for + +the west, but the weather was fine, and the orb of day, already high in the + +heavens, flung some of its rays across the valley and lit up the glittering + +ice-walls on either side.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett and Kalumah were a little behind the rest of the party chatting + +together, and looking about them as they wound through the narrow passages + +pointed out by Marbre and Sabine. They expected to get out of the valley + +quickly, and be back at the fort before sunset, as they had only two or three + +miles of the island to cross after leaving the ice. This would be a few hours + +after the time fixed, but not long enough to cause any serious anxiety to their + +friends at home.</p> + +<p>They made their calculation without allowing for an incident which no human + +perspicacity could possibly have foreseen.</p> + +<p>It was about ten o'clock when Marbre and Sabine, who were some twenty paces + +in advance of the rest, suddenly stopped and appeared to be debating some point. + +When the others came up, Sabine was holding out his compass to Marbre, who was + +staring at it with an expression of the utmost astonishment.</p> + +<p>"What an extraordinary thing!" he exclaimed, and added, turning to the + +Lieutenant-</p> + +<p>"Will you tell me, sir, the position of the island with regard to the + +ice-wall, is it on the east or west?"</p> + +<p>"On the west," replied Hobson, not a little surprised at the question, "you + +know that well enough, Marbre"</p> + +<p>"I know it well enough! I know it well enough!" repeated Marbre, shaking his + +head, "and if it is on the west, we are going wrong, and away from the + +inland!"</p> + +<p>"What, away from the island!" exclaimed the Lieutenant, struck with the + +hunter's air of conviction.</p> + +<p>"We are indeed, sir," said Marbre; "look at the compass; my name is not + +Marbre if it does not show that we are walking towards the east not the + +west!"</p> + +<p>"Impossible!" exclaimed Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Look, madam," said Sabine.</p> + +<p>It was true. The needle pointed in exactly the opposite direction to that + +expected. Hobson looked thoughtful and said nothing.</p> + +<p>"We must have made a mistake when we left the ice cavern this morning," + +observed Sabine, "we ought to have turned to the left instead of to the + +right."</p> + +<p>"No, no," said Mrs Barnett, "I am sure we did not make a mistake!"</p> + +<p>"But"--said Marbre.</p> + +<p>"But," interrupted Mrs Barnett, "look at the sun. Does it no longer rise in + +the east? Now as we turned our backs on it this morning, and it is still behind + +us, we must be walking towards the west, so that when we get out of the valley + +on the western side of the chain of icebergs, we must come to the island we left + +there."</p> + +<p>Marbre, struck dumb by this irrefutable argument, crossed his arms and said + +no more.</p> + +<p>"Then if so," said Sabine, "the sun and the compass are in complete + +contradiction of each other?"</p> + +<p>"At this moment they are," said Hobson, "and the reason is simple enough; in + +these high northern latitudes, and in latitudes in the neighbourhood of the + +magnetic pole, the compasses are sometimes disturbed, and the deviation of their + +needles is so great as entirely to mislead travellers."</p> + +<p>"All right then," said Marbre, "we have only to go on keeping our backs to + +the sun."</p> + +<p>"Certainly," replied Lieutenant Hobson, "there can be no hesitation which to + +choose, the sun or our compass, nothing disturbs the sun."</p> + +<p>The march was resumed, the sun was still behind them, and there was really no + +objection to be made to Hobson's theory, founded, as it was, upon the position + +then occupied by the radiant orb of day.</p> + +<p>The little troop marched on, but they did not get out of the valley as soon + +as they expected. Hobson had counted on leaving the ice-wall before noon, and it + +was past two when they reached the opening of the narrow pass.</p> + +<p>Strange as was this delay, it had not made any one uneasy, and the + +astonishment of all can readily be imagined when, on stepping on to the ice + +field, at the base of the chain of icebergs, no sign was to be seen of Victoria + +Island, which ought to have been opposite to them.</p> + +<p>Yes!-The island, which on this side had been such a conspicuous object, owing + +to the height of Cape Michael crowned with trees, had disappeared. In its place + +stretched a vast ice-field lit up by the sunbeams.</p> + +<p>All looked around them, and then at each other in amazement.</p> + +<p>"The island ought to be there!" cried Sabine.</p> + +<p>"But it is not there," said Marbre. "Oh, sir-Lieutenant-where is it? what has + +become of it?"</p> + +<p>But Hobson had not a word to say in reply, and Mrs Barnett was equally + +dumfounded.</p> + +<p>Kalumah now approached Lieutenant Hobson, and touching his arm, she said-</p> + +<p>"We went wrong in the valley, we went up it instead of down it, we shall only + +get back to where we were yesterday by crossing the chain of icebergs. Come, + +come!"</p> + +<p>Hobson and the others mechanically followed Kalumah, and trusting in the + +young native's sagacity, retraced their steps. Appearances were, however, + +certainly against her, for they were now walking towards the sun in an easterly + +direction.</p> + +<p>Kalumah did not explain her motives, but muttered as she went along-</p> + +<p>"Let us make haste!"</p> + +<p>All were quite exhausted, and could scarcely get along, when they found + +themselves on the other side of the ice-wall, after a walk of three hours. The + +night had now fallen, and it was too dark to see if the island was there, but + +they were not long left in doubt.</p> + +<p>At about a hundred paces off, burning torches were moving about, whilst + +reports of guns and shouts were heard.</p> + +<p>The explorers replied, and were soon joined by Sergeant Long and others, + +amongst them Thomas Black, whose anxiety as to the fate of his friends had at + +last roused him from his torpor. The poor fellows left on the island had been in + +a terrible state of uneasiness, thinking that Hobson and his party had lost + +their way. They were right, but what was it that had made them think so?</p> + +<p>Twenty-four hours before, the immense ice-field and the island had turned + +half round, and in consequence of this displacement they were no longer on the + +west, but on the east of the ice-wall!</p> +<a name="BXVI" id="BXVI"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XVI</h4> + +<h4><i>THE BREAK-UP OF THE ICE</i></h4> + +<p>Two hours later all had returned to Fort Hope, and the next day the sun for + +the first time shone upon that part of the coast which was formerly on the west + +of the island. Kalumah, to whom this phenomenon was familiar, had been right, + +and if the sun had not been the guilty party neither had the compass!</p> + +<p>The position of Victoria Island with regard to the cardinal points was again + +completely changed. Since it had broken loose from the mainland the island-and + +not only the island, but the vast ice field in which it was enclosed-had turned + +half round. This displacement proved that the ice-field was not connected with + +the continent, and that the thaw would soon set in.</p> + +<p>"Well, Lieutenant," said Mrs. Barnett, "this change of front is certainly in + +our favour. Cape Bathurst and Fort Hope are now turned towards the north-east, + +in other words towards the point nearest to the continent, and the ice-wall, + +through which our boat could only have made its way by a difficult and dangerous + +passage, is no longer between us and America. And so all is for the best, is it + +not?" added Mrs. Barnett with a smile.</p> + +<p>"Indeed it is," replied Hobson, who fully realised all that was involved in + +this change of the position of Victoria Island.</p> + +<p>No incident occurred between the 10th and 21st March, but there were + +indications of the approaching change of season. The temperature varied from 43? + +to 50? Fahrenheit, and it appeared likely that the breaking up of the ice would + +commence suddenly. Fresh crevasses opened, and the unfrozen water flooded the + +surface of the ice. As the whalers poetically express it, the "wounds of the + +ice-field bled copiously," and the opening of these "wounds" was accompanied by + +a sound like the roar of artillery. A warm rain fell for several hours, and + +accelerated the dissolution of the solid coating of the ocean.</p> + +<p>The birds, ptarmigans, puffins, ducks, &c., which had deserted the island + +in the beginning of the winter, now returned in large numbers. Marbre and Sabine + +killed a few of them, and on some were found the tickets tied round their necks + +by the Lieutenant several months before. Flocks of white trumpeter swans also + +reappeared, and filled the air with their loud clarion tones; whilst the + +quadrupeds, rodents, and carnivora alike continued to frequent the vicinity of + +the fort like tame domestic animals.</p> + +<p>Whenever the state of the sky permitted, which was almost every day, Hobson + +took the altitude of the sun. Sometimes Mrs Barnett, who had become quite expert + +in handling the sextant, assisted him, or took the observation in his stead. It + +was now most important to note the very slightest changes in the latitude and + +longitude of the island. It was still doubtful to which current it would be + +subject after the thaw, and the question whether it would be drifted north or + +south was the chief subject of the discussions between the Lieutenant and Mrs + +Barnett.</p> + +<p>The brave lady had always given proof of an energy superior to that of most + +of her sex, and now she was to be seen every day braving fatigue, and venturing + +on to the half decomposed, or "pancake" ice, in all weathers, through snow or + +rain, and on her return to the factory ready to cheer and help everybody, and to + +superintend all that was going on. We must add that her efforts were ably + +seconded by the faithful Madge.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett had compelled herself to look the future firmly in the face, and + +although she could not fail to fear for the safety of all, and sad presentiments + +haunted her, she never allowed herself to betray any uneasiness. Her courage and + +confidence never seemed to waver, she was as ever the kind encouraging friend of + +each and all, and none could have dreamt of the conflict of spirit going on + +beneath her quiet exterior demeanour. Lieutenant Hobson's admiration of her + +character was unbounded, and he had also entire confidence in Kalumah, often + +trusting to her natural instinct as implicitly as a hunter to that of his + +dog.</p> + +<p>The young Esquimaux was, in fact, very intelligent, and familiar from + +babyhood with the phenomena of the Polar regions. On board a whaler she might + +have advantageously replaced many an ice-master or pilot whose business it is to + +guide a boat amongst the ice.</p> + +<p>Every day Kalumah went to examine the state of the ice-field.</p> + +<p>The nature of the noise produced by the breaking of the icebergs in the + +distance was enough to tell her how far the decomposition had advanced. No foot + +was surer than hers upon the ice, no one could spring more lightly forwards than + +she when her instinct told her that the smooth surface was rotten underneath, + +and she would scud across an ice-field riddled with fissures without a moment's + +hesitation.</p> + +<p>From the 20th to the 30th March, the thaw made rapid progress. Rain fell + +abundantly and accelerated the dissolution of the ice. It was to be hoped that + +the ice-field would soon open right across, and that in about fifteen days + +Hobson would be able to steer his boat into the open sea. He was determined to + +lose no time, as he did not know but that the Kamtchatka Current might sweep the + +island to the north before it could come under the influence of the Behring + +Current.</p> + +<p>"But," Kalumah repeated again and again, "there is no fear of that, the + +breaking up of the ice does not proceed upwards but downwards. The danger is + +there!" she added, pointing to the south in the direction of the vast Pacific + +Ocean.</p> + +<p>The young girl's confidence on this point reassured Hobson, for he had no + +reason now to dread the falling to pieces of the island in the warm waters of + +the Pacific. He meant everybody to be on board the boat before that could + +happen, and they would not have far to go to get to one or the other continent, + +as the strait is in reality a kind of funnel through which the waters flow + +between Cape East on the Asiatic side and Cape Prince of Wales on the + +American.</p> + +<p>This will explain the eager attention with which the slightest change in the + +position of the island was noticed. The bearings were taken every day, and + +everything was prepared for an approaching and perhaps sudden and hurried + +embarkation.</p> + +<p>Of course all the ordinary avocations of the factory were now discontinued. + +There was no hunting or setting of traps. The magazines were already piled up + +with furs, most of which would be lost. The hunters and trappers had literally + +nothing to do; but Mac-Nab and his men, having finished their boat, employed + +their leisure time in strengthening the principal house of the fort, which would + +probably be subjected to considerable pressure from the accumulation of ice on + +the coast during the further progress of the thaw, unless indeed Cape Bathurst + +should prove a sufficient protection. Strong struts were fixed against the + +outside walls, vertical props were placed inside the rooms to afford additional + +support to the beams of the ceiling, and the roof was strengthened so that it + +could bear a considerable weight. These various works were completed early in + +April, and their utility, or rather their vital importance, was very soon + +manifested.</p> + +<p>Each day brought fresh symptoms of returning spring, which seemed likely to + +set in early after this strangely mild Polar winter. A few tender shoots + +appeared upon the trees, and the newly-thawed sap swelled the bark of beeches, + +willows, and arbutus. Tiny mosses tinged with pale green the slopes under the + +direct influence of the sunbeams; but they were not likely to spread much, as + +the greedy rodents collected about the fort pounced upon and devoured them + +almost before they were above the ground.</p> + +<p>Great were the sufferings of Corporal Joliffe at this time. We know that he + +had undertaken to protect the plot of ground cultivated by his wife. Under + +ordinary circumstances he would merely have had to drive away feathered + +pilferers, such as guillemots or puffins, from his sorrel and scurvy grass. A + +scarecrow would have been enough to get rid of them, still more the Corporal in + +person. But now all the rodents and ruminants of the Arctic fauna combined to + +lay siege to his territory; reindeer, Polar hares, musk-rats, shrews, martens, + +&c., braved all the threatening gestures of the Corporal, and the poor man + +was in despair, for whilst he was defending one end of his field the enemy was + +preying upon the other.</p> + +<p>It would certainly have been wiser to let the poor creatures enjoy unmolested + +the crops which could be of no use to the colonists, as the fort was to be so + +soon abandoned, and Mrs Barnett tried to persuade the angry Corporal to do so, + +when he came to her twenty times a day with the same wearisome tale, but he + +would not listen to her:</p> + +<p>"To lose the fruit of all our trouble!" he repeated; "to leave an + +establishment which was prospering so well! To give up the plants Mrs Joliffe + +and I sowed so carefully!... O madam, sometimes I feel disposed to let you all + +go, and stay here with my wife! I am sure the Company would give up all claim on + +the island to us"--</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett could not help laughing at this absurd speech, and sent the + +Corporal to his little wife, who had long ago resigned herself to the loss of + +her sorrel, scurvy grass, and other medicinal herbs.</p> + +<p>We must here remark, that the health of all the colonists remained good, they + +had at least escaped illness; the baby, too, was now quite well again, and + +throve admirably in the mild weather of the early spring.</p> + +<p>The thaw continued to proceed rapidly from the 2nd to the 5th April. The + +weather was warm but cloudy, and rain fell frequently in large drops. The wind + +blew from the south west, and was laden with the heated dust of the continent. + +Unfortunately the sky was so hazy, that it was quite impossible to take + +observations, neither sun, moon, nor stars could be seen through the heavy + +mists, and this was the more provoking, as it was of the greatest importance to + +note the slightest movements of the island.</p> + +<p>It was on the night of the 7th April that the actual breaking up of the ice + +commenced. In the morning the Lieutenant, Mrs Barnett, Kalumah, and Sergeant + +Long, had climbed to the summit of Cape Bathurst, and saw that a great change + +had taken place in the chain of icebergs. The huge barrier had parted nearly in + +the middle, and now formed two separate masses, the larger of which seemed to be + +moving northwards.</p> + +<p>Was it the Kamtchatka Current which produced this motion? Would the floating + +island take the same direction? The intense anxiety of the Lieutenant and his + +companions can easily be imagined. Their fate might now be decided in a few + +hours, and if they should be drifted some hundred miles to the north, it would + +be very difficult to reach the continent in a vessel so small as theirs.</p> + +<p>Unfortunately it was impossible to ascertain the nature or extent of the + +displacement which was going on. One thing was, however, evident, the island was + +not yet moving, at least not in the same direction as the ice-wall. It therefore + +seemed probable that whilst part of the ice field was floating to the north, + +that portion immediately surrounding the island still remained stationary.</p> + +<p>This displacement of the icebergs did not in the least alter the opinion of + +the young Esquimaux. Kalumah still maintained that the thaw would proceed from + +north to south, and that the ice wall would shortly feel the influence of the + +Behring Current. To make herself more easily understood, she traced the + +direction of the current on the sand with a little piece of wood, and made signs + +that in following it the island must approach the American continent. No + +argument could shake her conviction on this point, and it was almost impossible + +not to feel reassured when listening to the confident expressions of the + +intelligent native girl.</p> + +<p>The events of the 8th, 9th, and 10th April, seemed, however, to prove Kalumah + +to be in the wrong. The northern portion of the chain of icebergs drifted + +farther and farther north. The breaking up of the ice proceeded rapidly and with + +a great noise, and the ice field opened all round the island with a deafening + +crash. Out of doors it was impossible to hear one's self speak, a ceaseless roar + +like that of artillery drowned every other sound.</p> + +<p>About half a mile from the coast on that part of the island overlooked by + +Cape Bathurst, the blocks of ice were already beginning to crowd together, and + +to pile themselves upon each other. The ice-wall had broken up into numerous + +separate icebergs, which were drifting towards the north. At least it seemed as + +if they were moving in that direction. Hobson became more and more uneasy, and + +nothing that Kalumah could say reassured him. He replied by counter-arguments, + +which could not shake her faith in her own belief.</p> + +<p>At last, on the morning of the 11th April, Hobson showed Kalumah the last + +icebergs disappearing in the north, and again endeavoured to prove to her that + +facts were against her.</p> + +<p>"No, no!" replied Kalumah, with an air of greater conviction than ever, "no, + +the icebergs are not going to the north, but our island is going to the + +south!"</p> + +<p>She might perhaps be right after all, and Hobson was much struck by this last + +reply. It was really possible that the motion of the icebergs towards the north + +was only apparent, and that Victoria Island, dragged along with the ice-field, + +was drifting towards the strait. But it was impossible to ascertain whether this + +were really the case, as neither the latitude nor longitude could be taken.</p> + +<p>The situation was aggravated by a phenomenon peculiar to the Polar regions, + +which rendered it still darker and more impossible to take observations of any + +kind.</p> + +<p>At the very time of the breaking up of the ice, the temperature fell several + +degrees. A dense mist presently enveloped the Arctic latitudes, but not an + +ordinary mist. The soil was covered with a white crust, totally distinct from + +hoar-frost-it was, in fact, a watery vapour which congeals on its precipitation. + +The minute particles of which this mist was composed formed a thick layer on + +trees, shrubs, the walls of the fort, and any projecting surface which bristled + +with pyramidal or prismatic crystals, the apexes of which pointed to the + +wind.</p> + +<p>Hobson at once understood the nature of this atmospheric phenomenon, which + +whalers and explorers have often noticed in the spring in the Polar regions.</p> + +<p>"It is not a mist or fog," he said to his companions, "it is a 'frost-rime', + +a dense vapour which remains in a state of complete congelation."</p> + +<p>But whether a fog or a frozen mist this phenomenon was none the less to be + +regretted, for it rose a hundred feet at least above the level of the sea, and + +it was so opaque that the colonists could not see each other when only two or + +three paces apart.</p> + +<p>Every one's disappointment was very great. Nature really seemed determined to + +try them to the uttermost. When the break up of the ice had come at last, when + +the wandering island was to leave the spot in which it had so long been + +imprisoned, and its movements ought to be watched with the greatest care, this + +fog prevented all observations.</p> + +<p>This state of things continued for four days. The frost-rime did not + +disappear until the 15th April, but on the morning of that date a strong wind + +from the south rent it open and dispersed it.</p> + +<p>The sun shone brightly once more, and Hobson eagerly seized his instruments. + +He took the altitude, and found that the exact position of Victoria Island was + +then: Latitude, 69? 57'; longitude, 179? 33'.</p> + +<p>Kalumah was right, Victoria Island, in the grasp of the Behring Current, was + +drifting towards the south.</p> +<a name="BXVII" id="BXVII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XVII.</h4> + +<h4><i>THE AVALANCHE.</i></h4> + +<p>The colonists were then at last approaching the more frequented latitudes of + +Behring Sea. There was no longer any danger that they would be drifted to the + +north, and all they had to do was to watch the displacement of the island, and + +to estimate the speed of its motion, which would probably be very unequal, on + +account of the obstacles in its path. Hobson most carefully noted every + +incident, taking alternately solar and stellar altitudes, and the next day, + +April 16th, after ascertaining the bearings, he calculated that if its present + +speed were maintained, Victoria Island would reach the Arctic Circle, from which + +it was now separated at the most by four degrees of latitude, towards the + +beginning of May.</p> + +<p>It was probable that, when the island reached the narrowest portion of the + +strait, it would remain stationary until the thaw broke it up, the boat would + +then be launched, and the colonists would set sail for the American + +continent.</p> + +<p>Everything was ready for an immediate embarkation, and the inhabitants of the + +island waited with greater patience and confidence than ever. They felt, poor + +things, that the end of their trials was surely near at last, and that nothing + +could prevent their landing on one side or the other of the strait in a few + +days.</p> + +<p>This prospect cheered them up wonderfully, and the gaiety natural to them + +all, which they had lost in the terrible anxiety they had so long endured, was + +restored. The common meals were quite festal, as there was no need for + +economising the stores under present circumstances. The influence of the spring + +became more and more sensibly felt, and every one enjoyed the balmy air, and + +breathed more freely than before.</p> + +<p>During the next few days, several excursions were made to the interior of the + +island and along the coast. Everywhere the furred animals, &c., still + +abounded, for even now they could not cross to the continent, the connection + +between it and the ice-field being broken, and their continued presence was a + +fresh proof that the island was no longer stationary.</p> + +<p>No change had taken place on the island at Cape Esquimaux, Cape Michael, + +along the coast, or on the wooded heights of the interior, and the banks of the + +lagoon. The large gulf which had opened near Cape Michael during the storm had + +closed in the winter, and there was no other fissure on the surface of the + +soil.</p> + +<p>During these excursions, bands of wolves were seen scudding across parts of + +the island. Of all the animals these fierce carnivorous beasts were the only + +ones which the feeling of a common danger had not tamed.</p> + +<p>Kalumah's preserver was seen several times. This worthy bear paced to and fro + +on the deserted plains in melancholy mood, pausing in his walk as the explorers + +passed, and sometimes following them to the fort, knowing well that he had + +nothing to fear from them.</p> + +<p>On the 20th April Lieutenant Hobson ascertained that the wandering island was + +still drifting to the south. All that remained of the ice-wall, that is to say, + +the southern portion of the icebergs, followed it, but as there were no bench + +marks, the changes of position could only be estimated by astronomical + +observations.</p> + +<p>Hobson took several soundings in different parts of the ground, especially at + +the foot of Cape Bathurst, and on the shores of the lagoon. He was anxious to + +ascertain the thickness of the layer of ice supporting the earth and sand, and + +found that it had not increased during the winter, and that the general level of + +the island did not appear to have risen higher above that of the sea. The + +conclusion he drew from these facts was, that no time should be lost in getting + +away from the fragile island, which would rapidly break up and dissolve in the + +warmer waters of the Pacific.</p> + +<p>About the 25th April the bearing of the island was again changed, the whole + +ice-field had moved round from east to west twelve points, so that Cape Bathurst + +pointed to the north-west. The last remains of the ice-wall now shut in the + +northern horizon, so that there could be no doubt that the ice-field was moving + +freely in the strait, and that it nowhere touched any land.</p> + +<p>The fatal moment was approaching. Diurnal or nocturnal observations gave the + +exact position of the island, and consequently of the ice-field. On the 30th of + +April, both were together drifting across Kotzebue Sound, a large triangular + +gulf running some distance inland on the American coast, and bounded on the + +south by Cape Prince of Wales, which might, perhaps, arrest the course of the + +island if it should deviate in the very least from the middle of the narrow + +pass.</p> + +<p>The weather was now pretty fine, and the column of mercury often marked 50? + +Fahrenheit. The colonists had left off their winter garments some weeks before, + +and held themselves in constant readiness to leave the island. Thomas Black had + +already transported his instruments and books into the boat, which was waiting + +on the beach. A good many provisions had also been embarked and some of the most + +valuable furs.</p> + +<p>On the 2d of May a very carefully taken observation showed that Victoria + +Island had a tendency to drift towards the east, and consequently to reach the + +American continent. This was fortunate, as they were now out of danger of being + +taken any farther by the Kamtchatka Current, which, as is well known, runs along + +the coast of Asia. At last the tide was turning in favour of the colonists!</p> + +<p>"I think our bad fortune is at last at an end," observed Sergeant Long to Mrs + +Barnett, "and that our misfortunes are really over; I don't suppose there are + +any more dangers to be feared now."</p> + +<p>"I quite agree with you," replied Mrs Barnett, "and it is very fortunate that + +we had to give up our journey across the ice-field a few months ago; we ought to + +be very thankful that it was impassible!"</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett was certainly justified in speaking as she did, for what fearful + +fatigues and sufferings they would all have had to undergo in crossing five + +hundred miles of ice in the darkness of the Polar night!</p> + +<p>On the 5th May, Hobson announced that Victoria Island had just crossed the + +Arctic Circle. It had at last re-entered that zone of the terrestrial sphere in + +which at one period of the year the sun does not set. The poor people all felt + +that they were returning to the inhabited globe.</p> + +<p>The event of crossing the Arctic Circle was celebrated in much the same way + +as crossing the Equator for the first time would be on board ship, and many a + +glass of spirits was drank in honour of the event.</p> + +<p>There was now nothing left to do but to wait till the broken and half-melted + +ice should allow of the passage of the boat, which was to bear the whole colony + +to the land.</p> + +<p>During the 7th May the island turned round to the extent of another quarter + +of its circumference. Cape Bathurst now pointed due north, and those masses of + +the old chain of icebergs which still remained standing were now above it, so + +that it occupied much the same position as that assigned to it in maps when it + +was united to the American continent. The island had gradually turned completely + +round, and the sun had risen successively on every point of its shores.</p> + +<p>The observations of the 8th May showed that the island had become stationary + +near the middle of the passage, at least forty miles from Cape Prince of Wales, + +so that land was now at a comparatively short distance from it, and the safety + +of all seemed to be secured.</p> + +<p>In the evening a good supper was served in the large room, and the healths of + +Mrs Barnett and of Lieutenant Hobson were proposed.</p> + +<p>The same night the Lieutenant determined to go and see if any changes had + +taken place in the ice-field on the south, hoping that a practicable passage + +might have been opened.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett was anxious to accompany him, but he persuaded her to rest a + +little instead, and started off, accompanied only by Sergeant Long.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett, Madge, and Kalumah returned to the principal house after seeing + +them off, and the soldiers and women had already gone to bed in the different + +apartments assigned to them.</p> + +<p>It was a fine night, there was no moon, but the stars shone very brightly, + +and as the ice-field vividly reflected their light, it was possible to see for a + +considerable distance.</p> + +<p>It was nine o'clock when the two explorers left the fort and turned towards + +that part of the coast between Port Barnett and Cape Michael. They followed the + +beach for about two miles, and found the ice-field in a state of positive chaos. + +The sea was one vast aggregation of crystals of every size, it looked as if it + +had been petrified suddenly when tossing in a tempest, and, alas, there was even + +now no free passage between the ice-masses-it would be impossible for a boat to + +pass yet.</p> + +<p>Hobson and Long remained on the ice-field talking and looking about them + +until midnight, and then seeing that there was still nothing to do but to wait, + +they decided to go back to Fort Hope and rest for a few hours.</p> + +<p>They had gone some hundred paces, and had reached the dried-up bed of Paulina + +River, when an unexpected noise arrested them. It was a distant rumbling from + +the northern part of the ice-field, and it became louder and louder until it was + +almost deafening. Something dreadful was going on in the quarter from which it + +came, and Hobson fancied he felt the ice beneath his feet trembling, which was + +certainly far from reassuring.</p> + +<p>"The noise comes from the chain of icebergs," exclaimed Long, "what can be + +going on there?"</p> + +<p>Hobson did not answer, but feeling dreadfully anxious he rushed towards the + +fort dragging his companion after him.</p> + +<p>"To the fort! to the fort." he cried at last, "the ice may have opened, we + +may be able to launch our boat on the sea!"</p> + +<p>And the two ran as fast as ever they could towards Fort Hope by the shortest + +way.</p> + +<p>A thousand conjectures crowded upon them. From what new phenomenon did the + +unexpected noise proceed? Did the sleeping inhabitants of the fort know what was + +going on? They must certainly have heard the noise, for, in vulgar language, it + +was loud enough to wake the dead.</p> + +<p>Hobson and Long crossed the two miles between them and Fort Hope in twenty + +minutes, but before they reached the enceinte they saw the men and women they + +had left asleep hurrying away in terrified disorder, uttering cries of + +despair.</p> + +<p>The carpenter Mac-Nab, seeing the Lieutenant, ran towards him with his little + +boy in his arms.</p> + +<p>"Look, sir, look!" he cried, drawing his master towards a little hill which + +rose a few yards behind the fort.</p> + +<p>Hobson obeyed, and saw that part of the ice-wall, which, when he left, was + +two or three miles off in the offing, had fallen upon the coast of the island. + +Cape Bathurst no longer existed, the mass of earth and sand of which it was + +composed had been swept away by the icebergs and scattered over the palisades. + +The principal house and all the buildings connected with it on the north were + +buried beneath the avalanche. Masses of ice were crowding upon each other and + +tumbling over with an awful crash, crushing everything beneath them. It was like + +an army of icebergs taking possession of the island.</p> + +<p>The boat which had been built at the foot of the cape was completely + +destroyed. The last hope of the unfortunate colonists was gone!</p> + +<p>As they stood watching the awful scene, the buildings, formerly occupied by + +the soldiers and women, and from which they had escaped in time, gave way + +beneath an immense block of ice which fell upon them. A cry of despair burst + +from the lips of the houseless outcasts.</p> + +<p>"And the others, where are they?" cried the Lieutenant in heart-rending + +tones.</p> + +<p>"There!" replied Mac-Nab, pointing to the heap of sand, earth, and ice, + +beneath which the principal house had entirely disappeared.</p> + +<p>Yes, the illustrious lady traveller, Madge, Kalumah, and Thomas Black, were + +buried beneath the avalanche which had surprised them in their sleep!</p> +<a name="BXVIII" id="BXVIII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XVIII.</h4> + +<h4><i>ALL AT WORK.</i></h4> + +<p>Fearful catastrophe had occurred. The ice-wall had been flung upon the + +wandering island, the volume below the water being five times that of the + +projecting part, it had come under the influence of the submarine currents, and, + +opening a way for itself between the broken ice-masses, it had fallen bodily + +upon Victoria Island, which, driven along by this mighty propelling force, was + +drifting rapidly to the south.</p> + +<p>Mac-Nab and his companions, aroused by the noise of the avalanche dashing + +down upon the dog-house, stable, and principal house, had been able to escape in + +time, but now the work of destruction was complete. Not a trace remained of the + +buildings in which they had slept, and the island was bearing all its + +inhabitants with it to the unfathomable depths of the ocean! Perhaps, however, + +Mrs Barnett, Madge, Kalumah, and the astronomer, were still living! Dead or + +alive they must be dug out.</p> + +<p>At this thought Hobson recovered his composure and shouted-</p> + +<p>"Get shovels and pickaxes! The house is strong! it may have held together! + +Let us set to work!"</p> + +<p>There were plenty of tools and pickaxes, but it was really impossible to + +approach the enceinte. The masses of ice were rolling down from the summits of + +the icebergs, and some parts of the ice-wall still towered amongst the ruins two + +hundred feet above the island. The force with which the tossing masses, which + +seemed to be surging all along the northern horizon, were overthrown can be + +imagined; the whole coast between the former Cape Bathurst and Cape Esquimaux + +was not only hemmed in, but literally invaded by these moving mountains, which, + +impelled by a force they could not resist, had already advanced more than a + +quarter of a mile inland.</p> + +<p>Every moment the trembling of the ground and a loud report gave notice that + +another of these masses had rolled over, and there was a danger that the island + +would sink beneath the weight thrown upon it. A very apparent lowering of the + +level had taken place all along that part of the coast near Cape Bathurst, it + +was evidently gradually sinking down, and the sea had already encroached nearly + +as far as the lagoon.</p> + +<p>The situation of the colonists was truly terrible, unable as they were to + +attempt to save their companions, and driven from the enceinte by the crashing + +avalanches, over which they had no power whatever. They could only wait, a prey + +to the most awful forebodings.</p> + +<p>Day dawned at last, and how fearful a scene was presented by the districts + +around Cape Bathurst! The horizon was shut in on every side by ice-masses, but + +their advance appeared to be checked for the moment at least. The ruins of the + +ice-wall were at rest, and it was only now and then that a few blocks rolled + +down from the still tottering crests of the remaining icebergs. But the whole + +mass-a great part of its volume being sunk beneath the surface of the sea-was in + +the grasp of a powerful current, and was driving the island along with it to the + +south, that is to say, to the ocean, in the depths of which they would alike be + +engulfed.</p> + +<p>Those who were thus borne along upon the island were not fully conscious of + +the peril in which they stood. They had their comrades to save, and amongst them + +the brave woman who had so won all their hearts, and for whom they would gladly + +have laid down their lives. The time for action had come, they could again + +approach the palisades, and there was not a moment to lose, as the poor + +creatures had already been buried beneath the avalanche for six hours.</p> + +<p>We have already said that Cape Bathurst no longer existed. Struck by a huge + +iceberg it had fallen bodily upon the factory, breaking the boat and crushing + +the dog-house and stable with the poor creatures in them. The principal house + +next disappeared beneath the masses of earth and sand, upon which rolled blocks + +of ice to a height of fifty or sixty feet. The court of the fort was filled up, + +of the palisade not a post was to be seen, and it was from beneath this + +accumulation of earth, sand, and ice, that the victims were to be dug out.</p> + +<p>Before beginning to work Hobson called the head carpenter to him, and asked + +if he thought the house could bear the weight of the avalanche.</p> + +<p>"I think so, sir," replied Mac-Nab; "in fact, I may almost say I am sure of + +it. You remember how we strengthened it, it has been 'casemated,' and the + +vertical beams between the ceilings and floors must have offered great + +resistance; moreover, the layer of earth and sand with which the roof was first + +covered must have broken the shock of the fall of the blocks of ice from the + +icebergs." "God grant you may be right, Mac-Nab," replied Hobson, "and that we + +may be spared the great grief of losing our friends!"</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant then sent for Mrs Joliffe, and asked her if plenty of + +provisions had been left in the house.</p> + +<p>"Oh, yes," replied Mrs Joliffe, "there was plenty to eat in the pantry and + +kitchen."</p> + +<p>"And any water?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, water and rum too."</p> + +<p>"All right, then," said Hobson, "they will not be starved-but how about + +air?"</p> + +<p>To this question Mac-Nab could make no reply, and if, as he hoped, the house + +had not given way, the want of air would be the chief danger of the four + +victims. By prompt measures, however, they might yet be saved, and the first + +thing to be done was to open a communication with the outer air.</p> + +<p>All set to work zealously, men and women alike seizing shovels and pickaxes. + +The masses of ice, sand, and earth, were vigorously attacked at the risk of + +provoking fresh downfalls; but the proceedings were ably directed by + +Mac-Nab.</p> + +<p>It appeared to him best to begin at the top of the accumulated masses, so as + +to roll down loose blocks on the side of the lagoon. The smaller pieces were + +easily dealt with, with pick and crowbar, but the large blocks had to be broken + +up. Some of great size were melted with the aid of a large fire of resinous + +wood, and every means was tried to destroy or get rid of the ice in the shortest + +possible time.</p> + +<p>But so great was the accumulation, that although all worked without pause, + +except when they snatched a little food, there was no sensible diminution in its + +amount when the sun disappeared below the horizon. It was not, however, really + +of quite so great a height as before, and it was determined to go on working + +from above through the night, and when there was no longer any danger of fresh + +falls Mac-Nab hoped to be able to sink a vertical shaft in the compact mass, so + +as to admit the outer air to the house as soon as possible.</p> + +<p>All night long the party worked at the excavation, attacking the masses with + +iron and heat, as the one or the other seemed more likely to be effective. The + +men wielded the pickaxe whilst the women kept up the fires; but all were + +animated by one purpose-the saving of the lives of Mrs Barnett, Madge, Kalumah, + +and the astronomer.</p> + +<p>When morning dawned the poor creatures had been buried for thirty hours in + +air necessarily very impure under so thick a cover.</p> + +<p>The progress made in the night had been so great that Mac-Nab prepared to + +sink his shaft, which he meant to go straight down to the top of the house; and + +which, according to his calculation, would not have to be more than fifty feet + +deep. It would be easy enough to sink this shaft through the twenty feet of ice; + +but great difficulty would be experienced when the earth and sand were reached, + +as, being very brittle, they would of course constantly fill in the shaft, and + +its sides would therefore have to be lined. Long pieces of wood were prepared + +for this purpose, and the boring proceeded. Only three men could work at it + +together, and the soldiers relieved each other constantly, so that the + +excavation seemed likely to proceed rapidly.</p> + +<p>As might be supposed the poor fellows alternated between hope and fear when + +some obstacle delayed them. When a sudden fall undid their work they felt + +discouraged, and nothing but Mac-Nab's steady voice could have rallied them. As + +the men toiled in turn at their weary task the women stood watching them from + +the foot of a hill, saying little, but often praying silently. They had now + +nothing to do but to prepare the food, which the men devoured in their short + +intervals of repose.</p> + +<p>The boring proceeded without any very great difficulty, but the ice was so + +hard that the progress was but slow. At the end of the second day Mac-Nab had + +nearly reached the layer of earth and sand, and could not hope to get to the top + +of the house before the end of the next day.</p> + +<p>Night fell, but the work was continued by the light of torches. A + +"snow-house" was hastily dug out in one of the hummocks on the shore as a + +temporary shelter for the women and the little boy. The wind had veered to the + +south-west, and a cold rain began to fall, accompanied with occasional squalls; + +but neither the Lieutenant nor his men dreamt of leaving off work.</p> + +<p>Now began the worst part of the task. It was really impossible to bore in the + +shifting masses of sand and earth, and it became necessary to prop up the sides + +of the shaft with wood, the loose earth being drawn to the surface in a bucket + +hung on a rope. Of course under the circumstances the work could not proceed + +rapidly, falls might occur at any moment, and the miners were in danger of being + +buried in their turn.</p> + +<p>Mac-Nab was generally the one to remain at the bottom of the narrow shaft, + +directing the excavation, and frequently sounding with a long pick, but as it + +met with no resistance, it was evident that it did not reach the roof of the + +house.</p> + +<p>When the morning once more dawned, only ten feet had been excavated in the + +mass of earth and sand, so that twenty remained to be bored through before the + +roof of the house could be reached, that is to say, if it had not given way, and + +still occupied the position it did before the fall of the avalanche.</p> + +<p>It was now fifty-four hours since Mrs Barnett and her companions were + +buried!</p> + +<p>Mac-Nab and the Lieutenant often wondered if they on their side had made any + +effort to open a communication with the outer air. They felt sure that with her + +usual courage, Mrs Barnett would have tried to find some way out if her + +movements were free. Some tools had been left in the house, and Kellet, one of + +the carpenter's men, remembered leaving his pickaxe in the kitchen. The + +prisoners might have broken open one of the doors and begun to pierce a gallery + +across the layer of earth. But such a gallery could only be driven in a + +horizontal direction, and would be a much longer business than the sinking of a + +shaft from above, for the masses flung down by the avalanche, although only + +sixty feet deep, covered a space more than five hundred feet in diameter. Of + +course the prisoners could not be aware of this fact, and if they should succeed + +in boring their horizontal gallery, it would be eight days at least before they + +could cut through the last layer of ice, and by that time they would be totally + +deprived of air, if not of food.</p> + +<p>Nevertheless the Lieutenant carefully went over every portion of the + +accumulation himself, and listened intently for any sounds of subterranean + +digging, but he heard nothing.</p> + +<p>On the return of day the men toiled with fresh energy, bucket after bucket + +was drawn to the surface of the shaft loaded with earth. The clumsy wooden props + +answered admirably in keeping the earth from filling in the pit, a few falls + +occurred, but they were rapidly checked, and no fresh misfortunes occurred + +throughout the day, except that the soldier Garry received a blow on the head + +from a falling block of ice. The wound was not however severe, and he would not + +leave his work.</p> + +<p>At four o'clock the shaft was fifty feet deep altogether, having been sunk + +through twenty feet of ice and thirty of sand and earth.</p> + +<p>It was at this depth that Mac-Nab had expected to reach the roof of the + +house, if it had resisted the pressure of the avalanche.</p> + +<p>He was then at the bottom of the shaft, and his disappointment and dismay can + +be imagined when, on driving his pickaxe into the ground as far as it would go, + +it met with no resistance whatever.</p> + +<p>Sabine was with him, and for a few moments he remained with his arms crossed, + +silently looking at his companion.</p> + +<p>"No roof then?" inquired the hunter.</p> + +<p>"Nothing whatever," replied the carpenter, "but let us work on, the roof has + +bent of course, but the floor of the loft cannot have given way. Another ten + +feet and we shall come to that floor, or else"--</p> + +<p>Mac-Nab did not finish his sentence, and the two resumed their work with the + +strength of despair.</p> + +<p>At six o'clock in the evening, another ten or twelve feet had been dug + +out.</p> + +<p>Mac-Nab sounded again, nothing yet, his pick still sunk in the shifting + +earth, and flinging it from him, he buried his face in his hands and + +muttered-</p> + +<p>"Poor things, poor things!" He then climbed to the opening of the shaft by + +means of the wood-work.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant and the Sergeant were together in greater anxiety than ever, + +and taking them aside, the carpenter told them of his dreadful + +disappointment.</p> + +<p>"Then," observed Hobson, "the house must have been crushed by the avalanche, + +and the poor people in it"--</p> + +<p>"No!" cried the head-carpenter with earnest conviction, "no, it cannot have + +been crushed, it must have resisted, strengthened as it was. It cannot-it cannot + +have been crushed!"</p> + +<p>"Well, then, what has happened?" said the Lieutenant in a broken voice, his + +eyes filling with tears.</p> + +<p>"Simply this," replied Mac-Nab, "the house itself has remained intact, but + +the ground on which it was built must have sunk. The house has gone through the + +crust of ice which forms the foundation of the island. It has not been crushed, + +but engulfed, and the poor creatures in it"--</p> + +<p>"Are drowned!" cried Long.</p> + +<p>"Yes, Sergeant, drowned without a moment's notice-drowned like passengers on + +a foundered vessel!"</p> + +<p>For some minutes the three men remained silent. Mac-Nab's idea was probably + +correct. Nothing was more likely than that the ice forming the foundation of the + +island had given way under such enormous pressure. The vertical props which + +supported the beams of the ceiling, and rested on those of the floor, had + +evidently aided the catastrophe by their weight, and the whole house had been + +engulfed.</p> + +<p>"Well, Mac-Nab," said Hobson at last, "if we cannot find them alive"--</p> + +<p>"We must recover their bodies," added the head carpenter.</p> + +<p>"And with these words Mac-Nab, accompanied by the Lieutenant, went back to + +his work at the bottom of the shaft without a word to any of his comrades of the + +terrible form his anxiety had now assumed.</p> + +<p>The excavation continued throughout the night, the men relieving each other + +every hour, and Hobson and Mac-Nab watched them at work without a moment's + +rest.</p> + +<p>At three o'clock in the morning Kellet's pickaxe struck against something + +hard, which gave out a ringing sound. The head carpenter felt it almost before + +he heard it.</p> + +<p>"We have reached them!" cried the soldier, "they are saved."</p> + +<p>"Hold your tongue, and go on working," replied the Lieutenant in a choked + +voice.</p> + +<p>It was now seventy-six hours since the avalanche fell upon the house!</p> + +<p>Kellet and his companion Pond resumed their work. The shaft must have nearly + +reached the level of the sea, and Mac-Nab therefore felt that all hope was + +gone.</p> + +<p>In less than twenty minutes the hard body which Kellet had struck was + +uncovered, and proved to be one of the rafters of the roof. The carpenter flung + +himself to the bottom of the shaft, and seizing a pickaxe sent the laths of the + +roof flying on every side. In a few moments a large aperture was made, and a + +figure appeared at it which it was difficult to recognise in the darkness.</p> + +<p>It was Kalumah!</p> + +<p>"Help! help!" she murmured feebly.</p> + +<p>Hobson let himself down through the opening, and found himself up to the + +waist in ice-cold water. Strange to say, the roof had not given way, but as + +Mac-Nab had supposed, the house had sunk, and was full of water. The water did + +not, however, yet fill the loft, and was not more than a foot above the floor. + +There was still a faint hope!</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant, feeling his way in the darkness, came across a motionless + +body, and dragging it to the opening he consigned it to Pond and Kellet. It was + +Thomas Black.</p> + +<p>Madge, also senseless, was next found; and she and the astronomer were drawn + +up to the surface of the ground with ropes, where the open air gradually + +restored them to consciousness.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett was still missing, but Kalumah led Hobson to the very end of the + +loft, and there he found the unhappy lady motionless and insensible, with her + +head scarcely out of the water.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant lifted her in his arms and carried her to the opening, and a + +few moments later he had reached the outer air with his burden, followed by + +Mac-Nab with Kalumah.</p> + +<p>Every one gathered round Mrs Barnett in silent anxiety, and poor Kalumah, + +exhausted as she was, flung herself across her friend's body.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett still breathed, her heart still beat feebly, and revived by the + +pure fresh air she at last opened her eyes.</p> + +<p>A cry of joy burst from every lip, a cry of gratitude to Heaven for the great + +mercy vouchsafed, which was doubtless heard above.</p> + +<p>Day was now breaking in the east, the sun was rising above the horizon, + +lighting up the ocean with its brilliant beams, and Mrs Barnett painfully + +staggered to her feet. Looking round her from the summit of the new mountain + +formed by the avalanche, which overlooked the whole island, she murmured in a + +changed and hollow voice--</p> + +<p>"The sea! the sea!"</p> + +<p>Yes, the ocean now encircled the wandering island, the sea was open at last, + +and a true sea-horizon shut in the view from east to west.</p> +<a name="BXIX" id="BXIX"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XIX.</h4> + +<h4><i>BEHRING SEA.</i></h4> + +<p>The island, driven by the ice-wall, had then drifted at a great speed into + +Behring Sea, after crossing the strait without running aground on its shores! It + +was still hurrying on before the icy barrier, which was in the grasp of a + +powerful submarine current, hastening onwards on to its inevitable dissolution + +in the warmer waters of the Pacific, and the boat on which all had depended was + +useless!</p> + +<p>As soon as Mrs Barnett had entirely recovered consciousness, she related in a + +few words the history of the seventy-four hours spent in the house now in the + +water. Thomas Black, Madge, and Kalumah had been aroused by the crash of the + +avalanche, and had rushed to the doors or windows. There was no longer any + +possibility of getting out, the mass of earth and sand, which was but a moment + +before Cape Bathurst, completely covered the house, and almost immediately + +afterwards the prisoners heard the crash of the huge ice-masses which were flung + +upon the factory.</p> + +<p>In another quarter of an hour all felt that the house, whilst resisting the + +enormous pressure, was sinking through the soil of the island. They knew that + +the crust of the ice must have given way, and that the house would fill with + +water!</p> + +<p>To seize a few provisions remaining in the pantry, and to take refuge in the + +loft, was the work of a moment. This the poor creatures did from a dim instinct + +of self-preservation, but what hope could they really have of being saved! + +However, the loft seemed likely to resist, and two blocks of ice abutting from + +the roof saved it from being immediately crushed.</p> + +<p>Whilst thus imprisoned the poor creatures could hear the constant falls from + +the icebergs, whilst the sea was gradually rising through the lower rooms. They + +must either be crushed or drowned!</p> + +<p>But by little short of a miracle, the roof of the house, with its strong + +framework, resisted the pressure, and after sinking a certain depth the house + +remained stationary, with the water rather above the floor of the loft. The + +prisoners were obliged to take refuge amongst the rafters of the roof, and there + +they remained for many hours. Kalumah devoted herself to the service of the + +others, and carried food to them through the water. They could make no attempt + +to save themselves, succour could only come from without.</p> + +<p>It was a terrible situation, for breathing was difficult in the vitiated air + +deficient as it was in oxygen, and charged with a great excess of carbonic + +acid.... A few hours later Hobson would only have found the corpses of his + +friends!</p> + +<p>The horror of the position was increased by the gushing of the water through + +the lower rooms, which convinced Mrs Barnett that the island was drifting to the + +south. She had, in fact, guessed the whole truth; she knew that the ice-wall had + +heeled over and fallen upon the island, and concluded that the boat was + +destroyed. It was this last fact which gave such terrible significance to her + +first words when she looked around her after her swoon-</p> + +<p>"The sea! the sea!"</p> + +<p>Those about her, however, could think of nothing yet but the fact, that they + +had saved her for whom they would have died, and with her Madge, Kalumah, and + +Thomas Black. Thus far not one of those who had joined the Lieutenant in his + +disastrous expedition had succumbed to any of the fearful dangers through which + +they had passed.</p> + +<p>But matters were not yet at their worst, and fresh troubles were soon to + +hasten the final catastrophe.</p> + +<p>Hobson's first care after Mrs Barnett's recovery was to take the bearings of + +the inland. It was listless now to think of quitting it, as the sea was open and + +their boat destroyed. A few ruins alone remained of the mighty ice-wall, the + +upper portion of which had crushed Cape Bathurst whilst the submerged base was + +driving the island to the south.</p> + +<p>The instruments and maps belonging to the astronomer were found in the ruins + +of the house, and were fortunately uninjured. The weather was cloudy, but Hobson + +succeeded in taking the altitude of the sun with sufficient accuracy for his + +purpose.</p> + +<p>We give the result obtained at noon on the 12th May. Victoria Island was then + +situated in longitude 168?12' west of Greenwich, and in latitude 63?37' N. The + +exact spot was looked out on the chart, and proved to be in Norton Sound, + +between Cape Tchaplin on the Asiatic and Cape Stephens on the American coast, + +but a hundred miles from either.</p> + +<p>"We must give up all hope of making the land of the continent then!" said Mrs + +Barnett.</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam," replied Hobson; "all hope of that is at an end; the current is + +carrying us with great rapidity out into the offing, and our only chance is, + +that we may pass within sight of a whaler."</p> + +<p>"Well, but," added Mrs Barnett, "if we cannot make the land of either + +continent, might not the current drive us on to one of the islands of Behring + +Sea?"</p> + +<p>There was, in fact, a slight possibility that such a thing might happen, and + +all eagerly clutched at the hope, like a drowning man at a plank. There are + +plenty of islands in Behring Sea, St Lawrence, St Matthew, Nunivak, St Paul, + +George island, &c. The wandering island was in fact at that moment not far + +from St Lawrence, which is of a considerable size, and surrounded with islets; + +and should it pass it without stopping, there was yet a hope that the cluster of + +the Aleutian Islands, bounding Behring Sea on the south, might arrest its + +course.</p> + +<p>Yes! St Lawrence might be a harbour of refuge for the colonists, and if it + +failed them, St Matthew, and the group of islets of which it is the centre, + +would still be left. It would not do, however, to count upon the Aleutian + +Islands, which were more than eight hundred miles away, and which they might + +never reach. Long, long before they got so far, Victoria Island, worn away by + +the warm sea-waves, and melted by the rays of the sun, which was already in the + +sign of Gemini, would most likely have sunk to the bottom of the ocean.</p> + +<p>There is, however, no fixed point beyond which floating ice does not advance. + +It approaches nearer to the equator in the southern than in the northern + +hemisphere. Icebergs have been seen off the Cape of Good Hope, at about + +thirty-six degrees south latitude, but those which come down from the Arctic + +Ocean have never passed forty degrees north latitude. The weather conditions, + +which are of course variable, determine the exact locality where ice will melt; + +in severe and prolonged winters it remains solid in comparatively low latitudes, + +and <i>vice versa</i> in early springs.</p> + +<p>Now the warm season of 1861 had set in very early, and this would hasten the + +dissolution of Victoria Island. The waters of Behring Sea had already changed + +from blue to green, as the great navigator Hudson observed they always do on the + +approach of icebergs, so that a catastrophe might be expected at any moment.</p> + +<p>Hobson determined to do his best to avert the coming misfortune, and ordered + +a raft to be constructed which would carry the whole colony, and might be guided + +to the continent somehow or other. There was every chance of meeting vessels now + +that the whaling season had commenced, and Mac-Nab was commissioned to make a + +large solid raft which would float when Victoria Island was engulfed.</p> + +<p>But first of all, it was necessary to construct some shelter for the homeless + +inhabitants of the island. The simple plan appeared to be to dig out the old + +barracks, which had been built on to the principal house, and the walls of which + +were still standing. Every one set to work with a hearty good-will, and in a few + +days a shelter was provided from the inclemencies of the fickle weather.</p> + +<p>Search was also made in the ruins of the large house, and a good many + +articles of more or less value were saved from the submerged rooms-tools, arms, + +furniture, the air pumps, and the air vessel, &c.</p> + +<p>On the 13th May all hope of drifting on to the island of St Lawrence had to + +be abandoned. When the bearings were taken, it was found that they were passing + +at a considerable distance to the east of that island; and, as Hobson was well + +aware, currents do not run against natural obstacles, but turn them, so that + +little hope could be entertained of thus making the land. It is true the network + +of islands in the Catherine Archipelago, scattered over several degrees of + +latitude, might stop the island if it ever got so far. But, as we have before + +stated, that was not probable, although it was advancing at great speed; for + +this speed must decrease considerably when the ice-wall which was driving it + +along should be broken away or dissolved, unprotected as it was from the heat of + +the sun by any covering of earth or sand.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson, Mrs Barnett, Sergeant Long, and the head carpenter often + +discussed these matters, and came to the conclusion that the island could + +certainly never reach the Aleutian group with so many chances against it.</p> + +<p>On the 14th May, Mac-Nab and his men commenced the construction of a huge + +raft. It had to be as high as possible above the water, to prevent the waves + +from breaking over it, so that it was really a formidable undertaking. The + +blacksmith, Rae, had fortunately found a large number of the iron bolts which + +had been brought from Fort Reliance, and they were invaluable for firmly + +fastening together the different portions of the framework of the raft.</p> + +<p>We must describe the novel site for the building of the raft suggested by + +Lieutenant Hobson. Instead of joining the timbers and planks together on the + +ground, they were joined on the surface of the lake. The different pieces of + +wood were prepared on the banks, and launched separately. They were then easily + +fitted together on the water. This mode of proceeding had two advantages:-</p> + +<p>1. The carpenter would be able at once to judge of the point of flotation, + +and the stability which should be given to the raft. 2. When Victoria Island + +melted, the raft would already be floating, and would not be liable to the + +shocks it would receive if on land when the inevitable break-up came.</p> + +<p>Whilst these works were going on, Hobson would wander about on the beach, + +either alone or with Mrs Barnett, examining the state of the sea, and the + +ever-changing windings of the coast-line, worn by the constant action of the + +waves. He would gaze upon the vast deserted ocean, from which the very icebergs + +had now disappeared, watching, ever watching, like a shipwrecked mariner, for + +the vessel which never came. The ocean solitudes were only frequented by + +cetacea, which came to feed upon the microscopic anima[l]culae which form their + +principal food, and abound in the green waters. Now and then floating trees of + +different kinds, which had been brought by the great ocean currents from warm + +latitudes, passed the island on their way to the north.</p> + +<p>On the 16th May, Mrs Barnett and Madge were walking together on that part of + +the island between the former Cape Bathurst and Port Barnett. It was a fine warm + +day, and there had been no traces of snow on the ground for some time; all that + +recalled the bitter cold of the Polar regions were the relics left by the + +ice-wall on the northern part of the island; but even these were rapidly + +melting, and every day fresh waterfalls poured from their summits and bathed + +their sides. Very soon the sun would have completely dissolved every atom of + +ice.</p> + +<p>Strange indeed was the aspect of Victoria Island. But for their terrible + +anxiety, the colonists must have gazed at it with eager interest. The ground was + +more prolific than it could have been in any former spring, transferred as it + +was to milder latitudes. The little mosses and tender flowers grew rapidly, and + +Mrs Joliffe's garden was wonderfully successful. The vegetation of every kind, + +hitherto checked by the rigour of the Arctic winter, was not only more abundant, + +but more brilliantly coloured. The hues of leaves and flowers were no longer + +pale and watery, but warm and glowing, like the sunbeams which called them + +forth. The arbutus, willow, birch, fir, and pine trees were clothed with dark + +verdure; the sap-sometimes heated in a temperature of 68? Fahrenheit-burst open + +the young buds; in a word, the Arctic landscape was completely transformed, for + +the island was now beneath the same parallel of latitude as Christiania or + +Stockholm, that is to say, in one of the finest districts of the temperate + +zones.</p> + +<p>But Mrs Barnett had now no eyes for these wonderful phenomena of nature. The + +shadow of the coming doom clouded her spirit. She shared the feeling of + +depression manifested by the hundreds of animals now collected round the + +factory. The foxes, martens, ermines, lynxes, beavers, musk-rats, gluttons, and + +even the wolves, rendered less savage by their instinctive knowledge of a common + +danger, approached nearer and nearer to their old enemy man, as if man could + +save them. It was a tacit, a touching acknowledgment of human superiority, under + +circumstances in which that superiority could be of absolutely no avail.</p> + +<p>No! Mrs Barnett cared no longer for the beauties of nature, and gazed without + +ceasing upon the boundless, pitiless, infinite ocean with its unbroken + +horizon.</p> + +<p>"Poor Madge!" she said at last to her faithful companion; "it was I who + +brought you to this terrible pass-you who have followed me everywhere, and whose + +fidelity deserved a far different recompense! Can you forgive me?"</p> + +<p>"There is but one thing I could never have forgiven you," replied Madge,-"a + +death I did not share!"</p> + +<p>"Ah, Madge!" cried Mrs Barnett, "if my death could save the lives of all + +these poor people, how gladly would I die!"</p> + +<p>"My dear girl," replied Madge, "have you lost all hope at last?"</p> + +<p>"I have indeed," murmured Mrs Barnett, hiding her face on Madge's + +shoulder.</p> + +<p>The strong masculine nature had given way at last, and Mrs Barnett was for a + +moment a feeble woman. Was not her emotion excusable in so awful a + +situation?</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett sobbed aloud, and large tears rolled down her cheeks.</p> + +<p>Madge kissed and caressed her, and tried all she could to reassure her; and + +presently, raising her head, her poor mistress said-</p> + +<p>"Do not tell them, Madge, how I have given way-do not betray that I have + +wept."</p> + +<p>"Of course not," said Madge, "and they would not believe me if I did. It was + +but a moment's weakness. Be yourself, dear girl; cheer up, and take fresh + +courage."</p> + +<p>"Do you mean to say you still hope yourself!" exclaimed Mrs Barnett, looking + +anxiously into her companion's face.</p> + +<p>"I still hope!" said Madge simply.</p> + +<p>But a few days afterwards, every chance of safety seemed to be indeed gone, + +when the wandering island passed outside the St Matthew group, and drifted away + +from the last land in Behring Sea!</p> +<a name="BXX" id="BXX"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XX.</h4> + +<h4><i>IN THE OFFING.</i></h4> + +<p>Victoria Island was now floating in the widest part of Behring Sea, six + +hundred miles from the nearest of the Aleutian Islands, and two hundred miles + +from the nearest land, which was on the east. Supposing no accident happened, it + +would be three weeks at least before this southern boundary of Behring Sea could + +be reached.</p> + +<p>Could the island last so long? Might it not burst open at any moment, subject + +as it was even now to the constant action of tepid water, the mean temperature + +of which was more than 50? Fahrenheit?</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson pressed on the construction of the raft as rapidly as + +possible, and the lower framework was already floating on the lagoon. Mac-Nab + +wished to make it as strong as possible, for it would have a considerable + +distance to go to reach the Aleutian Islands, unless they were fortunate enough + +to meet with a whaler.</p> + +<p>No important alteration had lately taken place in the general configuration + +of the island. Reconaissances were taken everyday, but great caution was + +necessary, as a fracture of the ground might at any moment cut off the explorers + +from the rest of the party.</p> + +<p>The wide gulf near Cape Michael, which the winter had closed, had reopened + +gradually, and now ran a mile inland, as far as the dried-up bed of the little + +river. It was probable that it was soon to extend to the bed itself, which was + +of course of little thickness, having been hollowed out by the stream. Should it + +do so, the whole district between Cape Michael and Port Barnett, bounded on the + +west by the river bed, would disappear-that is to say, the colonists would lose + +a good many square miles of their domain. On this account Hobson warned every + +one not to wander far, as a rough sea would be enough to bring about the dreaded + +catastrophe.</p> + +<p>Soundings were, however, taken, in several places with a view to ascertaining + +where the ice was thickest, and it was found that, near Cape Bathurst, not only + +was the layer of earth and sand of greater extent-which was of little + +importance-but the crust of ice was thicker than anywhere else. This was a most + +fortunate circumstance, and the holes made in sounding were kept open, so that + +the amount of diminution in the base of the island could be estimated every day. + +This diminution was slow but sure, and, making allowance for the unfortunate + +fact that the island was drifting into warmer waters, it was decided that it was + +impossible for it to last another three weeks.</p> + +<p>The next week, from the 19th to the 25th May, the weather was very bad. A + +fearful storm broke over the island, accompanied by flash after flash of + +lightning and peals of thunder. The sea rose high, lashed by a powerful + +north-west wind, and its waves broke over the doomed island, making it tremble + +ominously. The little colony were on the watch, ready on an emergency to embark + +in the raft, the scaffolding of which was nearly finished, and some provisions + +and fresh water were taken on board.</p> + +<p>Rain heavy enough to penetrate to the ice-crust fell in large quantities + +during this storm, and melted it in many places. On the slopes of some of the + +hills the earth was washed away, leaving the white foundations bare. These + +ravines were hastily filled up with soil to protect the ice from the action of + +the warm air and rain, and but for this precaution the soil would have been + +everywhere perforated.</p> + +<p>Great havoc was caused amongst the woods by this storm; the earth and sand + +were washed away from the roots of the trees, which fell in large numbers. In a + +single night the aspect of the country between the lake and the former Port + +Barnett was completely changed. A few groups of birch trees and thickets of firs + +alone remained-a fact significant of approaching decomposition, which no human + +skill could prevent! Every one knew and felt that the ephemeral inland was + +gradually succumbing-every one, except perhaps Thomas Black, who was still + +gloomily indifferent to all that was going on.</p> + +<p>On the 23d of May, during the storm, the hunter Sabine left the house in the + +thick fog, and was nearly drowned in a large hole which had opened during the + +night on the site formerly occupied by the principal house of the factory.</p> + +<p>Hitherto, as we are aware, the house, three quarters submerged, and buried + +beneath a mass of earth and sand, had remained fixed in the ice-crust beneath + +the island; but now the sea had evidently enlarged the crevasse, and the house + +with all it contained had sunk to rise no more. Earth and sand were pouring + +through this fissure, at the bottom of which surged the tempest-tossed waves</p> + +<p>Sabine's comrades, hearing his cries, rushed to his assistance, and were just + +in time to save him as he was still clinging to the slippery walls of the abyss. + +He escaped with a ducking which might have had tragic consequences.</p> + +<p>A little later the beams and planks of the house, which had slid under the + +island, were seen floating about in the offing like the spars of a wrecked + +vessel. This was the worst evil the storm had wrought, and would compromise the + +solidity of the island yet more, as the waves would now eat away the ice all + +round the crevasse.</p> + +<p>In the course of the 25th May, the wind veered to the north-east, and + +although it blew strongly, it was no longer a hurricane; the rain ceased, and + +the sea became calmer. After a quiet night the sun rose upon the desolate scene, + +the Lieutenant was able to take the bearings accurately, and obtained the + +following result:-</p> + +<p>At noon on the 25th May, Victoria Island was in latitude 56? 13', and + +longitude 170? 23'.</p> + +<p>It had therefore advanced at great speed, having drifted nearly eight hundred + +miles since the breaking up of the ice set it free in Behring Strait two months + +before.</p> + +<p>This great speed made the Lieutenant once more entertain a slight hope. He + +pointed out the Aleutian Islands on the map to his comrades, and said-</p> + +<p>"Look at these islands; they are not now two hundred miles from us, and we + +may reach them in eight days."</p> + +<p>"Eight days!" repeated Long, shaking his head; "eight days is a long + +time."</p> + +<p>"I must add," continued Hobson, "that if our island had followed the hundred + +and sixty-eighth meridian, it would already have reached the parallel of these + +islands, but in consequence of a deviation of the Behring current, it is bearing + +in a south-westerly direction."</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant was right, the current seemed likely to drag the island away + +from all land, even out of sight of the Aleutian Islands, which only extend as + +far as the hundred and seventieth meridian.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett examined the map in silence. She saw the pencil-mark which + +denoted the exact spot then occupied by the island.</p> + +<p>The map was made on a large scale, and the point representing the island + +looked but a speck upon the vast expanse of the Behring Sea. She traced back the + +route by which the island had come to its present position, marvelling at the + +fatality, or rather the immutable law, by which the currents which had borne it + +along had avoided all land, sheering clear of islands, and never touching either + +continent; and she saw the boundless Pacific Ocean, towards which she and all + +with her were hurrying.</p> + +<p>She mused long upon this melancholy subject, and at last exclaimed + +suddenly-</p> + +<p>"Could not the course of the island be controlled? Eight days at this pace + +would bring us to the last island of the Aleutian group."</p> + +<p>"Those eight days are in the hands of God," replied Lieutenant Hobson + +gravely; "we can exercise no control upon them. Help can only come to us from + +above; there is nothing left for us to try."</p> + +<p>"I know, I know!" said Mrs Barnett; "but Heaven helps those who help + +themselves. Is there really nothing we can do?"</p> + +<p>Hobson shook his head doubtfully. His only hope was in the raft, and he was + +undecided whether to embark every one on it at once, contrive some sort of a + +sail with clothes, &c., and try to reach the nearest land, or to wait yet a + +little longer.</p> + +<p>He consulted Sergeant Long, Mac-Nab, Rae, Marbre, and Sabine, in whom he had + +great confidence, and all agreed that it would be unwise to abandon the island + +before they were obliged. The raft, constantly swept as it would be by the + +waves, could only be a last resource, and would not move at half the pace of the + +island, still driven towards the south by the remains of the ice-wall. The wind + +generally blew from the east, and would be likely to drift the raft out into the + +offing away from all land. They must still wait then, always wait; for the + +island was drifting rapidly towards the Aleutians. When they really approached + +the group they would be able to see what it would be best to do.</p> + +<p>This was certainly the wisest course to take. In eight days, if the present + +speed were maintained, the island would either stop at the southern boundary of + +Behring Sea, or be dragged to the south west to the waters of the Pacific Ocean, + +where certain destruction awaited it.</p> + +<p>But the adverse fate which seemed all along to have followed the hapless + +colonists had yet another blow in store for them: the speed on which they + +counted was now to fail them, as everything else had done.</p> + +<p>During the night of the 26th May, the orientation of the island changed once + +more; and this time the results of the displacement were extremely serious. The + +island turned half round, and the icebergs still remaining of the huge ice-wall, + +which had shut in the northern horizon, were now on the south.</p> + +<p>In the morning the shipwrecked travellers-what name could be more + +appropriate?-saw the sun rise above Cape Esquimaux instead of above Port + +Barnett.</p> + +<p>Hardly a hundred yards off rose the icebergs, rapidly melting, but still of a + +considerable size, which till then had driven the island before them. The + +southern horizon was now partly shut in by them.</p> + +<p>What would be the consequences of this fresh change of position? Would not + +the icebergs now float away from the island, with which they were no longer + +connected?</p> + +<p>All were oppressed with a presentiment of some new misfortune, and understood + +only too well what Kellet meant when he exclaimed-</p> + +<p>"This evening we shall have lost our screw!'"</p> + +<p>By this Kellet meant that the icebergs, being before instead of behind the + +island, would soon leave it, and as it was they which imparted to it its rapid + +motion, in consequence of their very great draught of water-their volume being + +six or seven feet below the sea level for every one above-they would now go on + +without it, impelled by the submarine current, whilst Victoria Island, not deep + +enough in the water to come under the influence of the current, would be left + +floating helplessly on the waves.</p> + +<p>Yes! Kellet was right; the island would then be like a vessel with disabled + +masts and a broken screw.</p> + +<p>No one answered the soldier's remark, and a quarter of an hour had not + +elapsed before a loud cracking sound was heard. The summits of the icebergs + +trembled, large masses broke away, and the icebergs, irresistibly drawn along by + +the submarine current, drifted rapidly to the south.</p> +<a name="BXXI" id="BXXI"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XXI.</h4> + +<h4><i>THE ISLAND BECOMES AN ISLET.</i></h4> + +<p>Three hours later the last relics of the ice-wall had disappeared, proving + +that the island now remained stationary, and that all the force of the current + +was deep down below the waves, not on the surface of the sea.</p> + +<p>The bearings were taken at noon with the greatest care and twenty-four hours + +later it was found that Victoria Island had not advanced one mile.</p> + +<p>The only remaining hope was that some vessel should sight the poor + +shipwrecked creatures, either whilst still on the island, or after they had + +taken to their raft.</p> + +<p>The island was now in 54? 33' latitude, and 177? 19' longitude, several + +hundred miles from the nearest land, namely, the Aleutian Islands.</p> + +<p>Hobson once more called his comrades together, and asked them what they + +thought it would be best to do.</p> + +<p>All agreed that they should remain on the island until it broke up, as it was + +too large to be affected by the state of the sea, and only take to the raft when + +the dissolution actually commenced. Once on the frail vessel, they must + +wait.</p> + +<p>Still wait!</p> + +<p>The raft was now finished. Mac-Nab had made one large shed or cabin big + +enough to hold every one, and to afford some little shelter from the weather. A + +mast had been prepared, which could be put up if necessary, and the sails + +intended for the boat had long been ready. The whole structure was strong, + +although clumsy; and if the wind were favourable, and the sea not too rough, + +this rude assortment of planks and timbers might save the lives of the whole + +party.</p> + +<p>"Nothing," observed Mrs Barnett,-"nothing is impossible to Him who rules the + +winds and waves."</p> + +<p>Hobson carefully looked over the stores of provisions. The reserves had been + +much damaged by the avalanche, but there were plenty of animals still on the + +island, and the abundant shrubs and mosses supplied them with food. A few + +reindeer and hares were slaughtered by the hunters, and their flesh salted for + +future needs.</p> + +<p>The health of the colonists was on the whole good. They had suffered little + +in the preceding mild winter, and all the mental trials they had gone through + +had not affected their physical well-being. They were, however, looking forward + +with something of a shrinking horror to the moment when they would have to + +abandon their island home, or, to speak more correctly, when it abandoned them. + +It was no wonder that they did not like the thought of floating on the ocean in + +a rude structure of wood subject to all the caprices of winds and waves. Even in + +tolerably fine weather seas would be shipped and every one constantly drenched + +with saltwater. Moreover, it must be remembered that the men were none of them + +sailors, accustomed to navigation, and ready to risk their lives on a few + +planks, but soldiers, trained for service on land. Their island was fragile, it + +is true, and rested on a thin crust of ice; but then it was covered with a + +productive soil, trees and shrubs flourished upon it, its huge bulk rendered it + +insensible to the motion of the waves, and it might have been supposed to be + +stationary. They had, in fact, become attached to Victoria Island, on which they + +had lived nearly two years; every inch of the ground had become familiar to + +them; they had tilled the soil, and had come safely through so many perils in + +their wandering home, that in leaving it they felt as if they were parting from + +an old and sorely-tried friend.</p> + +<p>Hobson fully sympathised with the feelings of his men, and understood their + +repugnance to embarking on the raft; but then he also knew that the catastrophe + +could not now be deferred much longer, and ominous symptoms already gave warning + +of its rapid approach.</p> + +<p>We will now describe this raft. It was thirty feet square, and its deck rose + +two feet above the water. Its bulwarks would therefore keep out the small but + +not the large waves. In the centre the carpenter had built a regular deck-house, + +which would hold some twenty people. Round it were large lockers for the + +provisions and water-casks, all firmly fixed to the deck with iron bolts. The + +mast, thirty feet high, was fastened to the deck-house, and strengthened with + +stays attached to the corners of the raft. This mast was to have a square sail, + +which would only be useful when the wind was aft. A sort of rudder was fixed to + +this rough structure, the fittings of which were necessarily incomplete.</p> + +<p>Such was the raft constructed by the head carpenter, on which twenty-one + +persons were to embark. It was floating peacefully on the little lake, strongly + +moored to the shore.</p> + +<p>It was certainly constructed with more care than if it had been put together + +in haste on a vessel at sea doomed to immediate destruction. It was stronger and + +better fitted up; but, after all, it was but a raft.</p> + +<p>On the 1st June a new incident occurred. Hope, one of the soldiers, went to + +fetch some water from the lake for culinary purposes, and when Mrs Joliffe + +tasted it, she found that it was salt. She called Hope, and said she wanted + +fresh, not salt water.</p> + +<p>The man replied that he had brought it from the lake as usual, and as he and + +Mrs Joliffe were disputing about it, the Lieutenant happened to come in. Hearing + +Hope's repeated [asertions] assertions that he had fetched the water from the + +lake, he turned pale and hurried to the lagoon.</p> + +<p>The waters were quite salt; the bottom of the lake had evidently given way, + +and the sea had flowed in.</p> + +<p>The fact quickly became known, and every one was seized with a terrible + +dread.</p> + +<p>"No more fresh water!" exclaimed all the poor creatures together.</p> + +<p>Lake Barnett had in fact disappeared, as Paulina River had done before.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Hobson hastened to reassure his comrades about drinkable + +water.</p> + +<p>"There will be plenty of ice, my friends," he said. "We can always melt a + +piece of our island, and," he added, with a ghastly attempt at a smile, "I don't + +suppose we shall drink it all."</p> + +<p>It is, in fact, well known that salt separates from sea-water in freezing and + +evaporation. A few blocks of ice were therefore "disinterred," if we may so + +express it, and melted for daily use, and to fill the casks on board the + +raft.</p> + +<p>It would not do, however, to neglect this fresh warning given by nature. The + +invasion of the lake by the sea proved that the base of the island was rapidly + +melting. At any moment the ground might give way, and Hobson forbade his men to + +leave the factory, as they might be drifted away before they were aware of + +it.</p> + +<p>The animals seemed more keenly alive than ever to approaching danger; they + +gathered yet more closely round the firmer part, and after the disappearance of + +the fresh water lake, they came to lick the blocks of ice. They were all uneasy, + +and some seemed to be seized with madness, especially the wolves, who rushed + +wildly towards the factory, and dashed away again howling piteously. The furred + +animals remained huddled together round the large well where the principal house + +had formerly stood. There were several hundreds of them, of different species, + +and the solitary bear roamed backwards and forwards, showing no more hostility + +to the quadrupeds than to men.</p> + +<p>The number of birds, which had hitherto been considerable, now decreased. + +During the last few days all those capable of long-sustained flight-such as + +swans, &c, migrated towards the Aleutian Islands in the south, where they + +would find a sure refuge. This significant and ominous fact was noticed by Mrs + +Barnett and Madge, who were walking together on the beach.</p> + +<p>"There is plenty of food for these birds on the island," observed Mrs + +Barnett, "and yet they leave it-they have a good reason, no doubt."</p> + +<p>"Yes," replied Madge; "their instinct of self-preservation makes them take + +flight, and they give us a warning by which we ought to profit. The animals also + +appear more uneasy than usual."</p> + +<p>Hobson now decided to take the greater part of the provisions and all the + +camping apparatus on board the raft, and when that was done, to embark with the + +whole party.</p> + +<p>The sea was, however, very rough, and the waters of the former lake-now a + +kind of Mediterranean in miniature-were greatly agitated. The waves, confined in + +the narrow space, dashed mountains high, and broke violently upon the steep + +banks. The raft tossed up and down, and shipped sea after sea. The embarkation + +of provisions, &c., had to be put off.</p> + +<p>Every one wished to pass one more quiet night on land, and Hobson yielded + +against his better judgment, determined, if it were calmer the next day, to + +proceed with the embarkation.</p> + +<p>The night was more peaceful than had been expected; the wind went down, and + +the sea became calmer; it had but been swept by one of those sudden and brief + +hurricanes peculiar to these latitudes.</p> + +<p>At eight o'clock in the evening the tumult ceased, and a slight surface + +agitation of the waters of lake and sea alone remained.</p> + +<p>It was some slight comfort that the island would not now be broken up + +suddenly, as it must have done had the storm continued. Its dissolution was, of + +course, still close at hand, but would not, it was hoped, be sudden and + +abrupt.</p> + +<p>The storm was succeeded by a slight fog, which seemed likely to thicken + +during the night. It came from the north, and owing to the changed position of + +the island, would probably cover the greater part of it.</p> + +<p>Before going to bed, Hobson went down and examined the moorings of the raft, + +which were fastened to some strong birch-trees. To make security doubly sure, he + +tightened them, and the worst that could now happen would be, that the raft + +would drift out on to the lagoon, which was not large enough to be lost upon + +it.</p> +<a name="BXXII" id="BXXII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XXII.</h4> + +<h4><i>THE FOUR FOLLOWING DAYS</i>.</h4> + +<p>The night was calm, and in the morning the Lieutenant resolved to order the + +embarkation of everything and everybody that very day. He, therefore, went down + +to the lake to look at the raft.</p> + +<p>The fog was still thick, but the sunbeams were beginning to struggle through + +it. The clouds had been swept away by the hurricane of the preceding day, and it + +seemed likely to be hot.</p> + +<p>When Hobson reached the banks of the lake, the fog was still too dense for + +him to make out anything on its surface, and he was waiting for it to clear + +away, when he was joined by Mrs Barnett, Madge, and several others.</p> + +<p>The fog gradually cleared off, drawing back to the end of the lake, but the + +raft was nowhere to be seen.</p> + +<p>Presently a gust of wind completely swept away the fog.</p> + +<p>The raft was gone! There was no longer a lake! The boundless ocean stretched + +away before the astonished colonists!</p> + +<p>Hobson could not check a cry of despair; and when he and his companions + +turned round and saw the sea on every side, they realised with a shock of horror + +that their island was now nothing more than an islet!</p> + +<p>During the night six-sevenths of the district once belonging to Cape Bathurst + +had silently floated away, without producing a shock of any kind, so completely + +had the ice been worn away by the constant action of the waves, the raft had + +drifted out into the offing, and those whose last hope it had been could not see + +a sign of it on the desolate sea.</p> + +<p>The unfortunate colonists were now overwhelmed with despair; their last hope + +gone, they were hanging above an awful abyss ready to swallow them up; and some + +of the soldiers in a fit of madness were about to throw themselves into the sea, + +when Mrs Barnett flung herself before them, entreating them to desist. They + +yielded, some of them weeping like children.</p> + +<p>The awful situation of the colonists was indeed manifest enough, and we may + +well pity the Lieutenant surrounded by the miserable despairing creatures. + +Twenty-one persons on an islet of ice which must quickly melt beneath their + +feet! The wooded hills had disappeared with the mass of the island now engulfed; + +not a tree was left. There was no wood remaining but the planks of the rough + +lodging, which would not be nearly enough to build a raft to hold so many. A few + +days of life were all the colonists could now hope for; June had set in, the + +mean temperature exceeded 68? Fahrenheit, and the islet must rapidly melt.</p> + +<p>As a forlorn hope, Hobson thought he would make a reconaissance of his + +limited domain, and see if any part of it was thicker than where they were all + +now encamped. In this excursion he was accompanied by Mrs Barnett and Madge.</p> + +<p>"Do you still hope!" inquired the lady of her faithful companion.</p> + +<p>"I hope ever!" replied Madge.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett did not answer, but walked rapidly along the coast at the + +Lieutenant's side. No alteration had taken place between Cape Bathurst and Cape + +Esquimaux, that is to say, for a distance of eight miles. It was at Cape + +Esquimaux that the fracture had taken place, and running inland, it followed a + +curved line as far as the beginning of the lagoon, from which point the shores + +of the lake, now bathed by the waves of the sea, formed the new coast-line. + +Towards the upper part of the lagoon there was another fracture, running as far + +as the coast, between Cape Bathurst and what was once Port Barnett, so that the + +islet was merely an oblong strip, not more than a mile wide anywhere.</p> + +<p>Of the hundred and forty square miles which once formed the total superficial + +area of the island, only twenty remained.</p> + +<p>Hobson most carefully examined the new conformation of the islet, and found + +that its thickest part was still at the site of the former factory. He decided, + +therefore, to retain the encampment where it was, and, strange to say, the + +instinct of the quadrupeds still led them to congregate about it.</p> + +<p>A great many of the animals had, however, disappeared with the rest of the + +island, amongst them many of the dogs which had escaped the former catastrophe. + +Most of the quadrupeds remaining were rodents; and the bear, which seemed + +terribly puzzled, paced round and round the islet like a caged animal.</p> + +<p>About five o'clock in the evening the three explorers returned to the camp. + +The men and women were gathered together in gloomy silence in the rough shelter + +still remaining to them, and Mrs Joliffe was preparing some food. Sabine, who + +was less overcome than his comrades, was wandering about in the hope of getting + +some fresh venison, and the astronomer was sitting apart from every one, gazing + +at the sea in an absent indifferent manner, as if nothing could ever rouse or + +astonish him again.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant imparted the results of his excursion to the whole party. He + +told them that they were safer where they were than they would be on any other + +spot, and he urged them not to wander about, as there were signs of another + +approaching fracture half way between the camp and Cape Esquimaux. The + +superficial area of the islet would soon be yet further reduced, and they could + +do nothing, absolutely nothing.</p> + +<p>The day was really quite hot. The ice which had been "disinterred" for + +drinkable water melted before it was brought near the fire. Thin pieces of the + +ice crust of the steep beach fell off into the sea, and it was evident that the + +general level of the islet was being lowered by the constant wearing away of its + +base in the tepid waters.</p> + +<p>No one slept the next night. Who could have closed his eyes with the + +knowledge that the abyss beneath might open at any moment?-who but the little + +unconscious child who still smiled in his mother's arms, and was never for one + +instant out of them?</p> + +<p>The next morning, June 4th, the sun rose in a cloudless sky. No change had + +taken place in the conformation of the islet during the night.</p> + +<p>In the course of this day a terrified blue fox rushed into the shed, and + +could not be induced to leave it. The martens, ermines, polar hares, musk-rats, + +and beavers literally swarmed upon the site of the former factory. The wolves + +alone were unrepresented, and had probably all been swallowed up with the rest + +of the island. The bear no longer wandered from Cape Bathurst, and the furred + +animals seemed quite unconscious of its presence; nor did the colonists notice + +it much, absorbed as they were in the contemplation of the approaching doom, + +which had broken down all the ordinary distinctions of race.</p> + +<p>A little before noon a sudden hope-too soon to end in disappointment-revived + +the drooping spirits of the colonists.</p> + +<p>Sabine, who had been standing for some time on the highest part of the islet + +looking at the sea, suddenly cried-</p> + +<p>"A boat! a boat!"</p> + +<p>It was as if an electric shock had suddenly ran through the group, for all + +started up and rushed towards the hunter.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant looked at him inquiringly, and the man pointed to a white + +vapour on the horizon. Not a word was spoken, but all watched in breathless + +silence as the form of a vessel gradually rose against the sky.</p> + +<p>It was indeed a ship, and most likely a whaler. There was no doubt about it, + +and at the end of an hour even the keel was visible.</p> + +<p>Unfortunately this vessel appeared on the east of the islet, that is to say, + +on the opposite side to that from which the raft had drifted, so that there + +could be no hope that it was coming to their rescue after meeting with the raft, + +which would have suggested the fact of fellow-creatures being in danger.</p> + +<p>The question now was, would those in this vessel perceive the islet? Would + +they be able to make out signals on it? Alas! in broad daylight, with a bright + +sun shining, it was not likely they would. Had it been night some of the planks + +of the remaining shed might have made a fire large enough to be seen at a + +considerable distance, but the boat would probably have disappeared before the + +darkness set in; and, although it seemed of little use, signals were made, and + +guns fired on the islet.</p> + +<p>The vessel was certainly approaching, and seemed to be a large three-master, + +evidently a whaler from New Archangel, which was on its way to Behring Strait + +after having doubled the peninsula of Alaska. It was to the windward of the + +islet, and tacking to starboard with its lower sails, top sails, and top-gallant + +sails all set. It was steadily advancing to the north. A sailor would have seen + +at a glance that it was not bearing towards the islet, but it might even yet + +perceive it, and alter its course.</p> + +<p>"If it does see us," whispered Hobson in Long's ear, "it is more likely to + +avoid us than to come nearer."</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant was right, for there is nothing vessels dread more in these + +latitudes than the approach of icebergs and ice-floes; they look upon them as + +floating rocks, against which there is a danger of striking, especially in the + +night, and they therefore hasten to change their course when ice is sighted; and + +this vessel would most likely do the same, if it noticed the islet at all.</p> + +<p>The alternations of hope and despair through which the anxious watchers + +passed may be imagined, but cannot be described. Until two o'clock in the + +afternoon they were able to believe that Heaven had at last taken pity on + +them-that help was coming-that their safety was assured. The vessel continued to + +approach in an oblique direction, and was presently not more than six miles from + +the islet. Signal after signal was tried, gun after gun fired, and some of the + +planks of the shed were burnt.</p> + +<p>All in vain-either they were not seen, or the vessel was anxious to avoid the + +islet.</p> + +<p>At half-past two it luffed slightly, and bore away to the northeast.</p> + +<p>In another hour a white vapour was all that was visible, and that soon + +disappeared.</p> + +<p>On this the soldier Kellet burst into a roar of hysterical laughter, and + +flinging himself on the ground, rolled over and over like a madman.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett turned and looked Madge full in the face, as if to ask her if she + +still hoped, and Madge turned away her head.</p> + +<p>On this same ill-fated day a crackling noise was heard, and the greater part + +of the islet broke off, and plunged into the sea. The cries of the drowning + +animals rent the air, and the islet was reduced to the narrow strip between the + +site of the engulfed house and Cape Bathurst. It was now merely a piece of + +ice.</p> +<a name="BXXIII" id="BXXIII"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XXIII.</h4> + +<h4><i>ON A PIECE OF ICE.</i></h4> + +<p>A piece of ice, a jagged triangular strip of ice, measuring one hundred feet + +at its base, and scarcely five hundred in its greatest extent; and on it + +twenty-one human beings, some hundred furred animals, a few dogs, and a large + +bear, which was at this moment crouching at the very edge!</p> + +<p>Yes! all the luckless colonists were there. Not one had yet been swallowed + +up. The last rupture had occurred when they were all in the shed. Thus far fate + +had spared them, probably that they might all perish together.</p> + +<p>A silent sleepless night ensued. No one spoke or moved, for the slightest + +shake or blow might suffice to break the ice.</p> + +<p>No one would touch the salt-meat served round by Mrs Joliffe. What would be + +the good of eating?</p> + +<p>Nearly every one remained in the open air, feeling that it would be better to + +be drowned in the open sea than in a narrow wooden shed.</p> + +<p>The next day, June 5th, the sun shone brightly down upon the heads of the + +doomed band of wanderers. All were still silent, and seemed anxious to avoid + +each other. Many gazed with troubled anxious eyes at the perfect circle of the + +horizon, of which the miserable little strip of ice formed the centre. But the + +sea was absolutely deserted-not a sail, not an ice-floe, not an islet! Their own + +piece of ice was probably the very last floating on the Behring Sea.</p> + +<p>The temperature continued to rise. The wind had gone down, and a terrible + +calm had set in, a gentle swell heaved the surface of the sea, and the morsel of + +earth and ice, which was all that was left of Victoria Island, rose and sank + +without change of position, like a wreck-and what was it but a wreck?</p> + +<p>But a wreck, a piece of woodwork, a broken mast, or a few planks, remain + +floating; they offer some resistance to the waves, they will not melt; but this + +bit of ice, this solidified water, must dissolve with the heat of the sun!</p> + +<p>This piece of ice had formed the thickest part of the island, and this will + +explain its having lasted so long. A layer of earth and plenty of vegetation + +covered it, and the base of ice must have been of considerable thickness. The + +long bitter Polar winters must have "fed it with fresh ice," in the countless + +centuries during which it was connected with the mainland. Even now its mean + +height was five or six feet above the sea level, and its base was probably of + +about the same thickness. Although in these quiet waters it was not likely to be + +broken, it could not fail gradually to melt, and the rapid dissolution could + +actually be watched at the edges, for as the long waves licked the sides, piece + +after piece of ground with its verdant covering sank to rise no more.</p> + +<p>On this 5th June a fall of this nature occurred at about one o'clock P.M., on + +the site of the shed itself, which was very near the edge of the ice. There was + +fortunately no one in it at the time, and all that was saved was a few planks, + +and two or three of the timbers of the roofs. Most of the cooking utensils and + +all the astronomical instruments were lost. The colonists were now obliged to + +take refuge on the highest part of the islet, where nothing protected them from + +the weather, but fortunately a few tools had been left there, with the air pumps + +and the air-vessel, which Hobson had employed for catching a little of the + +rain-water for drinking purposes, as he no longer dared to draw for a supply + +upon the ice, every atom of which was of value.</p> + +<p>At about four o'clock P.M., the soldier Kellet, the same who had already + +given signs of insanity, came to Mrs Barnett and said quietly-</p> + +<p>"I am going to drown myself, ma'am."</p> + +<p>"What, Kellet?" exclaimed the lady.</p> + +<p>"I tell you I am going to drown myself," replied the soldier. "I have thought + +the matter well over: there is no escape for us, and I prefer dying at once to + +waiting to be killed."</p> + +<p>"Kellet!" said Mrs Barnett, taking the man's hand and looking into his face, + +which was strangely composed, "you will not do that?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, I will, ma'am; and as you have always been very good to us all, I + +wanted to wish you good-bye. Good-bye, ma'am!"</p> + +<p>And Kellet turned towards the sea. Mrs Barnett, terrified at his manner, + +threw herself upon him and held him back. Her cries brought Hobson and Long to + +her assistance, and they did all in their power to dissuade the unhappy man from + +carrying out his purpose, but he was not to be moved, and merely shook his + +head.</p> + +<p>His mind was evidently disordered, and it was useless to reason with him. It + +was a terrible moment, as his example might lead some of his comrades to commit + +suicide also. At all hazards he must be prevented from doing as he + +threatened.</p> + +<p>"Kellet," said Mrs Barnett gently, with a half smile, "we have always been + +very good friends, have we not?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, ma'am," replied Kellet calmly.</p> + +<p>"Well, Kellet, if you like we will die together, but not to-day."</p> + +<p>"What, ma'am?"</p> + +<p>"No, my brave fellow, I am not ready; but to-morrow, to-morrow if you + +like."</p> + +<p>The soldier looked more fixedly than ever at the courageous woman, and seemed + +to hesitate an instant; then he cast a glance of fierce longing at the sea, and + +passing his hand over his eyes, said-</p> + +<p>"To-morrow!"</p> + +<p>And without another word he quietly turned away and went back to his + +comrades.</p> + +<p>"Poor fellow." murmured Mrs Barnett; "I have asked him to wait till + +to-morrow, and who can say whether we shall not all be drowned by that + +time!"</p> + +<p>Throughout that night Hobson remained motionless upon the beach, pondering + +whether there might not yet be some means to check the dissolution of the + +islet-if it might not yet be possible to preserve it until they came in sight of + +land of some sort.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett and Madge did not leave each other for an instant. Kalumah + +crouched like a dog at the feet of her mistress, and tried to keep her warm. Mrs + +Mac-Nab, wrapped in a few furs, the remains of the rich stores of Fort Hope, had + +fallen into a kind of torpor, with her baby clasped in her arms.</p> + +<p>The stars shone with extraordinary brilliancy, and no sounds broke the + +stillness of the night but the rippling of the waves and the splash of pieces of + +ice as they fell into the sea. The colonists, stretched upon the ground in + +scattered groups, were as motionless as corpses on an abandoned wreck.</p> + +<p>Sometimes Sergeant Long rose and peered into the night-mists, bat seeing + +nothing, he resumed his horizontal position. The bear, looking like a great + +white snowball, cowered motionless at the very edge of the strip of ice.</p> + +<p>This night also passed away without any incident to modify the situation. The + +grey morning dawned in the east, and the sun rose and dispersed the shadows of + +the night.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant's first care, as soon as it was light, was to examine the + +piece of ice. Its perimeter was still more reduced, and, alas! its mean height + +above the sea level had sensibly diminished. The waves, quiet as they were, + +washed over the greater part of it; the summit of the little hill alone was + +still beyond their reach.</p> + +<p>Long, too, saw the changes which had taken place during the night, and felt + +that all hope was gone.</p> + +<p>Mrs Barnett joined Lieutenant Hobson, and said to him-</p> + +<p>"It will be to-day then!"</p> + +<p>"Yes, madam, and you will keep your promise to Kellet!"</p> + +<p>"Lieutenant Hobson," said the lady solemnly, "have we done all in our + +power!"</p> + +<p>"We have, madam."</p> + +<p>"Then God's will be done!"</p> + +<p>One last attempt was, however, made during the day. A strong breeze set in + +from the offing, that is to say, a wind bearing to the south-east, the direction + +in which were situated the nearest of the Aleutian Islands. How far off no one + +could say, as without instruments the bearings of the island could not be taken. + +It was not likely to have drifted far, however, unless under the influence of + +the current, as it gave no hold to the wind.</p> + +<p>Still it was just possible that they might be nearer land than they thought. + +If only a current, the direction of which it was impossible to ascertain, had + +taken them nearer to the much-longed-for Aleutian Islands, then, as the wind was + +bearing down upon those very islands, it might drive the strip of ice before it + +if a sail of some kind could be concocted. The ice had still several hours to + +float, and in several hours the land might come in sight, or, if not the land, + +some coasting or fishing vessel.</p> + +<p>A forlorn hope truly, but it suggested an idea to the Lieutenant which he + +resolved to carry out. Could not a sail be contrived on the islet as on an + +ordinary raft? There could be no difficulty in that; and when Hobson suggested + +it to Mac-Nab, he exclaimed-</p> + +<p>"You are quite right, sir;" adding to his men, "bring out all the canvas + +there is!"</p> + +<p>Every one was quite revived by this plan, slight as was the chance it + +afforded, and all lent a helping hand, even Kellet, who had not yet reminded Mrs + +Barnett of her promise.</p> + +<p>A beam, which had once formed part of the roof of the barracks, was sunk deep + +into the earth and sand of which the little hill was composed, and firmly fixed + +with ropes arranged like shrouds and a stay. A sail made of all the clothes and + +coverlets still remaining fastened on to a strong pole for a yard, was hoisted + +on the mast This sail, or rather collection of sails, suitably set, swelled in + +the breeze, and by the wake it left, it was evident that the strip of ice was + +rapidly moving towards the south-east.</p> + +<p>It was a success, and every one was cheered with newly-awakened hope. They + +were no longer stationary; they were advancing slowly, it was true, but still + +they were advancing. The carpenter was particularly elated; all eagerly scanned + +the horizon, and had they been told that no land could be sighted, they would + +have refused to believe it.</p> + +<p>So it appeared, however; for the strip of ice floated along on the waves for + +three hours in the centre of an absolutely circular and unbroken horizon. The + +poor colonists still hoped on.</p> + +<p>Towards three o'clock, the Lieutenant took the Sergeant aside, and said to + +him-</p> + +<p>"We are advancing at the cost of the solidity and duration of our islet."</p> + +<p>"What do you mean, sir?"</p> + +<p>"I mean that the ice is being rapidly fretted away as it moves along. Its + +speed is hastening its dissolution, and since we set sail it has diminished + +one-third."</p> + +<p>"Are you quite sure?"</p> + +<p>"Absolutely certain. The ice is longer and flatter. Look, the sea la not more + +than ten feet from the hill!"</p> + +<p>It was true, and the result was what might naturally have been expected from + +the motion of the ice.</p> + +<p>"Sergeant," resumed Hobson, "do you think we ought to take down our + +sail?"</p> + +<p>"I think," replied Long, after a moment's reflection, "that we should consult + +our comrades. We ought all to share the responsibility of a decision now."</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant bent his head in assent, and the two returned to their old + +position on the little hill.</p> + +<p>Hobson put the case before the whole party.</p> + +<p>"The speed we have given to the ice," he said, "is causing it to wear away + +rapidly, and will perhaps hasten the inevitable catastrophe by a few hours. My + +friends, you must decide whether we shall still go on."</p> + +<p>"Forwards!" cried all with one voice.</p> + +<p>So it was decided, and, as it turned out, the decision was fraught with + +consequences of incalculable importance.</p> + +<p>At six o'clock P.M. Madge rose, and pointing to a point on the south-east, + +cried-</p> + +<p>"Land!"</p> + +<p>Every one started up as if struck by lightning. Land there was indeed, on the + +south-east, twelve miles from the island.</p> + +<p>"More sail! more sail!" shouted Hobson.</p> + +<p>He was understood, and fresh materials were hastily brought. On the shrouds a + +sort of studding sail was rigged up of clothes, furs, everything, in short, that + +could give hold to the wind.</p> + +<p>The speed increased as the wind freshened, but the ice was melting + +everywhere; it trembled beneath the feet of the anxious watchers, and might open + +at any moment. But they would not think of that; they were buoyed up with hope; + +safety was at hand, on the land they were rapidly nearing. They shouted-they + +made signals-they were in a delirium of excitement.</p> + +<p>At half-past seven the ice was much nearer the land, but it was visibly + +melting, and sinking rapidly; water was gushing from it, and the waves were + +washing over it, sweeping off the terrified quadrupeds before the eyes of the + +colonists. Every instant they expected the whole mass to be engulfed, and it was + +necessary to lighten it like a sinking vessel. Every means was tried to check + +the dissolution; the earth and sand were carefully spread about, especially at + +the edges of the ice, to protect it from the direct influence of the sunbeams; + +and furs were laid here and there, as being bad conductors of heat. But it was + +all of no avail; the lower portion of the ice began to crack, and several + +fissures opened in the surface. It was now but a question of moments!</p> + +<p>Night set in, and there was nothing left for the poor colonists to do to + +quicken the speed of the islet. Some of them tried to paddle about on planks. + +The coast was still four miles to windward.</p> + +<p>It was a dark gloomy night, without any moon, and Hobson, whose heroic + +courage did not even now fail him, shouted-</p> + +<p>"A signal, my friends! a signal!" A pile was made of all the remaining + +combustibles-two or three planks and a beam. It was set fire to, and bright + +flames soon shot up, but the strip of ice continued to melt and sink. Presently + +the little hill alone remained above water, and on it the despairing wretches, + +with the few animals left alive, huddled together, the bear growling + +fiercely.</p> + +<p>The water was still rising, and there was no sign that any one on land had + +seen the signal. In less than a quarter of an hour they must all be swallowed + +up.</p> + +<p>Could nothing be done to make the ice last longer? In three hours, three + +short hours, they might reach the land, which was now but three miles to + +windward.</p> + +<p>"Oh!" cried Hobson, "if only I could stop the ice from melting! I would give + +my life to know how! Yes, I would give my life!"</p> + +<p>"There is one way," suddenly replied a voice.</p> + +<p>It was Thomas Black who spoke, the astronomer, who had not opened his lips + +for so long, and who had long since appeared dead to all that was going on.</p> + +<p>"Yes," he continued, "there is one way of checking the dissolution of the + +ice-there is one way of saving us all."</p> + +<p>All gathered eagerly round the speaker, and looked at him inquiringly. They + +thought they must have misheard what he said.</p> + +<p>"Well!" asked Hobson, "what way do you mean?"</p> + +<p>"To the pumps!" replied Black simply.</p> + +<p>Was he mad? Did he take the ice for a sinking vessel, with ten feet of water + +in the hold?</p> + +<p>The air pumps were at hand, together with the air vessel, which Hobson had + +been using as a reservoir for drinking water, but of what use could they be? + +Could they harden the ice, which was melting all over?</p> + +<p>"He is mad!" exclaimed Long.</p> + +<p>"To the pumps!" repeated the astronomer; "fill the reservoir with air!"</p> + +<p>"Do as he tells you!" cried Mrs Barnett.</p> + +<p>The pumps were attached to the reservoir, the cover of which was closed and + +bolted. The pumps were then at once set to work, and the air was condensed under + +the pressure of several atmospheres. Then Black, taking one of the leather pipes + +connected with the reservoir, and opening the cock, let the condensed air + +escape, walking round the ice wherever it was melting.</p> + +<p>Every one was astonished at the effect produced. Wherever the air was + +projected by the astronomer, the fissures filled up, and the surface + +re-froze.</p> + +<p>"Hurrah! hurrah!" shouted all with one voice.</p> + +<p>It was tiring enough to work the pumps, but there were plenty of volunteers. + +The edges of the ice were again solidified, as if under the influence of intense + +cold.</p> + +<p>"You have saved us, Mr Black," said Lieutenant Hobson.</p> + +<p>"Nothing could be more natural," replied the astronomer quietly.</p> + +<p>Nothing, in fact, could have been more natural; and the physical effect + +produced may be described as follows:-</p> + +<p>There were two reasons for the relegation:-First, under the pressure of the + +air, the water vaporised on the surface of the ice produced intense cold, and + +the compressed air in expanding abstracted the heat from the thawed surface, + +which immediately re-froze. Wherever the ice was opening the cold cemented the + +edges, so that it gradually regained its original solidity.</p> + +<p>This went on for several hours, and the colonists, buoyed up by hope, toiled + +on with unwearying zeal.</p> + +<p>They were nearing the coast, and when they were about a quarter of a mile + +from it, the bear plunged into the sea, and swimming to the shore, soon + +disappeared.</p> + +<p>A few minutes afterwards the ice ran aground upon a beach, and the few + +animals still upon it hurried away in the darkness. The colonists "disembarked," + +and falling on their knees, returned thanks to God for their miraculous + +deliverance.</p> +<a name="BXXIV" id="BXXIV"></a> +<h4>CHAPTER XXIV</h4> + +<h4><i>CONCLUSION.</i></h4> + +<p>It was on the island of Blejinie, the last of the Aleutian group, at the + +extreme south of Behring Sea, that all the colonists of Fort Hope at last + +landed, after having traversed eighteen hundred miles since the breaking-up of + +the ice. They were hospitably received by some Aleutian fishermen who had + +hurried to their assistance, and were soon able to communicate with some English + +agents of the Hudson's Bay Company.</p> + +<p>After all the details we have given, it is needless to dwell on the courage + +and energy of the brave little band, which had proved itself worthy of its noble + +leader. We know how all struggled with their misfortunes, and how patiently they + +had submitted to the will of God. We have seen Mrs Barnett cheering every one by + +her example and sympathy; and we know that neither she nor those with her + +yielded to despair when the peninsula on which Fort Hope had been built was + +converted into a wandering island, when that island became an islet, and the + +islet a strip of ice, nor even when that strip of ice was melting beneath the + +combined influence of sun and waves. If the scheme of the Company was a failure, + +if the new fort had perished, no one could possibly blame Hobson or his + +companions, who had gone through such extraordinary and unexpected trials. Of + +the nineteen persons under the Lieutenant's charge, not one was missing, and he + +had even two new members in his little colony, Kalumah and Mrs Barnett's godson, + +Michael Mac-Nab.</p> + +<p>Six days after their rescue the shipwrecked mariners arrived at New + +Archangel, the capital of Russian America.</p> + +<p>Here the friends, bound together by so many dangers shared, must part, + +probably for ever! Hobson and his men were to return to Fort Reliance across + +English America, whilst Mrs Barnett, accompanied by Kalumah, who would not leave + +her, Madge, and Thomas Black, intended to go back to Europe via San Francisco + +and the United States.</p> + +<p>But whilst they were still altogether, the Lieutenant, addressing Mrs + +Barnett, said with considerable emotion-</p> + +<p>"God bless you, madam, for all you have been to us. You have been our + +comforter, our consoler, the very soul of our little world; and I thank you in + +the name of all."</p> + +<p>Three cheers for Mrs Barnett greeted this speech, and each soldier begged to + +shake her by the hand, whilst the women embraced her affectionately.</p> + +<p>The Lieutenant himself had conceived so warm an affection for the lady who + +had so long been his friend and counsellor, that he could not bid her good-bye + +without great emotion.</p> + +<p>"Can it be that we shall never meet again?" he exclaimed.</p> + +<p>"No, Lieutenant," replied Mrs Barnett;" we must, we shall meet again. If you + +do not come and see me in Europe, I will come back to you at Fort Reliance, or + +to the new factory you will found some day yet."</p> + +<p>On hearing this, Thomas Black, who had regained the use of his tongue since + +he had landed on <i>terra firma</i>, came forward and said, with an air of the + +greatest conviction-</p> + +<p>"Yes, we shall meet again in thirty-six years. My friends, I missed the + +eclipse of 1860, but I will not miss that which will take place under exactly + +similar conditions in the same latitudes in 1896. And therefore I appoint a + +meeting with you, Lieutenant, and with you, my dear madam, on the confines of + +the Arctic Ocean thirty six years hence."</p> + +<h4>End of Part II</h4> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fur Country, by Jules Verne + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FUR COUNTRY *** + +This file should be named 8991-h.htm or 8991-h.zip + +Produced by N. 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