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diff --git a/9618.txt b/9618.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..42a9d1e --- /dev/null +++ b/9618.txt @@ -0,0 +1,7480 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Field of Ice, by Jules Verne + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Field of Ice + Part II of the Adventures of Captain Hatteras + +Author: Jules Verne + +Posting Date: November 15, 2011 [EBook #9618] +Release Date: January, 2006 +First Posted: October 10, 2003 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FIELD OF ICE *** + + + + +Produced by PG Distributed Proofreaders + + + + + + + + + + + +[Redactor's Note: The Field of Ice {Number V004 (Part II)} in the +T&M numerical listing of Verne's works is a translation of Part II +of Voyages et aventures du capitane Hatteras: II: LeDesert de glace +(1866) first published in England in this Routledge (London, 1874) +anonymous translation. Other translations are Osgood (Boston, 1874), +Ward, Lock, and Tyler (1876), Goubaud & Son (London, 1877), and +Hutchinson (London, 1890). This early work was never published by +Scribners or Sampson and Low and never found the wide popularity +obtained by the works published by those houses. Page numbers are +retained in this version to assist in the later collating the +numerous illustrations. A List of Illustrations has been provided. +(NMW)] + + + + + +THE FIELD OF ICE + + + +BY JULES VERNE, + + +AUTHOR OF "A JOURNEY TO THE NORTH POLE." +"THE CHILDREN OF CAPTAIN GRANT." +ETC + + +WITH 126 ILLUSTRATIONS BY RIOU + + + +LONDON AND NEW YORK + + +GEORGE ROUTLEDGE AND SONS + + +1875 + +[All rights reserved.] + + + + + + + +LONDON +Printed by Simmons and Botten +Shoe Lane, E.C. + + + +CONTENTS. + +CHAPTER I. +THE DOCTOR'S INVENTORY + 1 + +CHAPTER II. +FIRST WORDS OF ALTAMONT + 10 + +CHAPTER III. +A SEVENTEEN DAYS' MARCH + 22 + +CHAPTER IV. +THE LAST CHARGE OF POWDER + 32 + +CHAPTER V. +THE SEAL AND THE BEAR + 44 + +CHAPTER VI. +THE "PORPOISE" + 55 + +CHAPTER VII. +AN IMPORTANT DISCUSSION + 66 + +CHAPTER VIII. +AN EXCURSION TO THE NORTH OF VICTORIA BAY + 77 + +CHAPTER IX. +COLD AND HEAT + 88 + +CHAPTER X. +WINTER PLEASURES + 97 + +CHAPTER XI. +TRACKS OF BEARS + 107 + +CHAPTER XII. +IMPRISIONED IN DOCTOR'S HOUSE + 118 + +CHAPTER XIII. +THE MINE + 130 + +CHAPTER XIV. +AN ARCTIC SPRING + 143 + +CHAPTER XV. +THE NORTH WEST PASSAGE + 154 + +CHAPTER XVI. +ARCTIC ARCADIA + 163 + +CHAPTER XVII. +ALTAMONT'S REVENGE + 173 + +CHAPTER XVIII. +FINAL PREPARATIONS + 181 + +CHAPTER XIX. +MARCH TO THE NORTH + 187 + +CHAPTER XX. +FOOTPRINTS IN THE SNOW + 199 + +CHAPTER XXI. +THE OPEN SEA + 209 + +CHAPTER XXII. +GETTING NEAR THE POLE + 216 + +CHAPTER XXIII. +THE ENGLISH FLAG + 227 + +CHAPTER XXIV. +MOUNT HATTERAS + 240 + +CHAPTER XXV. +RETURN SOUTH + 253 + +CHAPTER XXVI. +CONCLUSION + 264 + + + + + +LIST OF FULL PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS + + + +THE FIELD OF ICE + + + + +"Altamont had already swung his hatchet to strike, when he was +arrested by a well known voice" + + + 132--frontispiece. + + + +"The tired-out dogs were harnessed sorely against their will, and +before long bringing the few but precious treasures found among the +debris of the brig" + + + 9 + + + +Johnson's Story + + + 11 + + + +"The poor fellows felt like colonists safely arrived at their +destination." + + + 57 + + + +"'I dispute the claim,' said the Englishman, restraining +himself by a powerful effort." + + + 72 + + + +"Clambering up the steep, rocky wall he succeeded, though with +considerable difficulty, in reaching the top." + + + 77 + + + +"Soon they were walking in a bright luminous track, leaving their +shadows behind them on the spotless snow." + + + 87 + + + +"Hatteras could only manage to keep off his pursuers by flinging +down one article after another." + + + 120 + + + +"The carpenter began his task immediately." + + + 154 + + + +"The Doctor did not allow him to proceed, for he really feared the +two antagonists might come to blows." + + + 162 + + + +"It was a strange and touching spectacle to see the pretty +creatures--they flew on Clawbonny's shoulders, etc." + + + 169 + + + +"Dealt him such a blow on the head with his hatchet that the skull +was completely split open." + + + 177 + + + +"The poor seal struggled desperately, but could not free himself +from the grasp of his enemy." + + + 184 + + + +"On the 29th Bell killed a fox and Altamont a musk-ox." + + + 192 + + + +"At Bell's suggestion, torches were contrived." + + + 188 + + + +Three hours afterwards, they arrived at the coast and shouted +simultaneously "The sea, the sea!" + + + 206 + + + +"And the doctor, leaning over the side of the vessel, could see +the whales and the dolphins and all the rest of the monsters of the +deep." + + + 214 + + + +"It is a volcano, he explained." + + + 217 + + + +"Mast and sail were torn off and went flying away through the +darkness like some large, white bird." + + + 224 + + + +"Altamont speedily discovered a grotto composed of rocks." + + + 234 + + + +"There he was, standing on a rock, gazing fixedly at the top of +the mountain." + + + 242 + + + +"Hatteras did not even turn once to look back, but marched +straight on, carrying his country's flag attached to his staff." + + + 249 + + + +"Dead, frozen----" + + + 262 + + + +"Two hours later, after unheard-of exertions, the survivors of the +Forward were picked up by the Hans Christian." + + + 266 + + + +[no caption] + + + 267 + + + + + + + +THE FIELD OF ICE. + + + +CHAPTER I. + + + +THE DOCTOR'S INVENTORY. + + +It was a bold project of Hatteras to push his way to the North Pole, +and gain for his country the honour and glory of its discovery. But +he had done all that lay in human power now, and, after having +struggled for nine months against currents and tempests, shattering +icebergs and breaking through almost insurmountable barriers, amid +the cold of an unprecedented winter, after having outdistanced all +his predecessors and accomplished half his task, he suddenly saw all +his hopes blasted. The treachery, or rather the despondency, of his +worn-out crew, and the criminal folly of one or two leading spirits +among them had left him and his little band of men in a terrible +situation--helpless in an icy desert, two thousand five hundred +miles away from their native land, and without even a ship to +shelter them. + +However, the courage of Hatteras was still undaunted. The three men +which were left him were the + +[Illustration: ] + +best on board his brig, and while they remained he might venture to +hope. + +After the cheerful, manly words of the captain, the Doctor felt the +best thing to be done was to look their prospects fairly in the +face, and know the exact state of things. Accordingly, leaving his +companions, he stole away alone down to the scene of the explosion. + +Of the Forward, the brig that had been so carefully built and had +become so dear, not a vestige remained. Shapeless blackened +fragments, twisted bars of iron, + +[Illustration: ] + +cable ends still smouldering, and here and there in the distance +spiral wreaths of smoke, met his eye on all sides. His cabin and all +his precious treasures were gone, his books, and instruments, and +collections reduced to ashes. As he stood thinking mournfully of his +irreparable loss, he was joined by Johnson, who grasped his offered +hand in speechless sorrow. + +"What's to become of us?" asked the Doctor. + +"Who can tell!" was the old sailor's reply. + +"Anyhow," said Clawbonny, "do not let us despair! Let us be +men!" + +"Yes, Mr. Clawbonny, you are right. Now is the time to show our +mettle. We are in a bad plight, and how to get out of it, that is +the question." + +"Poor old brig!" exclaimed the Doctor. "I had grown so +attached to her. I loved her as one loves a house where he has spent +a life-time." + +"Ay! it's strange what a hold those planks and beams get on a +fellow's heart." + +"And the long-boat--is that burnt?" asked the Doctor. + +"No, Mr. Clawbonny. Shandon and his gang have carried it off." + +"And the pirogue?" + +"Shivered into a thousand pieces? Stop. Do you see those bits of +sheet-iron? That is all that remains of it." + +"Then we have nothing but the Halkett-boat?" + +"Yes, we have that still, thanks to your idea of taking it with +you." + +"That isn't much," said the Doctor. + +"Oh, those base traitors!" exclaimed Johnson. "Heaven punish +them as they deserve!" + +"Johnson," returned the Doctor, gently, "we must not forget +how sorely they have been tried. Only the best remain good in the +evil day; few can stand trouble. Let us pity our fellow-sufferers, +and not curse them." + +For the next few minutes both were silent, and then Johnson asked +what had become of the sledge. + +"We left it about a mile off," was the reply. + +"In charge of Simpson?" + +"No, Simpson is dead, poor fellow!" + +"Simpson dead!" + +"Yes, his strength gave way entirely, and he first sank." + +"Poor Simpson! And yet who knows if he isn't rather to be +envied?" + +"But, for the dead man we have left behind, we have brought back a +dying one." + +"A dying man?" + +"Yes, Captain Altamont." + +And in a few words he informed Johnson of their discovery. + +"An American!" said Johnson, as the recital was ended. + +"Yes, everything goes to prove that. But I wonder what the +Porpoise was, and what brought her in these seas?" + +"She rushed on to her ruin like the rest of foolhardy adventurers; +but, tell me, did you find the coal?" + +The Doctor shook his head sadly. + +"No coal! not a vestige! No, we did not even get as far as the +place mentioned by Sir Edward Belcher." + +"Then we have no fuel whatever?" said the old sailor. + +"No." + +"And no provisions?" + +"No." + +"And no ship to make our way back to England?" + +It required courage indeed to face these gloomy realities, but, +after a moment's silence, Johnson said again-- + +"Well, at any rate we know exactly how we stand. The first thing +to be done now is to make a hut, for we can't stay long exposed to +this temperature." + +"Yes, we'll soon manage that with Bell's help," replied the +Doctor. "Then we must go and find the sledge, and bring back the +American, and have a consultation with Hatteras." + +"Poor captain," said Johnson, always forgetting his own +troubles, "how he must feel it!" + +Clawbonny and Bell found Hatteras standing motionless, his arms +folded in his usual fashion. He seemed gazing into space, but his +face had recovered its calm, self-possessed expression. His faithful +dog stood beside him, like his master, apparently insensible to the +biting cold, though the temperature was 32 degrees below zero. + +Bell lay on the ice in an almost inanimate condition. Johnson had to +take vigorous measures to rouse him, but at last, by dint of shaking +and rubbing him with snow, he succeeded. + +"Come, Bell," he cried, "don't give way like this. Exert +yourself, my man; we must have a talk about our situation, and we +need a place to put our heads in. Come and help me, Bell. You +haven't forgotten how to make a snow hut, have you? There is an +iceberg all ready to hand; we've only got to hollow it out. +Let's set to work; we shall find that is the best remedy for us." + +Bell tried to shake off his torpor and help his comrade, while Mr. +Clawbonny undertook to go and fetch the sledge and the dogs. + +"Will you go with him, captain?" asked Johnson. + +"No, my friend," said Hatteras, in a gentle tone, "if the +Doctor will kindly undertake the task. Before the day ends I must +come to some resolution, and I need to be alone to think. Go. Do +meantime whatever you think best. I will deal with the future." + +[Illustration: ] + +Johnson went back to the Doctor, and said-- + +"It's very strange, but the captain seems quite to have got over +his anger. I never heard him speak so gently before." + +"So much the better," said Clawbonny. "Believe me, Johnson, +that man can save us yet." + +And drawing his hood as closely round his head as possible, the +Doctor seized his iron-tipped staff, and set out without further +delay. + +Johnson and Bell commenced operations immediately. They had simply +to dig a hole in the heart of a great block of ice; but it was not +easy work, owing to the extreme hardness of the material. However, +this very hardness guaranteed the solidity of the dwelling, and the +further their labours advanced the more they became sheltered. + +Hatteras alternately paced up and down, and stood motionless, +evidently shrinking from any approach to the scene of explosion. + +In about an hour the Doctor returned, bringing with him Altamont +lying on the sledge, wrapped up in the folds of the tent. The poor +dogs were so exhausted from starvation that they could scarcely draw +it along, and they had begun to gnaw their harness. It was, indeed, +high time for feasts and men to take food and rest. + +While the hut was being still further dug out, the Doctor went +foraging about, and had the good fortune to find a little stove, +almost undamaged by the explosion. He soon restored it to working +trim, and, by the time the hut was completed, had filled it with +wood and got it lighted. Before long it was roaring, and diffusing a +genial warmth on all sides. The American was brought in and laid on +blankets, and the four Englishmen seated themselves round the fire +to enjoy their scanty meal of biscuit and hot tea, the last remains +of the provisions on the sledge. Not a word was spoken by Hatteras, +and the others respected his silence. + +When the meal was over, the Doctor rose and went out, making a sign +to Johnson to follow. + +"Come, Johnson," he said, "we will take an inventory of all we +have left. We must know exactly how we are off, and our treasures +are scattered in all directions; so we had better begin, and pick +them up as fast as possible, for the snow may fall at any moment, +and then it would be quite useless to look for anything." + +"Don't let us lose a minute, then," replied Johnson. "Fire +and food--those are our chief wants." + +"Very well, you take one side and I'll take the other, and +we'll search from the centre to the circumference." + +This task occupied two hours, and all they discovered was a little +salt meat, about 50 lbs. of pemmican, three sacks of biscuits, a +small stock of chocolate, five or six pints of brandy, and about 2 +lbs. of coffee, picked up bean by bean off the ice. + +Neither blankets, nor hammocks, nor clothing--all had been consumed +in the devouring flame. + +This slender store of provisions would hardly last three weeks, and +they had wood enough to supply the stove for about the same time. + +[Illustration: The tired-out dogs were harnessed sorely against +their will, and before long returned bringing the few but precious +treasures found among the debris of the brig.--P.9] + +Now that the inventory was made, the next business was to fetch the +sledge. The tired-out dogs were harnessed sorely against their will, +and before long returned bringing the few but precious treasures +found among the debris of the brig. These were safely deposited in +the hut, and then Johnson and Clawbonny, half-frozen with their +work, resumed their places beside their companions in misfortune. + + +CHAPTER II. + + + +FIRST WORDS OF ALTAMONT. + + +About eight o'clock in the evening, the grey snow clouds cleared +away for a little, and the stars shone out brilliantly in the sky. + +Hatteras seized the opportunity and went out silently to take the +altitude of some of the principal constellations. He wished to +ascertain if the ice-field was still drifting. + +In half an hour he returned and sat down in a corner of the hut, +where he remained without stirring all night, motionless as if +asleep, but in reality buried in deepest thought. + +The next day the snow fell heavily, and the Doctor congratulated +himself on his wise forethought, when he saw the white sheet lying +three feet thick over the scene of the explosion, completely +obliterating all traces of the Forward. + +It was impossible to venture outside in such weather, but the stove +drew capitally, and made the hut quite comfortable, or at any rate +it seemed so to the weary, worn out adventurers. + +The American was in less pain, and was evidently gradually coming +back to life. He opened his eyes, but could not yet speak, for his +lips were so affected by the scurvy that articulation was +impossible, but he could hear and understand all that was said to +him. On learning what had passed, and the circumstances of his +discovery, he expressed his thanks by gestures, and the Doctor was +too wise to let him know how brief his respite from death would +prove. In three weeks at most every vestige of food would be gone. + +About noon Hatteras roused himself, and going up to his friends, +said-- + +"We must make up our minds what to do, but I must request Johnson +to tell me first all the particulars of the mutiny on the brig, and +how this final act of baseness came about." + +"What good will that do?" said the Doctor. "The fact is +certain, and it is no use thinking over it." + +"I differ from your opinion," rejoined Hatteras. "Let me hear +the whole affair from Johnson, and then I will banish it from my +thoughts." + +"Well," said the boatswain, "this was how it happened. I did +all in my power to prevent, but----" + +"I am sure of that, Johnson; and what's more, I have no doubt +the ringleaders had been hatching their plans for some time." + +"That's my belief too," said the Doctor. + +[Illustration: Johnson's Story. --P.11] + +"And so it is mine," resumed Johnson; "for almost immediately +after your departure Shandon, supported by the others, took the +command of the ship. + +I could not resist him, and from that moment everybody did pretty +much as they pleased. Shandon made no attempt to restrain them: it +was his policy to make them believe that their privations and toils +were at an end. Economy was entirely disregarded. A blazing fire was +kept up in the stove, and the men were allowed to eat and drink at +discretion; not only tea and coffee was at their disposal, but all +the spirits on board, and on men who had been so long deprived of +ardent liquors, you may guess the result. They went on in this +manner from the 7th to the 15th of January." + +"And this was Shandon's doing?" asked Hatteras. + +"Yes, captain." + +"Never mention his name to me again! Go on, Johnson." + +"It was about the 24th or 25th of January, that they resolved to +abandon the ship. Their plan was to reach the west coast of +Baffin's Bay, and from thence to embark in the boat and follow the +track of the whalers, or to get to some of the Greenland settlements +on the eastern side. Provisions were abundant, and the sick men were +so excited by the hope of return that they were almost well. They +began their preparations for departure by making a sledge which they +were to draw themselves, as they had no dogs. This was not ready +till the 15th of February, and I was always hoping for your arrival, +though I half dreaded it too, for you could have done nothing with +the men, and they would have massacred you rather than remain on +board. I tried my influence on each one separately, remonstrating +and reasoning with them, and pointing out the dangers they would +encounter, and also the cowardice of leaving you, but it was a mere +waste of words; not even the best among them would listen to me. +Shandon was impatient to be off, and fixed the 22nd of February for +starting. The sledge and the boat were packed as closely as possible +with provisions and spirits, and heaps of wood, to obtain which they +had hewed the brig down to her water-line. The last day the men ran +riot. They completely sacked the ship, and in a drunken paroxysm Pen +and two or three others set it on fire. I fought and struggled +against them, but they threw me down and assailed me with blows, and +then the wretches, headed by Shandon, went off towards the east and +were soon out of sight. I found myself alone on the burning ship, +and what could I do? The fire-hole was completely blocked up with +ice. I had not a single drop of water! For two days the Forward +struggled with the flames, and you know the rest." + +A long silence followed the gloomy recital, broken at length by +Hatteras, who said-- + +"Johnson, I thank you; you did all you could to save my ship, but +single-handed you could not resist. Again I thank you, and now let +the subject be dropped. Let us unite efforts for our common +salvation. There are four of us, four companions, four friends, and +all our lives are equally precious. Let each give his opinion on the +best course for us to pursue." + +"You ask us then, Hatteras," said the Doctor, "we are all +devoted to you, and our words come from our hearts. But will you not +state you own views first?" + +"That would be little use," said Hatteras, sadly; "my opinion +might appear interested; let me hear all yours first." + +"Captain," said Johnson, "before pronouncing on such an +important matter, I wish to ask you a question." + +"Ask it, then, Johnson." + +"You went out yesterday to ascertain our exact position; well, is +the field drifting or stationary?" + +"Perfectly stationary. It had not moved since the last reckoning +was made. I find we are just where we were before we left, in 80 deg. +15" lat. and 97 deg. 35" long." + +"And what distance are we from the nearest sea to the west?" + +"About six hundred miles." + +"And that sea is----?" + +"Smith's Sound," was the reply. + +"The same that we could not get through last April?" + +"The same." + +"Well, captain, now we know our actual situation, we are in a +better position to determine our course of action." + +"Speak your minds, then," said Hatteras, again burying his head +in his hands. + +"What do you say, Bell?" asked the Doctor. + +"It strikes me the case doesn't need long thinking over," said +the carpenter. "We must get back at once without losing a single +day or even a single hour, either to the south or west, and make our +way to the nearest coast, even if we are two months doing it!" + +"We have only food for three weeks," replied Hatteras, without +raising his head. + +"Very well," said Johnson, "we must make the journey in three +weeks, since it is our last chance. Even if we can only crawl on our +knees before we get to our destination, we must be there in +twenty-five days." + +"This part of the Arctic Continent is unexplored. We may have to +encounter difficulties. Mountains and glaciers may bar our +progress," objected Hatteras. + +"I don't see that's any sufficient reason for not attempting +it. We shall have to endure sufferings, no doubt, and perhaps many. +We shall have to limit ourselves to the barest quantities of food, +unless our guns should procure us anything." + +"There is only about half a pound of powder left," said Hatteras. + +"Come now, Hatteras, I know the full weight of your objections, +and I am not deluding myself with vain hopes. But I think I can read +your motive. Have you any practical suggestion to offer?" + +"No," said Hatteras, after a little hesitation. + +"You don't doubt our courage," continued the Doctor. "We +would follow you to the last--you know that. But must we not, +meantime, give up all hope of reaching the Pole? Your plans have +been defeated by treachery. Natural difficulties you might have +overcome, but you have been outmatched by perfidy and human +weakness. You have done all that man could do, and you would have +succeeded I am certain; but situated as we are now, are you not +obliged to relinquish your projects for the present, and is not a +return to England even positively necessary before you could +continue them?" + +"Well, captain?" asked Johnson after waiting a considerable time +for Hatteras to reply. + +Thus interrogated, he raised his head, and said in a constrained +tone-- + +"You think yourselves quite certain then of reaching the Sound, +exhausted though you are, and almost without food?" + +"No," replied the Doctor, "but there is one thing certain, the +Sound won't come to us, we must go to it. We may chance to find +some Esquimaux tribes further south." + +"Besides, isn't there the chance of falling in with some ship +that is wintering here?" asked Johnson. + +"Even supposing the Sound is blocked up, couldn't we get across +to some Greenland or Danish settlement? At any rate, Hatteras, we +can get nothing by remaining here. The route to England is towards +the south, not the north." + +"Yes," said Bell, "Mr. Clawbonny is right. We must start, and +start at once. We have been forgetting our country too long +already." + +"Is this your advice, Johnson?" asked Hatteras again. + +"Yes, captain." + +"And yours, Doctor?" + +"Yes, Hatteras." + +Hatteras remained silent, but his face, in spite of himself, +betrayed his inward agitation. The issue of his whole life hung on +the decision he had to make, for he felt that to return to England +was to lose all! He could not venture on a fourth expedition. + +The Doctor finding he did not reply, added-- + +"I ought also to have said, that there is not a moment to lose. +The sledge must be loaded with the provisions at once, and as much +wood as possible. I must confess six hundred miles is a long +journey, but we can, or rather we must make twenty miles a day, +which will bring us to the coast about the 26th of March." + +"But cannot we wait a few days yet?" said Hatteras. + +"What are you hoping for?" asked Johnson. + +"I don't know. Who can tell the future? It is necessary, too, +that you should get your strength a little recruited. You might sink +down on the road with fatigue, without even a snow hut to shelter +you." + +"But think of the terrible death that awaits us here," replied +the carpenter. + +"My friends," said Hatteras, in almost supplicating tones; +"you are despairing too soon. I should propose that we should seek +our deliverance towards the north, but you would refuse to follow +me, and yet why should there not be Esquimaux tribes round about the +Pole as well as towards the south? The open sea, of the existence of +which we are certified, must wash the shores of continents. Nature +is logical in all her doings. Consequently vegetation must be found +there when the earth is no longer ice-bound. Is there not a promised +land awaiting us in the north from which you would flee?" + +Hatteras became animated as he spoke, and Doctor Clawbonny's +excitable nature was so wrought upon that his decision began to +waver. He was on the point of yielding, when Johnson, with his wiser +head and calmer temperament, recalled him to reason and duty by +calling out-- + +"Come, Bell, let us be off to the sledge." + +"All right," said Bell, and the two had risen to leave the hut, +when Hatteras exclaimed-- + +"Oh, Johnson! You! you! Well, go! I shall stay, I shall stay!" + +"Captain!" said Johnson, stopping in spite of himself. + +"I shall stay, I tell you. Go! Leave me like the rest! Come, Duk, +you and I will stay together." + +The faithful dog barked as if he understood, and settled himself +down beside his master. Johnson looked at the Doctor, who seemed at +a loss to know what to do, but came to the conclusion at last that +the best way, meantime, was to calm Hatteras, even at the sacrifice +of a day. He was just about to try the force of his eloquence in +this direction, when he felt a light touch on his arm, and turning +round saw Altamont who had crawled out of bed and managed to get on +his knees. He was trying to speak, but his swollen lips could +scarcely make a sound. Hatteras went towards him, and watched his +efforts to articulate so attentively that in a few minutes he made +out a word that sounded like Porpoise, and stooping over him he +asked-- + +"Is it the Porpoise?" + +Altamont made a sign in the affirmative, and Hatteras went on with +his queries, now that he had found a clue. + +"In these seas?" + +The affirmative gesture was repeated. + +"Is she in the north?" + +"Yes." + +"Do you know her position?" + +"Yes." + +"Exactly?" + +"Yes." + +For a minute or so, nothing more was said, and the onlookers waited +with palpitating hearts. + +Then Hatteras spoke again and said-- + +"Listen to me. We must know the exact position of your vessel. I +will count the degrees aloud, and you; will stop me when I come to +the right one." + +The American assented by a motion of the head, and Hatteras began-- + +"We'll take the longitude first. 105 deg., No? 106 deg., 107 deg.? It is +to the west, I suppose?" + +"Yes," replied Altamont. + +"Let us go on, then: 109 deg., 110 deg., 112 deg., 114 deg., 116 deg., 118 deg., +120 deg." + +"Yes," interrupted the sick man. + +[Illustration: ] + +"120 deg. of longitude, and how many minutes? I will count." + +Hatteras began at number one, and when he got to fifteen, Altamont +made a sign to stop. + +"Very good," said Hatteras; "now for the latitude. Are you +listening? 80 deg., 81 deg., 82 deg., 83 deg." + +Again the sign to stop was made. + +"Now for the minutes: 5', 10', 15', 20', 25', 30', +35'." + +Altamont stopped him once more, and smiled feebly. + +"You say, then, that the Porpoise is in longitude 120 deg. 15', and +latitude 83 deg. 35'?" + +"Yes," sighed the American, and fell back motionless in the +Doctor's arms, completely overpowered by the effort he had made. + +"Friends!" exclaimed Hatteras; "you see I was right. Our +salvation lies indeed in the north, always in the north. We shall be +saved!" + +But the joyous, exulting words had hardly escaped his lips before a +sudden thought made his countenance change. The serpent of jealousy +had stung him, for this stranger was an American, and he had reached +three degrees nearer the Pole than the ill-fated Forward. + + +CHAPTER III. + + + +A SEVENTEEN DAYS' MARCH. + + +These first words of Altamont had completely changed the whole +aspect of affairs, but his communication was still incomplete, and, +after giving him a little time to rest, the Doctor undertook the +task of conversing again with him, putting his questions in such a +form that a movement of the head or eyes would be a sufficient +answer. + +He soon ascertained that the Porpoise was a three-mast American +ship, from New York, wrecked on the ice, with provisions and +combustibles in abundance still on board, and that, though she had +been thrown on her side, she had not gone to pieces, and there was +every chance of saving her cargo. + +Altamont and his crew had left her two months previously, taking the +long boat with them on a sledge. They intended to get to Smith's +Sound, and reach some whaler that would take them back to America; +but one after another succumbed to fatigue and illness, till at last +Altamont and two men were all that remained out of thirty; and truly +he had survived by a providential miracle, while his two companions +already lay beside him in the sleep of death. + +Hatteras wished to know why the Porpoise had come so far north, and +learned in reply that she had been irresistibly driven there by the +ice. But his anxious fears were not satisfied with this explanation, +and he asked further what was the purpose of his voyage. Altamont +said he wanted to make the north-west passage, and this appeared to +content the jealous Englishman, for he made no more reference to the +subject. "Well," said the Doctor, "it strikes me that, instead +of trying to get to Baffin's Bay, our best plan would be to go in +search of the Porpoise, for here lies a ship a full third of the +distance nearer, and, more than that, stocked with everything +necessary for winter quarters." + +"I see no other course open to us," replied Bell. + +"And the sooner we go the better," added Johnson, "for the +time we allow ourselves must depend on our provisions." + +"You are right, Johnson," returned the Doctor. "If we start +to-morrow, we must reach the Porpoise by the 15th of March, unless +we mean to die of starvation. What do you say, Hatteras?" + +"Let us make preparations immediately, but perhaps the route may +be longer than we suppose." + +"How can that be, captain? The man seems quite sure of the +position of his ship," said the Doctor. + +"But suppose the ice-field should have drifted like ours?" + +Here Altamont, who was listening attentively, made a sign that he +wished to speak, and, after much difficulty, he succeeded in telling +the Doctor that the Porpoise had struck on rocks near the coast, and +that it was impossible for her to move. + +This was re-assuring information, though it cut off all hope of +returning to Europe, unless Bell could construct a smaller ship out +of the wreck. + +[Illustration: ] + +No time was lost in getting ready to start. The sledge was the +principal thing, as it needed thorough repair. There was plenty of +wood, and, profiting by the experience they had recently had of this +mode of transit, several improvements were made by Bell. + +Inside, a sort of couch was laid for the American, and covered over +with the tent. The small stock of provisions did not add much to the +weight, but, to make up the deficiency, as much wood was piled up on +it as it could hold. + +The Doctor did the packing, and made an exact calculation of how +long their stores would last. He found that, by allowing +three-quarter rations to each man and full rations to the dogs, they +might hold out for three weeks. + +Towards seven in the evening, they felt so worn out that they were +obliged to give up work for the night; but, before lying down to +sleep, they heaped up the wood in the stove, and made a roaring +fire, determined to allow themselves this parting luxury. As they +gathered round it, basking in the unaccustomed heat, and enjoying +their hot coffee and biscuits and pemmican, they became quite +cheerful, and forgot all their sufferings. + +About seven in the morning they set to work again and by three in +the afternoon everything was ready. + +It was almost dark, for, though the sun had reappeared above the +horizon since the 31st of January, his light was feeble and of short +duration. Happily the moon would rise about half-past six, and her +soft beams would give sufficient light to show the road. + +The parting moment came. Altamont was overjoyed at the idea of +starting, though the jolting would necessarily increase his +sufferings, for the Doctor would find on board the medicines he +required for his cure. + +They lifted him on to the sledge, and laid him as comfortably as +possible, and then harnessed the dogs, including Duk. One final look +towards the icy bed where the Forward had been, and the little party +set out for the Porpoise. Bell was scout, as before; the Doctor and +Johnson took each a side of the sledge, and lent a helping hand when +necessary; while Hatteras walked behind to keep all in the right +track. + +They got on pretty quickly, for the weather was good, and the ice +smooth and hard, allowing the sledge to glide easily along, yet the +temperature was so low that men and dogs were soon panting, and had +often to stop and take breath. About seven the moon shone out, and +irradiated the whole horizon. Far as the eye could see, there was +nothing visible but a wide-stretching level plain of ice, without a +solitary hummock or patch to relieve the uniformity. + +[Illustration: ] + +As the Doctor remarked to his companion, it looked like some vast, +monotonous desert. + +"Ay! Mr. Clawbonny, it is a desert, but we shan't die of thirst +in it at any rate." + +"That's a comfort, certainly, but I'll tell you one thing: it +proves, Johnson, we must be a great distance from any coast. The +nearer the coast, the more numerous the icebergs in general, and you +see there is not one in sight." + +"The horizon is rather misty, though." + +"So it is, but ever since we started, we have been on this same +interminable ice-field." + +"Do you know, Mr. Clawbonny, that smooth as this ice is, we are +going over most dangerous ground? Fathomless abysses lie beneath our +feet." + +"That's true enough, but they won't engulph us. This white +sheet over them is pretty tough, I can tell you. It is always +getting thicker too; for in these latitudes, it snows nine days out +of ten even in April and May; ay, and in June as well. The ice here, +in some parts, cannot be less than between thirty and forty feet +thick." + +"That sounds reassuring, at all events." said Johnson. + +"Yes, we're not like the skaters on the Serpentine--always in +danger of falling through. This ice is strong enough to bear the +weight of the Custom House in Liverpool, or the Houses of Parliament +in Westminster." + +"Can they reckon pretty nearly what ice will bear, Mr. +Clawbonny?" asked the old sailor, always eager for information. + +"What can't be reckoned now-a-days? Yes, ice two inches thick +will bear a man; three and a half inches, a man on horse-back; five +inches, an eight pounder; eight inches, field artillery; and ten +inches, a whole army." + +"It is difficult to conceive of such a power of resistance, but +you were speaking of the incessant snow just now, and I cannot help +wondering where it comes from, for the water all round is frozen, +and what makes the clouds?" + +"That's a natural enough question, but my notion is that nearly +all the snow or rain that we get here comes from the temperate +zones. I fancy each of those snowflakes was originally a drop of +water in some river, caught up by evaporation into the air, and +wafted over here in the shape of clouds; so that it is not +impossible that when we quench our thirst with the melted snow, we +are actually drinking from the very rivers of our own native land." + +Just at this moment the conversation was interrupted by Hatteras, +who called out that they were getting out of the straight line. The +increasing mist made it difficult to keep together, and at last, +about eight o'clock, they determined to come to a halt, as they +had gone fifteen miles. The tent was put up and the stove lighted, +and after their usual supper they lay down and slept comfortably +till morning. + +The calm atmosphere was highly favourable, for though the cold +became intense, and the mercury was always frozen in the +thermometer, they found no difficulty in continuing their route, +confirming the truth of Parry's assertion that any man suitably +clad may walk abroad with impunity in the lowest temperature, +provided there is no wind; while, on the other hand, the least +breeze would make the skin smart acutely, and bring on violent +headache, which would soon end in death. + +On the 5th of March a peculiar phenomenon occurred. The sky was +perfectly clear and glittering with stars, when suddenly snow began +to fall thick and fast, though there was not a cloud in the heavens +and through the white flakes the constellations could be seen +shining. This curious display lasted two hours, and ceased before +the Doctor could arrive at any satisfactory conclusion as to its +cause. + +The moon had ended her last quarter, and complete darkness prevailed +now for seventeen hours out of the twenty-four. The travellers had +to fasten themselves together with a long rope to avoid getting +separated, and it was all but impossible to pursue the right course. +Moreover, the brave fellows, in spite of their iron will, began to +show signs of fatigue. Halts became more frequent, and yet every +hour was precious, for the provisions were rapidly coming to an end. + +Hatteras hardly knew what to think as day after day went on without +apparent result, and he asked himself sometimes whether the Porpoise +had any actual existence except in Altamont's fevered brain, and +more than once the idea even came into his head that perhaps +national hatred might have induced the American to drag them along +with himself to certain death. + +He told the Doctor his suppositions, who rejected them absolutely, +and laid them down to the score of the unhappy rivalry that had +arisen already between the two captains. + +[Illustration: ] + +On the 14th of March, after sixteen days' march the little party +found themselves only yet in the 82 deg. latitude. Their strength was +exhausted, and they had a hundred miles more to go. To increase +their sufferings, rations had to be still further reduced. Each man +must be content with a fourth part to allow the dogs their full +quantity. + +Unfortunately they could not rely at all on their guns, for only +seven charges of powder were left, and six balls. They had fired at +several hares and foxes on the road already, but unsuccessfully. + +However, on the 15th, the Doctor was fortunate enough to surprise a +seal basking on the ice, and, after several shots, the animal was +captured and killed. + +Johnson soon had it skinned and cut in pieces, but it was so lean +that it was worthless as food, unless its captors would drink the +oil like the Esquimaux. + +The Doctor was bold enough to make the attempt, but failed in spite +of himself. + +Next day several icebergs and hummocks were noticed on the horizon. +Was this a sign that land was near, or was it some ice-field that +had broken up? It was difficult to know what to surmise. + +On arriving at the first of these hummocks, the travellers set to +work to make a cave in it where they could rest more comfortably +than in the tent, and after three hours' persevering toil, were +able to light their stove and lie down beside it to stretch their +weary limbs. + + +CHAPTER IV. + + + +THE LAST CHARGE OF POWDER + + +Johnson was obliged to take the dogs inside the hut, for they would +have been soon frozen outside in such dry weather. Had it been +snowing they would have been safe enough, for the snow served as a +covering, and kept in the natural heat of the animals. + +The old sailor, who made a first-rate dog-driver, tried his beasts +with the oily flesh of the seal; and found, to his joyful surprise, +that they ate it greedily. The Doctor said he was not astonished at +this, as in North America the horses were chiefly fed on fish; and +he thought that what would satisfy an herbivorous horse might surely +content an omnivorous dog. + +The whole party were soon buried in deep sleep, for they were fairly +overcome with fatigue. Johnson awoke his companions early next +morning, and the march was resumed in haste. Their lives depended +now on their speed, for provisions would only hold out three days +longer. + +The sky was magnificent; the atmosphere extremely clear, and the +temperature very low. The sun rose in the form of a long ellipse, +owing to refraction, which made his horizontal diameter appear twice +the length of his vertical. + +[Illustration: ] + +The Doctor, gun in hand, wandered away from the others, braving the +solitude and the cold in the hope of discovering game. He had only +sufficient powder left to load three times, and he had just three +balls. That was little enough should he encounter a bear, for it +often takes ten or twelve shots to have any effect on these enormous +animals. + +But the brave Doctor would have been satisfied with humbler game. A +few hares or foxes would be a welcome addition to their scanty food; +but all that day, if even he chanced to see one, either he was too +far away, or he was deceived by refraction, and took a wrong aim. He +came back to his companions at night with crestfallen looks, having +wasted one ball and one charge of powder. + +Next day the route appeared more difficult, and the weary men could +hardly drag themselves along. The dogs had devoured even the +entrails of the seal, and began to gnaw their traces. + +A few foxes passed in the distance, and the Doctor lost another ball +in attempting to shoot them. + +They were forced to come to a halt early in the evening, though the +road was illumined by a splendid Aurora Borealis; for they could not +put one foot before the other. + +Their last meal, on the Sunday evening, was a very sad one--if no +providential help came, their doom was sealed. + +Johnson set a few traps before going to sleep, though he had no +baits to put inside them. He was very disappointed to find them all +empty in the morning, and was returning gloomily to the hut, when he +perceived a bear of huge dimensions. The old sailor took it into his +head that Heaven had sent this beast specially for him to kill; and +without waking his comrades, he seized the Doctor's gun, and was +soon in pursuit of his prey. On reaching the right distance, he took +aim; but, just as his finger touched the trigger, he felt his arm +tremble. His thick gloves hampered him, and, flinging them hastily +off, he took up the gun with a firmer grasp. But what a cry of agony +escaped him! The skin of his fingers stuck to the gun as if it had +been + +red-hot, and he was forced to let it drop. The sudden fall made it +go off, and the last ball was discharged in the air. + +The Doctor ran out at the noise of the report, and understood all at +a glance. He saw the animal walking quietly off, and poor Johnson +forgetting his sufferings in his despair. + +[Illustration: ] + +"I am a regular milksop!" he exclaimed, "a cry-baby, that +can't stand the least pain! And at my age, too!" + +"Come, Johnson; go in at once, or you will be frost-bitten. Look +at your hands--they are white already! Come, come this minute." + +"I am not worth troubling about, Mr. Clawbonny," said the old +boatswain. "Never mind me!" + +"But you must come in, you obstinate fellow. Come, now, I tell +you; it will be too late presently." + +At last he succeeded in dragging the poor fellow into the tent, +where he made him plunge his hands into a + +bowl of water, which the heat of the stove kept in a liquid state, +though still cold. Johnson's hands had hardy touched it before it +froze immediately. + +"You see it was high time you came in; I should have been forced +to amputate soon," said the Doctor. + +Thanks to his endeavours, all danger was over in about an hour, but +he was advised to keep his hands at a good distance from the stove +for some time still. + +That morning they had no breakfast. Pemmican and salt beef were both +done. Not a crumb of biscuit remained. They were obliged to content +themselves with half a cup of hot coffee, and start off again. + +They scarcely went three miles before they were compelled to give up +for the day. They had no supper but coffee, and the dogs were so +ravenous that they were almost devouring each other. + +Johnson fancied he could see the bear following them in the +distance, but he made no remark to his companions. Sleep forsook the +unfortunate men, and their eyes grew wild and haggard. + +Tuesday morning came, and it was thirty-four hours since they had +tasted a morsel of food. Yet these brave, stout-hearted men +continued their march, sustained by their superhuman energy of +purpose. They pushed the sledge themselves, for the dogs could no +longer draw it. + +At the end of two hours, they sank exhausted. Hatteras urged them to +make a fresh attempt, but his entreaties and supplications were +powerless; they could not do impossibilities. + +[Illustration: ] + +"Well, at any rate," he said, "I won't die of cold if I must +of hunger." He set to work to hew out + +a hut in an iceberg, aided by Johnson, and really they looked like +men digging their own tomb. + +It was hard labour, but at length the task was accomplished. The +little house was ready, and the miserable men took up their abode in +it. + +In the evening, while the others lay motionless, a sort of +hallucination came over Johnson, and he began raving about bears. + +The Doctor roused himself from his torpor, and asked the old man +what he meant, and what bear he was talking about. + +"The bear that is following us," replied Johnson. + +"A bear following us?" + +"Yes, for the last two days!" + +"For the last two days! You have seen him?" + +"Yes, about a mile to leeward." + +"And you never told me, Johnson!" + +"What was the good!" + +"True enough," said the Doctor; "we have not a single bail to +send after him!" + +"No, not even a bit of iron!" + +The Doctor was silent for a minute, as if thinking. Then he said-- + +"Are you quite certain the animal is following us?" + +"Yes, Mr. Clawbonny, he is reckoning on a good feed of human +flesh!" + +"Johnson!" exclaimed the Doctor, grieved at the despairing mood +of his companion. + +"He is sure enough of his meal!" continued the + +"You have no ball!" + +"I'll make one." + +"You have no lead!" + +"No, but I have mercury." + +So saying, he took the thermometer, which stood at 50 deg. above zero, +and went outside and laid it on a block of ice. Then he came in +again, and said, "Tomorrow! Go to sleep, and wait till the sun +rises." + +With the first streak of dawn next day, the Doctor and Johnson +rushed out to look at the thermometer. All the mercury had frozen +into a compact cylindrical mass. The Doctor broke the tube and took +it out. Here was a hard piece of metal ready for use. + +"It is wonderful, Mr. Clawbonny; you ought to be a proud man." + +"Not at all, my friend, I am only gifted with a good memory, and I +have read a great deal." + +"How did that help you?" + +"Why, I just happened to recollect a fact related by Captain Ross +in his voyages. He states that they pierced a plank, an inch thick, +with a bullet made of mercury. Oil would even have suited my +purpose, for, he adds, that a ball of frozen almond oil splits +through a post without breaking in pieces." + +"It is quite incredible!" + +"But it is a fact, Johnson. Well, come now, this bit of metal may +save our lives. We'll leave it exposed to the air a little while, +and go and have a look for the bear." + +Just then Hatteras made his appearance, and the + +Doctor told him his project, and showed him the mercury. + +The captain grasped his hand silently, and the three hunters went +off in quest of their game. + +[Illustration: ] + +The weather was very clear, and Hatteras, who was a little ahead of +the others, speedily discovered the bear about three hundred yards +distant, sitting on his hind quarters sniffing the air, evidently +scenting the intruders on his domains. + +"There he is!" he exclaimed. + +"Hush!" cried the Doctor. + +But the enormous quadruped, even when he perceived his antagonists, +never stirred, and displayed neither fear nor anger. It would not be +easy to get near him, however, and Hatteras said-- + +"Friends, this is no idle sport, our very existence is at stake; +we must act prudently." + +"Yes," replied the Doctor, "for we have but the one shot to +depend upon. We must not miss, for if Away they went, while the old +boatswain slipped behind a hummock, which completely hid him from +the bear, who continued still in the same place and in the same +position. + + +CHAPTER V. + + + +THE SEAL AND THE BEAR. + + +"You know, Doctor," said Hatteras, as they returned to the hut, +"the polar bears subsist almost entirely on seals. They'll lie +in wait for them beside the crevasses for whole days, ready to +strangle them the moment their heads appear above the surface. It is +not likely, then, that a bear will be frightened of a seal." + +"I think I see what you are after, but it is dangerous." + +"Yes, but there is more chance of success than in trying any other +plan, so I mean to risk it. I am going to dress myself in the +seal's skin, and creep along the ice. Come, don't let us lose +time. Load the gun and give it me." + +The Doctor could not say anything, for he would have done the same +himself, so he followed Hatteras silently to the sledge, taking with +him a couple of hatchets for his own and Johnson's use. + +Hatteras soon made his toilette, and slipped into the skin, which +was big enough to cover him almost entirely. + +"Now, then, give me the gun," he said, "and you be off to +Johnson. I must try and steal a march on my adversary." + +"Courage, Hatteras!" said the Doctor, handing him the weapon, +which he had carefully loaded meanwhile. + +"Never fear! but be sure you don't show yourselves till I +fire." + +The Doctor soon joined the old boatswain behind the hummock, and +told him what they had been doing. The bear was still there, but +moving restlessly about, as if he felt the approach of danger. + +In a quarter of an hour or so the seal made his appearance on the +ice. He had gone a good way round, so as to come on the bear by +surprise, and every movement was so perfect an imitation of a seal, +that even the Doctor would have been deceived if he had not known it +was Hatteras. + +"It is capital!" said Johnson, in a low voice. The bear had +instantly caught sight of the supposed seal, for he gathered himself +up, preparing to make a spring as the animal came nearer, apparently +seeking to return to his native element, and unaware of the +enemy's proximity. Bruin went to work with extreme prudence, +though his eyes glared with greedy desire to clutch the coveted +prey, for he had probably been fasting a month, if not two. He +allowed his victim to get within ten paces of him, and then sprang +forward with a tremendous bound, but stopped short, stupefied and +frightened, within three steps of Hatteras, who started up that +moment, and, throwing off his disguise, knelt on one knee, and aimed +straight at the bear's heart. He fired, and the huge monster +rolled back on the ice. + +[Illustration: ] + +"Forward! Forward!" shouted the Doctor, hurrying towards +Hatteras, for the bear had reared on his hind legs, and was striking +the air with one paw and tearing up the snow to stanch his wound +with the other. + +Hatteras never moved, but waited, knife in hand. He had aimed well, +and fired with a sure and steady aim. Before either of his +companions came up he had plunged the knife in the animal's +throat, and made an end of him, for he fell down at once to rise no +more. + +"Hurrah! Bravo!" shouted Johnson and the Doctor, but Hatteras +was as cool and unexcited as possible, and stood with folded arms +gazing at his prostrate foe. + +"It is my turn now," said Johnson. "It is a good thing the +bear is killed, but if we leave him out here much longer, he will +get as hard as a stone, and we shall be able to do nothing with +him." + +He began forthwith to strip the skin off, and a fine business it +was, for the enormous quadruped was almost as large as an ox. It +measured nearly nine feet long, and four round, and the great tusks +in his jaws were three inches long. + +On cutting the carcase open, Johnson found nothing but water in the +stomach. The beast had evidently had no food for a long time, yet it +was very fat, and weighed fifteen hundred pounds. The hunters were +so famished that they had hardly patience to carry home the flesh to +be cooked, and it needed all the Doctor's persuasion to prevent +them eating it raw. + +On entering the hut, each man with a load on his back, Clawbonny was +struck with the coldness that pervaded the atmosphere. On going up +to the stove he found the fire black out. The exciting business of +the morning had made Johnson neglect his accustomed duty of +replenishing the stove. + +The Doctor tried to blow the embers into a flame, but finding he +could not even get a red spark, he went out to the sledge to fetch +tinder, and get the steel from Johnson. + +The old sailor put his hand into his pocket, but was surprised to +find the steel missing. He felt in the other pockets, but it was not +there. Then he went into the hut again, and shook the blanket he had +slept in all night, but his search was still unsuccessful. + +He went back to his companions and said-- + +"Are you sure, Doctor, you haven't the steel?" + +"Quite, Johnson." + +"And you haven't it either, captain?" + +"Not I!" replied Hatteras. + +"It has always been in your keeping," said the Doctor. + +"Well, I have not got it now!" exclaimed Johnson, turning pale. + +"Not got the steel!" repeated the Doctor, shuddering +involuntarily at the bare idea of its loss, for it was all the means +they had of procuring a fire. + +"Look again, Johnson," he said. + +The boatswain hurried to the only remaining place he could think of, +the hummock where he had stood to watch the bear. But the missing +treasure was nowhere to be found, and the old sailor returned in +despair. + +Hatteras looked at him, but no word of reproach escaped his lips. He +only said-- + +"This is a serious business, Doctor." + +"It is, indeed!" said Clawbonny. + +"We have not even an instrument, some glass that we might take the +lens out of, and use like a burning glass." + +"No, and it is a great pity, for the sun's rays are quite strong +enough just now to light our tinder." + +"Well," said Hatteras, "we must just appease our hunger with +the raw meat, and set off again as soon as we can, to try to +discover the ship." + +"Yes!" replied Clawbonny, speaking to himself, absorbed in his +own reflections. "Yes, that might do at a pinch! Why not? We might +try." + +"What are you dreaming about?" asked Hatteras. + +"An idea has just occurred to me." + +"An idea come into your head, Doctor," exclaimed Johnson; +"then we are saved!" + +"Will it succeed? that's the question." + +"What's your project?" said Hatteras. + +"We want a lens; well, let us make one." + +"How?" asked Johnson. + +"With a piece of ice." + +"What? Do you think that would do?" + +"Why not? All that is needed is to collect the sun's rays into +one common focus, and ice will serve that purpose as well as the +finest crystal." + +"Is it possible?" said Johnson. + +"Yes, only I should like fresh water ice, it is harder and more +transparent than the other." + +"There it is to your hand, if I am not much mistaken," said +Johnson, pointing to a hummock close by. + +[Illustration: ] + +"I fancy that is fresh water, from the dark look of it, and the +green tinge." + +"You are right. Bring your hatchet, Johnson." + +A good-sized piece was soon cut off, about a foot in diameter, and +the Doctor set to work. He began by chopping it into rough shape +with the hatchet; then he operated upon it more carefully with his +knife, making as smooth a surface as possible, and finished the +polishing process with his fingers, rubbing away until he had +obtained as transparent a lens as if it had been made of magnificent +crystal. + +The sun was shining brilliantly enough for the Doctor's +experiment. The tinder was fetched, and held beneath the lens so as +to catch the rays in full power. In a few seconds it took fire, to +Johnson's rapturous delight. + +He danced about like an idiot, almost beside himself with joy, and +shouted, "Hurrah! hurrah!" while Clawbonny hurried back into the +hut and rekindled the fire. The stove was soon roaring, and it was +not many minutes before the savoury odour of broiled bear-steaks +roused Bell from his torpor. + +What a feast this meal was to the poor starving men may be imagined. +The Doctor, however, counselled moderation in eating, and set the +example himself. + +"This is a glad day for us," he said, "and we have no fear of +wanting food all the rest of our journey. Still we must not forget +we have further to go yet, and I think the sooner we start the +better." + +"We cannot be far off now," said Altamont, who could almost +articulate perfectly again; "we must be within forty-eight +hours' march of the Porpoise." + +"I hope we'll find something there to make a fire with," said +the Doctor, smiling. "My lens does well enough at present; but it +needs the sun, and there are plenty of days when he does not make +his appearance here, within less than four degrees of the pole." + +"Less than four degrees!" repeated Altamont, with a sigh; +"yes, my ship went further than any other has ever ventured." + +"It is time we started," said Hatteras, abruptly. + +"Yes," replied the Doctor, glancing uneasily at the two captains. + +The dogs were speedily harnessed to the sledge, and the march +resumed. [Illustration: ] + +As they went along, the Doctor tried to get out of Altamont the real +motive that had brought him so far north. But the American made only +evasive replies, and Clawbonny whispered in old Johnson's ear-- + +"Two men we've got that need looking after." + +"You are right," said Johnson. + +"Hatteras never says a word to this American, and I must say the +man has not shown himself very grateful. I am here, fortunately." + +"Mr. Clawbonny," said Johnson, "now this Yankee has come back +to life again, I must confess I don't much like the expression of +his face." + +"I am much mistaken if he does not suspect the projects of +Hatteras." + +"Do you think his own were similar?" + +"Who knows? These Americans, Johnson, are bold, daring fellows. It +is likely enough an American would try to do as much as an +Englishman." + +"Then you think that Altamont--" + +"I think nothing about it, but his ship is certainly on the road +to the North Pole." + +"But didn't Altamont say that he had been caught among the ice, +and dragged there irresistibly?" + +"He said so, but I fancied there was a peculiar smile on his lips +while he spoke." + +"Hang it! It would be a bad job, Mr. Clawbonny, if any feeling of +rivalry came between two men of their stamp." + +"Heaven forfend! for it might involve the most serious +consequences, Johnson." + +"I hope Altamont will remember he owes his life to us?" + +"But do we not owe ours to him now? I grant, without us, he would +not be alive at this moment, but without him and his ship, what +would become of us?" + +"Well, Mr. Clawbonny, you are here to keep things straight anyhow, +and that is a blessing." + +"I hope I may manage it, Johnson." + +The journey proceeded without any fresh incident, but on the +Saturday morning the travellers found themselves in a region of +quite an altered character. Instead of the wide smooth plain of ice +that had hitherto stretched before them, overturned icebergs and +broken hummocks covered the horizon; while the frequent blocks of +fresh-water ice showed that some coast was near. + +Next day, after a hearty breakfast off the bear's paws, the little +party continued their route; but the road became toilsome and +fatiguing. Altamont lay watching the horizon with feverish +anxiety--an anxiety shared by all his companions, for, according to +the last reckoning made by Hatteras, they were now exactly in +latitude 83 deg. 35" and longitude 120 deg. 15", and the question of +life or death would be decided before the day was over. + +At last, about two o'clock in the afternoon, Altamont started up +with a shout that arrested the whole party, and pointing to a white +mass that no eye but his could have distinguished from the +surrounding icebergs, exclaimed in a loud, ringing voice, "The +Porpoise." + + +CHAPTER VI. + + + +THE PORPOISE + + +It was the 24th of March, and Palm Sunday, a bright, joyous day in +many a town and village of the Old World, but in this desolate +region what mournful silence prevailed! No willow branches here with +their silvery blossom--not even a single withered leaf to be seen +--not a blade of grass! + +Yet this was a glad day to the travellers, for it promised them +speedy deliverance from the death that had seemed so inevitable. + +They hastened onward, the dogs put forth renewed energy, and Duk +barked his loudest, till, before long, they arrived at the ship. The +Porpoise was completely buried under the snow. All her masts and +rigging had been destroyed in the shipwreck, and she was lying on a +bed of rocks so entirely on her side that her hull was uppermost. + +They had to knock away fifteen feet of ice before they could even +catch a glimpse of her, and it was not without great difficulty that +they managed to get on board, and made the welcome discovery that +the provision stores had not been visited by any four-footed +marauders. It was quite evident, however, that the ship was not +habitable. + +"Never mind!" said Hatteras, "we must build a snow-house, and +make ourselves comfortable on land." + +"Yes, but we need not hurry over it," said the Doctor; "let us +do it well while we're about it, and for a time we can make shift +on board; for we must build a good, substantial house, that will +protect us from the bears as well as the cold. I'll undertake to +be the architect, and you shall see what a first-rate job I'll +make of it." + +"I don't doubt your talents, Mr. Clawbonny," replied Johnson; +"but, meantime, let us see about taking up our abode here, and +making an inventory of the stores we find. There does not seem a +boat visible of any description, and I fear these timbers are in too +bad a condition to build a new ship out of them." + +"I don't know that," returned Clawbonny, "time and thought +do wonders; but our first business is to build a house, and not a +ship; one thing at a time, I propose." + +"And quite right too," said Hatteras; "so we'll go ashore +again." + +They returned to the sledge, to communicate the result of their +investigation to Bell and Altamont; and about four in the afternoon +the five men installed themselves as well as they could on the +wreck. Bell had managed to make a tolerably level floor with planks +and spars; the stiffened cushions and hammocks were placed round the +stove to thaw, and were soon fit for use. Altamont, with the +Doctor's assistance, got on board without much trouble, and a sigh +of satisfaction escaped him as if he felt himself once more at +home--a sigh which to Johnson's ear boded no good. + +The rest of the day was given to repose, and they wound up with a +good supper off the remains of the bear, backed by a plentiful +supply of biscuit and hot tea. + +[Illustration: The poor fellows felt like colonists safely arrived +at their destination--P.57] + +It was late next morning before Hatteras and his companions woke, +for their minds were not burdened now with any solicitudes about the +morrow, and they might sleep as long as they pleased. The poor +fellows felt like colonists safely arrived at their destination, who +had forgotten all the sufferings of the voyage, and thought only of +the new life that lay before them. + +"Well, it is something at all events," said the Doctor, rousing +himself and stretching his arms, "for a fellow not to need to ask +where he is going to find his next bed and breakfast." + +"Let us see what there is on board before we say much," said +Johnson. + +The Porpoise has been thoroughly equipped and provisioned for a long +voyage, and, on making an inventory of what stores remained, they +found 6150 lbs. of flour, fat, and raisins; 2000 lbs. of salt beef +and pork, 1500 lbs. of pemmican; 700 lbs. of sugar, and the same of +chocolate; a chest and a half of tea, weighing 96 lbs.; 500 lbs. of +rice; several barrels of preserved fruits and vegetables; a quantity +of lime-juice, with all sorts of medicines, and 300 gallons of rum +and brandy. There was also a large supply of gunpowder, ball, and +shot, and coal and wood in abundance. + +Altogether, there was enough to last those five men for more than +two years, and all fear of death from starvation or cold was at an +end. + +"Well, Hatteras, we're sure of enough to live on now," said +the Doctor, "and there is nothing to hinder us reaching the +Pole." + +"The Pole!" echoed Hatteras. + +"Yes, why not? Can't we push our way overland in the summer +months?" + +"We might overland; but how could we cross water?" + +"Perhaps we may be able to build a boat out of some of the +ship's planks." + +"Out of an American ship!" exclaimed the captain, contemptuously. + +Clawbonny was prudent enough to make no reply, and presently changed +the conversation by saying-- + +"Well, now we have seen what we have to depend upon, we must begin +our house and store-rooms. We have materials enough at hand; and, +Bell, I hope you are going to distinguish yourself," he added. + +"I am ready, Mr. Clawbonny," replied Bell; "and, as for +material, there is enough for a town here with houses and streets." + +"We don't require that; we'll content ourselves with imitating +the Hudson's Bay Company. They entrench themselves in fortresses +against the Indians and wild beasts. That's all we need--a house +one side and stores the other, with a wall and two bastions. I must +try to make a plan." + +"Ah! Doctor, if you undertake it," said Johnson, "I am sure +you'll make a good thing of it." + +"Well, the first part of the business is to go and choose the +ground. Will you come with us Hatteras?" + +"I'll trust all that to you, Doctor," replied the captain. +"I'm going to look along the coast." + +Altamont was too feeble yet to take part in any work, so he remained +on the ship, while the others commenced to explore the unknown +continent. + +On examining the coast, they found that the Porpoise was in a sort +of bay bristling with dangerous rocks, and that to the west, far as +the eye could reach, the sea extended, entirely frozen now, though +if Belcher and Penny were to be believed, open during the summer +months. Towards the north, a promontory stretched out into the sea, +and about three miles away was an island of moderate size. The +roadstead thus formed would have afforded safe anchorage to ships, +but for the difficulty of entering it. A considerable distance +inland there was a solitary mountain, about 3000 feet high, by the +Doctor's reckoning; and half-way up the steep rocky cliffs that +rose from the shore, they noticed a circular plateau, open on three +sides to the bay and sheltered on the fourth by a precipitous wall, +120 feet high. + +This seemed to the Doctor the very place for this house, from its +naturally fortified situation. By cutting steps in the ice, they +managed to climb up and examine it more closely. + +[Illustration: ] + +They were soon convinced they could not have a better foundation, +and resolved to commence operations forthwith, by removing the hard +snow more than ten feet deep, which covered the ground, as both +dwelling and storehouses must have a solid foundation. + +This preparatory work occupied the whole of Monday, Tuesday, and +Wednesday. At last they came to hard granite close in grain, and +containing garnets and felspar crystals, which flew out with every +stroke of the pickaxe. + +[Illustration: ] + +The dimensions and plan of the snow-house were then settled by the +Doctor. It was to be divided into three rooms, as all they needed +was a bed-room, sitting-room and kitchen. The sitting-room was to be +in the middle, the kitchen to the left, and the bed-room to the +right. + +For five days they toiled unremittingly. There was plenty of +material, and the walls required to be thick enough to resist summer +thaws. Already the house began to present an imposing appearance. +There were four windows in front, made of splendid sheets of ice, in +Esquimaux fashion, through which the light came softly in as if +through frosted glass. + +Outside there was a long covered passage between the two windows of +the sitting-room. This was the entrance hall, and it was shut in by +a strong door taken from the cabin of the Porpoise. The Doctor was +highly delighted with his performance when all was finished, for +though it would have been difficult to say to what style of +architecture it belonged, it was strong, and that was the chief +thing. + +The next business was to move in all the furniture of the Porpoise. +The beds were brought first and laid down round the large stove in +the sleeping room; then came chairs, tables, arm-chairs, cupboards, +and benches for the sitting-room, and finally the ship furnaces and +cooking utensils for the kitchen. Sails spread on the ground did +duty for carpets, and also served for inner doors. + +[Illustration: ] + +The walls of the house were over five feet thick, and the windows +resembled port-holes for cannon. Every part was as solid as +possible, and what more was wanted? Yet if the Doctor could have had +his way, he would have made all manner of ornamental additions, in +humble imitation of the Ice Palace built in St. Petersburgh in +January, 1740, of which he had read an account. He amused his +companions after work in the evening by describing its grandeur, the +cannons in front, and statues of exquisite beauty, and the wonderful +elephant that spouted water out of his trunk by day and flaming +naphtha by night--all cut out of ice. He also depicted the +interior, with tables, and toilette tables, mirrors, candelabra, +tapers, beds, mattresses, pillows, curtains, time-pieces, chairs, +playing-cards, wardrobes, completely fitted up--in fact, everything +in the way of furniture that could be mentioned, and the whole +entirely composed of ice. + +It was on Easter Sunday, the 31st of March, when the travellers +installed themselves in their new abode and after holding divine +service in the sitting-room, they devoted the remainder of the day +to rest. + +Next morning they set about building the storehouses and powder +magazine. This took a whole week longer, including the time spent in +unloading the vessel, which was a task of considerable difficulty, +as the temperature was so low, that they could not work for many +hours at a time. At length on the 8th of April, provisions, fuel, +and ammunition were all safe on terra firma, and deposited in their +respective places. A sort of kennel was constructed a little +distance from the house for the Greenland dogs, which the Doctor +dignified by the name of "Dog Palace." Duk shared his master's +quarters. + +All that now remained to be done was to put a parapet right round +the plateau by way of fortification. + +[Illustration: ] + +By the 15th this was also completed, and the snow-house might bid +defiance to a whole tribe of Esquimaux, or any other hostile +invaders, if indeed any human beings whatever were to be found on +this unknown continent, for Hatteras, who had minutely examined the +bay and the surrounding coast, had not been able to discover the +least vestiges of the huts that are generally met with on shores +frequented by Greenland tribes. The shipwrecked sailors of the +Porpoise and Forward seemed to be the first whose feet had ever trod +this lone region. + + +CHAPTER VII. + + + +AN IMPORTANT DISCUSSION. + + +While all these preparations for winter were going on Altamont was +fast regaining strength. His vigorous constitution triumphed, and he +was even able to lend a helping hand in the unlading of the ship. He +was a true type of the American, a shrewd, intelligent man, full of +energy and resolution, enterprising, bold, and ready for anything. +He was a native of New York, he informed his companions, and had +been a sailor from his boyhood. + +The Porpoise had been equipped and sent out by a company of wealthy +merchants belonging to the States, at the head of which was the +famous Grinnell. + +There were many points of resemblance between Altamont and Hatteras, +but no affinities. Indeed, any similarity that there was between +them, tended rather to create discord than to make the men friends. +With a greater show of frankness, he was in reality far more deep +and crafty than Hatteras. He was more free and easy, but not so +true-hearted, and somehow his apparent openness did not inspire such +confidence as the Englishman's gloomy reserve. + +[Illustration: ] + +The Doctor was in constant dread of a collision between the rival +captains, and yet one must command inevitably, and which should it +be! Hatteras had the men, but Altamont had the ship, and it was hard +to say whose was the better right. + +It required all the Doctor's tact to keep things smooth, for the +simplest conversation threatened to lead to strife. + +At last, in spite of all his endeavours, an outbreak occurred on the +occasion of a grand banquet by way of "house-warming," when the +new habitation was completed. + +This banquet was Dr Clawbonny's idea. He was head-cook, and +distinguished himself by the concoction of a wonderful pudding, +which would positively have done no dishonour to the cuisine of the +Lord Chancellor of England. + +Bell most opportunely chanced to shoot a white hare and several +ptarmigans, which made an agreeable variety from the pemmican and +salt meat. + +Clawbonny was master of the ceremonies, and brought in his pudding, +adorning himself with the insignia of his office--a big apron, and +a knife dangling at his belt. + +As Altamont did not conform to the teetotal regime of his English +companions, gin and brandy were set on the table after dinner, and +the others, by the Doctor's orders, joined him in a glass for +once, that the festive occasion might be duly honoured. When the +different toasts were being drunk, one was given to the United +States, to which Hatteras made no response. + +This important business over, the Doctor introduced an interesting +subject of conversation by saying-- + +"My friends, it is not enough to have come thus far in spite of so +many difficulties; we have something more yet to do. I propose we +should bestow a name on this continent, where we have found friendly +shelter and rest, and not only on the continent, but on the several +bays, peaks, and promontories that we meet with. This has been +invariably done by navigators and is a most necessary proceeding." + +"Quite right," said Johnson, "when once a place is named, it +takes away the feeling of being castaways on an unknown shore." + +"Yes," added Bell, "and we might be going on some expedition +and obliged to separate, or go out hunting, and it would make it +much easier to find one another if each locality had a definite +name." + +[Illustration: ] + +"Very well; then," said the Doctor, "since we are all agreed, +let us go steadily to work." + +Hatteras had taken no part in the conversation as yet, but seeing +all eyes fixed on him, he rose at last, and said-- + +"If no one objects, I think the most suitable name we can give our +house is that of its skilful architect, the best man among us. Let +us call it 'Doctor's House.'" + +"Just the thing!" said Bell. + +"First rate!" exclaimed Johnson, "'Doctor's House!'" + +"We cannot do better," chimed in Altamont. "Hurrah for Doctor +Clawbonny." + +Three hearty cheers were given, in which Duk joined lustily, barking +his loudest. + +"It is agreed then," said Hatteras, "that this house is to be +called 'Doctor's House.'" + +The Doctor, almost overcome by his feelings, modestly protested +against the honour; but he was obliged to yield to the wishes of his +friends, and the new habitation was formally named "Doctor's +House." + +"Now, then," said the Doctor, "let us go onto name the most +important of our discoveries." + +"There is that immense sea which surrounds us, unfurrowed as yet +by a single ship." + +"A single ship!" repeated Altamont. "I think you have +forgotten the Porpoise, and yet she certainly did not get here +overland," + +"Well, it would not be difficult to believe she had," replied +Hatteras, "to see on what she lies at present." + +"True, enough, Hatteras," said Altamont, in a piqued tone; +"but, after all, is not that better than being blown to atoms like +the Forward?" + +Hatteras was about to make some sharp retort, but Clawbonny +interposed. + +"It is not a question of ships, my friends," he said, "but of +a fresh sea." + +"It is no new sea," returned Altamont; "it is in every Polar +chart, and has a name already. It is called the Arctic Ocean, and I +think it would be very inconvenient to alter its designation. Should +we find out by and by, that, instead of being an ocean it is only a +strait or gulf, it will be time enough to alter it then." + +"So be it," said Hatteras. + +"Very well, that is an understood thing, then," said the Doctor, +almost regretting that he had started a discussion so pregnant with +national rivalries. + +"Let us proceed with the continent where we find ourselves at +present," resumed Hatteras. "I am not aware that any name +whatever has been affixed to it, even in the most recent charts." + +He looked at Altamont as he spoke, who met his gaze steadily, and +said-- + +"Possibly you may be mistaken again, Hatteras." + +"Mistaken! What! This unknown continent, this virgin soil----" + +"Has already a name," replied Altamont, coolly. + +Hatteras was silent, but his lip quivered. + +"And what name has it, then?" asked the Doctor, rather +astonished at Altamont's affirmation. + +"My dear Clawbonny," replied the American, "it is the custom, +not to say the right, of every navigator to christen the soil on +which he is the first to set foot. It appears to me, therefore, that +it is my privilege and duty on this occasion to exercise my +prerogative, and--" + +"But, sir," interrupted Johnson, rather nettled at his sang +froid. + +"It would be a difficult matter to prove that the Porpoise did not +come here, even supposing she reached this coast by land," +continued Altamont, without noticing Johnson's protest. "The +fact is indisputable," he added looking at Hatteras. + +[Illustration: "I dispute the claim," said the Englishman, +restraining himself by a powerful effort.--P.72] + +"I dispute the claim," said the Englishman, restraining himself +by a powerful effort. "To name a country, you must first discover +it, I suppose, and that you certainly did not do. Besides, but for +us, where would you have been, sir, at this moment, pray? Lying +twenty feet deep under the snow." + +"And without me, sir," retorted Altamont, hotly, "without me +and my ship, where would you all be at this moment? Dead, from cold +and hunger." + +"Come, come, friends," said the Doctor, "don't get to words, +all that can be easily settled. Listen to me." + +"Mr. Hatteras," said Altamont, "is welcome to name whatever +territories he may discover, should he succeed in discovering any; +but this continent belongs to me. I should not even consent to its +having two names like Grinnell's Land, which is also called Prince +Albert's Land, because it was discovered almost simultaneously by +an Englishman and an American. This is quite another matter; my +right of priority is incontestable. No ship before mine ever touched +this shore, no foot before mine ever trod this soil. I have given it +a name, and that name it shall keep." + +"And what is that name?" inquired the Doctor. + +"New America," replied Altamont. + +Hatteras trembled with suppressed passion, but by a violent effort +restrained himself. + +"Can you prove to me," said Altamont, "that an Englishman has +set foot here before an American?" + +Johnson and Bell said nothing, though quite as much offended as the +captain by Altamont's imperious tone. They felt that reply was +impossible. + +For a few minutes there was an awkward silence, which the Doctor +broke by saying-- + +"My friends, the highest human law is justice. It includes all +others. Let us be just, then, and don't let any bad feeling get in +among us. The priority of Altamont seems to me indisputable. We will +take our revenge by and by, and England will get her full share in +our future discoveries. Let the name New America stand for the +continent itself, but I suppose Altamont has not yet disposed of all +the bays, and capes, and headlands it contains, and I imagine there +will be nothing to prevent us calling this bay Victoria Bay?" + +"Nothing whatever, provided that yonder cape is called Cape +Washington," replied Altamont. + +"You might choose a name, sir," exclaimed Hatteras, almost +beside himself with passion, "that is less offensive to an +Englishman." + +"But not one which sounds so sweet to an American," retorted +Altamont, proudly. + +"Come, come," said the Doctor, "no discussion on that subject. +An American has a perfect right to be proud of his great countryman! +Let us honour genius wherever it is met with; and since Altamont has +made his choice, let us take our turn next; let the captain----" + +"Doctor!" interrupted Hatteras, "I have no wish that my name +should figure anywhere on this continent, seeing that it belongs to +America." + +"Is this your unalterable determination?" asked Clawbonny. + +"It is." + +The Doctor did not insist further. + +"Very well, we'll have it to ourselves then," he continued, +turning to Johnson and Bell. "We'll leave our traces behind us. +I propose that the island we see out there, about three miles away +from the shore, should be called Isle Johnson, in honour of our +boatswain,'' + +"Oh, Mr. Clawbonny," began Johnson, in no little confusion. + +"And that mountain that we discovered in the west we will call +Bell Mount, if our carpenter is willing." + +"It is doing me too much honour," replied Bell. + +"It is simple justice," returned the Doctor. + +"Nothing could be better," said Altamont. + +"Now then, all we have to do is to christen our fort," said the +Doctor, "about that there will be no discussion, I hope, for it is +neither to our gracious sovereign Queen Victoria, nor to Washington, +that we owe our safety and shelter here, but to God, who brought +about our meeting, and by so doing saved us all. Let our little fort +be called Fort Providence." + +"Your remarks are just," said Altamont; "no name could be more +suitable." + +"Fort Providence," added Johnson, "sounds well too. In our +future excursions, then, we shall go by Cape Washington to Victoria +Bay, and from thence to Fort Providence, where we shall find food +and rest at Doctor's House!" + +"The business is settled then so far," resumed the Doctor. "As +our discoveries multiply we shall have other names to give; but I +trust, friends, we shall have no disputes about them, for placed as +we are, we need all the help and love we can give each other. Let us +be strong by being united. Who knows what dangers yet we may have to +brave, and what sufferings to endure before we see our native land +once more. Let us be one in heart though five in number, and let us +lay aside all feelings of rivalry. Such feelings are bad enough at +all times, but among us they would be doubly wrong. You understand +me, Altamont, and you, Hatteras?" + +Neither of the captains replied, but the Doctor took no notice of +their silence, and went on to speak of other things. Sundry +expeditions were planned to forage for fresh food. It would soon be +spring, and hares and partridges, foxes and bears would re-appear. +So it was determined that part of every day should be spent in +hunting and exploring this unknown continent of New America. + +[Illustration: Clambering up the steep, rocky wall, against which +the Doctor's House leaned, he succeeded, though with considerable +difficulty, in reaching the top.--P.77] + + +CHAPTER VIII. + + + +AN EXCURSION TO THE NORTH OF VICTORIA BAY + + +Next morning Clawbonny was out by dawn of day. Clambering up the +steep, rocky wall, against which the Doctor's House leaned, he +succeeded, though with considerable difficulty, in reaching the top, +which he found terminated abruptly in a sort of truncated cone. From +this elevation there was an extensive view over a vast tract of +country, which was all disordered and convulsed as if it had +undergone some volcanic commotion. Sea and land, as far as it was +possible to distinguish one from the other, were covered with a +sheet of ice. + +A new project struck the Doctor's mind, which was soon matured and +ripe for execution. He lost no time in going back to the snow house, +and consulting over it with his companions. + +"I have got an idea," he said; "I think of constructing a +lighthouse on the top of that cone above our heads." + +"A lighthouse!" they all exclaimed. + +"Yes, a lighthouse. It would be a double advantage. It would be a +beacon to guide us in distant excursions, and also serve to illumine +our plateau in the long dreary winter months." + +"There is no doubt," replied Altamont, "of its utility; but +how would you contrive to make it?" + +"With one of the lanterns out of the Porpoise." + +"All right; but how will you feed your lamp? With seal oil?" + +"No, seal oil would not give nearly sufficient light. It would +scarcely be visible through the fog." + +"Are you going to try to make gas out of our coal then?" + +"No, not that either, for gas would not be strong enough; and, +worse still, it would waste our combustibles." + +"Well," replied Altamont; "I'm at a loss to see how you--" + +"Oh, I'm prepared for everything after the mercury bullet, and +the ice lens, and Fort Providence. I believe Mr. Clawbonny can do +anything," exclaimed Johnson. + +"Come, Clawbonny, tell us what your light is to be, then," said +Altamont. + +"That's soon told," replied Clawbonny. "I mean to have an +electric light." + +"An electric light?" + +"Yes, why not? Haven't you a galvanic battery on board your +ship?" + +"Yes." + +"Well, there will be no difficulty then in producing an electric +light, and that will cost nothing, and be far brighter." + +"First-rate?" said Johnson; "let us set to work at once." + +"By all means. There is plenty of material. In an hour we can +raise a pillar of ice ten feet high, and that is quite enough. + +Away went the Doctor, followed by his companions, and the column was +soon erected and crowned with a ship lantern. The conducting wires +were properly adjusted within it, and the pile with which they +communicated fixed up in the sitting-room, where the warmth of the +stove would protect it from the action of the frost. + +As soon as it grew dark the experiment was made, and proved a +complete success. An intense brilliant light streamed from the +lantern and illumined the entire plateau and the plains beneath. + +Johnson could not help clapping his hands, half beside himself with +delight. + +"Well, I declare, Mr. Clawbonny," he exclaimed, "you're our +sun now." + +"One must be a little of everything, you know," was +Clawbonny's modest reply. + +It was too cold. however, even to stand admiring more than a minute, +and the whole party were glad enough to get indoors again, and tuck +themselves up in their warm blankets. + +A regular course of life commenced now, though uncertain weather and +frequent changes of temperature made it sometimes impracticable to +venture outside the hut at all, and it was not till the Saturday +after the installation, that a day came that was favourable enough +for a hunting excursion; when Bell, and Altamont, and the Doctor +determined to take advantage of it, and try to replenish their stock +of provisions. + +They started very early in the morning, each armed with a +double-barrelled gun and plenty of powder and shot, a hatchet, and a +snow knife. + +[Illustration: ] + +The weather was cloudy, but Clawbonny put the galvanic battery in +action before he left, and the bright rays of the electric light did +duty for the glorious orb of day, and in truth was no bad +substitute, for the light was equal to three thousand candles, or +three hundred gas burners. + +It was intensely cold, but dry, and there was little or no wind. The +hunters set off in the direction of Cape Washington, and the hard +snow so favoured their march, that in three hours they had gone +fifteen miles, Duk jumping and barking beside them all the way. They +kept as close to the coast as possible, but found no trace of human +habitation and indeed scarcely a sign of animal life. A few snow +birds, however, darting to and fro announced the approach of spring +and the return of the animal creation. The sea was still entirely +frozen over, but it was evident from the open breathing holes in the +ice, that the seals had been quite recently on the surface. In one +part the holes were so numerous, that the Doctor said to his +companions that he had no doubt that when summer came, they would be +seen there in hundreds, and would be easily captured, for on +unfrequented shores they were not so difficult of approach. But once +frighten them and they all vanish as if by enchantment, and never +return to the spot again. "Inexperienced hunters," he said, +"have often lost a whole shoal by attacking them, en masse, with +noisy shouts instead of singly and silently." + +"Is it for the oil or skin that they are mostly hunted?" + +"Europeans hunt them for the skin, but the Esquimaux eat them. +They live on seals, and nothing is so delicious to them as a piece +of the flesh, dipped in the blood and oil. After all, cooking has a +good deal to do with it, and I'll bet you something I could dress +you cutlets you would not turn up your nose at, unless for their +black appearance." + +"We'll set you to work on it," said Bell, "and I'll eat as +much as you like to please you." + +"My good Bell, you mean to say to please yourself, but your +voracity would never equal the Green-landers', for they devour +from ten to fifteen pounds of meat a day." + +"Fifteen pounds!" said Bell. "What stomachs!" + +"Arctic stomachs," replied the Doctor, "are prodigious; they +can expand at will, and, I may add, contract at will; so that they +can endure starvation quite as well as abundance. When an Esquimaux +sits down to dinner he is quite thin, and by the time he has +finished, he is so corpulent you would hardly recognize him. But +then we must remember that one meal sometimes has to last a whole +day." + +"This voracity must be peculiar to the inhabitants of cold +countries," said Altamont. + +"I think it is," replied the Doctor. "In the Arctic regions +people must eat enormously: it is not only one of the conditions of +strength, but of existence. The Hudson's Bay Company always +reckoned on this account 8 lbs. of meat to each man a day, or 12 +lbs. of fish, or 2 lbs. of pemmican." + +"Invigorating regimen, certainly!" said Bell. + +"Not so much as you imagine, my friend. An Indian who guzzles like +that can't do a whit better day's work than an Englishman, who +has his pound of beef and pint of beer." + +"Things are best as they are, then, Mr. Clawbonny." + +"No doubt of it; and yet an Esquimaux meal may well astonish us. +In Sir John Ross's narrative, he states his surprise at the +appetites of his guides. He tells us that two of them--just two +mind--devoured a quarter of a buffalo in one morning. They cut the +meat in long narrow strips, and the mode of eating was either for +the one to bite off as much as his mouth could hold, and then pass +it on to the other, or to leave the long ribbons of meat dangling +from the mouth and devour them gradually like boa-constrictors, +lying at full length on the ground." + +[Illustration: ] + +"Faugh!" exclaimed Bell, "what disgusting brutes!" + +"Every man has his own fashion of dining," remarked the +philosophical American. + +"Happily," said the Doctor. + +"Well, if eating is such an imperative necessity in these +latitudes, it quite accounts for all the journals of Arctic +travellers being so full of eating and drinking." + +"You are right," returned the Doctor. "I have been struck by +the same fact; but I think it arises not only from the necessity of +full diet, but from the extreme difficulty sometimes in procuring +it. The thought of food is always uppermost in the mind, and +naturally finds mention in the narrative." + +"And yet," said Altamont, "if my memory serves me right, in +the coldest parts of Norway the peasants do not seem to need such +substantial fare. Milk diet is their staple food, with eggs, and +bread made of the bark of the birch-tree; a little salmon +occasionally, but never meat; and still they are fine hardy +fellows." + +"It is an affair of organization out of my power to explain," +replied Clawbonny; "but I have no doubt that if these same +Norwegians were transplanted to Greenland, they would learn to eat +like the Esquimaux by the second or third generation. Even if we +ourselves were to remain in this blessed country long, we should be +as bad as the Esquimaux, even if we escaped becoming regular +gluttons." + +"I declare, Mr. Clawbonny, you make me feel hungry with talking so +much about eating," exclaimed Bell. + +"Not I!" said Altamont. "It rather sickens me, and makes me +loathe the sight of a seal. But, stop, I do believe we are going to +have the chance of a dinner off one, for I am much mistaken if +that's not something alive lying on those lumps of ice yonder!" + +"It is a walrus!" exclaimed the Doctor. "Be quiet, and let us +get up to him." + +Clawbonny was right, it was a walrus of huge dimensions, disporting +himself not more than two hundred yards away. The hunters separated, +going in different directions, so as to surround the animal and cut +off all retreat. They crept along cautiously behind the hummocks, +and managed to get within a few paces of him unperceived, when they +fired simultaneously. + +[Illustration: ] + +The walrus rolled over, but speedily got up again, and tried to make +his escape, but Altamont fell upon him with his hatchet, and cut off +his dorsal fins. He made a desperate resistance, but was overpowered +by his enemies, and soon lay dead, reddening the ice-field with his +blood. + +It was a fine animal, measuring more than fifteen feet in length, +and would have been worth a good deal for the oil; but the hunters +contented themselves with cutting off the most savoury parts, and +left the rest to the ravens, which had just begun to make their +appearance. + +Night was drawing on, and it was time to think of returning to Fort +Providence. The moon had not yet risen, but the sky was serene and +cloudless, and already glittering with stars--magnificent stars. + +"Come," said the Doctor, "let us be off, for it is getting +late. Our hunting has not been very successful; but still, if a man +has found something for his supper, he need not grumble. Let us go +the shortest road, however, and get quickly home without losing our +way. The stars will guide us." + +They resolved to try a more direct route back by going further +inland, and avoiding the windings of the coast; but, after some +hours' walking, they found themselves no nearer Doctor's House, +and it was evident that they must have lost their way. The question +was raised whether to construct a hut and rest till morning, or +proceed; but Clawbonny insisted on going on, as Hatteras and Johnson +would be so uneasy. + +"Duk will guide us," he said; "he won't go wrong. His +instinct can dispense with star and compass. Just let us keep close +behind him." + +They did well to trust to Duk, for very speedily a faint light +appeared in the horizon almost like a star glimmering through the +mist, which hung low above the ground. + +"There's our lighthouse!" exclaimed the Doctor. + +"Do you think it is, Mr. Clawbonny?" said Bell. + +[Illustration: Soon they were walking in a bright luminous track, +leaving their long shadows behind them on the spotless snow. --P.87] + +"I'm certain of it! Come on faster." The light became stronger +the nearer they approached, and soon they were walking in a bright +luminous track, leaving their long shadows behind them on the +spotless snow. + +Quickening their steps, they hastened forward, and in another half +hour they were climbing the ascent to Fort Providence. + + +CHAPTER IX. + + + +COLD AND HEAT. + + +Hatteras and Johnson had been getting somewhat uneasy at the +prolonged absence of their companions, and were delighted to see +them back safe and sound. The hunters were no less glad to find +themselves once more in a warm shelter, for the temperature had +fallen considerably as night drew on, and the thermometer outside +was 73 deg. below zero. + +The poor hunters were half frozen, and so worn out that they could +hardly drag their limbs along; but the stoves were roaring and +crackling cheerily, and the big kitchen fire waiting to cook such +game as might be brought in. Clawbonny donned his official apron +again, and soon had his seal cutlets dressed and smoking on the +table. By nine o'clock the whole party were enjoying a good +supper, and Bell couldn't help exclaiming-- + +"Well, even at the risk of being taken for an Esquimaux, I must +confess eating is the most important business if one has to winter +in these regions. A good meal isn't to be sneezed at." + +They all had their mouths crammed too full to speak, but the Doctor +signified his agreement with Bell's views by an approving nod. + +The cutlets were pronounced first-rate, and it seemed as if they +were, for they were all eaten, to the very last morsel. + +For dessert they had coffee, which the Doctor brewed himself in a +French coffee-pot over spirits-of-wine. He never allowed anybody but +himself to concoct this precious beverage; for he made a point of +serving it boiling hot, always declaring it was not fit to drink +unless it burnt his tongue. This evening he took it so scalding that +Altamont exclaimed-- + +[Illustration: ] + +"You'll skin your throat!" + +"Not a bit of it," was the Doctor's reply. + +"Then your palate must be copper-sheathed," said Johnson. + +"Not at all, friends. I advise you to copy my example. Many +persons, and I am one, can drink coffee at a temperature of 131 deg." + +"131 deg.?" said Altamont; "why, that is hotter than the hand +could bear!" + +"Of course it is, Altamont, for the hand could not bear more than +122 deg., but the palate and tongue are less sensitive." + +"You surprise me." + +"Well, I will convince you it is fact," returned Clawbonny, and +taking up a thermometer, he plunged it into the steaming coffee. He +waited till the mercury rose as high as 131 deg. and then withdrew it, +and swallowed the liquid with evident gusto. + +Bell tried to follow his example, but burnt his mouth severely. + +"You are not used to it," said the Doctor, coolly. + +"Can you tell us, Clawbonny," asked Altamont, "what is the +highest temperature that the human body can bear." + +"Yes, several curious experiments have been made in that respect. +I remember reading of some servant girls, in the town of +Rochefoucauld, in France, who could stay ten minutes in a baker's +large oven when the temperature was 300 deg., while potatoes and meat +were cooking all round them." + +"What girls!" exclaimed Altamont. + +"Well, there is another case, where eight of our own countrymen-- +Fordyce, Banks, Solander, Blagdin, Home, Nooth, Lord Seaforth, and +Captain Phillips--went into one as hot as 200 deg., where eggs and +beef were frizzling." + +"And they were Englishmen!" said Bell, with a touch of national +pride. + +"Oh, the Americans could have done better than that," said +Altamont. + +"They would have roasted," returned the Doctor, laughing. "At +all events they have never tried it, so I shall stand up for my +countrymen. There is one more instance I recollect, and really it is +so incredible, that it would be impossible to believe it, if it were +not attested by unimpeachable evidence. The Duke of Ragusa and + +[Illustration: ] + +Dr. Jung, a Frenchman and an Austrian, saw a Turk plunge into a bath +at 170 deg." + +"But that is not so astonishing as those servant girls, or our own +countrymen," said Johnson. + +"I beg your pardon," replied Clawbonny; "there is a great +difference between plunging into hot air and hot water. Hot air +produces perspiration, which protects the skin, but boiling water +scalds. The maximum heat of baths is 107 deg., so that this Turk must +have been an extraordinary fellow to endure such temperature." + +"What is the mean temperature, Mr. Clawbonny, of animated +beings?" asked Johnson. + +"That varies with the species," replied the Doctor. "Birds +have the highest, especially the duck and the hen. The mammalia come +next, and human beings. The temperature of Englishmen averages +101 deg." + +"I am sure Mr. Altamont is going to claim a higher rate for his +countrymen," said Johnson, smiling. + +"Well, sure enough, we've some precious hot ones among us, but +as I never have put a thermometer down their throats to ascertain, I +can't give you statistics." + +"There is no sensible difference," said the Doctor, "between +men of different races when they are placed under the same +conditions, whatever their food may be. I may almost say their +temperature would be the same at the Equator as the Pole." + +"Then the heat of our bodies is the same here as in England," +replied Altamont. + +"Just about it. The other species of mammalia are generally hotter +than human beings. The horse, the hare, the elephant, the porpoise, +and the tiger are nearly the same; but the cat, the squirrel, the +rat, the panther, the sheep, the ox, the dog, the monkey, and the +goat, are as high as 103 deg.; and the pig is 104 deg." + +"Rather humiliating to us," put in Altamont. + +"Then come the amphibia and the fish," resumed the Doctor, +"whose temperature varies with that of the water. The serpent has a +temperature of 86 deg., the frog 70 deg., and the shark several degrees +less. Insects appear to have the temperature of air and water." + +[Illustration: ] + +"All this is very well," interrupted Hatteras, who had hitherto +taken no part in the conversation, "and we are obliged to the +Doctor for his scientific information; but we are really talking as +if we were going to brave the heat of the torrid zone. I think it +would be far more seasonable to speak of cold, if the Doctor could +tell us what is the lowest temperature on record." + +"I can enlighten you on that too," replied the Doctor. "There +are a great number of memorable winters, which appear to have come +at intervals of about forty-one years. In 1364, the Rhone was frozen +over as far as Arles; in 1408, the Danube was frozen throughout its +entire extent, and the wolves crossed the Cattigut on firm ground; +in 1509, the Adriatic and the Mediterranean were frozen at Venice +and Marseilles, and the Baltic on the 10th of April; in 1608, all +the cattle died in England from the cold; in 1789, the Thames was +frozen as far as Gravesend; and the frightful winter of 1813 will +long be remembered in France. The earliest and longest ever known in +the present century was in 1829. So much for Europe." + +"But here, within the Polar circle, what is the lowest degree?" +asked Altamont. + +"My word!" said the Doctor. "I think we have experienced the +lowest ourselves, for one day the thermometer was 72 deg. below zero, +and, if my memory serves me right, the lowest temperature mentioned +hitherto by Arctic voyagers has been 61 deg. at Melville Island, 65 deg. +at Port Felix, and 70 deg. at Fort Reliance." + +"Yes," said Hatteras, "it was the unusual severity of the +winter that barred our progress, for it came on just at the worst +time possible." + +"You were stopped, you say?" asked Altamont, looking fixedly at +the captain. + +"Yes, in our voyage west," the Doctor hastened to reply. + +"Then the maximum and minimum temperatures," said Altamont, +resuming the conversation, "are about 200 deg. apart. So you see, my +friends, we may make ourselves easy." + +"But if the sun were suddenly extinguished," suggested Johnson, +"would not the earth's temperature be far lower?" + +"There is no fear of such a catastrophe; but, even should it +happen, the temperature would be scarcely any different." + +[Illustration: ] + +"That's curious." + +"It is; but Fourrier, a learned Frenchman, has proved the fact +incontestably. If it were not the case, the difference between day +and night would be far greater, as also the degree of cold at the +Poles. But now I think, friends, we should be the better of a few +hours' sleep. Who has charge of the stove?" + +"It is my turn to-night," said Bell. + +"Well, pray keep up a good fire, for it is a perishing night." + +"Trust me for that," said Bell. "But do look out, the sky is +all in a blaze." + +"Ay! it is a magnificent aurora," replied the Doctor, going up +to the window. "How beautiful! I never tire gazing at it." + +No more he ever did, though his companions had become so used to +such displays that they hardly noticed them now. He soon followed +the example of the others, however, and lay down on his bed beside +the fire, leaving Bell to mount guard. + + +CHAPTER X. + + + +WINTER PLEASURES + + +It is a dreary affair to live at the Pole, for there is no going out +for many long months, and nothing to break the weary monotony. + +The day after the hunting excursion was dark and snowy, and +Clawbonny could find no occupation except polishing up the ice walls +of the hut as they became damp with the heat inside, and emptying +out the snow which drifted into the long passage leading to the +inner door. The "Snow-House" stood out well, defying storm and +tempest, and the snow only seemed to increase the thickness of the +walls. + +The storehouses, too, did not give way the least; but though they +were only a few yards off, it was found necessary to lay in enough +provisions for the day, as very often the weather made it almost +impossible to venture that short distance. + +The unloading of the Porpoise turned out to have been a wise +precaution, for she was slowly but surely being crashed to pieces by +the silent, irresistible pressure around her. Still the Doctor was +always hoping enough planks might be sufficiently sound to construct +a small vessel to convey them back to England, but the right time to +build had not come. + +[Illustration: ] + +[Illustration: ] + +The five men were consequently compelled to spend the greater part +of the day in complete idleness. Hatteras lolled on his bed absorbed +in thought. Altamont smoked or dozed, and the Doctor took care not +to disturb either of them, for he was in perpetual fear of a quarrel +between them. + +At meal times he always led the conversation away from irritating +topics and sought, as far as possible, to instruct and interest all +parties. Whenever he was not engaged with the preparation of his +notes, he gave them dissertations on history, geography, or +meteorology, handling his subject in an easy, though philosophical +manner, drawing lessons from the most trivial incidents. His +inexhaustible memory was never at a loss for fact or illustration +when his good humour and geniality made him the life and soul of the +little company. He was implicitly trusted by all, even by Hatteras, +who cherished a deep affection for him. + +Yet no man felt the compulsory confinement more painfully than +Clawbonny. He longed ardently for the breaking up of the frost to +resume his excursions though he dreaded the rivalry that might ensue +between the two captains. + +Yet things must come to a crisis soon or late, and meantime he +resolved to use his best endeavors to bring both parties to a better +mind, but to reconcile an American and an Englishman was no easy +task. He and Johnson had many a talk on the subject, for the old +sailor's views quite coincided with his own as to the difficult +complications which awaited them in the future. + +However, the bad weather continued, and leaving Fort Providence, +even for an hour, was out of the question. Day and night they were +pent up in these glittering ice-walls, and time hung heavily on +their hands, at least on all but the Doctor's, and he always +managed to find some occupation for himself. + +[Illustration: ] + +"I declare," said Altamont, one evening; "life like this is +not worth having. We might as well be some of those reptiles that +sleep all the winter. But I suppose there is no help for it." + +"I am afraid not," said the Doctor; "unfortunately we are too +few in number to get up any amusement." + +"Then you think if there were more of us, we should find more to +do?" + +"Of course: when whole ships' crews have wintered here, they +have managed to while away the time famously." + +"Well, I must say I should like to know how. It would need a vast +amount of ingenuity to extract anything amusing out of our +circumstances. I suppose they did not play at charades?" + +"No, but they introduced the press and the theatre." + +"What? They had a newspaper?" exclaimed the American. + +"They acted a comedy?" said Bell. + +"That they did," said the Doctor. "When Parry wintered at +Melville Island, he started both amusements among his men, and they +met with great success." + +"Well, I must confess, I should like to have been there," +returned Johnson; "for it must have been rather curious work." + +"Curious and amusing too, my good Johnson. Lieutenant Beechey was +the theatre manager, and Captain Sabina chief editor of the +newspaper called 'The Winter Chronicle, or the Gazette of Northern +Georgia.'" + +"Good titles," said Altamont. + +"The newspaper appeared daily from the 1st of November, 1819, to +the 20th of March, 1820. It reported the different excursions, and +hunting parties, and accidents, and adventures, and published +amusing stories. No doubt the articles were not up to the +'Spectator' or the 'Daily Telegraph,' but the readers were +neither critical nor blase, and found great pleasure in their +perusal." + +[Illustration: ] + +"My word!" said Altamont. "I should like to read some of the +articles." + +"Would you? Well, you shall judge for yourself." + +"What! can you repeat them from memory?" + +"No; but you had Parry's Voyages on board the Porpoise, and I +can read you his own narrative if you like." + +This proposition was so eagerly welcomed that the Doctor fetched the +book forthwith, and soon found the passage in question. + +"Here is a letter," he said, "addressed to the editor." + +"'Your proposition to establish a journal has been received by +us with the greatest satisfaction. I am convinced that, under your +direction, it will be a great source of amusement, and go a long way +to lighten our hundred days of darkness. + +"'The interest I take in the matter myself has led me to study +the effect of your announcement on my comrades, and I can testify, +to use reporter's language, that the thing has produced an immense +sensation. + +"'The day after your prospectus appeared, there was an unusual +and unprecedented demand for ink among us, and our green tablecloth +was deluged with snippings and parings of quill-pens, to the injury +of one of our servants, who got a piece driven right under his nail. +I know for a fact that Sergeant Martin had no less than nine +pen-knives to sharpen. + +"'It was quite a novel sight to see all the writing-desks +brought out, which had not made their appearance for a couple of +months, and judging by the reams of paper visible, more than one +visit must have been made to the depths of the hold. + +"'I must not forget to tell you, that I believe attempts will +be made to slip into your box sundry articles which are not +altogether original, as they have been published already. I can +declare that, no later than last night, I saw an author bending over +his desk, holding a volume of the "Spectator" open with one +hand, and thawing the frozen ink in his pen at the lamp with the +other. I need not warn you to be on your guard against such tricks, +for it would never do for us to have articles in our "Winter +Chronicle" which our great-grandfathers read over their +breakfast-tables a century ago.'" + +"Well, well," said Altamont, "there is a good deal of clever +humour in that writer. He must have been a sharp fellow." + +"You're right. Here is an amusing catalogue of Arctic +tribulations:-- + +"'To go out in the morning for a walk, and the moment you put +your foot outside the ship, find yourself immersed in the cook's +water-hole. + +"'To go out hunting, and fall in with a splendid reindeer, take +aim, and find your gun has gone off with a flash in the pan, owing +to damp powder. + +"'To set out on a march with a good supply of soft new bread in +your pocket, and discover, when you want to eat, that it has frozen +so hard that you would break your teeth if you attempted to bite it +through. + +"'To rush from the table when it is reported that a wolf is in +sight, and on coming back to find the cat has eaten your dinner. + +"'To be returning quietly home from a walk, absorbed in +profitable meditation, and suddenly find yourself in the embrace of +a bear.' + +"We might supplement this list ourselves," said the Doctor, +"to almost any amount, for there is a sort of pleasure in +enumerating troubles when one has got the better of them." + +"I declare," said Altamont, "this 'Winter Journal' is an +amusing affair. I wish we could subscribe to it." + +"Suppose we start one," said Johnson. + +"For us five!" exclaimed Clawbonny; "we might do for editors, +but there would not be readers enough." + +"No, nor spectators enough, if we tried to get up a comedy," +added Altamont. + +"Tell us some more about Captain Parry's theatre," said +Johnson; "did they play new pieces?" + +"Certainly. At first two volumes on board the 'Hecla' were +gone through, but as there was a performance once a fortnight, this +repertoire was soon exhausted. Then they had to improvise fresh +plays; Parry himself composed one which had immense success. It was +called 'The North-West Passage, or the End of the Voyage.'" + +"A famous title," said Altamont; "but I must confess, if I had +chosen such a subject, I should have been at a loss for the +denouement." + +"You are right," said Bell; "who can say what the end will +be?" + +"What does that matter?" replied Mr. Clawbonny. "Why should we +trouble about the last act, while the first ones are going on well. +Leave all that to Providence, friends; let us each play our own +role as perfectly as we can, and since the denouement belongs to +the Great Author of all things, we will trust his skill. He will +manage our affairs for us, never fear." + +"Well, we'd better go and dream about it," said Johnson, +"for it's getting late, and it is time we went to bed," said +Johnson. + +"You're in a great hurry, old fellow," replied the Doctor. + +"Why would you sit up, Mr. Clawbonny? I am so comfortable in my +bed, and then I always have such good dreams. I dream invariably of +hot countries, so that I might almost say, half my life is spent in +the tropics, and half at the North Pole." + +"You're a happy man, Johnson," said Altamont, "to be blessed +with such a fortunate organization." + +"Indeed I am," replied Johnson. + +"Well, come, after that it would be positive cruelty to keep our +good friend pining here," said the Doctor, "his tropical sun +awaits him, so let's all go to bed." + + +CHAPTER XI + + + +TRACES OF BEARS + + +On the 26th of April during the night there was a sudden change in +the weather. The thermometer fell several degrees, and the inmates +of Doctor's House could hardly keep themselves warm even in their +beds. Altamont had charge of the stove, and he found it needed +careful replenishing to preserve the temperature at 50 deg. above zero. + +This increase of cold betokened the cessation of the stormy weather, +and the Doctor hailed it gladly as the harbinger of his favourite +hunting and exploring expeditions. + +He rose early next morning, and climbed up to the top of the cone. +The wind had shifted north, the air was clear, and the snow firm and +smooth to the tread. + +Before long the five companions had left Doctor's House, and were +busily engaged in clearing the heavy masses of snow off the roof and +sides, for the house was no longer distinguishable from the plateau, +as the snow had drifted to a depth of full fifteen feet. It took two +hours to remove the frozen snow, and restore the architectural form +of the dwelling. At length the granite foundations appeared, and the +storehouses and powder magazines were once more accessible. + +[Illustration: ] + +But as, in so uncertain a climate, a storm might cut off their +supplies any day, they wisely resolved to provide for any such +emergency by carrying over a good stock of provisions to the +kitchen; and then Clawbonny, Altamont, and Bell started off with +their guns in search of game, for the want of fresh food began to be +urgently felt. + +The three companions went across the east side of the cone, right +down into the centre of the far-stretching, snow-covered plain +beneath, but they did not need to go far, for numerous traces of +animals appeared on all sides within a circle of two miles round +Fort Providence. + +After gazing attentively at these traces for some minutes, the +hunters looked at each other silently, and then the Doctor +exclaimed:-- + +"Well, these are plain enough, I think!" + +"Ay, only too plain," added Bell, "bears have been here!" + +"First rate game!" said Altamont. "There's only one fault +about it." + +"And what is that?" asked Bell. + +"What do you mean?" + +"I mean this--there are distinct traces of five bears, and five +bears are rather too much for five men." + +"Are you sure there are five?" said Clawbonny. + +"Look and see for yourself. Here is one footprint, and there is +another quite different. These claws are far wider apart than those; +and see here, again, that paw belongs to a much smaller bear. I tell +you, if you look carefully, you will see the marks of all five +different bears distinctly." + +"You're right," said Bell, after a close inspection. + +"If that's the case, then," said the Doctor, "we must take +care what we're about, and not be foolhardy, for these animals are +starving after the severe winter, and they might be extremely +dangerous to encounter and, since we are sure of their +number----" + +"And of their intentions, too," put in Altamont. + +"You think they have discovered our presence here?" + +"No doubt of it, unless we have got into a bear-pass, but then, +why should these footprints be in a circle round our fort? Look, +these animals have come from the south-east, and stopped at this +place, and commenced to reconnoitre the coast." + +[Illustration: ] + +"You're right," said the Doctor, "and, what's more, it is +certain that they have been here last night." + +"And other nights before that," replied Altamont. + +"I don't think so," rejoined Clawbonny. "It is more likely +that they waited till the cessation of the tempest, and were on +their way down to the bay, intending to catch seals, when they +scented us." + +"Well, we can easily find out if they come tonight," said +Altamont. + +"How?" + +"By effacing all the marks in a given place, and if to-morrow, we +find fresh ones, it will be evident that Fort Providence is the goal +for which the bears are bound." + +[Illustration: ] + +"Very good, at any rate we shall know, then, what we have to +expect." + +The three hunters set to work, and scraped the snow over till all +the footprints were obliterated for a considerable distance. + +"It is singular, though," said Bell, "that bears could scent +us all that way off; we have not been burning anything fat which +might have attracted them." + +"Oh!" replied the Doctor, "bears are endowed with a +wonderfully keen sense of smell, and a piercing sight; and, more +than that, they are extremely intelligent, almost more so than any +other animal. They have smelt something unusual; and, besides, who +can tell whether they have not even found their way as far as our +plateau during the tempest?" + +"But then, why did they stop here last night?" asked Altamont. + +"Well, that's a question I can't answer, but there is no doubt +they will continue narrowing their circles, till they reach Fort +Providence." + +"We shall soon see," said Altamont. + +"And, meantime, we had best go on," added the Doctor, "and +keep a sharp look out." + +But not a sign of anything living was visible, and after a time they +returned to the snow-house. + +Hatteras and Johnson were informed how matters stood, and it was +resolved to maintain a vigilant watch. Night came, but nothing +disturbed its calm splendour--nothing was heard to indicate +approaching danger. + +Next morning at early dawn, Hatteras and his companions, well armed, +went out to reconnoitre the state of the snow. They found the same +identical footmarks, but somewhat nearer. Evidently the enemy was +bent on the siege of Fort Providence. + +"But where can the bears be?" said Bell. + +"Behind the icebergs watching us," replied the Doctor. +"Don't let us expose ourselves imprudently." + +"What about going hunting, then?" asked Altamont. + +"We must put it off for a day or two, I think, and rub out the +marks again, and see if they are renewed to-morrow." + +The Doctor's advice was followed, and they entrenched themselves +for the present in the fort. The lighthouse was taken down, as it +was not of actual use meantime, and might help to attract the bears. +Each took it in turn to keep watch on the upper plateau. + +The day passed without a sign of the enemy's existence, and next +morning, when they hurried eagerly out to examine the snow, judge +their astonishment to find it wholly untouched! + +"Capital!" exclaimed Altamont. "The bears are put off the +scent; they have no perseverance, and have grown tired waiting for +us. They are off, and a good riddance. Now let us start for a +day's hunting." + +"Softly, softly," said the Doctor; "I'm not so sure they +have gone. I think we had better wait one day more. It is evident +the bears have not been here last night, at least on this side; but +still--" + +"Well, let us go right round the plateau, and see how things +stand," said the impatient Altamont. + +"All right," said Clawbonny. "Come along." + +Away they went, but it was impossible to scrutinize carefully a +track of two miles, and no trace of the enemy was discoverable. + +"Now, then, can't we go hunting?" said Altamont. + +"Wait till to-morrow," urged the Doctor again. + +His friend was very unwilling to delay, but yielded the point at +last, and returned to the fort. + +[Illustration: ] + +As on the preceding night, each man took his hour's watch on the +upper plateau. When it came to Altamont's turn, and he had gone +out to relieve Bell, Hatteras called his old companions round him. +The Doctor left his desk and Johnson his cooking, and hastened to +their captain's side, supposing he wanted to talk over their +perilous situation; but Hatteras never gave it a thought. + +"My friends," he said, "let us take advantage of the +American's absence to speak of business. There are things which +cannot concern him, and with which I do not choose him to meddle." + +Johnson and Clawbonny looked at each other, wondering what the +captain was driving at. + +"I wish," he continued, "to talk with you about our plans for +the future." + +"All right! talk away while we are alone," said the Doctor. + +"In a month, or six weeks at the outside, the time for making +distant excursions will come again. Have you thought of what we had +better undertake in summer?" + +"Have you, captain?" asked Johnson. + +"Have I? I may say that not an hour of my life passes without +revolving in my mind my one cherished purpose. I suppose not a man +among you intends to retrace his steps?" + +No one replied, and Hatteras went on to say-- + +"For my own part, even if I must go alone, I will push on to the +North Pole. Never were men so near it before, for we are not more +than 360 miles distant at most, and I will not lose such an +opportunity without making every attempt to reach it, even though it +be an impossibility. What are your views, Doctor?" + +"Your own, Hatteras." + +"And yours, Johnson?" + +"Like the Doctor's." + +"And yours, Bell?" + +"Captain," replied the carpenter, "it is true we have neither +wives nor children waiting us in England, but, after all, it is +one's country--one's native land! Have you no thoughts of +returning home?" + +"We can return after we have discovered the Pole quite as well as +before, and even better. Our difficulties will not increase, for as +we near the Pole we get away from the point of greatest cold. We +have fuel and provisions enough. There is nothing to stop us, and we +should be culpable, in my opinion, if we allowed ourselves to +abandon the project." + +"Very well, captain, I'll go along with you." + +"That's right; I never doubted you," said Hatteras. "We +shall succeed, and England will have all the glory." + +"But there is an American among us!" said Johnson. + +Hatteras could not repress an impatient exclamation. + +"I know it!" he said, in a stern voice. + +"We cannot leave him behind," added the Doctor. + +"No, we can't," repeated Hatteras, almost mechanically. + +"And he will be sure to go too." + +"Yes, he will go too; but who will command?" + +"You, captain." + +"And if you all obey my orders, will the Yankee refuse?" + +"I shouldn't think so; but suppose he should, what can be +done?" + +"He and I must fight it out, then." + +The three Englishmen looked at Hatteras, but said nothing. Then the +Doctor asked how they were to go. + +"By the coast, as far as possible," was the reply. + +"But what if we find open water, as is likely enough?" + +"Well, we'll go across it." + +"But we have no boat." + +Hatteras did not answer, and looked embarrassed. + +"Perhaps," suggested Bell, "we might make a ship out of some +of the planks of the Porpoise." + +"Never!" exclaimed Hatteras, vehemently. + +"Never!" said Johnson. + +The Doctor shook his head. He understood the feeling of the captain. + +"Never!" reiterated Hatteras. "A boat made out of an American +ship would be an American!" + +"But, captain----" began Johnson. + +The Doctor made a sign to the old boatswain not to press the subject +further, and resolved in his own mind to reserve the question for +discussion at a more opportune moment. He managed to turn the +conversation to other matters, till it abruptly terminated by the +entrance of Altamont. + +This ended the day, and the night passed quietly without the least +disturbance. The bears had evidently disappeared. + + +CHAPTER XII + + + +IMPRISONED IN DOCTOR'S HOUSE + + +The first business next day was to arrange for a hunt. It was +settled that Altamont, Bell, and Hatteras should form the party, +while Clawbonny should go and explore as far as Isle Johnson, and +make some hydrographic notes and Johnson should remain behind to +keep house. + +The three hunters soon completed their preparations. They armed +themselves each with a double barrelled revolver and a rifle, and +took plenty of powder and shot. Each man also carried in his belt +his indispensable snow knife and hatchet, and a small supply of +pemmican in case night should surprise them before their return. + +Thus equipped, they could go far, and might count on a good supply +of game. + +At eight o'clock they started, accompanied by Duk, who frisked and +gambolled with delight. They went up the hill to the east, across +the cone, and down into the plain below. + +The Doctor next took his departure, after agreeing with Johnson on a +signal of alarm in case of danger. + +The old boatswain was left alone, but he had plenty to do. He began +by unfastening the Greenland dogs, and letting them out for a run +after their long, wearisome confinement. Then he attended to divers +housekeeping matters. He had to replenish the stock of combustibles +and provisions, to arrange the store-houses, to mend several broken +utensils, to repair the rents in coverlets, and get new shoes ready +for summer excursions. There was no lack of work, and the old +sailor's nimble clever fingers could do anything. + +[Illustration: ] + +While his hands were busy, his mind was occupied with the +conversation of the preceding evening. He thought with regret over +the captain's obstinacy, and yet he felt that there was something +grand and even heroic in his determination that neither an American +nor an American ship should first touch the Pole. + +The hunters had been gone about an hour when Johnson suddenly heard +the report of a gun. + +"Capital!" he exclaimed. "They have found something, and +pretty quickly too, for me to hear their guns so distinctly. The +atmosphere must be very clear." + +A second and a third shot followed. + +"Bravo!" again exclaimed the boatswain; "they must have fallen +in luck's way!" + +[Illustration: Hatteras could only manage to keep off his pursuers +by flinging down one article after another--P.120] + +But when three more shots came in rapid succession, the old man +turned pale, and a horrible thought crossed his mind, which made him +rush out and climb hastily to the top of the cone. He shuddered at +the sight which met his eyes. The three hunters, followed by Duk, +were tearing home at full speed, followed by the five huge bears! +Their six balls had evidently taken no effect, and the terrible +monsters were close on their heels. Hatteras, who brought up the +rear, could only manage to keep off his pursuers by flinging down +one article after another--first his cap, then his hatchet, and, +finally, his gun. He knew that the inquisitive bears would stop and +examine every object, sniffing all round it, and this gave him a +little time, otherwise he could not have escaped, for these animals +outstrip the fleetest horse, and one monster was so near that +Hatteras had to brandish his knife vigorously, to ward off a +tremendous blow of his paw. + +At last, though panting and out of breath, the three men reached +Johnson safely, and slid down the rock with him into the snow-house. +The bears stopped short on the upper plateau, and Hatteras and his +companions lost no time in barring and barricading them out. + +"Here we are at last!" exclaimed Hatteras; "we can defend +ourselves better now. It is five against five." + +"Four!" said Johnson in a frightened voice. + +"How?" + +"The Doctor!" replied Johnson, pointing to the empty +sitting-room. + +"Well, he is in Isle Johnson." + +"A bad job for him," said Bell. + +"But we can't leave him to his fate, in this fashion," said +Altamont. + +"No, let's be off to find him at once," replied Hatteras. + +[Illustration: ] + +He opened the door, but soon shut it, narrowly escaping a bear's +hug. + +"They are there!" he exclaimed. + +"All?" asked Bell. + +"The whole pack." + +Altamont rushed to the windows, and began to fill up the deep +embrasure with blocks of ice, which he broke off the walls of the +house. + +His companions followed his example silently. Not a sound was heard +but the low, deep growl of Duk. + +To tell the simple truth, however, it was not their own danger that +occupied their thoughts, but their absent friend, the Doctor's. It +was for him they trembled, not for themselves. Poor Clawbonny, so +good and devoted as he had been to every member of the little +colony! This was the first time they had been separated from him. +Extreme peril, and most likely a frightful death awaited him, for he +might return unsuspectingly to Fort Providence, and find himself in +the power of these ferocious animals. + +[Illustration: ] + +"And yet," said Johnson, "unless I am much mistaken, he must +be on guard. Your repeated shots cannot but have warned him. He must +surely be aware that something unusual has happened." + +"But suppose he was too far away to hear them," replied +Altamont, "or has not understood the cause of them? It is ten +chances to one but he'll come quickly back, never imagining the +danger. The bears are screened from sight by the crag completely." + +"We must get rid of them before he comes," said Hatteras. + +"But how?" asked Bell. + +[Illustration: ] + +It was difficult to reply to this, for a sortie was out of the +question. They had taken care to barricade the entrance passage, but +the bears could easily find a way in if they chose. So it was +thought advisable to keep a close watch on their movements outside, +by listening attentively in each room, so as to be able to resist +all attempts at invasion. They could hear them distinctly prowling +about, growling and scraping the walls with their enormous paws. + +However, some action must be taken speedily, for time was passing. +Altamont resolved to try a port-hole through which he might fire on +his assailants. He had soon scooped out a hole in the wall, but his +gun was hardly pushed through, when it was seized with irresistible +force, and wrested from his grasp before he could even fire. + +"Confound it!" he exclaimed, "we're no match for them." + +And he hastened to stop up the breach as fast as possible. + +This state of things had lasted upwards of an hour, and there seemed +no prospect of a termination. The question of a sortie began now to +be seriously discussed. There was little chance of success, as the +bears could not be attacked separately, but Hatteras and his +companions had grown so impatient, and it must be confessed were +also so much ashamed of being kept in prison by beasts, that they +would even have dared the risk if the captain had not suddenly +thought of a new mode of defence. + +He took Johnson's furnace-poker, and thrust it into the stove +while he made an opening in the snow wall, or rather a partial +opening, for he left a thin sheet of ice on the outer side. As soon +as the poker was red hot, he said to his comrades who stood eagerly +watching him, wondering what he was going to do-- + +"This red-hot bar will keep off the bears when they try to get +hold of it, and we shall be able easily to fire across it without +letting them snatch away our guns." + +"A good idea," said Bell, posting himself beside Altamont. + +Hatteras withdrew the poker, and instantly plunged it in the wall. +The melting snow made a loud hissing noise, and two bears ran and +made a snatch at the glowing bar; but they fell back with a terrible +howl, and at the same moment four shots resounded, one after the +other. + +"Hit!" exclaimed Altamont. + +"Hit!" echoed Bell. + +"Let us repeat the dose," said Hatteras, carefully stopping up +the opening meantime. + +The poker was again thrust into the fire, and in a few minutes was +ready for Hatteras to recommence operations. + +Altamont and Bell reloaded their guns, and took their places; but +this time the poker would not pass through. + +"Confound the beasts!" exclaimed the impetuous American. + +"What's the matter?" asked Johnson. + +"What's the matter? Why, those plaguey animals are piling up +block after block, intending to bury us alive!" + +"Impossible!" + +"Look for yourself; the poker can't get through. I declare it is +getting absurd now." + +It was worse than absurd, it was alarming. Things grew worse. It was +evident that the bears meant to stifle their prey, for the sagacious +animals were heaping up huge masses, which would make escape +impossible. + +"It is too bad," said old Johnson, with a mortified look. "One +might put up with men, but bears!" + +[Illustration: ] + +Two hours elapsed without bringing any relief to the prisoners; to +go out was impossible, and the thick walls excluded all sound. +Altamont walked impatiently up and down full of exasperation and +excitement at finding himself worsted for once. Hatteras could think +of nothing but the Doctor, and of the serious peril which threatened +him. + +[Illustration: ] + +"Oh, if Mr. Clawbonny were only here!" said Johnson. + +"What could he do?" asked Altamont. + +"Oh, he'd manage to get us out somehow." + +"How, pray?" said the American, crossly. + +"If I knew that I should not need him. However, I know what his +advice just now would be." + +"What?" + +"To take some food; that can't hurt us. What do you say, Mr. +Altamont?" + +"Oh, let's eat, by all means, if that will please you, though +we're in a ridiculous, not to say humiliating, plight." + +"I'll bet you we'll find a way out after dinner." + +No one replied, but they seated themselves round the table. + +[Illustration: ] + +Johnson, trained in Clawbonny's school, tried to be brave and +unconcerned about the danger, but he could scarcely manage it. His +jokes stuck in his throat. Moreover, the whole party began to feel +uncomfortable. The atmosphere was getting dense, for every opening +was hermetically sealed. The stoves would hardly draw, and it was +evident would soon go out altogether for want of oxygen. + +Hatteras was the first to see their fresh danger, and he made no +attempt to hide it from his companions. + +"If that is the case," said Altamont, "we must get out at all +risks." + +"Yes," replied Hatteras; "but let us wait till night. We will +make a hole in the roof, and let in a provision of air, and then one +of us can fire out of it on the bears." + +"It is the only thing we can do, I suppose," said Altamont. + +So it was agreed; but waiting was hard work, and Altamont could not +refrain from giving vent to his impatience by thundering +maledictions on the bears, and abusing the ill fate which had placed +them in such an awkward and humbling predicament. "It was beasts +versus men," he said, "and certainly the men cut a pretty +figure." + + +CHAPTER XIII. + + + +THE MINE. + + +Night drew on, and the lamp in the sitting-room already began to +burn dim for want of oxygen. + +At eight o'clock the final arrangements were completed, and all +that remained to do was to make an opening in the roof. + +They had been working away at this for some minutes, and Bell was +showing himself quite an adept in the business, when Johnson, who +had been keeping watch in the sleeping room, came hurriedly in to +his companions, pulling such a long face, that the captain asked +immediately what was the matter? + +"Nothing exactly," said the old sailor, "and yet--" + +"Come, out with it!" exclaimed Altamont. + +"Hush! don't you hear a peculiar noise?" + +"Where?" + +"Here, on this side, on the wall of the room." + +Bell stopped working, and listened attentively like the rest. +Johnson was right; a noise there certainly was on the side wall, as +if some one were cutting the ice. + +"Don't you hear it?" repeated Johnson. + +"Hear it? Yes, plain enough," replied Altamont. + +"Is it the bears?" asked Bell. + +"Most assuredly." + +"Well; they have changed their tactics," said old Johnson, +"and given up the idea of suffocating us." + +"Or may be they suppose we are suffocated by now," suggested the +American, getting furious at his invisible enemies. + +"They are going to attack us," said Bell. + +"Well, what of it?" returned Hatteras. + +"We shall have a hand-to-hand struggle, that's all." + +"And so much the better," added Altamont; "that's far more +to my taste; I have had enough of invisible foes--let me see my +antagonist, and then I can fight him." + +"Ay," said Johnson; "but not with guns. They would be useless +here." + +"With knife and hatchet then," returned the American. + +The noise increased, and it was evident that the point of attack was +the angle of the wall formed by its junction with the cliff. + +"They are hardly six feet off now," said the boatswain. + +"Right, Johnson!" replied Altamont; "but we have time enough +to be ready for them." + +And seizing a hatchet, he placed himself in fighting attitude, +planting his right foot firmly forward and throwing himself back. + +Hatteras and the others followed his example, and Johnson took care +to load a gun in case of necessity. + +Every minute the sound came nearer, till at last only a thin coating +separated them from their assailants. + +Presently this gave way with a loud crack, and a huge dark mass +rolled over into the room. + +Altamont had already swung his hatchet to strike, when he was +arrested by a well-known voice, exclaiming-- + +"For Heaven's sake, stop!" + +"The Doctor! the Doctor!" cried Johnson. + +And the Doctor it actually was who had tumbled in among them in such +undignified fashion. + +"How do ye do, good friends?" he said, picking himself smartly +up. + +His companions stood stupefied for a moment, but joy soon loosened +their tongues, and each rushed eagerly forward to welcome his old +comrade with a loving embrace. Hatteras was for once fairly overcome +with emotion, and positively hugged him like a child. + +"And is it really you, Mr. Clawbonny?" said Johnson. + +"Myself and nobody else, my old fellow. I assure you I have been +far more uneasy about you than you could have been about me." + +"But how did you know we had been attacked by a troop of bears?" +asked Altamont. "What we were most afraid of was that you would +come quickly back to Fort Providence, never dreaming of danger." + +"Oh, I saw it all. Your repeated shots gave me the alarm. When you +commenced firing I was beside the wreck of the Porpoise, but I +climbed up a hummock, and discovered five bears close on your heels. +Oh, how anxious I was for you! But when I saw you disappear down the +cliff, while the bears stood hesitating on the edge, as if uncertain +what to do, I felt sure that you had managed to get safely inside +the house and barricade it. I crept cautiously nearer, sometimes +going on all-fours, sometimes slipping between great blocks of ice, +till I came at last quite close to our fort, and then I found the +bears working away like beavers. They were prowling about the snow, +and dragging enormous blocks of ice towards the house, piling them +up like a wall, evidently intending to bury you alive. It is a lucky +thing they did not take it into their heads to dash down the blocks +from the summit of the cone, for you must have been crushed +inevitably." + +"But what danger you were in, Mr. Clawbonny," said Bell. "Any +moment they might have turned round and attacked you." + +"They never thought of it even. Johnson's Greenland dogs came in +sight several times, but they did not take the trouble to go after +them. No, they imagined themselves sure of a more savoury supper!" + +"Thanks for the compliment!" said Altamont, laughing. + +"Oh, there is nothing to be proud of. When I saw what the bears +were up to, I determined to get back to you by some means or other. +I waited till night, but as soon as it got dark I glided noiselessly +along towards the powder-magazine. I had my reasons for choosing +that point from which to work my way hither, and I speedily +commenced operations with my snow-knife. A famous tool it is. For +three mortal hours I have been hacking and heaving away, but here I +am at last tired enough and starving, but still safe here." + +"To share our fate!" said Altamont. + +"No, to save you all; but, for any sake, give me a biscuit and a +bit of meat, for I feel sinking for want of food." + +A substantial meal was soon before him, but the vivacious little man +could talk all the while he was eating, and was quite ready to +answer any questions. + +"Did you say to save us?" asked Bell. + +"Most assuredly!" was the reply. + +"Well, certainly, if you found your way in, we can find our way +out by the same road." + +"A likely story, and leave the field clear for the whole pack to +come in and find out our stores. Pretty havoc they would make!" + +"No, we must stay here," said Hatteras. + +"Of course we must," replied Clawbonny, "but we'll get rid +of the bears for all that." + +"I told you so," said Johnson, rubbing his hands. "I knew +nothing was hopeless if Mr. Clawbonny was here; he has always some +expedient in his wise head." + +"My poor head is very empty, I fear, but by dint of rummaging +perhaps I----" + +"Doctor," interrupted Altamont, "I suppose there is no fear of +the bears getting in by the passage you have made?" + +"No, I took care to stop up the opening thoroughly, and now we can +reach the powder-magazine without letting them see us." + +"All right; and now will you let us have your plan of getting rid +of these comical assailants?" + +[Illustration: ] + +"My plan is quite simple, and part of the work is done already." + +"What do you mean?" + +"You shall see. But I am forgetting that I brought a companion +with me." + +"What do you say?" said Johnson. + +"I have a companion to introduce to you," replied the Doctor, +going out again into the passage, and bringing back a dead fox, +newly killed. + +"I shot it this morning," he continued, "and never did fox +come more opportunely." + +"What on earth do you mean?" asked Altamont. + +"I mean to blow up the bears en masse with 100 lbs of powder." + +"But where is the powder?" exclaimed his friend. + +"In the magazine. This passage will lead to it. I made it +purposely." + +"And where is the mine to be?" inquired Altamont. + +"At the furthest point from the house and stores." + +"And how will you manage to entice the bears there, all to one +spot?" + +"I'll undertake that business; but we have talked enough, let us +set to work. We have a hundred feet more to add to our passage +to-night, and that is no easy matter, but as there are five of us, +we can take turns at it. Bell will begin, and we will lie down and +sleep meantime." + +"Well, really," said Johnson, "the more I think of it, the +more feasible seems the Doctor's plan." + +"It is a sure one, anyway," said Clawbonny. + +"So sure that I can feel the bear's fur already on my shoulder. +Well, come, let's begin then." + +Away he went into the gloomy passage, followed by Bell, and in a few +moments they had reached the powder-magazine, and stood among the +well-arranged barrels. The Doctor pointed out to his companion the +exact spot where he began excavating, and then left him to his task, +at which he laboured diligently for about an hour, when Altamont +came to relieve him. All the snow he had dug out was taken to the +kitchen and melted, to prevent its taking up room. + +The captain succeeded Altamont, and was followed by Johnson. In ten +hours--that is to say, about eight in the morning--the gallery was +entirely open. + +[Illustration: ] + +With the first streak of day, the Doctor was up to reconnoitre the +position of the enemy. The patient animals were still occupying +their old position, prowling up and down and growling. The house had +already almost disappeared beneath the piled-up blocks of ice, but +even while he gazed a council of war seemed being held, which +evidently resulted in the determination to alter the plan of action, +for suddenly all the five bears began vigorously to pull down these +same heaped-up blocks. + +"What are they about?" asked Hatteras, who was standing beside +him. + +"Well, they look to me to be bent on demolishing their own work, +and getting right down to us as fast as possible; but wait a bit, my +gentlemen, we'll demolish you first. However, we have not a minute +to lose." + +Hastening away to the mine, he had the chamber where the powder was +to be lodged enlarged the whole breadth and height of the sloping +rock against which the wall leaned, till the upper part was about a +foot thick, and had to be propped up to prevent its falling in. A +strong stake was fixed firmly on the granite foundation, on the top +of which the dead fox was fastened. A rope was attached to the lower +part of the stake, sufficiently long to reach the powder stores. + +"This is the bait," he said, pointing to the dead fox, "and +here is the mine," he added, rolling in a keg of powder containing +about 100 lbs. + +"But, Doctor," said Hatteras, "won't that blow us up too, as +well as the bears?" + +"No, we shall be too far from the scene of explosion. Besides, our +house is solid, and we can soon repair the walls even if they should +get a bit shaken." + +"And how do you propose to manage?" asked Altamont. + +"See! By hauling in this rope we lower the post which props up the +roof, and make it give way, and bring up the dead fox to light, and +I think you will agree with me that the bears are so famished with +their long fasting, that they won't lose much time in rushing +towards their unexpected meal. Well, just at that very moment, I +shall set fire to the mine, and blow up both the guests and the +meal." + +"Capital! Capital!" shouted Johnson, who had been listening with +intense interest. + +[Illustration: ] + +Hatteras said nothing, for he had such absolute confidence in his +friend that he wanted no further explanation. But Altamont must know +the why and wherefore of everything. + +"But Doctor," he said, "can you reckon on your match so +exactly that you can be quite sure it will fire the mine at the +right moment?" + +"I don't need to reckon at all; that's a difficulty easily got +over." + +"Then you have a match a hundred feet long?" + +"No." + +"You are simply going to lay a train of powder." + +"No, that might miss fire." + +"Well, there is no way then but for one of us to devote his life +to the others, and go and light the powder himself." + +"I'm ready," said Johnson, eagerly, "ready and willing." + +"Quite useless my brave fellow," replied the Doctor, holding out +his hand. "All our lives are precious, and they will be all +spared, thank God!" + +"Well, I give it up!" said the American. "I'll make no more +guesses." + +"I should like to know what is the good of learning physics," +said the Doctor, smiling, "if they can't help a man at a pinch +like this. Haven't we an electric battery, and long enough lines +attached to it to serve our purpose? We can fire our mine whenever +we please in an instant, and without the slightest danger." + +"Hurrah!" exclaimed Johnson. + +"Hurrah!" echoed the others, without heeding whether the enemy +heard them or not. + +The Doctor's idea was immediately carried out, and the connecting +lines uncoiled and laid down from the house to the chamber of the +mine, one end of each remaining attached to the electric pile, and +the other inserted into the keg of powder. + +By nine o'clock everything was ready. It was high time, for the +bears were furiously engaged in the work of demolition. Johnson was +stationed in the powder-magazine, in charge of the cord which held +the bait. + +"Now," said Clawbonny to his companions, "load your guns, in +case our assailants are not killed. Stand beside Johnson, and the +moment the explosion is over rush out." + +[Illustration: ] + +"All right," said Altamont. + +"And now we have done all we can to help ourselves. So may Heaven +help us!" + +Hatteras, Altamont, and Bell repaired to the powder-magazine, while +the Doctor remained alone beside the pile. + +Soon he heard Johnson's voice in the distance calling out +"Ready." + +"All right," was the reply. + +Johnson pulled his rope vigorously, and then rushed to the loop-hole +to see the effect. The thin shell of ice had given way, and the body +of the fox lay among the ruins. The bears were somewhat scared at +first, but the next minute had eagerly rushed to seize the booty. + +"Fire!" called out Johnson, and at once the electric spark was +sent along the lines right into the keg of powder. A formidable +explosion ensued; the house was shaken as if by an earthquake, and +the walls cracked asunder. Hatteras, Altamont, and Bell hurried out +with the guns, but they might spare their shot, for four of the +bears lay dead, and the fifth, half roasted, though alive, was +scampering away in terror as fast as his legs could carry him. + +"Hurrah! Three cheers for Clawbonny," they shouted and +overwhelmed the Doctor with plaudits and thanks. + + +CHAPTER XIV. + + + +AN ARCTIC SPRING. + + +The prisoners were free, and their joy found vent in the noisiest +demonstrations. They employed the rest of the day in repairing the +house, which had suffered greatly by the explosion. They cleared +away the blocks piled up by the animals, and filled up the rents in +the walls, working with might and main, enlivened by the many songs +of old Johnson. + +Next morning there was a singular rise in the temperature, the +thermometer going up to 15 deg. above zero. + +This comparative heat lasted several days. In sheltered spots the +glass rose as high as 31 deg., and symptoms of a thaw appeared. + +The ice began to crack here and there, and jets of salt water were +thrown up, like fountains in an English park. A few days later, the +rain fell in torrents. + +Thick vapour rose from the snow, giving promise of the speedy +disappearance of these immense masses. The sun's pale disc became +deeper in colour, and remained longer above the horizon. The night +was scarcely longer than three hours. + +[Illustration: ] + +Other tokens of spring's approach were manifest of equal +significance, the birds were returning in flocks, and the air +resounded with their deafening cries. Hares were seen on the shores +of the bay, and mice in such abundance that their burrows completely +honeycombed the ground. + +[Illustration: ] + +The Doctor drew the attention of his companions to the fact, that +almost all these animals were beginning to lose their white winter +dress, and would soon put on summer attire, while nature was already +providing mosses, and poppies, and saxifragas, and short grass for +their sustenance. A new world lay beneath that melting snow. + +But with these inoffensive animals came back their natural enemies. +Foxes and wolves arrived in search of their prey, and dismal howls +broke the silence of the short night. + +Arctic wolves closely resemble dogs, and their barking would deceive +the most practised ears; even the canine race themselves have been +deceived by it. Indeed, it seems as if the wily animals employed +this ruse to attract the dogs, and make them their prey. Several +navigators have mentioned the fact, and the Doctor's own +experience confirmed it. Johnson took care not to let his +Greenlanders loose; of Duk there was little fear; nothing could take +him in. + +For about a fortnight hunting was the principal occupation. There +was an abundant supply of fresh meat to be had. They shot +partridges, ptarmigans, and snow ortolans, which are delicious +eating. The hunters never went far from Fort Providence, for game +was so plentiful that it seemed waiting their guns, and the whole +bay presented an animated appearance. + +The thaw, meanwhile, was making rapid progress. The thermometer +stood steadily at 32 deg. above zero, and the water ran down the +mountain sides in cataracts, and dashed in torrents through the +ravines. + +The Doctor lost no time in clearing about an acre of ground, in +which he sowed the seeds of anti-scorbutic plants. He just had the +pleasure of seeing tiny little green leaves begin to sprout, when +the cold returned in full force. + +In a single night, the thermometer lost nearly 40 deg.; it went down to +8 deg. below zero. Everything was frozen--birds, quadrupeds, amphibia +disappeared as if by magic; seal-holes reclosed, and the ice once +more became hard as granite. + +The change was most striking; it occurred on the 18th of May, during +the night. The Doctor was rather disappointed at having all his work +to do again, but Hatteras bore the grievance most unphilosophically, +as it interfered with all his plans of speedy departure. + +[Illustration: ] + +"Do you think we shall have a long spell of this weather, Mr. +Clawbonny?" asked Johnson. + +"No, my friend, I don't; it is a last blow from the cold. You +see these are his dominions, and he won't be driven out without +making some resistance." + +"He can defend himself pretty well," said Bell, rubbing his face. + +"Yes; but I ought to have waited, and not have wasted my seed like +an ignoramus; and all the more as I could, if necessary, have made +them sprout by the kitchen stoves." + +"But do you mean to say," asked Altamont, "that you might have +anticipated the sudden change?" + +"Of course, and without being a wizard. I ought to have put my +seed under the protection of Saint Paucratius and the other two +saints, whose fete days fall this month." + +"Absurd! Pray tell me what they have to do with it? What influence +can they possibly have on the temperature?" + +"An immense one, if we are to believe horticulturists, who call +them the patron saints of the frost." + +"And for what reason?" + +"Because generally there is a periodical frost in the month of +May, and it is coldest from the 11th to the 13th. That is the +fact." + +"And how is it explained?" + +"In two ways. Some say that a larger number of asteroids come +between the earth and the sun at this time of year, and others that +the mere melting of the snow necessarily absorbs a large amount of +heat, and accounts for the low temperature. Both theories are +plausible enough, but the fact remains whichever we accept, and I +ought to have remembered it." + +The Doctor was right, for the cold lasted till the end of the month, +and put an end to all their hunting expeditions. The old monotonous +life in-doors recommenced, and was unmarked by any incident except a +serious illness which suddenly attacked Bell. This was violent +quinsy, but, under the Doctor's skilful treatment, it was soon +cured. Ice was the only remedy he employed, administered in small +pieces, and in twenty-four hours Bell was himself again. + +[Illustration: ] + +During this compulsory leisure, Clawbonny determined to have a talk +with the captain on an important subject--the building of a sloop +out of the planks of the Porpoise. + +The Doctor hardly knew how to begin, as Hatteras had declared so +vehemently that he would never consent to use a morsel of American +wood; yet it was high time he were brought to reason, as June was at +hand, the only season for distant expeditions, and they could not +start without a ship. + +He thought over it a long while, and at last drew the captain aside, +and said in the kindest, gentlest way-- + +"Hatteras, do you believe I'm your friend?" + +"Most certainly I do," replied the captain, earnestly; "my +best, indeed my only friend." + +"And if I give you a piece of advice without your asking, will you +consider my motive is perfectly disinterested?" + +"Yes, for I know you have never been actuated by self-interest. +But what are you driving at?" + +"Wait, Hatteras, I have one thing more to ask. Do you look on me +as a true-hearted Englishman like yourself, anxious for his +country's glory?" + +Hatteras looked surprised, but simply said-- + +"I do." + +"You desire to reach the North Pole," the Doctor went on; "and +I understand and share your ambition, but to achieve your object you +must employ the right means." + +"Well, and have I not sacrificed everything for it?" + +"No, Hatteras, you have not sacrificed your personal antipathies. +Even at this very moment I know you are in the mood to refuse the +indispensable conditions of reaching the pole." + +"Ah! it is the boat you want to talk about, and that man----" + +"Hatteras, let us discuss the question calmly, and examine the +case on all sides. The coast on which we find ourselves at present +may terminate abruptly; we have no proof that it stretches right +away to the pole; indeed, if your present information prove correct, +we ought to come to an open sea during the summer months. Well, +supposing we reach this Arctic Ocean and find it free from ice and +easy to navigate, what shall we do if we have no ship?" + +Hatteras made no reply. + +"Tell me, now, would you like to find yourself only a few miles +from the pole and not be able to get to it?" + +Hatteras still said nothing, but buried his head in his hands. + +"Besides," continued the Doctor, "look at the question in its +moral aspect. Here is an Englishman who sacrifices his fortune, and +even his life, to win fresh glory for his country, but because the +boat which bears him across an unknown ocean, or touches the new +shore, happens to be made of the planks of an American vessel--a +cast-away wreck of no use to anyone--will that lessen the honour of +the discovery? If you yourself had found the hull of some wrecked +vessel lying deserted on the shore, would you have hesitated to make +use of it; and must not a sloop built by four Englishmen and manned +by four Englishmen be English from keel to gunwale?" + +Hatteras was still silent. + +"No," continued Clawbonny; "the real truth is, it is not the +sloop you care about: it is the man." + +"Yes, Doctor, yes," replied the captain. "It is this American +I detest; I hate him with a thorough English hatred. Fate has thrown +him in my path." + +"To save you!" + +"To ruin me. He seems to defy me, and speaks as if he were lord +and master. He thinks he has my destiny in his hands, and knows all +my projects. Didn't we see the man in his true colours when we +were giving names to the different coasts? Has he ever avowed his +object in coming so far north? You will never get out of my head +that this man is not the leader of some expedition sent out by the +American government." + +"Well, Hatteras, suppose it is so, does it follow that this +expedition is to search for the North Pole? May it not be to find +the North-West Passage? But anyway, Altamont is in complete +ignorance of our object, for neither Johnson, nor Bell, nor myself, +have ever breathed a word to him about it, and I am sure you have +not." + +"Well, let him always remain so." + +"He must be told in the end, for we can't leave him here +alone." + +"Why not? Can't he stay here in Fort Providence?" + +"He would never consent to that, Hatteras; and, moreover, to leave +a man in that way, and not know whether we might find him safe when +we came back, would be worse than imprudent: it would be inhuman. +Altamont will come with us; he must come. But we need not disclose +our projects; let us tell him nothing, but simply build a sloop for +the ostensible purpose of making a survey of the coast." + +Hatteras could not bring himself to consent, but said-- + +"And suppose the man won't allow his ship to be cut up?" + +"In that case, you must take the law in your own hands, and build +a vessel in spite of him." + +"I wish to goodness he would refuse, then!" + +"He must be asked before he can refuse. I'll undertake the +asking," said Clawbonny. + +He kept his word, for that very same night, at supper, he managed to +turn the conversation towards the subject of making excursions +during summer for hydrographical purposes. + +"You will join us, I suppose, Altamont," he said. + +"Of course," replied the American. "We must know how far New +America extends." + +Hatteras looked fixedly at his rival, but said nothing. + +"And for that purpose," continued Altamont, "we had better +build a little ship out of the remains of the Porpoise. It is the +best possible use we can make of her." + +"You hear, Bell," said the Doctor, eagerly. "We'll all set +to work to-morrow morning." + +[Illustration: The carpenter began his task immediately.--P.154] + + +CHAPTER XV. + + + +THE NORTH-WEST PASSAGE. + + +Next morning, Altamont Bell and the Doctor repaired to the Porpoise. +There was no lack of wood, for, shattered as the old +"three-master" had been by the icebergs, she could still supply +the principal parts of a new ship, and the carpenter began his task +immediately. + +In the end of May, the temperature again rose, and spring returned +for good and all. Rain fell copiously, and before long the melting +snow was running down every little slope in falls and cascades. + +Hatteras could not contain his delight at these signs of a general +thaw among the ice-fields, for an open sea would bring him liberty. +At last he might hope to ascertain for himself whether his +predecessors were correct in their assertions about a polar basin. + +This was a frequent topic of thought and conversation with him, and +one evening when he was going over all the old familiar arguments in +support of his theory, Altamont took up the subject, and declared +his opinion that the polar basin extended west as well as east. But +it was impossible for the American and Englishman, to talk long +about anything without coming to words, so intensely national were +both. Dr. Kane was the first bone of contention on this occasion, +for the jealous Englishman was unwilling to grant his rival the +glory of being a discoverer, alleging his belief that though the +brave adventurer had gone far north, it was by mere chance he had +made a discovery. + +[Illustration: ] + +"Chance!" interrupted Altamont, hotly. "Do you mean to assert +that it is not to Kane's energy and science that we owe his great +discovery?" + +"I mean to say that Dr. Kane's name is not worth mentioning in a +country made illustrious by such names as Parry, and Franklin, and +Ross, and Belcher, and Penny; in a country where the seas opened the +North-West Passage to an Englishman--McClure!" + +"McClure!" exclaimed the American. "Well, if ever chance +favoured anyone it was that McClure. Do you pretend to deny it?" + +"I do," said Hatteras, becoming quite excited. "It was his +courage and perseverance in remaining four whole winters among the +ice." + +"I believe that, don't I?" said Altamont, sneeringly. "He +was caught among the bergs and could not get away; but didn't he +after all abandon his ship, the Investigator, and try to get back +home? Besides, putting the man aside, what is the value of his +discovery? I maintain that the North-West Passage is still +undiscovered, for not a single ship to this day has ever sailed from +Behring's Straits to Baffin's Bay!" + +The fact was indisputable, but Hatteras started to his feet, and +said-- + +"I will not permit the honour of an English captain to be attacked +in my presence any longer!" + +"You will not permit!" echoed Altamont, also springing erect. +"But these are facts, and it is out of your power to destroy +them!" + +"Sir!" shouted Hatteras, pale with rage. + +"My friends!" interposed the Doctor; "pray be calm. This is a +scientific point we are discussing." + +But Hatteras was deaf to reason now, and said angrily-- + +"I'll tell you the facts, sir." + +"And I'll tell you," retorted the irate American. + +"Gentlemen," said Clawbonny, in a firm tone; "allow me to +speak, for I know the facts of the case as well as and perhaps +better than you, and I can state them impartially." + +[Illustration: ] + +"Yes, yes!" cried Bell and Johnson, who had been anxiously +watching the strife. + +"Well, go on," said Altamont, finding himself in the minority, +while Hatteras simply made a sign of acquiescence, and resumed his +seat. + +The Doctor brought a chart and spread it out on the table, that his +auditors might follow his narration intelligibly, and be able to +judge the merits of McClure for themselves. + +"It was in 1848," he said, "that two vessels, the Herald and +the Plover, were sent out in search of Franklin, but their efforts +proving ineffectual, two others were despatched to assist them-- +the Investigator, in command of McClure, and the Enterprise, in +command of Captain Collison. The Investigator arrived first in +Behring's Straits, and without waiting for her consort, set out +with the declared purpose to find Franklin or the North-West +Passage. The gallant young officer hoped to push north as far as +Melville Sound, but just at the extremity of the Strait, he was +stopped by an insurmountable barrier of ice, and forced to winter +there. During the long, dreary months, however, he and his officers +undertook a journey over the ice-field, to make sure of its +communicating with Melville Sound." + +"Yes, but he did not get through," said Altamont. + +"Stop a bit," replied Clawbonny; "as soon as a thaw set in, +McClure renewed his attempt to bring his ship into Melville Sound, +and had succeeded in getting within twenty miles, when contrary +winds set in, and dragged her south with irresistible violence. This +decided the captain to alter his course. He determined to go in a +westerly direction; but after a fearful struggle with icebergs, he +stuck fast in the first of the series of straits + +[Illustration: ] + +which end in Baffin's Bay, and was obliged to winter in Mercy Bay. +His provisions would only hold out eighteen months longer, but he +would not give up. He set out on a sledge, and reached Melville +Island, hoping to fall in with some ship or other, but all he found +in Winter Harbour was a cairn, which contained a document, stating +that Captain Austin's lieutenant, McClintock, had been there the +preceding year. McClure replaced this document by another, which +stated his intention of returning to England by the North-West +Passage he had discovered, by Lancaster Sound and Baffin's Bay, +and that in the event of his not being heard of, he might be looked +for north or west of Melville Island. Then he went back to Mercy Bay +with undaunted courage, to pass a third winter. By the beginning of +March his stock of provisions was so reduced in consequence of the +utter scarcity of game through the severity of the season, that +McClure resolved to send half his men to England, either by +Baffin's Bay or by McKenzie River and Hudson's Bay. The other +half would manage to work the vessel to Europe. He kept all his best +sailors, and selected for departure only those to whom a fourth +winter would have been fatal. Everything was arranged for their +leaving, and the day fixed, when McClure, who was out walking with +Lieutenant Craswell, observed a man running towards them, flinging +up his arms and gesticulating frantically, and on getting nearer +recognized him as Lieutenant Prim, officer on board the Herald, one +of the ships he had parted with in Behring's Straits two years +before. + +Captain Kellett, the Commander, had reached Winter Harbour, and +finding McClure's document in the cairn, had dispatched his +lieutenant in search of him. McClure accompanied him back, and +arranged with the captain to send him his batch of invalids. +Lieutenant Craswell took charge of these and conveyed them safely to +Winter Harbour. Leaving them there he went across the ice four +hundred and seventy miles, and arrived at Isle Beechy, where, a few +days afterwards, he took passage with twelve men on board the +Phoenix, and reached London safely on the 7th of October, 1853, +having traversed the whole extent between Behring's Straits and +Cape Farewell." + +"Well, if arriving on one side and leaving at the other is not +going through, I don't know what is!" said Hatteras. + +"Yes, but he went four hundred and seventy miles over +ice-fields," objected Altamont. + +"What of that?" + +"Everything; that is the gist of the whole argument. It was not +the Investigator that went through." + +"No," replied Clawbonny, "for, at the close of the fourth +winter, McClure was obliged to leave her among the ice." + +"Well, in maritime expeditions the vessel has to get through, and +not the man; and if ever the Northwest Passage is practicable, it +will be for ships and not sledges. If a ship cannot go, a sloop +must." + +"A sloop!" exclaimed Hatteras, discovering a hidden meaning in +the words. + +"Altamont," said the Doctor, "your distinction is simply +puerile, and in that respect we all consider that you are in the +wrong." + +"You may easily do that," returned the American. "It is four +against one, but that will not prevent me from holding my own +opinion." + +"Keep it and welcome, but keep it to yourself, if you please, for +the future," exclaimed Hatteras. + +"And pray what right have you to speak to me like this, sir?" +shouted Altamont, in a fury. + +"My right as captain," returned Hatteras, equally angry. + +"Am I to submit to your orders, then?" + +"Most assuredly, and woe to you if----" + +[Illustration: The Doctor did not allow him to proceed, for he +really feared the two antagonists might come to blows.--P.162] + +The Doctor did not allow him to proceed, for he really feared the +two antagonists might come to blows. Bell and Johnson seconded his +endeavours to make peace, and, after a few conciliatory words, +Altamont turned on his heel, and walked carelessly away, whistling +"Yankee Doodle." Hatteras went outside, and paced up and down +with rapid strides. In about an hour he came back, and retired to +bed without saying another word. + + +CHAPTER XVI. + + + +ARCTIC ARCADIA + + +On the 29th of May, for the first time, the sun never set. His +glowing disc just touched the boundary line of the horizon, and rose +again immediately. The period was now entered when the day lasts +twenty-four hours. + +Next morning there was a magnificent halo; the monarch of day +appeared surrounded by a luminous circle, radiant with all the +prismatic colours. This phenomenon never lost its charm, for the +Doctor, however frequently it occurred, and he always noted +carefully down all particulars respecting it. + +Before long the feathered tribes began to return, filling the air +with their discordant cries. Flocks of bustards and Canadian geese +from Florida or Arkansas came flying north with marvellous rapidity, +bringing spring beneath their wings. The Doctor shot several, and +among them one or two cranes and a solitary stork. + +The snow was now fast melting, and the ice-fields were covered with +"slush." All round the bay large pools had formed, between which +the soil appeared as if some product of spring. + +The Doctor recommenced his sowing, for he had plenty of seed; but he +was surprised to find sorrel growing already between the half-dried +stones, and even pale sickly heaths, trying to show their delicate +pink blossoms. + +At last it began to be really hot weather. On the 15th of June, the +thermometer stood at 57 deg. above zero. The Doctor scarcely believed +his eyes, but it was a positive fact, and it was soon confirmed by +the changed appearance of the country. + +[Illustration: ] + +An excursion was made to Isle Johnson, but it turned out to be a +barren little islet of no importance whatever, though it gave the +old boatswain infinite pleasure to know that those sea girt rocks +bore his name. + +There was some danger of both house and stores melting, but happily +this high temperature proved exceptional, the thermometer seldom +averaging much above freezing point. + +By the middle of June, the sloop had made good progress, and already +presented a shapely appearance. As Bell and Johnson took the work of +construction entirely on themselves, the others went hunting, and +succeeded in killing several deer, in spite of its being difficult +game to approach. Altamont adopted the Indian practice of crawling +on all fours, and adjusting his gun and arms so as to simulate horns +and deceive the timid animal, till he could get near enough to take +good aim. + +[Illustration: ] + +Their principal object of pursuit, however, was the musk-ox, which +Parry had met with in such numbers in Melville Island; but not a +solitary specimen was to be seen anywhere about Victoria Bay, and a +distant excursion was, therefore, resolved upon, which would serve +the double purpose of hunting and surveying the eastern coast. + +[Illustration: ] + +The three hunters, accompanied by Duk, set out on Monday, the 17th +of June, at six in the morning, each man armed with a +double-barrelled gun, a hatchet and snow-knife, and provisions for +several days. + +It was a fine bright morning, and by ten o'clock they had gone +twelve miles; but not a living thing had crossed their path, and the +hunt threatened to turn out a mere excursion. + +However, they went on in hope, after a good breakfast and +half-an-hour's rest. + +The ground was getting gradually lower, and presented a peculiar +appearance from the snow, which lay here and there in ridges +unmelted. At a distance it looked like the sea when a strong wind is +lashing up the waves, and cresting them with a white foam. + +[Illustration: ] + +Before long they reached a sort of glen, at the bottom of which was +a winding river. It was almost completely thawed, and already the +banks were clothed with a species of vegetation, as if the sun had +done his best to fertilise the soil. + +"I tell you what," said the Doctor, "a few enterprising +colonists might make a fine settlement here. With a little industry +and perseverance wonders might be done in this country. Ah! if I am +not much mistaken, it has some four-footed inhabitants already. +Those frisky little fellows know the best spots to choose." + +"Hares! I declare. That's jolly!" said Altamont, loading his +gun. + +[Illustration: ] + +"Stop!" cried the Doctor; "stop, you furious hunter. Let the +poor little things alone; they are not thinking of running away. +Look, they are actually coming to us, I do believe!" + +He was right, for presently three or four young hares, gambolling +away among the fresh moss and tiny heaths, came running about their +legs so fearlessly and trustfully, that even Altamont was disarmed. +They + +[Illustration: It was a strange and touching spectacle to see the +pretty creatures--they flew on Clawbonny's shoulders, +etc.--P.169] + +rubbed against the Doctor's knees, and let him stroke them till +the kind-hearted man could not help saying to Altamont-- + +"Why give shot to those who come for caresses? The death of these +little beasts could do us no good." + +"You say what's true, Clawbonny. Let them live!" replied +Hatteras. + +[Illustration: ] + +"And these ptarmigans too, I suppose, and these long-legged +plovers," added Altamont, as a whole covey of birds flew down +among the hunters, never suspecting their danger. Duk could not tell +what to make of it, and stood stupefied. + +It was a strange and touching spectacle to see the pretty creatures; +they flew on Clawbonny's shoulders, and lay down at his feet as if +inviting friendly caresses, and doing their utmost to welcome the +strangers. The whole glen echoed with their joyous cries as they +darted to and fro from all parts. The good Doctor seemed some mighty +enchanter. + +The hunters had continued their course along the banks of the river, +when a sudden bend in the valley revealed a herd of deer, eight or +ten in number, peacefully browsing on some lichens that lay +half-buried in the snow. They were charming creatures, so graceful +and gentle, male and female, both adorned with noble antlers, +wide-spreading and deeply-notched. Their skin had already lost its +winter whiteness, and began to assume the brown tint of summer. +Strange to say, they appeared not a whit more afraid than the birds +or hares. + +The three men were now right in the centre of the herd, but not one +made the least movement to run away. This time the worthy Doctor had +far more difficulty in restraining Altamont's impatience, for the +mere sight of such magnificent animals roused his hunting instincts, +and he became quite excited; while Hatteras, on the contrary, seemed +really touched to see the splendid creatures rubbing their heads so +affectionately and trustfully against the good Clawbonny, the friend +of every living thing. + +"But, I say," exclaimed Altamont, "didn't we come out +expressly to hunt?" + +"To hunt the musk-ox, and nothing else," replied Clawbonny. +"Besides, we shouldn't know what to do with this game, even if +we killed it; we have provisions enough. Let us for once enjoy the +sight of men and animals in perfect amity." + +"It proves no human beings have been here before," said Hatteras. + +"True, and that proves something more, these animals are not of +American origin." + +"How do you make that out?" said Altamont. + +"Why, if they had been born in North America they would have known +how to treat that mammiferous biped called man, and would have fled +at the first glimpse of us. No, they are from the north, most likely +from the untrodden wilds of Asia, so Altamont, you have no right to +claim them as fellow-countrymen." + +[Illustration: ] + +"Oh! a hunter doesn't examine his game so closely as all that. +Everything is grist that comes to his mill." + +"All right. Calm yourself, my brave Nimrod! For my own part, I +would rather never fire another shot than make one of these +beautiful creatures afraid of me. See, even Duk fraternizes with +them. Believe me, it is well to be kind where we can. Kindness is +power." + +"Well, well, so be it," said Altamont, not at all understanding +such scruples. "But I should like to see what you would do if you +had no weapon but kindness among a pack of bears or wolves! You +wouldn't make much of it." + +"I make no pretensions to charm wild beasts. I don't believe +much in Orpheus and his enchantments. Besides, bears and wolves +would not come to us like these hares, and partridges, and deer." + +"Why not? They have never seen human beings either." + +"No but they are savage by nature," said Clawbonny, "and +ferocity, like wickedness, engenders suspicion. This is true of men +as well as animals." + +They spent the whole day in the glen, which the Doctor christened +"Arctic Arcadia," and when evening came they lay down to rest in +the hollow of a rock, which seemed as if expressly prepared for +their accommodation. + + +CHAPTER XVII. + + + +ALTAMONT'S REVENGE. + + +Next morning, as the fine weather still continued, the hunters +determined to have another search for the musk ox. It was only fair +to give Altamont a chance, with the distinct understanding that he +should have the right of firing, however fascinating the game they +might meet. Besides, the flesh of the musk ox, though a little too +highly impregnated with the smell, is savoury food, and the hunters +would gladly carry back a few pounds of it to Fort Providence. + +During the first part of the day, nothing occurred worth mentioning, +but they noticed a considerable change in the aspect of the country, +and appearances seemed to indicate that they were approaching a +hilly region. This New America was evidently either a continent or +an island of considerable extent. + +Duk was running far ahead of his party when he stopped suddenly +short, and began sniffing the ground as if he had caught scent of +game. Next minute he rushed forward again with extreme rapidity, and +was speedily out of sight. But loud distinct barking convinced the +hunters that the faithful fellow had at last discovered the desired +object. + +They hurried onwards, and after an hour and a half's quick +walking, found him standing in front of two formidable looking +animals, and barking furiously. The Doctor recognized them at once +as belonging to the musk ox, or Ovibos genus, as naturalists call +it, by the very wide horns touching each other at their base, by the +absence of muzzle, by the narrow square chanfrin resembling that of +a sheep, and by the very short tail. Their hair was long and thickly +matted, and mixed with fine brown, silky wool. + +[Illustration: ] + +These singular-looking quadrupeds were not the least afraid of Duk, +though extremely surprised; but at the first glimpse of the hunters +they took flight, and it was no easy task to go after them, for half +an hour's swift running brought them no nearer, and made the whole +party so out of breath, that they were forced to come to a halt. + +"Confound the beasts!" said Altamont. + +"Yes, Altamont, I'll make them over to you," replied +Clawbonny; "they are true Americans, and they don't appear to +have a very favourable idea of their fellow countrymen." + +[Illustration: ] + +"That proves our hunting prowess," rejoined Altamont. + +Meantime the oxen finding themselves no longer pursued, had stopped +short. Further pursuit was evidently useless. If they were to be +captured at all they must be surrounded, and the plateau which they +first happened to have reached, was very favourable for the purpose. +Leaving Duk to worry them, they went down by the neighbouring +ravines; and got to the one end of the plateau, where Altamont and +the Doctor hid themselves behind projecting rocks, while Hatteras +went on to the other end, intending to startle the animals by his +sudden appearance, and drive them back towards his companions. + +"I suppose you have no objection this time to bestow a few bullets +on these gentry?" said Altamont. + +"Oh, no, it is 'a fair field now and no favour,'" returned +Clawbonny. + +The oxen had begun to shake themselves impatiently at Duk, trying to +kick him off, when Hatteras started up right in front of them, +shouting and chasing them back. This was the signal for Altamont and +the Doctor to rush forward and fire, but at the sight of two +assailants, the terrified animals wheeled round and attacked +Hatteras. He met their onset with a firm, steady foot, and fired +straight at their heads. But both his balls were powerless, and only +served still further to madden the enraged beasts. They rushed upon +the unfortunate man like furies, and threw him on the ground in an +instant. + +"He is a dead man!" exclaimed the Doctor, in despairing accents. + +A tremendous struggle was going on in Altamont's breast at the +sight of his prostrate foe, and though his first impulse was to +hasten to his help, he stopped short, battling with himself and his +prejudices. But his hesitation scarcely lasted half a second, his +better self conquered, and exclaiming, + +"No, it would be cowardly!" he rushed forward with Clawbonny. + +Hatteras full well understood how his rival felt, but would rather +have died than have begged his intervention. However, he had hardly +time to think about it, before Altamont was at his side. + +He could not have held out much longer, for it was impossible to +ward off the blows of horns and hoofs of two such powerful +antagonists, and in a few minutes more he must have been torn to +pieces. But suddenly two shots resounded, and Hatteras felt the +balls graze his head. + +[Ilustration: Dealt him such a tremendous blow on the head with his +hatchet, that the skull was completely split open.--P.177] + +"Courage!" shouted Altamont, flinging away his discharged +weapon, and throwing himself right in front of the raging animals. +One of them, shot to the heart, fell dead as he reached the spot, +while the other dashed madly on Hatteras, and was about to gore the +unfortunate captain with his horns, when Altamont plunged his snow +knife far into the beast's wide open jaws with one hand, with the +other dealt him such a tremendous blow on the head with his hatchet, +that the skull was completely split open. + +It was done so quickly that it seemed like a flash of lightning, and +all was over. The second ox lay dead, and Clawbonny shouted +"Hurrah! hurrah!" Hatteras was saved. + +He owed his life to the man he hated the most. What a storm of +conflicting passions this must have roused in his soul! But where +was the emotion he could not master? + +However, his action was prompt, whatever his feeling might be. +Without a moment's hesitancy, he went up to his rival, and said in +a grave voice-- + +"Altamont, you have saved my life!" + +"You saved mine," replied the American. + +There was a moment's silence, and then Altamont added-- + +"We're quits, Hatteras." + +"No, Altamont," said the captain; "when the Doctor dragged you +out of your icy tomb, I did not know who you were; but you saved me +at the peril of your own life, knowing quite well who I was." + +"Why, you are a fellow-creature at any rate, and whatever faults +an American may have, he is no coward." + +"No, indeed," said the Doctor. "He is a man, every inch as +much as yourself, Hatteras." + +"And like me, he shall have part in the glory that awaits us." + +"The glory of reaching the North Pole?" asked Altamont. + +"Yes," replied Hatteras, proudly. + +"I guessed right, then," said Altamont. + +"And you have actually dared to conceive such a project? Oh! it is +grand; I tell you it is sublime even to think of it?" + +"But tell me," said Hatteras in a hurried manner; "you were +not bound for the Pole then yourself?" + +Altamont hesitated. + +"Come, speak out, man," urged the Doctor. + +"Well, to tell the truth, I was not, and the truth is better than +self-love. No, I had no such grand purpose in view. I was trying to +clear the North-West Passage, and that was all." + +"Altamont," said Hatteras, holding out his hand; "be our +companion to glory, come with us and find the North Pole." + +The two men clasped hands in a warm, hearty grasp, and the bond of +friendship between them was sealed. + +When they turned to look for the Doctor they found him in tears. + +"Ah! friends," he said, wiping his eyes; "you have made me so +happy, it is almost more than I can bear' You have sacrificed this +miserable nationality for the sake of the common cause. You have +said, 'What does it matter if only the Pole is discovered, whether +it is by an Englishman or an American?' Why should we brag of +being American or English, when we can boast that we are men?" + +The good little man was beside himself with joy He hugged the +reconciled enemies to his bosom, and cemented their friendship by +his own affection to both. + +At last he grew calm after at least a twentieth embrace, and said-- + +"It is time I went to work now. Since I am no hunter, I must use +my talents in another direction" + +And he began to cut up the oxen so skilfully, that he seemed like a +surgeon making a delicate autopsy. + +His two companions looked on smiling. In a few minutes the adroit +operator had cut off more than a hundred pounds of flesh. This he +divided into three parts. Each man took one, and they retraced their +steps to Fort Providence. + +At ten o'clock they arrived at Doctor's House, where Johnson and +Bell had a good supper prepared for them. + +But before sitting down to enjoy it, the Doctor exclaimed in a +jubilant tone, and pointing to his two companions-- + +"My dear old Johnson, I took out an American and an Englishman +with me, didn't I?" + +"Yes, Mr. Clawbonny." + +"Well, I bring back two brothers." + +This was joyous news to the sailors, and they shook hands warmly +with Altamont; while the Doctor recounted all that had passed, and +how the American captain had saved the English captain's life. +That night no five happier men could have been found than those that +lay sleeping in the little snow house. + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + + + +FINAL PREPARATIONS + + +Next day the weather changed, the cold returned. Snow, and rain, and +tempest came in quick succession for several days. + +Bell had completed the sloop, and done his work well, for the little +vessel was admirably adapted for the purpose contemplated, being +high at the sides and partly decked so as to be able to stand a +heavy sea, and yet light enough to be drawn on the sledge without +overburdening the dogs. + +At last a change of the greatest importance took place. The ice +began to tremble in the centre of the bay, and the highest masses +became loosened at their base ready to form icebergs, and drift away +before the first gale; but Hatteras would not wait for the +ice-fields to break up before he started. Since the journey must be +made on land, he did not care whether the sea was open or not; and +the day of departure was fixed for the 25th of June--Johnson and +Bell undertaking the necessary repairs of the sledge. + +On the 20th, finding there was space enough between the broken ice +to allow the sloop to get through, it was determined to take her a +trial trip to Cape Washington. + +[Illustration: ] + +The sea was not quite open but it would have been impossible to go +across on foot. + +This short sail of six hours sufficiently tested the powers of the +sloop, and proved her excellent qualities. In coming back they +witnessed a curious sight; it was the chase of a seal by a gigantic +bear. Mr. Bruin was too busily engaged to notice the vessel, or he +would have pursued; he was intently watching beside a seal hole with +the patience of a true hunter, or rather angler, for he was +certainly fishing just then. He watched in absolute silence, without +stirring or giving the least sign of life. + +[Illustration: ] + +But all of a sudden there was a slight disturbance on the surface of +the water in the hole, which announced the coming up of the +amphibious animal to breathe. Instantly the bear lay flat on his +belly with his two paws stretched round the opening. + +[Illustration: The poor seal struggled desperately, but could not +free himself from the iron grasp of his enemy.--P.184] + +Next minute up came the seal, but his head no sooner appeared above +the water than the bear's paws closed about him like a vice, and +dragged him right out. The poor seal struggled desperately, but +could not free himself from the iron grasp of his enemy, who hugged +him closer and closer till suffocation was complete. Then he carried +him off to his den as if the weight were nothing, leaping lightly +from pack to pack till he gained terra firma safely. + +[Illustration: ] + +On the 22nd of June, Hatteras began to load the sledge. They put in +200 lbs. of salt meat, three cases of vegetables and preserved meat, +besides lime-juice, and flour, and medicines. They also took 200 +lbs. of powder and a stock of fire-arms. Including the sloop and the +Halkett-boat, there was about 1500 lbs. weight, a heavy + +[Illustration: ] + +load for four dogs, and all the more as they would have to drag it +every day, instead of only four days successively, like the dogs +employed by the Esquimaux, who always keep a relay for their +sledges. However, the distance to the Pole was not 150 miles at the +outside, and they did not intend to go more than twelve miles a day, +as they could do it comfortably in a month. Even if land failed +them, they could always fall back on the sloop, and finish the +journey without fatigue to men or dogs. + +[Illustration: ] + +All the party were in excellent health, though they had lost flesh a +little; but, by attending to the Doctor's wise counsels, they had +weathered the winter without being attacked by any of the maladies +incident to the climate. + +Now, they were almost at their journey's end, and not one doubted +of success, for a common bond of sympathy bound fast the five men, +and made them strong to persevere. + +On Sunday, the 23rd, all was ready, and it was resolved to devote +the entire day to rest. + +The dwellers on Fort Providence could not see the last day dawn +without some emotion. It cost them a pang to leave the snow-hut +which had served them in such good stead, and this hospitable shore +where they had passed the winter. Take it altogether, they had spent +very happy hours there, and the Doctor made a touching reference to +the subject as they sat round the table at the evening meal, and did +not forget to thank God for his manifest protection. + +[Illustration: ] + +They retired early to rest, for they needed to be up betimes. So +passed the last night in Fort Providence. + + +CHAPTER XIX. + + + +MARCH TO THE NORTH + + +Next day at early dawn, Hatteras gave the signal for departure. The +well-fed and well-rested dogs were harnessed to the sledge. They had +been having a good time of it all the winter, and might be expected +to do good service during the summer. + +It was six in the morning when the expedition started. After +following the windings of the bay and going past Cape Washington, +they struck into the direct route for the north, and by seven +o'clock had lost sight of the lighthouse and Fort Providence. + +During the first two days they made twenty miles in twelve hours, +devoting the remainder of the time to rest and meals. The tent was +quite sufficient protection during sleep. + +The temperature began to rise. In many places the snow melted +entirely away, and great patches of water appeared; here and there +complete ponds, which a little stretch of imagination might easily +convert into lakes. The travellers were often up to their knees, but +they only laughed over it; and, indeed, the Doctor was rather glad +of such unexpected baths. + +"But for all that," he said, "the water has no business to wet +us here. It is an element which has no right to this country, except +in a solid or vaporous state. Ice or vapour is all very well, but +water--never!" + +[Illustration: ] + +Hunting was not forgotten during the march, for fresh meat was a +necessity. Altamont and Bell kept their guns loaded, and shot +ptarmigans, guillemots, geese, and a few young hares; but, by +degrees, birds and animals had been changing from trustfulness to +fear, and had become so shy and difficult to approach, that very +often, but for Duk, the hunters would have wasted their powder. + +Hatteras advised them not to go more than a mile away, as there was +not a day, nor even an hour, to lose, for three months of fine +weather was the utmost they + +[Illustration: ] + +could count upon. Besides, the sledge was often coming to difficult +places, when each man was needed to lend a helping hand. + +On the third day they came to a lake, several acres in extent, and +still entirely frozen over. The sun's rays had little access to +it, owing to its situation, and the ice was so strong that it must +have dated from some remote winter. It was strong enough to bear +both the travellers and their sledge, and was covered with dry snow. + +[Illustration: ] + +From this point the country became gradually lower, from which the +Doctor concluded that it did not extend to the Pole, but that most +probably this New America was an island. + +Up to this time the expedition had been attended with no fatigue. +The travellers had only suffered from the intense glare of the sun +on the snow, which threatened them with snow-blindness. At another +time of the year they might have avoided this by walking during the +night, but at present there was no night at all. Happily the snow +was beginning to melt, and the brilliancy would diminish as the +process of dissolution advanced. + +[Illustration: ] + +On the 28th of June the thermometer rose to 45 deg., and the rain fell +in torrents. Hatteras and his companions, however, marched stoically +on, and even hailed the downpour with delight, knowing that it would +hasten the disappearance of the snow. + +As they went along, the Doctor often picked up stones, both round +ones and flat pebbles, as if worn away by the tide. He thought from +this they must be near the Polar Basin, and yet far as the eye could +reach was one interminable plain. + +There was not a trace of houses, or huts, or cairns visible. It was +evident that the Greenlanders had not pushed their way so far north, +and yet the famished tribes would have found their account in +coming, for the country abounded in game. Bears were frequently +seen, and numerous herds of musk-oxen and deer. + +[Illustration: Bell killed a fox and Altamont a musk-ox.--P.192] + +On the 29th, Bell killed a fox and Altamont a musk-ox. These +supplies of fresh food were very acceptable, and even the Doctor +surveyed, with considerable satisfaction, the haunches of meat they +managed to procure from time to time. + +"Don't let us stint ourselves," he used to say on these +occasions; "food is no unimportant matter in expeditions like +ours." + +"Especially," said Johnson, "when a meal depends on a lucky +shot." + +"You're right, Johnson; a man does not think so much about +dinner when he knows the soup-pot is simmering by the +kitchen-fire." + +On the 30th, they came to a district which seemed + +[Illustration: ] + +to have been upturned by some volcanic convulsion, so covered was it +with cones and sharp lofty peaks. + +A strong breeze from the south-east was blowing, which soon +increased to a hurricane, sweeping over the rocks covered with snow +and the huge masses, of ice, which took the forms of icebergs and +hummocks, though on dry land. + +The tempest was followed by damp, warm weather, which caused a +regular thaw. + +On all sides nothing could be heard but the noise of cracking ice +and falling avalanches. + +The travellers had to be very careful in avoiding hills, and even in +speaking aloud, for the slightest agitation in the air might have +caused a catastrophe. Indeed, the suddenness is the peculiar feature +in Arctic + +[Illustration: ] + +avalanches, distinguishing them from those of Switzerland and +Norway. Often the dislodgment of a block of ice is instantaneous, +and not even a cannon-ball or thunderbolt could be more rapid in its +descent. The loosening, the fall, and the crash happen almost +simultaneously. + +Happily, however, no accident befel any of the party, and three days +afterwards they came to smooth, level ground again. + +[Illustration: ] + +But here a new phenomenon met their gaze--a phenomenon which was +long a subject of patient inquiry among the learned of both +hemispheres. They came to a long chain of low hills which seemed to +extend for miles, and were all covered on the eastern side with +bright red snow. + +It is easy to imagine the surprise and half-terrified exclamations +of the little company at the sight of this long red curtain; but the +Doctor hastened to reassure them, or rather to instruct them, as to +the nature of this peculiar snow. He told them that this same red +substance had been found in Switzerland, in the heart of the Alps, +and that the colour proceeded solely from the presence of certain +corpuscles, about the nature of which for a long time chemists could +not agree. They could not decide whether these corpuscles were of +animal or vegetable origin, but at last it was settled that they +belonged to the family of fungi, being a sort of microscopic +champignon of the species Uredo. + +Turning the snow over with his iron-tipped staff, the Doctor found +that the colouring matter measured nine feet deep. He pointed this +out to his companions, that they might have some idea of the +enormous number of these tiny mushrooms in a layer extending so many +miles. + +This phenomenon was none the less strange for being explained, for +red is a colour seldom seen in nature over any considerable area. +The reflection of the sun's rays upon it produced the most +peculiar effect, lighting up men, and animals, and rocks with a +fiery glow, as if proceeding from some flame within. When the snow +melted it looked like blood, as the red particles do not decompose. +It seemed to the travellers as if rivulets of blood were running +among their feet. + +[Illustration: ] + +The Doctor filled several bottles with this precious substance to +examine at leisure, as he had only had a glimpse of the Crimson +Cliffs in Baffin's Bay. + +[Illustration: ] + +This Field of Blood, as he called it, took three hours to get over, +and then the country resumed its usual aspect. + +[Illustration: At Bell's suggestion torches were +contrived.--P.199] + + +CHAPTER XX. + + + +FOOTPRINTS IN THE SNOW. + + +On the fourth of July there was such an exceedingly dense fog, that +it was very difficult to keep the straight course for the north. No +misadventure, however, befel the party during the darkness, except +the loss of Bell's snow-shoes. At Bell's suggestion, which fired +the Doctor's inventive genius, torches were contrived, made of tow +steeped in spirits-of-wine and fastened on the end of a stick, and +these served somewhat to help them on, though they made but small +progress; for, on the sixth, after the fog had cleared off, the +Doctor took their bearings, and found that they had only been +marching at the rate of eight miles a day. + +Determined to make up for lost time, they rose next morning very +early and started off, Bell and Altamont as usual going ahead of the +rest and acting as scouts. Johnson and the others kept beside the +sledge, and were soon nearly two miles behind the guides; but the +weather was so dry and clear that all their movements could be +distinctly observed. + +"What now?" said Clawbonny, as he saw them make a sudden halt, +and stoop down as if examining the ground. + +"I was just wondering what they are about, myself," replied old +Johnson. + +"Perhaps they have come on the tracks of animals," suggested +Hatteras. + +"No," said Clawbonny, "it can't be that." + +[Illustration: ] + +"Why not?" + +"Because Duk would bark." + +"Well, it is quite evident they are examining some sort of +marks." + +"Let's get on, then," said Hatteras; and, urging forward the +dogs, they rejoined their companions in about twenty minutes, and +shared their surprise at finding unmistakable fresh footprints of +human beings in the snow, as plain as if only made the preceding day. + +"They are Esquimaux footprints," said Hatteras. + +"Do you think so?" asked Altamont. + +"There is no doubt of it." + +"But what do you make of this, then?" returned Altamont, +pointing to another footmark repeated in + +[Illustration: ] + +several places. "Do you believe for a minute that was made by an +Esquimaux?" + +It was incontestably the print of a European boot--nails, sole, and +heel clearly stamped in the snow. There was no room for doubt, and +Hatteras exclaimed in amazement-- + +"Europeans here!" + +"Evidently," said Johnson. + +"And yet it is so improbable that we must take a second look +before pronouncing an opinion," said Clawbonny. + +But the longer he looked, the more apparent became the fact. +Hatteras was chagrined beyond measure. A European here, so near the +Pole! + +The footprints extended for about a quarter of a mile, and then +diverged to the west. Should the travellers follow them further? + +"No," said Hatteras, "let us go on." + +He was interrupted by an exclamation from the Doctor, who had just +picked up an object that gave still more convincing proof of +European origin. It was part of a pocket spy-glass! + +"Well, if we still had any doubts about the footmarks, this +settles the case at once, at any rate," said Clawbonny. + +"Forward!" exclaimed Hatteras so energetically, that +instinctively each one obeyed, and the march was resumed forthwith. + +The day wore away, but no further sign of the presence of suspected +rivals was discovered, and they prepared to encamp for the night. + +The tent was pitched in a ravine for shelter, as the sky was dark +and threatening, and a violent north wind was blowing. + +"I'm afraid we'll have a bad night," said Johnson. + +"A pretty noisy one, I expect," replied the Doctor, "but not +cold. We had better take every precaution, and fasten down our tent +with good big stones." + +"You are right, Mr. Clawbonny. If the hurricane swept away our +tent, I don't know where we should find it again." + +[Illustration: ] + +The tent held fast, but sleep was impossible, for the tempest was +let loose and raged with tremendous violence. + +"It seems to me," said the Doctor, during a brief lull in the +deafening roar," as if I could hear the sound of collisions +between icebergs and ice-fields. If we were near the sea, I could +really believe there was a general break-up in the ice." + +"I can't explain the noises any other way," said Johnson. + +"Can we have reached the coast, I wonder?" asked Hatteras. + +"It is not impossible," replied Clawbonny. "Listen! Do you +hear that crash? That is certainly the sound of icebergs falling. We +cannot be very far from the ocean." + +"Well, if it turn out to be so, I shall push right on over the +ice-fields." + +"Oh, they'll be all broken up after such a storm as this. We +shall see what to-morrow, brings; but all I can say is, if any poor +fellows are wandering about in a night like this, I pity them. + +The storm lasted for ten hours, and the weary travellers anxiously +watched for the morning. About daybreak its fury seemed to have +spent itself, and Hatteras, accompanied by Bell and Altamont, +ventured to leave the tent. They climbed a hill about three hundred +feet high, which commanded a wide view. But what a metamorphosed +region met their gaze! All the ice had completely vanished, the +storm had chased away the winter, and stripped the soil everywhere +of its snow covering. + +[Illustration: Three hours afterwards they arrived at the coast, and +shouted simultaneously, "The sea! the sea!"--P.206] + +But Hatteras scarcely bestowed a glance on surrounding objects; his +eager gaze was bent on the northern horizon, which appeared shrouded +in black mist. + +"That may very likely be caused by the ocean," suggested +Clawbonny. + +"You are right. The sea must be there," was the reply. + +"That tint is what we call the blink of open water," said +Johnson. + +"Come on, then, to the sledge at once, and let us get to this +unknown ocean," exclaimed Hatteras. + +Their few preparations were soon made, and the march resumed. Three +hours afterwards they arrived at the coast, and shouted +simultaneously, "The sea! the sea!" + +"Ay, and open sea!" added Hatteras. + +And so it was. The storm had opened wide the Polar Basin, and the +loosened packs were drifting in all directions. The icebergs had +weighed anchor, and were sailing out into the open sea. + +This new ocean stretched far away out of sight, and not a single +island or continent was visible. + +On the east and west the coast formed two capes or headlands, which +sloped gently down to the sea. In the centre, a projecting rock +formed a small natural bay, sheltered on three sides, into which a +wide river fell, bearing in its bosom the melted snows of winter. + +After a careful survey of the coast, Hatteras determined to launch +the sloop that very day, and to unpack the sledge, and get +everything on board. The tent was soon put up, and a comfortable +repast prepared. This important business despatched, work commenced; +and all hands were so expeditious and willing, that by five + +[Illustration: ] + +o'clock nothing more remained to be done. The sloop lay rocking +gracefully in the little bay, and all the cargo was on board except +the tent, and what was required for the night's encampment. + +The sight of the sloop suggested to Clawbonny the propriety of +giving Altamont's name to the little bay. His proposition to that +effect met with unanimous approval, and the port was forthwith +dignified by the title of Altamont Harbour. + +According to the Doctor's calculations the travellers were now +only 9 deg. distant from the Pole. They had gone over two hundred miles +from Victoria Bay to Altamont Harbour, and were in latitude 87 deg. +5' and longitude 118 deg. 35'. + + +CHAPTER XXI. + + + +THE OPEN SEA. + + +Next morning by eight o'clock all the remaining effects were on +board, and the preparations for departure completed. But before +starting the Doctor thought he would like to take a last look at the +country and see if any further traces of the presence of strangers +could be discovered, for the mysterious footmarks they had met with +were never out of his thoughts. He climbed to the top of a height +which commanded a view of the whole southern horizon, and took out +his pocket telescope. But what was his astonishment, to find he +could see nothing through it, not even neighbouring objects. He +rubbed his eyes and looked again, but with no better result. Then he +began to examine the telescope, the object glass was gone! + +The object glass! This explained the whole mystery, foot-prints and +all; and with a shout of surprise he hurried down the hill to impart +his discovery to the wondering companions, who came running towards +him, startled by his loud exclamation, and full of anxiety at his +precipitate descent. + +"Well, what is the matter now?" said Johnson. + +The Doctor could hardly speak, he was so out of breath. At last he +managed to gasp out-- + +"The tracks, footmarks, strangers." + +"What?" said Hatteras, "strangers here?" + +"No, no, the object glass; the object glass out of my telescope." + +[Illustration: ] + +And he held out his spy-glass for them to look at. + +"Ah! I see," said Altamont; "it is wanting." + +"Yes." + +"But then the footmarks?" + +"They were ours, friends, just ours," exclaimed the Doctor. +"We had lost ourselves in the fog, and been wandering in a +circle." + +"But the boot-marks," objected Hatteras. + +"Bell's. He walked about a whole day after he had lost his snow +shoes." + +"So I did," said Bell. + +The mistake was so evident, that they all laughed heartily, except +Hatteras, though no one was more glad than he at the discovery. + +A quarter of an hour afterwards the little sloop sailed out of +Altamont Harbour, and commenced her voyage of discovery. The wind +was favourable, but there was little of it, and the weather was +positively warm. + +The sloop was none the worse for the sledge journey. She was in +first-rate trim, and easily managed. Johnson steered, the Doctor, +Bell, and the American leaned back against the cargo, and Hatteras +stood at the prow, his fixed, eager gaze bent steadily on that +mysterious point towards which he felt drawn with irresistible +power, like the magnetic needle to the Pole. He wished to be the +first to descry any shore that might come in sight, and he had every +right to the honour. + +The water of this Polar Sea presented some peculiar features worth +mentioning. In colour it was a faint ultramarine blue, and possessed +such wonderful transparency that one seemed to gaze down into +fathomless depths. These depths were lighted up, no doubt, by some +electrical phenomenon, and so many varieties of living creatures +were visible that the vessel seemed to be sailing over a vast +aquarium. + +Innumerable flocks of birds were flying over the surface of this +marvellous ocean, darkening the sky like thick heavy storm-clouds. +Water-fowl of every description were among them, from the albatross +to the penguin, and all of gigantic proportions. Their cries were +absolutely deafening, and some of them had such + +[Illustration: ] + +immense, wide-spreading wings, that they covered the sloop +completely as they flew over. The Doctor thought himself a good +naturalist, but he found his science greatly at fault, for many a +species here was wholly unknown to any ornithological society. + +[Illustration: And the Doctor leaning over the side of the vessel, +could see the whales and the dolphins, and all the rest of the +monsters of the deep.--P.214] + +The good little man was equally nonplussed when he looked at the +water, for he saw the most wonderful medusae, some so large that +they looked like little islands floating about among Brobdignagian +sea-weeds. And below the surface, what a spectacle met the eye! +Myriads of fish of every species; young manati at play with each +other; narwhals with their one strong weapon of defence, like the +horn of a unicorn, chasing the timid seals; whales of every tribe, +spouting out columns of water and mucilage, and filling the air with +a peculiar whizzing noise; dolphins, seals, and walruses; sea-dogs +and sea-horses, sea-bears and sea-elephants, quietly browsing on +submarine pastures; and the Doctor could gaze at them all as easily +and clearly as if they were in glass tanks in the Zoological Gardens. + +There was a strange supernatural purity about the atmosphere. It +seemed charged to overflowing with oxygen, and had a marvellous +power of exhilaration, producing an almost intoxicating effect on +the brain. + +Towards evening, Hatteras and his companions lost sight of the +coast. Night came on, though the sun remained just above the +horizon; but it had the same influence on animated nature as in +temperate zones. Birds, fish, and all the cetacea disappeared and +perfect silence prevailed. + +Since the departure from Altamont Harbour, the sloop had made one +degree further north. The next day brought no signs of land; there +was not even a speck on the horizon. The wind was still favourable, +and the sea pretty calm. The birds and fishes returned as numerously +as on the preceding day, and the Doctor leaning over the side of the +vessel, could see the whales and the dolphins, and all the rest of +the monsters of the deep, gradually coming up from the clear depths +below. On the surface, far as the eye could reach, nothing was +visible except a solitary iceberg here and there, and a few +scattered floes. + +Indeed, but little ice was met with anywhere. The sloop was ten +degrees above the point of greatest cold, and consequently in the +same temperature as Baffin's Bay and Disko. It was therefore not +astonishing that the sea should be open in these summer months. + +This is a fact of great practical value, for if ever the whalers can +penetrate north as far as the Polar basin, they may be sure of an +immediate cargo, as this part of the ocean seems the general +reservoir of whales and seals, and every marine species. + +The day wore on, but still nothing appeared on the horizon. Hatteras +never left the prow of the ship, but stood, glass in hand, eagerly +gazing into the distance with anxious, questioning eyes, and seeking +to discover, in the colour of the water, the shape of the waves, and +the breath of the wind, indications of approaching land. + + +CHAPTER XXII. + + + +GETTING NEAR THE POLE. + + +Hour after hour passed away, and still Hatteras persevered in his +weary watch, though his hopes appeared doomed to disappointment. + +At length, about six in the evening, a dim, hazy, shapeless sort of +mist seemed to rise far away between sea and sky. It was not a +cloud, for it was constantly vanishing, and then reappearing next +minute. + +Hatteras was the first to notice this peculiar phenomenon; but after +an hour's scrutiny through his telescope, he could make nothing of +it. + +All at once, however, some sure indication met his eye, and +stretching out his arm to the horizon, he shouted, in a clear +ringing voice--- + +"Land! land!" + +His words produced an electrical effect on his companions, and every +man rushed to his side. + +"I see it, I see it," said Clawbonny. + +"Yes, yes, so do I!" exclaimed Johnson. + +"It is a cloud," said Altamont. + +"Land! land!" repeated Hatteras, in tones of absolute conviction. + +Even while he spoke the appearance vanished, and when it returned +again the Doctor fancied he caught a gleam of light about the smoke +for an instant. + +[Illustration: "It is a volcano!" he exclaimed.--P.217] + +"It is a volcano!" he exclaimed. + +"A volcano?" repeated Altamont. + +"Undoubtedly." + +[Illustration: ] + +"In so high a latitude?" + +"Why not? Is not Iceland a volcanic island--indeed, almost made +of volcanoes, one might say?" + +"Well, has not our famous countryman, James Ross, affirmed the +existence of two active volcanoes, the Erebus and the Terror, on the +Southern Continent, in longitude 170 deg. and latitude 78 deg.? Why, then, +should not volcanoes be found near the North Pole?" + +"It is possible, certainly," replied Altamont. + +"Ah, now I see it distinctly," exclaimed the Doctor." It is a +volcano!" + +"Let us make right for it then," said Hatteras. + +[Illustration: ] + +It was impossible longer to doubt the proximity of the coast. In +twenty-four hours, probably, the bold navigators might hope to set +foot on its untrodden soil. But strange as it was, now that they +were so near the goal of their voyage, no one showed the joy which +might have been expected. Each man sat silent, absorbed in his own +thoughts, wondering what sort of place this Pole must be. The birds +seemed to shun it, for though it was evening, they were all flying +towards the south with outspread wings. Was it, then, so +inhospitable, that not so much as a sea-gull or a ptarmigan could +find a shelter? The fish, too, even the large cetacea, were +hastening away through the transparent waters. What + +[Illustration: ] + +could cause this feeling either of repulsion or terror? + +At last sleep overcame the tired men, and one after another dropped +off, leaving Hatteras to keep watch. + +He took the helm, and tried his best not to close his eyes, for he +grudged losing precious time; but the slow motion of the vessel +rocked him into a state of such irresistible somnolence that, in +spite of himself, he was soon, like his companions, locked fast in +deep slumber. He began to dream, and imagination brought back all +the scenes of his past life. He dreamt of his ship, the Forward, and +of the traitors that had burnt it. Again he felt all the agonies of +disappointment and failure, and forgot his actual situation. Then +the scene changed, and he saw himself at the Pole unfurling the +Union Jack! + +While memory and fancy were thus busied, an enormous cloud of an +olive tinge had begun to darken sea and sky. A hurricane was at +hand. The first blast of the tempest roused the captain and his +companions, and they were on their feet in an instant, ready to meet +it. The sea had risen tremendously, and the ship was tossing +violently up and down on the billows. Hatteras took the helm again, +and kept a firm hold of it, while Johnson and Bell baled out the +water which was constantly dashing over the ship. + +It was a difficult matter to preserve the right course, for the +thick fog made it impossible to see more than a few yards off. + +This sudden tempest might well seem to such excited men, a stern +prohibition against further approach to the Pole; but it needed but +a glance at their resolute faces to know that they would neither +yield to winds nor waves, but go right on to the end. + +[Illustration: ] + +For a whole day the struggle lasted, death threatening them each +moment; but about six in the evening, just as the fury of the waves +seemed at its highest pitch, there came a sudden calm. The wind was +stilled as if miraculously, and the sea became smooth as glass. + +Then came a most extraordinary inexplicable phenomenon. + +The fog, without dispersing, became strangely luminous, and the +sloop sailed along in a zone of electric light. Mast, sail, and +rigging appeared pencilled in black against the phosphorescent sky +with wondrous distinctness. The men were bathed in light, and their +faces shone with a fiery glow. + +"The volcano!" exclaimed Hatteras. + +"Is it possible?" said Bell. + +"No, no!" replied Clawbonny. "We should be suffocated with its +flames so near." + +"Perhaps it is the reflection," suggested Altamont. + +"Not that much even, for then we must be near land, and in that +case we should hear the noise of the eruption." + +"What is it, then?" asked the captain. + +"It is a cosmical phenomenon," replied the Doctor, "seldom met +hitherto. If we go on, we shall soon get out of our luminous sphere +and be back in the darkness and tempest again." + +"Well, let's go on, come what may," said Hatteras. + +The Doctor was right. Gradually the fog began to lose its light, and +then its transparency, and the howling wind was heard not far off. A +few minutes more, and the little vessel was caught in a violent +squall, and swept back into the cyclone. + +But the hurricane had fortunately turned a point towards the south, +and left the vessel free to run before the wind straight towards the +Pole. There was imminent danger of her sinking, for she sped along +at frenzied speed, and any sudden collision with rock or iceberg +must have inevitably dashed her to pieces. + +But not a man on board counselled prudence. They were intoxicated +with the danger, and no speed could be quick enough to satisfy their +longing impatience to reach the unknown. + +At last they began evidently to near the coast. Strange symptoms +were manifest in the air; the fog suddenly rent like a curtain torn +by the wind; and for an instant, like a flash of lightning, an +immense column of flame was seen on the horizon. + +"The volcano! the volcano!" was the simultaneous exclamation. + +But the words had hardly passed their lips before the fantastic +vision had vanished. The wind suddenly changed to south-east, and +drove the ship back again from the land. + +"Confound it!" said Hatteras; "we weren't three miles from +the coast." + +However, resistance was impossible. All that could be done was to +keep tacking; but every few minutes the little sloop would be thrown +on her side, though she righted herself again immediately obedient +to the helm. + +As Hatteras stood with dishevelled hair, grasping the helm as if +welded to his hand, he seemed the animating soul of the ship. + +All at once, a fearful sight met his gaze. + +Scarcely twenty yards in front was a great block of ice coming right +towards them, mounting and falling on the stormy billows, ready to +overturn at any moment and crush them in its descent. + +But this was not the only danger that threatened the bold +navigators. The iceberg was packed with white bears, huddling close +together, and evidently beside themselves with terror. + +The iceberg made frightful lurches, sometimes inclining at such a +sharp angle that the animals rolled pell-mell over each other and +set up a loud growling, which mingled with the roar of the elements +and made a terrible concert. + +For a quarter of an hour, which seemed a whole century, the sloop +sailed on in this formidable company, sometimes a few yards distant +and sometimes near enough to touch. The Greenland dogs trembled for +fear, but Duk was quite imperturbable. At last the iceberg lost +ground, and got driven by the wind further and further away till it +disappeared in the fog, only at intervals betraying its presence by +the ominous growls of its equipage. + +[Illustration: Mast and sail were torn off, and went flying away +through the darkness like some large white bird.--P.224] + +The storm now burst forth with redoubled fury. The little barque was +lifted bodily out of the water, and whirled round and round with the +most frightful rapidity. Mast and sail were torn off, and went +flying away through the darkness like some large white bird. A +whirlpool began to form among the waves, drawing down the ship +gradually by its irresistible suction. + +[Illustration: ] + +Deeper and deeper she sank, whizzing round at such tremendous speed +that to the poor fellows on board, the water seemed motionless. All +five men stood erect, gazing at each other in speechless terror. But +suddenly the ship rose perpendicularly, her prow went above the edge +of the vortex, and getting out of the centre of attraction by her +own velocity, she escaped at a tangent from the circumference, and +was thrown far beyond, swift as a ball from a cannon's mouth. + +Altamont, the Doctor, Johnson, and Bell were pitched flat on the +planks. When they got up, Hatteras had disappeared! + +It was two o'clock in the morning. + + +CHAPTER XXIII. + + + +THE ENGLISH FLAG + + +For a few seconds they seemed stupefied, and then a cry of +"Hatteras!" broke from every lip. + +On all sides, nothing was visible but the tempestuous ocean. Duk +barked desperately, and Bell could hardly keep him from leaping into +the waves. + +"Take the helm, Altamont," said the Doctor, "and let us try +our utmost to find our poor captain." + +Johnson and Bell seized the oars, and rowed about for more than an +hour; but their search was vain--Hatteras was lost! + +Lost! and so near the Pole, just as he had caught sight of the goal! + +The Doctor called, and shouted, and fired signals, and Duk made +piteous lamentations; but there was no response. Clawbonny could +bear up no longer; he buried his head in his hands, and fairly wept +aloud. + +At such a distance from the coast, it was impossible Hatteras could +reach it alive, without an oar or even so much as a spar to help +him; if ever he touched the haven of his desire, it would be as a +swollen, mutilated corpse! + +Longer search was useless, and nothing remained but to resume the +route north. The tempest was dying out, and about five in the +morning on the 11th of July, the wind fell, and the sea gradually +became calm. The sky recovered its polar clearness, and less than +three miles away the land appeared in all its grandeur. + +The new continent was only an island, or rather a volcano, fixed +like a lighthouse on the North Pole of the world. + +[Illustration: Two men in a boat observing a volcano in the +distance.] + +The mountain was in full activity, pouring out a mass of burning +stones and glowing rock. At every fresh eruption there was a +convulsive heaving within, as if some mighty giant were respiring, +and the masses ejected were thrown up high into the air amidst jets +of bright flame, streams of lava rolling down the sides in impetuous +torrents. In one part, serpents of fire seemed writhing and +wriggling amongst smoking rocks, and in + +[Illustration: ] + +another the glowing liquid fell in cascades, in the midst of purple +vapour, into a river of fire below, formed of a thousand igneous +streams, which emptied itself into the sea, the waters hissing and +seething like a boiling cauldron. + +Apparently there was only one crater to the volcano, out of which +the columns of fire issued, streaked with forked lightning. +Electricity seemed to have something to do with this magnificent +panorama. + +Above the panting flames waved an immense plume-shaped cloud of +smoke, red at its base and black at its summit. It rose with +incomparable majesty, and unrolled in thick volumes. + +The sky was ash-colour to a great height, and it was evident that +the darkness that had prevailed while the tempest lasted, which had +seemed quite inexplicable to the Doctor, was owing to the columns of +cinders overspreading the sun like a thick curtain. He remembered a +similar phenomenon which occurred in the Barbadoes, where the whole +island was plunged in profound obscurity by the mass of cinders +ejected from the crater of Isle St. Vincent. + +This enormous ignivomous rock in the middle of the sea was six +thousand feet high, just about the altitude of Hecla. + +It seemed to rise gradually out of the water as the boat got nearer. +There was no trace of vegetation, indeed there was no shore; the +rock ran straight down to the sea. + +"Can we land?" said the Doctor. + +"The wind is carrying us right to it," said Altamont. "But I +don't see an inch of land to set our foot upon." + +"It seems so at this distance," said Johnson; "but we shall be +sure to find some place to run in our boat at, and that is all we +want." + +"Let us go on, then," said Clawbonny, dejectedly. + +He had no heart now for anything. The North Pole was indeed before +his eyes, but not the man who had discovered it. + +As they got nearer the island, which was not more than eight or ten +miles in circumference, the navigators noticed a tiny fiord, just +large enough to harbour their boat, and made towards it immediately. +They feared their captain's dead body would meet their eyes on the +coast, and yet it seemed difficult for a corpse to lie on it, for +there was no shore, and the sea broke on steep rocks, which were +covered with cinders above watermark. + +At last the little sloop glided gently into the narrow opening +between two sandbanks just visible above the water, where she would +be safe from the violence of the breakers; but before she could be +moored, Duk began howling and barking again in the most piteous +manner, as if calling on the cruel sea and stony rocks to yield up +his lost master. The Doctor tried to calm him by caresses, but in +vain. The faithful beast, as if he would represent the captain, +sprang on shore with a tremendous bound, sending a cloud of cinders +after him. + +"Duk! Duk!" called Clawbonny. + +But Duk had already disappeared. + +[Illustration: ] + +After the sloop was made fast, they all got out and went after him. +Altamont was just going to climb to the top of a pile of stones, +when the Doctor exclaimed, "Listen!" + +Duk was barking vehemently some distance off, but his bark seemed +full of grief rather than fury. + +"Has he come on the track of some animal, do you think?" asked +Johnson. + +"No, no!" said Clawbonny, shuddering. "His bark is too +sorrowful; it is the dog's tear. He has found the body of +Hatteras." + +They all four rushed forward, in spite of the blinding cinder-dust, +and came to the far-end of a fiord, where they discovered the dog +barking round a corpse wrapped in the British flag! + +"Hatteras! Hatteras!" cried the Doctor, throwing himself on the +body of his friend. But next minute he started up with an +indescribable cry, and shouted, "Alive! alive!" + +"Yes!" said a feeble voice; "yes, alive at the North Pole, on +Queen's Island." + +"Hurrah for England!" shouted all with one accord. + +"And for America!" added Clawbonny, holding out one hand to +Hatteras and the other to Altamont. + +Duk was not behind with his hurrah, which was worth quite as much as +the others. + +For a few minutes the joy of recovery of their captain filled all +their hearts, and the poor fellows could not restrain their tears. + +The Doctor found, on examination, that he was not seriously hurt. +The wind threw him on the coast where landing was perilous work, +but, after being driven back more than once into the sea, the hardy +sailor had managed to scramble on to a rock, and gradually to hoist +himself above the waves. + +Then he must have become insensible, for he remembered nothing more +except rolling himself in his flag. He only awoke to consciousness +with the loud barking and caresses of his faithful Duk. + +After a little, Hatteras was able to stand up supported by the +Doctor, and tried to get back to the sloop. + +He kept exclaiming, "The Pole! the North Pole!" + +"You are happy now?" said his friend. + +"Yes, happy! And are not you? Isn't it joy to find yourself +here! The ground we tread is round the Pole! The air we breathe is +the air that blows round the Pole! The sea we have crossed is the +sea which washes the Pole! Oh! the North Pole! the North Pole!" + +He had become quite delirious with excitement, and fever burned in +his veins. His eyes shone with unnatural brilliancy, and his brain +seemed on fire. Perfect rest was what he most needed, for the Doctor +found it impossible to quiet him. + +A place of encampment must therefore be fixed upon immediately. + +[Illustration: Altamont speedily discovered a grotto composed of +rocks.--P.234] + +Altamont speedily discovered a grotto composed of rocks, which had +so fallen as to form a sort of cave. Johnson and Bell carried in +provisions, and gave the dogs their liberty. + +About eleven o'clock, breakfast, or rather dinner, was ready, +consisting of pemmican, salt meat, and smoking-hot tea and coffee. + +But Hatteras would do nothing till the exact position of the island +was ascertained; so the Doctor and Altamont set to work with their +instruments, and found that the exact latitude of the grotto was +89 deg. 59' 15". The longitude was of little importance, for all +the meridians blended a few hundred feet higher. + +The 90 deg. of lat. was then only about three quarters of a mile off, +or just about the summit of the volcano. + +When the result was communicated to Hatteras, he desired that a +formal document might be drawn up to attest the fact, and two copies +made, one of which should be deposited on a cairn on the island. + +Clawbonny was the scribe, and indited the following document, a copy +of which is now among the archives of the Royal Geographical Society +of London:-- + +"On this 11th day of July, 1861, in North latitude 89 deg. 59' +15" was discovered Queen's Island at the North Pole, by Captain +Hatteras, Commander of the brig Forward of Liverpool, who signs +this, as also all his companions. + +"Whoever may find this document is requested to forward it to the +Admiralty. + +"(Signed) JOHN HATTERAS, Commander + +of the Forward + +"DR. CLAWBONNY + +"ALTAMONT, Commander of the Porpoise + +"JOHNSON, Boatswain + +"BELL, Carpenter." + +"And now, friends, come to table," said the Doctor, merrily. + +Coming to table was just squatting on the ground. + +"But who," said Clawbonny, "would not give all the tables and +dining-rooms in the world to dine at 89" 59' and 15" N. +lat.?" + +It was an exciting occasion this first meal at the Pole! What +neither ancients nor moderns, neither Europeans, nor Americans, nor +Asiatics had been able to accomplish was now achieved, and all past +sufferings and perils were forgotten in the glow of success. + +"But, after all," said Johnson, after toasts to Hatteras and the +North Pole had been enthusiastically drunk, "what is there so very +special about the North Pole? Will you tell me, Mr. Clawbonny?" + +"Just this, my good Johnson. It is the only point of the globe +that is motionless; all the other points are revolving with extreme +rapidity." + +"But I don't see that we are any more motionless here than at +Liverpool." + +"Because in both cases you are a party concerned, both in the +motion and the rest; but the fact is certain." + +Clawbonny then went on to describe the diurnal and annual motions of +the earth--the one round its own axis, the extremities of which are +the poles, which is accomplished in twenty-four hours, and the other +round the sun, which takes a whole year. + +Bell and Johnson listened half incredulously, and + +[Illustration: ] + +couldn't see why the earth could not have been allowed to keep +still, till Altamont informed them that they would then have had +neither day nor night, nor spring, summer, autumn, and winter. + +"Ay, and worse still," said Clawbonny, "if the motion chanced +to be interrupted, we should fall right into the sun in sixty-four +and a half days." + +"What! take sixty-four and a half days, to fall?" exclaimed +Johnson. + +"Yes, we are ninety-five millions of miles off. But when I say the +Pole is motionless, it is not strictly true; it is only so in +comparison with the rest of the globe, for it has a certain movement +of its own, and completes a circle in about twenty-six thousand +years. This comes from the precession of the equinoxes." + +A long and learned talk was started on this subject between Altamont +and the Doctor, simplified, however, as much as possible for the +benefit of Bell and Johnson. + +Hatteras took no part in it, and even when they went on to speculate +about the earth's centre, and discussed several of the theories +that had been advanced respecting it, he seemed not to hear; it was +evident his thoughts were far away. + +Among other opinions put forth was one in our own days, which +greatly excited Altamont's surprise. It was held that there was an +immense opening at the poles which led into the heart of the earth, +and that it was out of the opening that the light of the Aurora +Borealis streamed. This was gravely stated, and Captain Synness, a +countryman of our own, actually proposed that Sir Humphrey Davy, +Humboldt, and Arago should undertake an expedition through it, but +they refused." + +"And quite right too," said Altamont. + +"So say I; but you see, my friends, what absurdities imagination +has conjured up about these regions, and how, sooner or later, the +simple reality comes to light." + + +CHAPTER XXIV. + + + +MOUNT HATTERAS. + + +After this conversation they all made themselves as comfortable as +they could, and lay down to sleep. + +All, except Hatteras; and why could this extraordinary man not sleep +like the others? + +Was not the purpose of his life attained now? Had he not realized +his most daring project? Why could he not rest? Indeed, might not +one have supposed that, after the strain his nervous system had +undergone, he would long for rest? + +But no, he grew more and more excited, and it was not the thought of +returning that so affected him. Was he bent on going farther still? +Had his passion for travel no limits? Was the world too small for +him now he had circumnavigated it. + +Whatever might be the cause, he could not sleep; yet this first +night at the Pole was clear and calm. The isle was absolutely +uninhabited--not a bird was to be seen in this burning atmosphere, +not an animal on these scoriae-covered rocks, not a fish in these +seething waters. Next morning, when Altamont, and the others awoke, +Hatteras was gone. Feeling uneasy at his absence, they hurried out +of the grotto in search of him. + +[Illustration: There he was standing on a rock, gazing fixedly at +the top of the mountain.--P.242] + +There he was standing on a rock, gazing fixedly at the top of the +mountain. His instruments were in his hand, and he was evidently +calculating the exact longitude and latitude. + +The Doctor went towards him and spoke, but it was long before he +could rouse him from his absorbing contemplations. At last the +captain seemed to understand, and Clawbonny said, while he examined +him with a keen scrutinizing glance-- + +"Let us go round the island. Here we are, all ready for our last +excursion." + +"The last!" repeated Hatteras, as if in a dream. "Yes!, the +last truly, but," he added, with more animation, "the most +wonderful." + +He pressed both hands on his brow as he spoke, as if to calm the +inward tumult. + +Just then Altamont and the others came up, and their appearance +seemed to dispel the hallucinations under which he was labouring. + +"My friends," he said, in a voice full of emotion, "thanks for +your courage, thanks for your perseverance, thanks for your +superhuman efforts, through which we are permitted to set our feet +on this soil." + +"Captain," said Johnson, "we have only obeyed orders to you +alone belongs the honour." + +"No, no!" exclaimed Hatteras, with a violent outburst of +emotion, "to all of you as much as to me! To Altamont as much as +any of us, as much as the Doctor himself! Oh, let my heart break in +your hands, it cannot contain its joy and gratitude any longer." + +He grasped the hands of his brave companions as he spoke, and paced +up and down as if he had lost all self-control. + +"We have only done our duty as Englishmen," said Bell. + +"And as friends," added Clawbonny. + +"Yes, but all did not do it," replied Hatteras "some gave way. +However, we must pardon them--pardon both the traitors and those +who were led away by them. Poor fellows! I forgive them. You hear +me, Doctor?" + +"Yes," replied Clawbonny, beginning to be seriously uneasy at +his friend's excitement. + +"I have no wish, therefore," continued the captain, "that they +should lose the little fortune they came so far to seek. No, the +original agreement is to remain unaltered, and they shall be +rich--if they ever see England again." + +It would have been difficult not to have been touched by the +pathetic tone of voice in which Hatteras said this. + +"But, captain," interrupted Johnson, trying to joke, "one +would think you were making your will!" + +"Perhaps I am," said Hatteras, gravely. + +"And yet you have a long bright career of glory before you!" + +"Who knows?" was the reply. + +No one answered, and the Doctor did not dare to guess his meaning; +but Hatteras soon made them understand it, for presently he said, in +a hurried, agitated manner, as if he could scarcely command +himself-- + +"Friends, listen to me. We have done much already, but much yet +remains to be done." + +His companions heard him with profound astonishment. + +"Yes," he resumed, "we are close to the Pole, but we are not +on it." + +"How do you make that out," said Altamont. + +"Yes," replied Hatteras, with vehemence, "I said an Englishman +should plant his foot on the Pole of the world! I said it, and an +Englishman shall." + +"What!" cried Clawbonny. + +"We are still 45" from the unknown point," resumed Hatteras, +with increasing animation, "and to that point I shall go." + +"But it is on the summit of the volcano," said the Doctor. + +"I shall go." + +"It is an inaccessible cone!" + +"I shall go." + +"But it is a yawning fiery crater!" + +"I shall go." + +The tone of absolute determination in which Hatteras pronounced +these words it is impossible to describe. + +His friends were stupefied, and gazed in terror at the blazing +mountain. + +At last the Doctor recovered himself, and began to urge and entreat +Hatteras to renounce his project. He tried every means his heart +dictated, from humble supplications to friendly threats; but he +could gain nothing--a sort of frenzy had come over the captain, an +absolute monomania about the Pole. + +Nothing but violent measures would keep him back from destruction, +but the Doctor was unwilling to employ these unless driven to +extremity. + +He trusted, moreover, that physical impossibilities, insuperable +obstacles would bar his further progress, and meantime finding all +protestations were useless, he simply said-- + +"Very well, since you are bent on it, we'll go too." + +"Yes," replied Hatteras, "half-way up the mountain, but not a +step beyond. You know you have to carry back to England the +duplicate of the document in the cairn----" + +"Yes; but----" + +"It is settled," said Hatteras, in an imperious tone; "and +since the prayers of a friend will not suffice, the captain +commands." + +The Doctor did not insist longer, and a few minutes after the little +band set out, accompanied by Duk. + +It was about eight o'clock when they commenced their difficult +ascent; the sky was splendid, and the thermometer stood at 52 deg. + +Hatteras and his dog went first, closely followed by the others. + +"I am afraid," said Johnson to the Doctor. + +"No, no, there's nothing to be afraid of; we are here." + +This singular little island appeared to be of recent formation, and +was evidently the product of successive volcanic eruptions. The +rocks were all lying loose on the top of each other, and it was a +marvel how they preserved their equilibrium. Strictly speaking, the +mountain was only a heap of stones thrown down from a height, and +the mass of rocks which composed the island had evidently come out +of the bowels of the earth. + +The earth, indeed, may be compared to a vast cauldron of spherical +form, in which, under the influence of a central fire, immense +quantities of vapours are generated, which would explode the globe +but for the safety-valves outside. + +These safety-valves are volcanoes, when one closes another opens; +and at the Poles where the crust of the earth is thinner, owing to +its being flattened, it is not surprising that a volcano should be +suddenly formed by the upheaving of some part of the ocean-bed. + +The Doctor, while following Hatteras, was closely following all the +peculiarities of the island, and he was further confirmed in his +opinion as to its recent formation by the absence of water. Had it +existed for centuries, the thermal springs would have flowed from +its bosom. + +As they got higher, the ascent became more and more difficult, for +the flanks of the mountain were almost perpendicular, and it +required the utmost care to keep them from falling. Clouds of +scoriae and ashes would whirl round them repeatedly, threatening +them with asphyxia, or torrents of lava would bar their passage. In +parts where these torrents ran horizontally, the outside had become +hardened; while underneath was the boiling lava, and every step the +travellers took had first to be tested with the iron-tipped staff to +avoid being suddenly plunged into the scalding liquid. + +At intervals large fragments of red-hot rock were thrown up from the +crater, and burst in the air like bomb-shells, scattering the debris +to enormous distances in all directions. + +Hatteras, however, climbed up the steepest ascents with surprising +agility, disdaining the help of his staff. + +He arrived before long at a circular rock, a sort of plateau about +ten feet wide. A river of boiling lava surrounded it, except in one +part, where it forked away to a higher rock, leaving a narrow +passage, through which Hatteras fearlessly passed. + +Here he stopped, and his companions managed to rejoin him. He seemed +to be measuring with his eye the distance he had yet to get over. +Horizontally, he was not more than two hundred yards from the top of +the crater, but vertically he had nearly three times that distance +to traverse. + +The ascent had occupied three hours already. Hatteras showed no +signs of fatigue, while the others were almost spent. + +The summit of the volcano appeared inaccessible, and the Doctor +determined at any price to prevent Hatteras from attempting to +proceed. He tried gentle means first, but the captain's excitement +was fast becoming delirium. During their ascent, symptoms of +insanity had become more and more marked, and no one could be +surprised who knew anything of his previous history. + +"Hatteras," said the Doctor, "it is enough! we cannot go +further!" + +"Stop, then," he replied, in a strangely altered voice; "I am +going higher." + +"No, it is useless; you are at the Pole already." + +"No, no! higher, higher!" + +"My friend, do you know who is speaking to you? It is I, Doctor +Clawbonny." + +"Higher, higher!" repeated the madman. + +"Very well, we shall not allow it--that is all." + +He had hardly uttered the words before Hatteras, by a superhuman +effort, sprang over the boiling lava, and was beyond the reach of +his companions. + +A cry of horror burst from every lip, for they thought the poor +captain must have perished in that fiery gulf; but there he was safe +on the other side, accompanied by his faithful Duk, who would not +leave him. + +He speedily disappeared behind a curtain of smoke, and they heard +his voice growing fainter in the distance, shouting-- + +"To the north! to the north! to the top of Mount Hatteras! +Remember Mount Hatteras!" + +All pursuit of him was out of the question; it was impossible to +leap across the fiery torrent, and equally impossible to get round +it. Altamont, indeed, was mad enough to make an attempt, and would +certainly have lost his life if the others had not held him back by +main force. + +"Hatteras! Hatteras!" shouted the Doctor, but no response was +heard save the faint bark of Duk. + +At intervals, however, a glimpse of him could be caught through the +clouds of smoke and showers of ashes. Sometimes his head, sometimes +his arm appeared; then he was out of sight again, and a few minutes +later was seen higher up clinging to the rocks. His size constantly +decreased with the fantastic rapidity of objects rising upwards in +the air. In half-an-hour he was only half his size. + +The air was full of the deep rumbling noise of the volcano, and the +mountain shook and trembled. From time to time a loud fail was heard +behind, and the travellers would see some enormous rock rebounding +from the heights to engulph itself in the polar basin below. + +[Illustration: Hatteras did not even turn once to look back, but +marched straight on, carrying his country's flag attached to his +staff.--P.249] + +Hatteras did not even turn once to look back, but marched straight +on, carrying his country's flag attached to his staff. His +terrified friends watched every movement, and saw him gradually +decrease to microscopic dimensions, while Duk looked no larger than +a big rat. + +Then came a moment of intense anxiety, for the wind beat down on +them an immense sheet of flame, and they could see nothing but the +red glare. A cry of agony escaped the Doctor; but an instant +afterwards Hatteras reappeared, waving his flag. + +For a whole hour this fearful spectacle went on--an hour of battle +with unsteady loose rocks and quagmires of ashes, where the +foolhardy climber sank up to his waist. Sometimes they saw him hoist +himself up by leaning knees and loins against the rocks in narrow, +intricate winding paths, and sometimes he would be hanging on by +both hands to some sharp crag, swinging to and fro like a withered +tuft. + +[Illustration: ] + +At last he reached the summit of the mountain, the mouth of the +crater. Here the Doctor hoped the infatuated man would stop, at any +rate, and would, perhaps, recover his senses, and expose himself to +no more danger than the descent involved. + +Once more he shouted-- + +"Hatteras! Hatteras!" + +There was such a pathos of entreaty in his tone that Altamont felt +moved to his inmost soul. + +"I'll save him yet!" he exclaimed; and before Clawbonny could +hinder him, he had cleared with a bound the torrent of fire, and was +out of sight among the rocks. + +Meantime, Hatteras had mounted a rock which overhung the crater, and +stood waving his flag amidst showers of stones which rained down on +him. Duk was by his side; but the poor beast was growing dizzy in +such close proximity to the abyss. + +Hatteras balanced his staff in one hand, and with the other sought +to find the precise mathematical point where all the meridians of +the globe meet, the point on which it was his sublime purpose to +plant his foot. + +All at once the rock gave way, and he disappeared. A cry of horror +broke from his companions, and rang to the top of the mountain. +Clawbonny thought his friend had perished, and lay buried for ever +in the depths of the volcano. A second--only a second, though it +seemed an age--elapsed, and there was Altamont and the dog holding +the ill-fated Hatteras! Man and dog had caught him at the very +moment when he disappeared in the abyss. + +Hatteras was saved! Saved in spite of himself; and half-an-hour +later be lay unconscious in the arms of his despairing companions. + +When he came to himself, the Doctor looked at him in speechless +anguish, for there was no glance of recognition in his eye. It was +the eye of a blind man, who gazes without seeing. + +"Good heavens!" exclaimed Johnson; "he is blind!" + +"No," replied Clawbonny, "no! My poor friends, we have only +saved the body of Hatteras; his soul is left behind on the top of +the volcano. His reason is gone!" + +"Insane!" exclaimed Johnson and Altamont, in consternation. + +"Insane!" replied the Doctor, and the big tears ran down his +cheeks. + + +CHAPTER XXV. + + + +RETURN SOUTH. + + +Three hours after this sad denouement of the adventures of Captain +Hatteras, the whole party were back once more in the grotto. + +Clawbonny was asked his opinion as to what was best to be done. + +"Well, friends," he said, "we cannot stay longer in this +island; the sea is open, and we have enough provisions. We ought to +start at once, and get back without the least delay to Fort +Providence, where we must winter." + +"That is my opinion, too," said Altamont. "The wind is +favourable, so to-morrow we will get to sea." + +The day passed in profound dejection. The insanity of the captain +was a bad omen and when they began to talk over the return voyage, +their hearts failed them for fear. They missed the intrepid spirit +of their leader. + +However, like brave men, they prepared to battle anew with the +elements and with themselves, if ever they felt inclined to give way. + +[Illustration: ] + +Next morning they made all ready to sail, and brought the tent and +all its belongings on board. + +But before leaving these rocks, never to return, the Doctor carrying +out the intentions of Hatteras, had a cairn erected on the very spot +where the poor fellow had jumped ashore. It was made of great blocks +placed one on the top of the other, so as to be a landmark perfectly +visible while the eruptions of the volcano left it undisturbed. On +one of the side stones, Bell chiselled the simple inscription-- + +JOHN HATTERAS. + +The duplicate of the document attesting the discovery of the North +Pole was enclosed in a tinned iron cylinder, and deposited in the +cairn, to remain as a silent witness among those desert rocks. + +This done, the four men and the captain, a poor body without a soul, +set out on the return voyage, accompanied by the faithful Duk, who +had become sad and downcast. A new sail was manufactured out of the +tent, and about ten o'clock, the little sloop sailed out before +the wind. + +She made a quick passage, finding abundance of open water. It was +certainly easier to get away from the Pole than to get to it. + +But Hatteras knew nothing that was passing around him. He lay full +length in the boat, perfectly silent, with lifeless eye and folded +arms, and Duk lying at his feet. Clawbonny frequently addressed him, +but could elicit no reply. + +On the 15th they sighted Altamont Harbour, but as the sea was open +all along the coast, they determined to go round to Victoria Bay by +water, instead of crossing New America in the sledge. + +The voyage was easy and rapid. In a week they accomplished what had +taken a fortnight in the sledge, and on the 23rd they cast anchor in +Victoria Bay. + +As soon as the sloop was made fast, they all hastened to Fort +Providence. But what a scene of devastation met their eyes! +Doctor's House, stores, powder-magazine, fortifications, all had +melted away, and the provisions had been ransacked by devouring +animals. + +The navigators had almost come to the end of their supplies, and had +been reckoning on replenishing their stores at Fort Providence. The +impossibility of wintering there now was evident, and they decided +to get to Baffin's Bay by the shortest route. + +"We have no alternative," said Clawbonny; "Baffin's Bay is +not more than six hundred miles distant. We can sail as long as +there is water enough under our sloop, and get to Jones' Sound, +and then on to the Danish settlements." + +"Yes," said Altamont; "let us collect what food remains, and +be off at once." + +After a thorough search, a few cases of pemmican were found +scattered here and there, and two barrels of preserved meat, +altogether enough for six weeks, and a good supply of powder. It was +soon collected and brought on board, and the remainder of the day +was employed in caulking the sloop and putting her in good trim. + +Next morning they put out once more to sea. The voyage presented no +great difficulties, the drift-ice being easily avoided; but still +the Doctor thought it advisable, in case of possible delays, to +limit the rations to one-half. This was no great hardship, as there +was not much work for anyone to do, and all were in perfect health. + +Besides, they found a little shooting, and brought down ducks, and +geese, and guillemots, or sea turtledoves. Water they were able to +supply themselves with in abundance, from the fresh-water icebergs +they constantly fell in with as they kept near the coast, not daring +to venture out to the open sea in so frail a barque. + +At that time of the year, the thermometer was already constantly +below freezing point. The frequent rains changed to snow, and the +weather became gloomy. Each day the sun dipped lower below the +horizon, and on the 30th, for a few minutes, he was out of sight +altogether. + +However, the little sloop sailed steadily on without stopping an +instant. They knew what fatigues and obstacles a land journey +involved, if they should be forced to adopt it, and no time was to +be lost, for soon the open water would harden to firm ground; +already the young ice had begun to form. In these high latitudes +there is neither spring nor autumn; winter follows close on the +heels of summer. + +On the 31st the first stars glimmered overhead, and from that time +forwards there was continual fog, which considerably impeded +navigation. + +The Doctor became very uneasy at these multiplied indications of +approaching winter. He knew the difficulties Sir John Ross had to +contend with after he left his ship to try and reach Baffin's Bay, +and how, after all, he was compelled to return and pass a fourth +winter on board. It was bad enough with shelter and food and fuel, +but if any such calamity befell the survivors of the Forward, if +they were obliged to stop or return, they were lost. + +[Illustration: ] + +The Doctor said nothing of his anxieties to his companions, but only +urged them to get as far east as possible. + +At last, after thirty days' tolerably quick sailing, and after +battling for forty-eight hours against the increasing drift ice, and +risking the frail sloop a hundred times, the navigators saw +themselves blocked in on all sides. Further progress was impossible, +for the sea was frozen in every direction, and the thermometer was +only 15 deg. above zero. + +Altamont made a reckoning with scrupulous precision, and found they +were in 77 deg.15' latitude, and 85 deg. 2' longitude. + +"This is our exact position then," said the Doctor. "We are in +South Lincoln, just at Cape Eden, and are entering Jones' Sound. +With a little more good luck, we should have found open water right +to Baffin's Bay. But we must not grumble. If my poor Hatteras had +found as navigable a sea at first, he would have soon reached the +Pole. His men would not have deserted him, and his brain would not +have given way under the pressure of terrible trial." + +"I suppose, then," said Altamont, "our only course is to leave +the sloop, and get by sledge to the east coast of Lincoln." + +"Yes; but I think we should go through Jones' Sound, and get to +South Devon instead of crossing Lincoln." + +"Why?" + +"Because the nearer we get to Lancaster Sound, the more chance we +have of meeting whalers." + +"You are right; but I question whether the ice is firm enough to +make it practicable." + +"We'll try," replied Clawbonny. + +The little vessel was unloaded, and the sledge put together again. +All the parts were in good condition, so the next day the dogs were +harnessed, and they started off along the coast to reach the +ice-field; but Altamont's opinion proved right. They could not get +through Jones' Sound, and were obliged to follow the coast to +Lincoln. + +At last, on the 24th, they set foot on North Devon. + +"Now," said Clawbonny, "we have only to cross this, and get to +Cape Warender at the entrance to Lancaster Sound." + +But the weather became frightful, and very cold. The snow-storms and +tempests returned with winter violence, and the travellers felt too +weak to contend with them. Their stock of provisions was almost +exhausted, and rations had to be reduced now to a third, that the +dogs might have food enough to keep them in working condition. + +The nature of the ground added greatly to the fatigue. North Devon +is extremely wild and rugged, and the path across the Trauter +mountains is through difficult gorges. The whole party--men, and +dogs, and sledge alike--were frequently forced to stop, for they +could not struggle on against the fury of the elements. More than +once despair crept over the brave little band, hardy as they were, +and used to Polar sufferings. Though scarcely aware of it +themselves, they were completely worn out, physically and mentally. + +It was not till the 30th of August that they emerged from these wild +mountains into a plain, which seemed to have been upturned and +convulsed by volcanic action at some distant period. + +Here it was absolutely necessary to take a few days' rest, for the +travellers could not drag one foot after the other, and two of the +dogs had died from exhaustion. None of the party felt equal to put +up the tent, so they took shelter behind an iceberg. + +Provisions were now so reduced, that, notwithstanding their scanty +rations, there was only enough left for one week. Starvation stared +the poor fellows in the face. + +[Illustration: "Dead, frozen----"--P.262] + +Altamont, who had displayed great unselfishness and devotion to the +others, roused his sinking energies, and determined to go out and +find food for his comrades. + +He took his gun, called Duk, and went off almost unnoticed by the +rest. + +He had been absent about an hour, and only once during that time had +they heard the report of his gun; and now he was coming back +empty-handed, but running as if terrified. + +"What is the matter?" asked the Doctor. + +"Down there, under the snow!" said Altamont, speaking as if +scared, and pointing in a particular direction. + +"What?" + +"A whole party of men!" + +"Alive?" + +"Dead--frozen--and even--" + +He did not finish the sentence, but a look of unspeakable horror +came over his face. + +The Doctor and the others were so roused by this incident, that they +managed to get up and drag themselves after Altamont towards the +place he indicated. + +They soon arrived, at a narrow part at the bottom of a ravine, and +what a spectacle met their gaze! Dead bodies, already stiff, lay +half-buried in a winding-sheet of snow. A leg visible here, an arm +there, and yonder shrunken hands and rigid faces, stamped with the +expression of rage and despair. + +The Doctor stooped down to look at them more closely, but instantly +started back pale and agitated, while Duk barked ominously. + +"Horrible, horrible!" he said. + +"What is it?" asked Johnson. + +"Don't you recognize them?" + +"What do you mean?" + +"Look and see!" + +It was evident this ravine had been but recently the scene of a +fearful straggle with cold, and despair, and starvation, for by +certain horrible remains it was manifest that the poor wretches had +been feeding on human flesh, perhaps while still warm and +palpitating; and among them the Doctor recognized Shandon, Pen, and +the ill-fated crew of the Forward! Their strength had failed; +provisions had come to an end; their boat had been broken, perhaps +by an avalanche or engulphed in some abyss, and they could not take +advantage of the open sea; or perhaps they had lost their way in +wandering over these unknown continents. Moreover, men who set out +under the excitement of a revolt were not likely to remain long +united. The leader of a rebellion has but a doubtful power, and no +doubt Shandon's authority had been soon cast off. + +Be that as it might, it was evident the crew had come through +agonies of suffering and despair before this last terrible +catastrophe, but the secret of their miseries is buried with them +beneath the polar snows. + +"Come away! come away!" said the Doctor, dragging his companions +from the scene. Horror gave them momentary strength, and they +resumed their march without stopping a minute longer. + + +CHAPTER XXVI. + + + +CONCLUSION. + + +It would be useless to enumerate all the misfortunes which befell +the survivors of the expedition. Even the men themselves were never +able to give any detailed narrative of the events which occurred +during the week subsequent to the horrible discovery related in the +last chapter. However, on the 9th of September, by superhuman +exertions, they arrived at last at Cape Horsburg, the extreme point +of North Devon. + +They were absolutely starving. For forty-eight hours they had tasted +nothing, and their last meal had been off the flesh of their last +Esquimaux dog. Bell could go no further, and Johnson felt himself +dying. + +They were on the shore of Baffin's Bay, now half-frozen over; that +is to say, on the road to Europe, and three miles off the waves were +dashing noiselessly on the sharp edges of the ice-field. + +Here they must wait their chance of a whaler appearing; and for how +long? + +But Heaven pitied the poor fellows, for the very next day Altamont +distinctly perceived a sail on the horizon. Every one knows the +torturing suspense that follows such an appearance, and the +agonizing dread lest it should prove a false hope. The vessel seems +alternately to approach and recede, and too often just at the very +moment when the poor castaways think they are saved, the sail begins +to disappear, and is soon out of sight. + +[Illustration: Two hours later, after unheard-of exertions, the +survivors of the Forward were picked up by the Hans +Christian.--P.266] + +The Doctor and his companions went through all these experiences. +They had succeeded in reaching the western boundary of the ice-field +by carrying and pushing each other along, and they watched the ship +gradually fade away from view without observing them, in spite of +their loud cries for help. + +Just then a happy inspiration came to the Doctor. His fertile +genius, which had served him many a time in such good stead, +supplied him with one last idea! + +A floe driven by the current struck against the icefield, and +Clawbonny exclaimed, pointing to it-- + +"This floe!" + +His companions could not understand what he meant. + +"Let us embark on it! let us embark on it!" + +"Oh! Mr. Clawbonny, Mr. Clawbonny," said Johnson, pressing his +hand. + +Bell, assisted by Altamont, hurried to the sledge, and brought back +one of the poles, which he stuck fast on the ice like a mast, and +fastened it with ropes. The tent was torn up to furnish a sail, and +as soon as the frail raft was ready the poor fellows jumped upon it, +and sailed out to the open sea. + +Two hours later, after unheard-of exertions, the survivors of the +Forward were picked up by the Hans Christian, a Danish whaler, on +her way to Davis' Straits. They were more like spectres than human +beings, and the sight of their sufferings was enough. It told its +own tale; but the captain received them with such hearty sympathy, +and lavished on them such care and kindness, that he succeeded in +keeping them alive. + +Ten days afterwards, Clawbonny, Johnson, Bell, Altamont, and Captain +Hatteras landed at Korsam, in Zealand, an island belonging to +Denmark. They took the steamer to Kiel, and from there proceeded by +Altona and Hamburg to London, where they arrived on the 13th of the +same month, scarcely recovered after their long sufferings. + +The first care of Clawbonny was to request the Royal Geographical +Society to receive a communication from him. He was accordingly +admitted to the next + +[Illustration: --P.267] + +seance, and one can imagine the astonishment of the learned +assembly and the enthusiastic applause produced by the reading of +Hatteras' document. + +The English have a passion for geographical discovery, from the lord +to the cockney, from the merchant down to the dock labourer, and the +news of this grand discovery speedily flashed along the telegraph +wires, throughout the length and breadth of the kingdom. Hatteras +was lauded as a martyr by all the newspapers, and every Englishman +felt proud of him. + +The Doctor and his companions had the honour of being presented to +the Queen by the Lord Chancellor, and they were feted and +"lionized" in all quarters. + +The Government confirmed the names of "Queen's Island," +"Mount Hatteras," and "Altamont Harbour." + +Altamont would not part from his companions in misery and glory, but +followed them to Liverpool, where they were joyously welcomed back, +after being so long supposed dead and buried beneath the eternal +snows. + +But Dr. Clawbonny would never allow that any honour was due to +himself. He claimed all the merit of the discovery for his +unfortunate captain, and in the narrative of his voyage, published +the next year under the auspices of the Royal Geographical Society, +he places John Hatteras on a level with the most illustrious +navigators, and makes him the compeer of all the brave, daring men +who have sacrificed themselves for the progress of science. + +The insanity of this poor victim of a sublime passion was of a mild +type, and he lived quietly at Sten Cottage, a private asylum near +Liverpool, where the Doctor himself had placed him. He never spoke, +and understood nothing that was said to him; reason and speech had +fled together. The only tie that connected him with the outside +world was his friendship for Duk, who was allowed to remain with him. + +For a considerable time the captain had been in the habit of walking +in the garden for hours, accompanied by his faithful dog, who +watched him with sad, wistful eyes, but his promenade was always in +one direction in a particular part of the garden. When he got to the +end of this path, he would stop and begin to walk backwards. If +anyone stopped him he would point with his finger towards a certain +part of the sky, but let anyone attempt to turn him round, and he +became angry, while Duk, as if sharing his master's sentiments, +would bark furiously. + +The Doctor, who often visited his afflicted friend, noticed this +strange proceeding one day, and soon understood the reason of it. He +saw how it was that he paced so constantly in a given direction, as +if under the influence of some magnetic force. + +This was the secret: John Hatteras invariably walked towards the +North. + +The End. + + +End of the Voyage Extraordinaire + + + + + + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Field of Ice, by Jules Verne + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FIELD OF ICE *** + +***** This file should be named 9618.txt or 9618.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/9/6/1/9618/ + +Produced by PG Distributed Proofreaders + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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