Of course, he now fell over the stool he had upset
before. Meanwhile there was a hissing sound,
and a stifling smell of paraffin. I was thinking
of making my escape through the door, when suddenly,
just as I suppose it happened on the first day of
Creation, in an instant there was light. But
it was a light that defies description; it dazzled
and hurt the eyes, it was so bright. It was perfectly
white and extremely agreeable — when one
was not looking at it. Evidently it was one of
the 200-candle Lux lamps. My admiration for Lindstrom
had now risen to enthusiasm. What would I not
have given to be able to make myself visible, embrace
him, and tell him what I thought of him! But that
could not be; I should not then be able to see life
at Framheim as it really was. So I stood still.
Lindstrom first tried to put straight what he had
upset in his struggle with the lamp. The spirit
had, of course, run out of the bottle when it fell,
and was now flowing all over the table. This
did not seem to make the slightest impression on him;
a little scoop with his hand, and it all landed on
Johansen’s clothes, which were lying close by.
This fellow seemed to be as well off for spirit as
for paraffin. Then he vanished into the kitchen,
but reappeared immediately with plates, cups, knives
and forks. Lindstrom’s laying of the breakfast-table
was the finest clattering performance I have ever
heard. If he wanted to put a spoon into a cup,
he did not do it in the ordinary way; no, he put down
the cup, lifted the spoon high in the air, and then
dropped it into the cup. The noise he made in
this way was infernal. Now I began to see why
Amundsen had got up so early; he wanted to escape
this process of laying the table, I expect. But
this gave me at once an insight into the good-humour
of the gentlemen in bed: if this had happened
anywhere else, Lindstrom would have had a boot at
his head. But here — they must have
been the most peaceable men in the world.
Meanwhile I had had time to look around me. Close
to the door where I was standing a pipe came down
to the floor. It struck me at once that this
was a ventilating-pipe. I bent down and put my
hand over the opening; there was not so much as a
hint of air to be felt. So this was the cause
of the bad atmosphere. The next things that caught
my eye were the bunks — nine of them:
three on the right hand and six on the left.
Most of the sleepers — if they could be
regarded as such while the table was being laid —
slept in bags — sleeping-bags. They
must have been warm enough. The rest of the space
was taken up by a long table, with small stools on
two sides of it. Order appeared to reign; most
of the clothes were hung up. Of course, a few
lay on the floor, but then Lindstrom had been running
about in the dark, and perhaps he had pulled them
down. On the table, by the window, stood a gramophone
and some tobacco-boxes and ash-trays. The furniture
was not plentiful, nor was it in the style of Louis