would perhaps pray all the powers of goodness to preserve
them from such surroundings, does not counteract the
full validity of this rule. To an overwhelming
majority of our fellow-men Framheim will certainly
appear as one of those spots on our planet where they
would least of all wish to find themselves —
a God-forsaken, out-of-the-way hole that could offer
nothing but the very climax of desolation, discomfort,
and boredom. To us nine, who stood on the gangway
ready to leave this place, things appeared somewhat
differently. That strong little house, that now
lay entirely hidden beneath the snow behind Mount Nelson,
had for a whole year been our home, and a thoroughly
good and comfortable home it was, where after so many
a hard day’s work we had found all the rest
and quiet we wanted. Through the whole Antarctic
winter — and it is a winter —
those four walls had protected us so well that many
a poor wretch in milder latitudes would have envied
us with all his heart, if he could have seen us.
In conditions so hard that every form of life flies
headlong from them, we had lived on at Framheim undisturbed
and untroubled, and lived, be it said, not as animals,
but as civilized human beings, who had always within
their reach most of the good things that are found
in a well-ordered home. Darkness and cold reigned
outside, and the blizzards no doubt did their best
to blot out most traces of our activity, but these
enemies never came within the door of our excellent
dwelling; there we shared quarters with light and
warmth and comfort. What wonder was it that this
spot exercised a strong attraction upon each of us
at the moment when we were to turn our backs upon
it for good? Outside the great world beckoned
to us, that is true; and it might have much to offer
us that we had had to forego for a long time; but
in what awaited us there was certainly a great deal
that we would gladly have put off for as long as possible.
When everyday life came with its cares and worries,
it might well happen that we should look back with
regret to our peaceful and untroubled existence at
Framheim.
However, this feeling of melancholy was hardly so
strong that we could not all get over it comparatively
quickly. Judging by the faces, at any rate, one
would have thought that joy was the most predominant
mood. And why not? It was no use dwelling
on the past, however attractive it might seem just
then, and as to the future, we had every right to
expect the best of it. Who cared to think of coming
troubles? No one. Therefore the Fram was
dressed with flags from stem to stern, and therefore
faces beamed at each other as we said good-bye to
our home on the Barrier. We could leave it with
the consciousness that the object of our year’s
stay had been attained, and, after all, this consciousness
was of considerably more weight than the thought that
we had been so happy there. One thing that in
the course of our two years’ association on
this expedition contributed enormously to making time