South: the story of Shackleton's 1914-1917 expedition eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 531 pages of information about South.

South: the story of Shackleton's 1914-1917 expedition eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 531 pages of information about South.

     Out of whose womb came the ice? 
     And the hoary frost of Heaven, who hath gendered it? 
     The waters are hid as with a stone,
     And the face of the deep is frozen. [Job 38:29-30]

The other Bible, which Queen Alexandra had given for the use of the shore party, was down below in the lower hold in one of the cases when the ship received her death-blow.  Suitcases were thrown away; these were retrieved later as material for making boots, and some of them, marked “solid leather,” proved, to our disappointment, to contain a large percentage of cardboard.  The manufacturer would have had difficulty in convincing us at the time that the deception was anything short of criminal.

The pioneer sledge party, consisting of Wordie, Hussey, Hudson, and myself, carrying picks and shovels, started to break a road through the pressure-ridges for the sledges carrying the boats.  The boats, with their gear and the sledges beneath them, weighed each more than a ton.  The cutter was smaller than the whaler, but weighed more and was a much more strongly built boat.  The whaler was mounted on the sledge part of the Girling tractor forward and two sledges amidships and aft.  These sledges were strengthened with cross-timbers and shortened oars fore and aft.  The cutter was mounted on the aero-sledge.  The sledges were the point of weakness.  It appeared almost hopeless to prevent them smashing under their heavy loads when travelling over rough pressure-ice which stretched ahead of us for probably 300 miles.  After the pioneer sledge had started the seven dog teams got off.  They took their sledges forward for half a mile, then went back for the other sledges.  Worsley took charge of the two boats, with fifteen men hauling, and these also had to be relayed.  It was heavy work for dogs and men, but there were intervals of comparative rest on the backward journey, after the first portion of the load had been taken forward.  We passed over two opening cracks, through which killers were pushing their ugly snouts, and by 5 p.m. had covered a mile in a north-north-westerly direction.  The condition of the ice ahead was chaotic, for since the morning increased pressure had developed and the pack was moving and crushing in all directions.  So I gave the order to pitch camp for the night on flat ice, which, unfortunately, proved to be young and salty.  The older pack was too rough and too deeply laden with snow to offer a suitable camping-ground.  Although we had gained only one mile in a direct line, the necessary deviations made the distance travelled at least two miles, and the relays brought the distance marched up to six miles.  Some of the dog teams had covered at least ten miles.  I set the watch from 6 p.m. to 7 a.m., one hour for each man in each tent in rotation.

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South: the story of Shackleton's 1914-1917 expedition from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.