登陆注册
15425500000051

第51章 LETTER VIII.(14)

Numbers of whale vessels have thus been destroyed;some have been thrown upon the ice;some have had their hulls completely torn open,or divided in two,and others have been overrun by the ice,and buried beneath its heaped fragments.]and the first nip would settle the poor little schooner's business for ever.At the same time,it was quite possible that any progress we succeeded in making,instead of tending towards her liberation,might perhaps be only getting her deeper into the scrape.One thing was very certain,--Northing or Southing might be an even chance,but whatever EASTING we could make must be to the good;so I determined to choose whichever vein seemed to have most Easterly direction in it.Two or three openings of this sort from time to time presented themselves;but in every case,after following them a certain distance,they proved to be but CUL-DE-SACS,and we had to return discomfited.My great hope was in a change of wind.It was already blowing very fresh from the northward and eastward;and if it would but shift a few points,in all probability the ice would loosen as rapidly as it had collected.In the meantime,the only thing to do was to keep a sharp look-out,sail the vessel carefully,and take advantage of every chance of getting to the eastward.

It now grew colder than ever,--the distant land was almost hid with fog,--tattered dingy clouds came crowding over the heavens,--while Wilson moved uneasily about the deck,with the air of Cassandra at the conflagration of Troy.

It was Sunday,the 14th of July,and I had a momentary fancy that I could hear the sweet church bells in England pealing across the cold white flats which surrounded us.

At last,about five o'clock P.M.,the wind shifted a point or two,then flew round into the south-east.Not long after,just as I had expected,the ice evidently began to loosen,--a promising opening was reported from the mast-head a mile or so away on the port-bow,and by nine o'clock we were spanking along,at the rate of eight knots an hour,under a double-reefed mainsail and staysail--down a continually widening channel,between two wave-lashed ridges of drift ice.Before midnight,we had regained the open sea,and were standing away "to Norroway,To Norroway,over the faem."In the forenoon I had been too busy to have our usual Sunday church;but as soon as we were pretty clear of the ice I managed to have a short service in the cabin.

Of our run to Hammerfest I have nothing particular to say.The distance is eight hundred miles,and we did it in eight days.On the whole,the weather was pretty fair,though cold,and often foggy.One day indeed was perfectly lovely,--the one before we made the coast of Lapland,--without a cloud to be seen for the space of twenty-four hours;giving me an opportunity of watching the sun performing his complete circle overhead,and taking a meridian altitude at midnight.We were then in 70degrees 25'North latitude;i.e.,almost as far north as the North Cape;yet the thermometer had been up to 80degrees during the afternoon.

Shortly afterwards the fog came on again,and next morning it was blowing very hard from the eastward.This was the more disagreeable,as it is always very difficult,under the most favourable circumstances,to find one's way into any harbour along this coast,fenced off,as it is,from the ocean by a complicated outwork of lofty islands,which,in their turn,are hemmed in by nests of sunken rock,sown as thick as peas,for miles to seaward.There are no pilots until you are within the islands,and no longer want them,--no lighthouses or beacons of any sort;and all that you have to go by is the shape of the hill-tops;but as,on the clearest day,the outlines of the mountains have about as much variety as the teeth of a saw,and as on a cloudy day,which happens about seven times a week,you see nothing but the line of their dark roots,--the unfortunate mariner,who goes poking about for the narrow passage which is to lead him between the islands,--at the BACK of one of which a pilot is waiting for him,--will,in all probability,have already placed his vessel in a position to render that functionary's further attendance a work of supererogation.At least,I know it was as much surprise as pleasure that Iexperienced,when,after having with many misgivings ventured to slip through an opening in the monotonous barricade of mountains,we found it was the right channel to our port.If the king of all the Goths would only stick up a lighthouse here and there along the edge of his Arctic seaboard,he would save many an honest fellow a heart-ache.

[Figure:fig-p130.gif]

I must now finish this long letter.

Hammerfest is scarcely worthy of my wasting paper on it.

When I tell you that it is the most northerly town in Europe,I think I have mentioned its only remarkable characteristic.It stands on the edge of an enormous sheet of water,completely landlocked by three islands,and consists of a congregation of wooden houses,plastered up against a steep mountain;some of which being built on piles,give the notion of the place having slipped down off the hill half-way into the sea.Its population is so and so,--its chief exports this and that;for all which,see Mr.Murray's "Handbook,"where you will find all such matters much more clearly and correctly set down than I am likely to state them.At all events,it produces milk,cream--NOT butter--salad,and bad potatoes;which is what we are most interested in at present.To think that you should be all revelling this very moment in green-peas and cauliflowers!I hope you don't forget your grace before dinner.I will write to you again before setting sail for Spitzbergen.

同类推荐
  • 儿科醒

    儿科醒

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Magic and Real Detectives

    Magic and Real Detectives

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 张太史明道杂志

    张太史明道杂志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 浔阳记

    浔阳记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 送皇甫冉往安宜

    送皇甫冉往安宜

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 女配逆袭,男主快到碗里来

    女配逆袭,男主快到碗里来

    悲剧往往就发生在一些普通人身上。虽然说纪娆晓也算普通人,不过老天,这样做有点太过了吧!不仅让她出了车祸,还要让她被这个所谓的女配逆袭系统奴役!
  • “给皇贵妃娘娘请安”!

    “给皇贵妃娘娘请安”!

    他和她是命中注定的爱人,却在阴差阳错的情况下出了一点小状况。为了她,他可以抛弃整片江山,可是这时侯的她却是对他恨之入骨。她是他从小就等候的恋人,却老是因为种种礼仪规矩给阻隔,他们真的命不该在一起吗,到底为什么?
  • 现世尸王

    现世尸王

    活万千岁月,见证历史沧桑;曾经为将为王,威势震天;岁月如水,杳无生息;他只想安静做个小警察,平淡做个好老师,可一场血腥风雨的来临,把其再次卷入风云江湖,一代尸王,再现王者本色!
  • 矢武之神

    矢武之神

    万年前神祗不在,魔廷掌天,终生皆尽蝼蚁!万年后且看血裔少年手执无上谛剑傲视真天!
  • 雨后紫色蓝N世纪之恋

    雨后紫色蓝N世纪之恋

    是你说过,就算负尽天下苍生,也不会负我,如今一剑穿心,怎么原谅?正邪始终不两立,他,狱中之王,魔界之神,奉命杀人!她,灵界之女,血,染红了天地。嗜血狂魔,倾尽所有只为她。中毒?还是忘情蛊!关她什么事?什么?只有她才能解,好吧!就当做善事好了!不过为什么把脸凑那么来,这不是要打kiss的节奏吗?……
  • 感谢在我最美的时光遇见你

    感谢在我最美的时光遇见你

    在贴吧发了一半的文,继续也好,重新开始也好,总归是要写完,才能对得起自己。感谢在我最美的时光遇见你,有缘也好,命中注定也好,既然相遇了,就好好的走下去吧
  • 心忘则亡

    心忘则亡

    随着你离去,快乐渺无音讯。随往事淡去,随梦境睡去。随你麻痹的心逐渐远去。你看我多乖多听话,难以承受的诺言,只有等下一世兑现。
  • 天降兽皇

    天降兽皇

    说她幸运但她又很悲催,说悲催又比任何人都幸运。她前世是个大小姐,她今生还是个大小姐。巧的是都姓陆,巧的是身边都有帅哥,巧的是命运都很悲催。老天爷玩了她两次,都是先把她捧入云端最后狠狠摔向谷底。前世里没有一句抱怨的话的她,被人狠狠害死,今生没有一句懦弱的话的她,被命运渐渐戏耍。“凭什么?”最应该说这句话的人是她,但是她身边的人几乎都对她说过这句话,可是明明她没有做什么。她的幸运,她的霉运在这里演绎成了她的命运,这个叫陆露儿的身份是她永生永世最后一次为人的身份。
  • 锁金瓯

    锁金瓯

    这是一个严师欺压门下唯一女学生多年,一朝被反虐的故事。慕容琤道:“你选婿怎么那么多要求?胖的不要,老的不要,那你到底要什么样的?”她很认真地考虑了下,“要看合不合眼缘,太年轻的处世不老到,为人轻浮又不好。”他敛尽了笑意,哦了声,“要入你的法眼果然不易,那么我呢?我这样的可行?”
  • 天降魂狐

    天降魂狐

    世界一分为二,生存在正面世界一无所知的人族,而反面世界的龙族、天族、灵族与傀族却是暗流涌动。灵族大陆一出生便被安上“未来族长”头衔的“魂狐一族”吴族长子——吴邪。年幼无知的他,却被卷入各种势力斗争,灵族大陆与魂狐一族为保他周全,竟选择将一无所知的他丢入完全陌生的正面世界。传送过程中,本就年幼的吴邪意外幼化,退化成为婴儿,不知身在何处、尚在襁褓中的他与一直陪伴他的灵猫“镜子”被一个小小年纪却穿着粉色衬衫的“漂亮哥哥”捡回了家,与一个爱戴大墨镜的痞子哥哥和一脸面瘫的冰山哥哥开始了漫长的养成之旅。身为灵族骄子的他在人类世界又会发生什么呢?