,.'^.. 
 
 
 IMAGE EVALUATION 
 TEST TARGET (MT-3) 
 
 
 /. 
 
 
 
 1.0 
 
 I.I 
 
 l££|Z8 |2.5 
 
 ^ m 
 
 ^ 1^ 12.0 
 
 11.25 nil 1.4 
 
 1.6 
 
 
 7] 
 
 ^>. 
 
 >> 
 
 
 ^ W^l^^' 
 
 
 /: 
 
 ■v/ 
 
 '/ 
 
 Photographic 
 
 Sciences 
 Corporation 
 
 IZ WEST MAIN STREET 
 
 WEBSTER, N.Y. MS80 
 
 (716) 872-4503 
 
 ^^ 
 
 V 
 
 ^ 
 
 
 6^ 
 

 CIHM/fCMH 
 
 Microfiche 
 
 Series. 
 
 CIHIVI/ICIVIH 
 Collection de 
 microfiches. 
 
 Canadian Institute for Historical Microreproductions / Institut Canadian de microreproductions historiques 
 
 C'"- 
 
Technical and Bibliographic Notes/Notes techniques et bibliographiques 
 
 The c 
 to th( 
 
 The Institute has attempted to obtain the best 
 original copy available for filming. Features of this 
 copy which may be bibliographically unique, 
 which may alter any of the images in the 
 reproduction, or which may significantly change 
 the usual method of 'liming, are checked below. 
 
 D 
 
 D 
 
 a 
 
 D 
 D 
 
 D 
 
 D 
 
 Coloured covers/ 
 Couverture de couleur 
 
 I I Covers damaged/ 
 
 Couverture endommagie 
 
 Covers restored and/or laminated/ 
 Couverture restaurde et/ou pellicul^e 
 
 I I Cover title missing/ 
 
 Le titre de couverture manque 
 
 □ Coloured maps/ 
 Cartes giographiques en couleur 
 
 Coloured ink (i.e. other than blue or black)/ 
 Encre de couleur (i.e. autre que bleue ou noire) 
 
 Coloured plates and/or illustrations/ 
 Planches et/ou illustrations en couleur 
 
 Bound with other material/ 
 Relii avec d'autres documents 
 
 Tight binding may cause shadows or distortion 
 along interior margin/ 
 
 Lareliure serr6e peut causer de I'ombre ou de la 
 distortion ie long de la marge int6rieure 
 
 Blank leaves added during restoration may 
 appear within the text. Whenever possible, these 
 have been omitted from filming/ 
 II se peut que certaines pages blanches ajouties 
 lors d'une restauration apparaissent dans le texte. 
 mais, lorsque cela 6tait possible, ces pages n'ont 
 pas 6t6 film^es. 
 
 Additional comments:/ 
 Commentaires suppl6mentaires; 
 
 L'Institut a microfilm^ le meilleur exemplaire 
 qu'il lui a itd possible de se procurer. Les details 
 de cet exemplaire qui sont peut-dtre uniques du 
 point de vue bibliographique, qui peuvent modifier 
 une image reproduite, ou qui peuvent exiger une 
 modification dans la mdthode normale de filmage 
 sont indiqu^s ci-dessous. 
 
 I I Coloured pages/ 
 
 K 
 
 This item is filmed at the reduction ratio checked below/ 
 
 Ce document est film6 au taux de reduction indiqu6 ci-dessous. 
 
 Pages de couleur 
 
 Pages damaged/ 
 Pages endommagies 
 
 Pages restored and/oi 
 
 Pages restaurdes et/ou pellicul^es 
 
 I I Pages damaged/ 
 
 I ] Pages restored and/or laminated/ 
 
 Theli 
 possi 
 of th< 
 filmir 
 
 Orlgh 
 begin 
 the Is 
 sion, 
 other 
 first I 
 slon, 
 or illi 
 
 \71 Pages discoloured, stained or foxed/ 
 /\\ Pages d^color^es, tachetdes ou piqu6es 
 
 I I Pages detached/ 
 
 Pages d^tachdes 
 
 Shovythrough/ 
 Transparence 
 
 Quality of prir 
 
 Qualitd in^gale de I'impression 
 
 Includes supplementary materie 
 Comprend du matdriel supplementaire 
 
 Only edition available/ 
 Seule Edition disponible 
 
 |T71 Shovythrough/ 
 
 I I Quality of print varies/ 
 
 I I Includes supplementary material/ 
 
 I I Only edition available/ 
 
 Pages wholly or partially obscured by errata 
 slips, tissues, etc., have been refilmed to 
 ensure the best possible image/ 
 Les pages totalement ou partiellement 
 obscurcies par un feuillet d'errata, une pelure, 
 etc., ont 6t6 filmdes d nouveau de facon d 
 obtenir la meilleure image possible. 
 
 10X 
 
 
 
 
 14X 
 
 
 
 
 18X 
 
 
 
 22X 
 
 
 
 
 26X 
 
 
 
 
 30X 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 >/ 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 12X 
 
 
 
 
 16X 
 
 
 
 
 20X 
 
 
 
 24X 
 
 
 
 
 28X 
 
 
 
 
 32X 
 
 
 Theli 
 shall 
 TINU 
 whici 
 
 Maps 
 
 differ 
 
 entire 
 
 begin 
 
 right 
 
 requii 
 
 methi 
 
The copy filmed here has been reproduced thanks 
 to the generosity of: 
 
 Library of the Public 
 Archives of Canada 
 
 L'exemplaire fllm6 fut reproduit grflce d la 
 gAn6rosit6 de: 
 
 La bibliothdque des Archives 
 publiques du Canada 
 
 The images appearing here are the best quality 
 possible considering the condition and legibility 
 of the original copy and in keeping with the 
 filming contract specifications. 
 
 Original copies In printed paper covers are filmed 
 beginning with the front cover and ending on 
 the last page with a printed or illustrated impres- 
 sion, or the back cover when appropriate. All 
 other original copies are filmed beginning on the 
 first page with a printed or illustrated Impres- 
 sion, and ending on the last page with a printed 
 or illustrated impression. 
 
 The last recorded frame on each microfiche 
 shall contain the symbol — ^ (meaning "CON- 
 TINUED"), or the symbol y (meaning "END"), 
 whichever applies. 
 
 Maps, plates, charts, etc., may be filmed at 
 different reduction ratios. Those too large to be 
 entirely included in one exposure are filmed 
 beginning in the upp^r left hand corner, left to 
 right and top to bottom, as many frames as 
 required. The following diagrams illustrate the 
 method: 
 
 1 
 
 2 
 
 3 
 
 Les images sulvantes ont 6t6 reproduites avec le 
 plus grand soln, compte tenu de la condition et 
 de Iq nettet6 de l'exemplaire film6, et en 
 conformity avec les conditions doj contrat de 
 filmage. 
 
 Les exemplaires origlnaux dont la couverture en 
 papier est imprim6e sont film^s en commen^ant 
 par le premier plat et en terminant soit par la 
 dernidra page qui comporte une empreinte 
 d'Impression ou d'illustration, soit par la second 
 plat, salon le cas. Tous les autres exemplaires 
 origlnaux sont film6s en commen^ant par ia 
 premidre page qui comporte une empreinte 
 d'Impression ou d'illustration ta en terminant par 
 la dernidre page qui comporte une telle 
 empreinte. 
 
 Un des symboles suivants apparaftra sur ia 
 dernidre Image de cheque microfiche ^elon ie 
 cas: le symbole — ^ rignifie "A SUIVRE", le 
 symbols V signifie "FIN". 
 
 Les cartes, planches, tableaux, etc., peuvent dtre 
 film6s d des taux de reduction diffdrents. 
 Lorsque le document est trop grand pour §tre 
 reproduit en un seul clichd, 11 est film6 A partir 
 de Tangle sup6rleur gauche, de gauche d droite, 
 et de haut en bas, en prenant le nombre 
 d'images ndcessaire. Les diagrammes suivants 
 iliustrent la mdthode. 
 
 1 
 
 2 
 
 3 
 
 4 
 
 5 
 
 6 
 
fj 
 
 s 
 
 o 
 
 ^ 
 
 
 |4 
 
 « 
 
 fe 
 ^ 
 
 @ 
 
 ea 
 
 K 
 
L :i 
 
 f 
 
JVARRATIVE 
 
 or 
 
 AN EXPEDITION IN H.M.S. TERROR, 
 
 ^3 
 
 ONDERTAKKW WITH A V«W TO 
 
 GEOGRAPHICAL DISCOVERY 
 
 OK 
 
 THE ARCTIC SHORES, 
 
 IN THE YEARS 
 
 1836-7. 
 BY CAPTAIN BACK, R.N. 
 
 COMMANDER OF THE EXPEDITION. 
 
 ILLUSTRATED BY A MAP AND PLATES. 
 
 LONDON: 
 JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET. 
 
 MDCCCXXXVIir. 
 
 fL^tfitiie;^? ^ Uiiy\m^ 'Mt, \\ 
 
' LONDOK: 
 
 Printed by A. Spottiswoode, 
 New-Street- Square. 
 
TO 
 THE RIGHT HONOURABLE 
 
 LORD GLEJVELG, 
 
 HER majesty's principal SECRETARY OF STATE 
 FOR THE COLONIES, 
 &c. &c. &c. 
 
 THE FOLLOWING NARRATIVE 
 
 OF AN EXPEDITION TO THE ARCTIC SHORES, 
 
 IS. 
 
 WITH SINCERE RESPECT, 
 
 IlEDICATED 
 
 BY HIS lordship's MOST OBEDIENT / • 
 
 VERY HUUBLE SERVANT, 
 
 GEORGE BACK. 
 
■ ^Sa^w ^iS B.aMy- d 
 
 CONTENTS. 
 
 Preliminary Chapter 
 
 Page 1 
 
 CHAPTER I. 
 
 Departure from England. - Cape Farewell. - Porpoise, and 
 Gulls -Driftwood with Roots and Bark. -Lore the 
 Vicmity of Cape Farewell. - Icebergs. - Cou^e novel 
 Descrrrt -Resolution I.lani - WhirTpool l' 
 Uescry 1 wo Vessels. — Dreary Asnect of th. « 
 
 — Vessel moored to an Icebere — rr«„, "^'faa"on. 
 
 vered. - Deviation in Co^pa^e.. _ Trinity w"h°" 
 obhged to heave-to.- Whak, seen.- Ship imb^ddeH' 
 Ice. -Baffin and Southampton Islands. _ Perirstnl 
 Uo„. - Whi.e_ Whaies. - Winter IsIandlT wl; 
 
 17 
 
 CHAP. II. 
 Steer for Soutiampt™ Island. - Conjectures respecting the 
 
 Icebound in Sight of Land. - Wind veers to SnLh 7 
 
 Prospect of Release — rx^„ ^"/^^'^^/^ ^^^"th-west. 
 
 ^ xveiease. — Hopes disappointed. ~ Ship 
 
vi 
 
 CONTENTS. 
 
 driven nearer Land. — Mr. Gore Hhoots a Fox. — Ship in 
 extreme Peril. — Frightful Increaae of Pressure. — Pro- 
 vidential Delivery. — Exploring Expedition. — A Dock 
 cut in the lee. — Considtution of OlHcers. — Rapid De- 
 struction of the Floe. — Bow of the Ship split. — Hopes 
 of progressing baffled. ... Page 77 
 
 CHAP. HI. 
 
 Lane of Water discovered. — Prospect of wintering on the 
 Ice. — Violent Concussions experienced. — Employment 
 of the Crew. — Erection of an Observatory.— Favour- 
 able Position of the Ship. — Disruption by a Gale. — 
 Expansion of open Water. — Offict-rs build Snow Houses. 
 — Excursions to Land. — An exploring Party. — Experi- 
 ment of wearing a Mask. — Survey of a Harbour.—. 
 Pass Cape Comfort. — Risk of being crushed. — Robbed 
 by Foxes and Shrimps. — Thermometer rises. — Huge 
 Mass of Ice. — Amusements. — Thermometers tested.— 
 Accident to the Carpenter. — School for the Crew. — 
 Curious Phenomenon. — Register Thermometer. — Rein« 
 deer killed. — Fearful Storm. — Floe cracks. - 119 
 
 CHAP. IV. 
 
 Extraordinary Disruption. — Anxieties. — Rapid Change. — 
 Commotion. ■— Masquerade. — Results of Commotion. — 
 Temperatures. — Invalids. — Anxiety for the Floe. — 
 Advantages of Situation. — Death of a Sailor. — Reflec- 
 tions. — Desolation of the Land. — Curious Meteor. — Land 
 Excursions. — Tracks of Animals. — Increase of Sick. — 
 Precautions. — Phenomena. — Invalids. —Spirits of Crew 
 improve. — Weather. — Grinding of Ice. — Health. — 
 Under-Currents. — Floe diminishes. — Phenomena of Ice. 
 — Callosity of Limbs. — Intensely cold. — Influence of 
 Sun. — More Limpers. — Death of Mr. Donaldson. — Fine 
 Weather. — The Coast. — Soundings as before. — Set 
 of Current. — Heavy Gale. — Gale abates. — Holes of 
 Water. - - - - - - 177 
 
CONTENTS. 
 
 Vii 
 
 hip ill 
 -Pro- 
 Dock 
 1 De- 
 li opea 
 ^ge 77 
 
 in tho 
 
 jrmcnt 
 
 ivour- 
 
 ile. — 
 
 ouses. 
 
 xperi- 
 
 ur. — 
 
 obbed 
 
 Huge 
 
 ed.— 
 
 iVf. — 
 
 Ilein- 
 119 
 
 ;e.— 
 )n. — 
 »e. — 
 eflec- 
 Land 
 
 Crew 
 h.— 
 flee, 
 ce of 
 ■Fine 
 - Set 
 ?s of 
 177 
 
 CHAP, V. 
 
 Valentine's Day. — Floe damaged. — Outli no of Coast. — 
 Alarming Symptoms. — Chaotic Commotion. — Tumult 
 ceases, — Clearing Deck. — Dovekie shot. — Awful I'eril. 
 
 — Grandeur of Scene, — Expectation of Crisis. — Havoc 
 spreads — Desolation. — Ship remains nipped. — Turmoil. 
 
 — Set of Ice. — Ship rights. — lee Hills. _ Bolts, &c. 
 loosened by Pressure of Ice. — Flight of Hirds. — Nautical 
 Artists. — Divine Service. -- Blows a Gale. — Imminent 
 Peril. — St. Patrick's Day. — Ice fluctuates. - Sir J. Gor- 
 don's Bay. -Peril of Two Sailors. ~ Flock of Ducks, 
 and White Bear. — Death of a Sailor. — Baffin's Obser- 
 vations. — Flocks of Loons. — Improvement in Crew's 
 Health. — Diminution of Snow. — Mr. Gore Snow- 
 '^"°^- • - • - Page 217 
 
 CHAP. VI. 
 
 Feast of Loons. — Mr. Vaughan's Path. — Perilous Ex- 
 cursion. — White Whales. - Carpenters busy under- 
 mining Ship. _ Result of Labours. ~ Polar Expeditions 
 
 — Narwhales. — Report of Health. - Cannonading Floe. 
 
 — Cheerful Labours in sawing away the Ice.— Employ- 
 ment for Armourer. — Impedimenf s from Calves. — New 
 Rent discovered. — Report of the Ship's Drift. — Ship 
 bursts her Bonds. - Novelty of Scene. - Stern-post shat- 
 tered — Officers' Opinion in favour of Return to England. 
 
 — Awkwardness of Situation. — Expedition frustrated.' 
 
 — Ship's Draught increased, — Visited by Esquimaux. — 
 Ship struck by a Floe. _ Shattered Condition of Ship. - 
 Sad for England.— Arrival at Chatham. - - 343 
 
 Appendix 
 
 4.49 
 
NARRATIVE 
 
 OP AN 
 
 EXPEDITION 
 
 IN 
 
 HIS MAJESTY'S SHIP TERROR, 
 
 IN THE YEARS 1836-7. 
 
 PRELi: VARY CHAPTER. 
 
 The interest which had been excited by the 
 former Expeditions through the interior and 
 along the coast of North America, and the sue 
 cessive information gained on every trial, induced 
 the Geographical Society to draw the attention 
 of Government to a proposed expedition for 
 completing the coast line between Regent's 
 Inlet and Point Turnagain. The project was 
 entertamed, and I had the honour to be selected 
 to carry it into execution. 
 
 On May 13th, 1836, I received my official 
 appointment to His Majesty's ship Terror 
 then lying alongside the Hussar hulk, at 
 Cliatham. She had been recently doubled, and 
 m every respect strengthened with the most 
 massive iron and copper fastenings, for a voyage 
 to the Polar Sea. Some alterations were now 
 
 li 
 
2 
 
 PRELIMINARY CHAPTER. 
 
 made to accommodate her to the new service on 
 which she was destined, and a leak, which had 
 been discovered on a short trip which she had 
 made to Hull, was effectually repaired. She 
 was also provided with a warming apparatus, 
 whicli however, though probably well calcu- 
 lated for more temperate climates, was not 
 found to answer its intended purpose in the 
 North. 
 
 It may be briefly described as a purely wrought 
 iron pipe two hundred and forty feet long, an 
 inch in diameter, and five eighths of an inch 
 bore, extending nearly round the ship and the 
 midship cabins ; the solution of strong brine, with 
 which it was filled by the aid of a forcing-pump, 
 being kept hot by means of a furnace, strongly 
 built in brick within an iron tank or casing, in 
 the interior of which several coils of pipe wound 
 round. To guard against accidents, there were 
 expansion tubes abaft the first bend coming from 
 the furnace, which, in case of an excess of heat, 
 became filled, and so prevented the bursting of 
 the apparatus. 
 
 The advantage proposed to be gained over the 
 well-tried method adopted by Sir E. Parry, was 
 a diminution in the consumption of coals, a 
 bushel being considered quite enough for a 
 day's use. How far this calculation would have 
 been borne out by fact, there was no opportunity 
 
 1^1^- 
 
PRELIMINARY CHAPTER. 3 
 
 Of proving; but it is only justice to Mr. Heath. 
 
 one of the firm by which the apparatus was 
 
 provided, to state, that he himself declared, " he 
 
 should have scarcely recommended so novel a 
 
 scheme on a service such as ours, where, if an 
 
 accident occurred, there would be considerable 
 
 d^culty m makmg the necessary reparations." 
 
 _ Xhree capacious, but comparatively light, 
 
 whale boats were buUt, and an equal number of 
 
 sledges with iron runners, so contrived as to 
 
 whin r f *' """^ °' ^ '^^S'- -Wch, 
 when placed on wheels adapted to the con- 
 trivance, were expected, and could not fail, to be 
 most useful for the conveyance of stores. &c. over 
 the land. 
 
 For food at once the most portable and sub- 
 stantial, upwards of three thousand pounds weight 
 otpemmican were manufactured from the choicest 
 meat, with pimento and other spices mixed, to 
 make it more palatable. In addition to this, 
 there was a liberal supply of preserved meats and 
 soups, together with a great variety of anti- 
 scorbutics ; warm clothing to provide against the 
 cold of winter, such as fur caps, carpet or cloth 
 boots, with cork next the feet, and bear skin 
 blankets, &c. : but as I experienced some trouble 
 m makmg out a list of what was actually i„. 
 dispensable, it may be of future use to insert it 
 here : — 
 
4 
 
 PRELIMINARY CHAPTER. 
 
 
 Sea boots 
 Cloth ditto, with 
 
 cork soles 
 Ankle shoes 
 Pea jackets 
 Monkey jackets - 
 Flushing trousers, 
 
 lined with baize 
 
 WARM CLOTHING. 
 1 SO pair. 
 
 132 — 
 130 — 
 131 
 65 
 
 130 — 
 
 Red flannel shirts 130 
 
 Wadmil hose - 185 pair. 
 
 Swanskin drawers 130 
 
 Comfortables - 195 
 
 Welsh wigs - 130 
 
 Fur caps - - 63 
 
 Green crape - 100 yds. 
 
 Bear skin blankets 70 
 
 PROVISION FOR EIGHTEEN MONTHS' CON- 
 SUMPTION. 
 
 Bread 
 
 Spirits - 
 
 Brandy 
 
 Wine 
 
 Salt beef 
 
 Salt pork 
 
 Flour - 
 
 Suet - 
 
 Raisins 
 
 Tea 
 
 Oatmeal 
 
 Peas 
 
 Chocolate 
 
 Sugar 
 
 Do. for lime juice 
 
 Butter 
 
 Cheese - 
 
 Vinegar 
 
 Concent'' do. 
 
 Soap 
 
 Tobacco 
 
 Fresh beef and 
 
 live stock for 
 Lemon juice 
 Pemmican 
 Candles, wax 
 
 and tallow 
 Pemmican, with 
 
 currants 
 Preserved meats - 
 Vegetable soups - 
 
 35,860 lbs. 
 
 Preserved 
 
 
 1519 gals. 
 
 vegetables 
 
 1320 lbs. 
 
 100 — 
 
 Potatoes 
 
 4480 
 
 49i — 
 
 Carrots in sand - 
 
 lOcao^vs. 
 
 1634 lbs. 
 
 Molasses 
 
 800 lbs. 
 
 3280 
 
 Essence of 
 
 
 9896 — 
 
 spruce 
 
 50 pots. 
 
 1652 — 
 
 Do. do. 
 
 50 —. 
 
 728 — 
 
 Macaroni 
 
 1200 lbs. 
 
 613 — 
 
 Rice 
 
 1541 — 
 
 82 — 
 
 Pickled cabbage - 
 
 125 gals. 
 
 145 — 
 
 Walnuts 
 
 50 — 
 
 1951 — 
 
 Horse radish - 
 
 50 — 
 
 3107 
 
 Onions - 
 
 50 -- 
 
 798 
 
 Mixed pickles - 
 
 100 — 
 
 337 — 
 
 Cranberries 
 
 100 — 
 
 450 
 
 Salt 
 
 336 lbs. 
 
 203 
 
 Mustard 
 
 375 — 
 
 50 
 
 Pepper 
 
 60 — 
 
 1200 
 
 Normandy 
 
 
 1001 
 
 pippins 
 
 55 — 
 
 
 Arrow root 
 
 30 — 
 
 35 days 
 
 Prepared barley 
 
 24 — 
 
 798 lbs. 
 
 Portable soup - 
 
 20 — 
 
 4874 — 
 
 Coals - 
 
 112 tons. 
 
 
 Oil 
 
 101 gals. 
 
 3124 — 
 
 Cooking appara- 
 tus for boats 
 
 
 1080 — 
 
 complete 
 
 3 
 
 9001 — 
 
 Pyroligneous ether 120 pts. 
 
 372 qts. 
 
 
 
PBEMMINAKY CHAPTER. 
 
 s 
 
 These together with a complete set of anti- 
 madewed tents, oiled-cloth floorings and covers 
 
 supply of fo,rf,„g^,eees, rifles, and ammunition, 
 made our outfit of the most perfect description. 
 
 Artificial horizon 
 Marine barometer 
 Azimuth compasses 
 Alexander's steering do. 
 Boat compasses 
 Kater's compasses 
 Dipping needle 
 Case of instruments 
 Massey's logs 
 Sounding machines 
 Hygrometer 
 Case of bar magnets 
 Measuring chain 
 
 I 
 
 We were also provided with Fraser's fire 
 hearth and coppers, which, besides throwing out 
 more heat than those commonly in use, had the 
 decided advantage of consuming less fuel, and 
 were therefore particularly desirable in a ship 
 with a limited quantity of coals. 
 
 Most of the oflicers, and all the men, were 
 volunteers ; the whole number amounting to 
 sixty, m the following proportions • - 
 
 1 Magnetic intensity in- 
 
 1 strument 
 
 2 Sympiesometer 
 
 1 j Spirit thermometers 
 
 3 j Six's thermometer 
 
 2 , Small do. in brass cases - 
 
 Common mercurial ones - 
 Transit instrument 
 Night telescope 
 Bottle of spare mercury - i 
 Also a variety of books and 
 stationery. 
 
 1 
 1 
 3 
 2 
 1 
 1 
 1 
 
 1 
 1 
 8 
 1 
 
 4 
 
 6 
 
 1 
 
 1 
 
 1 
 
 George Back 
 William Smyth 
 Owen Stanley 
 Archibald M' Murdo 
 James Saunders 
 
 B 3 
 
 Captain. 
 
 First Lieutenant. 
 Second Lieutenant. 
 Third Lieutenant. 
 Acting Master. 
 
6 
 
 PRELIMINARY CHAPTER. 
 
 li 
 
 I 'i 
 
 ; 
 
 James Donovan, M.D. 
 
 - Surgeon. 
 
 Graham Gore 
 
 - Mate. 
 
 Robert M« Clure 
 
 - Mate. 
 
 Peter Fisher 
 
 - Mate. 
 
 Charles Marcuard 
 
 - Extra Mate. 
 
 James A. Mould 
 
 - Assistant Surgeon. 
 
 William Lawes 
 
 - Clerk in Charge. 
 
 Thomas Donaldson 
 
 - Gunner. 
 
 John Vaughan 
 
 • Boatswain. 
 
 John Smith 
 
 - Carpenter. 
 
 George Green 
 
 - Ice Mate. 
 
 SEAMEr. 
 
 Captain's coxswain - 1 
 Quarter-masters - - 3 
 Boatswain's mate - 1 
 Sailmaker and crew - 2 
 Armourer - - I 
 Armourer's mate - 1 
 Carpenter's crew, inclu- 
 ding 1 mate - - 4 
 
 Able seamen - - 22 
 Captain's steward - 1 
 Captain's cook - - 1 
 
 MARINES. 
 
 Seijeant John Maslin - 1 
 Corporal Henry 
 
 Plumstead - - 1 
 Privates - - - 5 
 
 The following orders were enclosed in an 
 official communication from the Honourable 
 Charles Elphinstone Fleeming, at that period 
 commander-in-chief at Sheerness : — 
 
 (( 
 
 By the Commissioners for executing the 
 office of Lord High Admiral of the United 
 Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, &c. 
 
 ** His Majesty's Government having been 
 pleased to command that another attempt by the 
 way of Wager River should be made to trace the 
 northern boundary of the North American 
 Continent : We have thought fit to appoint you 
 to the command of that expedition, and you are 
 
PRELIMINARY CHAPTER. 7 
 
 hereby required and directed to put to sea in 
 His Majesty's ship Terror, under your command, 
 the moment that she is in all respects ready, and 
 to proceed with the utmost celerity in the ex- 
 ecution of the following Instructions : 
 
 " If, on quitting the Nore, the wind should be 
 decidedly from the westward, you will pursue 
 the usual track, north about ; but if, on the con- 
 trary, the wind should appear to promise a more 
 speedy passage down the English Channel, you 
 are to push out in that direction, as affording the 
 best chance of completing this undertaking within 
 the present year, which will mainly depend on 
 your early arrival off Hudson's Straits, so as to 
 be able to take advantage of the first opening 
 in the outer barrier of ice, provided you should 
 find it still shut up. 
 
 " Having once entered this strait, you will pro- 
 bably find the water comparatively free till you 
 approach Salisbury Island, and you wUl then have 
 to choose between the direct and obvious course 
 up Frozen Strait, which was performed with ap- 
 parent ease by the Fury and Hecla in 1821, or 
 the more circuitous route by the Welcome, 
 which was unsuccessfully attempted by the 
 Griper in 1824, but which you are left at 
 liberty to adopt, if the state of the ice, ifter the 
 late severe winter, should render Frozen Strait 
 impassable. Again, though we consider Wager 
 
 B 4> 
 
8 
 
 PRELIMINARY CHAPTER. 
 
 River will be, for many reasons, the most eligible 
 place for the commencement of your operations, 
 yet, as the same combination of wind, tide, and 
 ice, which would render that inlet difficult of 
 access, might equally facilitate your entrance 
 into Repulse Bay j and as this bay would ap- 
 pear to be not more distant from Regent's Inlet 
 than Wager Bay, you are further left at liberty 
 to run for the former, instead of persisting in a 
 tedious struggle to reach Wager Bay. 
 
 " Into whichsoever of these inlets you may find 
 it expedient to conduct His Majesty's ship, your 
 first object will be to place her in present safety ; 
 and then, having previously arranged a sufficient 
 number of light reconnoitering parties, and having 
 duly provided them with all necessary provisions, 
 tools, and signals, you will detach them in any 
 and every direction that may appear mostpromptly 
 to lead to the discovery of a suitable track for 
 transporting the boats and stores across the laud 
 which intervenes between these inlets and the 
 sea. 
 
 " While these parties are employed on this im- 
 portant service, a rapid examination must be 
 made of the character of the shores of one or 
 other of these inlets, and of their several creeks 
 and harbours, along with the set and rise of the 
 tides, in order to the selection of such an anchor- 
 age as may ensure the perfect security of the 
 
 U ' 
 
PRELIMINARY CHAPTER. 
 
 9 
 
 ship during your absence, and as may promise 
 a ready egress to her at the close of the season, 
 when your operations have terminated, and when 
 the young ice may be expected to form. In 
 this point of view, the position, and the small 
 comparative depth of Repulse Bay, would appear 
 to offer an easier and more speedy egress. 
 
 " Tlie officer left in charge of the Terror is to 
 receive from you specific orders, not only as to 
 his general proceedings while you are away, but 
 as respects his intercourse with the natives, as 
 well as the series of observations he is to record, 
 and the mode in which he is to conduct a survey 
 of the inlet, including the neighbouring lakes. 
 Its accessory rivers, if any, a continued register 
 of the times and heights of the tides at high and 
 low water, and the elevation and geological 
 character of the adjacent hills. You will com- 
 municate to him the probable period of your 
 absence, and you will arrange with him a few 
 signals, by means of a gun fired in the stillness 
 of night, at a precise hour, or by rockets or 
 flashes, some of which may eventually be of great 
 importance in cases where assistance may be 
 required. Lastly, you will give him directions 
 how to act, should any misfortune befall yourself 
 and the other detached parties ; and in the con- 
 templation of such an event, which may retard 
 the return of the parties about the period fixed 
 
10 
 
 PRELIMINARY CHAPTER. 
 
 for their purpose, you will appoint some ultimate 
 period in the ensuing year, beyond which he is 
 not to protract his stay, but peremptorily to 
 repair with His Majesty's ship to England; 
 in which case it would be advisable that he 
 should endeavour to communicate a statement of 
 any accident that may hav*; occurred to Fort 
 Churchill. 
 
 "Havingsatisfactorily settled these preliminary 
 but important arrangements, you will then pro- 
 ceed in the execution of ths main objects of the 
 voyage. These objects are, — 
 
 "First, To ascertain the general form and 
 position of that part of the northern coast of 
 America which extends from the point where 
 you may first strike the sea shore of Prince 
 Regent's Inlet, as far as the western mouth of 
 Fury and Hecla Strait; and if that service should 
 be accompHshed with facility, or if no serious 
 obstacle should there present itself to the timely 
 return of the party, the western coast of Cock- 
 bum Island might be pursued as far as the Cape 
 Kater of Parry's first voyage, but forbidding the 
 officer of the boat whom you may detach on 
 this service, to penetrate far into any of the 
 openings by which that probable group of islands 
 may be intersected ; and on no account to risk 
 the prolongation of the ^^xed period for retuniing 
 to the ship ; not even to persevere in the attempt 
 
PRELIMINARY CHAPTER. 
 
 11 
 
 to cross the Fury and Hecla Strait, provided any 
 very serious difficulty should present itself. 
 
 " Secondly, The determination, in a simUar 
 manner, of the continental coast line from the 
 point of arrival on Prince Regent's Inlet, to the 
 mouth of the River Back, and after passing Mac- 
 onochie island, the continuation of the main 
 shore as far as the Point Turnagain of Franklin ; 
 to cross the strait which is supposed to separate 
 the continent of America from the islands to 
 the northern end of it, tracing the shore to the 
 farthest point of Captain James Ross's discoveiy, 
 and, if time will allow, to proceed from thence 
 to the spot where he determined, by observations, 
 the position of the northern magnetic pole. 
 
 " You will instruct the officers in command of 
 the two foregoing parties to note down as they 
 proceed, on each day, the state of the sea with 
 regard to ice, the one party in a northern 
 direction, the other to the westward; and also, if 
 any land should appear in these directions, \o 
 like its bearings and probable distance, it being 
 of great importance to ascertain whether the 
 Arctic Sea, to the northward of the north coast 
 of America, be from appearance navigable by 
 ships of considerable burden. 
 
 " In the event, however, of finding that these 
 positions of Captain James Ross are actually on 
 the continent of America, the party may return 
 
PftELTMINART CHAPTEn. 
 
 to the hip, a'^ the senmuj party, directing their 
 course towards Point 1 urn.igain, will, in that 
 case, deciili from what point the trending of 
 the coast to tlie northw »rd commences. 
 
 •* To the vigorous pui uit of these interesting 
 geographical questions, all minor objects must 
 be sacrificed ; and no halt in the progress towards 
 the termination of the journeys above mentioned 
 should be any where permitted, for the purpose 
 of obtaining information on any of those colla- 
 teral subjects which otherwise it would be highly 
 desirable to collect. 
 
 ** Nevertheless, on the return of the parties, 
 when they can estimate what time they have to 
 spare, and at every nightly station, every adverse 
 gale, or impervious fog, will afford opportunities 
 for observing the magnetic dip and intensity, and 
 tor encouraging a variety of valuable researches 
 in other branches of science, the necessary 
 instruments for which purposes have been sup- 
 plied to you, and the opportunities for effecting 
 which you will no doubt discreetly employ. 
 
 ** in any large enterprise of this nature much 
 must be left to the experience, judgment, and 
 responsibihty of the commanding officer ; and 
 as the general objects of this Expedition I>av« 
 been fully explained to you, so the detailed 
 manner of executing them is hereby committed 
 t- your own discretion and zeal, always re- 
 
PRELUVflNARY CHAPTEU. 
 
 IS 
 
 collecting our anxiety for the health, comfort, 
 safety, and ultimate credit of j^ourself, your 
 officers, and your crew. . In like manner you 
 will have to repose a similar confidence on 
 those officers to whom you entrust the command 
 of the detached parties j but you will endeavour 
 to guide them by the most explicit instructions 
 which It may be in your power to give. 
 
 "You will assist them by a minute exposition 
 of all the resources which you have derived 
 from the fruits of your own experience, and you 
 will give them peremptory injunctions to return 
 to the ship at a definite fixed period. 
 
 "The foregoing instructions have been fra med 
 with the intention, and in the full beUef, that rhis 
 service may be duly and faithfully perforn ed 
 m the course of the present season, and that this 
 Arctic Expedition maybe distinguished from all 
 others by the promptitude of its execution, and 
 by escapmg from the gloomy and unprofitable 
 waste of eight months* detention : it is therefore 
 our distinct orders, that every effort shall be 
 made to return to England in the fall of this 
 year. Difficulties may however occur, which 
 we cannot foresee ; some of the detachments may 
 have been detained by uncontrollable events 
 or may have been visited by accidents requiring 
 assistance at a considerable distance ; and in 
 these cases you may find yourself compelled to 
 
u 
 
 PRELIMINARY CHAPTER. 
 
 winter abroad. If such should, unfortunately, be 
 the issue of all your best exertions to comply 
 with our order to return home, you will en- 
 deavour to provide, in the most effectual man- 
 ner, for the safety of his Majesty's ship, and for 
 the health and comfort of your crew, and you 
 will continually and sedulously employ all the 
 scientific means at your disposal, in rendering 
 your long winter as beneficial as circumstances 
 will permit. 
 
 " In the same spirit, when the days become 
 sufficiently long, you will, by short arid well-pie- 
 pared expeditions, add as much as you can to 
 our knowledge of the adjacent regions. In the 
 case supposed, when the ice opens in the ensuing 
 summer, you may devote a short season to such 
 pursuits, and in such directions as you n»ay 
 consider most conducive to the general objects 
 contained in these instructions, but you will take 
 such timely measures as may prevent the pos- 
 sibility of a second year's detention. 
 
 "On your arrival in England, you are imme- 
 diately to repair to this office, to lay before us a 
 full account of your proceedings ; and you will 
 demand from the officers, and from all other 
 persons under your command, the logs and 
 journals they may have kept, together with any 
 charts or drawings they may have made, all 
 which are to be sealed up, in order to their being 
 
PRELIMINARY CHAPTER. 
 
 15 
 
 hereafter disposed of as we may think proper to 
 determine. 
 
 "Given under our hands, this 11th day of 
 June, 1836. 
 
 "Charles Adam. 
 "George Elliot. 
 
 " To George Backy Esq.y 
 Captain of His Majesty* s ship Terror, 
 at Chatham, 
 
 " By command of their Lordships, 
 
 ^^ John Barrow,** 
 
 The kind and valuable assistance I received 
 from the officers who preside at the head of the 
 different departments from which we were sup- 
 phed with stores, &c. demands my warmest ac- 
 knowledgments. 
 
 Admiral the Hon. C. E. Tleeming lost no op- 
 portunity of facilitating my wishes in every 
 respect j while it would be difficult to express 
 what I owe to Sir James Gordon, for the interest 
 he evinced, and the active measures he pursued 
 to get the ship quickly ready for sea. 
 
 Nor can I sufficiently thank Lieutenant (now 
 Commander) Smyth, the officers and crew of 
 the Terror, for their energetic services and 
 most praiseworthy conduct, under trials of no 
 
16 
 
 PRELIMINARY CHAPTER. 
 
 ■ i. 
 
 ¥ i 
 
 ordinary description, sustained by all with patient 
 fortitude. From the journal of Commander 
 Smyth I have derived much benefit in the com- 
 pilation of the following Narrative, and to him, 
 also, I am indebted for the faithful and spirited 
 drawings which embellish it. The Chart is the 
 work of Lieutenant Stanley, to whose efficient 
 services I have great pleasure in bearing 
 testimony. 
 
17 
 
 CHAPTER I. 
 
 Departure from EngUnd. - Cape Farewell - Porpoises and 
 l^ulU. — Driftwood wUn Roots and Bark.— Leave the 
 Vicinity of Cape Farewell. - Icebergs. - Course nmeland 
 
 interesting Resolution Island. — Whirlpool. — Descry 
 
 two Vessels — Dreary Aspect of the Savage Islands Fi. 
 
 sited by Esquimaux. — Difficult Navigation. — Vessel 
 moored to an Iceberg — Crew exerdsedat Small-arms under 
 Its Lee. — Geological Indications. — Careen the Ship. — 
 Progress through the Ice. — Salisbury Island. — Shipfol- 
 lowed by Esquimaux. — Land discovered. — Deviation in 
 
 Compasses.— Trinity Isles Ship obliged to heavcto. — 
 
 Whales seen. Ship imbedded in Ice Baffin and South- 
 ampton Islands. — Perilous Situation fVhite Whales. — 
 
 fVinter Island. — Water Shy. 
 
 The incidents of a voyage along the coasts of 
 Great Britain and across the North Atlantic, 
 however interesting to the actors, have been 
 rendered so familiar to the English reader, that, 
 passing rapidly over the earlier events, I shall 
 hasten forward to the peculiar circumstances that 
 distinguish the present expedition from those 
 which have preceded it. 
 
 I had requested, and obtained, from the Ad- 
 miralty the assistance of a steam vessel until we 
 should be clear of the shoals, and about eleven 
 A. M. of the 14th June, 1836, the Terror left 
 Chatham, and was towed along the Medway by 
 the Rhadamanthus steam vessel, amidst cheers 
 
li i m« li. l.j; t»i»Wqip. 
 
 18 
 
 PREPARATIONS FOR DEPARTURE. 
 
 from the vessels on either side of the river. At 
 Sheerness we were compelled to wait for gun- 
 ners* stores, and it was not till the l6th that we 
 were finally under weigh and clear of the river. 
 Baffling head-winds prevented me from discharg- 
 ing the steamer as I had intended at Flambo- 
 rough Head, and we were towed along at a slow 
 rate until, on the 21st, we reached the bay of 
 Aberdeen. The wind, which for some days had 
 been squally, had now freshened to a gale, and, 
 as it was impossible to make any advance, the 
 vessel was brought to an anchor. The watering 
 was completed, and, in accordance with a plan 
 on which I had previously determined, the re- 
 maining leisure was employed in converting the 
 ship into a barque. To nautical men, especially 
 those accustomed to polar navigation, it is unne- 
 cessary to explain the advantages of the change ; 
 but to the uninitiated it may be proper to men- 
 tion, that the difference consists in the more simnle 
 rigging of the mizen-mast, whereby several sails, 
 in themselves of no great use, being dispensed 
 with, the vessel is more easily worked, and many 
 hands are set free for other duties essential in 
 the difficult navigation through the ice. The 
 superfluous spars, which would have only en- 
 cumbered us, were placed on board the Rhada- 
 manthus and returned to Chatham. 
 
 Even as it was, our decks presented a singular 
 
PHEPAItATlONS FOR DEPARTURE. 
 
 19 
 
 appearance : there was a large stock of coals 
 stowed in double rows along the quarter-deck 
 and gangways, leaving but a very narrow space 
 for the officers and men to pass. There were 
 three boats on the booms and two on the quar- 
 ters. On the skids over the quarter-deck were 
 two whale-boats, besides several immense sledges, 
 and whatever else could be stowed there. Large 
 spars, planks, and a hand-mast, two tons of po- 
 tatoes, provender for twenty sheep and ten pigs, 
 the sheep and pigs themselves, with sundry ducks 
 and fowls, occupied every other disposeable nook ; 
 and though, by a little method and skilful stow- 
 ing, all this mass of dead and living lumber had 
 been made to assume some degree of form and 
 regularity, yet it may be well imagined that there 
 was no superfluous space. 
 
 The crew, when mustered at divisions on the 
 Sunday previous, presented to the view as fine 
 a body of men as could glad the heart of a com- 
 mander ; and, though experience had taught me 
 to distrust impressions of this kind, yet, when I 
 cast my eyes over the files, and, on a subsequent 
 inspection, saw the neatness and comfort con- 
 spicuous in the berths, I could not avoid drawing 
 a favourable omen for the future. 
 
 Early in the morning of the 22d (the wind 
 having shifted in the night) we left our anchor- 
 age, still towed by the Rhadamanthus, and stood 
 
 c a 
 
20 
 
 DEPARTURE FROM ENGLAND, 
 
 along the shore for Buchan-ness. In the even- 
 ing, the wind freshening to a stiff breeze, com- 
 pelled us to cast off the tow-rope ; and with 
 a view of saving time, as well as the risk of 
 lowering a boat, we sent off our letters in a keg 
 made fast to a line veered from the Rhadaman- 
 thus for the purpose. The next morning, being 
 off the Orkneys and the wind favourable, it was 
 thought unnecessary to detain the Rhadamanthus 
 any longer, and Mr. King having received his 
 instructions, parted company from us, in the true 
 English style with three hearty cheers from his 
 crew. 
 
 We now shaped our course for Cape Farewell. 
 From the 24th to the 27th, we had occasional 
 squalls, with a short pitching sea, and, on the 
 27th, a strong gale from the S. W. The sailing 
 qualities of the Terror were thus put to the test ; 
 and it was gratifying to find that, deep and lum- 
 bered as she was, and though at every plunge the 
 bowsprit dipped into the water, she yet pitched 
 so easily as scarcely to strain a rope-yarn, and, 
 in seaman's phrase, made very good weather of 
 it. This sort of weather continued with little 
 intermission till the 30th, the sea washing over 
 the decks, and the men constantly employed ; 
 but, on that day the wind moderating and be- 
 coming at the same time more favourable, the 
 royals and all the studding-sails were for the first 
 time set, and the gallant ship in the full pride 
 
CAPE FAREWELL. 
 
 91 
 
 of her expanded plumage floated majestically 
 through the rippling water. 
 
 On the 4th of July, we were distant from Cape 
 Farewell 537 miles, in lat. 59" 59' N. and Ion. 
 25° 25' W. Here a remarkable change was ob- 
 served in the colour of the sea, which, though 
 under a cloudy sky, assumed a sort of bottle- 
 green tint, such as is often seen in shoal water 
 over a sandy bottom. On this, as on some of the 
 preceding days, there was a heavy swell from the 
 S.W., the waves being estimated to range from 
 15 to 18 feet in height. On the 6th, we found 
 ourselves in lat. 61° N. ; and, though there 
 was reason to expect that from the combined 
 action of the westerly winds which had so long 
 prevailed and the southerly current, the drift 
 ice from Davis and Hudson' Straits would be 
 carried so far to the S. E. as to leave a clear 
 passage to the north ; yet, apprehensive that 
 some ice might still be hanging along the coast 
 east of Cape Farewell, I put the ship on the 
 other tack, and stood to the southward. 
 
 On the 9th, the weather was calm, and, taking 
 advantage of this to inspect the holds, we de- 
 tected an unusually fetid odour, which on exa- 
 mination was found to proceed from a quantity 
 of carrots packed in casks filled with sand. The 
 casks were opened, and so offensive were the 
 contents, that even the pigs refused to eat them, 
 
 c 3 ' 
 
f<f*f0ltmipim0 
 
 22 
 
 CUEW S ALLOWANCE DIMINLSHED. 
 
 and, much to our regret, we were compelled to 
 throw overboard our wliole stock of a vegeta- 
 ble which would have afforded us an agree- 
 able as well as wholesome variety of winter food* 
 The cause assigned for the accident was, that 
 the sand in which the carrots were packed had 
 not been thoroughly dried. On Sunday the 
 10th, the crew being mustered as usual by di- 
 visions, I announced my intention of putting the 
 ship on two-thirds* allowance of provisions, at 
 the same time carefullj explaining to the men 
 that, in so doing, I was actuated solely by a wish 
 to provide for their comfort, in case of any of 
 those disastrous contingencies to which a ser- 
 vice such as ours was peculiarly subject. On 
 the following day, this resolution was carried 
 into effect as to every thing but spirits and oat- 
 meal, of which there was an abundant stock j 
 and it is due to the men to say, that the regula- 
 tion was submitted to with apparent cheerful, 
 ness. The wind still blew perversely from the 
 west, and our rate of sailing scarcely exceeded 
 three knots an hour, much to our annoyance, 
 who felt how the best part of the season was thus, 
 as it were, slipping out of our grasp. The heavy 
 swell also continued, and, for some days after 
 this, the ship rolled almost helplessly on the 
 long waves j sometimes even drifting bodily to 
 leeward. After a short interval of calm weather. 
 
PORPOISES AND GULLS, 
 
 «9 
 
 which was gladly taken advantage of for drying 
 the clothes and hammocks, the wind again blew 
 hard from the S. W., and for some days ren- 
 dered any advance impossible. On the 18th, 
 the gale abated, and the wind getting more to 
 the south, enabled us to lay on our course. On 
 several occasions before this, in the intervals of 
 good weather, I had observed porpoises in great 
 numbers gamboling about the vessel j and at 
 this time in particular, we were visited by a large 
 shoal, whose sportive tricks and ludicrous atti- 
 tudes relieved the monotony of the scene, and 
 afforded us much amusement. When they left 
 us, a flock of gulls succeeded, and approached 
 with so much boldness as to catch the bits of 
 tallow thrown to them from the deck. It is 
 needless to say that they came and departed un- 
 molested. On the 20th, a breeze from the S. S. E. 
 sprung up, which, before noon the next day, had 
 increased to a strong gale, and carried us at the 
 unusual rate of six knots an hour to the west- 
 ward of Cape Farewell. This, however, did not 
 last long, for the wind again drew round to the 
 west, and ended in a calm. 
 
 Here some drift-wood was observed, to one of 
 the pieces of which the roots and bark were still 
 attached. It could not, therefore, have been 
 long separated from the land, but from what 
 land it is not easy to determine. The consider. 
 
 c 4 
 
1 
 
 u 
 
 DRIFT-WOOD. 
 
 ation of this subject possesses more interest than 
 at first sight may appear. We have the au- 
 thority of nearly every navigator for upwards of 
 three centuries, that drift-wood has been in- 
 variably seen somewhere near the parallel of 
 Cape Farewell ; whilst, on the other hand, by 
 the recent voyages of Sir E. Parry and Sir J. 
 Ross we are assured of the ei.tire absence of 
 drift-wood from the north-western parts visited 
 by them. Sir E. Parry, in particular, asserts that 
 none was seen by him in a period of five years. 
 Whence then does this wood come? Egede 
 tells us that, in some parts of Greenland, he saw 
 a small species of pine, perhaps not unlike the 
 swamp fir of Hudson's Bay ; but the wood ob- 
 served by us was of a longer kind, more resem- 
 bling that usually found inland on ,'he alluvial 
 banks of large rivers ; and there seem to be only 
 two places whence the wind and prevailing cur- 
 rent could bring wood of that description. It 
 may be, that it proceeds originally from some 
 part of the coast of Labrador, and that the trees 
 there being detached from the banks of the 
 streams, on the breaking up of the spring ice, 
 and carried down by the floods which usually 
 accompany the (disruption, are whirled about in 
 the conflicting eddies along the sea-shore, until 
 getting within the influence of the regular south- 
 erly current, they are met by a south west gale. 
 
LEAVE CAPE FAREWELL. 
 
 as 
 
 and thus driven to the part where tliey are ge< 
 nerally seen. The other, and, in my j udgnient, not 
 improbable explanation, is to be found in the 
 well-known fact, that vast piles of huge drift- 
 wood, consisting of balsam, poplar, larches, firs, 
 and birch, are swept by the annual flooding of 
 the Mackenzie into the Polar Sea, and are there 
 carried out in different directions as the tide 
 current and set of the ice may determine. The 
 greater portion, we know, parts east and west 
 of the mouth of the river, and accumulating on 
 the Polar shores, furnishes to the poor Esqui- 
 maux an invaluable and inexhaustible supply of 
 material for their canoes and other rude imple- 
 ments of art. But is it impossible that another 
 portion may be driven out far to the north, and 
 there, meeting with a westerly current, be brought 
 into Davis's Straits through some yet unex- 
 plored channel ? 
 
 On the 23d, we at length gave our willing 
 adieu to Cape Farewell, under the welcome in- 
 fluence of a breeze from the eastward ; but in the 
 night the wind shifted and blew hard, making a 
 sea, which kept the men half-leg deep on the 
 quarter-deck. From the 25th to the 28th, we 
 had a pleasant run across Davis's Straits under 
 a steady breeze from S. W. Day- light on the 
 29th exhibited to us a small iceberg, and soon 
 afterwards several larger bergs and a heavy 
 
26 
 
 ICEDEftOS. 
 
 M' 
 
 stream of ice were discerned to the west, 
 ward. We advanced close to the margin of the 
 atter and then tacked off: it was composed of 
 Jarge floe ,,iece8, and ran in a direction from 
 N. W. to S. E. Tlie rapid fall of the thermo- 
 meter in the night had indicated the vicinity 
 of ice. and now a thick fog coming on which 
 obscured the view, we were informed only by 
 the stdl greater depression of the temperature, 
 and by the roaring of the surf distinctly heard 
 that we were not far from some considerable mass 
 ot ice. Accordingly in the evening when the 
 weather cleared, we observed an enormous berg 
 the perpendicular fiice of which was not less 
 than 300 feet high, and other smaller bergs^ 
 nine altogether, in other directions. Prepar- 
 utions had been made for avoiding or escaping 
 the danger of a too close acquaintance with 
 theoe gigantic neighbours, in case the fog had 
 contmued j and, among other things, the boom 
 foresail had been bent, — a sail which, as nau- 
 tical men will be aware, is, by reason of its quick 
 movement, of excellent use in narrow channels 
 and consequently among ice, where it is ne- 
 cessary to alter course often and suddenly to 
 avoid the floating masses. The clearing of the 
 weather rendered these precautions for the pre- 
 sent unnecessary, and we proceeded on our 
 course with studding-sails set, until suddenly a 
 
 iL 
 
 ll 
 
COIUISE NOVpr AND INTF.RESTINO. 27 
 
 gleam of continuous ice was seen riglit ahead, 
 which threatened an interruption of our pro- 
 gress. But as the morning of tlie .iOth broke 
 we found the heavy stream before us less com- 
 pact than had been tearcd, and entered the pack 
 with confidence. 
 
 The day was beautifully fine, and to those 
 who were novices in this sort of navigation, 
 nothing could exceed the interest of the scene : 
 — the tall ship with all her sails set threading 
 her graceful way through the masses of ice, 
 upon a sea as smooth as an inland lake. What 
 a contrast from the mountain waves over which 
 we had been tossing and tumbling for weeks 
 past I Again, in the far horizon, there was the 
 ever-welcome loom of land j and though from 
 our distance according to reckoning, some doubts 
 were at first expressed as to the reality of this 
 appearance, yet these were soon afterwards set 
 at rest, and the land at eight a. m. was distinctly 
 visible to the naked eye, stretching from W. to 
 to N. W. by N. We supposed it to be Black- 
 head on the Labrador coast, not far from Cape 
 Chudleigh, and which our noon observations 
 placed sixty miles distant. It is to be remarked, 
 that the weather was unusually clear, with I 
 temperature of 86°, and the wind blowing off the 
 land, so that objects could be discerned at a great 
 distance. There was a copsiderable quantity of 
 
 m 
 
28 
 
 RESOLUTION ISLAND. 
 
 \ • 
 
 t 
 
 i 
 
 i: \ 
 
 
 snow on the summits and sides of the coast, 
 which about 11 A. M. was refracted into the most 
 eccentric outlines, some not unlike the form of 
 a pagoda. The latitude to-day was 60° 1/ N. 
 and longitude by chronometer 6l°57'W., from 
 which we learnt that we had been set by the cur- 
 rent no less than forty-one miles south in the 
 space of two days. Our distance from Resolution 
 Island, at noon, was sixty-nine miles. 
 
 Towards evening the wind dropped, and we 
 bent our cables to be in readiness, in case we 
 should be carried into situations where it might 
 be necessary to seek an anchorage. A thin ice 
 formed during the night, and, on the 31st, the 
 pack seemed to have gathered more closely 
 around us. The day, however, was beautifully 
 calm, and a boat was sent to procure fresh water 
 from the pools formed on the surface of the 
 larger masses of ice. A light breeze soon after- 
 wards sprung up, which, though scarcely raising 
 a ripple on the water, kept the sails full aloft, 
 and carried us gently onward at the rate of two 
 knots. The nearer view now afforded us of the 
 land presented nothing attractive. Peaked and 
 splintered hills, resting on a sort of shelf or 
 ledge, which again broke off perpendicularly 
 into dark cliffs raised upon shelving banks covered 
 with snow J and farther off, though still, as it 
 
 I 
 
 mam 
 
 wssies^ski-^^:. 
 
RESOLUTION ISLAND. 
 
 29 
 
 seemed, connected with these, a ridge of heights 
 rounder and more regular, but all bare and deso- 
 late, without one tinge of green to relieve the 
 sombre picture, —such was the forbidding aspect 
 of this unsocial coast. After divine service the 
 boat was again sent for water, which was found 
 to be of excellent quality, and our stock was in- 
 creased to eleven tuns, — a supply amply suffi- 
 cient, however long our run might prove to be. 
 Throughout the 1st of August we continued 
 to push our way through the yielding masses, 
 with no further mischief than a few thumps and 
 grindings. 
 
 We were now fast approaching Cape Chud- 
 leigh and Button's Isles, and, not long after- 
 wards, land was descried to the N. E., which 
 we knew to be Resolution Island, and the land 
 to the westward of it, when suddenly a delta of 
 ice appeared in front of us, so close as to defy 
 all attempts to penetrate it. Of the navigable 
 * lanes* at its sides one led considerably to the 
 east, and the other branched immediately along 
 the Labrador coast beyond Button's Isles, from 
 thence apparently leading into open water. My 
 general plan was to have kept the north shore 
 close aboard, after the example of the able 
 officers who had preceded mce on these services; 
 and, indeed, of the Hudson's Bay ships, which 
 
^li 
 
 ^ i 
 
 
 
 H\ 
 
 )\\ 
 
 *li 
 
 30 
 
 DENSE FOG. 
 
 invariably take tliat direction in their outward 
 passage ; but having a commanding breeze and 
 a clearer space for sailing in, I did not hesitate, 
 under the circumstances, to take the south shore, 
 intending to follow it up until a change in the 
 wind or ice should render it advisable to edge 
 over to the usual track. At 8^ p. m. Resolution 
 Island was seen bearing by compass N. by E., 
 and we were beginning to flatter ourselves that 
 we had cleared the obstacles when, about 
 noon, a dense fog came on, and the ice in- 
 creased in quantity and dimension so much 
 as to excite some apprehension of the practi- 
 cability of passing it. At 2^ of the following 
 morning, the fog was so dense that the 'leads* or 
 openings could not be distinguished, and there 
 was no resource but to heave-to until the weather 
 should be clearer. In an hour's time it did 
 clear, and, though for a few minutes only, yet 
 the interval enabled us to catch a glimpse of 
 a passage between some large masses ahead. 
 The breeze was quite fair, and again setting the 
 small sails we ran on through very heavy ice, 
 sometimes temporarily arrested, and at others 
 boring through every impediment, not, F owever, 
 without receiving some violent concussions. 
 
 By y** A. M. we had cleared this difficulty, but 
 soon came to a solid pack from twenty to twenty- 
 five feet high, which, of course, there was no 
 
DIFFICULT NAVIGATION. 
 
 31 
 
 hope of penetrating. Wishing, however, to 
 keep as near mid channel as I could, I coasted 
 the edge of the pack until a narrow stream was 
 seen, through which we bored our way until 
 we again came to heavy sailing ice. It was 
 exceedingly difficult to ascertain whereabout we 
 were, for independently of the fog, which of 
 Itself was bad enough, the whole of the com- 
 passes became so sluggish as to require tapping 
 with the finger every five or ten minutes to make 
 them traverse at all, and could not, therefore, be 
 depended on. There was, however, no choice, 
 but either to run on at all hazards., or to heave-to,' 
 at the risk of being beset in the pack, which 
 every moment the wind was driving closer 
 Rather than be detained in such a manner, at 
 least in this place, I determined to stretch over 
 to the north shore, which, in fact, had now be, 
 come the weather one, and to depend on the 
 sharpness of our sight for discovering the land 
 at the same time, having every thing ready for 
 guarding against accidents. The manner in 
 which this resolution was executed was hiffhlv 
 creditable to the ice-mate, Mr. Green, and the 
 gunner, Mr. Donaldson, who took upon them 
 the duty of piloting the ship in these situations 
 by turns, ~ a duty for which the latter, in par, 
 ticular, was weU qualified by the experience he 
 had acquired under Sir E. Parry. Frequently 
 
32 
 
 IMPEDED BY FOG AND ICE. 
 
 I ; 
 
 while boring through the packed pieces, or en- 
 deavouring to force some mass aside, the officers 
 were among the foremost over the bows to assist 
 in carrying oul: an ice-anchor with a line to warp 
 the ship, or, with long poles, to push the ice 
 away from the stern, and all seemed really to enjoy 
 the novelty and excitement of the scene. 
 
 The ice for the most part was old and rotten, 
 consisting of portions of broken floes, with square 
 blocks and hummocks on them. The weather 
 throughout the afternoon continued so thick, 
 that even ice could not be discerned above two 
 hundred yards off; and being, as we supposed, 
 near the north shore, I was not a little anxious 
 lest we should be driven by some violent cur- 
 rent against it an accident which, having ex- 
 perienced on a former occasion, I was by no 
 means desirous of encountering a second time. 
 Towards midnight, we found ourselves embar- 
 rassed amongst floes and very heavy ice, the 
 difficulty of avoiding which was much aug- 
 mented by the lightness of the breeze then 
 blowing from the south-west. However, in the 
 morning of August 3d, the breeze returning to 
 its old point of S. E. freshened a little, most 
 opportunely and fortunately for us, for the 
 weather continuing equally misty, we were be- 
 coming entangled amid large masses of ice which, 
 under the influence of a strong current, often 
 
 u 
 
 h 
 
WHIRLPOOL. 
 
 33 
 
 struck the ship with a force that made her reel ; 
 while the windward stream was approaching 
 the leeward so rapidly as to make it extremely 
 doubtful whether we should not be caught be- 
 tween them, and there be beset for, perhaps, 
 several days. Every sail that could be of the 
 least utility had been set, and for a short inter- 
 val we seemed to be gaining ground, but on 
 altermg the position of the head to clear a small 
 floe directly before us, the current took the slnp 
 on the starboard beam, and sent her bodily to- 
 wards the stream to leeward; and whilst we 
 were contemplating this result as almost inevi- 
 table, one of those whirlpools which are com- 
 mon in the vicinity of the Island of Resolution 
 caught us, and turning the ship round against 
 «ie helm, rendered her totally unmanageable. 
 This seemed to decide the matter ; and we must 
 mfaUibly have been carried into the already dense 
 pack, had not the breeze at that moment sud- 
 denly freshened, and forced us onwards towards 
 an opening a-head. About the same time 
 (3 A. M.), the eastern horizon cleared, so as just 
 to enable land to be seen much nearer than, 
 under these circumstances, was desirable ; for' 
 in that direction, with such a confusion of cross 
 currents, we had scarcely any control over the 
 ship, and the weather again thickened with rain, 
 which, with the thermometer at 31°, froze on 
 
 D 
 
f:/iKjK.-:^"^-:s"?'!->!r'^^w''T^^'^w?'.5TOPfTfflWi 
 
 > 
 
 ^4 
 
 SAVAGE ISLANDS. 
 
 5 
 
 ll 
 
 the rigging as it fell, and hung in icicles from 
 the boats and hammock-rails. 
 
 There was now no choice but to endeavour 
 to close the shore and get to windward of the 
 whole body of ice, and this having succeeded 
 after repeated trials in effecting, we continued 
 during the remainder of the forenoon running 
 at a moderate rate through sailing pieces, which 
 from their size there was little trouble in steer- 
 ing clear of. Observations could not be got, 
 but the dead reckoning placed us in latitude 
 61" 39' N., and some doubtful sights gave the 
 same latitude, and longitude 67° 7' W. 
 
 The weather, which during the day had been 
 hazy, cleared towards the evening, and gave us a 
 distinct view of the bleak and snow-streaked 
 land, with several islands, which we conjectured 
 to be part of the group lying between the middle 
 and lower Savage Islands. The sea being very 
 calm the officers lowered a boat, and set off in 
 quest of the seals and loons which were swim- 
 ming about ; but a brace of the latter was the 
 only result of a considerable expenditure of 
 powder and shot. During the night, with a 
 liffht breeze heading us and the vessel close 
 hauled, I found to my surprise that, of course 
 under the influence of some current, the ship 
 had weathered, or, in other words, gone to the 
 
 westward so much, that I gladly kept under 
 
 '^4! 
 
 n 
 
 t ' 
 
 I! 
 
SADDLEBACK. 
 
 as 
 
 weigh, passing between large pieces of ice with- 
 out inconvenience. The same thing continu- 
 mg the next day we found ourselves at noon, by 
 the observations, abreast of the middle Savage 
 Islands, and could see the extremes of land 
 from S. E. to N. N. E., the nearest being six or 
 «even miles distant. It was not, however, till 
 some hours had elapsed, that the remarkable 
 land called Saddle-back could be made out. At 
 this place, every vessel having occasion to visit 
 the straits has invariably fallen in with Esqui- 
 maux; but, although we stood within a few 
 miles of the shore, none appeared, nor did we per- 
 ceive any trace of them, from whence I inferred 
 they had already made their annual barter with 
 the Hudson's Bay ships, and were gone into the 
 interior to hunt. About three in the afternoon 
 an iceberg, about forty feet high, and of very pic 
 turesque form, suddenly, at the distance of about 
 a quarter of a mile from the ship, either toppled 
 over, or parted with a large mass detached from 
 Its summit. The splash in the water, the 
 foam which succeeded, and the fearful rockings 
 of the berg before it again settled upon its base, 
 gave us some notion of the danger of a too close 
 neighbourhood on such occasions. The breeze 
 was lost as night drew on, and the usual calm 
 succeeded; but at 11^ p.m. a light air crept 
 along the water from the south, and having 
 
 D 2 
 
•1-^s 
 
 f^' jnyaj 
 
 56 
 
 DESCRY TWO VESSELS. 
 
 again set the studding-sails, by midnight we were 
 making some progress through the water. 
 
 Early on August 5th the ice, which for a brief 
 interval had disappeared in a manner altogether 
 unaccountable, was again reported to be a-head, 
 and we shortly found ourselves beset by it on all 
 sides, not, however, so compact as to stop us 
 altogether. In this we might be considered 
 fortunate, for, at 4*^ a. m., a ship and brig, sup- 
 posed to belong to the Hudson's Bay Company, 
 were observed working through heavy-packed 
 ice to leeward, the brig corisiderably a-stern of 
 the other. Our colours were immediately hoisted 
 at the mast-head, but were not answered j and, 
 every moment being precious, I pushed on with- 
 out further notice of them, until about 7'' a. m. 
 I was arrested, in my turn, by a continuous line 
 of the same pack, which it was now evident run 
 in towards, if not altogether to, the upper 
 Savage Islands. At first, the prospect of de- 
 tention seemed inevitable, but few things are 
 more uncertain than the navigation among ice, 
 and, however desperate the situation, there is 
 generally room for hope. So it turned out now 
 in our case ; for, when measures were about to 
 be taken to reduce sail, lanes of water were dis- 
 tinguished round the deep bay or inlet formed 
 within the upper Savage Islands ; and, although 
 the following of these lanes involved the ne- 
 
DREARY ASPECT OF THE SAVAGE ISLANDS. 37 
 
 cessity of running towards a lee-shore with a wind 
 from the south ; yet rather than lose ground, as 
 the weather was extremely fine, and I had great 
 confidence in our resources, I determined on 
 making the attempt. In effecting this, we had 
 to pass within a short distance of the eastern 
 extremity of the bay, and had a distinct view of 
 the hills and valleys of the shore. 
 
 There were many rocks, more or less clad 
 with a dark and russety herbage unenlivened by 
 a single patch of green, and altogether as me- 
 lancholy and repulsive as fancy could conceive. 
 It was a place, in short, that even the sea-tired 
 mariner would scarcely leave his ship to visit. 
 Tlie ice, it was gratifying to find, was entirely 
 of last winter's produce ; and, though sometimes 
 close and thick, offered but a weak resistance as 
 we bored our way through it. The tide also, 
 which was flowing, lent us its aid, dispersing the 
 ice so as to leave a clear lead almost to the farthest 
 point in view. Just as we had got abreast of a 
 large island, on which Sir E. Parry had landed 
 in 1821, and were looking at a cairn erected, 
 possibly by him, on its highest hill, we were in- 
 formed by the look-out man from thecrowVnest, 
 that a number of canoes had set oft' from a point 
 of the island and were making towards us. It 
 was some time before they were visible from the 
 deck, but fortunately for them the breeze at 
 
 D 3 
 
38 
 
 VISITED DY ESQUIMAUX. 
 
 that moment moderating, between twenty and 
 tliirty Keiyaks and tliree Oomiaks came up with 
 their noisy owners vociferating their accustomed 
 •< Tima'* or ** Chimo," and " pilletay," till we 
 could scarcely hear each other's voices. These 
 were clearly apart of the Saddleback Esquimaux, 
 and began their traffic with the advantage of 
 practised traders, determined to make the best 
 of the market. Accordingly, no device or cun- 
 ning was left untried by them ; and in this re- 
 spect, at all events, it must fairly be confessed, 
 that they proved their superiority. They began 
 by offering the most trifling articles first, such as 
 seal-skin mittens and boots, of which many had 
 already seen service, and some were actually 
 patched; one pair of mittens particularly with old 
 blue cloth, which, however, the eager purchaser did 
 not perceive. When they were detected, their loud 
 laughter showed how greatly they enjoyed the 
 joke. Neither could they be prevailed upon to 
 part with bags of oil, or any thing else of real 
 value without something better in return than 
 the old iron hoop, which was all that 1 would 
 permit to be offered in exchange. The women, 
 in particular, were more outrageous than I had 
 ever observed before, for besides disposing oi 
 their garments, which they never hesitated to do, 
 more than one actually offered to barter their 
 children for a few needles. In the rest of their 
 
 f ? 
 
 lV V, 
 
CREW TRAFFIC WITH THE ESQUIMAUX. 39 
 
 <lealings, Jmbits, and manners, more especially as 
 respects stealing, they fully verified the various 
 accounts that have already appeared in print : 
 ibr, though sentinels were posted at different 
 parts of the ship purposely to prevent pilfering, 
 and not one of them was allowed to come on 
 board, yet so dextrous were they that, in spite 
 of all our vigilance, they contrived to cut away 
 two or three fathoms of rope from alongside the 
 ,ship. When the crew had purchased what they 
 required, wearied with their incessant clamours, 
 I ordered the men on board, and bade our noisy 
 visiters leave us. Some, and among them the 
 women, obeyed, but many, principally young 
 mc n, lingered for some time about the ship, 
 singing, laughing, and shouting according to 
 their several fancies. 
 
 Having passed the island and opened the 
 North Bluff, a number of smaller and lower 
 islands became visible above the ice, showing the 
 place where Baffin had been in 1665. The wind 
 fell as it had done for some days past, at the com- 
 mencement of the ebb, about 3^ p. m., but the 
 ship still going slowly a-head, without losing 
 ground or being obliged to make fast to ice, 
 cheered us with the hope of a satisfactory 
 progress. The night was cloudy and calm, with 
 sometimes a high flow of wind from different 
 
 D 4 
 
40 
 
 DIFFICULT NAVIGATION. 
 
 I 
 
 quarters of the conii)aHs, and the shij) more than 
 once came ronnd against the hehn and drove close 
 inshore. Fortunately the sliore was bold and tiie 
 water deep, but an immediate effort was made 
 u> get her round so as to be ready for the first 
 air to stand farther off. At that time no lead 
 could be ilescried from the mast-head, whence 
 all in the direction of our course seemed to be 
 one compact body. Nevertheless, when towards 
 midnight a breeze sprung up from the south- 
 west the studding-sails were again set, and, 
 though we received an occasional hard thump, 
 we had the consolation to find that we were 
 creeping along the land ; a low point of which, 
 directly a-head, we were most anxious to get 
 round, from an impression that a clear space 
 would certainly be found to the westward of it. 
 
 The next day (August 6th) brought with it 
 an increase of wind, which enabled us to bore 
 through some heavy masses, one of which nearly 
 carried away the fluke of the best bower anchor. 
 The ship, indeed, struck with great force, break- 
 ing the smaller impediments and thrusting the 
 larger ones out of the channel, sc as to make a 
 lane for herself; and having, at length, suc- 
 ceeded in rounding the low point already men- 
 tioned, and having found there, as had been 
 anticipated, a clearer space along shore, we fol- 
 lowed it, though not without difficulty. The 
 
SECOND VISIT 01' THE ESQUIMAUX. 41 
 
 winter line of ice was very apparent along tlu?. 
 beach, exactly as on the banks of hikes and broad 
 rivers in the interior of America. The height 
 was less than I should have sup[)osed, and could 
 not have exceeded tiiirty feet from low-water 
 mark. It must, therefore, have been formed 
 during an unusually calm season ; for, even in 
 these inland situations, a rise of full twenty feet is 
 by no means uncommon. 
 
 We had a second visit from the Esquimaux, 
 with the same noisy bartering, the same cupidity, 
 and the same unnatural readiness to exchange 
 their children for a few needles or a saw. Es- 
 quimaux, indeed, will give any thing to procure 
 what they desire ; a laughable instance of which 
 was afforded by a young woman who, observing 
 that one of the officers had not much hair on his 
 head, immediately offered to supply him wit!i 
 her own at th. easy price of a curtain-ring. The 
 weather continued beautifully fine, with a tem- 
 perature of 3o°, and the wat r 32"; and, at noon, 
 the latitude was 62° 39' N. longitude, 70" 50' W. 
 For the remainder of this day and the next 
 we continued beating along the siiore, wherever 
 a lane of water was to be found; arul such was 
 the strength of the current which set us in the 
 direction of our course, that, notwithstanding 
 the impediments by which we were besat, and a 
 wind for the most part heading us, we made 
 
4^ 
 
 FALL IN THE BAROMETER. 
 
 satisfactory progress. We received, it is true, 
 some heavy thumps from the drift ice, but to 
 these we were now become familiarised. In the 
 early morning of the 8th, the wind having shifted 
 more to the west, we were enabled to make a 
 considerable advance ; but, about nine o'clock, 
 tlie scene was materially changed. We were 
 abreast of the five hillocks spoken of by Sir Ed- 
 ward Parry, when, instead of the enlivening view 
 of open water, which had just before greeted us, 
 nothing could now be discerned but one firmly 
 knitted pack of ice, stretching from the outer 
 point of the shore as far south as the horizon, 
 and forbidding even the hope of an opening in 
 any available direction. The barometer, too, 
 which of late had showed but very little varia- 
 tion, had fallen from 29° 87' to 29° 54/, and the 
 sky became dark and gloomy, snow fell, and the 
 wind blew half a gale from the N. N. W. What 
 small sails we had up were instantly taken in, 
 and the topsails reduced two reefs. But all our 
 efforts to hold on our course were unavailing ; 
 and as there happened to be a tolerably large 
 berg at no great distance, I determined to make 
 fast to it, as the only way of keeping to windward. 
 Accordingly, having run to leeward, a boat was 
 lowered, containing two ice-anchors and lines ; 
 and, while the most experienced of the crew 
 were employed in fixing these in the berg, on its 
 
.VESSEL WaoIlED TO AN ICEBERG. 
 
 43 
 
 shelving side, (for the other was perpendicular,) 
 the ship made a tack, until, upon signal, she 
 again dropped down and shot up to the very 
 edge of the berg. Then, sending out two strong 
 hawsers, which were affixed to the anchors, she 
 soon became safely moored j and the sails were 
 furled. 
 
 Here we lay, snugly sheltered from the gale, 
 which now freshened, carefully watching how- 
 ever the slightest motion of the berg, lest, upon 
 some change of its equilibrium, it should topple 
 over, and so prove our destruction instead of 
 oar safety. Nothing however occurred to dis- 
 turb us till about two o'clock of the following 
 morning, when a heavy floe drifted against the 
 berg, on the weather-side, with a violent shock. 
 For some minutes it seemed uncertain whether 
 the ponderous mass would not turn completely 
 over J but, after many oscillations, a large piece 
 was supposed to have broken off from the south 
 weslern point, which, though it increased the 
 agitation for a time, seemed to have restored the 
 balance, and the maos again became stationary. 
 During this suspense, it will be easily believed 
 we were not idle ; for, not knowing how soon 
 we might be overwhelmed, the hawsers were in- 
 stantly veered away to eighty fathoms, and careful 
 hands stationed to cut the ropes in case the danger 
 became more imminent. 
 
 
It 
 
 ><\ 
 
 CREW EXERCISED AT SMALL ARMS. 
 
 As the day advanced the body of ice to wind- 
 ward was not found, as had been expected, to 
 have undergone any favourable alteration ; but 
 it was consoling to find by the bearings of the 
 land that we had rather gained than lost ground 
 by making fast to the berg, and it was evident 
 that, for the present, nothing better could be 
 done than to remain where we were. In .the 
 mean time, as there was nothing to be appre- 
 hended for the safety of the ship, which lay 
 extremely easy under the lee, the crew, for 
 occupation, were exercised at small arms; and, 
 considering that many of them had never had a 
 musket in their hands before, they acquitted 
 themselves very creditably. By the bearings of 
 a remarkable hill, N. 94" E., it was clear that 
 although we were certainly going slowly to the 
 northward and westward, yet we were setting 
 at the same time towards the shore. At 4'' p. m., 
 however, there was an apparent re-action in the 
 inshore body of ice, which now began to set 
 about S. S. E., and, to avoid being hemmed in, 
 it became necessary to cast off from the berg. 
 Having done so, we went under as easy sail as 
 the ice would allow between south and west; 
 and, though we had now the mortification to 
 behold, from the mast-head, a continuous pack, 
 extending from what we took to be Broken Point 
 to south-west, yet, by carefully watching such 
 
SOUNDINGS. 
 
 4>d 
 
 openings as offered themselves, and making more 
 sail on the ship, we succeeded in reaching a hole 
 of water; beyond this however there was no 
 outlet, and the ship was necessarily hove-to. At 
 daylight, the wind having veered to the south- 
 west, we bore up, and ran between the detached 
 ice as near as we could, though not without 
 many violent shocks that made the whole frame- 
 work of the ship tremble. 
 
 We continued all that day laboriously boring 
 our way through heavy streams of ice, or vainly 
 endeavouring to weather the larger masses, un- 
 der the disadvantage of a dense fog : but the 
 ^hip at length received so m.any blows, and the 
 «ce closed so fast while we were continually 
 drifting to leeward, that it would have been rash 
 to have continued any longer the unequal and 
 profitless contest. I there . .nade fast, with 
 an ice-anchor, to an adjoining floe, and, having 
 furled the sails, employed the men in making a 
 few necessary reparations. Soundings were ob- 
 tained with one hundred and twenty seven fathoms 
 of line, when the bottom was found to consist of 
 green mud, the current then setting N. W. by W., 
 one mile an hour. Some observations for the dip 
 made on the ice, out of the sphere of the sliip's 
 attraction, gave 85° 54'. At daybreak of the 
 11th, not the slighest alteration was perceptible, 
 except indeed that the north and west horizons 
 
4.6 
 
 GEOLOGICAL INDICATIONS. 
 
 '. i 
 
 m I 
 
 I 'I I;.'/ 
 
 a 
 
 glared with refracted ice, now wedged into a 
 compact body. At noon, I regretted to find we 
 had drifted a few miles to the southward. Sound- 
 ings were then got with one hundred and twenty- 
 nine fathoms, and consisted of grey sand ; with 
 6ne hundred and fifty fathoms of line the current 
 set E. S. E., at the rate of two miles an hour ; 
 but the lead being hauled up to sixty-five fathoms, 
 an upper set was observed to be running north, 
 about half a mile an hour. On the floes were 
 found a quantity of stones and small fragments 
 of rocks, with deposits of yellow mud and a few 
 pieces of sea-weed. Some of the former were 
 rounded by attrition, as if they had been exposed 
 to the action of the waves on the beach, and 
 were composed of sienite and limestone, with 
 small crystals of quartz. 
 
 Towards evening the clouds gathered in the 
 north and the breeze freshened, bringing with it 
 occasional showers of snow, but without be- 
 tokening a favourable change for us; and the 
 following day the appearance to windward was 
 most discouraging, for not a lane of water nor an 
 opening could be made out. Accordingly, as the 
 chance of advancing was diminished, it became 
 important at all events not to lose ground ; and a 
 larger floe having drifted near, we cast off from 
 our present holding, and made fast to it. It was 
 now ascertained that the larboard bow had sus- , 
 tained injury, to the depth of three inches, from 
 
 ili 
 
REPAIR THE SHIP. 4/^ 
 
 the force with which the ship had struck against 
 the ice in boring ; and having careened her, the 
 whole of the forenoon was employed in restoring 
 it with plank and a sheathing of iron. At noon 
 the observations made us six or seven miles to 
 the southward of yesterday's position, but at the 
 same time somewhat to the westward. We en- 
 deavoured to try the different dipping-needles ; 
 but after getting the instruments fixed, the ice 
 was found to move too much in azimuth, and 
 we were obliged to relinquish the attempt. The 
 floe to which we were attached, seemed to have 
 been formed by the pressure of many detached 
 pieces together, some of which were uplifted ten 
 or fifteen feet above the level of the general mass. 
 Several pools of excellent fresh water were found 
 on it ; and this being a good opportunity to fill 
 the empty tanks, the ship was warped alongside 
 and with the assistance of the engine, the task 
 was soon completed. The officers amused them- 
 selves with shooting, and bagged two or three 
 brace of dovekies, which after being skinned and 
 steeped for a time in water, were made into sea 
 pies, and pronounced very excellent eating. 
 They also endeavoured to kill some seals, which 
 continually popped their heads out of the water 
 with apparent curiosity, gazing stupidly at those 
 who were about to destroy them. But though 
 it is certain they were lilt, and often on the head,. 
 
^^m^^^ms^^s^: 
 
 i ? I 
 
 48 
 
 IMriiDED BY FOG AND ICE. 
 
 ! I 
 
 ih 
 
 ■ » < 
 
 
 i 
 
 yet in no instance could they be secured before 
 they sunk. 
 
 About 4" p M., though it was still perfectly 
 calm, the ice began to set past the ship to the 
 south-east, at an unusual rate, and then, by a 
 counter-movement, closed in around us so quickly 
 as to compel us to move, by warping on the 
 other side of the floe. A very light air then 
 sprung up from the S. S. W., but gradually got 
 more to the westward, accompanied as usual by 
 a dense fog ; and at nightfall it was remarked 
 that young ice was rapidly forming between the 
 stationary pieces. 
 
 On the 13Mi the fog still continued, and it 
 had again fallen calm ; but the floes near us 
 being large and hummocky., we cast oft' from the 
 ice, and sending a boat a-head, along such open- 
 ings as could be found, made fast a line to pro- 
 jecting masses or hummocks, and so warped the 
 ship to the north. A faint breeze from the right 
 quarter fortunately came to our aid, and enabled 
 us to make sail on the vessel, and dispense with 
 this laborious substitute. The ice, however, 
 was distressingly close and heavy, and no clear 
 water could be seen in any direction. The wea- 
 ther indeed remained continually hazy, and so 
 prevented us from distinguishing the right, or in- 
 deed any, lead beyond the distance of two hundred 
 yards. My object was to force a passage to the 
 
 1 
 
ship's progress through the ice. 49 
 
 north, from a conviction that, as we got nearer 
 to the shore, the influence of the tides would be 
 more felt, and more open water thereby created 
 or at least that the ice would be lighter : for such 
 heavy and extensive masses as we now encoun- 
 tered were contrary to the experience of all who 
 had gone before us, and I could only suppose 
 that the ice had not been broken up at all last 
 year, but, having come down in a body, created 
 our present impediment. At noon the latitude 
 was obtained on a small floe, and made us within 
 a mile of yesterday's situation. The sun shone 
 brightly through the mist ; and though, owinff 
 to the radiation of heat from the decks and bul! 
 warks, there was no perceptible dampness below, 
 yet the rigging aloft was coated with fine icy 
 particles, which, being viewed from the crow's- 
 nest, presented the appearance of a prismatic 
 halo resting in the concavity of the fore-topsail. 
 The wind at length freshened precisely as we 
 wished it. and the ship, with her studding-sails 
 set, bored between masses often more than half 
 a mile in length, resisting the pressure, and 
 driving pieces before her in a manner perfectly 
 surprising, and no sooner had she made a way 
 for herself than the icy portals closed firmly, and 
 as It seemed, impassably behind her. At length 
 the entire body ahead looked like one compact 
 hummocky field, streaked with a few dark lines 
 
 E 
 
1 
 
 ill' 
 
 ^0 ship's progress through the ice. 
 
 of unequal breadth ; boring through which, we 
 seemed to be, as it were, ploughing a furrow 
 towards the north. Advancing in this manner, 
 I was glad to see that there was, a few miles off, 
 ice of a looser kind ; and no effort was left unprac- 
 tised to reach it. Just as we were on the very 
 point of succeeding, two floes were attracted, or 
 driven by a current together, and effectually 
 jammed us in. Happily the breeze at the same 
 moment freshened ; and, after some delay, in 
 which the floe of last winter's formation began 
 to crack and yield, while that of the previous 
 season remained Arm as a rock, the ship, break- 
 ing a large mass away and forcing it before 
 her bluff bows, cleared a passage through. It 
 would be a tedious repetition to relate all the 
 trouble and anxiety that we experienced in forcing 
 through the heavy barrier, which, I am of opi- 
 nion, hangs about this part of the strait from 
 the influence of opposing currents issuing, the 
 one from the north, probably through the open- 
 ing formed by Broken Point, and the others from 
 between the islands to the south. The influ- 
 ence of the same barrier, I apprehend, aided by 
 easterly gales, produces the interruption occa- 
 sionally met with by the Hudson Bay ships on 
 their homeward passage, and which but a short 
 time ago compelled them to winter in the 
 country. However this may be, we were heartily 
 
 if 
 
SALISBURY ISLAND. 
 
 51 
 
 glad to get out of the thick of it, which, though 
 sm hampered on every side by small floes and 
 drift masses, we now considered ourselves as 
 havmg achieved. As we advanced to the north- 
 west, the lanes and holes of water increased; but 
 the weather continuing hazy, with intermittent 
 showers of snow, and the night gloomy, and 
 consequently darker than usual, the smaller sails 
 were taken in, and, running securely under top- 
 gallant sails, we kept > a devious course through 
 the ice. ° 
 
 Early on the 14th, during a partial clearance 
 ot the clouds to the west, some of the people 
 fancied they saw land, which, according to the 
 bearmg, could be no other than Salisbury Island ; 
 and, in the forenoon, the wind then blowing 
 fresh, land was reported on the lee-bow, which 
 our reckoning made the north coast of the 
 strait m longitude 76° 50' W., to the eastward of 
 the Nottingham Island of Sir E. Parrv, or Mill 
 Islands of Arrowsmith. It was evident there- 
 fore that our progress had been very favour- 
 able ; and, if a passage were to be effected this 
 autumn, I felt assured that we were now in the 
 best channel for accomplishing it. Having stood 
 withm three miles of the land, the ship was put 
 round, and directions given to work to wind- 
 ward along shore. The first appearance which 
 the coast presented was a round-backed hill, 
 
 E Q 
 
 I. 
 
52 
 
 SHIP FOLLOWED BY ESQUIMAUX. 
 
 I'^l 
 
 which, as seen through the haze, seemed isolated, 
 but as we n eared it proved to be part of a low 
 island. There were several others almost in a 
 line with it, all presenting the same sombre as- 
 pect which characterised the coast generally, 
 except one, which was relieved by a light yellow 
 colour as of sand, but which, on inspection with 
 a telescope, was found to be rock. The land 
 behind the islands was tolerably high, and bold, 
 broken into bluffs and points, and, from its in- 
 dented shape, probably formed some good har- 
 bours. 
 
 The ship was now going at the rate of five 
 knots through the water, when two Esquimaux 
 kieyaks were seen endeavouring to overtake us ; 
 presently the wind becoming more fair the stud- 
 ding-sails and royals were set, and the speed of 
 course increased. The poor Esquimaux never- 
 theless paddled away with all their might, and 
 finally succeeded in coming up with us, though 
 almost in a state of exhaustion. They had little 
 to offer except the horn of a narwal ; and, after 
 receiving a few bits of iron hoop, they went away 
 but ill compensated for the fatigue which they 
 had undergone. 
 
 About 6 p. M. the weather became very thick, 
 and snow fell so abundantly as completely to 
 cover the decks and boats. Tlie wind also 
 changed to the north, so that we could no 
 
LAND DISCOVERED. 
 
 53 
 
 longer lie our course; and, not knowing ex- 
 actly ijow near Mill Islands might be, or, from 
 the amazing difference in the variation, whether 
 we might not be actually standing on them, the 
 small sails were taken in and the topsails reefed, 
 and, with the anchors ready to let go, we 
 proceeded with the utmost caution. That we 
 were near to the land was certain, but none 
 could be distinguished through the haze, either 
 to windward or leeward, and we literally groped 
 our way in much uncertainty, and not without 
 some anxiety. The wind also increased to such a 
 degree that the ship was put under snug canvass, 
 and, for the first time since leaving the Atlantic, 
 there was a regular sea, and consequently no 
 continuous ice. The next morning brought no 
 change for the better, for the wind was accom- 
 panied by snow, and that, with the haze, so em- 
 barrassed us, that it was difficult to determine 
 in what direction to proceed. However, when 
 daylight broke the ship was put about ; and we 
 had the pleasure of seeing that the head sea 
 which tumbled us about was at the same time 
 fast reducing the ice into fragments. 
 
 About 7^ A. M. land was discovered, formino- a 
 semicircle to windward, and which, guided \y 
 the log, we conjectured to bt Seahorse Point of 
 Baffin, on Southampton Island. The distance 
 certainly seemed rather more than the ship was 
 
 E 3 
 
' ( 
 
 54t 
 
 PERPLEXITY OF SUlp's COUIISE. 
 
 in the habit of accomplishing ; and what added 
 to the uncertainty was, the incomprehensible 
 manner in which the islands had been passed 
 (if passed at all) witliout having been seen. The 
 mountains — for such they appeared through the 
 haze — were nearly covered with snow, the effect 
 of the preceding night ; and some small islands 
 could be nidistinctly made out. Our course was 
 held parallel to them, in the hope, rather than 
 the persuasion, that they would terminate in the 
 point which was to lead us to Frozen Strait ; but, 
 about 11'' A. M., we suddenly found ourselves em- 
 bayed, and, from the still prevailing murkiness, 
 had barely time to get the ship round ; when it 
 was indisputably ascertained that the coast tended 
 far to the east. Under these perplexing cir- 
 cumstances, I determined not to incur any risk 
 which might endanger the safety of the ship, 
 and directed her to be kept, under easy sail, close 
 under the J'^e of the high land just mentioned, 
 until the weather should be clear enough to 
 justify me in acting differently. It was for- 
 tunate that I did so ; for, having obtained the 
 latitude at noon, and the longitude soon after- 
 wards, we found, much to our astonishment, that 
 we were not near Southampton Island at all, but 
 had been deceived by great deviation in the 
 compasses, and a powerful current, which had 
 driven us along the eastern side of Mill Islands, 
 and thence to the main shore of the strait, where 
 
DEVIATION OF COMPASS. 
 
 dS 
 
 in fact we had been embayed. However, We 
 must have passed between tlie Islands during the 
 night, though how, or in what direction remained 
 a mystery ; and we were thankful, as we had 
 reason to be, for our happy guidance among 
 them. In the afternoon the sky became more 
 clear; and it was then apparent, that though un- 
 der a press of sail, we could not stem tiie current, 
 which at that time (7" p. m.) was carrying us 
 bodily away to tho ,t.u h and east. The variation 
 of the compass vith t\v ship's head N. W. was 
 found to be six t. id ti iialf points, but when 
 N.E. only three f i a half. At 10'' p. m. we 
 were to leeward of our afternoon's position, 
 and stood in again for the main. 
 
 After beating about between Mill Islands and 
 the north shore all night, we found ourselves in 
 the morning, the l6th, still to leeward of the 
 former, and utterly unable to make head against 
 the current. Near noon, being then within a 
 mile of the shore, we could perceive a strong 
 race, within which was an eddy sweeping the 
 ice about in a furious manner. At the line of 
 its junction with the regular tide there was a fall 
 produced of at least three or four feet, which 
 hid all but the upper surface of the ice near it. 
 My object hac' been to get close in shore, from 
 an impression that we should be less opposed by 
 the current there than further out ; but, as either 
 
 E 4 
 
 •T-"^-'(tidt^^ 
 
m 
 
 I '^: ]} 
 
 &6 
 
 TRINITY ISLES. 
 
 ,1 ' 
 
 W i 
 
 Qurrent or tide was now driving us fast towards 
 the land, it became necessary to tack, and try 
 our fortune once more in the offing. It was 
 evident that no ordinary cause could thus have 
 detained us two days with a commanding breeze ; 
 and I began to think that nothing but a fair 
 wind would release us, when suddenly the ship 
 took a start, and just as unaccountably went 
 away in mid channel, hurrying us in a short time 
 abreast of the Trinity Isles of Fox. The north 
 shore was partially covered with the snow that 
 had lately fallen ; all that could be seen consisted 
 of solid and barren rock, entirely destitute of 
 herbage, or, as far as I could judge, of any thing 
 capable of supporting life. Not an inhabitant, 
 nor even an animal or bird was seen. 
 
 By 4^" P.M. the islands were upwards of ten 
 miles astern, when the breeze left us, and we 
 obtained soundings in one hundred and twenty- 
 three fathoms, the bottom consisting as usual 
 of blue mud. Soon after we had snow, and 
 the barometer began to fall. Hardly had the 
 necessary reduction been made in the sails, 
 when the wind increased to a fresh gale, 
 which speedily brought us to the edge of some 
 L^avy ice. Tiie whole o£ the night was occu- 
 pied in endeavouring to twine our way through 
 it ; ,and although in the morning of the lyth, 
 from its detached appearance hopes were excited 
 that the interruption would not be of long con- 
 
SHIP HOVE-TO. 
 
 57 
 
 tinuance, yet the favourable breeze soon brouglit 
 in sight an enormous floe, the extremes of which 
 were lost in the driving snow and mist. Un- 
 willing to try the north end of it, as that would 
 have led us again to the eastward, in which di- 
 rection it trended as far as could be discerned, 
 I determined on running along its lee side. This 
 was almost in the direction of cir course, but, 
 as it turned out, conducted us into a labyrinth, 
 that might have been of serious consequence 
 had the wind at all abated ; for, after sailing for 
 some time, we found ourselves between two floes 
 of unknown extent ; and though if the weather 
 had been clear we might perhaps have found a 
 passage, yet with every thing daik a-head, and 
 the liability to be nipped by the closing of the 
 ice, no such chance could be trusted to. Not 
 a moment therefore was lost in worming our 
 way back, which after some trouble and anxiety 
 w s accomplished. 
 
 An attempt was then made in another Mead ' 
 which only guided us to a solid pack j so that] 
 baffled at every turn, the ship was for a time 
 hove-to. As soon as the weather cleared— which 
 it did with a change of wind, directly contraiy 
 to our progress, but the very best for sepa- 
 ratmg and clearing away the ice — we took 
 the only course left to us, and beat to wind- 
 ward, towards a narrow opening, which it was 
 thought might possibly offer a channel. Snow 
 
' i-::t-li^j^iMsiiiiMiiif£i,iak.iiaSib,M}m 
 
 58 
 
 WHALES. 
 
 had fallen, which, after being partially thawed on 
 the decks, was there solidly frozen — a result to 
 be expected with a temperature of 29° + . Land 
 was supposed to have been seen, in the direction 
 of Southampton Island ; but, in the absence of 
 good observations, no reliance was placed on 
 the report. Persevering in plying to windward, 
 amongst the heaviest drift ice I had ever be- 
 held, it was not without great difficulty, and at 
 a great sacrifice of distance, that the innume- 
 rable masses surrounding us could be steered 
 clear of; nor was this always the case, since, in 
 spite of all our care, the ship would sometimes 
 drive on them with a concussion that made all 
 the bells ring, and almost threw those below from 
 their chairs. Two whales, the first seen since 
 our arrival in these latitudes, excited the curi- 
 osity of the novices, but did not produce r nong 
 the Greenland sailors the enthusiasm which I 
 remember to have observed with much pleasure 
 on a former occasion. At that time they ran 
 up the rigging, and followed every motion of the 
 whale with the most unequivocal symptoms of 
 delight ; and one of their number, unable to 
 contain his joy at seeing the monstrous creature 
 heave its bulk partly out of the water, cried out 
 in ecstasy, " There she goes, my boys, tail up 
 for Greenland." The next morning two other 
 whales were seen. 
 
 The remainder of the day was employed in 
 
SOUTHAMPTON ISLAND. 
 
 59 
 
 the tedious mancer already described; and in the 
 night the ship, having little head-way, ran against, 
 or rather dropped broadside on, a floe, from 
 which she could not be removed without the aid 
 of a warp, which was accordingly carried out to 
 a projecting point. The land o£ Southampton 
 Island was now distinctly made out, bearing by 
 compass N. W.^N., but far away. Both com- 
 passes were more than commonly sluggish, and 
 required constant tapping ; a phenomenon which 
 was observed to be more palpable with the ship's 
 head west, than on any other point. 
 
 The next day (August 18.), after beating to 
 windward slowly till noon, the ice became so 
 close that there was but one hole of water to 
 work in ; nearer the land, which v> , ow visible 
 from the deck, looking like blue hills, it appeared 
 to be somewhat looser, but as it was not suffi- 
 ciently so to allow of our reaching it, we were 
 compelled to go wherever the least chance of an 
 opening presented itself. At length we came 
 to a solid and unbroken pack, of such fearful 
 extent as to throw a sudden damp on our hopes. 
 It looked, from the crow's-nest, as if it were 
 joined to the land, and stretching thence, west 
 and north, glared in one undivided mass to the 
 utmost limits of the sight. To the south and east 
 the prospect was little better, rendering it doubt- 
 ful whether, in a case of necessity, a passage 
 
 f 
 
J 
 
 ■f 
 
 ! -J 
 
 
 
 
 pi 
 
 €0 
 
 COURSE OBSTRUCTED BY 
 
 could have been found in that direction. The 
 most experienced of the seamen (many of whom 
 had spent their lives in the Greenland trade) 
 declared they had never beheld such heavy ice, 
 and were confident that it had never been broken 
 up. To me, however, it seemed to consist of 
 numerous floes, but so wedged together as to be 
 utterly impassable, not only by a ship but in any 
 way ; for so ragged and piled up was the entire 
 surface, that the height of the ridges frequently 
 exceeded fifteen feet, and no human being could, 
 by any exertion, have travelled over it for more 
 than a short distance. To those who were un- 
 accustomed to polar navigation nothing could 
 be more discouraging; for it required more than 
 ordinary strength of mind not to be persuaded 
 that, in this direction at least, a limit was now 
 put to our progress. Those, however, who had 
 experience of the singular uncertainty of the 
 navigation in these seas, looked forward to the 
 accidents of the coming nigjit — the change of 
 wind, the tide or current, or some of those un- 
 accountable circumstances which, in a few hours 
 even of entire calm, create so sudden and mar- 
 vellous a change in the scene. Still, it was 
 a situation to call forth our most active energies ; 
 and, though resolved to persevere by this route 
 as long as the remotest chance was offered of 
 success, yet I could not conceal from myself the 
 
ENORMOUS RIDGES OF ICE. 
 
 ei 
 
 striking difference of the season which Sir E. 
 Parry had experienced in passing through this 
 channel, where he speaks of the weather as fine, 
 and even mild j whilst we, on the contrary, were 
 regaled with constant snow, and had the ther- 
 mometer at f28° + . We soon worked through 
 the remaining part of the open space ; and all 
 speculations of the chance of a further progress 
 being at an end, the ship was made fast to the 
 floe. At the same time, soundings were tried for 
 with three hundred fathoms, but without effect. 
 The night was cloudy, and almost calm ; but 
 shortly after midnight of August Ipth, many 
 large pieces of ice, near the pack, were observed 
 to be drifting away to the south-west, at the 
 estimated rate of half a mile an hour ; and at 
 3" 30° A. M., finding we were likely to be hemmed 
 in, the ship was cast off from the ice, and, by 
 means of lines carried out and attached to pro- 
 jecting masses, warped towards the north-east, 
 where alone there seemed to be a lane of water. 
 In an hour the desired spot was gained ; and, as 
 there was every appearance, from the darkness 
 of the sky, of a continued channel, . sail was im- 
 mediately made on the ship, and, to the surprise 
 and joy of all, the impediment was found to have 
 yielded to a greater power, and a path opened 
 through what seemed an impenetrable barrier. 
 Such are the strange incidents of polar navi- 
 

 ^ '! 
 
 I s 
 
 62 
 
 OBSTIIUCTION BY THE ICE. 
 
 gation, which, though less striking than the wild 
 commotions of the earthquake or tornacfoj uie at 
 all events calculated to excite equal giadtafje to 
 that merciful Providence whose protecting care 
 is over all his works, — in the icy waste i>o less 
 than in the thronged city. For two or thre c hours 
 the sun struggled in vain with the mist, which 
 enveloped sky and ice, still we met with no 
 hindrance ; and, havin{^ made a few tacks to avoid 
 the krge driit pieces, at noon we were still ad- 
 van* rug to the north, the latitude* as obtained 
 on a ii'jc, hdng (k° 57' N., the variation 52° W. 
 At leij^'i^. however the mist dispelled and with 
 it the I'opes in which we had been indulging. 
 A glance satisfied us that our further progress 
 would be very short. The breeze had died 
 away, and allowed the ice to pack afresh. Not 
 a lane, not a hole of water was to be seen in 
 any direction but the one just passed ; and again, 
 most reluctantly, were we compelled to secure 
 the ship to a floe. 
 
 August 20th. Though the night was gene- 
 rally calm, yet a motion in the ice, find the 
 suspicious approach of a large floe, which 
 seemed to threaten a squeeze, induced us to 
 cast off and warp a little to the south ; where v/e 
 once more made fast to the same extensive 
 piece of ice. The morning gave no sign of a 
 favourable change, and the crew were < >.( rcised, 
 
 iS : J: ( 
 
 ►t 
 
 1,1; 
 
VARIATION IN COMPASSES. 
 
 63 
 
 on the floe, in firing at a mark. About 11" a. m. 
 an attempt was made by hauling the ship to an 
 outer point of the floe, and making all sail ; but 
 the light air was very faint, and she barely 
 glided through the water. Observations, at 
 noon, gave the latitude 65° O-V N., longitude 
 80° 44' W., and variation 57° W.; which was 
 so far satisfactory as showing that no ground 
 had been lost. The compasses continued to be 
 very sluggish ; indeed fo much so, that, on one 
 occasion, the larboard one showed the ship's 
 head to be south, while that of the starboard 
 made it north. The wind soon died away al- 
 together ; and none springing up, as had usually 
 before been the case, with the declining sun we 
 again moored to a floe for the night. The men 
 amused themselves by a riotous game of leap-frog 
 on the ice; and the disaster of one of the officers, 
 who, in crossing a point covered with snow, fell 
 through and took a -old bath, excited a hearty 
 laugh. 
 
 During the night, which was perfectly calm, 
 young ice formed entirely around us. A month 
 later this circumstance might have given me 
 some uneasiness j but now it was deemed of con- 
 sequence only as adding to the delay andabridg- 
 ing the time which we hoped to employ in 
 the more interesting objects of the expedition. 
 Unless, indeed, this seasor. were to be very dif- 
 
r 
 
 II 
 
 y\] 
 
 ( i 
 
 64 
 
 SHIP IMBEDDED IN ICE. 
 
 ferent from all others recorded of the climate, I 
 felt assured that the customary westerly winds 
 would sooner or later prevail ; and that, under 
 their influence, the body of ice which now inter- 
 rupted our progress would open a passage for 
 us. None, however, were insensible to the 
 annoyance of our position, thus hampered, and 
 as it were fixed in a bed of ice; and a burst of joy 
 followed the announcement, from the * crow's- 
 nest,* of an appearance of water towards the 
 N. N. E. By warping and hauling till we reached 
 the * lead,' and then carrying studding-sails till we 
 had exhausted it, some little way was gained ; 
 and at noon, though the latitude was much 
 the same as yesterday, the longitude differed. 
 Through the remainder of the day we went on 
 struggling with the ice, tacking continually to 
 weather or avoid the floes, and praying for a 
 breeze, but praying in vain. A few whales and 
 narwals alone relieved the monotony of the 
 scene ; and night found us again attached fo a 
 floe, and lying motionless and dark on the bright 
 bosom of the icy wilderness. 
 
 About 2'' A. M., August 22d, a light air came 
 from the north-west, of which immediate ad- 
 vantage was taken ; and leaving the floe, we got, 
 by the aid of warping, into a Mead.* Studding- 
 sails were soon hoisted, and the ship was forced 
 through the close ice for a time, and thus soon 
 
 111? 
 
OCHRISH-COLOURED ICK. 
 
 65 
 
 again obliged to have recourse to the lines, was 
 at last brought into comparatively open water- 
 The conduct of both officers and men in this 
 arduous and irksome service deserved all praise ; 
 and their exertions were not altogether without 
 reward, for the land supposed to be Cape Com- 
 fort was evidently further off; and, at noon, this 
 conjecture was confirmed by the increase of lati- 
 tude, which was 65° 25' N., the longitude being 
 81 ° 0-8' W. Hitherto my endeavour had been to 
 follow the leads, in the hope of being brought 
 out into open water ; but now, as none was in 
 sight, I determined on steering directly towards 
 Frozen Strait, and, singular to say, the ice opened 
 as we advanced, though but half an hour pre- 
 vious it was tightly pressed together. As the 
 day drew in, the southern horizon became dark 
 and cloudy, sending what had been long ardently 
 desired, a south-west wind. The effects of this 
 were soon conspicuous in the ice ahead, which 
 now began to part into holes and lanes, and en- 
 couraged a hope among the more sanguine that 
 we were, at length, near the edge of that vast 
 body which had so long detained us. It was 
 remarkable that the whole of the ice, whether 
 detached or compact, floe or drift, was of a dirty 
 ochrish colour, totally unlike any which we had 
 seen before, and must therefore have been close 
 to the land. The middle of the night being 
 
E 
 
 
 ii 
 
 ■ i 
 
 i 
 
 10 
 
 66 BAFFIN AND SOITTHAMPTON ISLANDS. 
 
 now dark, we necessarily ran foul of many a 
 piece of ice, and got some violent knocks ; but, 
 depending ( '.be iucngth of the sliip, I could 
 not forego luv pkasure of pusliing on while a 
 chance leniained, and we continued to thread 
 our tortuous way as well as the faint gleam from 
 the ice allowed us to pick it out. 
 
 It was with consiil,iauie satisfaction that, 
 at 4** A. M. of the 23d, I heard the announce- 
 ment of Baffin Island bearing N. N. W., and 
 shortly afterwards that the land of Southampton 
 Island was made out to the westward. Had there 
 only been a channel, even as wide as a brook, 
 we should soon have got to the strait ; but the 
 scene around us now presented an apparently 
 solid sea of ice, thrown up in many parts to the 
 height of eighteen feet, and so ragged, peaked, 
 and uneven, as to bid defiance to any aHempt 
 even to walk over it. Had it been composed of 
 mere drift-ice, which is invariably detached by a 
 strong breeze, there would have been more en- 
 couragement ; bat the ^ inits of the enor"ious 
 floes surroUitding us ( auid not be discerned, and 
 it was absolutely marvellous that we should be 
 able to peneuate it at all ; yet, at noon, we were 
 still moving slowly; and the observations (for 
 the weather was beai'tifuhy clear) gave the lati- 
 tude 65° 42', longii ^e t" 41' W., ariation 
 49° 52' W. The soui er.j wind now fi shened, 
 
 
 :« 
 
\ 
 
 « 
 
 CHEEBLES PROSPECT. 
 
 67 
 
 and, despite of increasing obstacles, we continued 
 to gain a few yards. Warping was next resorted 
 to ; but at last all failed us, and at 3" p. m. we 
 were compelled to give up the attempt as utterly 
 hopeless. Cheerless, indeed, was the prospect ; 
 for, excepting within a few feet of the ship, 
 where the black streaks of water looked like 
 inky lines on a fair sheet of paper, far as the 
 eye could reach all was ice. Soundings were 
 obtained in one hundred and two f.thoms, and 
 showed a muddy bo^ )m. The tide had little or no 
 effect here ; but about 7' p. m., a large floe having 
 exhibited symptoms of moving round so as to 
 nip us, the sails were again hoisted, and the 
 ship forced a {>ad about her own length, when 
 immediately the smai' opening we had quitted was 
 clewed up. It was evident that we were equally 
 secure under canvass as without ; and as it was 
 possible that so long as the ship could be kept 
 ^' rigiit way something might be gained, we 
 kei ^'»e sails full, and at long intervals she 
 moved some twenty or thirty yards, and again 
 stopped. As the breeze grew fainter more sail 
 was set and still ^ ced her onwards ; ou> at day- 
 break of the 24th ,o change taking plac e 
 were once more fast, and after two hours* 
 
 warping, and edgmg he ship next to a large 
 fl je, which had hevn ^een ahead, ve found our- 
 selves i tantly hemmed in bv tht surrounding 
 
 F 2 
 
 I 
 
I 
 
 v 
 
 
 r 
 
 1, 
 
 I HI 
 
 68 
 
 YELLOW-COLOURED SNOW. 
 
 masses. Baffin's Island was yet in sight, about 
 twenty-four miles off; but we had drifted a little 
 to the north of it. I may remark here, that 
 having procured some of the yellow-coloured 
 snow, it was '' und to be caused by innumerable 
 small grains of earth ; a convincing proof that 
 the immense quantity passed must have been in 
 the immediate neighbourhood of the shore, and 
 had, in all probability, drifted down from the 
 
 north. 
 
 No other alteration occurred during the day 
 than the setting of the whole body of ice to the 
 eastward, though at too moderate a rate to carry 
 us far awav ; but about S"* of the morning of 
 August ^2.Hli, the masses around us seemed 
 something more apart -, and after some warping, 
 which brought us to the odge of a floe, where, as 
 is generally the case, the ice was less pressed 
 together, we made sail, and " bored" through 
 towards the south-west, in the hope of getting 
 nearer to Southampton Island. The wind, how- 
 ever, on which we depended, veered more to 
 the eastward, and at the same time becoming 
 lighter, allowed the ice to pack again ; so that, 
 after many fruitless trials, we were forced to 
 desist, and soon lost all traces of water. The 
 weather was and had been for some days past 
 extraordinarily fine; the thermometer at mid- 
 day being 42° + , in the sun, and 36°+, in the 
 
 m 
 
PICTURESQUE SCENE. 
 
 (39 
 
 shade. The hours were passed in a feverish 
 state of excitement, and many an upward glance 
 was cast at the little vane at the mast-head ; but 
 all was calm, and the wonder was, not how we 
 were to get on, but how we had contrived to 
 get here. Towards evening a light air, together 
 with a *• slack" among the ice, allowed a trifling 
 distance to be made ; but at sunset we were 
 stopped near to an extensive floe, where, from 
 the effects of pressure, some ponderous masses 
 had been heaped up, like Titanian ruins, to the 
 height of thirty feet. The land, blue from dis- 
 tance, and beautifully sofl as contrasted with the 
 white cold glare of the interminable ice around, 
 reflecting by the setting sun the tints of the inter- 
 vening masses thrown into the most picturesque 
 groups and forms— spires, turrets, and pyramids, 
 many in deep shade — presented altogether a 
 scene sufficient for a time to cheat the imagina- 
 tion, and withdraw the mind from the cheerless 
 reality of our situation. It was past 4" a. m. of 
 August 26th before the ship could, even by the 
 use of warps, be forced ahead ; and then weari- 
 some indeed was the task. A mile at the utmost 
 rewarded our exertions ; and the wind having 
 veered round more to the north- east, the entire 
 body of ice swept down upon us, and tho im- 
 minent peril of being nipped was only avoided 
 by the cativity of tlie officers and crew in heav- 
 
 F 3 
 
 f 
 
 I, 
 
70 
 
 PERILOUS SITUATION. 
 
 I 
 
 ing the ship into a sort of basin, formed by two 
 projecting points of the nearest floe. Here we 
 were again set fast. A summer's day, with the 
 thermometer at 44" + in the sun, and a bright 
 and cloudless sky, made us deplore more than 
 ever our mortifying detention during weather 
 so advantageous for work along the coast with 
 our boats. But not the slightest improvement 
 took place in our condition ; though at long 
 intervals the mournful crashing of the young ice, 
 as yielding to the larger masses it was thrown 
 up in solid foam, gave token that all was in mo- 
 tion. There was no wind, and evidently but 
 little tide or current, for the bearings and dis- 
 tance from the land remained nearly as they 
 were yesterday ; still there was an occasional 
 stir, and the pressure against the ship was de- 
 cidedly increased. About midnight, though still 
 calm, this became more perceptible by additional 
 pieces of ice bv ng squeezed against the bows 
 and between the larboard side and the floe to 
 which we were secured, producing thereby a 
 heavy strain on the hawser, and threatening to 
 force the stern against what had hitherto been 
 a security, a projecting point. Another strong 
 hawser was therefore carried out and fixed to an 
 ice-anchor ahead, and being hove tight by the 
 windlass, materially relieved the strain upon the 
 other. Preparations were, at the same time, 
 
WHITE WHALES. 
 
 71 
 
 going on to unhang the rudder, which, in the 
 event of the ship's coming astern, must have 
 struck the floe and been carried away. 
 
 Until past 1 a. m. (August 27th), we remained 
 ^n suspense, which was then relieved by the ice 
 returning again to its former position, and giving 
 us an opportunity to warp closer to the floe. An 
 attempt was made to remove some of the smaller 
 masses from between the ship and the floe ; but 
 notwithstanding repeated trials with all the re- 
 sources in our power, we vere completely baffled. 
 Strange too at this late season, the breeze once 
 more came from the south-east, though the 
 height of the barometer indicated a totally differ- 
 ent result ; and there was no hope for us until 
 the faithless wind should round to the north- 
 west. During the whole of the day and follow- 
 ing night, the breeze blew freshly. Four white 
 whales were seen playing about sunset in a pool 
 ahead, and remained undeterred by our cries, 
 apparently enjoying the only breathing place for 
 many a league around. In the night there was 
 a great pressure against the bows, and a severe 
 strain upon the hawsers. In the morning of 
 August 28th this abated, but in its stead the 
 entire body became more closely packed than 
 ever ; and the ship, having to bear a great re- 
 sistance from the upturned pieces against her 
 
 F 4 
 
 M 
 
 I \ 
 
72 
 
 WINTER ISLAND. 
 
 
 sides, gradually lay over to starboard, being, in 
 the technical phrase, slightly nipped. 
 
 I had thought it not unlikely that the force 
 of the wind might possibly have turned round 
 some of the heavy remote ice, and thereby have 
 left a little clear space for the removal of that 
 near us ; but it must have been wedged against 
 the coast or among the islands which were 
 visible (Winter Island among the rest) from the 
 crow's nest. Appearances, indeed, were more 
 unpromising than we had yet experienced ; and 
 our devotions of that day (for it was Sunday) 
 were tinged with an humble hope that we should 
 shortly be released from our anxious situation. 
 Rain fell occasionally, and towards evening the 
 wind veered round to the south-west, directly 
 off the floe, affording one other chance of re- 
 moving the ice along the western shore, if any 
 unoccupied space were left in that quarter. The 
 effect on the ship was sensibly felt by her being 
 forced more over to starboard ; and during the 
 early part of the night, she was lifted up by the 
 stern in consequence of several loose pieces of 
 ice having got under her counter. On tha fol- 
 lowing day (the 29th), the strain on the haw- 
 sers was as nmch as they could bear ; and as 
 little or no motion could be detected in the 
 ice, it was attributed to the tide or current, 
 which, however, scarcely altered our position. 
 
 V 
 
 J 
 
m 
 
 -tl 
 
u 
 
I ! 
 
 P i 
 
 !5 (; 
 
 
 I 
 
MOVEMENT OF THE ICE. 
 
 73 
 
 In the forenoon the barometer had gone down 
 unusually low ; and as on former occasions this 
 had been invariably followed by a southerly 
 breeze, the same result was apprehended now ; 
 much to our relief, however, the wind blew with 
 some strength from the north-west, bringing with 
 it a prospect of release ; and though, packed 
 as the whole body south and east of us was sup- 
 posed to be, this could only be a work of time, 
 yet sanguine ideas were immediately entertained 
 of yet reaching our destination early enough to 
 do something this season. At noon, according 
 to the observations, we were within two miles 
 of the same spot ; but the effect of the wind was 
 shown by two or three partial openings near 
 the ship ; and, as early as 5 o'clock, a general 
 moven e-^t of the ice began. It came from the 
 westward, n id immense quantities skirting the 
 extremity of the larger floe to which we were 
 secured, and bearing down cir ^e upon us, wfjre 
 there caught w^ithin 'he circl~ of an eddy, and 
 shortly swept away to tl.t eastward. It is need- 
 less to say with how much pleasure so joyful a 
 sight was hailed, and how sincerely we prayed 
 that both the cause and effect might continue 
 until a passage should be cleared to the Frozen 
 Strait. The night was dark, with frequent squalls 
 and snow ; but on the morning of the 30th, the 
 ice was found to be still drifting in the same 
 
 { \ 
 
 
:-;^?r-^ytf^>^-^q??^|f^yi^-"~^ 
 
 (.! 
 
 7^ 
 
 SEVERE PRESSURE OF ICE, 
 
 direction, and the pieces were thought to be 
 considerably smaller and lighter ; still there was 
 no continuous 'lead* of which advantage could be 
 taken. As the day advanced, and the breeze be- 
 came more southerly and moderate, little further 
 effect was produced on the ice. At noon, the ob- 
 servations made us rather to the southward ; and 
 as the ice appeared inclined to return from that 
 quarter, nnd the wind was drawing gradually to 
 the eastward, it was necessary to make sail and 
 get as far as the openings would allow. This 
 was speedily accomplished; and, with much 
 trouble from the closing of the ice, we contrived 
 to gain a mile or two fi:om the floe, which had 
 been left, and found ourselves again brought 
 to a full stop, and in a more awkward situation 
 than before. Warps were immediately put into 
 requisition ; and with the aid of the capstan the 
 ship was wedged between the opposing masses, 
 until finding less obstruction the sails once more 
 pressed her onwards. The severity of the shocks 
 as we encountered the ice, notwithstanding our 
 familiarity with them, was on this occasion ab- 
 solutely startling. But there was mo help for it, 
 nor any other chance of getting on j for the 
 channel we ploughed before us closed ere the 
 ship had gone twice her length, and cut off all 
 retreat, even had retreat been thought of. 
 
 To complete the catalogue of annoyances the 
 
 2 ..™ 
 
 
 mm 
 
SINKING OF THERMOMETERr 
 
 15 
 
 breeze veered directly east, and came charged 
 with abundance of snow, which fell incessantly, 
 and filling u^- >„"ie hollows and crevices of thf 
 ice, baulked the sight by an appearance of uni- 
 formity. As the wind was fresh, we might 
 possibly, with the advantage of daylight for se- 
 lecting the right * leads,' have got well in with 
 the land ; but this the night frustrated, and 
 having pushed on till 10 o*clock, p. m., we were 
 unable to get farther ; still the topsails and fore- 
 sail were kept hoisted and set, in the hope that 
 on the turn of tide an opening might be made. 
 
 August 31st came, but with no friendly aspect, 
 for snow fell thick and fast, and the thermometer 
 sunk to 26° + , accelerating the formation of 
 young, and serving to cement the old ice, in an 
 alarming manner. However aoout 4 a. m., a 
 kind of * slack * was observed, and, after four 
 hours* labour, it was conjectured that one mile 
 of distance had been gained. Then being again 
 stopped, and not a pool of water in sight, the 
 sails were partly taken in. The hour arrived 
 when it was expected that the tide might have 
 some beneficial effect in loosening the vedged 
 masses, but arrived in vain : so the useless sails 
 were furled ; and in the midst of increasing snow, 
 and the worst and dreariest weather that could 
 have beflillen us, we submitted in silence to 
 what no human power could control. At sun- 
 
 It' 
 
 
76 
 
 WATER SKY. 
 
 set the sky became clear, and Baffin Isl:md was 
 
 seen bearin- N. 87° W., and a hill on Soi th;, np. 
 
 ton Island S. 4 r W. j a water sky * too was j e- 
 
 ported to the south-west, but scarcely succeeded 
 
 in again cheating us into hope. The nJght was 
 
 more than ordinarily cold, for the temperature 
 
 of the air was only 19° + , and that of the water 
 
 23°+ : an omen as gloomy as unlooked foi at 
 
 this early season, when Sir E. Parry, in the 
 
 same latitude, was enjoying almost the warmth 
 
 of summer. But the startling fact could not be 
 
 concealed from ourselves, that the rigour of a 
 
 precocious winter was thrust upon us, at the 
 
 moment when we were almost in sight of our 
 
 port. 
 
 • Prod-.u Mi! by the dark vapour from the water, and used 
 m opposl-oK to «« ice-blink." 
 
 
 I.K 
 
77 
 
 Iriven nearer Land, 
 in extreme Peril. — 
 
 CHAP. II. 
 
 Steer for Southampton ^xland. — Conjectures respecting the 
 Ice. — Islands.— Pressure of the Wind. — Ship immove- 
 able. — Cutting away the Ice. - ^now. ■ Drijling towards 
 Land. — Accident to Rudder. — Aspect ontiguous Coast. 
 
 New Moon. — Recreations of I - Chase of a 
 
 Bear. — Hawser carried away bi^ Icebound in sight 
 
 ofLd id. — Wind veers to South - Prospect of Re 
 
 lease. — Hopes disappointed. — /S 
 — Mr. Gore shoots a Fox. — *S' 
 Frightful Increase of Pressure. — Providential Delivery. — 
 /daring Expedition. — A Dock cut in the Ice. — Con- 
 
 tion of Officers. — Papid Destruction of the Floe 
 
 Bow oftlie Ship split. — Hopes of progressing baffled. 
 
 This detention, so irksome to the officers, though, 
 as it seemed, little regarded by the men, continued 
 throughout the forenoon of the 1st September, 
 the observations at noon showing no perceptible 
 difference in our situation, which, considering 
 the manner that the Hecla and Fury* were 
 whirled about in the same place, is another T^roof 
 of the capriciousness ofp.'lar navigation. 
 
 The wind, however, gradually drew round to 
 the westward of n( ^h ; yet, though tolerably 
 fresh, it was long before it made the smallest 
 impression on the ice. At last at 5 p. m. the 
 
 * See Parry's Narrative. 
 
IMAGE EVALUATION 
 TEST TARGET (MT-3) 
 
 1.0 
 
 I.I 
 
 11.25 
 
 
 2.5 
 2.2 
 
 2.0 
 
 1.8 
 
 U 11.6 
 
 V] 
 
 ^ 
 
 /a 
 
 el 
 
 
 v: 
 
 
 /^ 
 
 w/ 
 
 «/// 
 
 '/ 
 
 Photographic 
 
 Sciences 
 Corporation 
 
 23 WEST MAIN STREET 
 
 WEBSTER, N.Y. M580 
 
 (716) 872-4503 
 

78 STEEn FOR SOUTHAMPTON ISLAND. 
 
 cemented masses near us suddenly broke asunder, 
 and disentangled the ship from the thin crust 
 that had surrounded her. This change, which 
 was evidently the effect of the breeze, was gra- 
 tifying, as showing that three days* continuation 
 of it would, in all probability, clear the whole of 
 Frozen Strait, and, as it was, a clear channel on 
 the following day was confidently anticipated. 
 During the first part of the night, the wind con- 
 tinued to blow freshly J but early on the following 
 morning it moderated, and the ice at once 
 returned to its former position ; yet again, about 
 6 A. M., with unaccountable eccentricity, the 
 entire body half a mile round was in agitation. 
 Prompt to seize the lucky moment, we warped 
 to a spot where the sails could be advan- 
 tageously used, and, contrary to all the ex- 
 pectations of but an hour before, found ourselves 
 making headway. As the day grew clearer 
 the same dark-bluish grey clouds were observed 
 in precisely the same bearing as had been noted 
 two days ago, strengthening the opinion already 
 expressed that they were the certain signs of 
 open water. Fortunately the * leads,' narrow and 
 hampered as they were, took a direction towards 
 the desired point, and allowed us to hold a course 
 directly for Southampton Island, which I was the 
 more eager to attain, from a conviction in my own 
 mind that a passage existed alongshore, close in 
 
CONJECTURES RESPECTING THE ICE. 
 
 79 
 
 with the land. Hitherto, indeed, every attempt 
 to approach it, since leaving Mill Islands, had 
 been thwarted by consolidated bodies of inter- 
 vening ice, but at the moment this was not 
 regarded. It was the opinion of Sir E. Parry, 
 that the ice adheres to the shores of the con- 
 tinent and Southampton Island, unless blown off 
 by a strong breeze ; and in this opinion I entirely 
 concur as applicable to the appearance of ice 
 there in ordinary seasons j but in our case it 
 was obvious that some other explanation was to 
 be looked for of the extraordinary impediments 
 by which we had been beset. To me it seemed 
 almost certain that the great body of ice had 
 not been broken up at all in the previous year 
 1835, and that having, with the accumulations 
 of the following season, been detached from its 
 bonds by the storms of the spring, it had been 
 driven, probably by the combined action of the 
 wind and current, from the bays and harbours 
 of the north to the place where we found it. 
 That there were two distinct kinds of ice could 
 not be doubted ; since the most cursory observer 
 could not fail to remark that the one was 
 massive, old, and irregular, with huge piles tossed 
 up in picturesque confusion — the other light, 
 clean, and comparatively smooth. The time 
 too which had been consumed amidst the laby- 
 rinths of the old ice, with so trifling a change of 
 
80 FOOT-PRINTS OF A BEAR ON THE ICE. 
 
 
 H 
 
 situation, convinced me that any further delay 
 among it would be fatal, and all these consider- 
 ations made me, as I have said, most desirous to 
 close in with the land. 
 
 With this object, and a favourable wind, we 
 * bored * the whole of the forenoon through the 
 lighter kind of ice, making occasional circuits 
 as the accident of shape required. Still no 
 water appeared, though the Greenlandmen did 
 not lose their faith in the dark clouds which yet 
 hung upon the skirts of the horizon, seeming to 
 recede as we slowly approached them. The 
 fresh foot-prints of a bear which had crossed the 
 ice within the last twenty-four hours was the 
 novelty of the day ; and a goose was seen where 
 perhaps none but a goose would have been seen. 
 At noon the difference in longitude amounted 
 only to four miles ; the latitude remaining the 
 same. Indeed, by the increasing closeness of 
 the ice, the difficulty of advancing in any di- 
 rection was becoming hourly greater. For some 
 time we were entirely stopped ; but by keeping a 
 press of sail set, and with the aid of a freshening 
 N. E. breeze, we forced our way by a few hundred 
 yards at a time, proceeding in this manner with 
 little variation until midnight. The wind then 
 increased considerably, compelling us to take in 
 sail ; but that which, under more favourable 
 circumstances, would have facilitated, now only 
 
 /i 
 
ISLANDS* 
 
 81 
 
 no 
 
 served to impede our progress, for the strong 
 breeze packed the ice. September 3d brought 
 a cold and chilling day, with a temperature of 
 25° +, and a surface of young ice on all the pools 
 around. Every attempt therefore to move was as 
 useless as laborious ; and, after carrying away a 
 warp in trying to change the situation fifty paces 
 forwards, we were obliged to yield to necessity, 
 and desist altogether. The sails were taken 
 in ; and our stock of fresh water being almost 
 exhausted, the crew were employed in refilling 
 the tanks, a task which was completed in the 
 forenoon. The sky, which had been dark and 
 hazy towards the land and to the east^'r.rd, had 
 become clearer, and enabled us to see Southamp- 
 ton Island somewhere about Cape Comfort, which 
 was high and much co^^ered with snow. On 
 this side of it, and within perhaps twelve miles 
 of the ship, Fife Rock was also visible ; whik far 
 away to the eastward of North, was Baffii jla^id. 
 In fact, after all our labour, we found by the 
 observations that we had only got twelve miles 
 to the south. 
 
 A Burgomaster, or GlaucusguU, was seen; and 
 a golden plover, blown off the shore by the force 
 of the wind, was shot. Towards sunset several 
 pools of water were formed, one of which, on 
 the lee-bpw, was of some extent. That nearest 
 
w 
 
 i' 
 
 h . 
 
 II 
 
 82 
 
 PRESSURE OF THE WIND. 
 
 to US was, for a few minutes, an object of attrac- 
 tion, owing to the sudden appearance there of 
 three or four white whales. 
 
 It now blew a fresh gale, accompanied by 
 squalls, and though cold, the weather was clear. 
 On trying an anemometer, kindly lent to me by 
 Mr. Rice of Chatham dockyard, the pressure on 
 a square foot of canvass was found to be equal to 
 four pounds. The night brought no change ; 
 but, on the morning of September -Ith, we were 
 glad to perceive that the ship, and consequently 
 the whole body in which she was beset, had 
 drifted n^'ich nearer to Southampton Island, 
 which was now visible from the deck. We had 
 also passed Fife Rock. The frost, however, was 
 so severe that a hole was obliged to be cut along- 
 side to draw water from. As this was Sunday, 
 I fter the usual muster at divisions. Divine Ser- 
 vice was read, with an appropriate sermon, which 
 was listened to with becoming attention, and as I 
 hope and believe, with the devotion befitting the 
 perilous uncertainty of our situation. At noon, 
 the observations both by lunar and chrono- 
 meter made us a little to the east in longitude, 
 and the latitude showed that we had been set 
 fifteen miles south, the distance from Fife Rock 
 being west five miles, fi:om Southampton island 
 about twenty-four miles, and from Repulse Bay 
 
SHIP IMIvIOVEABLE. 
 
 83 
 
 not more than one hundred and thirty-six miles ; 
 so thut with but a moderate share of westerly 
 winds to open the ice from the land, there was 
 still good reason to look forward to the accom- 
 plishment of the passage before the close of the 
 season, though the thermometer was as low as 
 20*+ in the night, and but 27°+ during the 
 warmer part of the day. Some hours elapsed 
 without the slightest variation in the ice, but 
 at &" p. M. an extraordinary movement took 
 place, which with astonishing celerity dispersed 
 it inshore so much &s to leave a wide and long 
 lane, and we were not without hope that a 
 branch of it might even have reached us. Not, 
 however, that we waited for such a consum- 
 matioM without putting our shoulders to the 
 wheel ; for, brides the sails well filled with a 
 fresh breeze, our strongest hawsers were fas- 
 tened to the ice, and then hove round by the 
 capstan. The united force was of course very 
 great, and no device was left untried to heave 
 the ship ahead; but so firmly had the * sludge* 
 been frozen quite round the bends, that all our 
 efforts were unavailing, and not an inch could 
 we stir her. To see open water within one 
 hundred yards, and yet be unable to reach it, 
 was a type of the torment of poor Tantalus : but 
 so it was, and there was nothing left but to sub- 
 
 G 2 
 
'4' 
 
 
 i\ 
 
 84 
 
 CREW EMPLOYED IN 
 
 mit. The sails were furled, and the ship again 
 thrown on the chances of what might befall 
 
 The wind decreased during the night, and at 
 daylight of September 5th there was a calm. 
 We found also that we had drifted considerably 
 nearer the land, which was high, and thinly and 
 partially covered with snow. Fife Rock 'was 
 just visible to the north. Lanes of water were 
 seen at different points of the compass along 
 shore ; and, though they were rather far apart, 
 and of no great extent, the usual trial was made 
 to reach, them, but again without success. The 
 last resource therefore was adopted. . The whole 
 of the officers and men were despatched, under 
 the orders of Lieutenant Smyth, to the only 
 open water at all near ; and with axes, ice chi- 
 sels, handspikes, and long poles, began the la- 
 bouring process of cutting away the * sludge * 
 that bound the pieces together, and removing 
 them into the clear space. "In this, service 
 they were frequently obliged to fasten lines to 
 the heavier masses and haul them out ; and, 
 though slipping and tumbling about, yet the 
 light-hearted fellows pulled in unison to a cheer- 
 ful song, and laughed and joked with the un- 
 reflecting merriment of schoolboys. Every now 
 and then some luckless wight broke through 
 the thin ice, and plunged up to his neck j an- 
 
 M ni 
 
^ain 
 
 d at 
 aim. 
 ably 
 and 
 "was 
 ivere 
 long 
 part, 
 lade 
 The 
 hole 
 nder 
 only 
 chi- 
 le la- 
 dge* 
 >ving 
 rvice 
 es to 
 and, 
 : the 
 heer- 
 B un- 
 now 
 ough 
 : an- 
 

 I • 
 
 It 
 
 i 
 
 1 
 
 'r 
 1 
 
 ! 
 
 1 
 
 
 i 
 
I 
 
 m 
 
 I' fl 
 
CUTTING AWAY THE ICE. 
 
 8S 
 
 \ 
 
 other, endeavouring to remove a piece of ice 
 by pushing against a larger mass, would set him- 
 self adrift with it, and every such adventure was 
 followed by shouts of laughter, and vociferous 
 mirth. In this way considerable progress was 
 made, and in the meantime the weather be- 
 came warmer, and the wind veered to the south- 
 ward. It became therefore more desirable than 
 ever that the ship should be liberated, and, if 
 possible, got closer to the shore, to avoid being 
 drifted with the pack away to the north, as we 
 knew must happen if the breeze should freshen 
 from the quarter in which it now was. At noon, 
 the latitude was something south of yesterday's, 
 and the longitude a mile or two west. The 
 temperature was 33° + . In the afternoon, the 
 wind drew more to the eastward, and destroyed 
 the hope of warping the ship out in the channel 
 which we had been employed in cutting ; but 
 as it was by that process alone tliat we could 
 hope to get clear, the task was resumed with 
 undiminished ardour in a direction immediately 
 to the westward, where the ice was not quite 
 so tightly pressed as elsewhere. 
 
 The work went on cheerily, and as the breeze 
 increased the sails were hoisted, and much to 
 our satisfaction forced the head round, when the 
 ship gradually gathered way, and went slowly 
 
 G 3 
 
I 
 
 86 
 
 SNOW. 
 
 towards the land. There was indeed an infinite 
 expanse of ice, but every dark spot of water 
 encouraged the hope that an oif-shore wind 
 would soon place us in a navigable channel.. 
 Accordingly as the masses separated from time 
 to time, the hawsers were got out, and the ship 
 hove between them, and thus, about 10'' p. m., 
 we suddenly emerged into a free space. This 
 proved to be nearly four miles long ; but there 
 was no opening beyond it^ and again, in the 
 morning of September 6th, all was closed. The 
 wind freshened, but brought with it sr ow, the 
 most unwelcome thing which could befall usi 
 nevertheless the warps were tried, and with them 
 and the sails together we managed to push, 
 perhaps a mile altogether, towards the land. It 
 was then noon, and hazy, no land in sight ; ther- 
 mometer 29"+. The effect of the E.S.E. 
 breeze was shown in the slow setting of the ice 
 upon the coast ; and, as many of the pieces were 
 of sufficient dimension to entitle them to the 
 name of floes, their motion created occasional 
 lanes, which, if we had been able to see but a 
 few hundred yards ahead, might perhaps have 
 been followed with advantage. Even with all 
 the uncertainty and risk, I confess the tempt- 
 ation to gain a single mile was almost irresistible. 
 That the prudent course was the best was soon, 
 
 I i 
 
APPEARANCE OF THE LAND. 
 
 87 
 
 however, exemplified ; for the whole of the ice 
 within range of sight shortly after closed, and 
 hemmed us in. For an hour it was doubtful 
 whether we should not be nipped, but by warp- 
 ing into a bight accidentally formed by the 
 overlapping of one floe over the point of another, 
 we fortunately escaped. The wind too increased, 
 so the sails were furled, and the ship secured to 
 the largest floe. Soundings were struck in one 
 hundred and twenty-nine fathoms, the bottom 
 being composed of sand and shells, and by the 
 line it appeared that the s ^ was drifting 
 N. by E. The night was dark and cheerless from 
 the snow, which continuing to fall clogged the 
 rigging and decks. At daybreak, there was no 
 opening in any direction, east or west ; and the 
 ice had been packed against the land, which 
 could be traced from south-east to north ; Fife 
 Rock being still visible E. N. E. Our distance 
 from the land was about ten or twelve miles ; 
 but, not to speak of the icy barrier which se- 
 parated us, there was nothing which invited to 
 a nearer approach. The soft blue tint which, 
 twenty-four hours ago, had cheated the imagin- 
 ation, was gone ; and now there was the chilling 
 reality of precipitous black rocks streaked with 
 snow, and a mantle of the same cold whiteness 
 spread over the whole of the head land. 
 
 G 4 
 
9S 
 
 DRIFTING TOWARDS LAND. 
 
 ( 
 
 
 'I 
 
 It was now the 7th of September, and, with so 
 premature a winter, I could not fail to be more 
 than ordinarily anxious about our situation. I 
 was aware that Sir E. Parry had been within a 
 few niiles of the same spot on the 17th of the 
 same month on his return to England ; but at that 
 time the temperature — the season — in short, every 
 thing was different; whereas we were lying power- 
 less as a log, and nothing was left to my choice 
 but to sail through the first favourable opening 
 that offered. So much snow had fallen, that the 
 better part of the forenoon was taken up in 
 clearing it from the decks. At noon, the wind 
 had veered to N. E. by E., which was dead on 
 the land. Soundings were found with one 
 hundred ; and fifty-five fathoms. Temperature 
 29" + . Soon after, there was a perceptible move- 
 ment in the ice near us. At first, I thought it 
 was the re-action produced by the intensity of 
 the pressure ; but the blocks and pieces thrown 
 up on the surface of resisting masses, and against 
 the ship's sides, proved that some agent was 
 at work, and not long after a five-inch warp, 
 which held us to the floe, suddenly broke. At 
 4" p. M. we were evidently drifting much nearer 
 to the land, though no such indication was given 
 by the soundings, which were one hundred and 
 fifty fathoms, with a bottom of green mud» 
 
ACCir^; 
 
 TO RUDDER. 
 
 89 
 
 Indeed, it could be owing only to the amazing 
 pressure from the north, which ground the smaller 
 pieces into powder, and either sunk or threw 
 up others, at various heights and angles, upon 
 the larger pieces, that a space was cleared for 
 our drifting. Whatever the cause, we were set- 
 ting directly on the shore, without the slightest 
 means of averting it. 
 
 Near 8'' p. m., a general hubbub, with harsh 
 grating sounds, announced a commotion about 
 the stern, which being turned away from the 
 floe, among the looser ice, was more exposed 
 than any other part The tiller had been secured 
 with lashings, to confine the rudder amidships, 
 but a steep and heavy mass coming against 
 it under the quarter, snapped the lashings like 
 threads, and forced the rudder violently on one 
 side, from which position it could not be re- 
 lieved until the ice moved away. About the 
 same time another warp was broken, after which 
 we were not much further disturbed during the 
 night. 
 
 Sept. 8th brought no change. The same dreary 
 weather overhung the heavens as with a veil. 
 The coast however was dimly seen, forming, 
 according to our position, a long bay, termi- 
 nated abruptly to the westward by a projecting 
 bluff point, which we supposed to be that dis- 
 
90 
 
 ASPECT OF CONTIGUOUS COAST. 
 
 < '3 
 
 f ^ 
 
 tinguished in the chart by the, to us, most 
 unappropriate name of Cape Com^ rt. Beyond 
 it, a low neck of land could be made ot^t, run- 
 ning to the north, which was conjectured to be 
 Cape Bylot. Fife Rock bore N. E. There was 
 not, to use the ice mate's expression, " a sup 
 of water in sight." All our hopes, therefore, 
 rested on the uncertain chance of a westerly 
 breeze, uncertain only in such a season as this, 
 inasmuch as ordinarily the westerly and north- 
 westerly winds are the unfailing companions of 
 autumn in these latitudes. The barometer had 
 been for the last fortnight very steady, scarcely 
 varying with any difference of wind. At noon 
 the latitude was 65'' 09', and longitude 82°51' W., 
 not more, therefore, than fifty miles from Duke 
 of York's Bay in Frozen Strait. The temperature, 
 which had at one time fallen to 23°+, rose again 
 to 28** + , wind N. E. 
 
 The hours which usually brought some slight 
 alteration arrived, and passed away, leaving us as 
 we were, so that we were driven to infer that the 
 pressure from seaward had now attained its maxi- 
 mum, and that the compact and boundless field of 
 ice had vanquished tide and current, and was be- 
 come fixed and immoveable. A mild night suc- 
 ceeded, though at first overcast, yet by 10** p. m. 
 some stars were seen, giving indications of a clear . 
 
NEW MOON. 
 
 91 
 
 sky to the north-west. For an hour or two indeed 
 the wind did veer as far round as N. N. W., and 
 tantalized us by vacillating between that and 
 N. N. E. How often did we look up at the 
 mast-head vane, and how often presume to say 
 that it must get to the southward and westward. 
 In the morning (9th Sept.) all was still and 
 motionless, though it seemed that we had drifted 
 a little to the south along the land. At noon, 
 a gentle air might just be felt from the south- 
 west ; and as the breeze grew stronger, the hope 
 deferred which had made our hearts sick was 
 again doubtfully re-admitted. At night there 
 was no longer any pressure, for the ship, which 
 had been forced over considerably to starboard, 
 now righted ; and this joyful fact the least san- 
 guine construed into an omen of a speedy re- 
 lease. But the next morning (September lOth) 
 the capricious wind first drew more to the south, 
 bringing with it snow, then veered round again 
 to N. N. W., and finally fell nearly calm. The 
 only perceptible variation was the welcome sight' 
 of two or three streaks of water within a few 
 yards fi-om the ship. The weather now became 
 unusually mild, the thermometer being at 35°+, 
 and as there was to be a new moon at midnight, 
 we fixed on that event as the harbinger of a ^ 
 change. The hour arrived, but not the prognos- 
 
 iril 
 

 H 
 
 
 i i 
 1 
 
 
 1] 
 
 m 
 
 RECREATJONS OF THE CREW. 
 
 ticated wind ; and, in the still serenity of the star- 
 lit sky, yvt glowing in the west with the lingering 
 tints of a gorgeous sunset, there was a spirit of 
 bei^utiful repose which seemed to mock our dis- 
 appointment. All was uniform and motionless, 
 S9,ve where the fickle air aloft played with the 
 languid vane, coquetting round and round from 
 every point of the compass, as if, in very 
 waywardness, it knew not where to settle. 
 
 The morning of Sept. 11th was also calm, and a 
 mist overhung the barren coast. The ice had 
 opened a few yards, and the ship was with diffi- 
 culty hauled into the space. As the sun gained 
 power the mist dispersed from the land, or lay in 
 Jong thin clouds along its dark cliffs, but no 
 water could be seen from aloft. Until to-day no 
 animals had visited us ; but now two seals and 
 some small fish appeared close to the stem. 
 After service the officers collected in groups, and 
 basked in the sunshine of an arctic summer day, 
 with the thermometer at 35" + . For the last three 
 or four evenings the people had been permitted to 
 go on the floe alongside, where they amused 
 themselves by playing at various games, and 
 among others the well-known game of baiting 
 the bear. To-day they went upon the ice for 
 quiet exercise merely, but had not proceeded 
 more than a hundred yards, when Mr. Greer, 
 
 
CHASE OF A BEAR.: 
 
 ^ 
 
 the ice mate, being on the mast-head, espied 
 a real bear, and the alarm being immediately 
 given, the men ran belter skelter to the ship, 
 headed by a bull-dog belonging to the Serjeant 
 of marbles, which was first on board. Every one 
 below, hearing the rush, flew on deck, and, learn- 
 ing the cause, seized the first gun at hand to 
 prepare for the attack. Meantime the noble 
 animal (a fine polar bear) nothing startled at a 
 hubbub which might well have frightened k 
 legion of his kindred away, approached with 
 deliberate steps nearer and nearer. His gait was 
 loose, and rolling as if weak from hunger, for he 
 rather drew than lifted his huge limbs over the 
 rugged surface ; and still as he advanced, he now 
 raised his black nose and sniffed, and now paused, 
 as appetite or fear prevailed. At length he took 
 courage, and followed up the scent j till, at the 
 distance of about fifty paces from the ship, he 
 stood like a target to receive the balls which 
 were soon showered on him. He fell, but re- 
 covering his legs, limped, with what strength was 
 left, a short space off. Then, all hurry to pursue, 
 one grasped a handspike, another poised a lance, 
 a third more heedless rushed on with a mere 
 stick to give the coup de grace. The more pru- 
 dent however retained their guns, and a few 
 more shots terminated the sufferings of poor 
 
94 
 
 DIMENSIONS OF BEAR. 
 
 I! 
 
 t 
 
 bruin. The sailors with their wonted fun hauled 
 the bulky carcase over the floe, and hoisted it on 
 board.* The condition of the teeth indicated that 
 it had attained to some age. It was lean, and the 
 stomach was found to be entirely empty. 
 
 * The following dimensions were taken by Dr. Donovan 
 
 and Mr. Mould : 
 
 Ft. Inch. 
 
 Length from the snout to the tail - - 6 IH 
 
 Circumierenoe round the middle - - 5 
 
 From the snout to the shoulder joint - - 2 
 
 From the heel of the fore-paw to the top of the back 4 
 
 From the heel of the hind leg to the top of rump 
 
 Circumference of fore-paw, inckding claws 
 
 Breadth of the fore-paw - - - 
 
 Length from fore middle toe to knee joint 
 
 Circumference of fore-leg below the knee 
 
 Circumference of hind-paw - - - 
 
 Circumference of hind-leg - - - 
 
 Length of the hind-paw - - - 
 
 Breadth of the hind-paw . . - 
 
 Length of hind middle toe to knee joint 
 
 Length of tail .... 
 
 Circumference of head below the eyes - 
 
 Circumference of neck - - - - 
 
 Distance of snout from the eye - 
 
 Dbtance between the eyes (internal angles) 
 
 Length of axis of the eye (perpendicular) 
 
 Depth of snout . - - - 
 
 Depth from snout to lower part of under jaw - 
 
 Breadth of septum narjum - - - 
 
 Nare elliptical - 
 
 Length of ears - - - - 
 
 Breadth of aperture of ear - 
 
 3 
 
 2 
 
 
 
 
 
 1 
 
 2 
 
 1 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 1 
 
 3 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 6 
 
 4 
 
 8i 
 10 
 7 
 
 7 
 
 8f 
 8^ 
 9 
 7' 
 10 
 
 u 
 
 9+ 
 
 5i 
 
 Of 
 1 
 
 7 
 Oi 
 
 4 
 
 3i 
 
WEATHER MILD AND CALM. 
 
 95 
 
 This novelty, trifling as it was, was sufficient to 
 give a turn to our conversation ; and the eternal 
 inquiries about the wind, and the speculations as 
 to the probable quarter from which it would next 
 come, were for an hour or two suspended j indeed, 
 there was little to excite us on that subject, 
 for the weather continued very mild and calm, 
 though towards evening it was observed that the 
 ice had opened a little, and what was still more 
 singular, that the ship had a slight undulatory 
 motion. The thermometer during the night did 
 not sink below 32^°+, and early on September 
 12th, finding there was a chance of getting 
 through some lanes in the direction of Cape 
 Comfort, the ship was with infinite trouble 
 warped about half a mile, when the ice again 
 
 Number of front teeth in upper jaw- 
 Number of canine teeth 
 Number of molar do. 
 Small teeth between the tusks and molars 
 Front teeth in lower jaw 
 Canine (one broken) 
 Molars 
 Two small teeth between the canine and molars 
 
 Length of lower tusks 
 
 Length of upper tusks 
 
 Breadth between the tips of upper tusks 
 
 Breadth (^supposed) between lower tusks 
 
 Length of middle fore claw - 
 
 Length of middle hind claw 
 
 m 
 
 6 
 
 - 
 
 8 
 
 - 
 
 6 
 
 - 
 
 4 
 
 - 
 
 6 
 
 - 
 
 2 
 
 - 
 
 8 
 
 Qolars 
 
 2 
 
 
 Ft. Inch. 
 
 
 2 
 
 
 2+ 
 
 
 3i 
 
 
 2+ 
 
 
 2i 
 
 
 2 
 
 ' 1 
 
HAWSER CARRIED AWAY BY ICE. 
 
 ii ' 
 
 : '11 \ 
 
 closed, and the breeze blew, though light, from 
 the eastward, that is to say, fromthe quarter 
 directly opposite to what we wished: again 
 therefore our efforts were discontinued, and 
 the ship secured. The thermometer at noon 
 was 35° -^t and in a small pool of water £ stern 
 three white whales were seen. Later ii the 
 day the weather became overcast, and brought 
 with it a S.E. wind, thus at once overtiming 
 hopes of a week's growth, and making the pros- 
 pect of our liberation as remote as ever. Never- 
 theless, as the ice slacked, about 7" p-m., we 
 warped a couple of hundred yards ahead, and 
 then, setting the sails, endeavoured to bore 
 through the annoying obstruction ; a little way, 
 perhaps half a mile, we accomplished ; and even 
 ihat little was gratifying, for our long detention 
 had begun to be dispiriting. The ice then be- 
 coming closer, the sails were furled, and on the 
 morning of the 131-h September we found our- 
 selves rather closer in with the coast, but owing 
 to the thick state of the weather the precise spot 
 could not be ascertained. During the whole of 
 the forenoon there was nothing but snow, and 
 the breeze blew dead on the land ; the result 
 showed itself, as was to be expected, by an in- 
 creased pressure of the snow and ice, which tight- 
 ened so much, that before we were aware of it 
 the securing hawser was carried away. It was 
 
MOTrON JN THE ICE. 
 
 07 
 
 replaced by a stroiigei- one, but we could not 
 venture to tlirow a strain even on this ; and when- 
 ever any sudden change took place among the 
 ice it was immediately slackened. The snow 
 did not cease until 6^ 30'". p. m., and then so 
 laden were the decks with it, that the people 
 were actively occupied more than an hour in 
 clearing it away : the mist at the same time par- 
 tially clearing, permitted a glimpse of the land, 
 which was found to be considerably nearer than 
 any one had anticipated, and proved that we had 
 been set further than was expected to the west- 
 ward. At S*" p. M. Cape Comfort bore by compass 
 N.N.E., and soundings were obtained with one 
 hundred and seventy-five fathoms of line, at a dis- 
 tance of not more than five miles from the nearest 
 rocks. During the night the increased violence 
 of the wind, and its unwelcome constancy to the 
 adverse quarter, had a direful effect on the shore 
 ice in which we were embedded ; and though every 
 piece was so closely and firmly packed against the 
 other that there was not a hole large enough to 
 admit of drawing water, yet at4^30"'. a.m. Sept. 
 14th, an agitative motion discovered itself among 
 the surrounding ice, so violent, and indeed irresis- 
 tible, that what was not crushed by its enormous 
 force was raised up to various heights j one pon- 
 derous mass, with several peaks, to upwards of 
 twenty feet. 
 
 H 
 
 \ 
 
 4|| 
 
 It I 
 
 I 
 
9h 
 
 ICl.^'^ui 
 
 IN 8IO»T OF tAND. 
 
 as we were, we partook of the general 
 commotio!? •. and the ship being deep and too Jieavy 
 to ris^ with th*^ rest, it liaJ to sustain the whole 
 pressure uri'i became severely nip«»ed, leaning 
 over consideravbly to starboard, lue breeze, 
 too, which still blew from N. E., so far from 
 abating, came on attended by snart squalls. 
 At this time we appeared to be not more than 
 four miles from the land, which was broken into 
 exposed bays, utterly without shelter from the 
 north, and blocked up with close packed ice. 
 Not a pool of water was visible in any direction : 
 to the mercy of Providence alone could we look 
 for rescue from our perilous situation. None 
 but those who have experienced it can judge 
 of the weariness of heart, the blank of feeling, 
 the feverish sickliness of taste which gets the 
 better of the whole man under circumstances 
 such as these. Not an incident occurred to reUeve 
 for a moment the dull monotony of our unprofit- 
 able detention. Will the wind ever come from the 
 westwavd ? was the question fretfully asked and 
 peevishly answered. This one idea had taken 
 entire possession of the mind, and whilst even a 
 doubt remained, no occupation, no amusement, 
 however ordinarily gratifying, had power to 
 please or even distract the thoughts. Not that 
 this, or ai part of it, was expressed in words, 
 but the fteii- . t'^s i^ot the less easily detected. 
 
PARTIAL MOVEMENT OF THE MASSES. Qi) 
 
 
 As the sun set the sky became rather mam 
 bright at N. W., and with mu( '^ satisfaction the 
 wind was observed to veer that way. A faint 
 aurora was also seen at S. W., and as it iias been 
 often considered as a sign of wind from that quar- 
 ter in which it appears, even that prognostic, 
 unr^ertain ns it is, was eagerly caught at. But 
 altiiou/'rh the breeze blew off or along the coastal! 
 the nigiit, yet on Sept. 15th not the minutest 
 change was visible, until near 8" a. m., when a 
 very partial movement took place in about a 
 dozen large masses immediately around us. The 
 effect of this was so flir beneficial that it 
 released the ship from the heavy pressure she 
 had been sustaining, and as the sunken pieces, 
 from beneath her bottom, rose to the surface 
 with a bound, and others glided along the sides, 
 she gradually righted. But when we were looking 
 with eager eyes for some little space of water, the 
 motion stopped at once, as if arrested by the hand 
 of magic, and left us again to hope and again be 
 disappointed. The temperature which had been 
 as low as 21° + , at noon rose to 23°+- The wind 
 blew fresh along the land until evening, but it 
 was late in the first watch before the faintest 
 stir was heard among the ice, which then merely 
 moved in azimuth, causing the ship to go a few 
 yards astern. Yet to move at all was encouraging, 
 since it proved that the pieces, though wedged 
 
 H 2 
 
I 
 
 100 WIND VEERS TO SOUTH-WEST. 
 
 and heaped together, were not yet rivettedby the 
 continually increasing severity of the night-frosts. 
 Half of the month had now slipped away, 
 and we were held still within siglit of the same 
 land as it were in the grasp of a giant. Yet 
 the prospect though unpromising enough was 
 not yet hopeless ; for about midnight the wind 
 drew round to the south-west, and came with a 
 force which, a week before, would have fulfilled 
 our most sanguine desires. The ice now, however, 
 was too close wedged to yield at once to its- 
 influence, though considerably loosened. Up to 
 noon of Sept. 16. no effectual alteration took 
 place : the thermometer had once fallen as low 
 as 15° + , though it had now risen again to 81" + - 
 The height of the land made our distance from 
 shore appear less than it really was ; and often a 
 proposition was made to me that a small party 
 should endeavour to make their way across the 
 land to the westward, and satisfy themselves if 
 any open water was to be expected in that direc- 
 tion. However, being myself pretty confident 
 that there was open water, and moreover not 
 very far away, I could not at this crisis give my 
 consent to it. Besides the toil and difficulty 
 which must necessarily be encountered in the 
 attempt to traverse the country along the coast, 
 broken as it was into ravines and vallies, ren- 
 dered more impassable by the snow lately fallen; 
 
PROSPECT OF HELEASB. 
 
 lOX 
 
 the hazard of their being separated from the 
 ship left no room for hesitation, though I pro- 
 mised that on a future occasion the proposition 
 should not be forgotten. 
 
 The wind now got more to the southward, 
 and after being unsettled for an hour or two, 
 began to blow fresh from S. by W. : still the ice 
 did not stir. However, about 4'' 30", it opened 
 out a little, and though no water was visible 
 from the Crow's Nest, the breeze was so strong 
 that it was deemed expedient to set the sails j 
 and answering to their power, the ship imme- 
 diately forged ahead, generally, of course, very 
 slowly, but wherever the ice was smaller with 
 a speed that brightened every countenance. It 
 was indeed singular to behold the vast ship 
 gliding along without any perceptible water. This 
 could not last, and though it blew a gale of wind, 
 yet even with warps and all appliances and means 
 to boot, we were at length beaten by the solid 
 mass. The last gleam of twilight, however, had 
 just brought to sight several narrow lanes of 
 water precisely where they were most wanted, 
 so that the probability of a release was greater 
 than it had been for at least three weeks. The 
 wind veered a little to the eastward, but rather 
 increased than diminished in violence, so that 
 most of the sails were taken in, leaving enough to 
 press the ship forward if the ice should give way. 
 
 II 3 
 
 ^„K^m^im mx4»^mmm mfl u 
 
102 
 
 HOPES DISAPPOINTED. 
 
 ■: 
 
 Morning of the 17th came, and our hopes 
 were strongly excited. It was an auspicious 
 day, for it was the date of Sir E. Parry's getting 
 clear from nearly the same place on his return 
 to England ; but there was no such good fortune 
 in store for us. We had been forced nearer to 
 Cape Comfort, which jutted out something to 
 the north, forming with the wind then pre- 
 dominating a weather shore, under the lee of 
 which it was natural to suppose there would be a 
 Mead* of water ; but contrary to experience and 
 the expectation of all on board, the ice was 
 found to be locked in to the very base of the 
 rocks, and presented a barrier as insuperable as 
 the one just before us. Still the gale from the 
 eastward howled on, and though not a spot of 
 water could be detected ahead, yet there was a 
 channel for upwards of three miles formed in the 
 place we had left ; in fact, all that was wanted 
 was a breeze of the same kind from the west. 
 The weather throughout the afternoon was wild 
 and gloomy, and the evening closed in with 
 showers of sleet. The ice was disturbed, and 
 though too firmly wedged to open out, cracked 
 and heaved as if seeking relief from the grinding 
 pressure, but all in vain. The whole cemented 
 mass, however, yielded to the general impulse, and 
 ice and ship were borne helplessly along before 
 the violence of the gale. Much water had been 
 
SHIP DRIVEN NEARER LAND. 
 
 103 
 
 seen along the shore to the eastward, and there 
 seemed some likelihood of its overtaking us 
 by daylight, if by any means we could hold 
 on to some floe so as to let the smaller pieces 
 drift past. But this, howeve«- desirable, was. 
 found impracticable, as the whole mass moved 
 together. Throughout the night the wind scarcely 
 abated, but towards morning of Sept. 18th it 
 became moderate j and as the heavy clouds 
 cleared away before the rays of the rising sun, it 
 was discovered that we had been driven past 
 Cape Comfort about three or four miles, and at 
 the same time had been set considerably nearer 
 to the coast which, immediately abreast of us, 
 was fearfully forbidding. To the. north it pre- 
 sented a towering and perpendicular front, rent 
 into fissures, or jagged with splintery ridges, all 
 deeply black j whilst towards the south it receded 
 from the summit in round backed hills, entirely 
 (except where sharp-angled rocks peeped out) 
 covered with snow. Farther west the land gra- 
 dually declined with longer slopes and wider 
 vallies, and terminated in a point, either Cape 
 Bylot or Cape Welsford of Parry. Through- 
 out the entire range I was unable to detect any 
 of those marks which indicate the track of the 
 Esquimaux in their periodical migrations. 
 
 The latitude at noon was 65" 12' N., and in 
 liavingbeen tUifted thus fiir, we liad the consola- 
 
 II i< 
 
'^' 
 
 im 
 
 MR. GOIIE SHOOTS A FOX. 
 
 ( 
 
 tory conviction that there must be an open space of 
 water somewhere to the west We knew more- 
 over that the further we advanced in that direc- 
 tion the more we should be liable to the influence 
 of the high tides in the neighbourhood of the 
 Welcome, where the changes among the ice 
 would be more frequent, and our chance of 
 reaching Repulse Bay consequently improved. 
 In fact, a long narrow lane had begun to form 
 close to the beach, reaching nearly to the extre- 
 mity of the view, but the breeze freshening 
 from S.S.E. forced the seaward body of ice in, 
 and closed it up again. BaflSn Island was visible 
 from the mast-head, but there was no opening in 
 that direction. A raven and a little snow bunt- 
 ing came near the ship. No soundings were got 
 with one hundred and fifty fathoms. As the 
 sun declined the breeze freshened still more, 
 sending the low and light scud before it with the 
 swiftness of an arrow. It was not however till 
 near midnight that we stirred, when the ice, driven 
 by the wind and tide, carried us about a mile. 
 
 Sept. 19th sail was set to endeavour to force 
 the ship clear of some large pieces, which 
 ground with a grating noise against the bot- 
 tom, but it was to little purpose. About this 
 time an Arctic fox, probably allured by the 
 scent of the skeleton of the bear which was 
 hanging to the main-stay, came so close that it 
 
 i'l 
 
SHIP IN EXTREME PEUIL. 
 
 105 
 
 was shot by Mr. Gore. A raven, too, wheeled 
 its flight twice round the ship. What must be 
 the wearisome uniformity of a life in which inci- 
 dents such as these become memorable I 
 
 When the haze over the land was in some 
 measure dispersed, we found that we had been set 
 something further towards Cape Bylot, beyond 
 which more land could be made out, and at noon 
 Baffin Island bore N. 50° E. The temperature 
 continued 31° + , and the southerly wind still 
 prevailed. Four points more to the west was 
 all that we required. No water in sight. In 
 the early part of the night a thick mist came on, 
 and the wind gradually veered to east, bringing 
 with it sleet and snow. The next morning 
 (Sept. 20th) it drew more to the northward, 
 and, what was worse, blew fresh, thereby setting 
 the seaward ice down towards the land with more 
 force than had yet been experienced. Shortly 
 after 9^ a. m. a floe piece split in two, and the 
 extreme violence of the pressure curled and 
 crumbled the windward ice up in an awful man- 
 ner, forcing it against the beam fully eighteen 
 feet high. The ship creaked as it were in agony, 
 and, strong as she was, must have been stove and 
 crushed, had not some of the smaller masses been 
 forced under her bottom, and so diminished the 
 strain, by actually lifting her bow nearly two feet 
 out of the water. In this perilous crisis steps 
 
 ^MMP 
 
|M 
 
 i 
 
 i 
 
 106 FRIGHTFUL INCREASE OF PRESSURE. 
 
 were taken to have everything in readiness for 
 hoisting out the barge, and without creating un- 
 necessary alarm, the officers and men were called 
 on the quarter-deck, and desired, in case of 
 emergency, to be active in the performance of 
 their duties at the respective stations then notified 
 to them. It was a serious moment for all, as the 
 pressure still continued, nor could we expect 
 much, if any, abatement until the wind changed. 
 At noon the weather and our prospects re- 
 mained the same. The barometer was falling, and 
 the temperature was 26° + , with unceasing snow. 
 Much ice had been sunk under the bottom, and 
 a doubt existed whether it was not finding its 
 way beneath the lee floe also ; for the uplifted 
 ruins, within fifty paces of the weather beam, 
 were advancing slowly towards us like an im- 
 mense wave fraught with destruction. Resist- 
 ance would not, could not have been effectual 
 beyond a few seconds ; for what, of human con- 
 struction, could withstand the impact of an icy 
 continent, driven onward by a furious storm? 
 In the mean time symptoms too unequivocal to 
 be misunderstood demonstrated the intensity of 
 the pressure. The butt-ends began to start, and 
 the copper, in which the galley apparatus was 
 fixed, became creased, sliding doors refused to 
 shut, and leaks found access through the bolt- 
 heads and bulls-eyes. On sounding the well too, 
 
PROVIDENTIAL DELIVERY. 
 
 107 
 
 an increase of water was reported, not sufficient 
 to excite apprehension in itself, but such as to 
 render hourly pumping necessary. Moved by 
 these indications, and to guard against the worst, I 
 ordered the provisions and preserved meats, with 
 various other necessaries to be got up from below 
 and stowed on deck, so as to be ready at a mo- 
 ment to be thrown upon the large floe along-side. 
 To add to our anxiety, night closed prematurely, 
 when suddenly, from some unknown cause, in 
 which, if we may so deem without presumption, 
 the finger of Providence was manifest, the floe, 
 which threatened instant destruction, turned so 
 as in a great degree to protect us against an in- 
 crease of pressure, though for several hours after- 
 wards the same creaking and grinding sounds 
 continued to annoy our ears. The barometer 
 and other instruments fell with a regularity un- 
 precedented, yet the gale was broken, and by 
 midnight had abated considerably. 
 
 Sept. ^Ist. there was a lateral motion in some 
 pieces of the surrounding ice, and after several as- 
 tounding thumps under water against the bottom, 
 the ship which had been lifted high beyond her line 
 of flotation and thrown somewhat over to port, sud- 
 denly started up and almost righted. Still however 
 she inclined more than was agreeable to port, nor 
 was it until one mass of ponderous dimensions 
 burst from its imprisonment below that she alto- 
 
108 niESSUIlE UNEXPECTEDLY CONTINUES. 
 
 gether regained her upright position. On be- 
 holding the walls of ice on either side between 
 which she had been nipped, I was astonished at 
 the tremendous force she had sustained. Her 
 mould was stamped as perfectly as in a die. Asto- 
 nishment however soon yielded to a more grateful 
 feeling, an admiration of the genius and mechanical 
 skill by which the Terror had been so ably pre- 
 pared for this service. We had many old Green- 
 land seamen on board, and they wer ' unanimously 
 of opinion that no ship they had ever seen could 
 have resisted such a pressure. On sounding the 
 well she was found not to leak, though the car- 
 penters had employment enough in caulking the 
 seams on deck. 
 
 At last the wind got round to the westward, and 
 though not a pool of water was visible, still expect- 
 ation was again on the stretch ; but though a fresh 
 breeze prevailed till the evening, and again after a 
 partial calm blew through the night, and though 
 the effect to be anticipated from this would be 
 the sending of the ice to the eastward, if moved at 
 all, yet, strange to say, the very reverse took place, 
 as the creaking of the pressed ship gave us but 
 too plainly to understand. 
 
 On Sept. 22d. the vessel was again sharply 
 nipped, but without strain ing as before. At noon 
 the thermometer rose a few degrees from 15° +, 
 the point to which it had fallen in the night, and 
 
EXPLORING EXPEDITION. 
 
 109 
 
 by observations, we were at the distance of twenty- 
 five miles only from Duke of York's Bay ; but 
 we could no'^^ possibly advance so much as twenty- 
 five inches, or, with such a succession of untoward 
 winds, I should long ago have endeavoured to 
 get the ship into some place of safety. Birds of 
 all kinds had lefl us, and animals too, except a 
 solitary seal espied to-day from the mast-head : 
 this was immediately pursued by one of the 
 officers, but after a fatiguing walk over the ice, 
 he found the wary seal on the look-out and, 
 instead of waiting to be shot at, it prudently 
 disappeared through a hole in the ice. As the 
 scene of operations was daily growing more 
 circumscribed, and the outward body of ice 
 forced us further in shore, directly towards a bay, 
 bounded at either extreme by craggy rocks ; it 
 became important to get some knowledge of its 
 formation, in the hope of finding a shelter behind 
 some protruding rock or point, if circumstances 
 should permit us to get there. Accordingly a 
 party of officers and men, under the direction of 
 Lieutenant Smyth, having volunteered their ser- 
 vices, the remainder of the day was taken up in 
 making the requisite preparations for their de- 
 parture on the following morning. Sept. 23d 
 came on with thick weather and snow, which, 
 together with the quantity that had already fallen, 
 
110 
 
 A DOCK CUT IN THE ICE. 
 
 t 
 
 K 
 
 hid the looser portions of ice between the floes, 
 and thereby rendered the destined expedition too 
 hazardous. About 9** a. m., a relaxation in the 
 pressure encouraged us to try to warp the ship 
 from her present unsafe situation, and this being 
 found impracticable, the whole crew were em- 
 ployed to cut a canal with axes and ol'ier 
 implements, which attempt also was after a liiir 
 trial abandoned, as the heavier masses of ice 
 squeezed forward into each vacancy as fast as it 
 was made. The large floe against the larboard, 
 which was the side nearest to the land, was much 
 piled up with hummocks, and directly alongside 
 was upwards of twenty feet thick j and with 
 the double view of employing the people, and 
 to make an experiment which, if successful, 
 might be found advantageous, it was determined 
 to cut a dock in the pure ice. Accordingly, 
 after the dimensions were measured, the officers 
 and men set to work, and having, in the course 
 of four hours, sunk a trench as many feet deep, 
 satisfied me that, assuming the floe to be of a 
 uniform thickness, they could finish the work 
 in ten days at the most. On this occasion, it hap- 
 pened, contrary to expectation, that the ice near 
 us, and only that near us, began at tha' n\oment 
 to open, so that by five o'clock p. m. tl.ere was a 
 lane for two or three hundred yards, so free of 
 
HOPES AGAIN DISAPPOINTED. 
 
 Ill 
 
 interruption, that a whale line was made fast to 
 the upper part of the fore-mast, and the men 
 actually tracked the ship along. 
 
 We had now been precisely a month beset, 
 without the option of moving in any direction but 
 where the openings occurred, or where the whole 
 body of the ice drifted; and this at a period admit- 
 ted to be the most favourable for navigating these 
 seas. With every thing flattering to decoy us on 
 within twenty miles of Baffin Island, we there 
 found ourselves suddenly stopped, and saw the 
 ice close behind us in an unbroken line, cutting 
 off all retreat. It will easily therefore be con- 
 ceived, that the phenomenon which permitted 
 even this trifling advance was hailed with exult- 
 ation ; and though we were soon arrested, 
 yet three or four cracks between the floes 
 and packed body ahead, intimated that some- 
 thing favourable might be expected from the 
 returning tide. The weather, too, continued 
 mild, and a light air blew from the west. Still, 
 though there were occasional fluctuations in the 
 ice during the night, Sept. 24th came without 
 the consummation so eagerly anticipated. By some 
 unaccountable caprice, scarcely had the narrow 
 opening begun to enlarge when the ice suddenly 
 stopped, and then with a reaction truly alarm- 
 ing, pressed against the ship, so as to heave her 
 over considerably on one side to the no small risk 
 of the part nipped, which creaked and com- 
 
m 
 
 CUTTING AWAV ICE WITH AXES. 
 
 plained bitterly ; it was some hours before she 
 righted again. 
 
 It was now an object so to place the ship, 
 that the excessive pressure, aided as it was by the 
 spring tide, should be received equally on 
 every part of her; and as this could not be 
 effected without the ice saws, they were shortly 
 made ready, and having been fixed to large tri- 
 angles formed of three high poles, were worked 
 by means of a pulley. With one saw and some 
 axes we were enabled to cut away a sharp piece 
 which had already caused much annoyance, and 
 were about removing it, when the ship which 
 had been warped there, was suddenly set by the 
 ice against it, and in a short time crushed up 
 the whole mass. From that moment the pres- 
 sure was very great, and after midnight of Sept. 
 25th, the timbers were strained so severely 
 that there was a general creaking. Happily it 
 did not last, for the crack again opened out and 
 permitted our hauling a few yards ahead, and 
 thereby to escape being caught by an extensive 
 floe which, after sinking all smaller pieces, 
 had forced its way to us. The rudder had 
 borne an amazing force with- scarcely any injury, 
 but as there was no longer any reason for expos- 
 ing it, it was unhung and slung under the stern. 
 We were nearly half way between Capes Comfort 
 and Bylot, were in sight of each side of Frozen 
 Strait, could clearly distinguish Cape Welsford 
 
C0N3L1.TATI0N OF ;. . ,CER«. U{i 
 
 and the dark water sky over Duke of York's Bay 
 were only tiveor six mile, from the «l,ore, wi.icl', 
 would have afforded m some shelter, a,.d yet 
 here we wore fixed, compelled to endure the 
 *ur,ou., buffets which each successiye tide brought 
 "pon us, and at the mercy of the mighty power 
 that bound „.,. The temperature had taried 
 from 18" to 23% and the wind had .Irawn round 
 to the east, though this was now become of tri- 
 fling importance, as the westerly wind on which 
 so much reliance had been placed had not even 
 separated the floes, much less driven them from 
 the land; and in fact, according to our united 
 opinions, had made no impression whatever 
 Deeply sensible as I was of the growing peril of 
 
 oursituationwithdayscontmctingandtheprospect 
 •ofa speedy decrease of temperature, I now made 
 an official demand on the officers of his majesty's 
 ship, for their respective opinions in writing upon 
 he probabdity of any further progress beingmade 
 by our own exertions in the present season, to. 
 wards Repulse Bay. Their unanimous coiivic. 
 tion, from the experience of the thirty-four 
 days in which the ship had been beset, was, that 
 any thing more, with that view, was utterly im- 
 practicable, and they suggested the adoption of 
 ceruim precautions in the event of any sudden 
 contingency obliging us to have recourse to the 
 boats for safety. I„ this opinion I entirely coin- 
 
m 
 
 
 
 
 114 RAPID DESTRUCTION OF THE FLOE. 
 
 cided, and considering that the period had now 
 arrived for taking a decisive step, had deter- 
 mined to cut a dock in a favourable part of the 
 floe which we had quitted; that being the 
 largest, and, according to the ice mate, the only 
 one sufficiently strong for the purpose. I felt 
 assured that, if this could be accomplished, the 
 ship would be protected so long as the floe held 
 together, and in short it was my only resource. 
 The resolution thus adopted was tp^have been car- 
 ried into execution, but the following night, with- 
 out the aid of any strong breeze, produced the 
 most extraordinary changes yet witnessed. There 
 was a general commotion ; and the entire body by 
 which we were hampered separating into single 
 pieces, tossed into heaps or ground to powder 
 whatever interrupted its course, and finally, in 
 the early morning of the 26th, rushed violently 
 to the westward, directly up Frozen Strait. The 
 ship bore well up against the hurly burly, and 
 when daylight broke, and we could distinguish 
 objects, we looked in vain for the floe. In the 
 wild convulsion of the night it had been broken 
 and scattered with many other ponderous masses, 
 which now lay piled in ruins around us. It was 
 evident, too, that the ship had been set nearer to 
 Cape Bylot, for the coast beyond it, as well as 
 Baffin's Island, were plainly seen from the deck ; 
 so that, for aught we knew, we might still be 
 

li •; " 
 
 lirv 
 
 1 
 
 i \ 
 
 m 
 
 f f 
 'u 
 
 t :♦ 
 
 I % ■ 
 
 n 
 
 
■■<.» 
 
 ) 
 
 ^^m* 
 
BOW OF THE SHIP SPLIT. 
 
 115 
 
 carried even to the goal of our wishes without 
 any effort of our own. One fact, at all events, 
 was incontrovertible, that, now the ice, though 
 heavy enough to do great injury, was not exten- 
 sive enough to shelter us as I had designed, and 
 that there was nothing left but to drift with it 
 until Nature in her own good time should 
 release us. 
 
 The ice remained unusually tranquil the 
 whole of the afternoon ; but as the night ad- 
 vanced Ihe north-east wind increased, and at 
 11'' P.M., when the flood-tide made, the ship 
 became sharply nipped : fortunately it did not 
 last long, and on Sept. 27th she was free again. 
 The effect of the breeze which still continued, 
 accompanied with snow, had been to drive us 
 nearer to the land, but without any inconvenience 
 from pressure ; and we were congratulating our- 
 selves on this, when, at ll'* a.m., the creaking 
 of the beams and sides abaft the main-mast inti- 
 mated that the ice was in motion. On looking 
 over the stern, a heavy piece, driven on by 
 several others, was seen crashing or sinking 
 everything before it, and being now checked by 
 the ship, which it struck under the quarter^ 
 raised her at once several feet out of the water, 
 the bow at the same time being pressed with 
 such force against a mass ahead as to split it in 
 two or three directions, the whole going bodily 
 
 I 2 
 
110 
 
 PREPARING FOR AN EMERGENCY. 
 
 forward. In tliis alarming manner the ice 
 brought up, leaving the stern elevated seven and 
 a half feet, and the bow jammed against the 
 ponderous masses ahead. Nothing could be 
 done by us to relieve the ship ; and as there were 
 no floes of sufficient surface on which to place 
 boats and provisions, if driven to that necessity, 
 I decided on hoisting out the two whale boat^ 
 from the skids, and hanging them up alongside, 
 50 that these with the third and the two cuttersj 
 might be lowered at a moment's notice. A fur- 
 ther quantity of provision also was to be got up, 
 with ammunition and other necessaries to sup- 
 port life in case of the worst. As for the barge, 
 though in itself the most suitable boat, her size 
 and weight would have rendered her totally un- 
 manageable on the broken and moving ice which 
 surrounded us. The day was spent in executing 
 these arrangements, and I waited with anxiety 
 for the hour when the returning flood-tide 
 should again act. With the wind dead on shore, 
 it was not very likely to loosen the ice ; and if it 
 packed it still more, who could calculate on the 
 result? As midnight drew near, an occasional 
 sharp crack about the counter warned us that 
 something was giving way, but it passed ; and 
 on Sept. 28th, though the breeze had rounded 
 more to the eastward, the ship had not altered 
 her inclination. Much snow fellj and it blew 
 
 14 
 
ice 
 
 <and 
 
 the 
 
 be 
 
 ANNOYANCES OF THE SITUATION. II7 
 
 fresh till the morning, when the task of com. 
 pleting the requisite outfit for the boats was 
 resumed. The top-gallant-yards and masts were 
 lowered on deck, that the ship might be as light 
 as possible about the mast-heads ; and if by any 
 turn of fortune a channel should still open, we 
 could always set the topsails and courses, which 
 would be amply sufficient to take us to an 
 anchorage. At noon the ice was stationary, 
 and we therefore motionless. The thermometer 
 kept up to 29°+ with an easterly breeze, from 
 which I inferred that there was open water at no 
 great distance in that bearing, notwithstanding 
 we could not see it from aloft. On the 29th 
 the only change was, that the wind had veered 
 more to the south, and that although the ther- 
 mometer was above the freezing point (viz. 33° + ) 
 so much snow fell that the whole forenoon was 
 occupied in clearing it from the decks and 
 boats. It was a tedious and annoying situation 
 to be placed in, not above three miles from the 
 shore, yet unable to get the ship there— bays 
 and harbours apparently within reach, and still 
 obliged to be prepared for being wrecked. 
 • The ship remained in the same inconvenient 
 position, the slope and slippery state of the lee side 
 of the deck causing many falls to those who were 
 passing along. Sept. 30th was calm, and a depo- 
 sition of hoar-frost and small spiculiE coated the 
 
 I 3 
 
118 HOPES OF PROGRESSING BAFFLED. 
 
 rigging and spars. As this was to be expected 
 for many months, and the consequent difficulty of 
 walking the decks was to be guarded against, I set 
 up the housing cloth between the fore and main 
 masts, and thus made an excellent shelter, and a 
 dry place along the gangways for the people to take 
 exercise. Not that all idea of moving had been 
 abandoned, for I was determined to push up the 
 Strait whenever the slightest opportunity should 
 be given, whether now or in the middle of winter. 
 Nor, placed as we were, was such an opportunity 
 improbable, since Sir E. Parry had throughout 
 the whole winter, remarked more or less open 
 water to the south east of his anchorage at Winter 
 Island. About lO** 40" a. m. a very narrow sepa- 
 ration of the in-shore ice was seen, proving the 
 reasonableness of such expectations, especially 
 if a westerly gale, which some were yet sanguine 
 enough to hope for, should at last come to our 
 relief. During the afternoon the same ice closed 
 again without in any way affecting us. Thus 
 ended a month of vexation, disappointment, and 
 anxiety, to me personally more distressing and 
 intolerable than the worst pressure of the worst 
 evils which had befallen me in any other expe- 
 dition. 
 
119 
 
 CHAP. III. 
 
 Lane of Water discovered. — Prospect of wintering on the Ice ■ 
 — Violent Concussions experienced. — Employment of the 
 Crew. — Erection of an Observatory. — FavourablePosition 
 of the Ship. ^-Disruption by a Gale. — Expansion of open 
 
 Water Officers build Snow Houses. — Excursions to Land. 
 
 — An eocploring Party Experiment of wearing a Mask 
 
 Survey of a Harbour. — Pass Cape Comfort. — Risk of 
 being crushed. — Robbed by Foxes and Shrimps. — Ther- 
 Tnometer rises. — Huge Mass of Ice. — Amusements. — 
 
 TJiermometers tested. —Accident to the Carpenter School 
 
 for the Crew. — Curious Phenomenon. — Register 
 Thermometer. — Rein-deer killed. — Fearful Storm. — 
 Floe cracks. 
 
 On the 1st of Oct. the vessel gradually righted, 
 and from that day to the 6th not a single incident 
 occurred worthy of being recorded, except that 
 the ship got an awkward list to starboard. 
 
 The weather was singularly calm, the tempera- 
 ture did not fall lower than 14" + , and the ice 
 remained almost motionless, or moved, if at all, 
 bodily towards the land without creating the 
 smallest noise. One faint and flitting aurora was 
 seen. ' 
 
 On the 6th, a party of four, consisting of 
 two officers and two men, left the ship early in 
 the morning, with the intention of making an 
 excursion on shore, whence they returned about 
 
 I 4 
 
120 
 
 A PARTY GO ON SHORE. 
 
 U a 
 
 II; 
 
 4'' p. M. They described the walking as very 
 fatiguing, on account of the state of the ice, 
 thrown as it was into a heap of peaks and ridges, 
 with the exception of one floe about three 
 quarters of a mile broad, the whole way to the 
 shore, the distance of which was estimated to 
 be about four miles. The sludge ice between 
 the larger masses was frozen hard enough to 
 bear them ; and though painful to the feet, was 
 considered the most favourable for travelling on. 
 They did not perceive any open water near the 
 shore, but found some difficulty in reaching it, 
 on account of a chasm between the ice and the 
 nearest rocks, which however at last they con- 
 trived to leap over. After resting awhile, they 
 endeavoured to ascend the hills, but were soon 
 discouraged by the excessive fatigue of toiling 
 through snow, already in many places two and 
 three feet deep. Not a single track of an ani- 
 mal was seen to allure them on or cheer theu- 
 exertions ; and under these circumstances, they 
 very wisely retraced their steps to the vessel, 
 where they arrived well fagged with the trip. 
 On landing they had fired several shots, but 
 the sound did not reach us, though more than 
 one were watching their motions. The whole 
 line of coast to Cape Bylot seemed to them to 
 form a moderate bay, and the ice between the 
 ship and shore they thought decidedly more 
 
 ' iii ' 
 
LANE OF WATER DISCOVEUED. 
 
 121 
 
 packed than further to seaward. The specimens 
 of rocks which they brought were gneiss, with a 
 considerable mixture of red felspar. Tliey had 
 not seen a blade of grass, nor a symptom of vege- 
 tation of any kind. No marks were observed 
 on the rocks, indicating the rise and fall of the 
 tide. 
 
 The day was clear and fine, and the land 
 beyond Cape Welsford, as well as Vansittart and 
 Baffin islands, was so much thrown up by re- 
 fraction, that had we not certainly known the 
 passage through Frozen Strait, we might have 
 concluded that we were at the entrance of some 
 deep bay or inlet. 
 
 In the course of making some changes for 
 the more suitable accommodation of some of 
 the warrant officers, we found the roof and sides 
 of the vessel so damp, as to have contracted in 
 many parts a deposition of blue mould, caused, 
 in all probability, by the vapour from the cook's 
 copper close by. This led to a closer examina- 
 tion of other parts of the ship ; and on looking 
 narrowly at the heel of the bowsprit, it was dis- 
 covered to be sprung from the knight-heads 
 inwards six feet. How or when the injury had 
 been done it was impossible to ascertain : it was, 
 probably, the effect of the weight and strain 
 which must have been thrown upon it, whenever 
 the ship was hove suddenly aback with a slack- 
 

 UQ 
 
 ! ■! 
 
 II 
 
 '! 
 
 i f 
 
 SHIP UIGHTS. 
 
 13 
 
 ened bobstay among heavy ice, or it might 
 have been occasioned by running on and lifting 
 against elevated masses. During the after- 
 noon of the 9th the wind fre.«'iened from the 
 westward, and early the following morning, much 
 to tlie astonishment of those wlio first descried it, 
 a long lane of water was formed in shore at the 
 distance of not more than a mile from the ship. 
 The body in which we were beset had, in fact, 
 separated from and moved away from that nearer 
 the land, leaving a perfectly clear channel to Cape 
 Bylot within fifteen miles from Duke of York's 
 Bay, which I was most anxious to reach in order 
 to place the ship in safety for the winter. The 
 returning ebb closed the lane in a great part, 
 though not entirely, and we continued as firmly 
 beset as ever, yet not without hope that the next 
 three or four days might materially improve our 
 prospects. The same action and reaction suc- 
 cessively occurred at each change of tide ; but 
 on the 11th, the weather being exceedingly mode- 
 rate, various transverse cracks and small openings 
 began to appear over the greater part of the ice, 
 and at length actually reachtu the ship. Towards 
 evening, several pieces of ice slowly moved from 
 under her bilge, and at 11" 30'" p. m., the com- 
 motion having considerably increaseil, she first 
 forged a little ahead, and immediately righted. 
 Had it been light enough to ^end the men on the 
 
 1 1.' 
 
 
rUOSl'ECT OF WINTEUINO ON TliE ICE. IQ3 
 
 ice to make fast tlie hawsers, such was the rapiil 
 change going on, that it is possible we might 
 have gained a few hundred yards ; but among 
 other grievances was tliis also, that the most 
 favourable opportunities invariably occurred when 
 advantage could not be taken of them. 
 
 October 12th.— At daylight the different 
 articles which for convenience had been deposited 
 on the ice alongside were brought on board, and 
 unwilling to lose the slightest chance of advancing, 
 an effort was made to warp, but without success. 
 At noon we were almost in the same pluce as 
 before; witli this difference however, that the 
 entire body of ice was broken or separated into 
 single pieces as when we first entered it. The 
 wind Iiad veered to north-east, the thermometer 
 remaining at 22"+ j and its unwelcome influence 
 was felt at the very next floou, when it drove the 
 moving ice dead on tla ^and, of course inclosing 
 us in the general pressure. But, in truth, we 
 now hardly knew what to hope, or what to wish. If 
 the ice separated ^ here was danger ; if it remained 
 compact, there was the recurring commotion 
 of every spi ing-tide, and the conjectural ellect 
 of the storms which sooner or later must come 
 upon us. These reflections, and the responsi- 
 bility which devolved on me, embittered the 
 hours which I had fondly hoped to have passed 
 very differently. Plans for spending the winter, 
 
124 VIOLENT CONCUSSIONS EXPERIENCED. 
 
 IJ 
 
 It , 
 
 (supposing we were compelled to remain out) 
 had been concerted during the passage across the 
 Atlantic. Observatories were to be erected on 
 shore, experiments were to be made, much in 
 short was to be done from which interesting re- 
 sults might have been obtained ; and though I did 
 not yet altogether despair of accomplishing these 
 designs, since, by possibility, the ship might still 
 be set close to some bay or other place conveni- 
 ent for the purpose, yet it could not be concealed 
 that the probability was hourly diminishing. 
 
 The night of the 13th October was rougli and 
 boisterousjust at the very time of the highest tide, 
 and wedging the ice against and under the ship, 
 occasioned many severe concussions. A little past 
 ll** I was reading in the cabin, when I felt so 
 violent a shock directly under the quarter, that 1 
 thought it must have been stove in. The attack 
 (if I may so express myself) was repeated at 
 regular intervals, and lasted for upv/ards of two 
 hours. On the 14th October there was no other 
 change than that brought by snow, and a depres- 
 sion of the thermometer to 14" + . One faint au- 
 rora had been seen. During tlie two succeeding 
 days, at the flood-tide, the same concussions 
 were indicated by a slight trembling of the ship. 
 As the tides became weaker tlie effect ceased, 
 and we remained thenceforth undisturbed. 
 
 It was not till October 17th tiiat the tempera- 
 

^:, 
 
 i s 
 
 t y a . 'J 
 
 2 
 
 g 
 
 l^ 
 
 3 
 
 i** 
 
 
 @ 
 
 .1 » 
 
 1 1 
 
18, r 
 It 
 
 !:■ ) 
 
REPAIRING HEATING APPARATUS. 
 
 125 
 
 ture fell below zero. On that day, however, it was 
 9"™—, with a clear sky and a very light air from the 
 N. N. W. The aurora was observed at the 
 same time. The planking and timbers, &c. of 
 the ship cracked from the contraction of the 
 cold, and the temperature of the officers' cabins 
 being below the freezing point, the vapour froze 
 until the hatches were shut down, and when this 
 had been done, caused more inconvenience still 
 by returning to its former state, and running 
 down from the beams and sides in streams. I now, 
 therefore, gave instructions for the constant use 
 of the warming apparatus, which on three pre- 
 vious trials had answered satisfactorily. Not 
 long, however, after the fire had been put into 
 the furnace, it was discovered that the heat 
 circulated only along one side of the ship, and 
 upon examination, a portion of the liquid, con- 
 sisting of brine, was found to have escaped. 
 The work of repair was forthwith commenced by 
 taking down the outer brickwork of the furnace 
 between which and the latter was the worm of 
 the iron pipe that formed the heating apparatus. 
 It was a flaw or opening in this worm that had 
 allowed the liquid to escape, and this imposed on 
 us the additional trouble of putting the forge 
 together, which wa» accordingly done under a 
 canvass shed on the ice alongside. Here the 
 armourer, who had been supplied to us from 
 
126 
 
 EMPLOYMENT OF THE CREW. 
 
 ■ ( 
 
 Chatham Dock-yard, an industrious and active 
 man, set to work with seeming deh'ght, and in 
 a few days the worm was replaced and again 
 bricked up. I determined, however, on a gene- 
 ral inspection of the whole range before the fire 
 should be again hghted. In the meantime the 
 steam and vapour on the lower deck spread over 
 the whole upper surface and sides, as well as on 
 the beams and stanchions, and then becoming 
 condensed and falling in every direction, acted 
 something like a shower bath. Rather than 
 suffer this, the consequences of which on the 
 general health might soon have been felt, the 
 hatches were again thrown open, and the clouds 
 of dense vapour suffered to escape. It was my 
 intention, in case the heat generated by the 
 warming apparatus should not be adequate to 
 the absorption of the moisture, to have iron tanks 
 placed on the upper deck as condensers ; but the 
 plan for the present was delayed, for being quite 
 ignorant of what the next spring-tides might 
 produce, I was more tardy in making final ar- 
 rangements for the winter as well as in organis- 
 ing occupations for keeping up the health and 
 spirits of the crew, than was consistent with my 
 own wishes. Not a day, however, had been suf- 
 fered to pass without some active employment, 
 either in the duties of the ship, or on the ice,* 
 where healthy exercise was .turned to profitable 
 
 h ; 
 
ERECTION OF AN OBSERVATORY. 
 
 127 
 
 account in constructing paths and one general 
 roadlowards the shore. The officers kept their 
 regular watches j nor in the peculiar situation of 
 the ship, and the uncertainty of what might hap- 
 pen in case of any sudden storm, were the men 
 at present discharged from the performance of 
 the like duty. 
 
 The temperature had hitherto been registered 
 every two hours, but on October 18th two large 
 spirit thermometers previously tested and found 
 to agree, were placed on each side of a thick 
 post fixed on the tafrail, in a direction due north 
 and south ; the southern thermometer having its 
 bulb freely exposed, and the northern one having 
 the brass guard usually thrown over the bulb by 
 the makers. These were now to be registered 
 every hour, and at Q"" r. m. October 20, with a 
 clear sky and a light air from west, the north 
 shewed 4°+ and the south 22°+. The follow- 
 ing day at 6" p. m., wind light at N. N. E., 
 the temperature fell to 15° by both. An hour 
 after, the weather became overcast, and they 
 rose to 8". 
 
 The risk of the ice separating had induced me 
 to defer the erection of an observatory, but now I 
 yielded to the urgency of Lieutenant Stanley, who 
 was eager to commence a series of astronomical 
 observations, and a party of officers and men, 
 under his directions, set about the work on a 
 
128 
 
 UNSOCIABILITY OF THE CREW. 
 
 I- 
 
 i ( 
 
 small floe, less than two hundred yards from the 
 larboard quarter. The site chosen had every 
 appearance of solidity, and yet, to my surprise, 
 I confess, after the sharp weather of the past 
 few days, they came to water on removing snow, 
 a foot or two from the surface. At first it was 
 thought to be fresh, but when they had dug 
 about five inches through ice, the sea-water 
 rushed up, thus proving how great is the pro- 
 tection afforded by a covering of six or eight 
 inches of snow. The ice formed on the fire hole* 
 in a single night but three days before was just 
 five inches thick. 
 
 Meantime we were not unobservant of the 
 habits and dispositions of the crew, hastily ga- 
 thered together, and for the most part composed 
 of people who had never before been out of 
 a collier : some half dozen, indeed, had served 
 in Greenland vessels, but the laxity which is there 
 permitted, rendered them little better than the 
 former. A few men-of-wars-men who were also 
 on board, were worth the whole together. The 
 want of discipline, and attention to personal 
 comfort, were most conspicuous; and though 
 the wholesome regulations practised in His 
 Majesty's service were most rigidly attended to 
 in the Terror, yet such was the unsociability, 
 
 * Fire hole -— hole for drawing water in the event of fire. 
 
CHARACTERISTICS OF A BRITISH SAILOR. 1^9 
 
 though without any ill-will, that it was only by 
 a steady and undeviating system pursued by the 
 first lieutenant, that they were brought at all 
 together with the feeling of messmates : at first, 
 though nominally in the same mess, and eating 
 at the same table, many of them would secrete 
 their allowance, with other unmanly and un- 
 sailor-like practices. This was another proof 
 added to the many I had already witnessed, 
 how greatly discipline improves the mind and 
 manners, and how much the regular service-man 
 is to be preferred for all hazardous or diflicult 
 enterprises. Reciprocity of kindnesses, a gene- 
 rous and self-denying disposition, a spirit of 
 frankness, a hearty and above-board manner— 
 these are the true characteristics of the British 
 seaman ; and the want of these is seldom com- 
 pensated by other qualities. In our case, and I 
 mention this merely to show the difference of 
 olden and modem times, there were only three 
 or four in the ship who could not write. All 
 read ; some recited whole pages of poetry, others 
 sang French songs. Yet with all this, had they 
 been left to themselves, I verily believe a more 
 unsociable, suspicious, and uncomfortable set 
 of people could not have been found. Oh ! if 
 the two are incompatible, give me the old Jack 
 Tar, who would stand up for his ship, and give 
 his life for his messmate. 
 
 K 
 
130 
 
 A GENERAL MASQUERADE. 
 
 ! f i 
 
 Li 
 
 Nor were the efforts of the first lieutenant con- 
 fined to the enforcement of discipline or the regu- 
 lations of the mess ; for, as I felt the importance 
 of amusing the minds of the crew during so 
 many hours of forced inaction by every innocent 
 device, he kindly undertook and personally super- 
 intended the getting up of a general masquerade. 
 The affair *came off* on the 22d October; and 
 if the entertainment was not of a very refined cha- 
 racter, at all events it answered its purpose ; for 
 the fun was hearty and the laughter loud. Some 
 of the devices, as well as the contrivances to 
 give the necessary variety of costume, with the 
 scanty means at our command, did great credit 
 to the ingenuity of the performers; and alto- 
 gether it was a gratifying scene, as showing how 
 the native elasticity of the mind can triumph 
 over circumstances the most cheerless and dis- 
 couraging. 
 
 October 23d. After divine service, which was 
 listened to with a stillness that evinced, more 
 than words could have done, the devout feeling 
 created by the impressive and beautiful language 
 of our liturgy, as the weather was very fine, the 
 people, under the direction of the officers, were 
 sent on the ice for exercise ; and I too, putting 
 on a pair of Chippewyan snow-shoes, saV'ed out 
 and made towards the land, which I reached 
 after more than two hours of great fatigue. 
 
FATIGUING EXCURSION TO SHORE. 
 
 ISt 
 
 There was nothing besides the novelty of having 
 been on shore, to repay me for the trouble and 
 falls which I met with in getting there. A bare 
 jutting or rounded piece of granite was visible 
 here and there, the rest was covered with snow, 
 steep and inaccessible, and dipping to the 
 water's edge. It was a desolate solitude which, 
 from the absence of all tracks, seemed to be 
 equally abandoned by man and animals. At 
 that part, at least, there was no shelter ; and 
 when I reflected on the dangers by which we 
 were encompassed, and the casualties which 
 might befal us, I could not refrain from casting 
 an anxious look towards the ship, whose masts 
 alone were in sight above the peaked hummocks, 
 and imploring the protection of heaven. 
 
 The fatigue I experienced from my walk did 
 not arise from the distance, which at most could 
 not exceed six miles, but from the unevenness of 
 the surface, which, from the smooth and in some 
 places deep coating of snow that covered it, was 
 extremely deceitful. In stepping forward, it 
 often happened that my show-shoe was canted 
 over by some sharp piece out of sight, and I 
 myself thrown down ; but worse than this were 
 the ridges and hummocks, which being heaped 
 up to a considerable height demanded the ut- 
 most exertion to surmount. On one occasion 
 I slipped, and falling headlong into the snow, 
 
 K 2 
 
i li 
 
 M'l 
 
 4;i 
 
 I 
 
 :i 
 
 PMJ 
 
 
 ii.,v 
 
 13^ FAVOUUAULE POSITION OF THE SHIP. 
 
 found that I was between two thick musses of 
 ice, with my face down, and that I hung only 
 by the right snow-shoe, which, fortunately for 
 me, had turned so as to fix itself across two 
 pieces strong enough to support me. From this 
 awkw d situation I was eight or ten minutes in 
 extricating myself, and congratulated myself not 
 a little on my esca}.e. The fact is, that 1 ought 
 not to have been alone ; but as I was at present 
 the only person who could boast of a pair of 
 snow-shoes, no one could keep pace with me. 
 Every thing which I saw between the ship and 
 the shore, the heavy floes in some parts, and 
 the extreme pressure that must have existed in 
 others, served to reconcile me to the position 
 in which accident, or something better, had 
 thrown the ship, as affording a more favourable 
 chance of getting away than if we had been 
 nearer to the land. 
 
 October 24th, being the day of the full moon, 
 had been looked forward to with more than 
 ordinary interest, on account of the spring- 
 tide; though, from the cold we had experienced, 
 the snow which had fallen, and the uniform 
 compactness of the ice in every direction, it was 
 thought that it might now affect us but little, 
 if at all. The hour of change was ushered in by 
 a fresh westerly, or off-shore breeze, which 
 passed harmless over the surflice of the vast 
 
 12 
 
 ^1 
 
DISRUPTION BY A OALE. 
 
 133 
 
 body, only raising in its fury clouds of drift, 
 particularly about the land to the east-ward of the 
 ship. Scarcely, however, had the sun crossed the 
 meridian when a change came on for the worse, 
 and soon settled into a downright gale, such 
 as a fortnight ago would most likely have taken us 
 to Repulse Bay. Until 4" p.m. it had not made 
 the faintest impression on any part of the ice, but 
 at that time a lane of water was observed between 
 us and the shore, precisely wh -»i I had walked 
 over yesterday. Aided by tVie gale, which some- 
 times burst in heavy squalls, rh chart lel went on 
 gradually expanding until nigi ? clcjcd the view. 
 About 8" p. M. however, a crack directly ahead 
 and another on the starboard quarter were heard, 
 seeming to announce a general disruption, the 
 effect of which, at that hour of darkness and at so 
 late a season, it was impossible to foresee. Sleep 
 was banished, at least from me, and when the 
 morning of October 25th arrived, a continuous 
 sheet of water was seen extending from the 
 before-mentioned lane to Cape Bylot, and thence 
 to seaward abaft our starboard beam. Two or 
 three other small openings were seen ; and the 
 ship unable to resist the power of the gale, had 
 worked a clear space of tliree inches along the 
 whole of the starboard side. By noon the 
 cracks ahead and astern were something enlarged, 
 and the lane of water on the starboard side 
 
 K 3 
 
' m a m 
 
 if 
 
 ' 1 I 
 
 .1:'! 
 
 Ill): 
 
 |J f 
 
 il! I 
 
 i 
 
 f^ 
 
 134, 
 
 EXPANSION OF OPEN WATER. 
 
 seemed to be nearing us. The wind now began 
 to abate, and having caught a glimpse of the 
 land, we found that the ship had been driven 
 together with the pack to the eastward. The 
 temperature from 3°+ had risen to 26°+, the 
 breeze still prevailing from the west. 
 
 During the afternoon the sky continued over- 
 cast, and the wind freshening up from the same 
 quarter, the ice began to set to the northward as 
 well as eastward, so that after a boisterous night, 
 we found ourselves much nearer to Cape Comfort. 
 The water too had increased considerably, reach- 
 ing now from Cape Bylot to Cape Comfort; 
 a second lane had been formed which, branch- 
 ing to seaward in a semicircular shape, joined 
 the principal opening near its two extremes, 
 and thus completely insulated the pack in 
 the centre of which the ship was fixed. How 
 far the channels led, and whether, supposing 
 we could have entered them, serviceable use 
 could have been made of them, was at best 
 matter of conjecture merely ; but on the 
 other hand, it was clear, that the separation of the 
 ice, so as to admit of the triid, would have 
 exposed us to the irresistible crushing of the 
 consolidated masses around, masses very different 
 from the straggling pieces which formerly 
 knocked agaii^,t us, and cemented into vast 
 floes, whose momeiUum the ship, strong as she 
 
SHIP CONTINUES FIXED. 
 
 135 
 
 was, could scarcely have withstood. Upon the 
 whole, therefore, it was gratifying to me to see 
 the ice, forming the pack in which we were, 
 remain firm j for so long as that was the case, 
 however incommodious our position, it was at 
 least safe. Meantime we continued to drift as 
 before, until the wind getting round into the 
 east began to send us back again. 
 
 The temperature was 27°+, and the weather 
 extremely gloomy. By the morning of the 27th 
 we had not only altered the bearing of the ship's 
 head from west to east, but had drifte so far 
 out as to have a distinct sight of the land forming 
 the extreme point of the bay eastward of Cape 
 Comfort. There was also much more of clear 
 water along shore leading directly up Frozen 
 Strait, where, hanging over the Western Hills, 
 were dense clouds, similar to those near us, indi- 
 eating, beyond doubt, a continuation of the 
 same channJ. That, therefore, for which we 
 had so long and anxiously waited — that which, 
 in two days at the most, would have terminated 
 our labours by allowing a free and unobstructed 
 passage to our anchorage, was now before us, 
 and we were helpless and immovable, fixed in 
 the solid mass as it were in a block of marble. 
 Again, the heavy clouds to the far east showed 
 open water in that direction also, so that at this 
 time, with an offshore breeze, a vessel might hav^ 
 
 K 4 
 
 m 
 
•I 
 
 if I.' 
 
 
 136 
 
 OFFICERS BUILD SNOW HOUSES. 
 
 sailed without impediment (so far as we could 
 judge) from one extremity of Southampton 
 Island to the other. In the direction of Baffin 
 Island indeed, and to the north, the horizon was 
 still white with ice ; but the fact of our having 
 drifted so far from the land proved, beyond 
 question, the existence of a clear sea thereabouts : 
 and though no immediate advantage could be ex- 
 pected from this circumstance, yet in conjunction 
 with what was daily passing near us, it afforded 
 the hope of a departure early enough for 
 carrying into effect the objects of the expedition 
 in the course of the following year. To behold 
 the open water so near, without a possibility of 
 reaching it, was mortifying enough, but we made 
 a virtue of necessity, and suppressed our feelings. 
 The usual occupations in cleaning the holds, 
 re-stowing and getting provisions for six months at 
 hand, with other necessary duties, were followed 
 up on board ; whilst for the preservation of health, 
 a moderate share of walking or rather working 
 exercise was taken on the ice. The officers 
 found employment and amusement in building 
 snow houses for various purposes, and among 
 others for an observatory, instead of that which 
 had been already put up with a sail covering, too 
 valuable to be risked upon so uncertain a found- 
 ation. My plans, as to magnetical observations, 
 were for the present completely frustrated by 
 
WANT OF FUEL PREVENTS EXCURSIONS. 137 
 
 the motion of the ice, though I did not despair of 
 yet doing something in that respect during the 
 winter. At noon the weather was very gloomy, 
 with vsmoke-black clouds hanging over the water, 
 and seeming more heavy from mingling with a 
 greenish pale yellow which canopied the snow- 
 clad hills beyond. The wind was from the south- 
 ward and the thermometer showed 28°-f-. The 
 next day the water remained still open, and in 
 the opinion of the ice-mate had greatly increased 
 towards the upper end or western extreme of 
 Frozen Strait. From alongside the ship how- 
 ever, to the nearest edge of the pack connected 
 with the water, the distance was at least a mile, 
 the whole of which was a succession of hu^^ 
 mocks, wedged and cemented by sludge a v.. 
 snow into a mass so firm, as to defy any human 
 efforts to separate them. Yet so tempting was 
 that channel, so doubtful its re-occurrence when 
 we might be at liberty to avail ourselves of it, 
 that had there been wood, or the means of pro- 
 curing fuel around Repulse Bay, I could hardly 
 have resisted an attempt with the boats, whereby 
 half tlie object might have been accomplished by 
 the time the ship could have forced her way to 
 an anchorage. But without fire, the thing was 
 utterly impracticable, so I was compelled unwil- 
 lingly to submit. 
 
 The wanning apparatus, of the repair of which I 
 
1 
 
 1 . 
 
 lA ': 
 
 
 i 
 
 :i( 
 
 !< sl! 
 
 
 138 FURTHER REPAIR OF HEATING APPARATUS. 
 
 spoke, had again been bricked up around the 
 furnace, and was now to undergo another trial, 
 which, it is painful to add, was equally unsuc- 
 cessful with the former. This second failure was 
 attributable to the shortness of the nuts and 
 the fineness of the threads of the screws, and fresh 
 leaks in the pipes ; a combination of evils which, 
 if not overcome by the skill of our armourer, 
 would reduce us to three common stoves, and 
 these, it is scarcely necessary to say, would be 
 utterly inadequate for warming the whole ship. 
 The damaged parts having been repaired, and 
 the whole once more replaced and filled with 
 brine, the furnace was lighted ; but now, one 
 side only was warmed, the temperature of the 
 other being scarcely raised. The cause of this 
 was found to be the insufficiency of the liquid 
 forced into the circulating pipes, and this being 
 remedied, there was for a short time a prospect 
 that all would go right. But it was for a short 
 time only, for a fresh leak soon discovered itself, 
 and once more arrested the proceedings. The 
 people annoyed at these interruptions, and the 
 complication of the whole affair, with charac- 
 teristic humour, nicknamed it the infernal 
 machine, and prayed that we might not all be 
 blown up. Fortunately for us, the thermometer 
 was still high, viz. 26°+. 
 
 The wind being light, we did not seem to vary 
 
 14 
 
INCONVENIENCE OF THE VAPOUR. 
 
 139 
 
 our position much during the night, and yet in 
 the morning of the 29th it was evident that the 
 ice near the shore had by some means or other di- 
 minished in quantity, either by drifting away, or 
 from having been broken up by the tide. At 
 all events, the channel of water was certainly 
 nearer, and we ourselves closer to the land, 
 which remained shrouded in sombre clouds. 
 Much inconvenience was now experienced from 
 the great accumulation of moisture on the lower 
 deck. When the warming apparatus began to 
 throw out its heat this had partially disappeared ; 
 but that complex and most vexatious piece 
 of mechanism, after performing its office with 
 tolerable regularity for a few hours, again, with an 
 inexplicable caprice, confined its action to the 
 larboard side, and soon after, though there was 
 no visible defect, or any want of fire, grew 
 cold altogether, and consequently useless. To 
 remove the vapour for the present, two hang- 
 ing stoves were placed on the lower deck, which 
 answered the purpose, but half stifled with 
 their smoke those who were below. 
 
 The wind which had set in in the morning 
 from the N. E. blew with increasing strength as 
 the day closed j and when the moon shone out, 
 a dark lane of water was supposed to be descried 
 between our pack and the coast which we were 
 rapidly nearing. Here, as at tiie more westerly 
 
 ss*l.t-fefe; 
 
140 
 
 EXCURSION TO LAND. 
 
 P if 
 
 
 I M 
 
 part, the ir*: had almost entirely disappeared, so 
 that there was every reason to suppose we should 
 be brought up by the inner edge of the pack 
 striking the rocks. If this were realized, it was 
 to be expected that the concussion would not 
 only detach and pulverize the extremity imme- 
 diately in contact, but that the reverberation of 
 the shock might extend itseli even m tiie ship, 
 free her from her icy bonds, and leave her once 
 more to the mercy of drift ice. This was 
 a crtiisommation not to be wished, and I 
 passed a restic . oigfit. More tlmn once it was 
 thought that the pack had actually struck the 
 land, but in theni^ning of Sunday, Oct. 30th, 
 the appearance was found to have been a delu- 
 sion, occasioned by the high and dark line of the 
 coast on this part of Southampton Island which 
 has been already described as adjacent to Cape 
 Comfort. After the accustomed examination, 
 and the religious duties of the day, the whole of 
 the crew, under the guidance of the first lieu- 
 tenant, made an excursion towards the nearest 
 land which, however, they were unable to reach, 
 on account of the interposition of a few feet of 
 water between the pack and the bay ice and 
 sludge adiierir^g to the rocks. The distance from 
 the ship to >he spot whence they returned, which 
 was considered about halfway, was estimated at 
 something more than a mile. At noon, the 
 
ANOTHER EXCURSION. 
 
 ux 
 
 thermometer having bee*, at S^-f- rose to 9°+, 
 the wind from the westward. In the early morn- 
 ing two prismatic hmar halos had been seen. The 
 pack was now arrested by the young ice, which 
 on the following day I went to examine, in 
 company with a small party of the officers, who 
 continued their walk to the shore. They re- 
 turned in the evening with an account of the 
 toil they had had in scaling the precipitous sides 
 of the rocks, which, there, were of red granite. 
 Seals and a recent track of a bear were seen, as 
 well as the excrement of Alpine hares. From 
 the summit of the hills, the young ice could be 
 traced ahead or to the eastward of the ship, almost 
 surrounding the pack, which was decidedly the 
 heaviest in sight. The weather being obscure 
 to the westward, nothing could be ascertained 
 in that quarter. 
 
 On November 1st, the thermometer was 10"+, 
 and the ice stationary. The iwlds having now 
 been arranged, as well as the coals would allow 
 with more advantage, the articles liable to 
 injury from the frost placed in midships, and 
 six months' provisions stowed near the hatches ; 
 there remained little of duty to occupy the at- 
 tention beyond the important one of setting to 
 rights the warming apparatus. Assuredly, no 
 pains were spared to solve the puzzling 
 question, why it would not act. Some of the 
 
142 TROUBLE OF HEATING APPARATUS. 
 
 I i 
 
 pipes were again repaired and a volume of 
 hot salt-water having been driven with a forcing 
 pump from one extremity to the other, its 
 entire reparation was thought to be conclusively 
 established. The fire therefore was lighted, and, 
 as the warmth spread throughout the ship, it 
 was considered that all obstacles were finally over- 
 come, when suddenly, to our great and serious 
 disappointment, first the starboard side cooled 
 rapidly, and ten or twelve hours later the larboard 
 followed the example. The evil now began to 
 press on us the more heavily as our remedies 
 were failing ; for, not foreseeing nor imagining 
 such a succession of disasters, we had been sup- 
 plied only with such a quantity of mortar as might 
 be sufficient for making good any fracture in the 
 furnace, the whole of which was expended ; so 
 that it was necessary to leave it untouched until 
 some substitute could be discovered. As there 
 was reason to suppose that the pipes had become 
 foul or partially obstructed, I directed that a 
 stream of hot water should be forced through 
 the whole range of pipes for several hours with- 
 out interruption, and went myself to superintend 
 the operation. Half an hour's trial, without 
 visible result, convinced me that, to do anything 
 effectual, a part (at least) of the tedious con- 
 trivance must be unscrewed and examined, and 
 this, notwithstanding the confusion it would 
 
AN EXPLORING PARTY, 
 
 143 
 
 create in the officers* cabins through which it 
 passed, and the doubt of our being able to put it 
 together again, was accordingly directed to be 
 done. In the mean time the temperature had 
 fallen to 22°-, throwing the lower deck into a 
 most uncomfortable state, and yet not so bad 
 as the after cabins, which were dripping with 
 moisture. Much to the credit of the officers 
 no complaints were heard, nor was the health of 
 any one affected. Moreover, under every dis- 
 advantage, the deck was kept perfectly dry. 
 
 November 4th. I accompanied a party of 
 officers to the land for the purpose of satisfying our 
 curiosity respecting an opening about three miles 
 from the ship, which had the appearance of a 
 harbour. The result in some measure verified 
 our conjecture, for we walked upwards of a mile 
 from the entrance to the further end, where, 
 providing the holding ground were good, any 
 vessel would be securely sheltered. From a 
 bold perpendicular rock, one of the many by 
 which it is girt in, the echo was so clear, that 
 an unhappy wanderer in these dreary solitudes 
 might have listened to his own voice, and fan- 
 cied himself no longer alone. We attempted to 
 ascend a sloping side to gain the heights above ; 
 but all except myself being unprovided with 
 snow-shoes, sunk so deep in the snow that the 
 effi^rt was found too laborious, and was therefore 
 abandoned for another opportunity. In this 
 
 ''■^ H 
 
r 
 
 ,?,:^*"^«<i' 
 i 
 
 I 
 
 l^if EXPERIMENT 01? WEAIIINO A MASK. 
 
 excursion a few tracks of bears, wolves, and 
 foxes, and our old acqiuiintance the raven weie 
 seen ; and though the v\:ath.er was fine, yet a 
 moderate breeze frr. • u ^ westward wa.s quite 
 cold enough to freeze slightly the faces of two of 
 the gentlemen, which, however, tlie application 
 of a little snow oon restored to their former 
 florid hue. By way of experimch' T.'.- 'enant 
 Smyth put on a common mask, and at first con- 
 sidered it rather comfortable, until getting 
 heated wit a exertion, a cake of ice was formed 
 inside, which, not being the kind of lining he 
 ])referrea, was immediately rejected, and from 
 the face the mask was transferred to the end of 
 a boarding pike, the point being thrust through 
 one of the eyes» and carried in tha. way over his 
 shoulder. With such a Gorgon*s head, it was 
 laughingly rem: ked, we need not fear to face a 
 troop of bears. In the afternoon we returned on 
 board. There was a broad sheet of bay '-e 
 from the shore to the pack, but although now 
 firm enough, we could form no op lion of what 
 it might be when aci 'on jy tl^e suing spring- 
 tide. There was not the least --ign of any tide- 
 mark along the rocks, tliough a crticking of !he 
 ice, as if it were sinking, was heard. ^ 
 
 On inspection of the pipes it tui rjed out, as I 
 anticipated, that a considerabi ^ui- ity of rust 
 and dirt had accumulated in thi ta »ard return 
 pipe, and tiiis having been cleared out, the 
 
ANNOYANCES FROM Yfi UR. 
 
 145 
 
 anil 
 
 apparatus was again put together, and for a time 
 threw out a gcii ral heat. But after two days* 
 trial the heat, though occiisionally as liigli as 
 60"-|- between decks, was found to be too irre- 
 gular for the purpose mainly intended, of keep- 
 ing the interior dry by the action of a uniform 
 temperature. On the contrary, it rather seemed 
 to favour the generating of vapour, which now 
 ran in streams from every part. The officers' 
 cabins, gun-room, and midshipmen's berth were 
 miserably uncomfortable. It was in the after- 
 part, espi^cially near the first leutenant's cabin, 
 that the greatest accumulation of moisture was 
 observed, aiKi there, as there seemed to be no 
 chance of an improvement, a stove was now 
 permanently fixed. Foi the rest, the deck was 
 partly covered with snow, well beaten down, and 
 in default q-avel or sand, strewed with saw- 
 dust. Tksides this, the afler-hatchway or com- 
 panii 1 was > losed and a tank placed over it for 
 a condi nsei hile tlio ladder was transferred to 
 the main hatchw a^ having a fearnought screen 
 round it below, and a regular door entrance 
 above on deck. With those, and numerous 
 othei precautions of a like kind, it was hoped 
 we might contrive to get through the coldest 
 months of the winter. 
 
 After service on Sunday, Nov< nher 6th, the 
 people strolled on the ice, \mi 
 
 L 
 
 extending their 
 
 n 
 
 IP! 
 
 ^fi^'i 
 
 
(; 
 I 
 
 I 
 
 It ' 
 
 M i 
 
 H6 
 
 SUIIVEY OF HAKBOUB. 
 
 walk to the land. On the following day a party 
 under the orders of Lieutenant Stanley, was 
 directc(1 to make a survey of the harbour. 
 This was completed by the evening. It was 
 ascertained to be one niilo and a half long, and 
 half a mile broad, by iu..neasurement; exposed 
 to a north-north-east wind, but sheltered from 
 all others. The echo-rock was six hundred and 
 fifty feet high ; some others varied from that to 
 eight hundred and fifty feet ; these again were 
 backed by the coast range, running generally 
 from one thousand to fourteen and sixteen hun- 
 dred feet above the level of the sea. Neither 
 the depth of water nor the nature of the bottom 
 could be got, on acco iit of the under layers of 
 ice intercepting the lead. I called it Smyth's 
 Harbour, after the first Lieutenant of the Terror. 
 Some of the gentlemen ascended the hills by 
 the vallies, and observed on their way numerous 
 tracks of animals, — bears, wolves, foxes, and rein- 
 deer. A few willows were also seen, near which 
 were the tracks of partridges. 
 
 The pack in which we were frozen had now 
 remained so long unmoved, and the bay ice had 
 attained such a solidity, that many concluded 
 we were definitively fixed for the winter ; but 
 on the 8th November a fresh gale ushered in 
 the new moon, and before night drove the huge 
 pack from the inshore ice, leaving between the 
 
 '1 
 
Pass cape comfort. 
 
 147 
 
 two a dark lane of water. Tlie land was 
 effectually shut out from view by the whirls 
 of drift raised by the gusty wind, but on the 
 following day, November <}th, a partial clearance 
 showed that the pack had not only drifted out, 
 but was also setting to the eastward. Cape 
 Comfort being at that time full on the beam. 
 After this, the same kind of weather continu- 
 ing throughout that day prevented us from 
 ascertaining the precise situation of the ship, 
 till daylight of the 10th, when we found we 
 had just passed Cape Comfort. Our pack, in 
 leaving tlie station where it had been so long 
 undisturbed, had carried away a considerable 
 portion of the bay ice attached to its edges, and 
 had now turned round about ninety degrees, 
 placing the stem of the ship towards the land, 
 and consequently leaving her head true north. 
 From the crow's nest much young ice was 
 observable on every side, but only in lanes 
 intervening between the heavier bodies, of which 
 it was remarked that our pack was the most 
 extensive. The thermometer still retained an 
 elevation whicli we thought high, viz. 11° + . 
 
 It may v/ell be imagined that these spring-tide 
 changes of position gave rise to no little specu- 
 lation whither we might be driven by the time 
 the ice commonly breaks up. During the three 
 succeeding days we were blo^v.i backwards and 
 
 L 2 
 
 II 
 
I'!'' 
 
 t; 
 
 1. 
 
 ii' 
 
 f^'l. 
 
 
 s1» 
 
 M 
 
 ill '' 
 
 \ : 
 
 til I' 
 
 148 
 
 DRIVEN TOWARDS CAPE COMFORT. 
 
 forwards until tlie pack set in towards tlie shore 
 a little to the westward of Cape Comfort, and 
 here it was hoped we might remain undisturbed 
 up to the time of the next spring-tide : but not 
 so ; for a strong north-westerly breeze coming 
 on with heavy squalls and much drift, we were 
 again set in motion to the eastward, in an oblique 
 direction towards the land, whicL, when seen at 
 intervals through the drift, appeared to be 
 nearer than we had yet approached. The tem- 
 perature now fell to 14°—, and this, though not 
 in fact so low as on some previous occasions 
 when the crew had walked out for exercise, was 
 foimd, with the aid of the breeze, too biting to 
 be faced without great discomfort ; and, conse- 
 quently, after our accustomed assemblage at 
 divisions and church on the 13th, the men were 
 directed to walk unJer the housing. Through- 
 out the latter part of the day and most of the 
 night, heavy squalls were frequent from the same 
 quarter, and though these had considerably 
 abated by the 14th, yet, to our astonishment, . 
 tiie pack had taken us, according to Lieutenant 
 Stanley's measurement, within three thousand 
 six hundred and fifty yards of the inaccessible 
 cliffs of Cape Comfort, against which, therefore, 
 there was reason to apprehend that the ice might 
 strike, break up, and wreck the ship. The extra- 
 ordinary disappearance of extensive bodies of 
 
RISK OF DEINC CRUSHED. 
 
 11.9 
 
 inshore ice, and the occupation of their places by 
 the still heavier ones from seaward, seemetl at first 
 quite unaccountable, till the fact was established 
 that two thirds of it were actually ground and 
 pressed up to the height of twenty feet, in a solid 
 mass agaii;st the unyielding rocks. What fatal 
 consequences, therefore, might not be appre- 
 bended if any untowai-d fracture of the pack 
 should unmoor us from our present bed I A 
 small hole of water was all that was visible from 
 the mast-head, but happily that was off the 
 point to the eastward, and between the pack 
 and the shore there was yet a weak barrier of drift 
 and bay ice to fend off any serious concussion. 
 The drift had spread such a uniform carpet over 
 the entire surface of the ice, that it seemed like 
 one immense floe, A vast proportion of it had 
 evidently been drifted down from the north- 
 ward, and having wedged itself between the 
 western extremity of our pack and Frozen 
 Strait, was thus, in combination with the wind, 
 gradually forcing us out : situated as we were, 
 this was a consummation most devoutly to be 
 wished, for our return to the strait was clearly 
 impossible, even if the wind should veer to the 
 eastward; and any change of place was ob- 
 viously better than a position immediately off an 
 iron-bound cape. 
 
 And now again the annoyance returned which 
 
 L 3 
 
 I r 
 
■ I; 
 
 P!. 
 
 I u 
 
 t r 
 
 m 
 
 111 U 
 
 ti,P 
 
 ?( 
 
 1 ] 
 
 1.50 HEATING APPARATUS CONDEMNED. 
 
 has been already mentioned oftener than I could 
 wish. In spite of every attention, our trouble- 
 some warming apparatus could not be made to 
 answer. Scarcely did it begin to throw out a 
 little heat than one pipe or other gradually 
 cooled, and left us teeming with vapour which it 
 had just had the power to generate. Not a day 
 passed without a complaint of its inefficiency. 
 In its best state the officers' cabins were drip- 
 ping, and a stove was necessary to dry the deck. 
 I had been most reluctant to abandon it 
 altogether, but at last, on repeated represen- 
 tations of its failure, I issued an official order 
 to the proper officers to survey it, and on their 
 report pronouncing its condemnation, I directed 
 the furnace and its appurtenances to be dis- 
 mantled, and availed myself of the lead and cop- 
 per attached to it, for fitting up a Fraser's stove 
 a little before the main-hatchway on the lower 
 deck. 
 
 November l6th. We continued to move ac- 
 cording to the direction of the wind, off the 
 point of Cape Comfort, with some holes of water 
 round the pack, caused by its own motion, but 
 did not get beyond it, either to the east or to the 
 west. I examined the recently formed ice near 
 the land, which was broken into slabs, and piled 
 up in the utmost confusion, so steep and irre- 
 gular as to be almost impassabJc. Just at the 
 
DRIVEN FARTHER OUT. 
 
 151 
 
 edgt of the pack, while keenly following the 
 fresli track of a bear, in the company of three of 
 the officers, we suddenly came to some gravel 
 evidently thrown up by the lower ice, and look- 
 ing more attentively round, observed that the 
 adjacent ice was in a raised and spherical form, as 
 if resthig on a rock or bank of similar shape. 
 The pack was only a few yards from this, and 
 had evidently been arrested by it, as was further 
 demonstrated by a crack about twenty feet from 
 its edge. To get away from the shoal, there- 
 fore, would require an off-shore breeze ; nor was 
 this long wanting, for on the very same night 
 it blew fresh from the westward, and urging 
 the ice along the land, faster than might 
 have been expected in a neap-tide, by the fore- 
 noon of the 18th we had completely rounded 
 the Cape, and were considerably farther out 
 than we had been since the early part of last 
 month. On making an excursion with a small 
 party, I observed that our pack had received ano- 
 ther shock, and that an extensive crack on the side 
 nearest the land was the consequence. Again 
 I saw the same convexity of surface, terminated 
 by huge mounds of spHntered fragments amount- 
 ing to hundreds of tons in weight, each piece or 
 fragment, though of this year's ice, being from 
 two to two and a half feet thick. The exist- 
 ence of shoals was manifest, since the pressure 
 
 L 4. 
 
 t 
 
miNi 
 
 I : 
 
 II! 
 
 if 
 
 VV >: 
 
 I 
 
 If 
 
 w • 
 
 I' 
 
 152 ROBBED BY FOXES AND SHRIMPS. 
 
 causing the accumulation referred to, ceased 
 abruptly where this and other similar remark- 
 able elevations appeared. Beyond that line, 
 and occupying a full mile in breadth, was a 
 sheet of young ice, alternating with lieaps of 
 a different character, and extending towards 
 the land, which, however, we were prevented 
 from reaching by a narrow lane of water. Tracks 
 of bears, wolves, and foxes were noticed, of which 
 the last mentioned alone ever ventured to ap- 
 proach the ship. Indeed these met with no very 
 friendly reception, having put an end to all 
 relations of amity, by stealing sundry pieces 
 of beef, left carelessly by the owners outside on 
 the snow. To do them justice however, they 
 were not the only depredators, as they soon ex- 
 perienced who, having been taught to mistrust 
 the honesty of the foxes, afterwards to be very safe, 
 sunk their allowance of beef in the '* fire hole." 
 Alas! to adopt the pathetic lament of oldShylock, 
 ** There be water thieves and land thieves :" and 
 here a greedy colony of shrimps made such 
 havock, tliat wiien in th^ morning one of the men 
 went to draw up tlie meat intended for the dinner 
 of tiis mess, he found in its place a few miserable 
 slireds, to which iUo ; xates still clung with un- 
 satiated appetites. TJie temperature fluctuated 
 from 0" to about 21° — , but there were neither 
 iiuiora nor other phenomena to excite attention 
 
DlilVEN CLOSE IN SHORE. 
 
 153 
 
 and employ the mind ; and all attempt to make 
 magnetic observations, except in occasional in- 
 stances, was frustrated by the constant moving of 
 the pacK. This indeed was a serious disappoint- 
 ment, as we had many experiments in view, which 
 could not have failed to be highly interesting. 
 
 November 19th. The wind veered to thesouth- 
 east, and some signs were observed of water in the 
 opposite quarter, occasioned, as we knew, by the 
 motion of our own pack. The night was unusually 
 calm, yet it was apparent to every one that some 
 disturbing force was carrying us rapidly towards 
 the frowning precipices not a gun-shot distant. 
 The attention of those on deck was riveted to 
 sounds distinctly heard of breaking ice, crashing 
 and grinding with a discord the more horrible^ 
 as with that exception nature was in dead re- 
 pose. When day dawned it appeared that we had 
 been driven to the westward, and close in shore, 
 where the bay ice was still in tumultuous agi! 
 tation, having been thrown up against the rocks 
 in some shelving places, to the height of tliirty or 
 forty feet. After church a large party went to 
 the edge of the pack, or floe, as it was now 
 termed, and witnessed the work of destruction as 
 It wt . on. It was a spectacle indeed not less 
 sublime than appalling 5 filling tlie mind with 
 awe, and at the suuic time inspiring it with 
 ilevotional gratitude to that lieiiig whose Pro- 
 
 ^1 
 
 J 
 
 I-.,!.. 
 
 \ 
 
'.vS^H^ 
 
 teie«i«««d«bMliiftii^*M, 
 
 154 
 
 THERMOMETER RISES > 
 
 f',' I 
 
 fi 
 
 li' 
 
 HM 
 
 lltv /' 
 
 ill i 
 
 vidence watclied over us and preserved us in the 
 midst of such fearful perils. On the 21st Novem- 
 ber we moved but little, though close in with the 
 point of Cape Comfort, and therefore exposed to 
 the influence of those alternate tides which 
 worked so much confusion amongst the bay ice. 
 The wind however began to blow fresh and 
 steadily from the south-east, with the same degree 
 of force v/hich had hitherto characterized it on 
 the days of full and change. In consequence 
 of this change the thermometer showed a dis- 
 position to rise, and on the 22d was 9° + , the 
 weather being overcast, and the ship farther off 
 shore. Still, notwithstanding the continuance 
 and strength of the wind, we did not increase our 
 distance from the land so much as might have 
 been expected, a circumstance which can only be 
 accounted for by supposing that its influence was 
 partial, or that ice had accumulated in the north 
 so as to prevent any egress in that direction. 
 Whatever it was, we certainly had not been drifted 
 more than five miles ; and after the period of full 
 moon, an op^ ^site breeze sent us again in shore, 
 altogether to the westward of the Cape, 
 
 On making holes at two places, a quarter of 
 a mile apart, the thickness of the ice beneath the 
 covering of snow, was found to be not more than 
 two and two and a half feet. Much snow now 
 fell, and even with a fresh northerly wind, the 
 
 14 
 
HUGE MASS OF ICE. 
 
 1.55 
 
 temperature was 1 1° + , So mild did the weather 
 continue, with every wind, for several consecutive 
 days, that the snow remained fleecy and soft, 
 and, -obliterating every trace of the old tracks, 
 perplexed us considerably in our daily exercise. 
 Our floe had undergone a change of form from 
 the pressure on the extremities, and having been 
 forced against the compact and solid ice off 
 the western low point of Smyth's Harbour, 
 a large portion of it had broken and separated 
 from the main body. On examining it myself, 
 I saw that there were cracks in all directions, 
 and concluded that two more such encroach- 
 ments would infallibly extend to us : nor was 
 it possible to avoid the reflection that no art 
 could save us, if we were once exposed to the 
 grinding pressure of the mass against the 
 rocks. Commur. r,i4r 1 with the shore was cut 
 off; but having folio ved the channel some way 
 to seaward, it was found to be connected with 
 another open space of more thnn usual extent, 
 though now fast becoming coaiod vith thin ice. 
 Nor was this distant from the shii* . and within 
 a few hundred paces was an accumulation of 
 ponderous masses of ice, the interstices between 
 which were filled up with snow drift, so firmly 
 cemented, and of such height, that it might 
 well have passed for a berg. From it? summit 
 
 .1 
 
 ifi 
 
 ■i 
 
 \< > 
 
! i I: 
 
 If! 
 
 1 
 
 1 
 
 i' 
 
 % 
 
 
 i 
 
 \}* 
 
 t 
 
 m > 
 
 I 'I 
 
 i;." 
 
 156 
 
 IIAPID MOTION OF THE ICE. 
 
 I looked down into the Terror's main-top. One 
 of the crew saw some fish in the water which 
 he described to be as large as salmon, but we 
 were unable to set lines, owing to the overlap- 
 ping of the ice below the surface. 
 
 November 28th. There had been a dark 
 steel coloured sky, extending from about Winter 
 Island to the situation of Repulse Bay, so ex- 
 actly resembling that which indicates open 
 water, that we could not forbear imagining 
 the ice in the centre of the Welcome to have 
 broken up. That some such occurrence must 
 have taken place was indeed evident, for the ice 
 was now perpetually in motion, and we were 
 driven occasionally five or seven miles. A 
 strance refraction of the horizon to the north 
 was remarked about sunrise, or rather when the 
 sun was seen just above the south-eastern hills. 
 At the part to the north the sky was a dark 
 gi-ey, and the icy horizon appeared in detached 
 horizontal lines at a very acute angle. The 
 temperature fell to lO°~, with a moderate 
 wind from the westward. Without much vari- 
 ation in the state of the weather, a very sensible 
 diminution was brought about on the edge 
 of the floe by the successive action of the in- 
 shore ice against it. But as the temperature 
 hud fallen to 30"- of Pastorelli's thermometer. 
 
 
 'm 
 
AMUSEMENTS. 
 
 157 
 
 and 38"— of Newman's, it was rather thought 
 that the detached pieces might again unite and 
 form a stronger bulwark of defence than before. 
 It has been ahcady ii rationed that the crew 
 were daily exercised on the ice j and as it 
 seemed better that the mind should be fixed on 
 some object, the accomplishment of which might 
 be looked forward to with a sort of interest, 
 the whole were directed to build up snow walls 
 and galleries in different directions from the 
 ship. These being destined for the comfort of 
 all, the work was cheerfully undertaken, and 
 the operators were rewarded with a proportion- 
 able stock of health. Good, however, as was 
 the general health, it was necessary to relieve 
 the monotony of scene and occupation ; and 
 in this view the officers kindly undertook to 
 perform a play for the amusement of the men. 
 Accordingly, on November 29th, a day speci- 
 ally selected on account of the gallant action 
 off Pelagossa, 1811, (such had been the deep 
 impression left by Sir J. Gordon's good offices 
 and urbanity), every preparation that our limited 
 means would permit having been made, it was 
 announced that the Farce of Monsieur Tonson 
 would be acted that evening. The exhibition 
 at the appointed hour, ushered in by an 
 appropriate j)rologue from the first lieiitenant, 
 and set off by scenery from the brush of the 
 same accomplished performer, occasioned hearty 
 
 'I 
 
 'I 
 
^mj^ 
 
 JJ ' 4' " ' 
 
 ,) 
 
 • I 
 
 ill ' 
 
 1. '' i 
 
 158 
 
 CRUSHING OF ICE. 
 
 laughter, plentiful plaudits, and in conclusion, 
 three hearty cheers. After the perfornmnce, 
 the dramatis personae, with the otiier officers, 
 passed a few hours together ; and I question 
 whether in any other quarter of the globe, an 
 equal number could be found more free from 
 care than were the merry group so assembled. 
 
 The sea, however, was not chinned into inac- 
 tivity, for the usual grating noise was heard by 
 the watch on deck, and in the morning the floe 
 was found to have turned in more towards the 
 shore. A drift was skimming over the ice, 
 which rendered walking, even with the advan- 
 tage of snow-shoes, a more severe task than was 
 agreeable j but being desirous to see what effect 
 had been produced by the uproar of the night, 
 I went to our nearest boundary, and found that 
 it had sufFere«1 rtnther encroachment, and was 
 crushed and thrown up like the rest beyond it. 
 Dark, and theretbre recently formed ice, occu- 
 pied some conspicuous openings, though this 
 could scarcely last beyond the next tide. 
 
 December 3d. The temperature now began 
 to decrease rapidly. The difference between 
 Pastorelli's thermometer and mine, made by 
 Newman (the same which I had with me on my 
 last expedition), amounted to eight degrees, the 
 former being 3li°~, and the latter 4^°-. I 
 determined to test tliem by exposing a saucer 
 of mercury to the atmosphere. In the course 
 
THERMOMETERS. 
 
 159 
 
 of an hour it ' came dull in colour and fl 
 tened ..l its edges, aiu in two hours an( a 
 half more was ozen. In the interval Pasto- 
 relli , had fallen to 35° 5'-, and New- 
 man's to 44 -. U'ter this test tlie one last 
 mentioned was fixed on a post about seventy 
 paces frnm the ship, and thencefoi reg-^tered 
 as the standard thermometer ; the others, liow- 
 cvcr, north and south, as well as one J 
 
 in a tin case perforated with holes ai ted 
 
 to tlie mast-head, being also noted ii q log- 
 book. Tfie cold was now sufficiently severe to 
 freeze some of the people as they were employed 
 on the ici the temperature being 49"—. 
 However, dug desirous to satisfy my doubts 
 about the practicability of getting on shore, and 
 as to the extent of the bay ice near us, 1 went on 
 snow-shoes, and on arriving at the boundary of 
 the floe, which just at that part was unaltered, 
 found a narrow lane of water kept from 
 freezing by the agitation caused by the moving 
 ice. Thinking tliat the lane did not extend far, 
 I skirted along it, first towards the west, and 
 then more north, until I lost sigh^ of the ship. 
 In this distance, perhaps abont six or seven 
 miles, the breadth of the lane was much reduced, 
 but a continuous crack, in places large enough 
 to admit a boat, ran in an easterly direction fur- 
 ther than I could venture alone. But what 
 
 (fl 
 

 
 IMAGE EVALUATION 
 TEST TARGET (MT-3) 
 
 4 
 
 A 
 
 if. 
 
 1.0 
 
 I.I 
 
 ^ 140 
 
 25 
 
 1.8 
 
 11.25 mil 1.4 IIIIII.6 
 
 V] 
 
 <? 
 
 n 
 
 n 
 
 7 
 
 
 /^ 
 
 '^ 
 
 7 
 
 Photographic 
 
 Sciences 
 
 Corporation 
 
 23 WEST MAIN STREET 
 
 WEBSTER, NY. 14580 
 
 (716) 872-4503 
 
160 
 
 ACCIDENT TO THE CARPENTER. 
 
 K ' 
 
 ^'ii 
 
 n 
 
 
 ^i^ I 
 
 most excited my attention was the comparative 
 thinness of those portions of floe ice which had 
 been detached from what we considered as our 
 property ; for though upon a hasty glance it 
 looked thick and solid, yet a nearer inspection 
 convinced me that this appearance was owing 
 solely to a compact crust of snow, the ice itself 
 being certainly not more than sixteen inches 
 deep. Coupling so important a fact with the 
 numerous fractures for three hundred yards 
 from the extremity of the floe, there did not 
 seem much reason to apprehend a protracted 
 detention in what had hitherto proved a place of 
 refuge and security. A thick misty haze from 
 the water impeded the view towards Frozen 
 Strait, but up to the most distant point there 
 was a mixture of old and young bay ice, so 
 that in the event of a fresh easterly breeze, 
 there would be nothing to oppose our setting 
 again towards Cape Bylot. The cold was so 
 piercing that, although to prevent being frost- 
 bitten I walked fast enough to keep up a drip- 
 ping perspiration, yet on regaining the ship 
 one of my toes was rather sharply touched. 
 
 December 4th. After divine service the 
 people went to walk, according to custom, and 
 being close to the young ice, one of them, a 
 carpenter, was thoughtless enough to step upon 
 it, and immediately sunk to his arms, which. 
 
 i .)' 
 
'.■«^- 
 
 itive 
 had 
 
 our 
 e it 
 :tion 
 ving 
 tself 
 :hes 
 the 
 ards 
 not 
 ;ted 
 e of 
 rom 
 zen 
 ere 
 
 so 
 ;ze, 
 ing 
 
 so 
 
 3St- 
 
 rip- 
 hip 
 
 the 
 ind 
 . a 
 >on 
 ch, 
 
 w 
 
I 
 
' I . ^ 
 
 I.. ^ 
 
 "s 
 
 n ■■:,-■ 
 
 L ■ * 
 
 
 ^^' 
 
 •i 
 
 |»H 
 
 11 
 
 J? 
 
 m 
 
 P' 
 
 ■W 
 
 Ifi 
 
 
 
 jijIM 
 
 it 
 
 i| xJ 
 
 si^fjir 
 
 M'; 
 
 
 
i; 
 
GOOD EFFECTS OF THE DUCKING. ICl 
 
 being extended, checked his further descent. 
 
 Wh"' TmT/ "" "'''"''"" "'■ Lieutenants 
 Smyth and M'Murdo, who, with Mr. M'Ciure 
 
 being close by, instantly rescued him. The' 
 
 temperature at that time was 43«- i„ the air 
 
 ^ton of pleasant warmth, doubUess attributable 
 tothe<hfference (15°) between the water and the 
 atmosphere. On being placed on the7"e hit 
 fim request was to be permitted to sit d^j^' 
 and as m the absence of the ofBcen, he wZu 
 tn all probability have done so. he would Inelt 
 ^bly have been frozen, perhaps to death. C 
 Wve.V so far from acceding to his wish, com! 
 peUed h.m to run ; and when he was no longer 
 able to do so from fatigue and the stiffness of W 
 icy garments, he was forcibly pushed Zwa„ 
 untd he reached the ship, where blanke s S 
 been prepared for his reception. These iS 
 dechned as he well might, for on dise^cum 
 bermg h.m of his clothes, it wa., seen thatTe' 
 was m a profuse perspiration, and thus In 
 apprehension being removed, the whole afl,t 
 was converted into a jest. It was nnf i! 
 
 without a good effect as IZV^ '"''"""' 
 asain^t i„^ ■ afforduig a warning 
 
 W incumng unnecessary risks for thf 
 
 December 8th. The interval since the h,f 
 sp™g-tides had been free from any striklnii! 
 
 M 
 
 111 
 
162 
 
 SCHOOL FOR THE CREW. 
 
 ji'l^ 
 
 1 ■ ' 
 
 1 
 
 1 
 
 1 
 
 * 
 
 , f 
 
 ■ 1 
 
 11 
 
 turbance of the ice, and now that they had 
 come round again, we were nearly in the same 
 place as before, the only change being, that the 
 ship's head was turned something more in shore. 
 The calmness of the weather, so different from 
 what had hitherto been experienced at this 
 period, excited general observation. On most 
 former occasions the usual attendants of the 
 spring-tides were squalls and boisterous gales, 
 charged with snow and drift. But now every 
 thing was still except the dull grinding of the 
 ice along the rocks— a sound which time and use 
 do not familiarize, but which still comes like a 
 warning, useful, perhaps, though disagreeable. 
 It was odd enough, that having made a large 
 kite for the express purpose of sending up a 
 register thermometer, we had not even wind 
 enough to raise it. A faint aurora was seen 
 during the night for a short interval, but that 
 phenomenon, so vivid and brilliant in the territo- 
 ries of the Hudson Bay Company, is evidently 
 rare in this locality. An evening school for the 
 men was instituted under the superintendance 
 of the first Lieutenant and occasionally visited by 
 myself. 
 
 I ought to mention, that though our sub- 
 stitutes of stoves on the lower deck answered 
 tolerably well, yet they did not keep the place 
 effectually dry j for notwithstanding our tank 
 
TIDE SEPARATES ICE. 
 
 1 03 
 
 condenser a.>d other precautions, the most unre. 
 
 "ot!h'' T"""" "*' "'" ^''"i"' ''«'^«- could 
 not altoge«,er prevent the accumulation of mois- 
 
 urem particular spots. In such cases, our only 
 remedy was to use the stoves belonging to the 
 Joa^, and as these, having no funnels toLry off 
 the smoke almost suffocated us, it will be readily 
 
 ?o sol!':,"""? '"' "-essity induced us 
 theZ . "•; /'^'"^ «"■"'•' moreover, that 
 the ot a,r from below froze against the inside of 
 the ho^^smg. producing a most disagreeable efHu- 
 
 the'rlof Tr', *'""' ' ^1""^ ''"'« -••« cut in 
 the roof of the housing, which being opened 
 
 occasionally had the desired effect, lut these 
 .nc»nven.ences were trifles in comparison S 
 what m,ght have been expected from the failure 
 of the heating apparatus. 
 
 Though the clear weather which so unexpect. 
 ecUy continued was free from fresh winds,';^ 
 ^^ tides sepamted the ice, so as to leave open 
 places m various directions. Through the niTi 
 
 «iere adbeenas,uallortwofrom%hti 
 east, and on the morning of the 10th a broad 
 
 round the floe to seaward, and to mahitain a 
 
 bevondi; 'f ' r " ^'^ "^■■'^ '"'^crvable 
 
 chCel ' ^""'."'''""■'^^''^ "° ^-"-^cting 
 channel or opening from the one lane to the other! 
 
 M 2 
 
 IIM 
 
 :ll 
 
1 > 
 
 1G4. 
 
 CUTIIOUS PHENOMENON. 
 
 i 
 
 ?■ i" 
 
 hi 
 
 Our own position >vas something nearer the 
 rocks, and moreover a little to the westward. 
 
 There being now, as was thought, wind enough 
 for the kite, it was sent up, but as in repeated 
 trials it only mounted about two hundred and 
 fifty feet, we desisted. It was evident, indeed, that 
 the wind only prevailed to that height, which 
 was also, according to appearance, nearly the 
 lieight of the dark vapour surrounding us. 
 
 It had been remarked for a considerable time, 
 that though the water immediately froze every- 
 wliere else, yet on the larboard beam of the ship, 
 about ten or twelve feet from the bends at the base 
 of the snow embankment, there was always sludge, 
 or on its removal, salt-water in its place, though 
 the ice beneath was solid. I remember three in- 
 stances of the same kind in rivers, where, not- 
 withstanding the low state of temperature, the 
 surface for some distance, near particular spots, 
 was invariably so moist, that our snow-shoes 
 were coated with ice, which it was necessary to 
 scrape away. In the present instance, the phe- 
 nomenon was not confined to any precise period, 
 but existed through the neap as well as the 
 spring tides. The days now dwindled fast away, 
 the sun being only visible for a few minutes at 
 11 o'clock. It rose above the edge of a serrated 
 hill, and in favourable weather, brightened the 
 gloomy outline. Its altitude was 2° 10'. 
 
REGISTEn THERMOMETER. Jg^ 
 
 December 12th. The floe had nearly resumed 
 Its old position, and was steadier than of late In 
 consequenceof this, two of the people reached the 
 shore over the bay ice, which for upwards of a 
 mile was much thrown up and packed. To sea- 
 ward, mdeed, a very visible reduction of the floe 
 had taken place from sheer pressure, wiiich in 
 many parts had ploughed it up and broken it 
 into comparatively small pieces. The wind 
 havmg mcreased enough to accomplish the rais- 
 mg of the kite, it was sent up with a self^regis- 
 tenng thermometer. This showed a difl^erence 
 ot eight degrees greater cold at twelve hundred 
 feet perpendicular than on the ice, the figures 
 being zero, and eight degrees minus. It may 
 be remarked, also, that the spirit thermometer 
 at the masOhead, which had hitherto during the 
 recent weather, when the wind did not extend 
 beyond the surface, indicated less cold than those 
 on deck, stood, when the kite was up, at three 
 degrees plus, or greater cold than below, aoree, 
 mg in this respect with Six's. '' 
 
 December 13th. Th. ice remained almost 
 stationary, and enabled one of the officers to 
 reach the shore. Here he saw a reindeer, wliich 
 at first bounded from him, but soon, as if not 
 quite convinced that it had cause for alarm 
 turned round and trotted back again, gazing and 
 moving slowly on until Mr. Gore, having crept 
 
 M S 
 
 M 
 
 'I't 
 
V I 
 
 f 
 
 1G(> 
 
 iii.in-i)i:j:ii killed. 
 
 oil his liiiiuls aiul knees near enough, killed it at 
 the first shot. His exploit had been witnessed 
 from the ship, and some men were immediately 
 disjiatched with a sledge to bring on board the 
 unlooked-for addition to our Christmas faro. It 
 was very lean, and when skinned, only weiglied 
 (iOlbs., the head included. This event, how- 
 ever, raised the emulation of our sportsmen, of 
 whom several started early on the following day, 
 but they saw only three wolves, which made the 
 vallies echo with their howling. The weather 
 was still fine, and the thermometer high, varying 
 from 20"- to 5"-, which, without wind, we 
 thought satisflictory enough. The extreme edge 
 of the sun's upper limb was barely visible now 
 above the lowest hill. 
 
 A tranquil interval of uninterrupted clear 
 weather followed, and all anxiety was set at rest 
 by the firm adhesion of the ice to the land, 
 which was now almost daily visited either for 
 exercise or amusement. A few more deer were 
 seen, and a Polar hare as well as two white 
 partridges shot. Lines also were set for fish, but 
 in this attempt we failed. A young fox had 
 been slightly wounded and caught. It was put 
 into an open snow hut and secured, but though 
 in the night it got loose, it made no attempt to 
 escape ; on the contrary, it diverted itself by 
 running round the ship, and quietly retreated to 
 
HAPID FALL OF THEUMOIMETEU. IG? 
 
 tlie Jiut, where it soon buiTowed. When any 
 one attempted to caress it, the little creature 
 made a half stiHcd snarl, and snapped, but not 
 viciously, at the extended hand. It rejected 
 biscuit, but devoured a tallow candle with avidity 
 and seeming satisfaction. 
 
 From our proximity to the shore, the im had 
 not been visible since the 12tli instant, when its 
 altitude a few minutes after 11" was 1" 40' ; vet, 
 according to our perception, little if any difference 
 was observed in the diminution of daylight. At 
 length the ^2 1st December arrived; and as the 
 moon would be at full on the following day, we 
 began to fancy that another spring-tide would 
 pass by with impunity. Indeed every circum- 
 stance concurred to confirm the opinion, until 
 towards night, when the barometer began to 
 fall with such precipitation as to prepare the 
 minds of all for some uncommon occurrence. 
 ihe mercury which had stood at 30 inches, 
 had, in the course of eighteen hours, which 
 brought It near the time of change, fallen to 
 ^8.26. During this interval the wind had 
 been light and unsteady, veering round the 
 compass, but at 11" a. m., December 22d, it 
 settled at S.S.E., and soon blew hard. WhUe 
 these changes were in progress the whole sky had 
 become overcast, and a dense haze, occasioned 
 by the partial falling of snow, limited the view 
 
 M 4 
 
 r .,i 
 
■^ .^-.^.».. 
 
 k 'i '■' « 
 
 
 I !!! 
 
 I 
 
 168 
 
 FEARFUL STORM. 
 
 to a very few yards. Hearing a rustling noise 
 like the rushing of water apparently beneath us, 
 we supposed that the floe w^.s already separated, 
 and that the consequences would soon be ma- 
 nifested alongside, but very shortly all specula- 
 tions were merged in the reality before us. 
 Since our departure from England na such 
 storm had been experienced. Within an hour 
 it raged with such fury, that not a man could 
 face it. Several who endeavoured to perform 
 some duty outside the ship were instantly frost- 
 bitten, and obliged to return, and the officer of 
 the watch in merely going from the housing to 
 the tafrail to register the thermometers had the 
 whole of his face frozen. Not that the tem- 
 perature was so low as it had been a few days 
 previous, for it was then 53° minus, and now 
 only 30" minus, but the rapid extraction of heat 
 was beyond endurance, and a very short expo- 
 sure would have been certainly fatal to the 
 hardiest. 
 
 As night advanced the barometer indicated a 
 change, but the storm still raged like a hurri- 
 cane, and covered the ship with snow drift. 
 Our topmasts shook like wands, and the lee 
 rigging was forced out like a bow : piles of snow 
 were whirled on the lee side of the housing, 
 until the chain which sustained the rough spar 
 that formed the ridge pole broke, and the 
 
 i\ 
 
Fl-OE CRACKS. 
 
 169 
 
 accumulated weight fell, but the end of the spar 
 fortunately striking the windlass, was stopped in 
 •te descent, and thus saved the burge. which 
 otherwise must have been severely if not irre- 
 parably injured. As the wind was directly 
 off shore, there was no great cause for appre- 
 hens.on as to the holding together of the floe, 
 unless indeed the drift should cause sufficient 
 open water to admit of any sea rising, for i„ 
 
 fu^ of the tempest grad,.-.lly abated, it was not 
 entirely exhausted until u.. 24th. Then the sky 
 was again serene, and a tolerably clear view 
 showed us that instead of having been driven 
 out towards Frozen Strait, we were actually 
 twelve or fourteen miles to the eastward of 
 Cape Comfort. This can be accounted for only 
 on the supposition that the flood-tide had come 
 fi-om the Welcome through Fury and Hecla 
 Mraits. and. taking the channel of the Frozen 
 t>trait. had met the course of the gale nearly at 
 light angles, ar.d thus produced a mean line 
 of du-ection for the ship between the two. which 
 in fact answered to the position. 
 
 Our floe was slighUy cracked within a few yards 
 from either side ; but in other respects it looked 
 more extensive and firmer than ever. This was 
 verified by examination, for the high tide had 
 raised the entire body of old and young ice to 
 
 tl 
 
170 
 
 GLOOMINESS OF THE CREW. 
 
 h i 
 
 Ji; 
 
 the very rocks, and with the aid of the gale, 
 the whole mass having been driven away, an 
 interval was produced, which was already firmly 
 frozen over. As to the rest, no water was 
 visible ; but what gave us infinitely more 
 pleasure, the sun peeped over the distant moun- 
 tains, gladdening us with his returning beams, 
 after a short absence of twelve days. It was a 
 glorious and a joyful sight, when we considered 
 that each day would make its influence more 
 felt, and that at last, having liberated us from 
 our crystal bonds, it might light us to a happy 
 issue of our labours. 
 
 Sailors, it is proverbial, are naturally light 
 hearted, and have in general a great flow of 
 animal spirits ; but in this respect ours most 
 assuredly differed from their brother tars. Whe- 
 ther this arose from the services in which they 
 had been brought up, or from their never having 
 been subject to the salutary influence of naval 
 discipline, I know not, but certainly their want 
 of cheerfulness was not attributable to any lack 
 of example or encouragement on the part of the 
 officers. For about six hours every day except 
 Sundays, they were kept at some easy work on 
 the ice, as was absolutely requisite for their 
 health ; but it was in vain that we endeavoured 
 to lead them into the wholesome habit of amusing 
 themselves with games or dancing, to cheer their 
 
TJ: A.IUCALS OF THE MEN. 
 
 171 
 
 Spirits, and while away the long hours of our 
 winter evenings. The most trivial cold or other 
 complaint induced despondency, and an attack 
 in the joints of the legs and limbs attended with 
 extravasation of blood, for which it may be re- 
 marked there was some difficulty in accounting, 
 excited the most discouraging apprehensions. 
 Under these circumstances, I was not a little 
 delighted when informed that they had contrived, 
 in imitation of the officers, to get up a play, and 
 had appointed Christmas Eve for its performance. 
 In due time two farces were announced for 
 representation, the " First Floor" and the « Be- 
 nevolent Tar ;" and thesewent off with unbounded 
 applause in a stifling atiposphere between decks, 
 though outside the thermometer stood at 30°-. 
 Christmas Day which succeeded, was duly and 
 religiously observed; neither were the personal 
 comforts, more majorum, neglected, for, as we 
 were on two thirds' allowance, I directed a 
 double portion to be served of all but spirits, and 
 thus gave the men a treat without intoxication. 
 Theofficers also dined together ; and, among other 
 luxuries which the providence of the caterer had 
 furnished, was a haunch of the rein-deer, shot by 
 Mr. Gore, and what every one most anxiously 
 looked forward to, a smiling plum pudding, the 
 considerate and substantial gift of Sir James 
 Gordon's amiable family, who in this way had 
 
 i 
 
 1' 
 
 I 
 
172 
 
 FOOTBALL. 
 
 .! l^ 
 
 !t ' 
 
 largely contributed to our comforts. With these 
 incitements to enjoyment, no wonder that care 
 was forgotten ; mirth prevailed, friends were 
 toasted, home remembered, and the evening 
 passed quickly and happily away. 
 
 December 26th, some occasional gusts of wind 
 came from the south-east, and as well as the 
 mist over the land would allow us to judge, we 
 seemed to have gone a little to the eastward. 
 The severity of the cold daily increased : the 
 temperature was 44°— ; and as the effect of this 
 was aided by strong winds and gales from the 
 north-west, it is not surprising that we felt it more 
 acutely than formerly. All occupation outside 
 the ship, except for amusement merely, was now 
 abandoned, for notwithstanding the unremitting 
 endeavours of the officers to keep the men in 
 sufficient exercise for the rapid circulation of the 
 blood, such was their perverseness or sluggishness, 
 that though constantly frost-bitten from mere 
 want of exertion, they would lounge about, when 
 left to themselves, with the listlessness which be- 
 longs to a tropical climate. One expedient pro- 
 posed was the game of football, and every day, the 
 whole crew were made to play at this active and 
 amusing diversion with the officers, who left no- 
 thing untried to encourage them. Still in spite 
 of all our efforts, fresh men were daily seized 
 with numbness of limbs, affections of the gums, 
 
SCURVY. 1>JQ 
 
 and other symptoms of scurvy. The gunner, 
 Mr. Donaldson, was in a very feeble state, not 
 being able to walk more than a quarter of an hour 
 without assistance ; and many more were limping 
 and complaining of general debility. As the 
 most sedulous attention had been bestowed, both 
 as to the quantity and the quality of the clothing 
 of every one, we were satisfied that this unwel- 
 come visitation, from which recent voyages to 
 this quarter have been for the most part happily 
 exempted, could not be attributed to any defici- 
 ency in these respects. Neither could it be as- 
 cribed to any deficiency in quantity or sameness 
 m kmd of food, since fresh preserved meat with 
 maccaroni or rice, pickles and lime juice, had 
 been issued twice a week. But that nothing 
 might be omitted towards the eradication of the 
 evil, the last named article was now directed to 
 be served out three times, and an extra quantity 
 of preserved soup, cranberries, and other fruits 
 in our possession, considered to be anti-scorbutic, 
 were likewise placed at the disposal of the medi- 
 cal gentlemen. As it was necessary to prohibit 
 the use of spirits to such as were attacked, a 
 privation which few sailors like, they were apt to 
 conceal their situations, until detected by their 
 limping. I therefore directed Doctor Donovan 
 to examine the whole crew, when only two or 
 three additional cases, and those slight, were dis- 
 
 ' I* 
 
 fi 
 
ff 
 
 
 4 
 
 
 Mi 
 
 H'' 
 
 'ifi* 
 
 i' 
 
 1 
 ] 
 
 i 
 i 
 i 
 
 
 
 t 
 
 i 
 
 
 f ' 
 
 
 1 
 
 1 
 
 ■ i 
 
 •i' 
 
 m 
 
 !■ 
 
 ft 
 
 I 1 
 
 f 
 
 I f f 
 
 ^ '■■ 
 
 174 
 
 ANNOYANCES TUOM STOVF.S. 
 
 covered : this system was continued afterwards 
 at stated times, independently of the daily in- 
 spection at divisions. Hitherto the officers had 
 escaped every complaint, although two were now 
 temporarily indisposed from a return of attacks 
 to which they had been previously subject in 
 other climates ; yet as these would probably have 
 manifested themselves anywhere else, they did 
 not create the same uneasiness as the former. I 
 do not feel myself competent to pronounce in what 
 the malignant disease had its origin with us ; but 
 when it is considered that the difference of 
 temperature, between the outside and inside of 
 the ship, amounted frequently to one hundred 
 and ten degrees, that the air outside was pure 
 and extremely dry, whilst that inside was fetid and 
 excessively moist, there seems to be good ground 
 for presuming that this was, if not the source, 
 ceiiiainly a great aggravation of the evil. The 
 total failure of the warming apparatus had indeed 
 proved a serious misfortune. The stoves were 
 just sufficient to produce a warm current about 
 the central line of the deck, whilst the sides were 
 cool enough to convert this into vapour, which, 
 having accumulated within the cabins, streamed 
 down the sides and from over head, until they 
 were half afloat. If open stoves were brought 
 down to dry up the vapour, we were half suffia- 
 cated by the sulphuric odour of the coals ; and 
 
 
CANVASS F(JNNEL. 
 
 i75 
 
 the sick, who had no other retreat, were tortured. 
 Condensers of various kinds had been tried and 
 some were still continued ; but at last it occurred 
 to me that it would be worth while to try the 
 effect of a long canvass funnel, fixed on the top 
 of the doorway and carried above the housing, 
 in the hope tliat a considerable part of the im- 
 pure atmosphere below might thus be carried off. 
 This was no sooner fixed than the advantages 
 were at once perceptible ; a continuous stream of 
 vapour rose through it resembling smoke, for 
 which, indeed, a novice would have taken it. A 
 difference of temperature of eighteen degrees was 
 tne consequence ; but, for the first time, we could 
 see along the whole length of the lower deck. 
 The two following days were so bitterly cold, the 
 wind still blowing fresh from N. N. W., that no 
 exercise could be taken outside the ship. 
 
 On the 31st the wind veered a few points to 
 the north, but with scarcely any diminution in 
 force, and we were confined to the semi-circular 
 space inclosed between snow walls on the larboard 
 side of the ship, and called humourously enough 
 " the Court-yard." But notwithstanding foot- 
 ball twice a day and a swing from the bowsprit, 
 which, as a novelty, was for a time much used* 
 the liabihty to pains in the legs still continued • 
 to obviate which, still further precautions were 
 taken agamst damp clothing by fitting up a dry. 
 
176 
 
 DRYING ROOM. 
 
 ing-room, and requiring every man to hang up 
 Ills clothes there on coming in from the outside 
 air. That there might be no evasion or remiss- 
 ness on the part of the more negligent, proper 
 officers were specially appointed to see these 
 directions carried into execution. And thus un- 
 comfortably ended the fourth month of our impri- 
 sonment, and the last of this disastrous year. 
 
 7 T':- 
 
 I : 
 
177 
 
 CHAPTER IV. 
 
 Tempermun,. - InvaUA. - An^ciCj for Oe fZ Z 
 Mvantag,, of Situation. - Death of I Sailor, it flZ 
 f^-De^ion of the Land, -.drum MeUor.-tLi 
 Excurnms. _ Track, ofAmmrJs. - Increase of S^Z. 
 PfecauHone. -Pienomem. - Invalid.. - SpirL ofTrZ. 
 
 <'J/'"nl'>—Inlemelyeold.-I,^ucnee of Sun. -More 
 
 ^ IJ Coast.- Sounding, aa before. -Set of Current — 
 ■ Beavy Gak. -Gale abau,.- Hole, of W^. 
 
 The Ut January. 1837, which, at the request 
 of Mr M<Clure, was duly ushered in by sound 
 of bell, brought with it more auspicious omens. 
 After a week of storm and drift. i„ ^hich 
 all around had been enveloped in impene- 
 trable obscurity, the barometer had now risen to 
 the unusual height of 30. 70, betokening a change 
 which the day fully realized. There was a per- 
 fectly unclouded sky. a bright sun just seen 
 above the mountams, and a heavenly calm. 
 For the first time too, the coast, from which we 
 mijrht be ten miles distant, was now visible: and 
 we had the agreeable satisfaction to know that we 
 had been carried to the eastward with the entire 
 
 N 
 
 i 
 
i I 
 
 178 EXTRAORDINARY DISRUPTION. [CIIAP.IV. 
 
 body of ice, not less than forty-Hve miles, so 
 irresistible was the power of a heavy gale 
 and a spring-tide over the boundless ranges of 
 ice, which were thrown up in chaotic confusion 
 around us. Suddenly a portentous crash, fol- 
 lowed by a loud, quick, and rumbling noise, 
 rent the floe in various directio)is, and even 
 within one hundred and sixty yards from the 
 ship. Strange rushing sounds, tcio, were heard 
 throughout the night; and in the morning of 
 January 2d, the openings were found to be 
 much ^vider, and many new cracks threatened 
 a further diminution of our now circumscribed 
 floe. It is remarkable that in the meantime 
 there was not the lightest breath of air ; nor can 
 I ascribe any other reason for this extraordinary 
 disruption than a possible compression or stop- 
 page of the ice, by the Fife Rock on the one 
 hand, and the coast on the other. It may be 
 also, that there were shoals inshore of us, though, 
 on sounding, it required one hundred and fifteen 
 fathoms to reach the bottom. Towards noon, a 
 breeze sprung up from the S. S. W., freshened, 
 and in the evening fell again, without producing 
 any sensible efi'ect on the ice. In the night a 
 faint aurora displayed itself; and, on the following 
 morning the appearance of another point of land 
 to the eastward showed us that we had receded 
 still further from the off shore. All our anxiety. 
 
CHAP. IV.] 
 
 howe 
 
 ANXIETIES. 
 
 179 
 
 v'cr, was now centred in the floe, winch 
 to our regret we beheld still further contracted 
 by several other lanes of water, or rather young 
 ice, within a short distance from the ship • 
 wlnle towards the horizon, and again in shore, 
 the body seemed to be more compact, although, 
 the wJiole of yesterday, a long line of dark 
 vapour was observed rising from that place, 
 liiiis, the same substance that had remained 
 hrm and unbroken throughout the raging of 
 the storm was in a few hours of calm all 
 shattered and disjointed j and the sense of seen- 
 nty which a day or two ago had cheered us in 
 the midst of our discomforts, was suddenly, and 
 at a time when it was least expected, converted 
 into distrust and apprehension. Such are the 
 strange caprices of Polar navigation, and such 
 the revolutions of feeling to which the adventurer 
 IS continually subject I Happy is the tempera- 
 ment which can preserve its equal balance be- 
 tween the extremes of hope and despondency. 
 
 The barometer had reached the unusual 
 height of SO'n.84.; and what is equally sin- 
 gular, the thermometer rose from 34.°- to IS°- 
 under the influence of a very dear blue sky and 
 calms, a fact utterly at variance with all my 
 former experience. The sun rose above the mounl 
 tarns to the southward at 10'' 15"^ a. m. The 
 extremes of land at noon bore from S. S. E. i E. 
 
 N *2 
 
 IV 'I 
 
f 
 
 I 
 
 i'^ 
 
 f 
 
 li# EAPIP CHANGE. [CHAP.IV* 
 
 to about #. N. W., ant! tlu disUincc fioin tho 
 nearest point was estimated at /ifteen or seven- 
 teen miles. Until night the ice remained ahnost 
 Itotionary, but a grinding n( iso was then tUstinctly 
 audibk to the eastward, \\. ch with temporary 
 interruptions continued for many hours. Tlie 
 aurora was frequently observed in the south-east 
 cpiartcr, flitting to and from the zenith, but 
 had nothing remarkable either in colour or 
 appearance. 
 
 As the morning of January 4th dawned, a 
 great crashing intimated that some serious 
 change was in progress, and on making the touv 
 of our sadly curtailed floe, we found that the 
 western opening had closed a little, while that 
 on the larboard bow was considerably enlarged. 
 We had thus been again favoured ; for the com- 
 pactness of the ice, immediately around us, was 
 •preserved by a wide lane of open water between 
 us and the land. So rapid had been the tran- 
 sition that, except one part of the edge, not 9. 
 particle was left to tell where the large tract of 
 Ivxy ice, brought with us from Frozen Strait, had 
 been; the space which it had occupied being con- 
 verted into what was not inaptly compared lo 
 an extensive lake. The light breeze from rb^; 
 eastward could scarcely have effected this, which 
 probably therefore was partly the result of curr 
 renL ^r tide. The same cause, whatever it was. 
 
cuAr.iv.J 
 
 COMMOTIO!?. 
 
 181 
 
 ia<I carricl the ship „ f;..^ ^iles t« the west • 
 tor at Moon the ohservd latitude was W 51' N 
 ami longitiulc 82' 15' W. Thermometer 11°-! 
 Weather clear. 
 
 l''or three successive .lays the ice around us 
 of.cncdan,l closed so as fie.juently to leave our 
 m,M floe entirely insulated ; at each closing 
 however, ,t was but too evident that we were 
 iosers by the concussion. Fortunately, at least 
 as we supposed, the weather though overcast re- 
 mained ahnost calm, leaving usexposed only to the 
 action of the spring-tide, which on this occasion 
 (trom what cause we knew not) produced no 
 »..rther d.sturbtmce than to send us soinethina 
 nearer to the shore ; a remarkable cliff' being now 
 not more than seven or eight miles distant. On 
 the night of the 7th, a moderate breeze from 
 the north-west created a terrific din immediately 
 astern of the ship, and so great was the pressure 
 tliat the ice was actually ploughed up ten or 
 twelve feet, while the rumbling and crashing 
 ."Ulerneath and along the surface effectually 
 marred our rest. Daylight of the 8th exhibited 
 ic same opening immediately ahead, and the 
 floe dim,„.slK..d ; still as many parts of it consisted 
 merely of frozen sludge covered with snow, 
 winch could not of course be expected to offer 
 effectual resistance against the battering and pres- 
 sine of a.nore soiul substance, we were not witlw 
 
 N 3 
 

 I 
 
 I ' 
 
 182 
 
 MASQUERADE. 
 
 [chap. IV. 
 
 out alarm for its durability. A few of the men were 
 attacked by the same extraordinary rigidity of the 
 muscles of the legs, which I have spoken of before. 
 Mr. Donaldson, and Walker, one of the seamen, 
 were in a very critical state. All who were un- 
 able to walk were dragged about on sledges for 
 the benefit of air ; and improvements were con- 
 tinually suggested and carried into execution for 
 adding to the dryness and wholesomeness of the 
 lower deck. Nor were our eiforts relaxed to 
 cheer the spirits and divert the minds of the crew. 
 Another masquerade was got up and went off 
 with much spirit and humour, aided not a little 
 by the introduction, in character, of several comic 
 songs from the pen of Mr. Smyth. The barometer 
 had fallen a little, but the temperature of the air 
 was mild, having ranged lately from 2° to 11° — : 
 wind westerly. 
 
 Sunday had been spent in the accustomed 
 exercise of religious duties, and in the evening, 
 which was undisturbed by ice or wind, the 
 aurora was powerful enough to shed a soft light 
 on the pale snow. For the most part it was 
 generally diffused; but at one time it concen- 
 trated itself near the north west, from whence 
 it shot up towards the zenith in beams and pen- 
 cilled rays, finally settling in an arch from E. N. E. 
 to S.S.W. Towards 11'' p.m., and at intervals 
 durinii; the remainder of the night, the commotion 
 
CHAP. IV.] RESULTS OF COMMOTION. 
 
 183 
 
 and grinding of the ice around us were painfully 
 distinct ; and, although the light airs above had 
 prevailed, yet to our utter amazement, the first 
 beam of day on the 9th January dispkyed the 
 high ridged cliff, which I have before mentioned, 
 within three miles of the ship. What had become 
 of the four or five miles of ice which but a few 
 hours before had intervened between us and the 
 same land, was beyond our comprehension. All 
 we knew was that it was there no longer. An 
 attempt was instantly made to get soundings 
 through the fire-hole, but this was frustrated from 
 the under part being entirely blocked up by ice. 
 However, a lane or rather hole of water 
 nmety fathoms ahead, answered our purpose, 
 and the lead struck upon a green slimy rock at 
 seventy fathoms. Along the surface of this 
 opening, some light pieces of ice were setting at 
 the rate of two knots directly south, for the shore, 
 agreeing in that respect with the known set from 
 the north, and Fury and Hecla Strait; this 
 would satisfactorily account for the hue of drift 
 as well as for the accumulation of ice generally 
 observedalongSouthampton Island. Atnoon there 
 was still pressureagainst the north edge of the floe 
 which after crumbling up to some heiglit, at last 
 tell over. Barometer 30. u. and thermometer 7"—. 
 The constant motion of the ice had precluded 
 the possibility of making satisfactory observations 
 
 N 4 
 
 I i 11 
 
 I n 
 
 ' ;i' 
 
184 
 
 TEMPKRATURES. 
 
 [chap. IV. 
 
 i I 
 
 11' 
 
 with the dipping needle, on account of the time 
 necessary for completing the set. But the same 
 difficulty did not apply to Fox's instrument, with 
 which the dip had been observed November 16th 
 1836, in latitude 65° 10' N., and longitude 83" 17' 
 W. to be 87° 14', and the intensity 58° 22'. And on 
 January 6th, off the ridged Cliff, the same instru- 
 ment gave the dip 87° 3', and intensity 58° 21'. 
 
 It may be remembered that I spoke of an ex- 
 traordinary oozing of water alongside, for which 
 no satisfactory reason could be assigned. This had 
 now ceased, but not before the following experi- 
 ment was tried by Messrs. Stanley and Mould. 
 
 The temperature of the air was 9° — , and of 
 the water in the fire-hole 17° 5 + , while that 
 from the hole alongside was only 1° 5 + . 
 
 A 14 ounce vial filled with boiled snow water 
 filtered through lint, weighed, independently of 
 the vial, at a temperature of 5 T + . 734. 75 grains. 
 The same quantity of water from the hole along- 
 side weighed 799. 25 grains. 
 
 The weather now became gloomy and overcast, 
 with a variable wind, which, after flitting round 
 the compass, at last remained for a time steady 
 at S. E. The necessary consequence was, that 
 we were driven slowly along shore to the west- 
 ward J for no long time however, for the fickle 
 element soon veered again. Our attention was 
 now chiefly directed to the sick, who though 
 
CHAP. IV.] 
 
 INVALIDS. 
 
 185 
 
 comparatively few, yet remained on our hands. 
 A pure and equable temperature was the thing 
 most required, and unfortunately most difficult 
 of attainment. A snow hut, at the requisite 
 warmth, could not be kept free from vapour, and 
 our only resource was to screen in a place on the 
 forecastle under the housing, which with a stove 
 in it we thought might answer. The project was 
 accordingly carried into execution, and two of the 
 greatest invalids slept there on the night of the 
 1 0th } but though the weather was rather mild for 
 the season, the interior temperature could not be 
 raised beyond 45°+ : nor could this, which might 
 perhaps have been sufficient, be maintained, in 
 consequence of the necessary ingress and egress 
 of the attendants and visiting officers. Those 
 who were able to support the cold remained until 
 the next day ; the weaker patients returned to 
 their old abode on the lower deck. 
 
 Daylight of January 11th shewed us abreast 
 of the ridged cliff, which the westerly breeze was 
 driving us past, at a distance of about three or 
 four miles from it. Beyond was a kind of open 
 bay, terminated by a rocky bluff headland nearly 
 ahead, and closing the view. Immediately off 
 the latter, as well as farther east, tliere was all 
 the appearance of a xvater sky, though it was 
 hardly possible to imagine that there could be 
 any thmg more than a few holes or lanes so far 
 from Hudson's Straits. 
 
 . 
 
18G 
 
 ANXIETY FOR THE FLOE. [cHAP.IV. 
 
 Hi* 
 
 V M 
 
 Our experimental hospital having proved a 
 failure, we now determined to build up a small 
 cabin on the larboard side of the forecastle with 
 all the spare plank and spars we could afford; 
 and though we could not expect the external 
 air to be excluded as effectually as might be 
 wished, yet we were not without hopes that, 
 with the aid of a covering of sails, the place 
 might be made tolerable. Night came, and in its 
 train, wind and drift; the land, however, was 
 just distinguished abeam at S^ p. m., as well as 
 could be judged not further off than before. 
 Towards midnight there must have been im- 
 mense pressure from the northward, as the ship 
 not only creaked about the aflerpart, but heeled 
 over to starboard ; and this circumstance reviving 
 all my anxiety for the stability of the floe on which, 
 thus close in with the shore, our safety in a great 
 degree depended, altogether deprived me of sleep. 
 Morning, however, of January 12th arrived, an.' 
 found us still imbedded within three miles of the 
 beach to the eastward of the Ridge Cliff, with 
 soundings in seventy-eight fathoms of mud and 
 sand. We had been set into the outer line of a bay, 
 with the same headland before us about eight or 
 ten miles away. Sloping from the Cliff was a 
 continuous deposition (as it seemed) of coarse 
 gravel or shingle, through the surface of which 
 thcie cropped out at intervals craggy black 
 rocks. Connected with these, 
 
 agaui, 
 
 were van- 
 
CHAP.IV.] ADVANTAGES OF SITUATION. 187 
 
 ous rocky liills-, separated by vallies, and reacJi- 
 mg to the headland, the distance being crowned 
 by mountains less high and more rounded than 
 those further west. 
 
 January 13th. Very little alteration had token 
 place in the floe, and our own position remained 
 unchanged. This for the present was exactly as 
 we wished, for our onward progress to the east- 
 ward might have carried us into a less inter- 
 rupted space, and therefore within the influence 
 of a stronger tide; and as the floe in such case 
 must inevitably have been broken up, we should 
 have been cast loose too early amidst difficulties 
 most harassing, if not inextricable. To be thus 
 quietly arrested, even though not beyond the 
 next twenty.four hours, was a matter for which 
 we were sincerely grateful. 
 
 A sailor, named Graham Walker, had been 
 for some time under the care of the medical 
 gentlemen who, at first, had good grounds for 
 supposing that little was the matter with him. 
 However, he was treated as a sick man ; and for 
 want of exercise, or by some means or other, he 
 soon contrived to render himself so in earnest. 
 Unhappily the symptoms shortly after became 
 scorbutic, and the man being of melancholic tem- 
 perament, and utterly incapable of being roused 
 or cheered, grew daily worse. Yet his appetite 
 continued good until within the last tew days, and 
 
 
 ^ ,A 
 
 I: 
 
188 
 
 DEATH OF A SAILOR. [CHAP.IV. 
 
 V 
 
 hn 
 
 H ,1 
 
 even on these he always ate some nourishing diet. 
 Tliis day, however, at 9^^ p. m. he died without 
 suffering, and indeed so cahnly, that those in 
 attendance were unconscious of the moment of 
 his departure. Sucli visitations are always me- 
 lancholy, and it was natural that in our case a 
 more than ordinary impression should be made. 
 Isolated as we were from our fellow-creatures, 
 and at the mercy of a power over which we had 
 no control, who could help feeling that his hour 
 also might shortly come ? At 10'' a. m., on the 
 14th, the officers and crew of H.M.S. performed 
 the last mournful duties towards their shipmate. 
 The body was conveyed on a sledge to the 
 extremity of the floe, where a grave had been 
 dug through the ice ; and the solemn and affect- 
 ing service for the dead having been read, the 
 remains were committed to the deep. 
 
 In the afternoon I went on shore, though not 
 without some trouble and scrambling. It was 
 gratifying to observe that, separated and cur- 
 tailed of its fair proportions, as our floe had been, 
 yet many of the original pieces maintained nearly 
 the same relative positions as when part of the 
 mass, thus forming an additional barrier between 
 us and the shore, which I now found was not 
 more than two miles and a half distant. Along 
 the beach between the jutting rocks the ice 
 iijjpeared to have been forced up full twenty 
 
 p.' V 
 
CUAP.IV.] 
 
 KEFLECTIONS, 
 
 isa 
 
 feet ; and, where the resisting barrier was pre- 
 cipitous, huge masses had been successively 
 lifted up, pile on pile, until they presented the 
 appearance of bergs, for which indeed they were 
 taken. A stranger combination of ruin and con- 
 fusion with the softness and harmony of the most 
 beautiful tints, from the faintest emerald to the 
 deep cerulean blue, it would have been difficult 
 for the most imaginative mind to conceive. 
 Then from the sterile summit of the hill to gaze, 
 far as the eye could stretch, upon a dreary plain 
 of rocky ice, relieved only by the frost-smoke 
 issuing here and there from a few holes or lanes 
 of water, and suddenly to turn to the small dark 
 speck which denoted the ship, the abode, alas how 
 frail! of living men imprisoned amidst this "abo- 
 mination of desolation." What a multitude of 
 reflections rushed into the mind!— the might of 
 nature— the physical feebleness of man— and yet 
 again the triumph of spirit over matter-man, 
 trusting in his own unquenchable energy and the 
 protection of an omnipresent Providence, braving 
 nature in the very strongholds of her empire, 
 and if not successful in the encounter, yet 
 standing up unvanquished and undismayed ! It 
 was indeed a scene not readily to be forgotten. 
 
 The rocks seemed to be a striated granite sin- 
 gularly placed J some having a parallel inclination 
 with open spaces between, and others affain 
 
 m 
 
It 
 
 I 
 
 
 '\H 
 
 I Hit 
 
 190 
 
 DESOLATION OF THE LAND. [cHAP.IV. 
 
 being placed directly across, or almost at right 
 angles to each other. The intervals between 
 the rocks as well as the hills consisted entirely 
 of what in summer would be a coarse loose 
 shingle with rounded stones, and with so little 
 soil, that only in five or six places did I observe 
 any symptoms of vegetation, if short thin grass 
 and a few yards of moss even deserve the name. 
 From the top of the nearest range a small 
 lake was visible, which f^ischarged itself over 
 some steep rocks into a narrow bay or harbour, 
 whose entrance lay between the ship and the 
 headland. It seemed to be covered with smooth 
 bay ice, or ice not yet broken up, but it was evi- 
 dently exposed to the north-east winds. From 
 the brink of the headland, along the tops and 
 curvatures of the inland country, was an uninter- 
 rupted line of utter barrenness and desolation. 
 Not a bird, not an animal, not a solitary foot- 
 print, was there to indicate the presence of a 
 living creature. Not far from the headland was 
 what looked like a narrow lane of water, while 
 in the remote distance in the direction of Fox's 
 channel I fancied there was the loom of land, 
 which considering how greatly objects are re- 
 fracted in this climate, was not impossible. 
 
 On my return, I learned that at S** 55"^ p. m. 
 Doctor Donovan and Mr. Mould had seen an 
 extraordinary meteor in the clear blue sky, at the 
 
CHAP.IV.] qURIOUS METEOR. 
 
 191 
 
 moment of detection bearing north at an altitude 
 of about 23 degrees; it was then in rapid mo- 
 tion, and having ascended to 25 degrees or 
 ' thereabouts, it decHned, its course being some- 
 thing of a paraboloid. It was, as seen, of about 
 the size of a man*s hand, and its colour was that 
 of a pale emerald. When it separated, which 
 it did at its lowest altitude, it dispersed into 
 three parts, each of the same pale tinge, and 
 vanished from the sight. Having myself been 
 travelling south at the time, I was unfortunate 
 enough not to see it. In the morning however, 
 at a quarter before ten o'clock, while standing 
 on a hummock about seventeen feet high, and 
 looking to the east, I had observed the upper 
 limb of the sun, as it filled a triangular cleft on 
 the ridge of the headland, of the most brilliant 
 emerald colour, a phenomenon which I had 
 not witnessed before in these regions. In about 
 five minutes afterwards the sun rose clear and 
 bright, over the summit of the same hill, and 
 the whole sky was free from clouds and appa- 
 rently from vapour; though, as I previously 
 remarked, I saw from the shore a lane of water 
 near the Point. 
 
 January 18th.— During the few last days 
 nothing occurred to vary our position. Several 
 shooting parties had been on shore, and Lieu- 
 tenant Stanley accompanied by Mr. Saunders, 
 
 ' 1 ! • 
 
 (■ 
 
 I'i l. 
 
 • i » 
 
 iil 
 
19^ 
 
 LAND EXCURSIONS [ciIAP.IV. 
 
 I 
 
 1 
 
 h 
 
 
 went to survey the harbour aheady mentioned, 
 which was subsequently named after him. It 
 proved to be too much exposed to the north to 
 afford tlie smallest shelter with a wind from that 
 quarter ; it was narrow also, and in the summer 
 months would rarely be accessible on account of 
 the ice, which, judging from last year, it may be 
 presumed is usually set against it. Mr. Gore 
 had been eight miles in the interior, and on his 
 way passed a lake two miles long ; the shortness 
 of the day would not permit him to extend his 
 excursion as he had felt inclined to do, if for no 
 other purpose than to reach the highest hill, 
 which, as usual to the inexperienced, the next 
 always promised to be. 
 
 Mr. Fisher also, after being baffled in one 
 attempt, contrived on the second occasion 
 to reach the headland, thence called Cape 
 Fisher, and after traversing several steep hills 
 and crossing a frozen mountain stream, whose 
 mouth was two hundred paces across, he came 
 to a spot, whence the coast was descried in the 
 form of a bay trending S. E. by S., while in 
 the extreme distance the same officer, with the 
 aid of a telescope, saw what he considered to 
 be two islands stretching far out from the most 
 southern point. The interval between, as well 
 indeed as the whole space from the headland, 
 presented the novel appearance of a smooth 
 
CHAP. IV.] TRACKS OF ANIMALS. 
 
 193 
 
 (lark and unbroken sheet of bay ice. From the 
 Cape towards Frozen Strait, forming a wide se- 
 micircle as seen from tlie ship, was a continuous 
 line of dense vapour, wliich clearly indicated 
 open water, though the white gleam of ice might 
 be easily distinguished beyond it j so that the 
 crushing and crumbling which had progressively 
 destroyed, separated, and almost pulverized 
 so many miles of floe ice around us, and which 
 providentially had ceased when within little more 
 than a hundred paces from the ship, must have 
 been mainly caused by the undulating motion 
 proceeding from this open water, acted upon of 
 course by wind and tide; for it may be re- 
 membered that the extraordinary grinding com- 
 plained of, when the vessel lay to the westward, 
 near Smyth's Harbour, took place only at such 
 times and under such circumstances, as would 
 point to a combination of the above-mentioned 
 causes. 
 
 Our gentlemen had seen but two tracks of 
 deer, with others of wolves, hares, and foxes ; 
 but what interested us most was the footstep of 
 an Esquimaux which Mr. Fisher had endeavoured 
 ineffectually to trace. If it were one (and it 
 gave rise to as many conjectures as the memo- 
 rable foot-print in Robinson Crusoe), it must 
 have been that of some one who had wandered 
 far out of his way in the eagerness of the chase ; 
 
 o 
 
 i h I 
 

 i :.(; 
 
 I'i 1 
 
 ii If.' 
 
 ri 
 
 li'll 
 
 194 
 
 INCREASE OF SICK. [ciIAr.IV. 
 
 since, as far as our knowledge went, the line of 
 coast would scarcely afford sustenance to the 
 most active and skilful hunter. 
 
 Our new hospital, or sick bay on the larboard 
 side of the forecastle, had been completed three 
 days, and with a boat stove kept always lighted in 
 it, the temperature could be forced up to 70" -f-, 
 which was quite as high as the medical gentlemen 
 required. The two most debilitated invaHds, 
 Mr. Donaldson, and Alexander Anderson, had 
 been immediately conveyed there ; and though 
 they had not yet derived the benefit that was 
 anticipated, they felt more comfortable and 
 were in better spirits. I was sorry, however, to 
 see that the former was dangerously weak and 
 evinced a disposition to incoherency, from which 
 the worst might be feared. N either did any of 
 the others who had been attacked entirely re- 
 cover; for although their general health was 
 sometimes better, yet their legs continued dis- 
 coloured, hard, and bent ; the number of the sick 
 moreover, was continually swelled by new acces- 
 sions, andat last amounted to one sixth of the crew. 
 Five or six of the officers also became slightly 
 affected, thus establishing incontrovertibly that the 
 evil, from whatever cause it originated, was at all 
 events not attributable to any difference in food. 
 However, to put an end to all fancies on this score, 
 and to prevent the possibility of cavil, I gave 
 
CHAP. IV.] 
 
 rilECAUTfONS. 
 
 19^ 
 
 orders for the issue of an extra allowance of 
 preserved meat to all hands, together with cran- 
 berries, pick'es, mustard, vinegar, spruce-beer, 
 and lime juice, so arranged that some anti- 
 scorbutics might be taken every day. The crew 
 moreover were kept constantly engaged either in 
 work or amusement. The lower deck, which, 
 though not exempt from vapour, was yet as dry 
 as could be reasonably expected, was kept clear 
 almost the whole day, except at meal times, 
 and the hammocks were hung up at 9' p. m.. and 
 tiiken down at G" a. m. Excursions were made 
 to the shore under the direction of proper 
 persons, and on the return of the parties, officers 
 were appointeil to see that every man entirely 
 removed the snow from his clothes, and then 
 put on dry ones on going below. I am parti- 
 cular in detailing these precautions, in order to 
 show that this unexpected visitation was prin- 
 cipally to be ascribed to the failure of our 
 unfortunate warming apparatus, which though 
 perhaps suitable enough for a temperate climate, 
 and places where in the event of an accident 
 the means of reparation are at hand, was certainly 
 not adapted for a service such as ours. Our 
 stoves were placed amidship, and near the 
 mtense lieat thrown out by them the deck and 
 beams were dry ; but not so at the sides, where 
 the tubes diffusing general heat should have 
 
 o 2 
 
196 
 
 PHENOMENA. 
 
 [chap. IV. 
 
 Hi 
 
 i 
 
 been ; and the consequence was, that it was no 
 uncommon occurrence to liear one speak of 
 having filled a bucket with the water which 
 streamed down the sides and ceiling of his little 
 cabin. As a last effort to get rid of the fetid 
 and impure atmosphere that lurked in the lower 
 parts of the deck, I ordered a bell-shaped 
 canvass funnel to be made, having the mouth 
 or wide opening within a foot and a half of the 
 deck, and leading through an aperture in the 
 forehatch, from which it was carried through 
 the housing in such a manner as to convey 
 whatever it might be charged with, quite clear 
 of the ship. 
 
 January 19th. For the first time since the 
 new moon, the ice was heard to make a noise 
 to the north-east. The weather however still 
 continued fine, and nearly all hands went on 
 shore for a run. At ^ 4»"* p. m. we had a par- 
 helion, whose semi-diameter as taken from the 
 sun*s centre was 22°, the prevailing colours being 
 orange graduating into red : and at 10'' 45" p.m. 
 Mr. Stanley observed a prismatic lunar halo, 
 the outer diameter of which was 9° and the 
 inner 5". 
 
 January 20th. A few of the gentlemen went 
 on shore with their guns, but met with nothing 
 to reward them for their trouble beyond the be- 
 nefit of the exercise. They reported that the ice 
 
CHAP. IV.] 
 
 INVALIDS. 
 
 197 
 
 near the shore had opened out a little, and that some 
 holes of water, besides one extensive lane, were 
 clearly visible from the hills, for which informa- 
 tion I was quite prepared, not only by the hint 
 of grinding ice to seaward, but also by the near 
 approach of the full moon. It would have been 
 satisfactory to ascertain the true rise and fall of 
 the tide at the full and change respectively, but 
 this the under layers of ice effectually prevented, 
 though by a rough estimate of the depression of 
 the ice on the sides of the rocks, without, how- 
 ever, knowing the thickness of that ice, or 
 whether it touched the bottom, a difference of 
 between seven and ten feet was repeatedly re- 
 marked. In one instance, indeed, Mr. Fisher's 
 party were obliged to return by a different route 
 from that taken in the morning, in consequence 
 of the ice adjoining the land having sunk to 
 a level too deep for a jump. 
 
 Our new funnel was put up and the deck 
 somewhat improved, but still close. The tem- 
 perature was 73°+, the dew point 65\ and the 
 degree of saturation, as shown by the hygro- 
 meter, 786. 
 
 The invalids did not recover as I could have 
 Avished, nor did the two worst evince any decided 
 or even encouraging cliange for the better. One 
 man, who had been afflicted for upwards of a 
 month with the prevalent complaint of a dis- 
 
 o 3 
 
 
 ■ 
 
 
 I^H 
 
 ' 
 
 IH 
 
 
 jil 
 
 ill 
 
 11 ^1 
 
 M 
 
 Il ^^^n 
 
 
 Iff fl^H^H 
 
 
 in 
 
 1 
 
 ill 
 
 1 ' / 
 
 I'Ifl 
 
 !i 
 
 i'll'^'^l 
 
 ;' ' 
 
 Inili^l 
 
 i j 
 
 1 
 
 if ml 
 
 '' 1 
 
 ft 'iii: ^^1 
 
 H 
 
 iP 1 
 
 ^ 1 
 
 Il Ml ' ^^H 
 
 " fp «- ( p-,«t ^^ 
 
 
 • 1 ^H 
 
 ^ . i -,1 
 
 
 ii* 1 
 
 
 
 llr'l 
 
 i 
 
 1 (' ' ^1 
 
 1 
 
 1 r i ^1 
 
 1 
 
 li '1 
 
 V 
 
 1 fi ' ji^^i 
 
 1 
 
 
 1! 
 
 i^ H 
 
 I! 
 
 imB^^^^H 
 
 ■1 
 
 ill 
 
 fl 
 
 '1 ! ' 
 
198 
 
 SPIRITS OF CREW IMPROVE. [CHAP.IV. 
 
 ■ 
 
 coloured and rigid leg, but wiiose healtli in other 
 respects had been good, was suddenly seized 
 with syncope as he was walking j aiid though he 
 recovered in the course of a few minutes, yet in 
 his case, as in that of the other patients who 
 were similarly affected, it seemed to aggravate 
 the disease, or rather to reduce the power of 
 struggling against it. That the rest of the crew, 
 and the few who were affected but slightly, had 
 rather gained than lost on the score of cheerful- 
 ness and good spirits, I was to-day agreeably con- 
 vinced ; for, while taking my accustomed evening 
 exercise within the snow- wall inclosure^ I Was sur- 
 prised at hearing the sound of music somewhere 
 on the floe, and before I could get outside the 
 gallery, the whole crew, headed by the armourer, 
 playing the fife, and under the orders of Mr. 
 Vaughan, the boatswain, marched up in file, sing- 
 ing the song of the '* Southern Breezes." They 
 halted with a hearty laugh at the word of com- 
 mand, as given out by some one in military 
 fashion. Halt, front! and gave three hearty cheers } 
 then placing the fifer on a hummock, they 
 finished with a country dance, in which the 
 slipping, sliding, and felling of the performers 
 gave occasion to much mirth. It may be ima- 
 gined that this was to me a most agreeable 
 sight, and that I did not fail to pronounce my 
 commendations, and to encourage a repetition. 
 
CHAP. IV.] 
 
 WEATHER. 
 
 199 
 
 During the night the breeze occasionally fresh- 
 ened, and the sky was more or less overcast. 
 The 21st brought the spring-tide, but up to 
 noon there was no difference in the ice per- 
 ceptible from the ship, though one of the people 
 had seen, while walking, a narrow lane caused 
 by the separation of the ice, near the shore. 
 Wind W.N.W., squally ; thermometer 21°, and 
 cold ; barometer 29. 72. The night was some- 
 what variable, the wind occasionally freshening, 
 and then decreasing again, but towards the morn- 
 ing of January 22d the weather became clear 
 and almost calm, and we were left, much to our 
 satisfaction, in the same situation as before. Wq 
 had reason, indeed, to apprehend that the wind 
 which generally accompanies the spring-tide 
 might be boisterous enough to blow the ship 
 round the Cape ; for the light and moderate 
 airs which had prevailed throughout the last 
 neaps, could not be expected to continue through 
 the springs, our experience hitherto coinciding 
 with the following remark of Ellis, (who, in 
 1746, wintered in Hudson's Bay,) as reported in 
 Barrow's Chronological History of Northern 
 Voyages : " It seems, however, that the severity 
 " of cold is seldom felt above four or five days 
 " in a month, and generally about the full and 
 
 change of the 
 
 moon, 
 o 4 
 
 at which times the 
 
 . 
 
 ! i 
 
 i Hi?? ■■ 
 
 miA 
 
f.J 
 
 200 
 
 i 
 
 # 
 
 GRINDING OF ICE. [CHAP.IV. 
 
 *' wind is usually from the north-west and 
 ** very tempestuous." At noon a faint grind- 
 ing of the ice was heard to the north. Tem- 
 perature 24°— ; wind W.N.W., light. Within 
 the last week three common flies had in- 
 troduced themselves into the midshipmen's 
 berth. 
 
 January 25th. There is something to me 
 inexplicable in the eccentric action of the tides 
 on the north side of Southampton Island. For 
 three days after the full moon the utmost dis- 
 turbance which reached us amounted to a dull 
 and distant grinding, easily accounted for by 
 the prevalent westerly winds. But the last 
 forty-eight hours had been nearly calm, though 
 intensely cold, the thermometer having indi- 
 cated 43°—, and the mercury having frozen 
 in an artificial horizon. Yet now a loud rushing 
 noise was heard beneath the ice three or four 
 times a-day, agreeing, as it seemed, with the ebb 
 and flow of a regular tide. The lane off Cape 
 Fisher, which had been closed, was re-opened, 
 and the ice outside our floe was lifted up with a 
 singing or rather squeaking sound This, again, 
 at a later hour was followed by a distinct crack- 
 ing, and then a hollow grinding: still we re- 
 mained almost if not entirely stationary. Our 
 number of sick did not materially increase, and 
 
CHAP. IV.] 
 
 HEALTH. 
 
 201 
 
 even of these the general health of several might 
 be called positively good. They were almost free 
 from pain, but could not get rid of the callousness 
 of the part affected, which continued, in spite of 
 every effort, as hard as if it had been thoroughly 
 frozen. One man only (and his was more a 
 rheumatic than a scorbutic case) had returned 
 to his duty; on the other hand, the gunner, 
 Mr. Donaldson, was in a declining and dangerous 
 state, notwithstanding the unremitting attention 
 of Dr. Donovan and Mr. Mould, who were 
 themselves affected with the prevailing complaint, 
 and even walked about with difficulty. 
 
 January 26th. There had been no wind of 
 any consequence throughout the night, some 
 part of which had actually been calm ; and yet in 
 the morning the ice, and consequently the ship, 
 had been set to the eastward from a quarter to 
 half a mile. Several lanes of water too were 
 formed between us and the land, while a dark 
 grey frost smoke extended some distance from 
 the Cape to seaward. The weather was still 
 fine, though cold, the thermometer being 4i"~, 
 and a mist or haze hung round the horizon. In 
 the evening the wind blev/ from the westward, 
 and afterwards veering to the south, got more 
 squally, coming occasionally in smart gusts di- 
 rectly off the land, which, when distinctly seen 
 at 4" i\ M., bore from S.E. toN. W. by N. The 
 
 '( 'i 
 
202 
 
 UNDER-CURRENTS. [CHAP.IV. 
 
 !';';'■' 
 
 barometer had for two days indicated symp- 
 toms of some change, for the mercury fell slowly, 
 and on January 27th, at lO*" a.m. was 29. 22. 
 while the temperature varied in the night up to 
 the same hour, from 47°-- to Sli"— . It was 
 then too misty with snow drift to make out the 
 land clearly, though we could do so sufficiently 
 to ascertain that we had been driven something 
 farther from it than before, and more to the east- 
 ward. From this gradual falling of the mercury of 
 the barometer over a period of nearly three days, 
 and the fluctuations in the ice at a time of moon 
 when the contrary was to be expected, I should 
 conjecture that there had been boisterous weather 
 in some other quarter, probably not very remote, 
 and yet far enough for the intervening ice to qualify 
 and counteract its further progress — an effect 
 familiar to those who have been driven from a 
 heavy gale into a pack for protection. The 
 transition in such cases is often as sudden as it is 
 agreeable j but the under motion of the sea 
 continues for a considerable extent, though of 
 course gradually diminishing in intensity. It 
 was probably something of this kind which oc- 
 casioned the singular movements above described. 
 For an undulation beneath the surface of ice, aid- 
 ing or opposing the current, especially about the 
 hours when it was influenced by the tides, would 
 be likely to produce such efl'ects. I give this, 
 
CHAP. IV.] FLOE DIMINISHES. 
 
 SOS 
 
 of course, as a mere conjecture, which however 
 I thought it better to note down when the 
 phenomena were before my eyes, than to trust 
 to any after judgment, when the fact^ may present 
 themselves less vividly to the mind, or be dis- 
 torted to suit some theory. 
 
 At noon the Cape was dimly seen before the 
 beam, and soundings were obtained in one hun- 
 dred and fifty-six fathoms on a bottom of green 
 mud. On the 28th lanes of water were seen in 
 various directions, and we were sorry to observe 
 that we had lost about sixty paces of the floe, to 
 say nothing of the unwelcome appearance of a 
 small opening of water at the edge of it astern. 
 An officer had been round the floe and reported 
 the inshore ice to be setting fast to the eastward, 
 which led to an unfounded notion that we had 
 rounded the Cape j the detection, for the first 
 time, of an under-current, while sounding, having 
 strengthened the conjecture. The set of this 
 current could not be determined, in consequence 
 of the many under layers of ice which caught and 
 entangled the line. It is probably by an ac- 
 cumulation of such layers, cemented together in 
 bights or bays, sheltered by projecting capes or 
 headwinds, and less liable to disturbance fiom 
 currents and tides, that the very thick ice found 
 in many parts of floes is formed ; for we had 
 ocular demonstration, that with a very low tempe- 
 
 
 I- 
 
 "f'^ n 
 
204 
 
 PHENOMENA OF ICE. [CHAP.IV. 
 
 rature and calm weather, in the severest portion 
 of the winter, no addition of bulk takes place 
 from the surface downwards when protected as our 
 floe was by a hard coating of snow and drilfl. The 
 doubling and packing of ice during gales of wind, 
 and when exposed to severe pressure, as well as 
 the growth of bergs and extensive fields, are 
 phenomena which the attentive observations of 
 modern voyagers have rendered familiar ; and, by 
 an extension of the above remark, another ex- 
 planation besides the action of the waves (for the 
 mere heat of the sun has little influence) is 
 afforded, how it is that tne destruction of the 
 immense fields of ice is effected, not indeed by 
 pointing out the agents of the destruction, but 
 by showing how little may, in many instances, 
 be added in successive winters to the bulk to be 
 destroyed. The fact that no new deposition 
 takes place underneath seems also at once to 
 account for the decayed and wasting appearance, 
 which every one accustomed to Polar navigation 
 must have noticed in what is called the old ice, 
 of which sailors will sometimes say — "Ay*?, sir, 
 that piece is older than I am, but it cannot last 
 above another summer." 
 
 January 29th. The weather, though fine over- 
 head was thick about the southern boundary of 
 our view, but from the aspect of a point of 
 Ridge Cliff, which bore S. 82° 30' W., it was 
 
CHAP. IV.] CALLOSITY OP LIMBS. 
 
 205 
 
 evi«.Ient we had gone still more offshore. After 
 divisions I inspected the decks as usual, and 
 was happy to find the lower one comfortably 
 dry, a result mainly to be attributed to the 
 last bell-mouthed funnel, which carried off an 
 amazing deal of vapour and impure air ; indeed, 
 with eight funnels, either for the stoves or vapour, 
 constantly going, it would have been strange if 
 some good effect had not been produced. Had 
 it not been for the masts and rigging, any one a 
 few hundred yards off might have taken the 
 ship for a manufactory, for the vapour steamed 
 forth in as great a volume, and nearly as dense 
 as the smoke. The only drawback to the gene- 
 ral comfort now was the unfortunate lameness 
 that characterized the scorbutic symptoms. In 
 this respect our list increased, though none, 
 thank God, were worse ; and the poor gunner, 
 who lay still dangerously ill, with scarcely 
 strength enough to change his position, seemed 
 to be in better spirits. One third of the com- 
 plement, including officers, were now affected 
 with this extraordinary callosity of limbs. 
 
 At noon the barometer was 29. 37 ; thermo- 
 meter 39°-. The night was particularly clear, 
 and the stars were observed by Lieutenant 
 Stanley to be freer from nebulae and that danc- 
 ing motion which he had always complained of 
 
 r 
 
 ■s 
 
 i * 
 
 > I ' 
 
 ;, 
 
 !t|i; 
 
 W Mi 
 
20G 
 
 INTENSELY COLD. [ciIAr.IV. 
 
 while making observations. Faint auroras, occa- 
 sionally brightening up a little, were seen fre- 
 quently, but without any of the interesting 
 phenomena which I had been accustomed to 
 observe in the inland regions of this latitude. 
 The ice continued to move, more or less, at a 
 little distance fron> the floe, while a zigzag crack 
 had commenced at one part on the starboard 
 quarter ; and, after an eccentric course through 
 some of the thickest and largest hummocks, not 
 unlike the wild track of lightning, had turned 
 round and ended as it had begun among the looser 
 particles. 
 
 On tlie 31st January, we had been set far 
 enough off shore to distinguish a distant point 
 beyond Cape Fisher, tlie bearing of which at 
 noon was S. E. (true) while tlie other extreme 
 was west ; the observed latitude being 64** 46' N. 
 and longitude 82° 19'W. Happily for us, the 
 weather continued beautifully fine, though in- 
 tensely cold, the thermometer during several days 
 Slaving never been liigher than 38° minus, and 
 generally below 44°. This night, the register at 
 midnight was 54° minus ; but though thus coldly 
 welcomed, the month of February was hailed by 
 us with heartfelt gladness, as bringing us nearer 
 to the day of liberation. The mercury froze in 
 the artificial horizon j and such as were interested 
 
CHAP. IV. J INFLUENCE OF SUN. 
 
 ao7 
 
 in the experiment fired a pistol ball of that metal 
 into a i)iece of wood which hud been long ex- 
 posed to the cold. 
 
 Now, as before, we found there was more grind- 
 ing during the prevalence of calms, or light airs, 
 than in a breeze ; for, the greater part of the even- 
 ing and night of the 1 st February, there was a fear- 
 ful noise outside and even at the edge of the floe, 
 and on examination the next day I ascertained 
 that a further encroachment had been made; 
 and, from the uplifted waves of ice, and the con- 
 fused and massive heaps thrown up or partly 
 crushed, it was evident the force must have been 
 irresistible. Many lanes of water were visible on 
 themorningof FebruarySnd J and though the ther- 
 mometer was still low, the sun whose altitude was 
 8° 39' 45'''' at noon, began to produce some effect 
 on the southern thermometer exposed on board 
 though surrounded with snow, the difference be- 
 tween this and the northern one am.ounung to 
 15°. If any thing, the ship had gone a little 
 nearer the shore. The variation was 60° 45' 
 west. On walking round the floe, I observed 
 that some one had cut the figure of a cross on 
 the overhanging and inner face of a huge wave 
 of ice, left by a former pressure in that menacing 
 attitude. 
 
 The wind having got round from N. E. to 
 
 I 
 
 iiii 
 
 Ull lH'tL 
 
208 
 
 MOnK MMPEJ18. 
 
 [chap. IV. 
 
 r 
 
 \^ 
 
 S. E., and varyinf»; between tliat and S. S. W., 
 broiiglit with it an overcast sky and t'resli breezes, 
 approaching often to a smart gale, which soon 
 caused a separation between the sea and land ice, 
 and drove us slowly ofF shore. On the 4th the 
 distance had increased to ten miles ; and, from a 
 partial glimpse of the land, it was conjectured we 
 had also moved seven miles to the east, a result 
 exactly similar to what had been before expe- 
 rienced from an oflp-shore wind, and the reasons 
 for which have already been assigned. Although 
 the barometer liad predicted with such accuracy 
 the heavy gale which had driven us from the west- 
 ward of Cape Comfort to Ridge Cliff, on this 
 occasion it had not yet indicated the breezes 
 experienced since the i^nd instant ; but what was 
 remarkable enough, and forced itself unwillingly 
 on our notice, was the general effect on the 
 sick, who all complained of being worse. The 
 temperature, it should be observed, had risen to 
 zero on board, and 2°— on the ice j at the same 
 time there was a wide lane of water between 
 the ship and the land. On inspecting the crew 
 at divisions this morning, I was sorry to observe 
 more people limping, while not one could be got 
 out of the list. It was beyond our comprehen- 
 sion or control. They had abundance of pro- 
 visions, the allowance having been again recently 
 
CriAP.IV.] DEATH OF Mil. DONALDSON. 
 
 ^09 
 
 increased, with antiscorbutics of various iunds ; 
 their bedding was shaken and purified ; they 
 were never suffered to remain below in damp 
 clothes ; the deck was free from anything like 
 a close atmosphere ; persons were appointed to 
 see them take sufficient exercise for health three 
 times a day ; and the men themselves were as 
 cheerful as the temperament of each permitted. 
 As a still further precaution, chloride of lime 
 was put into the pump-well, which had never 
 more than six, and generally less than three 
 inches in it. We may be said, indeed, to have 
 brought the disheartening malady with us in the 
 person of one of the marines, who must have 
 been strongly predisposed to the complaint, as 
 he showed symptoms of it so early as a fortnight 
 or three weeks after the expenditure of our live 
 stock. Anderson, though improved in health, 
 was unable to quit his K .. and poor Mr. Donald- 
 son lay in a state c^i drowsy torjjor, from which 
 the medical officers had great difficulty to rouse 
 him. He scarcely took any sustenance; and 
 we could nof contemplate the slow but marked 
 change winch was going on without gloomy 
 apprehtiisions. These fears were but too soon 
 verified; for after another day of lethargy, and 
 beckoning away with his hand any attempt to 
 give him nourishment, he may be said to have 
 slumbered to death at the hour of six o'clock on 
 
 i\ 
 
 ;r 
 
 Ik'i. 
 
FINE WEATHER. [[CHAP.IV* 
 
 Sunday moniing, and was the next day com- 
 mitted to the deep with the usual ceremony. 
 His case was very different from those who were 
 still suffering from indisposition, and who, with 
 sound constitutions, were attacked with a local, 
 and, as we hoped, a temporary complaint, 
 brought on we knew not how j whereas Donald-* 
 9dn had worn out a frame originally strong and 
 vigorous, in a succession of long and arduous 
 services in the whale fishery, in the different 
 voyages of discovery under Sir E. Parry, on 
 board ships of war, and now finally in the Terror. 
 Though leading what is generally styled a hard 
 life, he had seldom if ever been ill ; but when 
 his constitution once began to break up, the 
 symptoms of decline were the more marked and 
 rapid, and he died at the early age of forty-three. 
 Though the event had been long anticipated, 
 it did not fail to cast a gloom over the spirits, 
 which however yielded in some measure before 
 the holy duties of the day, and the reflections 
 naturally arising from them. 
 
 The wind had abated but once, when for a 
 brief interval it fell calm, and the thermometer 
 rose to 4°—; but in a few hours aflerwards, viz. 
 at 8^ A. M. on February 6th, the cold had in- 
 creased to^Q"— , with a fresh breeze from north- 
 west and a clear sky overhead, though misty 
 and indistinct with snow drifl along the horizon. 
 
i^ 
 
 CHAP. IV. J 
 
 THE COAST. 
 
 fill 
 
 We were at least five miles from the nearest land, 
 and had been set and blown with the entire body 
 of the ice so far to the eastward, as to have the 
 Widge Chff for the most westerly bearing astern. 
 At noon the observed latitude was 64° 38' 30" N 
 longitude 82° 01' W., and soundings were ob-' 
 temed m one hundred and fifty fathoms, with a 
 bottom of green mud. In the course of twenty, 
 four hours we had altered our position eleven 
 miles m latitude, and nearly twenty of longitude. 
 ihe ice appeared to be drawing to the land, 
 though no open water was seen near it, and the 
 wind still continued on the quarter. The out- 
 line of the coast was more regular and sloping 
 at the point, which, with an elevated and ob! 
 tusely peaked hill, formed what seemed like 
 islands, and were probably taken for such on a 
 former occasion. Abreast of us were two bays. 
 The wmd having fallen considerably, the ship 
 and ice continued to draw nearer to the land, 
 but towards night the breeze freshened from' 
 N. W. by N., and we began again to drift to the 
 eastward. The coruscation^ of the aurora were 
 visible at intervals to the south-east. At clear 
 daylight, it was perceived that we had been 
 set round the comparatively low point described 
 as forming yesterday the eastern boundary of 
 view, and now saw at the extreme limit of vision 
 ahead, a high bluff, disconnected from the 
 
 p 2 
 
 ^¥i 
 
212 
 
 SOUNDINGS AS BEFORE. [CHAP. IV. 
 
 I 
 
 %ll\ '■ 
 
 h^tin 
 
 low land farther south. From the mast-head, 
 with a glass, about two points of the compass 
 presented a clear horizon, and then began the 
 low land, which after making a long curve 
 approached the shin to within four or five miles. 
 This part not having been surveyed, many 
 conjectures were made as to the probability of 
 a passage to the south of the bluff land ahead, 
 which it was further supposed might be found 
 to lead into Evan's Inlet of Lyon. It was how- 
 ever impossible at our remote situation to form 
 any conclusion, because, notwithstanding appear- 
 ances, the clear space might be nothing more than 
 the circular trending of the coastline, terminating 
 somewhere about Seahorse Point. The change 
 in the rounded and shelving outline of the hills 
 was too remarkable to escape the notice of the 
 most careless observer, though this did not seem 
 to affect the soundings, which at noon were in 
 one hundred and fifty fathoms, with the same 
 description of mud as before. The extremes of 
 land at the above hour were from E. 65° S., to 
 W. Sd"" N., and the latitude was 64" 32' N. 
 
 The whole of the 8th was foggy j nor did the 
 weather clear until near midnight, when the 
 aurora shooting up to the zenith threw a faint 
 light around, and enabled the officer of the watch 
 to catch a glimpse of the land, which he fancied 
 to be nearer. At broken intervals there was a 
 

 CHAP. IV.] SET OF CURRENT. 
 
 213 
 
 rumbling and crashing noise as of splintered ice 
 towards the southwest, which continued more or 
 less until day-break of February 9th. Theweather 
 was still calm, and yeU when the sun rose, it 
 was evident the ship and ice had been drifted to 
 the eastward, at a distance of five miles from the 
 land, which became lower, more sloping, and 
 more free from bays. The soundings at 1** p.m. 
 were found in one hundred and fifty-two fathoms, 
 and with a bottom of darker mud than before. 
 The latitude observed was 64^" 29' N., and longi- 
 tude 81° 46' W., thus establishing the set of the 
 current along the coast. In two instances we 
 hac' %oen checked in our progress, and forced 
 d::^ naily about S.W. by W. towards the land; 
 and the coincidence of times at which this oc- 
 curred pointed to the action of two forces, that 
 is to say, the tide from the ea.. aiJ in com- 
 bination with the prevailing current from the 
 north-west. 
 
 All our boats which, except the barge, had been 
 necessarily kept hung at the davits, with a few in- 
 dispensable stores in them, to be prepared for any 
 sudden emergency, were now thoroughly cleansed 
 from ice and snow, and after a minute and atten- 
 tive examination by Mr. Smith, the carpenter, I 
 had the satisfaction of learning that they were 
 uninj ured, and perfectly ready for service. They 
 
 p 3 
 
 I: 111 
 
Jil pff 
 
 T- i 
 
 il 
 
 I'i 
 
 i 
 I 
 
 I' 
 ; 
 
 Si4 
 
 HEAVY GALE. 
 
 [chap, IV. 
 
 were, therefore, restored to their places, and the 
 upper parts covered with their sails as before. 
 The northerly wind continued to blow fresh 
 during the night, and in the morning of the 
 10th a kne of water was discovered at the edge 
 of the floe astern, extending from thence to due 
 south near the shore. In this opening a few 
 seals were seen. In the forenoon two ravens 
 were observed flying northward. At noon it 
 blew a fresh gale, and the streams of snow-drift 
 effectually shut out the land. As the gale 
 increased durhig the day, it was conjectured 
 we were setting to the southward, and through- 
 out the night, and up to noon of February 11th, 
 it blew hard. The barometer in the meantime 
 had risen in the last twenty-four hours, from 
 29. 59 to 29. 70, while the theimometer on the 
 ice had fallen from 18°- to 37°- ; and, such was 
 the keenness of the cold occasioned by the wind 
 and drift, that it was at some hazard the officer 
 of the watch could venture even to the regis- 
 tering station, though less than a hundred yards 
 from the ship. Edtlies and clouds of drift 
 whirled incessantly round us, and caused the 
 wood and spars to crack and split, so that on 
 one occasion I thought we had got into shoal 
 water, and the ship was touching. Neither 
 could the people take their accustomed exercise 
 
 ijii 
 
CHAP. IV.] 
 
 GALE ABATES. 
 
 215 
 
 on the ice; and though sometimes a glimpse 
 was caught of the land, all that could be ascer- 
 tained was, that it was low, and seemed very 
 much like an island. The latitude gave 64° 21' N., 
 from which, and the fact of the gale being north, 
 there was every reason to believe we were drift- 
 ing into the bay. Soundings gave one hundred 
 and three fathoms, and the lead had struck on 
 green mud. 
 
 This uncomfortable weather continued through- 
 out the greater part of Sunday the 12th j but in 
 the afternoon some of the people were able to 
 walk round the floe, and in so doing discovered 
 that a piece of ice one hundred and twenty 
 yards broad and two hundred yards long had 
 been separated from the western angle, and that 
 there were several cracks striking in a direction 
 towards the centre of it. Towards night the 
 wind got round to the westward, and soon after- 
 wards a loud grinding noise was distinctly heard 
 in that quarter; and, in the early part of the 13th 
 a wall of bay and other ice was seen at the 
 western edge of the floe, which had been forced 
 up perpendicularly to the height of eighteen 
 feet, without, however, doing much damage. 
 The mercury in the barometer continued to fall, 
 and, as the bronze abated, some light snow suc- 
 ceeded and kept falling for several hours. Land 
 
 p 4 
 
 
 i 
 
 ■ >' n ! ' 
 
 kiL .'i \i 
 
21(1 
 
 HOLES OF WATER. [CIIAIMV. 
 
 was discerned from S. S. W. to N. N. W., but 
 too indistinctly for any satisfactory observation. 
 Four or five holes of water however broke sud- 
 denly upon the sight, the largest to seaward, or 
 in the direction of Fox's Channel, and the 
 others between the ship and the shore to the 
 westward. 
 
217 
 
 CHAPTER V. 
 
 Valentine's Day. — Fhe damaged.— Outline of Coast*-' 
 Alarming Symptoms. — Chaotic Commotion. — Tumult 
 ceases. — Clearing Deck. — Dovekie shot. — Awful PeriL 
 
 — Grandeur of Scene. — Expectation of Crisis. — J7 voc 
 spreads Desolation. — Ship remains nipped. — Turmoil 
 
 — Set of Ice. — Ship rights.— Ice Hills. — Bolts, Sfc. 
 loosened by Pressure of Ice. — Flight of Birds. — Nautical 
 Artists. — Divine ."Service. — Blows a Gale. — Imminent 
 Peril. — St. Patrick's Day. — Ice fluctuates — Sir J. Gor- 
 don's Bay. — Peril of Two Sailors. — Flock of Ducks, 
 and White Bear. — Death of a Sailor. — Baffin's Obser- 
 vations. — Flocks of Loons. — Improvement in Crew's 
 
 I Health.— Diminution of Snow. — Mr.Gore Snow-blind. 
 
 The 14th February, Valentine's day I By uni- 
 versal consent in the temperate regions of 
 Europe, the harbinger of spring, the day when 
 iiope revives and the future begins to triumph 
 over the past ! Even with us, fast locked in the 
 dreary wilderness of ice, amidst driving sleet and 
 fog, the time was not without its influence, and 
 I mark this day as the boundary from which we 
 began to look forward to our final release. " How 
 short the past, how long the future appears," is 
 the trite and universal reflection ; yet in my case 
 the reality was exactly the reverse. When I 
 looked back upon the past, (and it was the first 
 lime that I remember to have experienced such 
 
 f\ 
 
 ! 
 
 U 
 
 li? 
 
 ml 
 
218 
 
 11 4' 
 
 11 i)t 
 
 ■l It I 
 
 '1 
 
 1 
 
 i 
 
 ■'(. 
 
 i 
 
 , * i 
 
 i 
 
 
 li 
 
 valentine's day. [chap. v. 
 
 a feeling), the time since we left England, though 
 but eight months, seemed longer than any three 
 years of my former not unadventurous life. Days 
 were weeks, weeks months, months almost years. 
 As objects seen through a haze appear more 
 distant, so to me the past had a dim and shadowy 
 indistinctness which magnified its proportions. 
 There were no marks to separate one day from 
 another, no rule whereby to measure time ; all 
 was one dull and cheerless uniformity of dark 
 and cold. But from this date, on the contrary, 
 the successive days being occupied in active and 
 exciting employment, with continual novelties of 
 situation, and expectation of something to come, 
 seemed to fly with accelerated speed as each 
 brought us nearer to the termination of our im- 
 prisonment. But I return to my narmtive. 
 
 Our day of promise set in, it must be confessed, 
 unpromisingly enough ; for through the night a 
 breeze blew from the N. E., directly on the land, 
 and the mist and snow drift continued so thick, 
 that there was no possibility of seeing at what 
 part of the coast we were. The barometer too 
 kept falling, and the wind increasing. At noon, 
 soundings were obtained in one hundred and 
 thirty fathoms, but the sun was too obscure to 
 get an observation. About ^^ p. m. it being rather 
 squally, a lane of water was formed along the 
 edge of the floe one half round it, and the ice 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 FLOE DAMAGED. 
 
 «19 
 
 seemed to be fast drifling to the south. During 
 the early part of the niglit a lunar halo, slightly 
 prismatic, and of 48° diameter was observed. 
 Shortly after the wind veered more to the north, 
 and with a rising barometer blew a strong gale, 
 which remained unabated till morning of the 15th. 
 From a severe shock, that was felt on board 
 sometime in the middle watch, as well as various 
 dull crackings about the stern frame and counter, 
 I inferred that some commotion had been in ope- 
 ration among the ice. I was not, however, pre- 
 pared to hear that an opening, commencing 
 within a short distance of the laiboard bow, had 
 made its way to within forty paces of the 
 ship, and then running diagonally across had 
 absolutely bisected the floe ; nor, on furtlier 
 examination, was this all, since, at the southern 
 extreme, we had lost another large portion, 
 broken off in a parallel line, while to the 
 north innumerable cracks appeared in every 
 du'ection. Tliis was the most unpromising sight 
 experienced from the time of our being frozen in, 
 for there could be no doubt that tlie bulwark 
 of our security had been shattered j and, as no 
 instance had been known of a reunion of parts 
 once separated from the mass, we could not but 
 feel, though with an humble reliance on the 
 mercy of that Providence which had hitherto 
 sustained us, how precarious was henceforth our 
 
 Im 
 
 i li' 
 
 ii i 
 
 I'l 
 
 
220 
 
 SURVEY OF FLOE. [CHAP.V. 
 
 \f 
 
 I'i 
 
 condition. At noon, soundings were found in 
 ninety-five fathoms, but no land was visible. The 
 latitude, however, by a hazy sun, was 64° 21' N. 
 This day was remarkable as that on which our 
 oldest invalid was rescued from the sick list, 
 but though well in general healtli his leg con- 
 tinued crqoked. A parhelion was seen, whose 
 semidiameter was 23** : the barometer was slowly 
 rising, and at length the sky began to clear, so 
 that about 4'' p. m. land was made out to the 
 south east, and also astern. 
 
 About night fall a lane of water appeared on 
 the western extremity of the floe, extending 
 round the northern part of it to south east. 
 The night itself was beautifully clear, and soon 
 after midnight quite calm. The barometer again 
 fell, and at 6" a m. a light air came from the 
 south west. We had been of late so enveloped 
 in mist and snow drifl, that a fine day was quite 
 a treat ; and afler divisions and the usual inspec- 
 tion of the decks, all hands rambled about the 
 floe, which now formed the limit of our excursions. 
 I, also, as undisputed sovereign of the floe, (and 
 never certainly was monarch more anxious to 
 preserve the integrity of his territory, or more 
 jealous of the smallest encroachment on his 
 border,) went forth to make a survey of my 
 icy domain. After tracing the various cracks 
 from one extreme to the other, I was sorry 
 
CHAP.V.] ENORMOUS PRESSURE. 
 
 S9I 
 
 to find not only a complete verification of the 
 former report, but additional fractures also, of a 
 very threatening aspect. The pressure had been 
 enormous, having thrown up tenific piles of 
 broken, and in many instances ponderous, slabs 
 of ice. Sad inroads had been made upon the 
 floe which, however, much as it was reduced, 
 was yet infinitely the largest compact body within 
 the circle of the horizon In many parts, where 
 a temporary rent and separation had given free- 
 dom to masses confined underneath, huge calves, 
 yellow and brown with age, darted up to the 
 surface, looking like unsightly blotches on the 
 pale features of the general scene. One small 
 crack even trespassed on the ship : but what 
 most astonished me was the state of the ice com- 
 posing the entire body to the verge of the 
 horizon. Formerly it had been remarked to con- 
 sist of innumerable floes of different sizes, all 
 more or less irregular, but chiefly crowned by 
 peaked and massy hummocks, whirh, without 
 any straining of the imagination, might, in some 
 atmospheres, have been mistaken for islands. Of 
 these, not one now remained. Ihe whole had 
 been crushed, ground, and powdered into an 
 appearance, which I can liken only to the 
 spiculated and splintery surflice of broken 
 granite, as seen through a powerful magnifier. 
 How it was that this effect had been produced. 
 
 !:; if!'' 
 
 y 
 
 i^'ir 
 
 i 
 
Ti 
 
 99x 
 
 OUTLINE OF COAST. [ciIAP.V. 
 
 whefher there had been no resistance, or tliat the 
 particles had intermixed and consolidated, we 
 could not determine ; but the fact was indis* 
 putable, that none of the hideous ruins piled up 
 on both extremities of our floe were distinguish- 
 aJe elsewhere. It is worthy of remark, as illus- 
 trating the fracture of chrystals, that the cracks 
 in general pursued their course through every 
 impediment of ice, large or small, in a track not 
 unlike that sometimes marked by lightning on 
 other substances. How far these continued, we 
 had no means of ascertaining. 
 
 The clearness of the day enabled us to define 
 the outline of the coast very satisfactorily. We 
 had evidently been set a little into a bay, though 
 the nearest land which seemed rather low and 
 shelving, was at least twelve or fifteen miles away. 
 From the deck, it seemed to trend southerly, until 
 quite lost in the horizon ; but with the assistance 
 of a glass, as ^dewed from the crow's-nest, it 
 formed a very deep bay, and again vanished 
 behind a line of high blue land, clearly visible 
 two points on the starboard bow. Beyond the 
 latter, and stretcliing something more to the 
 east, was the last point in sight, and which it was 
 considered must be the western side of Seahorse 
 Point, or at least very close to it. The ship's 
 head (which it will be remembered was turned 
 jouud by u commotion of the ice when not far 
 
 J4 
 
CHAP. V.J ALARMING SYMPTOMS* 
 
 itiS 
 
 tiom Cape Bylot) was in an excellent direction, 
 and allowing that the floe held together, and the 
 wind continued from the westward, it was not 
 unreasonable to sup])ose we should eventually be 
 tiiken somewhere among the cluster of islands at 
 the western extremity of Hudson's Straits. 
 
 At noon, soundings on a green muddy bottom 
 were struck in eighty-six fathoms, and at the same 
 time the extremes of land extended from 
 N. W. i N. to S. E. i N. The latitude observed 
 was C4" 10' 30" N. a id tin 'ongitude 81° 40' W. 
 
 February 17th, f( r )me i ut of the day, might 
 be said tobc calm ; anj asus.al, the ice under what 
 might have been thought favourable circum- 
 stjuices, began to work wilh a noise by no 
 means welcome to our ears. The weather 
 was beautifully fine, and the wind quite light, 
 rather otfthe land ; but though there was nothing 
 in this respect which betokened a change, the 
 barometer was slowly falling, and it was remarked 
 that the grinding noise around the floe increased 
 more than usual. From 1" to 3' a. m. of the 
 following day (February 18th) the crashing of the 
 ice at the eastern edge of the floe was alarmingly 
 loud, and a few minutes afterwards I was awakened 
 by a hoarse rushing sound, quickly followed 
 by several severe shocks against the ship. The 
 officer of the watch hurrying down, reported that 
 the floe was certainly breaking up alongside, and 
 I hastened on deck, where the first Lieutenant 
 
CHAOTIC COMMOTION, [[CIIAP.V. 
 
 ■Hi 
 
 t : , »t !■ 
 
 had arrived before me. Here we saw a rent in 
 the ice, extending from the stern of the ship to 
 the edge oi the floe, and another stretching from 
 the bow directly ahead to the eastern brink 5 
 thus, in fact, forming a continuous Hne of 
 separation directly through the centre. The 
 bands were immediately turned up and set to 
 work in bringing on board the armourer's forge 
 
 from a shed alongside, and 
 
 hoisting 
 
 up 
 
 the 
 
 dingy,* which, for convenience and preservation 
 had been stowed on the floe within our wall. 
 The ship now began to complain, and strained 
 considerably under the counter. She then heeled 
 over to port, and relieved herself about six inches 
 from the starboard embankment against the side, 
 making by the effort gaping rents through the 
 snow walls. At this time, the crashing, grind- 
 ing, and rushing noise beneath, as well as at the 
 borders of the floe, the rents and cracks in all 
 directions towards the ship, herself suffering 
 much, the freezing cold of 33°-, together with 
 a W.N.W. wind, and the dimness of the early 
 hour, combined to render our situation not a 
 little perilous and uncomfortable. 1 had been 
 alone to examine the edge of the outer ice, which 
 thoug.j greatly disturbed and making a deafening 
 noise, had not yet broken into our floe. But at 
 5" A.M., a commotion like an earthquake took 
 place; additional cracks displayed themselves 
 
 * A small boat. 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 TUMULT CEASES. 
 
 225 
 
 across our snow houses, galleries, and court yard. 
 The ship creaked in her beams and timbers ; and 
 to cur great dismay, the increasing daylight 
 shewed an advancing rampart of ice forming a 
 semicircle to seaward, and already much nearer 
 to us, from having rolled in one vast body full 
 eighty yards. It extended from S. W. to N. E., 
 and Lieutenant M*Murdo who made the report, 
 estimated its height at thirty feet.* In all parts 
 now, within the scope of the above bearings, 
 enormous calves, some round and massy, others 
 like small floes, had escaped from confinement, 
 and tossed up into irregular positions looked 
 like so many engines threatening destruction. 
 But at this moment of most imminent peril there 
 was a pause, and at near T a.m. the whole tumult 
 suddenly ceased. It will be remembered that 
 as a screen from the severity of the climate, the 
 decks had been covered with layers, and the 
 sides protected hy embankments of snow, now 
 hardened almost into solidity. I gave orders 
 that the whole of these should be cleared 
 away, as well to lighten the ship as much as 
 possible, as to get access to our supply of pro- 
 visions, which were ranged along the bulwark, 
 and this was the only step I could take towards 
 our preservation, in the event of the ship being 
 
 * Tt afterwards sank to eighteen feet. 
 
 ' i|« 
 
 ! ; n 
 
,t / ^ : ( i 
 
 226 
 
 CLEARING DECK. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 crushed. The ice all round was so splintered and 
 jagged, that to put a boat upon it was out of the 
 question. Neither could it be made, even for an 
 hour, a deposit of provisions, full as it was of 
 clear cracks and small holes, the production of 
 each instant. Nothing therefore could have 
 been conveyed to the land, distant at least seven 
 or nine miles, and I think it at least doubtful 
 whether any one, even without incumbrance, 
 could have reached it. 
 
 The work of clearing the deck with pick-axe 
 and shovel went on briskly ; and at 3*' p. m. the 
 ship rose up four inches, and towards evening, 
 when the after-part was completed, eight inches 
 more. The men under the inspection of the 
 officers, had exerted themselves considerably, 
 because, according to past experience, it was 
 thought the disturbance would recommen'^e 
 about three o'clock. Nothing, however, beyond, 
 a partial motion was then perceptible, nor until 
 5^ 15"" P. M. when the ship was lifted up abaft. 
 From that time, symptoms of the influence of 
 some under-current were audible in the cabin, 
 where the concussions of passing ice striking 
 underneath were too clearly heard to be misun- 
 derstood. It ended in the separation of two 
 edges of a large crack, not more than fifty yards 
 from the ship, which opened in the space of five 
 minutes into a hole of water. The extraordinary 
 
CHAP. v.] DISUNION OF FLOE. 
 
 227 
 
 part of this was, that the opening did not con- 
 tinue along the crack to the edge of the floe, 
 but took place only in a particular spot, as if the 
 ice had been scooped out from the interval so 
 created. At 10^ p. m. it closed a little, and imme- 
 diately a mound of ice was raised at the western 
 termination, adjacent to the starboard quarter ; 
 this had probably eased the pressure from the 
 ship, since little more was felt on board than a 
 few squeezes and an occasional concussion. 
 Meanwhile, the body of the ice outside the 
 ramparts, which had been for some time at rest, 
 began to be again disturbed. February igth 
 arrived, and we looked with some anxiety to 
 the approach of the same hours, du"'*iff which, 
 on the preceding morning, we had . ]fered so 
 much annoyance, fully expecting a repetition ; 
 but, fortunately the chief pressure fell on the new- 
 ly-opened crack, extending however occasionally 
 as far as the ship, and ending by heeling her over 
 to starboard. In fact, when the sun rose, it was 
 found she had forged about eight inches from 
 the bank of the dock on the larboard side, where 
 bay or young ice had closed up the interval. 
 Alx)ut 10*" A.M. another crack close ahead, 
 or rather on the starboard bow, opened, and en- 
 larged others near it, which in their turns pro- 
 duced fresh fractures, thus gradually separating 
 the floe into its original constituent parts. In 
 
 Q 2 
 
 M 
 
nB 
 
 DOVEKIE SHOT. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 M: I 
 
 •'Js 
 
 '. !•' 
 
 i 
 
 this latter disunion, I could not but remark how 
 quickly the young ice was formed on the ex- 
 posed surface of water, onwhichthechrystals might 
 actually be seen darting and glancing till they 
 formed a continuous sheet. It happened that a 
 solitary Dovekie had found in its wanderings 
 the now circumscribed hole of water, which had 
 been created the evening before, and gladly 
 availed itself of this relief from its wearied flight, 
 unconscious of the dangerous neighbours who 
 observed it. Our keen sportsman, Mr. Gore, 
 soon brought it triumphantly on board, where of 
 course it underwent a careful scrutiny. Besides 
 the two white spaces in the wings,, the breast 
 and under part were entirely white, as were the 
 whole of the neck and back except three patches 
 of a grey or speckled colour where the black and 
 white plumage were intermixed. Though the 
 maw was quite empty, the bird was tolerably plump. 
 From the circumstance of its coming so far from 
 land, it was inferred that there could not be 
 much, if any, open water in that direction ; yet 
 in a couple of hours, three or four lanes became 
 suddenly visible, in one of which, at the edge of 
 the floe, the ice was drifting past us to the S. S. E. 
 . Sunday had been kept on all occasions, when 
 the duty allowed of it, as a day of entire rest ; 
 but the necessity of clearing away the ice and 
 snow compelled for once a deviation from our 
 
 14 
 
CHAP, v.] CONFUSED COMBINATIONS. 
 
 229 
 
 practice, and the work proceeded with uninter- 
 mitted energy. Looking at the heaps thus re- 
 moved, the broken arches of our galleries, and the 
 rent walls, the cracks in the floe, and the vast 
 mounds around it, one could not help being strongly 
 reminded of the scene which must follow an earth- 
 quake. The ship's head had been turned by the 
 late commotion about three points in shore j and 
 judging from the land which was clearly seen, 
 she had been set at the same time to the south- 
 ward and eastward, rather towards an opening 
 in the bay, the exact nature of which could not 
 be ascertained. Evidently, however, it ran a long 
 way to the south, as the low land on its western 
 side was lost sight of; and as we could dis- 
 tinguish other points to the eastward, it was by 
 no means impossible that it might be continuous- 
 with Evan's Inlet, thus making the land, the 
 eastern extremity of which is Seahorse Point, an 
 island. If this be so, the extraordinary rush of 
 water experienced in the recent convulsion of ' 
 our floe would be easily accounted for j still the 
 soundings at noon had undergone no material 
 change, continuing to give eighty-three fathoms, 
 but with a substance containing particles of lime- 
 stone instead of green mud. The latitude was 
 64° 17' N. and longitude 81" 3& W. ; and the 
 extremes of land were from S. 8" 50' east to N. 
 
 il II 
 
 Q 3 
 
230 
 
 5H£DS TAKEN DOWN. [cHAP.V, 
 
 Ife, 
 
 ! I'l 
 
 32 W . i barometer 29. 53, and temperature of 
 air 30°—. A parhelion was observed. 
 
 In a very short time the ice got into moti<m, 
 and in a small lane on the starboard quarter 
 appeared to be setting south. At 3*' p. m. the 
 same lane closed, and another immediate?'/ 
 opened at a short distance from it. At 4>\ the 
 edge of the floe from west to north displayed 
 signs of considerable pressure, which, riffeciing 
 the ice alongside, drove it onwards with p rum- 
 bling do'; t: so as to heel the ship over to 
 starboard, 'Ihe beans whale-boat being thus 
 brought tor; VA:m \-he ice, was hoisted half up 
 the maiD rigging. The shed too, which had been 
 so long familiar to our sight as the armourer's 
 work-shop was now necessarily taken down 
 and the spars, sails, ice-anchor, &c., brought on 
 board. At 8'' p. m. a barrier was thrown up 
 nine feet high on the starboard bow, and, owino- 
 to some under convulsion, the large pieces of 
 the floe on that side were much cracked and 
 broken j besides which, the chink astern leading 
 to the edge of the floe in that direction 
 became sufficiently wide to admit of the 
 water being seen through it. There was onlv 
 a light air of wind rather off-shore, so that these 
 changes must have been occasioned principally 
 by irregular tides. At 10' 30'" p. m. several 
 
 12 
 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 AWFUL PERIL. 
 
 231 
 
 singular openings suddenly appeared in sights 
 and were soon followea by another of those loud 
 rushing noises, known by experience to be the 
 forerunners of evil. The thermometer was 40° — , 
 and the weather very cold. 
 
 February 20th. For three hours after mid- 
 night the ice opened and shut, especially on the 
 starboard beam and quarter, where mounds and 
 heaps were squeezed up alarmingly near the 
 ship, but without in any manner disturbing her, 
 beyond an occasional concussion and squeaking 
 pressure under the counter. But at 4'' a. m., 
 the whole of the ice was in motion, producing 
 instantaneous fissures, and, among these, an actual 
 separation of the ice along the starboard side, 
 extending beyond the bow, and throwing down 
 every thing in its way. Some of the galleries 
 were now floating in the water, looking like 
 tunnels. To find ourselves at freedom to move, 
 would, two months liter, have been the summit 
 of our wishes; but now we saw it with reluctance, 
 as it only mocked us with a hope which could 
 not be realized, while it involved us in immedi- 
 ate peril. At 7*" a. m., the ice returning with 
 accumulated force made the ship crack fore and 
 aft with a hideous creaking that for some seconds 
 held us in suspense for the result. My cabin 
 door could with difficulty be forced open, and 
 was split with the pressure. The people, in 
 
 Q 4 
 
 
 ■r;il 
 

 I' 1 , 
 
 tr ' til 
 
 282 
 
 INSTRUCTIONS TO CHEW. [CHAP.V. 
 
 alarm, crowded on deck ; and even the poor sick 
 came tottering aft, in an agony of terror. Provi- 
 dentially the ship lifted herself up fully eight 
 inches, under the pressure of a force that would 
 have crushed a less strengthened vessel to 
 atoms ; and thus the opposing ice either passed 
 in part beneath the bottom, or was wedged 
 against the large masses at either extremity. 
 
 After 8" a. m. we had some quiet ; and at 
 divisions, I thought it necessary to address the 
 crew, reminding them that as Christians and 
 British seamen, they were called upon to con- 
 duct themselves with coolness and fortitude ; 
 and that independently of the obligations imposed 
 by the Articles of War, every one ought to be 
 influenced by the still higher motive of a con- 
 scientious desire to perform his duty. I gave 
 them to understand, that I expected from one 
 and all, in the event of any disaster, an implicit 
 obedience to and an energetic execution of every 
 order they might receive from the officers, as 
 well as kind and compassionate help to the sick. 
 On their observance of these injunctions, I warned 
 them, our ultimate safety might depend. Some 
 fresh articles of warm clothing were then dealt out 
 to them ; and as the moment of destruction was 
 uncertain, I desired that the small bags in which 
 those things were contained should be placed on 
 deck with the provisions, so as to be ready at 
 
 1 1 > 
 
PHAP.V.] GRANDEUR OF SCENE. 
 
 233 
 
 an instant. The forenoon was spent in getting 
 up bales of blankets, bear-skins, provision, pyro- 
 ligneous acid for fuel, and in short whatever 
 might be necessary if the ship should be suddenly 
 broken up, and spars were rigged over the 
 quarters to hoist them out. Meanwhile the ice 
 moved but little, though the hour of full moon 
 was passed j but at noon it began to drift slowly 
 to the northward. We were now from five to eight 
 miles off the nearest land. The soundings were 
 m eighty-eight fathoms, and showed black mud, 
 wliich had not been seen before. The latitude 
 was 64° 16' N., and we had gone a little to the 
 eastward. Thermometer 21"-, and cold, owing 
 to spiculae faUing. Barometer stationary at 29-55. 
 Wind west. 
 
 Though I had seen vast bodies of ice from 
 Spitzbergen to 150° west longitude, under 
 various aspects, some beautiful, and all more or 
 less awe-inspiriiig, I had never witnessed, nor 
 even imagined, any thing so fearfully magnifi- 
 cent, as the moving towers and ramparts that now 
 frowned on every side Had the still extensive 
 pieces of which the floe was formed been split 
 and divided like those further off, the effect 
 would have been far less injurious to the ship ; 
 but, though cracked and rent, the parts, from 
 some inexplicable cause, closed again for a 
 time, and drove with accelerated and almost 
 irresistible force against the defenceless vessel. 
 
 ( 't 
 
 ii 'I 
 
 M .1 
 
 :l. 
 

 234 
 
 EXPECTATION OF CRISIS. [CHAP.V. 
 
 i: F 
 
 f 
 
 r: 
 
 l!l'- 
 
 In the afternoon the other boats were hoisted 
 higiier up, to save them fioni damage in the 
 event oi" the ship t> lu^ 'irown much over on 
 her broadside, i^or tliree hours we remained 
 unmolested, though the ice outside of the floe 
 was moving in various directions, some pieces 
 almost wlnrling round, and of course, in the 
 effort, disturbing others. Al .> * p. m., however, the 
 piece near the ship having previously opened 
 enougii to allow of her resuming a nearly up^ 
 right position, collapsed again with a force that 
 m;ide every plank complain ; and further pres- 
 sure being added at six o*clock, an ominous 
 cracking was heard, that only ceased on her 
 being lifted bodily up eighteen inches. The 
 same unwelcome visitation was repeated an hour 
 afterwards, in consequence of the closing of a 
 narrow lane directly astern, l^he night was 
 very fine, but the vapour which arose from the 
 many cracks, as well as the small ope . "^pace 
 alongside, quickly becoiiting converted into small 
 spiculae of snov^ rendered th > cold intolerably 
 keen to those wliu faced tl " ,vind. Lp to mid- 
 night we were not much annoyetl, and for four 
 hours afterwards, on l^ebruary fiist, all Wd6 quiet. 
 Every man had gone to rest with his clothes on, 
 and was agreeably surpriF'id at being so long 
 undisturbed by the usual Im iitory grind' ig. 
 However, at 4>*' 10" a. m. a ; >miu *tion was he d, 
 which appeared to be confined to the angle co. 
 
CHAP. v.] BEAMS, 8c^ .^/SPECTED. 
 
 235 
 
 tained between west and north-west. On look- 
 ing round at day-break, it was found that the 
 ship had been released by the retreating of the 
 ice, and had nearly righted ; but at 5" a. m. she 
 was again sorely squeezed, and the nip being 
 repeated at y'* a. m., she rose eighteen inches as 
 before ; she was then at intervals jerked up from 
 the pressure underneath, with a groan each time 
 from the woodwork. Yet notwithstanding these 
 successive attacks, very little additional water 
 found its way into the well, which was sounded 
 every five minutes, and had not yet exceeded 
 seven inches in the twenty four hours. On 
 inspecting the beams and decks_a precaution 
 that followed every nip -the former were found 
 firm, and the bolts still tight; but the latter 
 tor about twelve feet abreast of the store-rooms 
 Oil the lower deck, had risen three quarters of 
 an mch, while the binding planks on the larboard 
 ttr% al am had also started a little. In order, 
 th. -fore, to give additional support, it was pro' 
 posed to put up quarter shores along the lower 
 deck, and store-rooms, and the proposition was 
 nnmcdiately carri .1 into effect. At o' h, ice 
 eased off, and some an the outside appear. ^ 
 if setting to the « . which was in shore of us. 
 The weather was fine, but for the reason already 
 assigned, extremely co d in the sh de, or facing 
 the northerly wind in the neighbourhood of 
 
gS6 
 
 HAVOC SPREADS. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 I' 
 
 ll 
 
 '}. ' I 
 
 fik i I' 
 
 frost smoke. I felt it keenly in making the 
 round of the now much rent floe, and in looking 
 with fresh wonder on the gigantic piles before 
 alluded to. Of the awful grandeur of these no 
 language could givo an adequate description, and 
 even the more effective pencil has been able only 
 to catch one momentary aspect of a scene, the 
 terrible sublimity of which lay chiefly in the roll- 
 ing onw rd of these mighty engines of destruc- 
 tion. Cracks, rents, and banks extended from 
 the edge or base of the barrier towards the ship, 
 in every bearing on the north-east side, where 
 the ice was much the heaviest, and, conse- 
 quently, unless it should be splintered into 
 smaller masses, ii.ost to be dreaded in the encoun- 
 ter. Around the other part of the floe the 
 havoc was, if possible, still greater, reaching, by 
 four or five transverse fractures, even to the 
 starboard side of the ship, while ahead and 
 astern longitudinal mounds of ice and snow 
 began to assume the appearance of barricades. 
 . Whilst engaged with the first Lieutenant in 
 contemplating these effects, within ten paces of 
 the vessel, the sound of rushing water beneath 
 warned us to expect some change. All at once, 
 however, it ceased : another rush was heard, 
 which stopped as suddenly; but a third, ad- 
 vancing with a louder roar, threw the whole 
 body into motion, and bringing the ponderous 
 
 
CHAP. v.] VIOLENT PRESSURE. 
 
 437 
 
 acres with all their loads against the ship, threw 
 her up and considerably over to starboard, with 
 great violence, though, strange to say, without 
 apparent injury. It was then we saw her rise to 
 tlie pressure, and endeavour to thrust the ice 
 beneath her bends, a result much to be desired, 
 as it would form a sort of bolster to support her! 
 We had certainly gone somewhat to the east- 
 ward, since a point named, after the third Lieu- 
 tenant, M'Murdo, the bearing of which yester- 
 day was before, was now abaft the beam, and the 
 high bluff land was more clearly visible, though 
 in some measure dimmed by frost smoke. 
 There was no interruption from this time until 
 3" 30" p. M., when the ice suddenly pressed up 
 against the ship. It was not however till 6^ that 
 it came with much force, when the decks, espe- 
 cially the upper one, creaked fearfully in the 
 afterpart, notwithstanding the four newly erected 
 shores in my cabin. As usual, after some resist- 
 ance, she rose and heeled over to starboard. 
 The two following hours kept us in a state of 
 painful suspense, for the ice closing in different 
 points occasioned violent pressure, that threw 
 her over twenty inches, and raised her nearly as 
 much. This was accompanied by one of those 
 loud rushing noises beneath, so frequently men- 
 tioned before. Judging from the previous even- 
 ing, we might now hfive expected a few hours of 
 
 A 
 
238 
 
 DESOLATION. 
 
 [^CHAI*.V. 
 
 il 
 
 I ' 
 
 U ii i 
 
 tranquillity ; but when every other part was 
 undisturbed, the extensive piece on the larboard 
 side moved slowly to the south, and again nipped 
 us. At 11'' this slackened, and thenceforth we 
 were quiet until 5^ a. m. of February 22d, 
 during which interval I conceive the tide and 
 current were setting to the south and east. 
 From 5^ until 8^* a. m, the commotion again 
 went on, and caused several new, and enlarged 
 many old cracks, the detached pieces taking dif- 
 ferent directions, though still close together, and, 
 consequently, grinding or overlapping whatever 
 obstructed them. The pressure came suddenly 
 and without warning on the ship, and strained 
 her fore and aft, more especially, however, about 
 the orlop deck, where, on examination, the car- 
 penter discovered that some of the iron fasten- 
 ings in the store-rooms had received injury. 
 There had been, indeed, an immense pressure 
 on the starboard bow, as may be conjectured 
 from the fact that a huge mass had been 
 thrown up fully nineteen feet above the level. 
 The remnant of the wall across the bow had 
 been thrown down, and the ice there so bro- 
 ken as to present a most ruinous and deso- 
 late appearance. The whole i^cene indeed, far 
 as the eye could stretch, was confusion worse 
 confounded. Broken points at every angle, from 
 tiie perpendicular to the nearly horizontal, hum- 
 
as 
 rd 
 
 ve 
 
 id 
 
 it. 
 
 m 
 
 if. 
 
 er 
 
 ly 
 
 2d 
 Ut 
 
 ir- 
 n- 
 
 re 
 
 3d 
 
 •n 
 
 id 
 o- 
 o- 
 ar 
 se 
 mi 
 
 Tl- 
 
h^:'>' 
 
 S 
 
-^ 
 
'l 
 
 "■ ■'■>i^ 
 
I 
 
 CHAP. v.] SHIP REMAINS NIPPED. QSQ 
 
 mocks, mounds, jagged and warted masses, 
 splinters, walls, and ramparts, with here and 
 there, at far intervab, the remains of some floe 
 not yet entirely broken up ; -such was the 
 picture which saluted us on every side, teach- 
 ing the lesson of humility and resignation to 
 the will of Heaven. Much ice was forced un- 
 derneath the bottom on the starboard side, 
 and often bounded up with severe concussion! 
 along the run abaft, making the ship tremble at 
 each successive shock. The angle of inclination 
 on that side was nine degrees. 
 
 Up to noon scarcely any alteration took place 
 the vessel remaining heavily nipped. It had been 
 remarked during the last eight or ten days, that 
 from the early part of the day until a few hours 
 past noon, we had been regularly set to the west • 
 but now, the ship's head had not only been turned 
 more out, and consequently in a better direction 
 for going along the coast, but we were drifted 
 by the ice to the north west until 3'' 30™ p m 
 when we seemed to be stationary. Among the 
 numerous cracks around, were several astern, 
 that after a temporary separation generally closed 
 again ; but an entirely new one now opened 
 from fifteen to twenty feet wide, within the short 
 distance of thirty paces from the quarter : not far 
 from this, .-rrl completely isolating the hio-h 
 hummock which under the name of Mount 
 
 I 
 
 I 
 
 •m 
 
 F 
 
240 
 
 LANES CLOSED. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 if M 
 
 1 1 ^; 
 
 I 
 
 5 f ■ 
 
 I- } ■'■■ 
 
 
 Pleasant, had for the whole winter, served as a 
 look-out station, was another lane ; and this again 
 was bisected by a third, that cut in two the snow 
 hut first made, the two parts of which were, on a 
 shifting of the lane, carried different ways. A 
 larger and more distant hut was already partly 
 crushed, and only awaited the advancing roll of 
 the rampart, now within a few feet of it, for its 
 final downfal. Between the hours of 6^ and 8^ 
 p. M. the rushing *bore,'* was faintly audible to 
 the westward, and after various checks seemed 
 to resume its course with increased violence, 
 setting in motion whatever impeded its progress. 
 The lanes adjacent were all closed, and began 
 grinding down their edges, which were speedily 
 thrown up into bordering mounds. The cracked 
 ice on either side was also agitated, and saved us 
 considerably by affording a channel for the bore. 
 Our anxiety indeed was not of long duration, for 
 the ice immediately adjoining the stern was more 
 pounded and the ship less affected than on any 
 of the recent assaults. The sky was clear over- 
 head, id almost calm, and midnight came with- 
 out any more disturbance than an occasional 
 rustling at the extreme barriers. This tran- 
 quillity remained until about 6^ a. m. of the 23d, 
 when a remote jound indicated another commo- 
 
 * The bore is a sort of rampart or wall of water, thrown 
 up by the opposition of the current and the set of the tide. 
 
CHAP.V.] CONTINUED PRESSURE. 24>i 
 
 tion ; but this effect was neither serious nor 
 lasting, and up to noon there was no annoyance. 
 Ihe ship, however, had still the same indination, 
 about three feet four inches to starboard, and 
 consequently remained nipped; and the bread 
 room having been cleared for an examination 
 abaft, a knee-cliock on the larboard side was found 
 wrenched f of an inch from its position on tJie 
 after part, above which the deck was raised | 
 of an inch. Three shores were fixed on each 
 side of the bread room, as an additional support, 
 The weather was calm, and to a certain heio-ht 
 misty, from the great increase of minute frozen 
 particles. The difference between tlie two ther 
 mometers on board, (those on the ice havino- 
 necessarily been taken down,) was at a little pas" 
 noon 27° : the one being 19" -, and the other 8"+ . 
 The higli h, d was still in sight, and evidently 
 nearer ; the extremes being from S. to W. N. W, 
 The latitude was 64" W :,0" N. I'he ice co'/ 
 tinned setting to the V. W. undj 4'- p.m., then 
 remained stationary unti; C\ after which there 
 was disturbance at intervals, in the direction of 
 the north east, but without any material effect 
 except that a short cracking sound indicated 
 extra pressure on the ship. 
 
 The 21.th was comparatively tranquil, and at 
 noon the ship remained with precisely the same 
 mclmation. Still, as the wind was now directly on 
 
 R 
 
 ii 
 
 ! f III 
 1' I 
 
 ftf 
 
 
 ( i « S 
 
242 
 
 doctor's report. [chap. v. 
 
 if !l?' 
 
 
 U ],.: 
 
 I 
 
 ^:l: 
 
 shore, there was no saying at what moment a nip 
 might come on ; and as the upper deck had been 
 more affected than any of the others, the firstLieu- 
 tenant suggested a method of lashing its beams to 
 the stronger ones of the lower deck, to prevent 
 them from rising u]), as they had always a tendency 
 to do, when under the influence of heavy pressure 
 amidships, or on the topsides. The people were 
 forthwith set to work in canting the barge and 
 clearing the booms for that purpose. The wind 
 had set us towards the land abeam ; and that 
 ahead bore S. S° E., distant about eight or ten 
 miles. After inspection to-day, Doctor Dono- 
 van made a favourable report of the health of 
 the crew, which he considered to be manifestly 
 improving. One only was added to the list, 
 whilst many of those who had been affected 
 were so far recovered, as to stand in no further 
 need of an extra quantity of acid. Until 5^ p. m. 
 the ice was generally in motion, and setting fast 
 to the westward ; at that hour tlie motion ceased, 
 and was succeeded by a noise to the northward, 
 occasioned, as was supposed, by the freshening 
 breeze breaking up the ice in that quarter. 
 Soon after the cracking of the pitch and timber 
 about the stern frame gave notice of fresh an- 
 noyance ; and, though nothing could be detected 
 by tiie officer of the watch denoting any action 
 on tlie surface, the cracking became more vehe- 
 
CHAP.V.J VIOLENT STRAINING. 
 
 ns 
 
 ment, accompanied with a splitting of part of the 
 lining. It was evident, therefore, that there was 
 considerable p ..^sure existing about the larboard 
 quarter ; and, a few minutes before 8*^ p. m., the 
 cause announced itself by a succession of loud 
 rushing noises, followed bv the rending of the ice 
 near us, and the squeezing of the ship. For two 
 hours more there was incessant motion of one kind 
 or other, bearing the ice hard against the larboard 
 side, particularly the quarter, and at midnight 
 the ship was straining much. 
 
 February 25th. During a brief interval we 
 were reheved from anxiety by a general stillness, 
 but the same unwelcome sounds soon returned ; 
 the vast bodies pressed more closely together! 
 producing complaints from the larboard quarter! 
 When the sun rose the ship was carefully exa- 
 mined, but notwithstanding all the sound and 
 fuiy heard in the night, no marks of external 
 violence were discovered. Early in the forenoon 
 the ship began to set towards the S.S.E. As the 
 low land abreast could now be distinctly made 
 out, it seemed that we must have neared it; the 
 blue bluff ahead bearing ' due south was' dim 
 from the quantity of small snow which was 
 flying about, causing a penetrating cold that all 
 complained of. The wind kept to the north 
 with a moderate force, and the temperature was 
 33°- ; but the southern thermometer being 
 
 R 2 
 
 !-t 
 
 iii' 
 
 li 
 
 ' [ 
 
 ■-'i 
 
 ^^ 
 
 ' 1 
 
 1 '"l 
 
 11 
 
 si 
 
 i ■'» 
 
 
 ! 
 
 
 ■ 
 
 
 m 
 
 
 11 
 
 j 
 
 ||| 
 
 it 
 
 'M 
 
 ^fli 
 
244 
 
 SEVERK SHOCKS. 
 
 [nHAP.V. 
 
 i ^) 
 
 tit 
 
 sometimes sliaded by the ngffing, nnd having no 
 other place so siee from radiation to put it, ihe 
 register was not to be depended on. Baro- 
 meter, 20. 94. Latitude, 64" 14' 20" N., and 
 longitude, 81° 27' 15" W. 
 
 During the entire part of the afternoon the 
 ice appeared to set in a northerly direction, 
 though at 5^ r. m. the hi[;h land was fur more 
 distinct than I had iiitherto seen it, many breaks 
 and inequalities being observed whicli were not 
 previously visible. For a couple of hours there 
 were irregular movements near us, and between 
 7'» 30™ and 8'' the usual rushing sounds were 
 heard in the north-west quarter. The cracking 
 ice marked the course of the disturbing force 
 whatever it was, which, though frequently de- 
 viating arul interrupted for a few seconds, 
 again hrka ouward with increased violence, bear- 
 in o- down I'll opposition. Such were the severe 
 attacks the ship had continually to withstand, 
 and that too, at the weakest point. She cracked 
 much around the quarter, and was otherwise 
 heavily pressed. 
 
 February 26th. During several hours, the 
 ice, though to all appearance close jammed to- 
 o-ether, was often in motion, and came with 
 such sudden shocks, that few were able to sleep. 
 Many, indeed, lay down in their clothes, ready 
 to start up at a moment. Our devotions this 
 
mt WW »" B A < 
 
 I 
 
 CHAP. V.J 
 
 S£RMON. 
 
 ^^4J 
 
 day >v re tin, -d with a solemnit fining the 
 
 preca iousness of our condition j 1 a sermon, 
 upon ilie appropriate text «• It is the Lord : let 
 Him do wh\t seenieth Him good," was listened 
 to with ; lie most profound and serious attention. 
 At noon the high land was much nearer, and 
 we had now opened the deep ba inlet, or strait, 
 mentioned before. The land' s very low, 
 
 not unlike the description coast to the 
 
 south of Evan's Inlet. The , which had been 
 denominated the blue bluff*, 1 i the tinge always 
 seen on it, could now be made out perfectly clear, 
 ar^ ^ was not more than ten miles off", and the 
 di' ce of the nearest low land did not exceed 
 tour miles. Soundings were found in seventy- 
 two fathoms, having a bottom of rock and sand^ 
 Some of the gentlemen thought they saw the 
 track of a fox, which, if so, must have taken 
 more than common trouble to make so long a 
 journey, and would find itself but poorly requited 
 after all. As usual, in the afternoon, the ice 
 eased off'a little astern,and, after afcw concussions 
 underneath, began to set hi a body to the north- 
 west. While this was in j)rogress, there was 
 an evident dispositic in the broken masses of 
 ice, under the stern, to rise up; and as they 
 would undoubtedly have staved in the cabin 
 windows, if nothing worse, some thick planking 
 was nailed across them, which, with the dead 
 
 * 
 
 w I 
 
 R 3 
 
.^^i-, 
 
>.^.^'Vi 
 
 '^'^ ^'^\^ 
 
 IMAGE EVALUATION 
 TEST TARGET (MT-3) 
 
 f 
 ^ 
 
 // 
 
 ^/ 
 
 
 ,.<t' ^^ 
 
 /. 
 
 
 &?^ 
 
 
 fc 
 ^ 
 
 1.0 Ifi 
 
 I.I 
 
 21 11125 
 
 50 
 
 T 13.2 
 
 1.8 
 
 — 6" 
 
 11.25 1 1.4 i 1.6 
 
 VI 
 
 A 
 
 e. 
 
 ^m 
 
 m 
 
 c 
 
 
 
 /A 
 
 *^.^' 
 
 %' 
 
 y 
 
 "5^ 
 
 Photographic 
 
 Sciences 
 
 Corporation 
 
 23 WEST MAIN STREET 
 
 WEBSTER, NY. MS80 
 
 (716) 872-4503 
 

 
 

 S46 
 
 TURMOIL. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 lights, was considered to be strong enough to 
 resist any ordinary force. There was no move- 
 ment of any consequence until between 9'' and 
 11'', when after many and various sounds, the 
 entire body around to the Northward began to be 
 agitated. The motion would suddenly cease, 
 and then as suddenly recommence ; sometimes 
 far off, more frequently near the ship ; squeezing 
 up ridges of ice, and causing a most distressing 
 creaking and splitting of the lining along the 
 larboard side. The aurora showed itself in the 
 south-west in the form of an arch, from which 
 beams darted up to the zenith. 
 
 February 27th. The time of the lowest neaps 
 having arrived, we naturally expected a few days' 
 respite, at least for the night, a boon which would 
 have been most joyfully accepted ; for, the quan- 
 tity of clothing which the cutting cold rendered 
 necessary required so much time to put on, 
 that few lately had ventured to disburthen them- 
 selves of the whole, when seeking to snatch a 
 few hours of rest. It was not, however, our 
 fortune to be so indulged ; for about I'' a. m. 
 the commotion and turmoil recommenced, and 
 soon forced the ship, embedded as she was, about 
 two feet astern. The creaking and crashing of the 
 ice in that short space was horrible, nor did it en- 
 tirely desist, until again closing it held us in a still 
 tighter grasp than before. After a pause of four 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 SET OF ICE. 
 
 247 
 
 hours, by opening out a few inches alongside, it 
 allowed the ship to come more upright, still, 
 however, with a considerable inclination. Some 
 narrow lanes of water appeared nearer the ice, 
 which was at present immovably fixed to the low 
 land, forming the western entrance to the deep bay 
 or inlet, and along the edge of which we seemed 
 to be setting to and fro. The frost smoke from 
 these lanes in some measure obscured the land 
 which however we seemed to have approached ; 
 thus making it apparent that the flood tide came 
 from the north-west, and without any aid from 
 wind (of which for two days there had been very 
 little), continued to drive us bodily along towards 
 Hudson's Straits. Up to 11'' a. m. the seaward 
 ice which encircled us passed rapidly to the south.^ 
 east, along the outer edge of that wedged against 
 the land at the entrance of tlie opening : at that 
 hour it stopped, and in tlie concussion produced 
 by the reaction, several pieces ground along and 
 underneath the bottom of the ship, but without 
 producing any corresponding action on the sur- 
 face. At noon all was once more silent. Ihe 
 crew, for employment, were ordered to make 
 each a small sledge of the staves of casks, and 
 to sling the tin cases of pemmican. Our in- 
 valids were generally better, except two on the 
 sick list, who, probably from despondency, did 
 not improve as rapidly as their companions. 
 
 R 4 
 
 Hi 
 
248 
 
 SHIP RIGHTS. 
 
 [chap. V 
 
 About 1" 40"" P.M. the retrograde action com» 
 menced, and after compressing the masses nearer 
 together, a temporary obstacle within twenty paces 
 from the starboard quarter squeezed up a small 
 ridge twelve feet high. We kept driving to the 
 north-west until 6** p. m ., from which time until 
 midnight we enjoyed almost uninterrupted quiet. 
 
 February 28th. The Aurora appeared in the 
 form of an arch in the south-east quarter, and, as 
 before, sent up beams towards the zenith, but 
 without colour. At 1^ 40"" a. m. the reaction 
 took place, and once or twice pressed us closely, 
 though soon after the ice began to be more dis- 
 engaged, and that near the edge of the fixed 
 shore ice appeared to be going to the west- 
 ward. Between 4^ and 8" a. m. there was some 
 grinding, but the cracks and openings grew 
 wider, and the ship gradually righted. The sea- 
 ward body again set to the S.E. ; but a large and 
 remarkable hummock, stationary among the land 
 ice abreast of us, showed us that our progress 
 had not been much, as the same mark had been 
 observed under a similar bearing about an hour 
 earher the day before. Two or three narrow lanes 
 close to the vessel, and a continuous one along 
 the outer edge of the land ice, extending as 
 far as the fluthest point of ooast, gave me 
 reason to hope that the ice ahead was slowly 
 finding an outlet by the strait, which, with a 
 
) 
 
 CHAP. v.] IMPROVING PllOSPECTS. 
 
 249 
 
 westerly wind, there seemed every probability of 
 our soon reaching. In fact, had it not been for 
 the uncertainty respecting our being nipped, and 
 the apprehension that the whole frame-work 
 would, by constant repetition, get daily weaker, 
 nothing could be more desirable, or, as far as I 
 could judge, more favourable for my intention of 
 trying the passage by Sir Thomas Roe's Wei- 
 come, than our gradual approach towards Sea- 
 horse Point. How far the ship might be battered 
 by floating ice, and cross tides or currents, when 
 within the influence of Fox*s Channel, the 
 Strait, and Hudson's Bay, not to mention the 
 races and strong sets of the W ,.ome, was a 
 consideration which I did not choose to dwell 
 upon J satisfied that if we once got into open 
 water, the difficultif.3 generally encountered on 
 such occasions would assuredly be overcome. 
 
 Tiie ice within us was considerably m -re icnt 
 by every fresh pressure, though that en the north- 
 east side, which sometimes served as a bulwark of 
 defence, and at others as an engine of attack, 
 remained, together with an adjoining part of our 
 old floe, the most imposing piece around. There 
 was one fact, however, as evident as it was new 
 and satisfactory, namely, that the aspect of the 
 ice originally forming our floe,— the very solid 
 pi'operties of which we had so disagreeably 
 tested in our serious nip of last September, --was 
 
 » ! 
 
 i; 
 
250 
 
 SLABS OF SNOW. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 now completely changed. The identical pieces, 
 with the marks of the ship's side, were still 
 within a few paces of us ; and some of them 
 were fractured sufficiently, to show that a very 
 great reduction in thickness had taken place 
 upon the under surface. In every direction 
 where huge masses were upturned, or ridges 
 and barriers thrown up, it was observed by the 
 ice mate, and those who had had most expe- 
 rience in the Greenland seas, that there was 
 comparatively little solid ice, and that mostly 
 of this winter's formation. It was slabs of 
 frozen &--ow adhering to and covering most of 
 these masses, which gave them the formidable 
 appearance they assumed. It may, therefore, be 
 inferred that the rushing of currents and tides, 
 the sounds of which were distinctly heard under- 
 neath our floe, even when to the westward of 
 Cape Comfort, had the beneficial effect of grinding 
 down or wearing away the irregular under-surfaces 
 of the ice, as they chafed against any obstructions 
 to their course. This, if, as seems probable, a 
 correct explanation, will, in connexion with othCf 
 ascertained facts to some of which I have before 
 adverted, aid in accounting for the occasional 
 disappearance of ice, and consequent facility of 
 navigating these seas during particular seasons. 
 
 The crew were kept employed, and one of 
 them had a narrow escape from drowning, from 
 
CHAP.V.] 
 
 FINE WEATHER. 
 
 231 
 
 having incautiously, whilst crossing a narrow 
 opening, stepped on some slabs of snow, which 
 broke under him : he fell into the water, and 
 in a few moments would have been gone for 
 ever, had not Mr. Vaughan, the boatswain, seen 
 him, and run immediately to his succour. Before 
 noon the ship was free from pressure, but the ice 
 checked by the tide, drove her back again 
 towards the N. W. We were evidently farther 
 off shore than before, though still nearing two 
 remarkable round hills, having each a small dome- 
 shaped mound rising from the termination of 
 the slope, and forming the summit. To the 
 north and west, and seemingly connected with 
 them, was the blue bluff, now on our starboard 
 bow ; farther south was another point, the ex- 
 tremes of which and the land astern were S. E. 
 and N. W. by W. The weather was fine and 
 calm, and some icicles formed on the ship's side. 
 At 1" 20" p. M., a mercurial thermometer, hung 
 against the sunny side of the ship, rose to lV5-\. j 
 the spirit one on board in the sun being 15°-, 
 and the one in the shade 21°-. In the latter 
 part of the day the ice set slowly to the N. W., 
 but about 8" p. m. stopped, and closed a Httle on 
 the starboard side of the ship. 
 
 This was the lowest neap tide ; and as the weather 
 was calm, we looked forward to the comfort of a 
 quiet night. In this however we were disappointed. 
 
 )'. 
 
 m 
 
f252 
 
 LANES OF WATER. [cilAl'.V. 
 
 From 10'' p. m. there was no peace, but on the 
 contrary, harsli rubbing, smart explosions, and 
 other varieties of discordant sounds, quite suf- 
 ficient to keep the mind on the alert. As day- 
 light gleamed, several narrow lanes of water 
 were perceived running from the quarter, in- 
 shore, directly ahead of the ship, and precisely 
 in the same crack, which we hoped to have got 
 through last year, when the ship's head was the 
 other way. Under any circumstances they were 
 not wide enough to afford us a passage ; and a few 
 minutes were sufficient to coat them with young 
 ice, which of itself barred all progress. So long, 
 however, as they remained open, they aided the 
 work of destruction, by allowing space for the 
 large bodies to giind against each other ; but the 
 ship was what is termed free in her dock ; that 
 is to say, she was from two to tlnee feet away 
 from the walled sides of ice and snow which 
 usually hemmed her in, the clear interval below 
 being frozen hard with young ice. Whether 
 from the current of air thereby permitted to 
 circulate round the bends, or from the removal 
 of the snow covering and embankment, or both, 
 the water in the pump-well was found for the 
 first time frozen. Its temperature was 30"-}-, 
 and that of the lower deck 58° -j-. The land 
 was clearly seen from the deck, running out 
 to a point in the extreme distance, bearing 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 PARHELION. 
 
 253 
 
 S.E. J S., but during the last twenty-four hours 
 we had not gone much if at all towards it. At 
 noon there was a moderate breeze from the north, 
 which increased so as to predict a gale, a result 
 least of all to be desired from that point of the 
 compass, as it would have infjdhbly brought 
 down an immense pressure upon the leeward ice 
 packed against Southampton Island. Happily it 
 declined with the setting sun, and subsequently 
 fell quite calm. In the afternoon there was a 
 beautiful parhelion, with an outer circle and one 
 mock sun. The subtended angle of the latter 
 was 45°. It is to be observed, that for some 
 time past we had regularly been set backwards 
 and forwards, along shore, with the flood and ebb, 
 generally gaining upon the whole some trifling 
 advantage with the former, as proved by our 
 gradual approach to the land ahead. To-day, 
 however, owing, as was supposed, to the op- 
 posing wind, there was no retrograde motion to 
 the westward at all ; and it was reasonable, there 
 fore, to calculate at the turn of tide on some 
 acquisition of distance. Nevertheless the hour 
 passed without the slightest alteration; but, 
 at 10'' p. M., several sudden jerks in the cabin 
 warned me tiiat something was going on ; and, ac- 
 cordingly, near an hour after, a general rumbling 
 was audible to seaward and astern. After some 
 alternations of commotion and pauses, and when 
 
 ^1 
 
 lifl 
 
 fi 
 
Sd4 
 
 DREADFUL COMMOTION. [CIIAP.V. 
 
 all was still and apparently ended, suddenly the 
 vast bodies in contact with, and immediately sur- 
 rounding the ship, were in fearful agitation, rising 
 up in grinding conflict, piece thrown over piece 
 until the ponderous walls tumbled over, and the 
 whole accompanied with a screeching and howling 
 and whining which was absolutely hideous : such 
 was the violence of the pressure that the ship 
 was lifted up abaft, and both hull and rigging 
 trembled violently. Another pause ensued j 
 the stars shone brightly ; a faint gleam of aurora 
 was playing near the zenith, and so beautiful 
 and hushed was every thing, that nature seemed, 
 as it were, in a trance. But scarcely had the idea 
 flitted across the mind, when the war burst out 
 again with more fury than ever, and huge frag- 
 ments and masses seemed to be rolling down upon 
 us with an impetuosity that threatened immediate 
 destruction. Repose was impossible : many 
 started from their beds, preferring, though they 
 could do nothing, rather to see than merely 
 hear the danger. The current rushed irre- 
 sistibly to the stern j and, taking the hull fore 
 and aft, forced a complete stream of broken 
 ice under the bottom, lifting the after part still 
 higher up than before. While the first Lieu- 
 tenant was below with the carpenter and his 
 crew, anxiously observing the beams and decks 
 as the heavy strain came upon them, to see which 
 
 14 
 
CHAP. v.] HUBBUB CEASES. 
 
 ^55 
 
 most complained, and to be ready in the event 
 of injury if possible to repair it ; I was standing 
 on the tafrail, watching the approach of a solid 
 mass, part of our late floe, which was forcing 
 another huge mass, like an advancing wave, over 
 a hard piece, already noticed as having oppressed 
 our starboard quarter last year. At length, the 
 ship became so completely hampered by ice 
 underneath, that the remainder of the floe, on 
 either side, moved about eight or ten feet ahead^ 
 leaving the ship fixed in the midst, and wedged 
 up in every direction. This was another novelty 
 to our Greenlandmen, who, in the strange and 
 unaccountable phenomena which now presented 
 themselves, grew daily more puzzled. 
 
 At ^^ A. M., March 2d, the hubbub ceased, 
 and we slept until morning without further inter- 
 ruption. As daylight broke, the havoc was more 
 clearly seen, and a wild scene of confusion it 
 was. About a mile ahead the frost smoke 
 betrayed an opening that led along the land- 
 packed ice to abeam of the ship ; and this, with 
 a few other lanes, was tli . jnly difference in that 
 respect which was observable. The land was 
 much raised by refraction, and we seemed to 
 have neared it a little. I say seemed, for, in 
 consequence of a gentle undulatory motion of 
 the ice close to the ship, which, though imper- 
 ceptible to the eye, was proved by the mercury 
 
 I 
 
 'Ml 
 
 ii 
 
 1 1 i i 
 
 1^1 
 
C56 
 
 THEUiMOMETERS. 
 
 [CIIAP.V. 
 
 i 
 
 n\ 
 
 in the artificial liorizon, the observations could 
 not always be relied upon as exact. The sun 
 was acquiring power daily ; for, at lO** SO*" a. m. 
 we saw the vapour rising from the southern 
 aspect of a snow wall, and at 11^ 30*" a.m. a 
 mercurial thermometer with a blackened bulb, 
 placed against an empty coal bag, rose to 28"-+-, 
 while tliat on board (spirit and clear bulb) was 
 19°—, and the one in the shade 27°—. The 
 sky was free from clouds, a light air prevailed 
 from the S.W. ; and, whether from the wind 
 being off shore, or some other local cause, we 
 were free throughout the day from annoyance of 
 any kind, except a distant sound, as of a rushing 
 towards the south. 
 
 March 3d. The same sounds continued, and 
 at 2'' 30'" A. M. reached the ship, but without 
 producing any thing more serious than rubbing 
 and sliding loose pieces of ice against the sides. 
 This soon subsided, and again we remained per- 
 fectly quiet up to noon, when the mist which 
 had hitherto concealed the land cleared away, 
 and the bearings placed us a little to the east- 
 ward of our position of yesterday. At 1'' p. m. 
 the wind still slanting off the land, a lane of 
 water was observed to open about half a mile 
 distant from the ship. It was fully a quarter of 
 a mile broad, and extended a long way towards 
 the point. From this fact, there was reason to 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 A LULL. 
 
 257 
 
 suppose that, however close and packed the ice 
 might be in our vicinity, there cither could not 
 be such ii continuous body to the northward as 
 we conjectured, or, that it must be interrupted 
 by lanes and other openings sufficiently extensive 
 to allow of its being put into motion even by a 
 light wind. Towards evening the ice clc sed a 
 little, but until 6" a. m., March 4th, remained 
 perfectly quiet, and thus allowed us the enjoy- 
 ment of a sound sleep. Neitlier at that hour 
 was there any thing more than a slight rushing 
 ahead, occasioned probably by the change of 
 tide, as the ship began immediately to drift to 
 the N.W., and so continued to do until noon. 
 The approach of the new moon kept us alive to 
 every symptom of change in the weather ; and 
 when the wind drew more round to north, caus- 
 ing a trifling movement among the ice in that 
 quarter, apprehensions began to be ertertiiined 
 that a breeze would come from the same point. 
 Meantime the ship drifted backward and forward 
 with the tide, without encountering any annoy- 
 ance. We had now thirty-six small sledges 
 made, which completed our arrangements for 
 whatever might happen. 
 
 After a passing alarm in the early morning, the 
 5th of March went quietly over until 6^ p. m., 
 when a noise was heard in the north-east direction. 
 The breeze also had freshened, and often came in 
 
258 
 
 CONCUSSION. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 l; 
 
 squalls. A little past 8^ the disturbance reached 
 the ship, bringing down the heavy bodies 
 to windward with a fearful pressure, ploughing 
 up the small quantity of young ice alongside, 
 and lifting other large fragments up to the 
 chains, from the starboard quarter to the 
 bow. During two hours and a half our situa- 
 tion was exceedingly precarious, and it seemed 
 every moment as if the ship were making 
 her last struggle. For a tisw minutes she was 
 forced up by the ice fifteen 'feet forwards, 
 and then thrust resistlessly astern. Hardly 
 was this over when the large pieces on the star- 
 board side moved slowly forward, and the still 
 more ponderous ones to windward closed at right 
 angles, thus subjecting her to the severest trial. 
 All this time the bottoffi>^^s continually 
 thumped and hammered by the huge calves 
 struggling to get free, each blow shaking the 
 whole frame so violently as to be sensibly felt on 
 deck J and, not knowing what the effect might be, 
 the hands were turned up and the sick dressed, 
 to be ready for the worst. The thermometer at 
 the time was 25°— , and the weather decidedly 
 cold. 
 
 By midnight there was a pause, and at 1" a.m. 
 March 6th, a relaxation on the starboard side, 
 where two cracks had separated sufficiently to 
 show the water. The submerged masses, now 
 
 ^i' 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 ICE HILLS. 
 
 259 
 
 more at liberty, sought release from their im- 
 prisonment ; and finally, the ship freed by these 
 various secessions, righted. Still however the 
 disturbance continued, and at 3" a. m. the ice 
 again closed with the same almost intolerable 
 pressure. When daylight broke, the land was 
 discovered bearing from S. E. by E. to N. W, 
 i W., and apparently we had gone somewhat 
 to the eastward. From what had occurred in 
 the last twelve hours a more than ordinary 
 change was expected, nor in vain ; for besides 
 several fresh barriers, niasf of many tons* weight 
 were seen riding on the top of mounds which 
 even before had been considered very high. But 
 the most striking effect had been produced along 
 the walled side of the shore ice, where, for several 
 miles, actual hills fifty feet high had been thrown 
 up. We were also nearer than before, but hoped 
 that the several considerable pieces which yet 
 interposed, would, for some time, perhaps entirely, 
 prevent our being driven on the land. At 9** 30"* 
 A. M. as the tide turned, we of course suffered, 
 but not materially as compared with what had 
 just passed, and up to noon all was tolerably 
 quiet. The wind was still north, the barometer 
 SO. 37, thermometer at 21°-, difference in the 
 sun 14". Latitude 64° 12' N. and longitude 81° 
 16' W. At 1" 45" p. M. the ice ceased its drift 
 to the N. W., and after some cracking alongside, 
 
 s 2 
 
 W a 'U 
 
 ir V 
 
200 
 
 anxiety; 
 
 [ciiAr. V. 
 
 :Ai 
 
 at S*" p. M. it set at the rate of between two and 
 three miles an hour to the S. E. The barometer 
 indicated a furtlier rise, and therefore fine weather ; 
 but though clear overhead it grew misty about 
 the horizon as the sun went down ; and the breeze 
 freshening in squalls brought a proportionate 
 pressure from the entire body to windward, whicli 
 caused much straining and cracking on the lar- 
 board side and quarter. The ice too alongside 
 and near became agitated, occasioning consider- 
 able annoyance. On this day of the new moon^ 
 indeed, such effects were to be expected, but our 
 fear was that, having commenced earlier than was 
 expected, they betokened something more serious 
 afterwards. Our anxiety {fov there is no becom- 
 ing indifferent to this kind of trial) lasted till 8'' 
 p. M., during which interval we had drifted closer 
 to the fearful looking wall of what was called the 
 shore ice. About 9^ p. m. the ship suffered many 
 shocks and hard rubbings from afresh disturbance, 
 and we should doubtless have been kept in a 
 state of restlessness all night, had not a sepa- 
 ration taken place in a crack about fifty paces 
 from the ship, which allowed a lateral escape to 
 the pressure of the opposing parts. 
 
 On the following day, March 7th, we were un- 
 usually quiet until5" a. M.,whenanothercommotion 
 began, and again made the poor ship crack and 
 tremble violently. This was accompanied by a 
 
u:hap.v.] 
 
 jlTHER AGITATION. 
 
 261 
 
 grinding and heavy thumping abaft under the 
 Jarboard counter, where I understood from the 
 officer of the watch, a very compact gallery, built 
 on a solid mass, was forcing itself underneath and 
 lifting the ship over. Going on deck, I found 
 she had risen two or three feet, and was cer- 
 tainly suffering under severe pressure. Mean- 
 time she was carried by the ice rapidly to the 
 S. E. We had the land more broad on the bow, 
 and could clearly distinguish the farthest point 
 ahead from the deck ; but we were not, as I 
 thought, nearer the wall, which however was 
 very distinct, and perpendicular as well as high. 
 Hitherto it had been supposed to be attached to 
 the land ; but Mr. Green, the ice mate, now 
 detected the movement of an inner body, by ac- 
 cidentally seeing two hummocks cross each other, 
 the outer one steady, the inner one moving. It 
 was evident, therefore, that we were at the edge 
 of the strongest set of the current and tides, and, 
 could we have been divested of other anxieties;, 
 were perhaps in the very best situation for getting 
 early into open water. After a tranquil day, the 
 ship setting backward and forward with the tide 
 as before, at d^ SOT p. m. she was thrown up three 
 inches higher than before. This was the beginning 
 ofa series of strange and unaccountable convulsions, 
 which to any less fortified ship would assuredly 
 have proved fatal. The nortlierly and N. N. E. 
 
 s 3 
 
262 
 
 APPALLING SHOCKS. [CHAP.V. 
 
 fresh breezes which had brought the ice down 
 for more than three hundred and sixty miles, 
 had fallen calm, and given way to a more west- 
 erly and very light air ; an interval too of more 
 than twelve hours had elapsed to check the im- 
 petus so given, and it was, therefore, reasonable to 
 conclude that no impediment would occur to a 
 peaceable progress. In this, however, we were 
 cruelly deceived. From 6^ p. m. ominous rush- 
 ing sounds were heard far off to the north east 
 and north west. These gradually drew nearer, 
 as the flood made its way either under the com- 
 pact bodies that withstood the shock, or along 
 the cracks and openings — gaining in these latter 
 a furious velocity, to which every thing seemed to 
 yield. It happened that there were several of 
 these around the ship ; and, when they opened 
 on us like so many conduits pouring their con- 
 tents to a common centre, the concussion was 
 absolutely appalling, rending the lining and 
 bulkheads in every part, loosening some shores 
 or stanchions, so that the slightest effort would 
 have thrown them down, and compressing others 
 with such force as to make the turpentine ooze 
 out of their extremities. One fir plank placed 
 horizontally between the beams and the shores, 
 actually glittered with globules. At the s-ime 
 time the pressure was going on from the larboard 
 side, where the three heaviest parts of the ruin 
 
 m 
 
CHAP. v.] BOLTS, &C. LOOSENED. 
 
 26ii 
 
 of the floe remained, cracked here and there, but 
 yet adhering in firm and solid bodies. These of 
 course were irresistible; and after much groaning, 
 splitting, and cracking, accompanied by sounds 
 like the explosion of cannon, the ship rose fore and 
 aft, and heeled over about 10° to starboard. On 
 sounding the well there appeared a trifling in- 
 crease of water, amounting in the day to 2^ 
 inches, a proof that she was loosened. Below 
 indeed, during the pressure, a part of the bulkhead 
 of the steward's room had fallen out into the after 
 cockpit ; while three of the lower deck beams 
 eighteen inches square, abreast of the larboard 
 fore chains, had been lifted half an inch from the 
 shelf-piece : the bolts that fastened them were 
 drawn a quarter of an inch, and several treenails 
 also were much loosened. Even when the 
 weather became calm the agitation of the ice did 
 not subside, but continued up to midnight, assail- 
 ing the ship with almost unremitted violence. 
 
 Nor on the following day, 8th March, was there 
 much abatement; and at 7*" a.m. the ice closed, and 
 again straining the ship, raised her several inches 
 higher, making in the whole four feet three inches. 
 A light air was now blowing from the S. W. 
 which was nearly off shore, but wedged as the 
 vessel now was we could scarcely expect to 
 escape all annoyance. In fact, not a hole of 
 water was visible from the mast-head ; and, with 
 
 s 4 
 
 
 \ > 
 
 !■ 
 
 i ' 
 
 ; > 
 "i ■ i 
 
 
^64 
 
 FLIGHT OF BIRDS. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 ! 
 
 
 
 ■ 
 
 
 the ice so jammed in every part, it must have 
 required an astonishing impetus in the first in- 
 stance to make the effects felt so far. Nothing 
 indeed but a current from the north co-operating 
 with the tide, could in my opinion possibly have 
 brought about such a result. We had decidedly 
 gone more tovirards the outer point, which, even 
 when thrown up by refraction as all the land 
 was, appeared too low to answer the descrip- 
 tion of high coast given by Captain Lyon as 
 forming the Seahorse Point of Button. The land 
 formerly called the blue bluff was now nearly 
 abeam, and appeared, as well as the snow per- 
 mitted me to judge, to be composed of rocks, in 
 some of which were gullies. It seemed the eastern 
 entrance to the Inlet, Strait, or Bay frequently 
 alluded to before ; and receding from it further 
 south and east, the land bending in a semi-lunar 
 form terminated in two bold and tolerably high 
 hills, which are perhaps the most remarkable 
 along the whole coast as far as Cape Bylot. 
 Their dome-like summits assumed a more an- 
 gular outline as we altered the bearings, and 
 the coast had some bays and cliffs. A novelty 
 presented itself in the shape of a flight of birds, 
 supposed to have been dovekies, which were seen 
 flying from the land towards the north, most 
 likely in search of open water. At noon the 
 black thermometer was 35"+, the plain one 
 
 HHIMi 
 
 
 iflHwNE ^ 
 
 ^^^H 
 
 ^^^B ^ 
 
CHAP.V.] 
 
 GALE. 
 
 265 
 
 P.M. 
 
 7° + , and the one in shade 14°-. At 1" 
 the blackened thermometer was as high as 41° + . 
 The day passed quietly over, and at last, for the 
 first time for many nights, I enjoyed the comfort 
 of unloading myself from a stack of clothes. 
 
 At noon of the 9th a visible progress had been 
 made along the land, the south extreme of a high 
 bluff bearing S. 38° W. The afternoon was 
 rather fine j and though there was no perceptible 
 motion on the surface, yet the two large pieces 
 of ice opened apart almost athwart the stern, 
 and within only a few paces from it. This 
 was done quietly, and directly against the fbrce 
 of the wind ; but when the ship began to set to 
 the S.E., as she did at a little past 4*" p. m., they 
 closed again, occasioning a strain upon the 
 larboard quarter. From that time the breeze 
 freshened rapidly from the N.E., a point from 
 which it was least desired, as it brought the 
 whole force of the windward ice against the 
 broadside. At T 30" p.m. there was a strong 
 gale, and squalls in quick succession, driving 
 the low scud over the young moon with great 
 velocity. The natural accompaniments were 
 not remote, and soon announced in grating 
 sounds their impetuous and destructive march. 
 I beheld two enormous masses, one of which 
 had hitherto resisted every attack to thrust it 
 from its place, hurled onward across the stern, 
 
 '! ' 
 
 \ 
 
 \'\ 
 
 Pi: 
 
 I 
 
11 
 
 ^66 
 
 TREMENDOUS HUBiiUB. [CHAP.V. 
 
 id 
 
 W' 
 
 V 
 
 t\ 
 
 i 
 
 in a line for the shore ice, which there seemed 
 little prospect with such a gale of long avoiding. 
 The ship cracked and shook violently, and no 
 longer able to offer direct resistance rose several 
 inches. It was a boisterous and restless night, 
 passed in wearisome listening to the incessant 
 crashing, which, for aught known to the contrary, 
 indicated the final dissolution of our hope and 
 stronghold, the floe. The hubbub at length 
 reached its climax. A hollow grinding, as from 
 the onward motion of some vast body, came 
 louder and louder on the ear, and, speed and 
 sound increasing as it approached, finally burst 
 with deafening fury on the ship, causing such 
 fearful cracks and ominous tremblings, that all 
 waited the result in painful suspense. A little 
 more and she must go ! What of human con- 
 struction could withstand the violence of such 
 an onset I Still she continued to rise as the 
 pressure increased. In an instant it ceased, and 
 all was still as death. 
 
 After midnight, March 10th, the wind veered 
 more to the north, blowing heavily in squalls ; 
 and, in the north-west circle of the heavens, a 
 beautiful meteor was seen shooting athwart the 
 sky in an elliptic course, with a brilliant pale 
 blue light. After this we were indulged with a 
 few hours of repose, but from 4'' to 8'' a. m. we 
 were again disturbed, and again listened with 
 
ciiAr.v.3 
 
 SET OF ICE. 
 
 267 
 
 anxiety to the severe complainings of our excel- 
 lent ship. On examination, the proper officer 
 found that she had been lifted up forward three 
 and a half feet, and one and a half abaft. No 
 injury, beyond an indentation from the pressure, 
 could be detected outside, and with the excep- 
 tion of two or three trifling leakages in the 
 upper deck, there had been no mischief below. 
 During the remainder of the day nothing mate- 
 rial occurred. The ship was set backwards and 
 forwards with the tide along the mural edge 
 of the in-shore ice, still advancing towards the 
 S.E., but more slowly to-day in consequence of 
 the course of the wind along the elbow of the wall. 
 About 9** 30"* p. M. there was an easing of the 
 ice from the sides, and a free space created of 
 three feet on one, and nearly two on the other 
 side, whereby the ship was allowed to slide a little 
 astern and come more upright. 
 
 We were favoured with a tranquil night, and 
 on March 11th, after a slight commotion, the 
 whole body set flist to the S. E. At 1 1" 40"" a. m. 
 this ceased, and at noon again set N. W. By the 
 bearing of the land we had gone a little to the 
 eastward. Though there was not much change 
 in the ice inside of us, that to seaward certainly 
 1( jked less high than formerly, while the reaction 
 which had made the whole body thereabouts ease 
 out, indicated open water to the north. Indeed 
 
 i 
 
 I 
 
^J^' 
 
 268 
 
 NAUTICAL ARTISTS. [CHAP.V. 
 
 the fact of our being driven to this distance from 
 Frozen Strait, explains at once liow it was that 
 Sir E. Parry saw so much open water off Winter 
 Harbour. In all probability it was at this very 
 moment equally free from all but young ice, as 
 the prevalent winds would have cleai ed it from 
 every more sohd impediment. At l^'p. m. the 
 black thermometer was 43" + . The ice con- 
 tinued perfectly still, and the day being fine, some 
 of the men amused themselves by cutting out 
 figures from blocks of snow, bringing them as 
 they were finished within a few feet of the star- 
 board bow, and depositing them on a smooth 
 piece of soHd ice for exhibition. The oddity of 
 the grouping provoked a smile. The most con- 
 spicuous figure was that of a female, favoured with 
 a most liberal allowance of bust, arms akimbo, a 
 very slender waist, great deficiency of hips, and 
 legs deplorably curtailed. Injustice however to 
 the delicacy of the artist, it ought to be observed 
 that the limbs were supposed to be enveloped in 
 a straight tight gown, ornamented with a fringed 
 apron foiling so low as to disclose only the sub- 
 stantial feet and still more substantial ankles. 
 Grouped around this principal personage, were 
 various little boys in hats and trowsers ; houses, 
 forts, vessels J and a heavy piece of ordnance, 
 doubtless intended as the symbol and guarantee 
 of her sovereignty. She was attended, moreover, 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 TURMOIL. 
 
 209 
 
 I should rather perhaps say fijiiardcd, by a sort of 
 fierce wolf dog, whicli amidst all changes main- 
 tained its post by its mistress's side. I encouraged 
 this humour of the men, glad to perceive that 
 their minds were free enough from care to indulge 
 in it. Indeed the first warmth of the sun and the 
 tranquillity of the ice had dispelled the notion of 
 immediate danger, and the light-hearted sailors 
 yielded to their feelings and enjoyed the hour 
 
 while it lasted. 
 
 Afler C)^ p. M. the tide set towards the S. E., 
 
 and notwithstanding the calmness of the weather 
 
 and the decreasing flow and ebb, there were at 
 
 long intervals, distant sounds, that portended 
 
 nothing favourable. As these increased in strength 
 
 and rapidity, the various cracks and openings near 
 
 us gradually drew closer, but without squeezing 
 
 the ship. At length, afler many rushes and many 
 
 sudden pauses, the larger remnants of the floe to 
 
 seaward came slowly nearer, preceded by ruins 
 
 which, though insignificant as compared with 
 
 what had been, were still massy enough to make 
 
 a fearful clamour as they were sunk beneath and 
 
 wedged against the ship's bottom. At this time 
 
 (past 9'' P. M.) she showed symptoms of suffering 
 
 in the hull, which was evidently undergoing a 
 
 severe ordeal. Inexplicable noises, in which the 
 
 sharp sounds of splitting and the harsher ones 
 
 of grinding were most distinct, came in quick 
 
 y 
 
 9 ,'<[ 
 
 11 
 
 liJ 
 
«70 
 
 INTENgE SUSPENSE. [cHAP.V. 
 
 it ' 
 
 li 'n 
 
 jssion, aii^d IImM aj^ain shipped suddenly, 
 hiving ail so still tiiiit not even « breath was 
 heird. In an instant the ship was felt to rise 
 V^der our feet, and the roaring and rushing 
 recuiiinierjced with a deafeniu^ din alongside, 
 abeam, and astern, at one and the same instant. 
 Alongside, tiie grinding masses held the ship 
 tight as in a vice ; while tlie overwhelming pres- 
 sure of the entire body, advancing from the west, 
 so wedged the stern and starboard quarter, that 
 the greatest apprehensions were entertained for 
 the sternpost and frame-work abafl. Some idea 
 of the power exerted on this occasion may be 
 gathered from this : — At the moment which I am 
 now describing, the forepart of the ship was lite- 
 rally buried as high as the flukes of the anchors 
 in a dock of perpendicular walls of ice, so that 
 in that part she might well have been thought 
 immovable. Still, such was the force applied to 
 her abafl, that after much cracking and per- 
 ceptible yielding of the beams, which seemed to 
 curve upwards, she actually rose by sheer pressure 
 above the dock forward, and then with sudden 
 jerks did the same abaft. During these convul- 
 sions many of the carpenters, and others stationed 
 below, were violently thrown down on the deck 
 as people are in an earthquake. It was a mo- 
 ment of intense suspense ; and to avoid con- 
 fusion, L'e hands were called, and the officers 
 
CIIAP.V.3 
 
 SHIP 8Tli aNED. 
 
 871 
 
 with their respective crews statioiiofl at their 
 boats, ready for lowei in/r and sccnring dit'in on 
 the larger parts of the flt,e. All this wtxfi done 
 by the first Lieutenant, under my inspection, 
 with the utmost coohiess and promptitude ; and 
 thus prepared, we waited the result. Heaven, 
 however, again protected us, and at ll** r. m. all 
 was ij dead repose. 
 
 An examination for the purpose of ascer- 
 taining what injury had been sustained was 
 immediately commenced by clearing the bread- 
 room ; and, so far as our compact and heavy 
 cargo would permit the inspection (for we 
 were afraid to move it lest the solidity and 
 means of resistance should be weakened below), 
 little was detected on the larboard side and 
 right aft. But on the other, at eight feet 
 from the round of the quarter, one of the 
 stringers, nine inches thick, was found severely 
 split, though the extent of the mischief could 
 not be seen, owing to the diagonal doubling 
 across it. Four of the lower-deck beams also had 
 been lifted from their pillars three-eighths of an 
 inch. The well was sounded every five minutes, 
 and at first we thought she did not leak ; but the 
 unwelcome truth was forced upon us, when, 
 from five to ten inches were reported. This was 
 soon cleared out, and subsequently she made 
 about an inch and a half of water an hour. It 
 was now, therefore, certain that the ship had 
 
 \f 
 
272 
 
 DIVINE SERVICE. 
 
 [CIIAP.V. 
 
 )>{' 
 
 been seriously strained ; and as it would be 
 necessary for the future to inspect narrowly the 
 complaining parts, I caused the bread, which 
 had hitherto been stowed there, to be taken up, 
 and placed, carefully covered over, on deck. 
 
 March 12th. The ice began to set to the 
 eastward, and at the dawn of day a narrow lane 
 of water was descried ahead, extending north 
 and south. On going outside, the ship was seen 
 fairly lifted on the ice forward, and fearfully 
 wedged up abaft. She was in fact four feet 
 eight inches above her usual line of flotation. 
 The ice was much pressed up at certain points, 
 and closely jammed in all ; a circumstance easily 
 accounted for by the fact, that as we were nearer 
 the mural ridge, this also had undergone a 
 change in its outline : for though still, at unequal 
 distances, thrown up in smooth and perpendicu- 
 lar cliffs, terminated by peaked or jagged tops, 
 there were spaces between these corresponding 
 with the rest of the crushed masses around. 
 We fancied, moreover, that farther inshore 
 there was another similar ridge. 
 
 We assembled at Divine Service as usual on 
 Sunday, and returned thanks for the protection 
 which had been so signally and mercifully 
 afforded us j and in this, if I might judge from 
 the earnest and devotional tone of the responses, 
 there was no want of sincerity. Noon came 
 peacefully. We had undoubtedly advanced along 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 FIXING SHORES. 
 
 273 
 
 the high land, and were bringing the lower 
 point ahead clearer into view. The weather was 
 calm: the latitude 64° 8' 30" N., and longi- 
 tude 81° 5' W. 
 
 After midnight, March 13th, there was a com- 
 motion heard to the northward, but it did not 
 extend to the ship, and again we had the luxury 
 of a quiet night. In the morning the ship was 
 found to have settled down a few inches, although^ 
 with the exception of the tidal lane, there was no 
 open water in sight. One of the officers attended 
 by a couple of men attempted to reach the shore 
 to the eastward, but after a rather tedious walk 
 of two or three hours, he found so much inter- 
 ruption from narrow but open cracks leading 
 into the principal lane, that he halted. He had 
 seen the fresh tracks of an enormous bear. 
 About 8'' 30"" p. M. I heard a faint rush under 
 the stern, and from that time until midnight 
 there was considerable under pressure, which, 
 with occasional cracking, in that part especially, 
 raised the vessel up an inch or two more. Find- 
 ing that, notwithstanding the shores which had 
 been fixed in the bread-room and elsewhere, 
 there was still an immense strain fore and aft, we 
 determined on increasing the number, and for 
 that purpose immediately selected the best and 
 fittest spars on board. Thrown up and nipped 
 as we were under the resistless action of three 
 
 { !i» 
 
274 
 
 GENERAL ORDER. [ciIAP.V. 
 
 hundred miles of drift ice, it was obvious that 
 if any thing did happen, it would be as sudden 
 as in all probability it would be serious ; and I 
 therefore issued a general order to the officers in 
 charge of the boats, to the following effect : that 
 whenever it should be considered necessary to 
 lower the boats, they were to see them first 
 removed far enough from the ship's sides to 
 avoid accidents from any motion which might 
 be going on, and, if there were time, to lighten 
 them of the stores always kept there ; they were 
 then to be hauled to separate pieces of the 
 largest ice, and placed, together with the stores, 
 in temporary safety. The invaHds (if the case 
 were urgent) were to be taken care of by the 
 crews to which they severally belonged, and the 
 medical officers were to see that such coverings 
 and protection from the weather were provided 
 them as the pressure of circumstances might 
 permit. A man was to be left in charge of each 
 boat and cargo ; after which, the officers and their 
 respective mates and crews were to return on 
 board and make their reports to me. 
 
 On the 14th March the barometer continued 
 to fall, and the wind increased to a fresh gale, 
 accompanied by snow and much drift. At in- 
 tervals, indeed, the ship was quiet, but more 
 frequently cracked and strained, in a manner 
 that showed how severely she was suffering. 
 
 f 
 
^m 
 
¥>>■>! 
 
 1 ! 
 
 ft< 
 
 [l I 
 
 -iSTw-'- "^ ■"■*■- --la.:..*- '.^-v-^ 
 

 
 3 
 
 k 
 
 w 
 
 o 
 
 n 
 
 I 
 fill 
 
 1^ 
 
 o 
 
 r 
 
 3:fi 
 
 
^^^^^^B^^B^ 
 
 .(i. 
 
 ^^^^^^^HBji 
 
 
 ^^^^E<uZnj 
 
 <i'l 
 
 ^^Bffi' 
 
 |H 
 
 
 HH 
 
 ■ 
 
 i 
 
CHAP, v.] HEAVY WEATHER. 
 
 275 
 
 \ \ 
 
 This was more particularly felt in the after cock- 
 pit and bread-room ; and four more shores, with 
 diagonal bracings from the stringers to the orlop 
 beams, were fixed up. The ice was too close to 
 get soundings, and the weather too misty from 
 small snow to allow the land to be seen, or 
 observations to be got. We seemed, however, 
 very little nearer the mural edge. At noon the 
 wind was N.N.E., squally, and at times blowing 
 a gale. The thermometer (air) 3°—. Almost 
 immediately after there was a visible motion 
 ahead of the ship, and the ice then began to 
 set slowly to the westward. At Q,^ SOT p. m. 
 the weather cleared enough to allow of our see- 
 ing the land, a point of which bore S. 22° E., 
 while the centre of the blue buff was S. 62° W. 
 The gale continued unabated, blowing very hard 
 in squalls, with occasional lulls. A little after 
 7** p. M. the advancing ice began to press hard 
 upon and underneath the stern and quarter, 
 causing considerable cracking fore and aft. No 
 motion, however, could be detected at the surface. 
 For the following four hours the pressure at times 
 was alarmingly severe, lifting up the lower-deck 
 beams three-eighths of an inch, and twice throw- 
 ing down all the upright shores. After this had 
 passed, the ice was forcibly driven to the east- 
 ward, and though we were never entirely free 
 from pressure, yet the cracking sounds were not 
 
 T 2 
 
 1^' 
 
 if. f,T 
 
276 
 
 BLOWS A GALE. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 SO loud. March 15tli.— The ship seemed suffer- 
 ing much below, though again no motion was 
 perceptible from the deck on the surface of the 
 ice. The leak also had slightly increased. 
 
 In the morning the weather was still thick and 
 misty with the same sort of small snow, resem- 
 bling the sort of spray or congelated vapour ex- 
 perienced when to leeward of open water ; the 
 gale continuing to blow hard in squalls. That 
 we should make some advance, therefore, was not 
 surprising ; but, considering the extreme closeness 
 of the ice, no one certainly had expected to see 
 the ship not far from the low point which formed 
 the eastern extreme of yesterday. Such, how- 
 ever, was the irresistible power urging the entire 
 body forwards, that we were now actually within 
 four miles of the low land on the beam ; and 
 from 8" A.M. the ice drove rapidly along this 
 shelving beach, composed, apparently, of coarse 
 jrravel and stones. No rocks were seen. It was 
 of importance to get soundings, but after a fore- 
 noon's trial, and with the loss of ice chisels, &c., 
 the utter impossibility of cutting through the 
 imderlayers of ice, compelled us to abandon the 
 attempt. Near the shore the ice was thrown up in 
 some places from twenty to thirty feet ; and the 
 mural line, which had for a space disappeared, 
 here began again and stretched out to another 
 low point almost ahead. As we rounded the 
 
 12 
 
ir 
 

 •H 
 
 , i 
 
 1 . 
 
 4 
 
 it 
 
 Ml 
 
 '!|(i 
 
 ,5 
 
 t 
 
 ' 1 
 
 •'ii 1 
 
 
^H 
 
 k'fc 
 
 i 
 
 > 
 4 
 
 / 
 
 m *" 
 
 i 
 
 I 
 
 
 f 
 
 ^' % 
 
 H^ 
 
 r. E 
 
 
 If 
 
 I 
 
 fl 
 
 r ^ 
 
 13 
 
 i;/rn 
 
 
 
 
 1 1' '1 
 
 ^Ms^^l 
 
 
 
 m 
 
 iWjH 
 
 
 ' f 
 
 iHH 
 
 
 
 L. ^i^^^H 
 
 1 
 
 
 
 !| /^^H 
 
 
 
 
 aVB^HH 
 
 J 
 
 '■ -J 
 
 
w 
 
 CIIAP.V.] TUEMENDOUS UU8II, 
 
 «77 
 
 curve of the laud the pressure and strain were 
 violent on the larboard quarter and bow, forcing 
 the ship upon the ice, and raising her so much as 
 to bring tlu eleven feet water mark in sight fore 
 and aft Several rushes succeeded and lifted her 
 up more by the stern, again raising the beams 
 and causing a severe strain on the diagonal shores. 
 The whole of the ice continued to set eastward, 
 producing in its progress a jerking motion as it 
 was checked by the shore ice and the land. At 
 noon the weather was misty, with the wind blow- 
 ing fresh in squalls from N. W. by N. : barometer 
 21). 17, always falling; latitude observed 64,". S' N. 
 Up to this day, however anxious, we were 
 yet safe ; but we were now destined to witiiess 
 trials of a more awful kind. While we were 
 gliding quickly along the land— which I may 
 here remark, had become more broken and 
 rocky, though without attaining an altitude of 
 more than, perhaps, one or two hundred feet— 
 at 1" 45"" p. M. without the least warning, a 
 heavy rush came upon the ship, and, with a'tre- 
 mendous pressure on the larboard quarter, bore 
 her over upon the heavy mass on her starboard 
 quarter. The strain was severe in every part, 
 though from the forecastle she appeared to be 
 moving in the easiest manner towards the land 
 ice. Suddenly, howevej-, a loud crack was heard 
 below the mainmast, as if the keel were broken 
 
 T 3 
 
 
 if 
 
278 
 
 IMMINENT PERIL. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 *|.^ 
 
 ! I 
 
 ©r carriied away ; and simultaneously, the outer 
 stern post from the ten feet mark was split down to 
 an unknown extent, and projected to the larboard 
 fiide upwards of three feet. The ship was thrown 
 up by the stern to the seven and a half teet mark ; 
 and that damage had been done was soon placed 
 beyond doubt by the increase of leakage, which 
 now amounted to three feet per hour. Extra 
 pumps were worked, and while some of the car- 
 penters were fixing diagonal shores forward, 
 others were examining the orlops and other parts. 
 It was reported to me by the first Lieutenant, 
 Master and carpenter, that nothing could be 
 detected inside, though apprehensions were en- 
 tertained by the two former, that some serious 
 injury had been inflicted. In spite of the com- 
 motion, the different pieces of our floe still re- 
 mained firm ; but being unable to foresee what 
 miglit take place in the night, I ordered the two 
 cutters and two whale boats to be lowered down, 
 and hauled with their stores to places considered 
 more secure ; this was accordingly done, though 
 not under two hours and a half, even with the 
 advantage of daylight. The ship was still setting 
 fast along shore and much too close to the fixed 
 ice ; but it was not till past 8*" p. m. that any sus- 
 picious movement was noticed near us: then, 
 however, a continually increasing rush was heard, 
 which at 10'' 45*" p. m. came on with a heavy 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 ANOTHEU HUSH. 
 
 279 
 
 roar towards the larboard quarter, upturning in 
 its progress and rolling onward with it an im- 
 mense wall of ice. This advanced so fast, that 
 though all hands were immediately called, they 
 had barely time, with the greatest exertion, to 
 extricate three of the boats, one of them, in fact, 
 being hoisted up when only a few feet from the 
 crest of the solid wave, which held a steady 
 course directly for the quarter, almost overtopping 
 it, and continuing to elevate itself until about 
 twenty-five feet high. A piece had just reached 
 the rudder slung athwart the stern, and at the 
 moment, when, to all appearances, both that and 
 a portion at least of the frame work weie ex- 
 pected to be staved in and buried beneath the 
 ruins, the motion ceased ; at the same time the 
 crest of the nearest part of the wave toppled over, 
 leaving a deep wall extending from thence be- 
 yond the quarter. The effect of the whole was 
 a leak in the extreme run, oozing, as far as could 
 be ascertained, from somewhere about the stern- 
 post. It ran in along the lining like a rill for 
 about half an hour, when it stopped, probably 
 closed by a counter pressure. The other leaks 
 could be kept under by the incessant use of one 
 pump. 
 
 Our intervals of repose were now very short ; 
 for at 12*' 50™ a.m., March iGth, another rush 
 drove irresistibly on the larboard quarter and stern, 
 
 T 4 
 
 '(l:- ;i 
 
280 
 
 THE CRISIS. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 
 i. 
 
 ■n 
 
 and forcing the ship ahead raised her up on the 
 ice. A chaotic ruin followed ; our poor and 
 cherished court yard, its wall and arched doors, 
 gallery, and well-trodden paths, were rent, and 
 in some parts ploughed up like dust. The ship 
 was careened fully four streaks, and sprung a 
 leak as before. Scarcely were ten minutes left us 
 for the expression of our astonishment that any 
 thing of human build could outlive such assaults, 
 when at 1** a. m. another equally violent rush 
 succeeded; and in its way towards the star- 
 board quarter threw up a rolling wave thirty 
 feet high, crowned by a blue square mass 
 of many tons, resembling the entire side of a 
 house, which, after hanging for some time in 
 doubtful poise on the ridge, at length fell with a 
 crash into the hcllow, in which, as in a cavern, 
 the after part of the ship seemed imbedded. It 
 was indeed an awful crisis, rendered more fright- 
 ful from the mistiness of the night and dimness 
 of the moon. The poor ship cracked and trem- 
 bled violently ; and no one could say that the 
 next minute would not be her last and, indeed, 
 his own too, for with her our means of safety 
 would probably perish. The leak continued, 
 and again (most likely as before, from counter- 
 pressure) the principal one closed up. When all 
 this was over, and there seemed to be a chance 
 of a respite, I ordered a double allowance of pre- 
 
CHAP. v.] COMMOTION SUBSIDES. 
 
 «81 
 
 served meat, &c. to be issued to the crew, whose 
 long exposure to the cold rendered some extra 
 stimulant necessary. Until 4'* a. m. the rushes 
 still kept coming from different directions, but 
 fortunately with diminished force. From that 
 hour to S"* A. M. every thing was still and the ice 
 quite stationary, somewhat to the westward of 
 the singular point, terminating as it were in a 
 knob, which was the farthest eastern extreme 
 yesterday. We certainly were not more than 
 three miles from the barren and irregular land 
 abeam, which received thenameof Point Terror. 
 To this was attached a rugged shelf of what for 
 the time might be called shore ice, having at its 
 seaward face a mural ridge of unequal, though 
 in many parts, imposing height, certainly not 
 less than from fifty to sixty feet. Such had been 
 the diminution of our nucleus, that the ship 
 was now within four hundred yards of the water 
 line of demarcation between the floe and the 
 land ice. 
 
 I was naturally anxious to ascertain as far as 
 possible the amount of damage received; and, on 
 inspecting the outside of the ship with the first 
 Lieutenant and carpenter, we saw that the fore-foot 
 was completely exposed, the ship having been 
 literally lifted up on the surface of the same ice, 
 which had formerly, as I have said, imbedded her 
 up to the flukes of the anchors. How far she was 
 
 :v pw 
 
282 
 
 CREW IN COUNCIL. [cHAP.V. 
 
 from the water's edge could not be ascertained, 
 though it was seen from the marks, that she was 
 lieaved up seven feet abaft, whilst on deck the 
 ascent in walking forward was considerable. 
 The larboard side was found to be flattened and 
 indented in such a manner, as to make it proba- 
 ble some injury had been sustained about the 
 timbers near the line of flotation, in a direction 
 six or eight feet from the main ciiannels forward, 
 and the quarter on the same side was bolstered 
 up as liigh as the tafrail by one of the largest 
 floe pieces, which pressed severely on one of 
 her weakest points. These appearances with 
 the facts of the damaged stern post and the 
 leaks, raised a doubt in my mind, how far the 
 ship might be trustworthy when the ice should 
 slacken off sufficiently to let her down to her 
 bearings ; and, though every precaution had been 
 adopted with respect to the provision, &c. on 
 deck, which was ready to be thrown on the ice 
 upon any sudden emergency, and other prepara- 
 tions had been made for the worst ; yet, when 
 instead of the ice remaining, as we had fer- 
 vently hoped, stationary, it began again to move 
 in a body to the eastward, and there was every 
 reason to expect during the night a similar visi- 
 tation to that of yesterday ; I thought it my 
 duty to collect the opinions of the officers, the 
 ice mate, and some of the leading men, who had 
 
 t 
 >■ 
 
 u 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 THEIR OPINIONS. 
 
 2SS 
 
 I 
 
 had much experience among ice. They agreed 
 that a light boat with provisions should, if possible, 
 be landed, to serve as a last resource to com- 
 municate with the Hudson's Bay Company's 
 Factory, in the event of the loss of the ship. 
 Other opinions were also given, creditable 
 to the good sense and firmness of those who 
 uttered them ; and as the greater part of them 
 coincided with my own, I felt more comforted 
 and assured. All that could be done immediately, 
 was to get on deck some more sails, with flour 
 and other provisions, and one of the cutters 
 having been removed to a firmer piece of ice, 
 the two whale boats were again hoisted up for 
 greater security. In the meantime we were ra- 
 pidly setting to the eastward, and by noon had 
 passed the point, and opened another line of 
 higher and more hilly coast, with ranges above 
 and beyond the land forming the beach. The 
 crew were now put on full allowance of provision. 
 The weather continued misty, with abundance 
 of small snow : the top of the highest land in 
 sight was S. 63'' W. ; latitude 64," 4' ; wind N. 
 W. by W., fresh at times j barometer, 29. 25, 
 thermometer 12°—. 
 
 During the remainder of the day there was 
 some disturbance, not very material, and in 
 the evening we appeared to be crossing a bay 
 antl nearing higher land ahead. During the 
 
 ( 
 
 \l 
 
284 
 
 ST. I'ATUICK S DAY. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 /< <J 
 
 ( " 
 
 W\i 
 
 night rushing noises were occasionally heard 
 astern and to the north, and though these once 
 or twice intimated their approach by some sus- 
 picious sharp cracks, yet we reached the morn- 
 ing of the 17th without serious molestation. 
 Tlie wind tlien came all at once from S. E. by S. 
 nearly ahead, bringing with it a load of vapoury 
 mist, small snow and drift. The land was not 
 visible, but it was evident we had got much 
 nearer to the edge of tidal ice ; for several well- 
 marked hummocks, which had been our com- 
 panions for months and weathered out every 
 gale, had in tlie comparative stillness of last 
 night disappeared altogether, taking with them 
 very liberal portions of the surrounding ice. 
 The wind had the effect of setting us slowly 
 to the westward, and though it gradually 
 drew ahead, yet there was no squeezing of the 
 ice, and St. Patrick's day was one of compa- 
 rative enjoyment ; nor in the midst of our own 
 disasters did we forget to wish all prosperity to 
 the " Gem of the 8ea.'* The only drawback 
 was the incessant clanging of the pump, which 
 was still found indispensable to keep the ship 
 clear from water. Meantime there was no 
 lack of employment, especially on the outside, 
 where a large party v/ith pickaxes, ice chisels 
 and shovels were fast reducing the bulk of the 
 towering wave tliat propped up the stern. To- 
 
 \ 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 COAST. 
 
 285 
 
 wards evening a Jane of water o})ened not far 
 from us towards the sliore, which, however, soon 
 closed, and the night set in beautifully clear and 
 tranquil. 
 
 At daylight of the 18th the coast line was dis- 
 tinctly traced from S.E. by E. ^ E. to W. by N., 
 the nearest land abeam being about four or five 
 miles distimt. The character of the country was 
 now shelving, with hills of moderate altitude ; on 
 the regular and apparently even summits of which 
 were isolated cones, and other steep and rounded 
 hills, totally covered with snow. Extending to 
 the eastward the appearances were similar ;lonly, 
 that over a point, and something to the south of 
 it, was a distant range of high mountainous land, 
 answering the description of that about Seahorse 
 Point, from which we were now not thirty miles 
 distant. We experienced, moreover, that pecu- 
 liarly keea cold against our faces, known by the 
 term of the " barber,*' which must have come 
 from the eastward, as the lane of water was all 
 but closed. At 7*" a. m. a slight rushing noise 
 was heard to seaward, and more faintly alongside. 
 The ice was then setting slowly to the westward, 
 and about ll*" 10™ a.m. a second weak rush just 
 reached us, and the motion stopped. At S*" 30™ 
 p. M. the ice began to set slowly to the eastward, 
 and from its closeness to the wall made a low 
 grinding noise. For the rest of the day it con- 
 
 i'w 
 
@86 
 
 CALM WEATHEIl. 
 
 [CIIAP.V. 
 
 !!' 
 
 M; 
 
 u 
 
 r 11 
 
 tinued quiet; but the wind being very light from 
 the westward, a faint disturbance was heard in 
 the first watch, supposed to arise from an attempt 
 of the ice to open a little. 
 
 March 19th. The same sounds, but more 
 distinct, were audible more or less frequently 
 until the forenoon, and sometimes they were 
 accompanied by rushes that set every one on the 
 alert. Indeed, on looking minutely round, a 
 few fresh cracks were discovered, and we were 
 obviously much nearer to the tidal lane, or 
 rather wall, the interval between the two bodies 
 of ice not exceeding two fe% though how this 
 had happened we were somewhat puzzled to 
 understand. There was much frost smoke rising 
 from small cracks around, which rendered the 
 land rather indistinct. After 8'' a. m. we drifted 
 west again, with rather an accelerated motion. 
 Divine service was not omitted, and at noon the 
 weather was fine but cold, out of the sun, the 
 thermometer in the shade being 20"-. At 
 1 30 P.M. the ice commenced setting to the 
 eastward, the wind then being light from the 
 land. Soon after 4'' there was a small lane or 
 opening between the ship and the wall; and 
 about the same time a great noise was heard in 
 the direction of the starboard bow. Every 
 thing was again quiet by midnight, when the 
 wmd veered to the south. 
 
CHAP, v.] ICE SETS EASTWARD. 
 
 287 
 
 
 March 20th. As the tide changed a grinding 
 sound was produced along the rnural edge, and 
 at broad dayhght, tliough there was a very hazy 
 atmospliere, occasioned by the frost smoke, we 
 could see that there was a lane of icy water half 
 a mile broad, separating the sea from the land 
 ice, and that it extended in a direction north- 
 west and south-east as far as the eye could reach. 
 A little past T a. m., when the tide made to the 
 westward, it grew narrower; and, on a nearer 
 inspection, we found we were getting continually 
 closer, in consequence of pieces streaming off at 
 our boundary. On the other hand, the surface 
 of the water became immediately covered witli 
 young ice, infinitely too thick to move a ship 
 through. The people were employed in clear- 
 ing away the higher portions of ice thrown up 
 alongside to starboard, as well as in stopping a 
 leak over my cabin. At 1" 15" p. m. the ice set 
 to the eastward, and during the latter part of the 
 day the bay ice increased very fast, from whence 
 it was concluded that we were driving further off 
 the land, which the density of the frost smoke 
 concealed from view. 
 
 March 21st. Many had been the forebodings 
 of what was to be expected from the coincidence 
 of the full moon with the equinoctial day ; yet 
 nothing more had occurred than a freshening 
 breeze from S. by W., which drove us easily off, 
 
 xm\ 
 
S88 
 
 PLEASANT TEMPEUATUHK. [ciIAP.V. 
 
 It 
 
 * i 
 
 ^1 I 
 
 or backwards and forwards, along the coast. 
 The latter was still obscured by frost smoke, 
 which rose in dense clouds from the ever-shifl- 
 ing black lanes of water, instantly converted, on 
 the least cessation from action, into firm bay ice. 
 The sensation was that of intense cold, when ex- 
 posed to the breeze charged with frozen vapour, 
 but the temperature was not only bearable, but 
 even pleasant, when under the lee of ice, and open 
 to the warmth of the sun. Our cutters were still 
 on the floe pieces, for the ship remained precisely 
 in the position into which she had been thrown 
 on the night of the 1.5th, and one pump was 
 quite equal to keep her dry; but as it was uncer- 
 tain when she might come upright by the easing 
 away of the ice which boimd and poised her up, 
 I had every thing in readiness to hoist them to 
 the davits, and to set additional pumps at work 
 ■without a moment's delay. About lO'* a. m. a 
 glimpse was caught of the land j but as only the 
 lower part was discernible, the precise whereabouts 
 could not be determined. Neither holes nor 
 vapour were seen to the north-east. At noon, it 
 could not be ascertained in which direction the 
 ice was setting, so great was the haze. The 
 barometer had risen to the height of 30.58. 
 Wind south, moderate. Thermometer 10"-, 
 and in the sun 11°-}-. 
 
 This was the day for the examination of the 
 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 HEALTH. 
 
 289 
 
 
 crew; and I was much gratified to learn from 
 Doctor Donovan's report tliat, with the excep- 
 tion of the three on tlie sick list, who were 
 themselves improving, the rest were in a fair 
 state of health, notwithstanding the lameness 
 which still, though without pain, oppressed some 
 of them. To occupy the crew they were de- 
 sired to remove the mounds and other irregular 
 heaps of ice round the ship, and to dig down 
 below the bows. The forefoot being thus par- 
 tially cleared was found to be much worn away, 
 and judging from the state of the bolts, was 
 considered to have received considerable injury. 
 The ice which imbedded the starboard bow was, 
 therefore, quickly cleared away ; and on a nearer 
 inspection, the carpenter recommended cutting 
 away the protruding part of one bolt to prevent its 
 catching against the ice, and at the same time 
 suggested the propriety of placing some iron 
 plates over that portion of the injured part which 
 was out of the water. By evening this was 
 accomplished ; two more plates, three feet four 
 inches long, and nine inches wide, being secured 
 with eighteen iron deck spike nails on the fore- 
 foot, immediately beneath the iron sheathing of 
 the bow, which was all that, under existing cir- 
 cumstances, could be done. The keel could be 
 just felt at the length of an extended saw under 
 water i and the carpenter was always of opinion 
 
 u 
 
 J 
 
590 
 
 iiQUALLS. 
 
 [CHAl'.V. 
 
 i' ' 
 
 J ■)• 
 
 ■I ' 
 
 that it had received little or no damage. There 
 was a great deal of frost smoke between us and 
 the land, and up to midnight all was tranciuil. 
 
 March f2'id. At daylight we seemed from 
 the ucaiing of a known hill, to have been set 
 off and rather along the shore to the eastward. 
 As before, only black lines of open water ap- 
 peared to windward, though the extent of bay 
 ice was evidently greater, and certainly at the 
 nearest part, not more than four or five hundred 
 yards from the ship, which, however, fortunately 
 continued fixed in the same position. During 
 the forenoon we drifted westerly, and again in the 
 afternoon slowly to the eastward ; the conical 
 hill at 3" 30™, bearing S. 31" W. About 8" p. M. 
 the wind gradually drew more to the oast, and 
 began to biow fresh in squalls with every appear- 
 ance of a gale ; but subsequently, March 23d, 
 settled at south-east, and moderated. Tht ice had 
 again set to the westward, witli no other altera- 
 tion than that of causing several lanes in the bay 
 ice. Up to noon, all was quiet. The weather to- 
 day was warm enough, with the thermometer at 
 10" + in the shade, and 32" + in the sun, even to be 
 oppressive ; the blackened thermometer was as 
 high as 39"+ • In walking to the bay ice, some 
 of the officers saw the fresh track of a bear not 
 very far from the ship. We had drifted so much 
 off shore, and in the iifternoon more particularly, 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 LUNAR HALO. 
 
 «91 
 
 had gone so far to the north west, that at 4" p. m. 
 the blue bluff seen on the 11th, was in sight, and 
 the fact of an opening between it and the nearest 
 land of Point M'Clure, being now evident, it waa 
 called Gore Island. The high hills too, which 
 were noted about the same time, were equally 
 visible, and proved to be the same, the principal 
 of which we had hitlierto been calling the Conical 
 Hill, but now distinguished by the name of 
 Mount Minto, after the first Lord of the Ad- 
 miralty, and which every one had considered to 
 he quite distinct from those that had been passed. 
 At our first station two rather deep bays were 
 clearly made out, with low land to seaward, and 
 here the low land was somewhat nearer to us 
 than the high ; so that, although it was impossible 
 to discern whether there was any ice between th6 
 two, I am not certain that the fcrmer may not 
 be islands stretr' ,g out from the latter. As 
 night drew on the wind got round to the N. E.. 
 by which means the pack that ii closed the ship 
 became detached in one or two places from the 
 more seaward body, causing a lane of water to 
 appen . On the other hand, we commenced 
 going eastward, slantingly towards the shore. 
 
 March 24th. There was a prismatic lunar halo 
 with paraselenae. In the morning we wt re more 
 to the eastward, but began to retrograde a^ 10\ 
 By noon we had drawn closer to the land, and 
 
 u 2 
 
 
T 
 
 
 292 
 
 SUSPICIOUS CRACKINGS. [CIIAP.V. 
 
 ^ H 
 
 ■In 
 
 
 '' ■ i' ft 
 
 I 
 
 
 J P 
 
 N 
 
 , ' 
 
 I 
 
 ; i. 
 
 ': 1' 
 
 If' 
 
 were evidently ploughing up the intervening bay 
 ice. About 7'' SO™ r. m. a slight roise was heard 
 on both quarters, the wind then having got more 
 to the westward, from which however it sub- 
 sequently changed to N. E. with light snow. 
 A faint glimpse was caught of the aurora in the 
 same quarter. March 25th the body of ice again 
 moved easterly, and at daylight, some suspicious 
 cracking was audible to seaward ; while the wide 
 lane of bay ice, which had intervened between 
 our pack and that fixed to the shore, was now 
 diminished to three hundred yards of squeezed 
 up pieces, which, for the present, served as a 
 fender against the wall along shore. The weather 
 was too thick to make out objects distinctly ; but 
 from the appearance of the nearest land, we 
 seemed to have almost reached the place from 
 which we were blown off when the southerly 
 wind came. A crack in one of the remaining 
 large pieces was detected during the forenoon ; 
 srnd, in the early part of the afternoon, the ice to 
 seaward of the crack on the quarter began to 
 open out a little, allowing us to get soundings, 
 which were found in sixty-four fathoms, on a bot- 
 tom of gravel, consisting of grey granite and small 
 particles of limestone. The snow which fell a 
 few hours afterwards, was of a soft and flaky kind, 
 different from any we had seen since the autumn, 
 and betokening, as we hoped, a southerly wind. 
 
 P1"S 
 
CHAP. V.J 
 
 SNOW. 
 
 295 
 
 In the evening two more narrow openings wer^ 
 observed ; the one about a hundred paces from 
 the larboard bow, which it crossed, joining the 
 principal lane along shore; the other a little 
 farther astern, stretching out to the N. N. E., 
 where it ran into the one on the quarter. These 
 sejaarations were the more remarkable, as the 
 wind latterly had been from the north and east, 
 and might have been expected, therefore, to bind 
 the ice against the shore. However, as we were at 
 no great distance from Hudson's Straits, the ice 
 east of our position might have streamed away into 
 that opening, leaving the body behind it more 
 space tor motion. The room thus made caused no 
 parting of the heavy pieces, between which the 
 ship was lifted up, and notwithstanding a grinding 
 noise heard from the north, we did not alter our 
 position in the least. 
 
 March 26th. Small snow continued to fall 
 throughout the night ; and although when morn- 
 ing came it was too thick to see the land, it was 
 evident we were setting to the eastward. There 
 was an opinion that less water found its way into 
 the ship, but on ceasing to use the pump for 
 forty-five minutes it was found that twelve inches 
 had accumulated. The men, however, were not 
 kept so constantly at work as before, so that 
 either the leak was reduced, or they contrived 
 to throw more water out in a given time. About 
 
 u 3 
 
I' 
 
 294 
 
 MISTS. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 noon soundings were obtained in ninety-four 
 fathoms, with a bottom of green mud, which im- 
 plied a change of situation ; still the weather 
 was 80 misty from small snow incessantly fallings 
 that no land could be made out. The narrow 
 lanes closed quietly. The temperature was 20° + 
 at the north, and 29°+ facing the south. About 
 4** p« M. the land was in sight Scorn S. E. by S. to 
 N. "W., distant at the nearest part about three 
 miles. Nothing occurred during the night, 
 beyond a slight rumbling of the ice to the east 
 about the turn of the tide. 
 
 March 27th. The weather was tolerably fine, 
 though misty from the same cause as before. 
 The land was barely visible. We were now 
 separated only by a narrow breadth of bay ice 
 from the tidal wall, which was ground perfectly 
 smooth, curving very gently to a distant point j 
 and, on looking carefully at the shore ice, we 
 were delighted to observe the surface much 
 clearer and more free from points and inequalities. 
 There certainly could not have been the same 
 sort of grinding and confusion here, as we had 
 so lamentably experienced to the north-west. 
 
 When MountMintc bore S. S. W. 4 W., sound- 
 ings were found in one hundred and twenty 
 fathoms, the ground being yellow mud, with 
 small pebbles of felspar. A single raven flew 
 round the ship, and again made for the laud 
 
 1 
 
 ^J 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 LANE AHEAD. 
 
 295 
 
 whence it had come. Sunday afternoon, the 
 breeze veered a little to the south ; and as we 
 set westward, the seaward body of ice drew off, 
 so as to leave a perceptible channel within us. 
 In the evening the weather became suddenly 
 overcast ; and the wind drawing round to the 
 south, came first in gusts, then in heavy squalls, 
 which, with the intelligence that a lane had opened 
 ahead, made me apprehensive of some sudden 
 change. The boats and stores, therefore, on either 
 floe were frequently visited, and scouts were sent 
 to examine the cracks that on other occasions had 
 been known to open. At this time, however, 
 ihiff were closed. It may be here mentioned, 
 ■J:-'> as soon as the gale had fairly set in the 
 barometer began to rise very rapidly, tliat is to 
 say, with a southerly windy in the same way that 
 it had often previously done wif , ? irtherlj/ one. 
 It varied in tiie ascending scale considerably in 
 a few hours, and still continued to rise; never- 
 theless, the gale blew with much violence 
 througho..t the night, at the same time lowering 
 the temperature. 
 
 March 28th. The ship cracked so as to induce 
 an idea that she was easing down ; but, in all 
 probability, it was merely the eftect of the gale 
 coming full on her uplifted bulk, and causing her 
 to shake at every squall. However, at break of 
 day our inclination was precisely the same, though 
 
 u 4 
 
 ('■ 
 
, J8J.L1. ! ! 
 
 ;: 
 
 . r i 
 
 / i ^ 
 
 '.^^ 
 
 ii / 
 
 
 29G 
 
 RE-STOWING. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 we were farther away from the land — a change 
 which the proximity of the two icy boundaries 
 yesterday had taught us to appreciate. There 
 was still a mist hanging over objects in that 
 direction ; but a dark gleam of water was 
 visible, forming a part of the lane now much 
 encumbered with old pieces of ice, that must 
 have been detached from larger masses to the 
 eastward. To seaward was still one unbroken 
 body. In the forenoon the sky became clear, the 
 wind having shifted to S. E. A few well-defined 
 clouds were remarked upon as a sight which had 
 not for a long tmie been observed. Our decks 
 were naturally much lumbered from the store 
 of provisions which I considered it still ne- 
 cessary to keep there J but as the small snow 
 which constantly fell was found to injure them, 
 and particularly the bread, the whole was now 
 restowed, and covered well over with sails. 
 As night drew on the wind again got round to 
 the N. E., and at intervals came in heavy squalls 
 which drove the ship fast towards the land. 
 
 March 29th. The weather became more 
 threatening ; and in a short time a cracking 
 noise was heard to windward, accompanied by a 
 grinding sound among the bay ice just within us. 
 At 5^ A. M. the narrow lane about forty paces 
 astern suddenly opened from fifteen to twenty 
 feet, again partially closing a few hours after. 
 
 
 k «■■< 
 
CHAP. v.] ICE FLUCTUATES. gf)- 
 
 The ship creaked more than usual from the force 
 of the breeze, indeed so much that it was thought 
 possible we might have set against the land ice • 
 and m truth, when daylight came, we were closer 
 to the shore itself than at any other period. But 
 the most extraordinary fact was, the great dis 
 tance that the ice had drifted, with the wind 
 abeam, to the westward ; for we now found our- 
 selves, much against our wish, in the precise 
 spot where we had been so roughly treated on 
 he mght of the I5th. For a considerable in- 
 terval the ice remained motionless, so far as the 
 tide was concerned J though on going to sound, 
 which was done in sixty fathoms, the loose young 
 ice was observed to rise and fall between the 
 edges of the larger pieces as it would have done 
 in a sea or swell. Afterwards for two hours and 
 a half, the entire body set very slowly to the 
 eastward, and then stopped. The wind was 
 N. N. E., and blew fresh m squalls : thermo- 
 meter 16°+, and in the sun 22°+. The next 
 twenty.four hours nothing occurred worthy of 
 notice ; and at noon of March 30th, the only 
 alteration near the ship was in the lanes ahead 
 and on the larboard quarter, which presented a 
 considerably larger open surface. It was remarked 
 that as one edge receded from the other, calves 
 and smaller pieces of old yellow ice emerged 
 from beneath into the temporary free space 
 
 i:> 
 
 IJ'l 
 
 i ll 
 
|l! 
 
 '.'l.Ul-l-,^.. 
 
 298 
 
 DOVEKIES. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 i 
 
 i ! 
 
 Our acquaintances, the ravens, paid us daily 
 visits, and sometimes perched on the pinnacle of 
 the most elevated hummock, apparently watching 
 the movements of those on board. We explored 
 the surface of the lanes for seals or other ani- 
 mals, but in vain, until a couple of curiously 
 speckled dovekies appeared playing about, 
 though, from whence, no one could tell. A 
 wish was expressed to shoot them, to which I — 
 whom their lively motions and seeming enjoy- 
 ment amused and gratified— was unwilling to 
 accede. The mottled plumage, however, was 
 too great a temptation, and finally one of the offi- 
 cers set off to secure them j he waited for some 
 time in ambush gazing at them, and hoping they 
 would come within shot, till at last wearied and 
 cold, he was fain to relinquish the attempt. In 
 the evening much snow fell, and two fresh holes 
 of water appeared on the starboard quarter with- 
 in a short distance of the ship. 
 
 March 31st. The ice remained perfectly tran- 
 quil round the ship, though daylight showed a 
 greater difference than had been noticed for a 
 long time. There were several lanes of open 
 water immediately surrounding our pack, while 
 near the same places, but to seaward, were 
 holes and openings in various directions ; most 
 of them at right angles to the land. in 
 addition to these, some of the waves of ice had 
 
CHAP.V.3 
 
 8EAL» 
 
 299 
 
 eased down ; and to our no small astonishment 
 
 in one instance, no sooner had the ponderous 
 
 mass fallen into the opening space, than a seal 
 
 started up from beneath, i„ evident alarm. 
 
 Up to noon, the wind being moderate from the 
 
 westward, the ice moved a little in the opposite 
 
 direction. Soundings were obtained in fifty-six 
 
 fathoms, having a hard bottom. The weatlier 
 
 was always thick : thermometer 12°+ and I30+. 
 
 barometer 30. 31. All continued tranquil ; and 
 
 as the western tide made, the ice closed about the 
 
 lanes, &c. turning our pack, and, consequently, 
 
 the ship's head about three points more to the 
 
 south. 
 
 April 1st. The wind came from E. N. E and 
 about d' A. M. the ship's head was veered mJre to 
 the west, almost dead on for the land ; the ice 
 then moving slowly to the westward. The 
 change in the weather was such as to thaw the 
 snow on the sails and housing, from which 
 we beheld the novel sight of water dripping and 
 runnmg along the decks. And although there 
 was not the least alteration in the uncomfortable 
 position of the ship, yet it was gratifying to ob- 
 serve the pump less constantly in action, and 
 still more enlivening to behold the people clear- 
 ing the wet deck and removing the accumulated 
 rubbish of a winter's gathering. At 2" p. m. the 
 temperature in the sun was 35' + , and 29« 5+in 
 
 ,.'): 
 
 J 
 
r 
 
 300 
 
 MILD WEATHER. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 I 
 
 ■r h:, 
 
 
 n 
 
 the shade ; and, such was the effect of the transi- 
 tion, that large well trodden cakes of ice adher- 
 ing to the anchors and found the bows, which 
 a week before would have remained firm under 
 the blows of a sledge hammer, now peeled off 
 with little effort, enabling us entirely to clear the 
 upper works. The breeze increased to a gale 
 during the night, and at one time a faint aurora 
 was visible in the N. W. 
 
 During the 2d of April we were set rather 
 to the west under the influence of the easterly 
 wind. In the night the wind veered to N.N.E., 
 and on the 3d, a slight commotion was heard 
 to windward, but without result. At daylight 
 several small holes of water were seen, and there 
 was a manifest diminution in the height of some 
 of the waves and mounds, though in other 
 respects the ice was perfectly close. The 
 weather continued overcast, though the tempera- 
 ture was 25° + and even 30 on tlie south side. 
 A slight difference was perceptible on the hills 
 from the effect of the mild weather. 
 
 The season was now rapidly advancing, and 
 under different circumstances I should have 
 commenced making the necessary preparations 
 for more active employment. As it was, although 
 the ship remained cradled precisely as before, 
 it was deemed prudent to caulk where there 
 was no strain from external pressure. Accord- 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 CAULKING. 
 
 301 
 
 mgly, the carpenters were set to work in 
 board, and some slight leaks on the quarter were 
 stopped. The largest unbroken remnant of 
 our former floe, which lay between us and the 
 shore on the starboard side, as yet had borne 
 every encounter; but at 4" p.m. to-day, with- 
 out visible cause adequate to such an effect, it 
 split in two, and the parts opened out about 
 eighteen inches. The crack ran close to the 
 cutter, which, together with the stores, was 
 quickly removed nearer the ship. 
 
 On the following day, 4th April, the medi- 
 cal officer following up the system acted on 
 throughout the past winter, carefully inspected 
 the whole crew ; and with the exception of two 
 men, before spoken of as still labouring under 
 scorbutic symptoms, they were reported free from 
 positive illness and rapidly improving in appear- 
 ance. In fact, the mild weather, though still gen- 
 erally below the freezing point, had produced a 
 visible alteration for the better in all of us. This 
 was thenight of thenewmoon ; and, renderedwary 
 from the past, we could not entirely divest our- 
 selves of every anxiety, though there was nothing 
 immediately prognosticating further chano-e 
 However, on the next day, April 5th, all was trani 
 quil, and from daylight to 8" a. m. the ship was 
 carried something more to the east than before, 
 but the ice obeying the returning tide soon 
 
 J 
 
•t y . m i3» iw ii»aaegr«e-;.i - ur . t t- 
 
 ^xh 
 
 '• 
 
 ) li 
 
 « J 
 
 302 
 
 SOUNDINGS. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 retrograded. Much light snow had fallen ; and 
 for a short interval when the sun had power to 
 dart its rays through the misty atmosphere, it 
 melted at once, so that water was to be seen 
 lodged in the hollows of the boats* coverings. 
 Soundings were found in one hundred and thirty 
 fathoms. By 7^ p. m. we had passed two fresh 
 barriers thrown up on the mural edge of the 
 land ice, and at 8" we were stationary, having 
 been set considerably farther to the eastward 
 than at any former period since last August. 
 
 April 6th. All was still quiet ; and when day 
 broke, it was seen that we had gained more 
 ground to the eastward, being apparently drifted 
 along the tidal edge of the land ice, which here- 
 abouts was smoother than that more to the west. 
 Unfortunately the land was obscured by a mist, 
 but, from the faintness of the receding outline, 
 it appeared to form a curved bay, across which 
 we were setting to and fro with the variations 
 of the tide. In the evening we had neared 
 some high land ; and at 11" 30"" a. m. soundings 
 were obtained in twenty-seven fathoms, which 
 were the least we had yet found. At noon the 
 weather continued misty, but a point of land 
 bore S. 24° E., and a black mark on a distant 
 hill N. 79" E. Wind N. by E., moderate. The 
 sun shortly broke through, and partly dispersing 
 the mist, showed us actually within a mile from 
 
 14 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 CLMIRENT OP ICE. 
 
 308 
 
 the beach, where numerous huge fragments of 
 dilapidated floes were strewed about in con- 
 fusion. Tliey occupied the space lying between 
 the tidal edge and the land, and did not appear 
 to have been of recent production. The density 
 of the atmosphere had deceived us in other 
 respects also; for that which, from its white 
 smooth glare, had been set down for land ice, 
 now turned out to be the ven shelving side of 
 the snow-clad coast. After 5" p. m. a lane of 
 water opened out on the larboard bow of the 
 ship, and this seemed to be the beginning of a 
 general movement immediately around us ; for 
 soon after, the ice in every direction was evidently 
 easing down from those formidable ramparts into 
 which it had been thrown, and settling into a 
 freer space. We were at the time crossing the 
 bend of a bay, and it was ob^^erved that the ice 
 was set by the tide and current in a circle, as if 
 within the influence of an eddy j but as this, 
 from the straight line of bearing of the southern 
 land, was scarcely probable, the eflTect may have 
 been produced by the meeting of counter cur- 
 rents from the north and south. Be the cause, 
 however, what it might, we were in momentary 
 expectation of seeing the two remaining floe 
 pieces on which we were partly poised, separate, 
 so as to allow the ship to settle into the water; 
 especially, when the outer portion of the cracked 
 
 . ii 
 
 I r it 
 
 '' I a 
 
 11 
 
iiMI*. 
 
 # 
 
 rl 
 
 JI, 
 
 i 
 
 : 
 
 1' , 
 
 
 304 
 
 PROSPECTS. 
 
 [CIIAP.V. 
 
 floe, on the starboard side, suddenly parterl 
 from its better half, and glided mysteriously 
 away among the still rugged but looser fragments 
 near. But when our favourite look-out, which 
 we had jestingly denominated Mount Pleasant, 
 the ikithful companion of our wanderings from 
 Cape Bylot to this spot, staunch and unshaken 
 amidst the crash and ruin which had surrounded 
 it ; when this, too, departed, and became lost 
 and indistinguishable amongst other peaks and 
 hummocks, what could we look for but an utter 
 dissolution of all the parts of our system ? In 
 spite, however, of all these defections, in spite of 
 upper or under current, spring or neap tide, for 
 the present we remained firm as a rock ; the only 
 alteration being, that the direction of the ship's 
 head was exactly reversed, having been turned 
 round from the south to N.W. by W., in much 
 the same manner as had been the case last 
 autumn at the western end of the island. All 
 these things plainly demonstrated that the eastern 
 ice was gradually drifting through Hudson's 
 Straits into the Atlantic, and making way for 
 our liberation ; which I still sanguinely hoped 
 would take place, so as to enable me to carry 
 into effect some of the objects of the expe- 
 dition. A narwhal was supposed to have been 
 seen in one of the adjoining lanes, and was 
 described as being spotted, like those seen last 
 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 PARHELION. 
 
 305 
 
 year. During the night there was repeated 
 noise among the ice ; l)ut as it was rather that of 
 easing down than the harsh grating of pressure, 
 it did not much aflfect us. Twice we sounded 
 in tliirty fatlioms, and about two miles off shore 
 in twenty-two fathoms, the bottom being com- 
 posed of rock, shells, and mud. 
 
 Daylight of the 7th showed that we had 
 already gone and were still going rapidly to the 
 south-east, along a hilly -orist, apparently con- 
 sisting of barren rod s witii precipitous cliffs, 
 based upon a lowshdviig skpe, which passed 
 imperceptibly into the h^'v^ ice; both being 
 covered with snow, and only distinguishable, in 
 some places near the margin, by the black tops 
 of protruding rocks. Here, then, was a totally 
 different formation from the smooth and rounded 
 low tract lately passed, and answered better to 
 the land about Seahorse Point. 
 
 There was a beautiful parhelion for a short 
 time, while a W. S. W. breeze was blowing 
 about a great quantity of small snow, but it soon 
 disappeared. At noon the coast was distinctly 
 seen from S. E. J S. to Mount Minto at W. ^ N., 
 terminating at the furthest east abruptly in a 
 bluff point. There was another bluff something 
 nearer to us. In the afternoon lanes of water 
 opened out between us and tlie shore ; but as 
 the wind blew very fresh off the land, it only 
 
 X 
 
 i'i ? 
 
 11 lU 
 
 jl 
 
 afl 
 
 m ii^^H 
 
 IH 
 
 11 
 
306 
 
 SIR J. Gordon's bay. [ciiap.v. 
 
 ii 
 
 i:' 
 
 l:\ 
 
 bound us the more against the sea ice. As he 
 tide changed, these places soon closed ; and 
 again at daylight, April 8th, opened much 
 wider than before. We drifted past the high 
 point, which was then ascertained to be the 
 north-western extremity of a fine open bay, 
 called after Sir James Gordon ; which making a 
 sweep of about two miles, with a radius from 
 three quarters to one mile, formed a Sv.cond 
 point, and thence stretched to the farthest land 
 in sight. Much frost smoke was rising from the 
 open water beyond this land; and in conse- 
 quence of the mist it caused, we were unable to 
 make out satisfactorily whether two comparatively 
 low spots were continuous with the main coast, 
 or islands off it. One fact, however, was beyond 
 question, viz. that the land ended there ; and that 
 the boundary, therefore, must be Sea Horse Point. 
 Could the ship have been once freed from 
 her icy fetters, I should soon have set the mat- 
 ter at rest ; since the fresh gale of the night, 
 combined with a favourable juncture of tide, had 
 so marvellously dispersed the inner, and indeed 
 some of the outer ice, that there was no other 
 impediment sufficient to have prevented our 
 gettin^^ entirely round it. As it was, I had no 
 choice but to remain quiet until nature should 
 set us free ; satisfied for the present if I could 
 purchase exemption from nipping. Every day. 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 INVALIDS. 
 
 307 
 
 however, the sun had more power, and another 
 month or six weeks might effect much. My 
 object was to try the Welcome. 
 
 A wind coming from the land at west, chilled us 
 all; but the thermometer did not fall below 10°-: 
 andasthe wind veered more to the north it speedily 
 rose again. A couple of large seals were seen, 
 but neither fish nor birds, notwithstanding the 
 expanse of water along the coast. At noon there 
 were soundings in fifty-eight fathoms, by which 
 time there was scarcely any water to be seen, 
 and the ship had considerably near 1 the land, 
 being not more than two miles off. Though, as 
 I before observed, our invalids generally con- 
 tinued to improve, yet some of the number 
 could not yet conquer the obstinate rigidity oi 
 the muscles of the leg. Of the two who re- 
 mained still on the list, Alexander Young (who 
 was also the person first affected) was now in so 
 low a s^ate as to make his recovery extremely 
 doubtful— much to the regret of us all ; for his 
 happy disposition and steady conduct as gun- 
 room steward had made him a favourite with 
 the officers, who left nothing undone to minister 
 to his comfort. Every thing on board favoured 
 the health of the crew j for, since the adoption 
 of the funnels for carrying away the vapour, and 
 still more within the last ten days, during which 
 the hatchways and fore scuttle had been thrown 
 
 X 2 
 
 f^ 
 
 
vammm 
 
 smm 
 
 308 
 
 HUSH OF ICE. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 i fi ' 
 
 open in the day-time, our lower deck had been 
 perfectly dry and pure. Until 8** the ice was 
 quiet ; but about that time, there being a light 
 wind blowing from the north, a low grinding was 
 heard at the outer edge of the outer floe-piece, 
 and soon after, the two or three holes of water 
 in that quarter closed up. The commotion was 
 followed at 10'' p. m. by a heavy rush of the 
 seaward ice against the same piece, on which it 
 not only made encroachments, but shook it 
 throughout its whole dimensions so as to intimate 
 the effect on board by the short cracking of the 
 after part of the ship. Ultimately a barrier was 
 thrown up about eighteen feet high. It became 
 prudent, therefore, to secure the provisions and 
 stores, which were alongside the cutters, and to 
 have the latter in readiness to hoist up ; since, 
 notwithstanding the immense masses still appear- 
 ing in every direction, there was not another piece 
 proper to receive them. Nothing further occurred 
 at that time ; but when daylight came, on April9th, 
 the starboard floe-piece was found to be cracked 
 in several parts. At 5^ a. m. the ice was setting 
 to the east, and the temperature had fallen 
 to 26°—. However, at 8^ it had risen to 10° + . 
 Shortly afterwards the seaward ice became 
 agitated, and ground so suspiciously against our 
 diminishing territory, that it was considered 
 prudent to hoist up both the cutters. In the 
 
 
CHAP. v.] AGITATION CONTINUES. 
 
 3ogt 
 
 interim we continued to drift east, and being 
 almost across Sir J. (Gordon's Bay were unques- 
 tionably farther in that direction than at anytime 
 before. With the turn of the tide the direction 
 of the drift changed as usual, and until ^'^ p. m. 
 we were setting rapidly to the west. 
 
 April 10th. It was too obscure to see what was 
 going on ; but at 4" 50™ the wind had got to the 
 northward, and the ice commenced setting to the 
 east. The breeze increased rather more than was 
 desirable, and the ice being extremely closepacked 
 began about 8" a. m. to make a grinding noise. 
 This soon became louder as larger masses were 
 thrown up ; ana looking towards the tidal edge 
 of the shore ice, we observed an immense piece, 
 many tons in weight, forced up vertl a!; to 
 a height of between twenty and thirty feet. 
 Scarcely had we had time to remark this, when a 
 heavy rush of the seaward ice from the windward 
 called our attention to the opposite side ; and, 
 after watching many piled-up mounds tumbhng 
 with a rattle on our starboard floe-piece, we were 
 greatly surprised at seeing the latter slowly 
 assume a convex form, and, after gradually 
 attaining a moderate elevation, splinter into 
 fragments, one-third of the' original piece 
 breaking off and sailing heavily away to the 
 eastward. While this was going or, a similar 
 inroad was made in a line towards the starboard 
 
 X 3 
 
SIO 
 
 PEKIL OP TWO SAILORS. [CHAP.V. 
 
 ' f 
 
 i i 
 
 f ,\ 
 
 bow, and matters were beginning to wear a 
 serious aspect, when, in an instant, the noise 
 was hushed. The whole body, the weight of 
 which, greatly augmented by the breeze, we 
 had to bear our part in sustaining, was brought 
 up by the curve of coast where we were em- 
 bayed. Indeed it could not be otherwise ; for 
 any wind coming from between N.W. by W. 
 and N.N.E., must of necessity drive the entire 
 body of northern ice to this its only place of 
 egress into the Atlantic. While the turmoil 
 was going on, two of the men carelessly loitering 
 about soon found themselves separated from us, 
 and it required some activity in scrambling over 
 the moving mounds before they succeeded in 
 reaching the ship. The wind blew fresh and 
 keen from N. by W., the temperature being 
 at 0", though 23° + in the sun. 
 
 The carpenters now commenced caulking 
 wherever they could outside the ship. At 7^ p. m. 
 a slight noise was heard among the ice about a 
 mile to the westward of the ship, which, for the 
 succeeding two hours, drove fast towards the 
 straits ; but as the tide grew weaker the onward 
 motion of the ice was of course checked, while the 
 breeze urged the whole western body with irresis- 
 tible force against it j the effect of which was, that 
 at 9^ P. M., while we were making the curve of a 
 bay, our floe-pieccs were suddenly assailed by a 
 
 \ 
 
CHAP.V.] DREADFUL COMMOTION. 
 
 311 
 
 powerful rush of the seaward ice, which, thrusts 
 ing us close to the tidal wall so as to cause 
 almost a dead pressure, began to grind and 
 plough up the edges on every side. Fre- 
 quently during the process there were brief 
 intervals of cessation in one part or another, 
 followed by a quick repetition, in a direction 
 perhaps exactly opposite. Again, there would 
 be a general pause, not unlike the silence which 
 succeeds a heavy crash of thunder ; but sud- 
 denly, when hope was beginning to whisper 
 that all was over, on it came again with a burst 
 of deafening roar, destroying every thing in 
 its furious course. Wherever our eyes were 
 turned they were met by rising waves of ice 
 rolling their burdens towards the ship. One in 
 particular, not more than thirty paces away, had 
 reared itself at least thirty feet on our inner 
 floe^piece, which, strong as it was, gave way 
 under the accumulated weight j and a mass of 
 several tons being thus upturned and added to 
 the original bulk, the whole bore down slowly 
 upon our quarter. The ship herself was high 
 out of the water on the ice, but this over- 
 topped her like a tower. Meantime we were 
 getting nearer and nearer to the land ice : large 
 rents were showing themselves in the ice, at 
 right angles, on each side of the fore, chains : the 
 ship unable to right herself began to complain, 
 
 X 4 
 
 /)] 
 
;^^fS^^PHHBI 
 
 «i 
 
 1 . I 
 
 I I i 
 
 
 J I 
 
 H 
 
 r 
 
 I 
 
 IM 
 
 II 
 
 IM 
 
 A ^ 
 
 
 i\ 
 
 312 
 
 IMMINENT PERIL. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 and the ^ ;ene every moment became more dark 
 and threatening. Extra purchases were fixed 
 to the pumps ; the hands were turned up ; the 
 sick provided for ; and though nothing effectual 
 could be done for our prtjservation, the attention 
 of the men was occupied in hoisting two of the 
 boats higher up. On former occasions there 
 were large pieces of ice around, any one of 
 which would have afforded a sufficient .lepowt 
 for boats, provisions, or whatever in the exi- 
 gency of *r ' moment might have been placed 
 upon it. iNi'v, on the contrary, we were sur- 
 rounded by rrutjlu d and broken ice, some, 
 indeed, pondercL's enough, but all too angular 
 and fractured to trust a boat upon : nor could we 
 ourselves have found footing so long as every 
 part w:ts more or less in motion ; or, even if some 
 of the more active and hardy had succeeded in 
 doing so, still they could not possibly have 
 reached the land. Knowing this, and feeling 
 acutely for the many beings entrusted to my 
 charge, it may be conceived with what intense 
 anxiety I listened to the crashing and grinding 
 around. The strength of the ship, tried and 
 shaken as it had already been, could hardly be 
 expected to withstand the overwhelming power 
 opposed to it ; and, what the result of that night 
 might have been it is impossible to say and 
 pamful to contemplate, hud not an overruji'ig 
 
CIIAP.V.] TUMULT ARIIESTED. 
 
 sia 
 
 Providence mercifully averted the crisis, by sud- 
 denly, and at the momei^t of greatest peril, 
 arresting the tumult. In less time than it could 
 be spoken, there was the stillness of death, and 
 we were saved I The watch was called, the 
 crew dismissed; and I trust that none that 
 night laid his head on his pillow without offering 
 up a devout thanksgiving for the mercy which 
 had been vouchsafed him. 
 
 April 1 1th. About half an hour after midnight 
 the wind having veered more to the west, the ic3 
 was observed to slacken out; and this it continued 
 to do so rapidly, that at daylight the large wave 
 and other ramparts of ice on the larboard side had 
 considerably subsided, and ultimately they dis- 
 appeared, leaving only some straggling pieces to 
 mark the scene of so much terrific grandeur. 
 To seaward no alteration had taken place, and 
 we had leisure to contemi)late the devastation 
 that a few short hours ha J brought home to the 
 very side of the ship. The cracks were wider apart, 
 and our territory greatly diminished ; we were, 
 however, further off shore, and at 5»' 50"" a. m. 
 were driving quietly to the east towards the low 
 point. In our progressa deep bay or, possibly, inlet 
 was seen, for there might be a passage through 
 its south-eastern termination, though the land ap- 
 peared continuous from the crow's-nest, whence 
 ice was made out on the other or eastern side of 
 
 '• s 
 
 tJ 
 
iHI 
 
 SH 
 
 ISLANDS. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 in i 
 
 'i 
 
 I' ;f 
 
 M Jf 
 
 n I 
 
 it. The high land which joined it, and along 
 which we were setting, rounded down to a point, 
 between which and one or two islands, for we 
 could not satisfactorily make them out, was 
 unquestionably an icy channel. Soundings were 
 found in forty-eight and fifty fathoms, with a 
 muddy bottom. At noon the ice was stationary. 
 At IS** 45" the ice began to set slowly to the 
 westward, and the breeze freshening at the same 
 time forced it off shore j so that in a few hours a 
 lane of water was plainly discovered along the 
 mural edge of the land ice, while that within 
 us, and bordering our floe piece, was * brash,' 
 such as under favourable circumstances might 
 have been sailed through. At 6^ p. m. we were 
 going slowly towards the east ; and, being now at 
 a different angle with the land, thought that there 
 certainly was a passage through the bay just 
 mentioned, which had been concealed before by 
 the overlapping of two projecting points. 
 
 At daylight of the 12th we found ourselves 
 still farther off shore, and the breeze had not 
 only kept us more than usual to the west, but 
 had caused several holes of water to open in 
 different places. There was indeed a continuous 
 channel in shore for several miles, extending 
 however, no farther than the point. Beyond, 
 all was compact ; the necessary consequence of a 
 leeward situation, such as this would be with the 
 
CHAP.V.] 
 
 REFLECTIONS. 
 
 315 
 
 wind blowing slantingly from Hudson's Bay and 
 the Straits. Considerably to the west, near the 
 spot where we had passed the last three weeks, 
 was a dark water sky, and accordingly from the 
 crow's-nest, water was seen in the direction and 
 to the extent so pointed out. It seems, therefore, 
 certain that on this coast the first place where a 
 channel is to be looked for is along the land, 
 though probably with some winds not extending 
 far, unless on favourable occasions, such as the 
 one experienced in the last autumn, when an un- 
 hampered vessel might have sailed round the 
 island. Farther out, whatever theprevailing wind, 
 a ship must be immovably beset, and dependent 
 altogether upon the drift of the entire body of 
 ice : if that take her into clear water, well ; if not^ 
 she must submit to the event. Undoubtedly a 
 vessel is more secure when beset than when 
 comparatively at liberty. In the former case, so 
 long as the ice remains firm, she is exempted 
 from serious pressure, and tolerably safe; whereas 
 along the land, every rock, bank, or projecting 
 point, catches the moving mass, and subjects the 
 unhappy vessel to all the disastrous effects. 
 It is in this sudden stoppage, or in nautical 
 phraseology, < bringing up,' that all the danger 
 lies. 
 
 April 13th. The wind had veered a little to the 
 east, and freshened, so that by noon we had been 
 
 hiJ 
 
 ! I 
 
316 
 
 SQUALLS. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 I 
 
 driven so far to the west, as to bring into siglit 
 land that we scarcely expected, and, in truth, did 
 not wish to seea^min froiv, ' "s side of the island. 
 It was gratifying K avpv< . to find ourselves much 
 farther off shor<\ as well as to behold a greater 
 portion of the intervening space occupied by 
 fresh ice, forced in by the wind and tide from the 
 Straits, which would serve as a buinor to ]<:^ep 
 us off from the mural edge, in case a change of 
 wind sliould drive us near our former station. 
 On the next day we found ourselves set still 
 farther to the westward without other alteration, 
 but daring the afternoon and night the barometer 
 indicated a change in the weather. Accordingly 
 at night it blew fresh from N. by E., and on 
 the 15th the gale increased with squalls and 
 snow. The slightest change in the direction of 
 the wind had always an immediate effect on the 
 ice, and we were set nearer to the land, though 
 from the mistiness of the atmosphere we m\d 
 not say how much. About 9*" a. m. the young 
 ice, formed around, rose up un(' r an easy pres- 
 sure to the height ci a footu 'o, die edge of our 
 inner floe, now but forty paces distant from the 
 ship. This however did not contuiue long, and 
 at noon all was quiet, except the fresh breeze 
 which came stronger after every iull. Snow of 
 a soft and flaky kind, un e le glitteriii': 
 chrystals of the winter mom is, icll lightly bi 
 
 
CHAP. v.] DOCTORS* li RT, 
 
 317 
 
 I 
 
 incessantly, and o])scured the land. At 2" p. m. 
 some of the ice near us became again agitated for 
 about ten minutes, and then ceased, after which 
 the breeze gradually diminished in strength, 
 and towards midnight drew more round to the 
 east. 
 
 April l6th. Every thing was quiet. The 
 
 weather was overcast, and after divine service,. 
 
 examining the north thermometer, I was delighted 
 
 to find it exhibiting a temperature of 32^"+, 
 
 being the first time this year that it had risen 
 
 above the freezing poi Little lines of water 
 
 soon dribbled from the snow on the weather side 
 
 of the .eck and other places j and great was the 
 
 pleasure with which I remarked that instead of 
 
 instantly congealing as usual, it maintained its 
 
 liquid form. Sir E. Parry had the same degree 
 
 of . . ,;erature at Winter Island, a little more 
 
 than two degrees north of our situation, on the 
 
 wth, /. e., exactly one week later in the year 
 
 182 
 
 On til, 17th and 18th the weather was 
 iiild, but still so overcast that the points of 
 the land could not be distinguished. Ae-ain 
 on the 1.9th all was tranquil. The crew 
 were inspected by ! ; medical officers aiiu 
 reported to be in an anjjroving state. Three 
 houcver were still larfron well, and one (Jone.s) 
 had rather retrograded. Several otheis. though 
 
 i 
 
 Hi!' If 
 If. fit 
 
 
 .ki 
 
US. 
 
 ia«i<«t« 
 
 ■Ml 
 
 
 r; 
 
 ;ii!i 
 
 " ' If 
 
 \ilm 
 
 W' 
 
 J, III 
 
 i ; 
 
 ii 
 
 ai8 
 
 FLOCK OF lURDS. 
 
 [CIIAP.V. 
 
 able to do their duty and free from pain, con- 
 tinued to walk lame from tlie rigidity of which 
 I ]( xve so often spoken. 
 
 April 20th. The outsiile caulking of the ship 
 was completed as far as practicable ; and though 
 under some disadvantage, on account of the 
 pressure of our inclined position, yet the carpen- 
 ters were desired to proceed with the same 
 operation along the water ways and upper deck. 
 The sails were also under examination, and had 
 prudence permitted us to restow the six months* 
 provisions, which sadly lumbered the quarter 
 deck and gangways, we might soon have assumed 
 something of a ship-shape appearance. This 
 however could nc be until the ship was fairly 
 afloat, and it was necessary therefore to be satis- 
 fied with having all in readiness for good or 
 evil. At noon the ice, affected by the con- 
 stant blowing of the northely wind, which had 
 prevailed since the day before, was found to 
 have gone considerably to the eastward. A 
 large flock of birds, supposed to be ducks, though 
 more likely dovekies, was observed flying north- 
 ward. 
 
 At daylight of the 21st, it was found that 
 the spring tide had set us faitlier east than 
 we had yet been ; a hole or two of water also 
 was seen within a few hundred yards of the ship, 
 and the ice bad the appearance of easing down. 
 
 14 
 
CHAP, v.] Lyon's rem arks. 
 
 819 
 
 
 a natural consequence of the offshore wind. 
 Tiie temperature which had been lowered by 
 a breeze from the N. W. to 2"+ rose again 
 as the sun gained power, and at noon was 18" + 
 and 53° . 
 
 At 2" p. M. the ice commenced setting to 
 the east, and by 6*" p. m. we had drifted so 
 far to the soutli east, as to bring into view 
 some new land, low, and apparently forming a 
 shoal point, inasmuch as at some distance oft; 
 there were four rounded mound;? of high and 
 heavily packed ice, thrown up upon what we con- 
 cluded to be sand banks or reefs. As the bearing 
 (true) was S..37° W. it was certain that we were 
 opposite to Seahorse Point, which was in latitude 
 63"43'N., longitude 80° 10' W., and variation, 49** 
 00 W. This is the most eastern part of Southamp- 
 ton Island, but too low to be visible from Point 
 Leyson, though, as Captain Lyon remarks, the 
 heights behind might be seen from thence ; and it 
 seems to me most likely that the high land which 
 he saw, and had supposed to be the continuation 
 and boundary of the range terminating in the 
 
 otherextremityatCape Comfort, was really Mount 
 Minto, which is fully one thousand feet high, 
 and the adjacent ridge that was still within view 
 of the ship. It had always been an interesting 
 speculation with me what would be the direc- 
 tion taken by us, or ratler by the ice driven by 
 
 1 
 
 ^1 
 
 ■f 
 
 !^| 
 
 i 
 
 !^l 
 
 1 
 
 ij^l 
 
 [■ 
 
i 
 
 •,«»'■■ 
 
 3Q0 
 
 FLOCK OF DUCKS. 
 
 [CIIAP.V, 
 
 the current, on arriving at this spot ; for it was 
 difficult to say whether we should be set round 
 the point along the coast towards Caryswan's 
 Nest, or to the East of Mansfield Island to- 
 wards Labrador, or, directly through Hudson*^ 
 Straits into the Atlantic. Confiding in the 
 observations of those v/ho had preceded us, and 
 assuming, therefore, that the meeting of the tides 
 from the Welcome and Fox's Channel was somcr 
 where about Caryswan's Nest, I held to the 
 first opinion; conjecturing further, that the nu- 
 merous detentions likely to be encountered from 
 different winds, eddies, or other causes, would 
 eventually lead us near open water, perhaps 
 quite as early as any practical use could be made 
 of it. 
 
 In the course of the evening a flock of fifty 
 ducks was seen approaching, but after coming 
 within five hundred yards, they wheeled round 
 and flew away to the south east. 
 
 At 2^ A. M. of Apri^ 22d the ice in its course 
 to the eastward eased out so much, that many 
 calves sprung up from beneath the pack, and 
 soon after a few holes of water were seen. By 
 8^ A. M. the south point bore S. .5^" W. ; but the 
 ice, as usual, with the change of tide setting 
 again in the contrary direction, at noon, the ex- 
 treme point bore S. 32" W., and Momit MintoN. 
 80" W. TIic wind was moderate from the S,W., 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 A WHITE BEAR. 
 
 321 
 
 and though otherwise fine the temperature was 
 only 24° + . 
 
 April 23d found us twelve or fifteen miles off 
 Seahorse Point, which, nevertheless, we did not 
 get beyond, the wind being light and very un- 
 stear^v. Certainly either the tide was not strong, 
 or the whole body of ice moving together pre- 
 vented our observing it. Some ducks were 
 seen, apparently looking for open water. About 
 4" p. M. the ice slackened considerably round the 
 ship and to the southward, causing in the course 
 of two hours several lanes and holes of water, 
 but too far disconnected to have aided our 
 escape, even had we been at liberty. It was not 
 a little singular that with so much water there 
 should have been no appearance of seals, sea- 
 horses, whales, or any other denizen of the 
 Arctic regions. This evening, however, a visitor 
 was announced in the following manner. De- 
 tached groups of the crew were sauntering about 
 the ridged and extremely uneven ice that formed 
 the nucleus of our floe-pieces, when the Cor- 
 poral of Marines, who was somewhat apart from 
 the rest, gazing listlessly upwards at the peaked 
 hummock above his head, saw, to his amaze- 
 ment, quietly looking at him, a white bear. At 
 the first glimpse he started off with all the 
 speed which circumstances permitted, leaped 
 a wide opening, which, on common occasions. 
 
 w 
 
 ' i Ml 
 
mmmmm 
 
 
 < }' 
 
 ^'1 
 
 m III 
 
 , ii 
 
 i I 
 
 > f '! 
 
 .^22 
 
 DRIVEN OFF SHORE. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 he would not have attempted, and in breathless 
 agitation announced the intruder. Instantly 
 were heard a hundred voices in all varieties of 
 tone, from the shrill scream to the hoarse bawl : 
 tlie news flew fast, and gathered as it flew ; so 
 that, by the time it had travelled from the fore- 
 castle to my cabin, it saluted me with the intel- 
 ligence, that t?/jo bears, an old and a young one, 
 were close to the ship. On reaching the deck 
 I saw, indeed, a young bear about ninety paces 
 ahead of the ship, shaking and eating a piece of 
 an old jacket which it had just picked up. The 
 first Lieutenant and Mr. Gore fired, and, both 
 balls taking effect, the animal staggered away about 
 forty paces and fell dead. It was a female cub of 
 last year ; and though on being opened the stomach 
 was found entirely empty, there was still some fat 
 adhering to the flesh. To us the adventure was a 
 novelty, and gave occasion to some jests. 
 
 By midnight the wind blew fresh from the 
 south-east, soon closing the holes near us ; and 
 during the next twelve hours, so far had the 
 ice taken us off shore, that at noon, when the 
 sun was fortunately clear for a few minutes, 
 it was evident that the ship's head was now 
 pointing E.N.E., in a line directly for Mill 
 Islands, and that we were not less than seven or 
 eight leagues from Seahorse Point. In this new 
 posture of affairs it was deemed expedient imme- 
 
CHAP. v.] RESTOWING PROVISIONS. 3^3 
 
 diately to refit, so far as could be conveniently 
 done. The small sails and geer had already 
 been put into order, and now the topsails under- 
 went an inspection, while the bulwark inside was 
 caulked, the seams paid over with a layer of 
 resin, scraped, and primed with a coating of yellow 
 paint. The tanks were also ordered to be cleansed 
 in order to their being filled ; and, as the com- 
 paratively small dimensions of the fragments of ice 
 which now surrounded us, as well as its loose and 
 disconnected state, would necessarily render futile 
 any attempt to save a stock of provisions, &c., in 
 case of accident, and there no longer, therefore 
 existed any reason for keeping it on deck, I crave 
 directions that every thing should be restowed • 
 except a sufficient supply of pemmican, preserved 
 meats, &c., to be kept on deck for each boat in 
 readiness for any emergency, against which it 
 was still necessary to provide, as it was uncertain 
 whether the ship would float, when once more 
 in open water. At all events, whenever that 
 time should arrive, whether soon or late, and 
 whether with good or evil fortune, it was 'clear 
 that the promptest activity would be required 
 from all on board j and that it was necessary 
 therefore, to have all prepared beforehand. 
 
 Up to noon on April 25th nothing occurred 
 worth mentioning. We were perhaps a little 
 fhrtlier from the land, the nearest part of which 
 
 I: ^ 
 
 
 i' • 
 
 m 
 
 J I, 
 
 Y 2 
 
''^,>''* 
 
 
 M ' 1 
 
 i'::) 
 
 I ;;i- 
 
 324 
 
 IDEATII OF A SAILOK. [cHAP.V. 
 
 bore S. 85° W., distant by estimation twenty- 
 three miles. Mount Minto v.as once seen, and 
 by admeasurement was forty^ miles away. To- 
 wards evening the breeze became steady from 
 south-east, and gradually freshened as night drew 
 in. A small bird, supposed to be a snow bird, 
 flew near the ship. In the early part of the 26th 
 the wind increased to a gale from the southward, 
 and placed us in latitude 63° 57' 02' N. j but the 
 horizon being rather misty no land was seen, 
 and the sun w^as not clear enough to get sights. 
 This day terminated the life of Alexander Young 
 (marine), who had been long slowly sinking under 
 his flital malady. There had been occasional 
 fluctuations which afforded a ray of hope ; but, 
 at length, after lingering on the verge of disso- 
 lution durinrj a wearisome period, in which he 
 displayed no want of mental energy or proper 
 resignation, he yielded to the overmastering 
 disease, and with some appearance of sufF-^ring 
 closed his mortal career. At his own request the 
 body was opened by Messrs. Donovan and Mould, 
 who found tJje liver affected and very much en- 
 larged. The blood was poor and extremely 
 gerous, almost ind^'id separated into two parts ; 
 and some water was lodged in the region of the 
 heart. The following day, April 27tli, the last 
 sad officcH were paid by the officers and crew, and 
 a third poor shipmate was committed to the deep. 
 
CHAP. v.] FORGE AGAIN ERECTED. 
 
 325 
 
 Soon after the mournful ceremony was con- 
 cluded, a little snow-bunting was observed to 
 hover for a few seconds over the aperture 
 through which the body had been lowered, and 
 then to fly away. 
 
 For the preceding eighteen hours the wind 
 had freshened considerably from the south- 
 west, and at noon the weather being dark 
 with snow no observation could be got, 
 neither was any land in sight, though we con- 
 sidered we were setting with the entire body 
 of ice towards Mill Islands. The people 
 were occupied in refitting different parts of 
 the ship, and our winter housing was taken 
 down. So great indeed was the quiet we now 
 enjoyed, that the forge was again erected on the 
 ice, for the purpose of making and repairing 
 several articles of which we stood in need. No 
 water was visible : another flock of ducks passed 
 near. In the evening the wind veered to 
 W. N. W., and occasionally blew fresh in squalls. 
 Early on April 28th a few holes of water were 
 observed, but soon closed again. What how- 
 ever was more interesting, was an island faintly 
 distinguished from the mast-head, bearing south- 
 ist. At noon it was no longer in sight, in con- 
 sequence of the ship having drifted to the south- 
 ward. The temperature had once fallen so 
 low as 1"-, but. subsequently rose again to 
 
 s . 
 
 i, . H 
 
 ,)!• 
 
 
J < 
 
 ' ! 
 
 
 
 
 t i 
 
 
 326 
 
 ISLANDS IN SIGHT. [CHAP.V. 
 
 5° + . The latitude was 63° 58' N., and longitude 
 79° 04' 15" W., which made us about twenty-five 
 miles from the western extremity of Mill Islands. 
 The wind still blew from the same quarter, 
 neither was there any change around the ship. 
 
 April 29th. At daylight land was descried to 
 the south-east, and at noon the bearings, as 
 taken from the crow's-nest, were Mill Island 
 E. ^ N , Salisbury Island S. E. J E., and north- 
 east end of Nottingham Island S. J E. We 
 still remained undisturbed, though apparently 
 drawing nearer to Salisbury Island, which the haze 
 of the evening shut out from our sight. Another 
 large flock of ducks was observed flying towards 
 the north-v/8st. 
 
 April 30th. The wind had veered to north ; but 
 from the dullness of the weather our precise 
 situation, with respect to the land, could not be 
 ascertained. One large hole of water was made 
 out about three miles to the eastward, but this 
 soon afterwards closed, giving place to two of 
 smaller dimensions, which opened something 
 nearer t-^ us. The operations of the last week 
 had dono much to clear and cleanse the vessel, 
 and the upper deck having been scraped, there 
 was an air of comfort and neatness, to which the 
 climate not less than the anxieties of the winter 
 had for many months rendered us strangers. 
 The coldness of the westerly winds, which in 
 
 •ii r 
 
CHAP.V.J ADVANCE OF SEASON, 
 
 327 
 
 the night reduced the temperature below zero, 
 and in the day seldom suffered it to rise much 
 above, had proved an annoying drawback to 
 the exertions of the first Lieutenant; unfor- 
 tunately, however, we were not pressed for 
 time, for at present there was nothing around 
 but one wide range of closely packed ice. 
 Still the end of the month had arrived ; the sun 
 beamed brightly and travelled far in its diurnal 
 circuit ; the heralds of spring had flown beyond 
 us towards the north, and the gladness of ad- 
 vancmg summer was felt by all of us. At 6" p. m. 
 a part of Mill Islands was seen, bearing N.E. by 
 E-i E., and some other land near it, most likely 
 one of the group. The breeze freshened from 
 N.N.W. in the night, and on May 1st the weather 
 was keener than it had been for some time. A 
 momentar; -lir/ipse was caught of the land on 
 the starboard bjam, but the haze prevented our 
 distinguishing what part it was. The boats, which 
 it may be remembered had been hoisted high up 
 the rigging to keep tht i> .hove the frowning 
 masses which then threaten J to overwhelm us, 
 were now removed to the davits, in the hope that 
 danger of that kind was past. The horizon 
 was still obscured at noon ; but from sights with 
 the artificial horizon, the latitude was found to be 
 63° 49' N., and longitude 78° 54> iio' W.; thas 
 giving the anomalous result of our having been 
 
 Y 4 
 
 »r 
 
 It 
 
 il 
 
 141 
 
 %' 
 
as 
 
 an 
 
 528 
 
 PROBLEM. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 set to the westward against a westerly wind, and 
 with fresh squalls from the north a progress 
 south of only four miles. For this, I am at a loss 
 to account in any other manner than by sup- 
 posing the passage between the islands to have 
 been closely blocked up ; so that the southern ice, 
 acted upon by the floods which attend the dis- 
 ruption of the spacious lakes and rivers of the in- 
 terior, had been pressed forward with such force 
 as to resist even the vast body of ice bearing down 
 upon it from the north. The mast-head thermo- 
 meter, which throughout the winter had been in 
 a position eighty-seven feet above the sea now 
 varied so little from those on deck, seldom more 
 than 2° or 3° at the most, that it was taken down 
 and the registering of it discontinued ; and I may 
 take this opportunity of observing that there 
 were very few occasions which on trial were found 
 favourable for flying a kite with an appended 
 self-registering thermometer, during the former 
 portion of the winter when the floe was un- 
 broken, and that the operation was utterly im- 
 practicable in the latter part, when the ice was 
 ground into thousands of peaked and irregular 
 heaps, mounds, and barriers, which defied the 
 activity of the most alert. 
 
 The weather continuing obscured, nothing 
 could be distinguislied beyond a mile or two from 
 the ship, and on May ^2d there was no change ex- 
 
 feH^» 
 
CHAP. v.] CHAUTS DEFECTIVE. 
 
 329 
 
 1 
 
 cept a fresh layer of snow, and a south-east wind 
 instead of a northerly one. Several large flocks of 
 ducks flew past us *o the north, and one flock was 
 seen resting in a binall hole of open water about 
 a mile to the south. Land was indistinctly seen 
 abeam. The latitude at noon was 63" 39' N., 
 but the few miles gained to the south would 
 probably be lost again from the change in the 
 direction of the wind. The difficulty which 
 we experienced as to the exact bearings of 
 the land would have been in a great degree 
 obviated, had the observations and charts of the 
 only navigatoi's who, as far as I know, have ever 
 passed between these islands been transmitted to 
 posterity. " Purchas," says Sir John Barrow, in 
 his Chronological History of Voyages into the 
 Arctic Regions, *' is blameable, o a certain 
 degree, for the meagreness of Baffin's Journal, 
 and the suppression of a chart which accom- 
 panied it; for he admits, in a marginal note, 
 that * this map of the Author's for this and the 
 former voyage, with the tables of his journale 
 and sayling, were somewhat troublesome and 
 too costly to insert.' " The consequence was, 
 that the true places of these islands were lot 
 inserted in the maps j and though the hiatus 
 thus left has been in part filled up by other sea- 
 men, and among these, recently, by Sir Edward 
 Parry and Captain Lyon, yet from the fact of 
 
m 
 I 
 
 I 
 
 
 
 830 
 
 DAFFIN*S OBSERVATIONS. [CHAP.V. 
 
 all tlirse officers having passed north, south, or east 
 of the islaiids, and ^\ui\c to the west, tlieir remarks, 
 however excellent in themselves, were compar - 
 tively without value to us. It is therefore, I repeat, 
 much to bt regretted that the entire account of 
 Baffin's voyage in 1615 has not been handid 
 down to modern times ; for we find it stated 
 that, afler getting beyond Ca])e Comfort, they 
 " tacked and turned Lhc shippes head homewards, 
 without any further search ;** and again that, 
 after this, they " passed Nottingham's Isle, near 
 which they remained till the 27th of July, 
 observing the set of the tides, the time of 
 high water, &c., and taking in ballast. From 
 thence they proceeded between Salisbury and 
 Nottingham Islands." For our embarrassment, 
 however, as to the width of the channel between 
 the islands, ' depth and dangers, we were 
 compensat wi bj not experiencing any of those 
 turbulent coi^jruotions of the ice which had so 
 painfully harassed us before. We now drifted 
 to and fro with the mass, on which the ship was 
 still poised, with little inconvenience beyond the 
 awkwardness of our position and the irksome 
 monotony of the scene. 
 
 On May the 3d we were much nearer the 
 land, the north-west point of which bore S. 20° E. 
 The sky was blue, the weather nearly calm ; 
 and at noon the temperature was 24° +, and 55° + 
 
CHAP. v.] GULLS, DUCKS, &C. 
 
 331 
 
 in the su But that which most pie, ^< -, was 
 the sipfht of a gu.. Hying towards the i th-west. 
 I had lu or known these birds to arrive earlier 
 than the 7th ; and at Fort Reliance, at the east 
 end of Gre; Slave Lake, more than a degree to 
 the south ot our position, the same birds did not 
 appear before the 15th of i month. Hence, 
 tiiough no water was visible trom t mast-head, 
 1 felt confident that there mu me at no 
 
 great distance from us. The e was over- 
 
 cast, and snow continued to fa roughout the 
 better part of the night, but on am next day the 
 sun dispersed the gloom, and the weather, for 
 the i ^ time these several months, became plea- 
 sant Two rather extensive lanes of water 
 opened out on either side, about a mile away 
 from the ship, and at noon Nottingham Island 
 was still in sight. Some flocks of ducks being 
 detected, two of the officers, unable to resist the 
 temptation, went in quest of them. They re- 
 turned in the course of the afternoon, sunburnt 
 and weary, with the acquisition of two loons 
 instead of ducks ; and I cannot but suspect that 
 what before had been taken ibr ducks were also 
 loons. A few dovekies and three gulls were tlie 
 only other kinds of bi.as that had been seen; 
 but later in the day a white whale showed itself 
 for a few minutes. As the temperature in the 
 shade at 2" p. m. was 46" + , it was not surprising 
 
 ) 
 
 ill 
 
 f 
 

 IMAGE EVALUATION 
 TEST TARGET (MT-3) 
 
 // 
 
 
 ^ 
 
 // 
 
 
 J^ 4i. 
 
 '^ 
 
 < <;^ 
 
 V#>^ 
 
 s'- 
 
 2i 
 
 
 1.0 
 
 I.I 
 
 |^|28 
 
 2.5 
 
 1.8 
 
 L25 IIIIII.4 IIIIII.6 
 
 V] 
 
 <? 
 
 /^ 
 
 v: 
 
 %1:^:> .^<^ 
 
 
 //%^/ 
 
 r^jr 
 
 o 
 
 / 
 
 Photographic 
 
 Sciences 
 
 Corporation 
 
 23 WEST MAIN STREET 
 
 WEBSTER NY. 14580 
 
 (716) 872-4503 
 
^'-^^ 
 
(, 
 
 1 
 
 ii 
 
 w 
 
 I 
 
 Mi' 
 
 332 
 
 WATER ANKLE-DEEP. [cHAP.V. 
 
 that they should have experienced much diffi- 
 culty in picking their way over a surface so 
 extremely rugged, but I was scarcely prepared 
 to hear, as was the fact, that water bad been 
 found ankle deep. This was the effect of one 
 day's sun ; and if the thaw continued at the 
 same rate, there seemed every probability that a 
 large portion of the lighter pieces of ice would 
 soon be resolved into water, and that our release 
 would be earlier than we had anticipated. 
 
 May 5th. We appeared to be something 
 nearer to Nottingham Island, which, from being 
 high and hilly, now declined by an easy slope to 
 the southward. A lane or two of water was still 
 open ; and, besides many extensive floes in shore, 
 one, at least a mile and a half long and quite 
 even, was discovered at no great distance from 
 us. Such floes could not have subsisted where 
 we had been ;,. and it was therefore inferred that» 
 up to that time at least, there had been no 
 violent pressure in this quarter. This was the 
 more remarkable, as it is a fact well attested 
 that, about the spring tides, when the ice has 
 space to move about in, the violence and irregu- 
 larity of cross sets, together with that unac- 
 countable " bore," or furious rush of waters, of 
 which I have so often had occasion to speak, 
 have been experienced by all who have fre- 
 quented these straits, perplexing the Commanders, 
 
 i I ' 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 REFITTING. 
 
 333 
 
 and hampering their vessels so as to create 
 alarm for their safety. Sir Edward Parry men- 
 tions the buflfetings his ship received from the 
 eccentric motion of masses of ic?, which, under 
 the influence of a fresh working breeze, he was 
 unable to avoid ; and on several occasions Captain 
 Lyon was so startled at the sudden tumult of 
 waters around £he Griper, that he was under 
 great anxiety to know where the " wild eddy*' 
 would carry her; once, indeed, he says, "a 
 noise as of a beach surf was heard, and the 
 fog being very heavy, the boats were lowered 
 to tow our head off the supposed shore, but 
 the sky was suddenly cleared by the breeze, 
 and no land was seen in any direction.** 
 
 The Ci'ew were kept employed in refitting, 
 &c., and in the evening the top gallant masts 
 were swayed aloft and pointed. The next day. 
 May 6th, brought a rather fresh breeze from the 
 westward, and, at noon, the south-west point of 
 Nottingham Island in sight, bore S. E. by S. J S. 
 But one lane of water was seen, and that was to 
 the south ; beyond it, however, therv, appeared 
 to be a water sky. 
 
 On May 7th the ice was perfectly close, and 
 at noon we had been set nine miles to the south, 
 and five to the west ; the extremes of land at 
 8" A. M. having been from N. 84" E. to S. 60" E. 
 For the whole of the day the ice carried us to the 
 
 f ; 
 
 
 ■ i 
 
I 
 
 
 i 
 
 m 
 
 i 
 
 \ I' 
 
 334 
 
 HILLY COAST. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 southward, but still not a drop of water was iir 
 sight. Three burgomasters (Larus Glaucus) 
 flew past, and were followed by some flocks of 
 loons. 
 
 May 8th. There was no change in the ice, but 
 several flocks of birds were observed winging 
 their flight to the west. At noon we had gone 
 nine miles to the south of yesterday's position. 
 On clearing away the booms to caulk the deck, 
 the seams were found more open than was antici- 
 pated, and numberless rents were discovered 
 between them, all of which were now filled up 
 and made tight. The ice remained perfectly 
 quiet, and on May 9th there was no water in 
 sight, nor could the land be seen on account of 
 the haziness of the weather. About 7 ^ SO" p.m. 
 before sunset, the sky became clearer, and showed 
 us the coast of this part of Nottingham Island, 
 extending farther than we had yet seen to the 
 south-east. The distinct view now afTorded us, 
 gave an outline more marked than any hitherto 
 passed, for irregularity and sinuosity, ravines and 
 isolated hills. Of the hills, many had an elevation 
 of no less than one thousand or fourteen hundred 
 feet, and it is probable that some, in the interior, 
 were still higher, as their peaks also were 
 faintly visible. One, the nearest of the detached 
 heights, sprang abruptly from the comparatively 
 smooth summit of a shelving slope that rose 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 FLOCKS OP LOONS. 
 
 335 
 
 
 from the yet lower land abutting the sea, and in 
 
 shape resembled the roof of a large barn. Two 
 
 others, differing from the first in having more 
 
 ridged and rounded extremities, next caught the 
 
 eye, which, from these, wandered over a more 
 
 regular surface, until arrested by a gorge or pass. 
 
 To the north and west of this succeeded a 
 
 range of uneven heights, extremely varied and 
 
 novel. The southern termination appeared like 
 
 an island, but was supposed, in fact, to be con- 
 
 nected by a small ridge of low land. The 
 
 summits and rounded tops of a portion of this 
 
 extraordinary island were still enveloped in their 
 
 winter mantle, but innumerable patches proved 
 
 the influence of the adva < ng season. .. - 
 
 May 10th brought no change : not a living 
 creature was seen, nor a drop of water detected 
 within scop . of the horizon ; the ice, so far as 
 we were conscious, was motionless, though our 
 observations assured us that ve v,.re drifting 
 gradually to the south east. As dusk drew on, 
 two holes of water were seen in a south east di! 
 rection, but up to midnight they were not en- 
 larged. Very early on the 1 1 th an immense number 
 ofloons flew towards the west, and were shortly 
 afterwards followed by additional flocks which 
 seemed to pursue the same course. The sky 
 was overcast, and the land consequently indis- 
 tinct ; but there was little doubt that we had 
 
 J 
 
 ■\k 
 
336 
 
 SQUALLS. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 moved slowly towards the southern point of the 
 island. Soon after a light breeze sprung up from 
 the south west, and several lanes and holes of 
 water shortly appeared in that and other direc- 
 tions, though the ice immediately round the 
 ship continued exactly the same. Over all these 
 places there was a dark horizontal cloud. The 
 atmosphere being favourable for seeing remote 
 objects, it was observed, that beyond what had 
 been thought the termination of Nottingham 
 Island, there was an extensive line of low circuit- 
 ous coast, apparently dipping into the water, or 
 rather losing itself in the ice ; and to the right of 
 it, at a bearing of S. 35° E., other land was de- 
 tected, which could be no other than one of 
 Diggers Islands. 
 
 May 12. After midnight the breeze freshened 
 from E.S.E. and drifted us somewhat to the 
 N.W. along the land, now within a moderate 
 distance; a fact curious enough, since no 
 pressure had occurred inshore to make any va- 
 cant space for an admission. Such, nevertheless, 
 was the case. In the forenoon the wind veered 
 to south and blew with considerable violence in 
 squalls, bringing light snow which dissolved 
 on the deck as it fell. An interesting event was 
 noticed by one of the officers yesterday evening : 
 Lieutenant M*Murdo was outside the ship on 
 the ice, and his attention being awakened by a 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 RAIN. 
 
 887 
 
 Shrill screaming overhead, he looked round, and 
 saw a large white hawk with the tips of the wings 
 and the end of the tail black, chasing, what he 
 imagined to be a solan goose, but which, from 
 his description, I considered to be one of the 
 northern divers. The hawk kept always above 
 and repeatedly struck at it but without accom- 
 plishing its purpose, when, scared by the sound of 
 Lieutenant M* Murdo's dog-whistle, it wheeled 
 round and went off slowly towards the south, in 
 a direction for the coast of Labrador. The only 
 hawks of a similar description that I remember 
 to have seen, were a few, found on the rocky 
 borders of Artillery Lake in latitude 6r 66' N 
 and longitude 108" 24' W.; and it may be worth 
 remarking that the broad feathers of the tail are 
 held in such high estimation by the more war- 
 like tribes of Indians, that there is scarcely any 
 thing they will not give to obtain them. 
 
 In the latter part of the day the snow was 
 converted into drizzKng rain, the first we had 
 had for more than eight months, and in date 
 corresponding with remarkable precision to the 
 same circumstance in the interior of the Hudson 
 Bay Company's territories. At Fort Franklin, in 
 |atitude65" 1 1'56" N. an d longitude 123« 08' 52 "W. 
 in 1826, the first shower of rain fell on the 11th 
 of May. At Fort Enterprise in 1820, being in lati- 
 tude64°28'24" N., and longitude IIS^OGW W., 
 
 z 
 
 i 
 
338 
 
 SHIP LEAKY. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 i ! 
 
 i 
 I 1 
 
 t * , 
 
 and at Fort Reliance in 1834., in latitude 62° 46' 
 09" N. and longitude 1 09° 00 39" W., rain fell about 
 the same period; and now off Nottingham Island, in 
 latitude63° ll'^^" N. and longitude 78° 56' 30" W., 
 it came on the 12th May 1837 ; so that, in this 
 respect, two degrees of latitude and forty-four 
 of longitude occasioned far less difference than 
 might have been expected under circumstances 
 and modifications so various* A solitary raven 
 and some large flocks of ducks or loons were 
 seen going to the north-west, probably to open 
 water somewhere thereabouts. The rain, which 
 ran down the rigging and across the deck^ 
 served to tighten the former, and to prove the 
 leaky condition of the latter. It was, indeed, to 
 be expected that, twisted and shaken as the ship 
 had been, to say nothing of the chinks occasioned 
 by the climate, some leaks would show them- 
 selves, especially about the butt ends ; but the 
 water found its way through so many places, that 
 unfavourable as the position of the ship was 
 for caulking, it seemed prudent to do so at 
 once, even though a further repair might be 
 required '~3reafter when she came upright. 
 Accordingly on the 13th the carpenter com- 
 menced operations,, and the temperature being 
 much higher than usual, the opportunity was 
 taken to rattle down the rigging. No open 
 water was made out, but many dark clouds were 
 
CHAP, v.] 
 
 RAPID THAW. 
 
 339 
 
 hanging round the horizon. In the afternoon 
 the weather was much clearer though the sky 
 remained overcast, and there was certainly more 
 land free from snow than on the previous day: 
 the ice, too, surrounding the ship was hourly 
 becoming more honeycombed on the surface ; 
 fresh water found its way into the cracks ; several 
 pools gratified the sight ahead and astern as well as 
 m the cavities between the huge mounds ; and, 
 such was the softness of the under ice in some 
 few places, that both ohicers and men, while en- 
 deavounng to pass along, frequently sank above 
 the knee into water, until stopped by the sub- 
 stratum of ice. At 8" P. M. some long lanes of 
 water towards the south-west and Diggers Islands 
 appeared, and the whole sky in those points 
 assumed a dark steely-blue hue, which, as it 
 prognosticated, brought about midnight abun- 
 dance of rain, the thermometer being then 
 at 34 +, 
 
 May 14th. The welcome rain did not Vate 
 and the surface of the pack, stripped of the 
 frozen snow, displayed a variety of tints, by 
 which the age of its component parts might 
 easily be detected J among these, it was not the 
 least interesting to observe the dim and sombre 
 hue of irregular mounds, ridges, or peaks of 
 age-stricken ice, peering out conspicuously amidst 
 the more recent and brighter formations, like 
 
 z 2 
 
840 
 
 GLOOMY WEATHEn. [cHAP.V, 
 
 
 I 
 
 feudal castles frowning over a level waste. 
 After attendance at divine service, I was in- 
 formed by the officer of the watch that the ship 
 had settled down three inches forward, but an 
 alteration so trifling was not apparent on deck ; 
 and, what was far more consolatory was the fact 
 that the leak had taken up so much, as to make 
 it an easy task to keep it free with one pump, 
 used four or five times a day. At noon the 
 weather was thick and gloomy, with light rain, 
 ihe temperature being 35" + . Drizzling rain, 
 ultimately succeeded by snow, fell during most 
 of the night, and at daylight of May 15th water 
 could be made out from the crow*s-nest, extend- 
 ing from south-east to west. The thermometer 
 did not fall lower than 29°+ during the night, 
 and began to rise rapidly after S^ a. m. For the 
 first time this season the sails, which had been 
 wetted by the late rain, were loosed to dry. 
 The land was dimly visible and the sky still 
 overcast, but the same dark horizontal clouds 
 were always seen to the south-west. The breeze 
 freshened as the day declined, and some lanes of 
 water displayed themselves to the southward as 
 usual. 
 
 May l6th. When the land could be made 
 out, it was seen that we had set more to the 
 south, and by noon we were opposite the rounded 
 rocky hill, which had formed the terminating 
 
CHAP. V.J IMPllOVEMENT IN chew's HEALTH. 341 
 
 point of view on the lOth of May. It was 
 remarked that a lower continuation of land ran 
 beyond it. and now, a still more sloping part 
 ended in what, judging from some grounded and 
 up-turned pieces of ice lying off it, we imagined 
 to be a shoal. However, we were evidently 
 drifting clear between it and Digge's Islands, 
 which from the mast-head were seen to bear 
 directly astern, but the main land was not 
 visible. Countless flocks of loons, ducks, and 
 teal were winging their way to the northward, 
 all flying low, and what struck me as strange 
 and unusual, there was not a single one to be 
 found on the water ; for though they not unfre- 
 quently passed across and round it, as if tempted 
 to bathe and sport awhile, yet restrained, as it 
 seemed, by some more powerful motive, they 
 pressed onward to their destination. At noon 
 the temperature was 36°+, and even in the 
 night, under the influence of the north-west 
 wind, it only fell to Q6\ Upon inspection by 
 the medical officers the crew were reported to 
 be in reasonable good health : one alone was 
 unable to do duiy, though three or four more, 
 perfectly well in other respects, had not yet 
 recovered the complete use of their limbs. 
 Indeed, Barker's leg was as inflexible as stone. 
 As the sky cleared we were rather surprised to 
 find ourselves full ir sight of Digge's Group, 
 
 z 3 
 

 li! 
 
 S4« 
 
 ISLANDS. 
 
 [CHAl'.V. 
 
 with high craggy land stretching to the eastward. 
 Between the latter and Nottingham Island were 
 several lanes of water, which, either from the 
 change of tide, or some other cause, began gra- 
 dually to close, but were again found open early 
 on May 17th, the ship having by that time been 
 drifted more to the south-east. Vast numbers 
 of birds whizzed through the grey haze of the 
 morning, which, from a heavy lurid glare, min- 
 gled with a dull red tint, had all at once saddened 
 to mist. The sun, however, struggled through 
 it ; and as the vapour passed away we were glad- 
 dened by the sight of a lane of water in a 
 manner surrounding our pack, besides others not 
 very remote, and dark cloudy patches along the 
 horizon denoting still more. Salisbury Island 
 was also seen beyond the point of Nottingham, 
 as were Digge*s, and the wild-looking land a 
 little to the east of Cape Wolstenholm, which 
 must be much higher than was supposed by 
 Captain Lyon, whose description, however, 
 gives an excellent idea of it. " The land here- 
 abouts," he says, ** has a very remarkable 
 appearance, being broken into high perpen- 
 dicular bluffs, of from six to eight hundred 
 feet, between which the rocks were split into 
 deep ravines, descending abruptly to the water's 
 edge, and, at a few miles* distance, giving the 
 idea of their being the entrances to narrow 
 
 ■J^a^i^'^is:^ l^S*^. 
 
CHAP. V.J 
 
 POOLS OF W/.TER. 
 
 943 
 
 fiords. The rocks are apparently of gneiss, 
 tlie strati of which dip, with u considerable 
 curve, to the northward." I may add to this 
 account, that the land behind rises into round 
 and high acclivities, which were then in many 
 parts free from snow. By noon the ice a few 
 miles off assumed a more detached appear- 
 ance. Speculation as to when and where the 
 eagerly desired event of our liberation would 
 occur was now over, for it was evident that no 
 one could, with any show of reason, assign any 
 preference of place. The wind having set in 
 from the eastward slowly checked the outward 
 passage of the ice, though by the evening we 
 had altered the bearings of the different re- 
 markable bluffs and other projections more than 
 four points of the compass. 
 
 During the whole of May 18th we remained 
 much in the same position between the Labrador 
 Coast and the Islands, the t^^mperature at noon 
 being 36\ and 5V+ in the sun. 
 
 May 19th. There was no alteration in tlie 
 ice, and the ship was almost in the same place. 
 About 6^ P.M. the ice commenced setting fast to 
 the eastward, and near the main land seemed to 
 be easing out. Numerous flocks of loons flew 
 towards the south, and one snow bunting was 
 seen. Pools of water formed from the melting 
 of the ice and snow around the ship. The wind 
 having veered round to the north-eastward 
 
 z 4 
 
 r|i 
 
 in] 
 
 R-H 
 
3U 
 
 DIMINUTION OF SNOW. [CHAP.V. 
 
 ^/•i ij 
 
 '' :! 
 
 brought drizzly rain j and, as the temperature 
 fell during the night to 31° + , the rigging on 
 May 21st was partly coated with ice, which, as 
 the day grew warmer and the breeze freshened, 
 fell on the deck like a shower of glass. The 
 weather cleared up enough by noon to allow of 
 our seeing Salisbury Island, which, notwithstand- 
 ing a wind directly against us, we seemed to have 
 neared. This, as well as Nottingham Island, 
 were much more free from snow than when 
 seen two days before ; and, indeed, a manifest 
 diminution was visible over the surface of the 
 ice ; yet no lanes were in sight, and but one 
 solitary hole of water in any direction. A 
 lonely raven visited us for a few m?nutes, but no 
 other birds appeared. One seal, the first seen 
 for a long time, was observed to rise in a hole of 
 water. The temperature at noon was 36". The 
 next twenty-four hours produced no change but 
 that which was afforded by continued snow and 
 sleet, eventually subsiding into rain j and on 
 May 22d, exactly eight months since we had 
 ceased to have the control of the ship's motion, 
 there was not a hole of water to be seen from 
 the mast-head, nor was our position at all 
 altered. The temperature had been as low as 
 29" + , but got up to 38" + . Wind east. The 
 land was seen in the evening, but no change 
 worth mentioning occurred ; and after a night 
 of snow and sleet. May 23d found us almost in 
 
 \l^\ 
 
CHAP. v.] captain's STEWARD ILL. 
 
 345 
 
 as 
 
 the same place. We were then set back a few 
 miles to the westward, until the wind, veering 
 to W.S. W., brought us to our former position, 
 at the same time separating the ice into lanes, 
 which opened and closed more or less through- 
 out the night. 
 
 May 24th. The sky was overcast, but about 
 noon Salisbury Island could be just distinguished, 
 and by the bearing we seemed to have been 
 drifted to the east. The temperature was 23"+, 
 but subsequently rose to 37° + . After the favour' 
 able account whic^ I had so recently received of 
 the health of the crew, I certainly did not 
 expect to hear of any fresh attack, but I was 
 now given to understand that the malady had 
 fastened on my steward, though no one had 
 been more regular in taking exercise, or more 
 particular about his diet and comforts. The 
 symptoms, it is true, were at present but trifling ; 
 but as they had displayed themselves in the 
 same place and manner as in all the former 
 cases, there could be no doubt of the nature of 
 the malady, against which, therefore, there 
 seemed to be no security. The decks were not 
 only well ventilated and dry, but extremely 
 clean and comfortable, and there was certainly no 
 want of anti-scorbutic diet or generous nourish- 
 ment. I was the more distressed by this new 
 case as fearing that it might extend further, at a 
 time when the active services of every one 
 
346 
 
 SNOW. 
 
 [CHAP.V. 
 
 ^ I 
 
 would assuredly be required. It was observed 
 that we had gone more to the eastward in the 
 latter part of the day than during the whole of 
 the last fortnight, and as the evening closed 
 Nottingham Island bore astern, making that of 
 Salisbury more abeam. The wind veered half 
 round the compass and brought abundance of 
 snow, which continued without interruption 
 until noon of the 25th, when, from the obscurity 
 that prevailed, no land could be seen. The ice 
 looked white and wintry, the fresh- water pools 
 were all hard frozen ; and, with the solitary 
 exception of one opening, probably the effect of 
 the tide, the whole surface was again one 
 compact mass. The temperature was as low 
 as 22° + ; wind westerly. 
 
 By the 26th we had gone sufficiently to the 
 eastward, to be in sight of the extremity of 
 Salisbury Island as well as of a very high and 
 rocky part of the Labrador coast. On the 27th 
 the ship was set a little to the north-east, or 
 in a direction nearly across the straits. No 
 water was in sight, but immense flocks of 
 loons kept flying to the south. On the 28th 
 the weather was warmer but yet no lanes ap- 
 peared, though the entire body of ice had 
 assumed a more even appearance and was evi- 
 dently easing down. Two large birds like swans 
 flew past to the north. The temperature rose 
 at noon to 45" + . A couple of loons were 
 
 'I'j^rrx 
 
CHAP.V 
 
 MR. GORE SNOW-BLIND. 
 
 347 
 
 shot L; Mr. Gore. The day was dedicated to 
 the celebration of His Majesty's birth, the crew 
 being allowed an extra store of good things to 
 quicken their loyalty. There was little wind, 
 and therefore little change of any kind. On 
 the 29th the temperature, which had sunk to 
 27° + , ran up the scale until at noon it reached 48% 
 and in the sun 64° + . Our sportsman, Mr. Gore 
 after about ten hours' exposure on the ice, became 
 snow-blind. No water was to be seen. 
 
 On the 30th the weather was thick with 
 light snow, which shut out the land from 
 sight. The crew were again examined by the 
 medical officers, and reported to be a little 
 improved, though there was not one instance 
 of perfect recovery, and my steward was quite 
 lame. At a*' p. m. the east bluff of Salisbury 
 Island bore N.N.W., by which it seemed we 
 had been set something to the N.E. In the 
 night the wind blew fresh from the S.E., and 
 snow fell without cessation ; nor up to noon on 
 May 31st was there any change. Still no water 
 in sight, until at 5^ p. m, while the ice in the 
 distance was perfectly close, we were surprised 
 by the sudden opening of a serpentine lane 
 thu-ty yards astern, extending to either side of 
 the ship. The wind blew fresh in squalls during 
 the night, and the entire body of the ice appeared 
 to be setting to the north-east. 
 
 ■6 
 
 i 
 
 < 
 
348 
 
 [chap. VI. 
 
 CHA? TER VI. 
 
 ftl^ 
 
 Feast of Loons. — Mr. Vaughans Path. — Perilous Ex- 
 cursion, — White Whales. — Carpenters busy under' 
 mining Ship. — Result of Labours, — Polar Expeditions. 
 
 — Narwhales. — Report of Health. — Cannonading Floe. 
 
 — Cheerful Labours in sawing away the Ice. — Employ- 
 ment for Armourer. — Impediments from Calves. — New 
 Rent discovered. — Report of the Ship's Drift. — Ship 
 bursts her Bonds. — Novelty of Scene. — Stem-post shattered. 
 
 — Officers' Opinion in favour of Return to England. — 
 Awkwardness of Situation. — Expedition frustrated. — 
 Ship's Draught increased. — Visited by Esquimatix. — 
 Ship struck by a Floe. — Shattered Condition of Ship. — 
 Sail for England. — Arrival at Chatham. 
 
 In the diary of the last month I have had few 
 incidents to record, and 1 am sensible that to 
 the general reader it may have presented little to 
 attract attention. It is, however, the duty of 
 iiavigators to detail with some minuteness such 
 fects as, however in themselves uninteresting, 
 may hereafter be found useful as guides to those 
 who follow in the career of adventure, and I 
 proceed therefore with my journal. 
 
 June 1st. The temperature fell to 23"+, but 
 the lane astern, as well as two or three others, 
 continued open, and some loons and seals being 
 discovered, several parties weat in quest of them, 
 but without much succ^si>. Mu^h light snow 
 
CHAP.VI.] FEAST OF LOONS. 
 
 349 
 
 fell during the night, but the weather cleared up 
 on the 2d ; and shortly after 8" a. m. the lanes, or 
 rather the one close to the ship, opened so much, 
 that some of the officers went out in the dingy, 
 while others made a long circuitous walk. The 
 party altogether shot upwards of thirty loons, 
 which being first skinned, and allowed to steep 
 for two days in salt and water, were then dressed 
 like jugged hare, and with red wine sauce and 
 currant jelly, were esteemed by us as nearly equal 
 in flavour. At all events we found them a 
 grateful change from the preserved meats and 
 other cured stock in our possession. At noon 
 the lane began to get narrower, but in the course 
 of three hours I had watched no insignificant 
 quantity of detached pieces of ice stream 
 without noise from the main body, and drift 
 rapidly to the north-east as far as the lane would 
 allow. This was encouraging, as betokening 
 the facility with which a general separation 
 would take place, whenever the barrier farther 
 down the straits should ease off sufficiently to 
 allow of it. Salisbury Island bore directly 
 ahead, and the Labrador Coast was merely in 
 sight. The temperature varied from 22"+ to 
 42°+. The ice became more slack, and began 
 to assume a promising look to the eastward. 
 Numerous parties were tempted by the novelty to 
 try their skill in shooting, and as the cheerfulness 
 
 -M 
 
 s4 
 
 \' 
 
 
350 
 
 Mil. vauohan's path. [chap. VI. 
 
 I 
 
 ■.M 
 
 which the sport was calculated to excite was 
 valuable at the moment of recovery from indis^ 
 position, I encouraged the inclination. There 
 were, however, other substantial advantages ; for 
 such v,as the success of the day, that a sufficient 
 number of loons were killed to allow of the dis- 
 tribution of an extra allowance to each mess in 
 the ship. Many, too, were the anecdotes related 
 on the occasion. The Larus Glaucus, or Bur- 
 gomaster, seemed to defy the powder and shot 
 of the ablest marksman, contenting itself, when 
 struck, with merely looking round, uttering a 
 short guttural screech, and flying deliberately to 
 the nearest wounded loon, which he dispatched 
 in so artist-like a manner as to leave no other 
 remnants than the clean bones and a few of the 
 larger feathers. But the boatswain, Mr. Vaughan, 
 had met with the oddest adventure. Having 
 walked over soft and hard ice along the margins 
 of the different lanes, sinking to various depths 
 in treacherous holes, and always holding a 
 charged gun, ready to fire at the first thing that 
 came within hail, but all to no purpose; he 
 very resignedly stuck the butt end of his piece 
 into the snow, and thrusting both hands in his 
 pockets, walked up and down so much after bis 
 usual methodical fashion, that he had soon beaten 
 down a path the exact length of the forecastle 
 of the ship. In this mechanical perambulation 
 
CHAP. VI.] 
 
 A WALRUS. 
 
 351 
 
 some time passed away, and probably his thoughts 
 Were wandering to far other scenes, when sud- 
 denly, from among the pieces of ice at his feet, 
 up sprang a walrus. The stranger startled the 
 boatswain beyond measure; and, far from 
 attempting to touch his gun, he stood staring 
 with riveted astonishment at the long tusks, and, 
 to use his own language, the ^^ grey heard** of 
 the apparition before him, until the walrus 
 having sufficiently breathed itself, and less curious 
 than the astonished seaman, quietly sank again 
 to the dark recesses of the deep. He then 
 remembered it was a sea-horse, and came on 
 board with the account. 
 
 Towards night the ice opened, and streamed 
 away to the eastward past the ship, insomuch 
 that it became necessary to dispatch the boat for 
 some parties, who suddenly discovered that, in- 
 stead of being on the main pack, they were 
 slowly floating away on detached masses. The 
 utmost extent of water was not more than two 
 miles, in a south-west direction towards Hud- 
 son's Bay, and this, during the night, was par- 
 tially closed, though on June 3d there was an 
 appearance of many slack places in the same 
 quarter. The officers amused themselves in en- 
 deavouring to kill an immense seal, that incau- 
 tiously rolled across a piece of ice within three 
 hundred yards from us; but, notwithstanding 
 
 
 w 
 
352 
 
 PERILOUS EXCURSION. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 Ml 
 
 1 ' 
 
 Ml 
 
 the correctness of their aim, it contrived to reach 
 the margin and plunge into the water. Those 
 of the crew who had been sporting were equally 
 unfortunate, having met with few birds ; among 
 those shot, however, may be mentioned a fat 
 dovekie, and a kind of widgeon. The weather 
 cleared and showed us Salisbury Island, which 
 bore N.W. J W. At 2" p. m., it being then 
 spring-tide, the ice, gradually slackening beyond 
 our pnck, set to the N.E. for two hours, after 
 which it partially closed again, leaving, however, 
 a few holes, to which some of the officers and 
 men went off, for the purpose of shooting what- 
 ever they /night find. But about S^ p. m. there 
 was a partial slacking out of the ice between 
 them and us, and the water being soon covered 
 with brash and sludge, which lay thickly between 
 the larger pieces, it was impossible to send out a 
 boat. The officers, who, being disappointed of 
 their sport, were nearer the ship, found no dif- 
 ficulty in returning ; but the men, who had 
 straggled farther, were very diiferently situated. 
 They had not only a lane to cross, but had to 
 pick their way from piece to piece over two 
 miles of loose ice *, a labour which we, unable to 
 render the least assistance, watched with no 
 little uneasiness, lest those who were less alert 
 should fall into the water or be disabled. They 
 managed, notwithstanding, to arrive on board 
 
CHAP. VI.] ICE MORK COMPACT. 
 
 353 
 
 shortly after I 
 
 of 
 
 course much fagged 
 with their exertions. # 
 
 ' June 4th. The ice closed at 4>^ a. m., and, 
 with some trifling variety, remained so till noon, 
 when we were about four miles south, and 
 two east, of our former position. The tem- 
 perature had ranged from 23° + to 42** +, with 
 a light south-east wind. There was no favour- 
 able change of any description, either in the 
 afternoon or throughout the night, the ice being 
 rather more compact than heretofore, a fact 
 which I was unable to comprehend, as the wind 
 w-as much too light to affect it in any way, 
 still less when subject to the counter influence 
 Of a spring-tide. The most probable conjecture 
 seemed to be, that this very tide might have dis- 
 lodged some heavy bodies of ice from the many 
 friths and bays to the north of Resolution Island j 
 and that, aided by the southerly current, together 
 with the light winds which had prevailed of late 
 between south-east and south, those bodies might 
 have been driven against, or partly into, the 
 mouth of Hudson's Straits, and so blocked up 
 the space between that and our position. Certain 
 it was, we had scarcely altered the bearing of 
 Salisbury Island, which at noon was N. 60° W. 
 In the afternoon, while occupied in exercising 
 the crew at small arms, and afterwards in reefing 
 and furling, the wind came from the eastward 
 
 A A 
 
^54> 
 
 SNOW. 
 
 [chap. VI. 
 
 \trith more than usual violeuce, bringing with it 
 so much snow, that, in tlie course of four hours, 
 it lay eight inches deep on the deck j deeper, 
 that is to say, than had been the case on any 
 previous occasion, in the same time. The ice 
 was closely wedged, without a single hole of 
 water so far as we could see. 
 
 On .Tune 6th there was a partial slackening 
 out, within a few hundred yirds of the ship, but 
 the whole soon closed agaii, forming one un- 
 broken body in every dire<:tion. That such had 
 not always been the case i:i other seasons we are 
 assured from the fact, that Bylot and Baffin 
 found little or no impediment to their sailing 
 past this very spot in June. Still, the Hudson's 
 Bay Company's ships, admonished no doubt by 
 experience, seldom or never leave the Thames 
 earlier than the 6th June ; and, without ques- 
 tion, last year they must have found tiiat date 
 quite soon enough. At noon the weather, which 
 had been misty, cleared a little, but not suf- 
 ficiently so to enable us to see land. The tem- 
 perature varied from 25° to 49° +. The wind 
 now veered to west, and, like that from the op- 
 posite quarter, brought snow, from which indeed 
 we were seldom exempted. The ice presented 
 an a,ppearance of opening, and with a fresh 
 breeze down, or, in other words, out of the 
 Straits, it might have been supposed that 
 
CHAP. VI.] 
 
 STHONO WINDS. 
 
 355 
 
 this would continue for several hours j yet our 
 conjectures in this, as in many other cases, were 
 wrong, and it closed again almost immediately. 
 Neither was there any improvement during tlie 
 night, and on June 7th the whole surface was 
 more compact than had been observed for a 
 month past } not a drop of water was to be seen. 
 The thickness of the weatlier intercepted our 
 view of the land, though, from a hasty glimpse, 
 Salisbury Island seemed farther to the north. 
 
 Tiie wind, which continued to blow steadily 
 from the same quarter, but with increasing vio. 
 lence, at length began to have some effect on 
 the immense suiface surrounding us; and al- 
 though at midnight no water was visible, shortly 
 after, on June 8th, a lane opened out astern, 
 extending, with some interruption, three or four 
 hundred yards to the south-west, in which di- 
 rection several large holes were subsequently 
 seen. The ice immediately astern and adjoining 
 the lane was more loose and disengaged from the 
 larger compact masses than it had previously 
 been, so that there was fresh reason to hope that 
 the seaward body was streaming away from the 
 entrance of the Straits and the neighbourhood of 
 the Labrador coast. At noon we had drifted 
 by estimation, about eleven miles: Salisbury 
 Island was no longer to be seen. The latitude 
 placed us one mile to the south of yesterday's 
 
 A A 2 
 
 I ! 
 
 I 
 
h 
 
 If 
 
 h 
 
 a 
 
 iSfi 
 
 WHITE WHALES. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 positior , All repairs ah..iit the ship and rigging 
 being completed, there was little occupation to 
 be found il • the crew, wiio, by way of ex- 
 tercise, were regularly fl rilled by the Sergeant of 
 M wines, under the n pection of Lieutenant 
 Smyth, and made to march quick and travel hard 
 round the upper deck, for an hour or more, until 
 Ihey had been properly breathed for the day. 
 
 Having now more pemmican than with our 
 weakened crew could be made use of on boat 
 service, and as this was a perishable article, I 
 ordered it to be issued once a week, in the place 
 of preserved meat j the store of which, if not 
 required, might be appropriated hereafter in any 
 manner Government thought proper. In the 
 afternoon it blew a gale which separated the ice 
 so far as to leave a considerable space of open 
 water, where, for the first time this season, some 
 white whales were observed. At 6" p. m. land 
 was descried to the south, the bearings of which 
 were from S.W. to E. S. E. 
 
 June 9th. There was much loose ice to the 
 eastward, mingled with several smooth and 
 regular floes, which evidently had neither been 
 exposed to pressure nor otherwise i v bed, 
 except as we now beheld them. The Ic:. ^ui l> 
 ing our pack was unaltered in area, though 
 slightly diminished in thickness from the in- 
 creased temperature of the day. At night the 
 
CIIAP.M.] THICKNESS OV ICE. 
 
 357 
 
 pools still froze, being invariably found crusted 
 with ice in the moruing ; still, from the effect 
 of the sun and i 'h> heat radiated from the sides 
 of the ship, upwards of two teet of ice and 
 frozen snow had slowly sunk away, thus almost 
 exposing the keel from the fore-toot to tiie fore- 
 chains, while a deep trench resulting from the 
 same cause extended quite round, exhibiting 
 above it the ruins of the ponderous waves, ia 
 the hard gripe of which the whole of the after 
 part of the ship lay immovably wedged, 
 T'here were no means of ascertaining the actual 
 thickness of the accumulated masses, wh'ch in 
 so extraordinary a manner cradled us up, but 
 some of the pieces floating in the clear , nace 
 were estimated at forty feet beneath the lii e of 
 flotation; and, indeed, from the force applied 
 during the convulsions so providentially escap jd, 
 when the ship with all her heavy load was felt 
 rising under our feet, it could hardly have been 
 less, while from the irresistible pressure that 
 drove one mass under another, it might have beei i 
 even more. It seemed, therefore, indispensable^ 
 that before we could get free, the weaker bodies 
 surrounding us and as yet adhering, should be 
 entirely detached, so as to afford room for our 
 supporters to glide away easily. An operation 
 of this magnitude could only be accomplished 
 by natural means ; but in order to divert the 
 
 A A 3 
 
 I 
 
358 
 
 OFr CHAllLES ISLAND. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 J! l< 
 
 ^! 
 
 minds of the crew^ they were set to work with 
 pickaxes, spades and axes, to reduce the for* 
 midable summits of the nearer waves, and mark 
 out the most feasible line of escape, when acci- 
 dent or time should favour us. There was a 
 great deal of loose ice between us and the land, 
 which the fineness of the day brought clearly 
 into view. It turned out to be Charles Island ; 
 so that the late gale had driven the ice rapidly 
 to the eastward, and, as regarded the ship, some- 
 thing to the south. At noon the land bore from 
 S.S.W. to E.S.E.; and, as seen from the deck, 
 had the appearance of three islands. The ice 
 closed again. 
 
 The adverse direction from which the breeze 
 came kept the ice much closer than of late, and 
 for a few hours we seemed to retrograde ; but in 
 the night this ceased, and up to noon, June 10th, 
 we might be said to be stationary, the ice then 
 being very compact. The temperature varied 
 only from 30° to 38°+. The following night 
 we were set a few miles off the land in conse- 
 quence of the breeze having veered to south- 
 east, and increased in strength j and though for 
 a brief interval some openings were observed, 
 yet they soon closed again, and in the morning 
 of June 11th, the ice was again perfectly com- 
 pact. However, soon after divine service, the 
 weather became so fine, that little rills of water 
 
CHAP. VI.] BRIGHTENED HOPES. 
 
 35D 
 
 were pouring down from the more elevated 
 pieces of ice into the hollows and thence into the 
 sea. Before noon, a hole had appeared within 
 fifty paces of the starboard quarter, and, singular 
 enough, without other apparent cause than a 
 trifling motion in the looser floating ice. About 
 the same time, and without any noise, a ser- 
 pentine lane of water unexpectedly broke on our 
 sight, at no greater distance than one hundred 
 and sixty yards. It was connected with the 
 hole just referred to, and extended across the 
 bow towards some brash and mixed ice to the 
 south-west, in the limit of which direction, for 
 some days past, a dark lane of water had been 
 more or less visible. The appearance, as if by 
 magic, of an opening so near the ship, was pro- 
 bably the most fortunate event that could have 
 happened, for until some such occurrence, we 
 could indulge but slender expectations of a speedy 
 release ; whereas, now, the hopes which frequent 
 disappointment had dimmed suddenly bright- 
 ened, and cast an enlivening gleam on the future. 
 The temperature had not been lower than 30° + . 
 . Up to noon of June 12th, the only further 
 change was another separation between two of 
 the heavier floe pieces, still nearer to the star- 
 board side of the ship; after which another 
 twenty-four hours of tedious uniformity rolled 
 heavily away amidst a dead calm and thick 
 
 A A 4 
 
 I 
 
 ii »i 
 
 ^ mm 
 
 
 ■ii 111 
 
 iiii 
 
 •1 lit 
 
S60 
 
 DIMINUTION OF ICE. [cHAP.VI, 
 
 atmosphere. One novelty indeed there was 
 in those stagnant hours, and that a suffi- 
 ciently gratifying one, viz. that the temperature 
 remained above the freezing point through- 
 out the night, the lowest having been 33°+, 
 At noon of June 14th it was 54°+, the sky 
 being still overcast and no land in sight. Some 
 lanes of water appeared, but none of any conse- 
 quence. Within the last few days the upper 
 portion of the ice had undergone a perceptible 
 diminution from increased warmth, but there 
 was still an immense thickness to be dissolved ; 
 and one summer, such as this region could bq 
 expected to afford, might not suffice for th^ 
 destruction of so vast and, as it seemed, inter- 
 minable a body, without the co-operation of some 
 more powerful and speedy influence. The im« 
 potence of our own efforts had been already mani- 
 fested in the attempts in which, although zeal and 
 self-interest had prompted every man to do his 
 utmost, we found ourselves unable to effect more 
 than to level down some of the inequalities of the 
 surface near the stem, or on either side of the 
 ship. Nothing, indeed, favourable could be ex- 
 pected, until the ice should become slack enough 
 to allow the imprisoned under pieces to rise to 
 the surface. 
 
 The period had again arrived for examining 
 the crew, who were reported to be in much the 
 
 \ 
 
CHAP. VI.] 
 
 INVALIDS. 
 
 36t 
 
 same state, some still continuing lame, and Gibbs, 
 poor fellow, barely able to walk once or twice 
 along the deck by the aid of a stick in one hand^ 
 and resting on the bulwark, or whatever else he 
 could grasp for support with the other. Jones 
 also was unable to do any duty, though in a 
 less degree affected, while Barker and Anderson 
 continued to complain of the stiffness of their 
 legs. Smith (my steward) was still suffering, 
 and walked very lame, and two more were tem- 
 porarily on the sick list. Indeed, the knee or 
 ankle joints of two-thirds on board were more or 
 less affected with shooting pains or twitches, 
 betokening weakness, and few could take even 
 ordinary exercise without sensations of languor 
 and uneasiness. The lowest temperature of this 
 day was 32° +. 
 
 The prevalence of the northerly breeze, 
 though moderate, was sufficient to bind the 
 whole of the surrounding ice on the Labrador 
 side, and consequently our change of position, 
 at the most, did not exceed two miles to the 
 south. Some few holes of water were occa- 
 sionally seen as the ice varied in its movements, 
 but generally speaking it was more packed and 
 forbidding than had of late been customary. 
 Much, however, was expected from a westerly 
 wind, whenever it might come, and in the mean- 
 time there was some satisfaction in witnessing 
 
 J. I" 
 
mm 
 
 362 
 
 CARPENTERS BUSY. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 'V;,: 
 
 w 
 
 the diminution of the upper ice, which wasted 
 away from one to two inches in the twenty-four 
 hours. 
 
 On June 15th not fewer than twenty-six 
 planks of the ship's side could be counted from 
 the fore chains directly down to the ice, and as 
 this had dissolved enough to bring within reach 
 of the carpenters several more streaks, prepara- 
 tions were made to caulk and coat them with 
 coal tar like the rest. It was found, too, that 
 we could, by removing the ice down to the water 
 level, reach the upper part of the damaged stern- 
 post, though this was not to be accomphshed 
 without hard labour, since the mere pressure had 
 formed an icy cement so tough and adhesive, 
 that fragments stuck to the planking, even be- 
 tween the narrow breadth of the strokes of the 
 pickaxe. It looked, indeed, as if the ship had 
 been placed in a bed of some plastic compo. 
 sition, which time had indurated into the solidity, 
 and almost the substance, of limestone iOck» 
 However, under the direction of Lieutenant 
 Smyth, the men contrived to get below the ten 
 feet mark, and it was then ascertained that the 
 doubling as well as the split stern-post were more 
 twisted from their true positions than when last 
 seen about tliree months ago. The water in 
 some measure interrupted the proceedings, but 
 with the assistance of the fire engine it was kept 
 
CHAP. VI.] UNDERMINING SHIP. 
 
 36B 
 
 y 
 
 SO much under, that the work could be con- 
 tinued, while a second party, co-operating with 
 the former, went on steadily undermining the 
 fore-foot, which has been described as 'jesting 
 upon the surface of the ice. It will be readily 
 understood that the object of these proceedings 
 was to remedy, as effectually and speedily as pos- 
 sible, whatever portion was accessible of the seri- 
 ous injuries which it was probable the keel and 
 lower section of the hull had sustained ; and, 
 though nature would in time have effected the 
 same thing without labour of ours, yet it was 
 of moment to be ready for any of those extraor- 
 dinary changes which, through the disruption of 
 the surrounding ice, would sooner or later launch 
 us into freedom. 
 
 Three swans, a flock or two of ducks, and an 
 occasional plover or snipe passed towards the 
 north, while a few loons and two or three kinds 
 of gulls flew round or hovered over the different 
 holes of water. At noon Charles Island was 
 just distinguishable from aloft, and soundings 
 were obtained in forty-six fathoms on a rocky 
 bottom with small pebbles, and a part of some 
 crustaceous animal. This corresponded exactly 
 with the soundings, as given in Captain Lyon's 
 chart, and al^ those of the Hudson's Bay Com- 
 pary in our possession. 
 
 The labour of excavation was carried on with 
 
 'i 
 
i 
 
 !!( 
 
 i ,'■ 
 
 S64^ 
 
 RESULT OF LABOURS. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 cheerful alacrity, and by the incessant use of 
 draining machines, in the shape of the engine, 
 boats* pumps, and buckets, we contrived to 
 penetrate as low as the seven feet markj but the 
 sea water then beginning to ooze through the 
 under ice, rendered abortive any further attempt 
 to keep the space clear. This result, however, 
 had been gained. It was ascertained that the 
 doubling, and a portion of the stern-post below, 
 projected over to the larboard side several feet ; 
 and that another portion, from the ten feet six 
 mark to seven feet five, was incapable of repair. 
 It was, consequently cut away. The night 
 passed tranquilly, and a flock or two of geese 
 flew past towards the north. No change trans- 
 pired among the ice until early in the morning 
 of June l6th, the anniversary of our sailing from 
 the Nore, when it began to slacken round the 
 heavy ice which we were partly entrenched in 
 and partly upon. The weather, too, cleared, for 
 the wind came lightly from the south, and the 
 distinctness of the blue land (the snow being now 
 gone) of Charles Island, was a convincing proof 
 that we had been drifted a few miles in that 
 direction. Still there was not the faintest indi- 
 cation or promise of an open space ; for, let the 
 eye roam where it would, there was one wide glare 
 of dazzling white but too familiar to our senses. 
 It is not a little remarkable to reflect on the 
 
l» 
 
 CHAP. VI.] POLAR EXPEDITIONS. 
 
 "365 
 
 various ineffectual attempts that have been made 
 by ^different commanders in modem days, to 
 fill up the small blank on the northern charts, 
 between the bottom or south part of .Regent's 
 Inlet and Point Tumagain. Parry's and Frank- 
 lin's achievements are too well known to require 
 observation or eulogium from me; yet the 
 former could not penetrate through Fury and 
 Hecia Strait, and the latter found it imprac- 
 ticable, from the damaged condition of his 
 canoes, the want of provision, and the advanced 
 state of the season, to proceed beyond Point 
 Turnagain. Of Sir John Ross's eventful expe- 
 dition all have heard. My own, in search of 
 him, is also before the public. Captain Lyon, in 
 trying to reach Repulse Bay by the Welcome, 
 was baffled by a succession of bad weather and 
 heavy gales ; and now again, I, acting upon the 
 united experience of most of the distinguislied 
 names just mentioned, under circumstances con- 
 sidered favourable, after getting nearly within 
 sight of my port, am stopped by drift ice, at 
 what is generally the very best period for navi- 
 gatmg the Polar Seas — am frozen fast, in Octo- 
 ber 1836, at the entrance of Frozen Strait—and 
 now, June 16th, am carried into Hudson's Strait, 
 on some of the very same ice that originally 
 begirt the ship, without having had it once in 
 my power either to advance or retreat. In 
 
m 
 
 DIVERSIONS. 
 
 [chap. VI. 
 
 hh 
 
 i»,i 
 
 !;■ ' 
 
 short, from north, south, east, and west, the 
 attempt lias been made, and in all equally with^ 
 out effect J and yet, with a tolerably open 
 season, the wholp liffair is within the accomplish* 
 ment of six months. 
 
 The crew were variously employed, but 
 principally in removing the ice from under the 
 fore-foot, the bend of which was literally above 
 the level of the sea, now ascertained by the 
 bursting up of the water from beneath ; on the 
 other hand, the stern-post was immersed or 
 imbedded a little more than nine feet. The 
 officers also had their occupations : some of the 
 keener sportsmen lurked for the chance of a 
 shot ; others were speculating on the possibility 
 of coaxing the ship*s peas to germinate in a 
 heterogeneous composition of coal dust. A 
 fishing line, too, was set, but the most per- 
 severing had not been rewarded even by a 
 nibble. My aim was to encourage every thing 
 that could relieve the mind by abstracting it 
 from a too fixed attention to our situation ; and 
 as there were no complaints, it is fair to pre- 
 sume that the end was in a great measure 
 attained. Though the temperature at noon was 
 46°+, and with a blackened bulb thermo- 
 meter 66" in the sun, yet it had been as low 
 as 29° + in the night, and consequently the fresh 
 and brackish pools were once more coated with 
 
CHAP.VI.] INCREASE OF WATER. 
 
 S67 
 
 ice. Little transpired throughout the night, 
 but on June 17th the wind veered to the N.W., 
 and the ice began to open out all round, ex- 
 posing by noon considerably more water than 
 had yet been seen. A fog soon rose from it, 
 which so completely darkened the sky that we 
 neither saw land nor got observations, and were 
 consequently ignorant whether we were drifting 
 down the Straits or not. The ship appeared to 
 have risen bodily up one inch during the twenty, 
 four hours j but this of course was attributable 
 to the thawing of the ice on the surface. A 
 small fish was found in the mouth of a gull 
 (boatswain), and more ducks and geese flew 
 towards the north. By 4" p.m. the ice was 
 again cemented, and subsequently Charles Island 
 was seen, the position indicating that we had 
 been set a short distance to the south and east 
 Dark patches of sky created by the vapour from 
 open water appeared all round the horizon, 
 except towards the main land, in the direction 
 of which were some extensive floes of a remark- 
 ably even surface. One or two, of minor 
 dimensions, could be just descried to the east- 
 ward J and as a conclusive proof that there was 
 something more than a mere opening and 
 shutting in of the ice by the action of successive 
 tides, several pieces of broken and discoloured 
 mounds, quite new to us, were swept near and 
 
 ii'ii 
 
 L>' i! 
 
II-'! ' 
 
 • 
 
 St)8 
 
 A GALE. 
 
 I 
 
 '\ I 
 
 [CHAP.VI. 
 
 ultimately past the ship. The temperature sank 
 to 30°+ in the night, and tlie pools of fresh 
 water froze over. Much small snow also fell 
 without intermission up to noon of June 18th, 
 with a temperature of 43° + . The ice again 
 moved about with great irregularity, flattering 
 Us one hour by its loose and disconnected 
 aspect, and annoying us the next by resuming 
 its compactness. Yet these transiticn^v unsatis- 
 factory as they were, betokened an activity of 
 some sort towards the entrance of the Straits, 
 which might therefore be clearing so as to ahow 
 the western ice to drift down. The haziness of 
 the weather concealed the land, but the latitude 
 made us still farther south. 
 
 In the afternoon soundings were obtained in 
 eighty-five fathoms, on a rocky bottom. The ice 
 opened out towards night, and a solitary walrus 
 showed its huge frame above water but made 
 no long stay. About midnight, and on June 
 19th, the wind blew from the E.S.E., and, 
 increasing to a gale, speedily set the ice in 
 motion all round us. Occasionally, streams of 
 drift-pieces drove, at the rate of two miles an 
 hour, against the corners or edges of our heavy 
 floe-ruins ; and though without any perceptible 
 shock or injuiy at the time, yet, as it afterwards 
 appeared, with effective force, since, at 11'' a. m., 
 a large strip silently separated itself iVom our 
 
CHAP. VI.] 
 
 BOLT STARTED. 
 
 SG9 
 
 general mass. It was then that numerous lanes 
 and holes of water ranged themselves in a line 
 exactly across the direction of the wind, almost 
 up and down the Straits ; and the land becoming 
 visible during a partial cessation of sleet, snow, 
 and rain, with which we had been refreshed, the 
 ice-mate, Mr. Green, imagined he could make 
 out several conical tents, from whose tops smoke, 
 as he thought, issued. Unfortunately, dark clouds 
 soon obscured that part of the land, which seemed 
 like an island, depriving us, for tiie present, of 
 the satisfaction which the realization of this idea 
 would have afforded. On inspecting the hull, 
 as was customary, it was discovered that one of 
 the copper bolts, situated in the eleventh plank 
 below the fore. part of the main chains, on the 
 larboard side, had started, and projected one- 
 eighth of an inch outside the doubling j a cir- 
 cumstance that made it necessary to cut beneath 
 the head and clinch it afresh. Again, while em- 
 ployed in clearing out the fore part of the bread- 
 room, for the purpose of getting at coals and 
 provisions, just below the broken stringer on the 
 starboard side, one of the through bolts of the 
 lining was found to have started, and, from the 
 mere collapsing of the after part of the ship, one 
 of the casks had been actually pressed to such a 
 degree, as to stick into the lining. Prudence, 
 therefore, required that the stowage should not 
 
 B B 
 
 »n 
 
370 
 
 ICE MORE OPEN. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 be disturbed until we were afloat, for the ship 
 still inclined over as before, and it might be 
 that, at intervals, a strain was thrown on that 
 particular part. 
 
 The east end of Charles Island bore S.W., 
 and the weather was ilark and gloomy, with 
 a temperature of 31" +. The ice, this after- 
 noon, was more detached and open than it 
 had been during the season; and had the 
 ship been freed of her bonds, there was space 
 enough to have moved two or three miles to 
 the westward. But, as it was uncertain when 
 that consummation so devoutly wished would 
 take place, or what might be her state when 
 afloat, as it was possible that she might be 
 near the land, or in a situation requiring to 
 be immediately worked, I thought it right to 
 make such preparations for steering her, as the 
 urgency of the occasion might demand. From 
 what had been already seen, there were reasons 
 for apprehending an insuperable difficulty in 
 shipping the rudder; and, indeed, if, as was 
 conjectured, the split stern-post projected three 
 or four feet at right angles to the keel, to say 
 nothing of the doubling forced up, it seemed 
 evident, that even if the old rudder could by any 
 management be fixed in its place, it would serve 
 only for an additional purchase to weaken the 
 already broken parts thereabouts. To provide 
 against a contingency so serious as well as proba- 
 
CHAP.Vr.] nUDDKR CONTRIVED. 
 
 371 
 
 VI 
 
 ble, it was requisite to devise a rudder of an en- 
 tirely different construction, yet so contrived as 
 to lose little of its power, and such a one was 
 ingeniously hit upon by Lieutenant Smyth. It 
 was effected by the siinpleoperation of transposing 
 the wood, forming the lower part or heel of the 
 rudder, to that forming the u])per part, thus 
 giving to it when finished an oblong form, not 
 much unlike that used by a Thames barge riggeci 
 with sails, and at the same time the desirable 
 property that it could be hung on the sUongest 
 part of the stern-post. Having a spare rudder on 
 board, which had fortunately been put together 
 in pieces for the convenience of stowage, as it 
 \yas divided into twoportions, an upper and lower, 
 just where the division was wanted, the thing 
 was half done to our hand*, some iron work and 
 a few fittings for putting it together being all that 
 was required. Throughout the night the ice 
 kept opening and closing, and the temperature 
 sank to 30° +. In the early part of June 20th, 
 however, it became very slack to the westward, 
 especially along the shore of Charles Island, to 
 which we were much nearer. The Strait, never- 
 theless, was completely blocked to the north and 
 east, though the ice, at least that near us, was 
 certainly drifting slowly down towards the 
 
 * The rudder had been made in this way to provide 
 against accidents. 
 
 B B a 
 
 I" 
 
 ? 
 
 if 
 
 ( 
 
 i i 
 
 ■li 
 
372 
 
 SOLIDITY OF FLOE. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 ; ! 
 
 ! ! 
 
 I 1 
 
 entrance. We now began to Cut through the 
 mounds at the edge of the floe pieces, and to 
 open a communication with the visible parts of 
 those cracks extending diagonally from one ex- 
 treme to the other, and in one instance crossing 
 the ship's bows ; for as it was mere speculation 
 how deep or tortuous these flaws might be 
 beneath the surface, it was at all events an equal 
 chance whether our operations might not ac- 
 celerate their rupture. 
 
 Som€ snow had fallen which was succeeded by 
 a south-west wind, and at noon thick weather 
 came on that hid the land. The temperature 
 was only 35"+. The wind became variable, 
 coming sometimes in fresh gusts accompanied by 
 snow and rain : partly from this cause and partly 
 from the tide, there was a more than common 
 stir among the ice, which now separated itself 
 into detached streams and single pieces, exposing 
 a checquered surface of water to the west- 
 ward, most cheering to the eye. During the 
 night the ice was, what the Greenland sailors 
 term, running about j and, though firmly con- 
 nected pieces of various dimensions, from one to 
 three or four hundred feet in diameter, struck 
 our floe with considerable violence in passing by, 
 yet such was its solidity and weight that the 
 effect was merely to grind away insignificant 
 points along the edges. 
 
CHAP. VI.] TRENCHING THROUGH ICE. 
 
 373 
 
 June Slst came in with snow and a tempe- 
 rature of 30° + . At 5*^ A.M., all hands were 
 employed in trenching through the mounds, and 
 cutting as low into the water as they could. 
 Saws unfortunately were altogether useless, on 
 account of the thickness of the ice, which being 
 measured with a line, as far down as a projecting 
 tongue, was found to be thirty-three feet, and 
 was conjectured to be, in the whole, between 
 forty and fifty at that particular place. Some 
 large calves rose up from beneath the starboard 
 floe piece, which indeed was the most vulnerable, 
 and we now marked out a line of work at three 
 different places, which were ultimately to be 
 connected, so as to form an upper channel of 
 communication with the sea. I would willingly 
 have trenched down and cleared away the frozen 
 snow, which adhered so tenaciously to the afler 
 part of the ship, but for the impracticability of 
 shoring her up, and the risk that must have 
 attended the disturbance of the shores on the 
 parting of the floe ; all that could be done, there- 
 fore, was to conduct a channel of water within 
 a few feet of the starboard side, to which she 
 inclined, in the hope that a severance might be 
 effected by some sudden jerk through the entire 
 depth below. By noon, we were rather nearer 
 to the east end of Charles Island, which was quite 
 bare of snow, except in fissures and ledges. The 
 
 B r> 3 
 
 » r 
 
 ii I :,h " 
 
 1'^ 
 
 i:. 
 
 
 V 'I 
 
 I 
 
 f 
 
 i 
 
li 
 
 374 
 
 EXTRAORDINARY EDDIES. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 ! i 
 
 jM 
 
 Wi !' 
 
 ,ia i 
 
 temperature was only 40° + , the weather calm 
 but hazy with snow, the barometer 29. 5 1 . Much 
 ice drifted past and as far as the ship in the 
 afteraoon, among which, were several perfectly 
 even floes of six to seven hundred yards long, of 
 a pale blue colour, and evidently of last winter's 
 formation ; while, contrasting with these* were 
 others more soiled and channeled, that had ap- 
 parently strayed from the northern lands at the 
 head of Fox's Channel, bearing on their shoulders 
 the ruins of other floes which had been broken 
 and borne over them in the convulsions of 
 those extraordinary eddies. These did not re- 
 main ; for in the early morning, a little after the 
 close of the longest day, with the last rays of 
 which the sky was yet tinted, they swept by, 
 leaving us as usual fixed in our unyielding bed. 
 There was a dead calm, and even on the day 
 of the surrmer solstice, the temperature sank to 
 27° + . The crew, under the immediate direction 
 of the first Lieutenant, were set to work at 
 5^ A.M., and performed the novel duty with 
 good humour and perseverance. By noon we 
 had been drifted to the eastward, the latitude 
 being 62" 54' 50'', and longitude 74° 40' 30". 
 
 The character of the shore was comparatively 
 low, even, and rocky, about the eastern extremity, 
 but farther west, was more hilly, and if not com- 
 posed of more than one island must possess some 
 
CHAP. VI.] MASS BREAKS OFF. 
 
 375 
 
 vi 
 
 very deep bays. The last twenty-four hours, 
 the leak had increased twelve inches. By a sud- 
 den change, the weather had become sultry, the 
 thermometer in the sun being 62". A very few 
 birds, but not a fish or animal was seen. The 
 ice merely opened and closed with the flood and 
 ebb tide, without further effect. 
 
 On June 23d, the crew were employed in cut- 
 ting away the outer mound on the starboard side 
 of the ship, and made such rapid progress in their 
 early labour, that the edge of the floe rose two 
 feet six inches out of the water, and this was 
 immediately followed by the appearance of a 
 transverse crack between them and the ship. At 
 lO** 15"* A. M., while steadily occupied at their 
 work, the disconnected body of ice was observed 
 to run with considerable velocity past the stern 
 of the ship, directly towards the part they were 
 reducing, and an enormous piece coming in sud- 
 den contact with a projecting point, that had been 
 purposely formed by cutting away the ice about 
 it in the morning, the whole mass broke off with 
 the concussion, and rolled partly over in conse- 
 quence probably of the upshooting of several im- 
 mense calves from underneath it and the floe. 
 At the very moment of disruption a number of 
 men were working on the separated piece, the 
 rocking of which placed them for the time in a 
 perilous situation. From this, however, they 
 
 B B 4 
 
 M It 
 
 'i! 
 
376 
 
 MOTION OF ICE. 
 
 [chap. VI. 
 
 '.* 'i ( 
 
 were promptly rescued by launching the dingy 
 to their assistance, though not soon enough to 
 save all the pickaxes, shovels, handspikes, &c., 
 some of which were lost. This circumstance 
 made a great difference both in the magnitude and 
 compactness of our island floe, and encouraged 
 a hope of getting the ship afloat earlier than had 
 been expected; still this was a consummation 
 which at the present juncture was hardly to be 
 wished, as it would have been impossible to pre- 
 vent the running ice from striking, or the heavier 
 bodies from nipping her ; either of which, strained 
 and shaken as she was, it was obviously desirable to 
 avoid. The motion of the ice on this occasion was 
 singular, being rotatory, as if influenced by an 
 eddy, as indeed was not unlikely to be the case 
 about the eastern end of an island, having only a 
 narrow passage between it and the main, so far as 
 could be distinguished from the deck. The tempe- 
 rature varied from 30° to 4-7° + , and in the sun was 
 73° + . The ice moved backwards and forwards as 
 usual, but towards the close of the day was more 
 wedged than customarily. However, at 4^ a. m., 
 24th June, there were many lanes of water to 
 the eastward, without a single one in the oppo- 
 site quarter. Fresh [water ran off our floe in 
 streams during the warmth of the day ; and, 
 what with those and cutting away more ice on 
 the starboard quarter, it was found by the 
 
CHAP. VI.] SET OF CURRENT. 
 
 377 
 
 '\\ 
 
 marks on the stern-post that the entire mass, 
 composing that part of the floe, had risen three 
 inches. In the forenoon the ship was set to the 
 eastward, and had certainly drawn nearer to the 
 land, especially the eastern end of Charles Island, 
 which was not more than five or six miles away. 
 The other land, appearing at first continuous 
 with the latter island, was now ascertained to be 
 the dark and forbidding coast of Labrador. 
 
 It is worth mentioning that even in calms we 
 were evidently set to the southward and east- 
 ward, but more particularly to the former, owing, 
 probably, to the set of the current through 
 Fox's Channel and between the islands, which 
 would strike somewhere on the main shore be- 
 fore turning directly towards the Atlantic. There 
 was no other change during the night than 
 what was occasioned by the tides ; and on 
 June 25th, the weather was too overcast and 
 misty to allow our position to be ascertained. 
 At 11 ''SO™ soundings were struck in one hundred 
 and eighteen fathoms, and the bottom was com- 
 posed of mud and shells. It might be that the 
 heavier ice, by which, I mean that formed in the 
 winter, had drifted out of the Strait, as the 
 lighter pieces which now surrounded us seemed 
 to be the recent production of the spring, being 
 mostly even and of but a few feet thickness, 
 tinged with blue instead of the brownish green 
 
 
 y! 1 
 
 I. 
 
 ,i 
 
 io 
 
 ,1' 
 
978 
 
 REPAIRING FOREFOOT. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 and yellow of the older formation. Three or 
 four pieces had been lifted on the edge of our 
 floe, in consequence, o^ course, of some un- 
 seen pressure. It was thought, too, that the 
 ship was a little more upright. The land was 
 only dimly visible once or twice, for the day 
 was overcast and gloomy, and towards evening 
 settled into rain, which poured incessantly the 
 whole night Soundings were found in eighty- 
 six fathoms. In consequence of the prevailing 
 easterly wind the ice continued remarkably close, 
 slackening, however, occasionaUy near the ship. 
 Nothing, indeed, could have been done even 
 had she been afloat, except to ascertain with 
 some precision, as I was very desirous of doing, 
 the extent of our damage. 
 
 For this purpose, on June 26th, the crew 
 were again employed in removing the mounds, 
 while the carpenters were occupied about the 
 fore-foot, which, owing to the rising of the ice, 
 was now sufficiently exposed to allow of the 
 broken and damaged part being examined with 
 more exactness. It had been ground away by 
 the action of the ice, but the stem was un- 
 injured, and we began immediately to cut away 
 the ragged parts, with a view of substituting 
 more solid pieces in their stead, and finally 
 covering the whole with iron sheathing, t^ken 
 from the upper works of the bows, where ex- 
 
CHAP.VI.3 
 
 NARWHALES. 
 
 379 
 
 perience had taught us it was not likely to be 
 of service. At noon the weather was still dark, 
 and the land invisible. A continuation of the 
 same gloomy atmosphere prevaUed, and immense 
 floes of ^ring ice, not exceeding in thickness 
 three feet, and black with water on the surface, 
 crowded round our still solid island from diffe- 
 rent points, but chiefly from the main or Labra- 
 dor coast, which happened to be the windward 
 shore. Many of these, driven forward by wind 
 and tide, struck against us with considerable 
 violence, but without splintering a fragment from 
 our rock-like mass. In the evening soundings 
 were got in one hundred and twelve fathoms 
 (sand). All night the ice remained very close, 
 the wind being fresh from the eastward; and 
 in the morning of June 27th all hands recom- 
 menced their labour on the larboard mound, 
 which unlike some of its neighbours was one 
 body of solid blue ice, and though causing more 
 hard work, yet began sensibly to diminish before 
 the exertions of the crew. But few birds flew 
 past, though some narwhales were seen plajdng 
 about, to the great relief of the ice-mate, who, 
 having been engaged in the Davis Straits' fishery 
 the greater part of his life, had been almost 
 inconsolable at the paucity of * living creatures,' 
 as he termed them. His joy, therefore, on this 
 occasion, was commensurate j and 
 
 I 
 
 m 
 
 m 
 
 fi. a, 
 
 having 
 
 m- 
 
330 
 
 REPORT OF HEALTH. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 , 
 
 tently watched their gambols to the moment of 
 disappearance, he descended from the crow's- 
 nest, and with evident signs of pleasure pro- 
 ceeded to give me a minute account of their 
 size, colour, and length of horn. By observation 
 at noon, it was found we were eight miles north 
 of the last latitude, and by the view of the land 
 which was quite clear, it was equally evident the 
 ship had been set rather east than west, though 
 the wind blew, and had been blowing fresh from 
 the former quarter of the compass. It follows, 
 therefore, that the northern ice must have so 
 completely blocked up the channelswe had passed, 
 as to prevent any thing liice a retrograde action. 
 The temperature varied from 34° + to 39° + , and 
 the barometer was 30*01. Wind east. 
 
 The men were examined to-day by the medical 
 officers, and reported to be free from actual com- 
 plaint, with the exception of the few individuals 
 mentioned before, some of whom were rather worse. 
 At this time, in an official letter addressed to 
 Doctor Donovan, 1 demanded his opinion of the 
 probable consequences if the ship were detained 
 another winter in these regions. His answer was, 
 that it would be fatal to many of the officers and 
 men, some of whom were even now in a pre- 
 carious state; and he also reported that the most 
 useful medicines for the prevalent disease were 
 expended. The good effect of the labour of 
 
 ^1 
 
CIIAP.Vr.] CANNONADING FLOE. 
 
 381 
 
 the crew in throwing the weight of ice off the 
 floe, was made manifest by the fact of the ship's 
 having risen two inches, her immersion in the 
 water and ice aft being 8 feet 10 inches. In the 
 evening the ice was close, but much to our 
 satisfaction a large piece was separated from the 
 larboard side of the floe ; and, after midnight of 
 June 28th, the wind then blowing fresh in 
 squalls from the south-east, a sudden disruption 
 took place one hundred and fifty yards ahead of 
 the ship, and split the floe right across. We 
 therefore returned to our task with fresh spirits ; 
 and, as a matter of experiment, fired a couple of 
 six-pounder shot at a mound, but without the 
 results expected, as instead of splintering and 
 throwing it down, the shot merely cracked it, 
 and buried themselves deep in the substance 
 without doing further injury. One of the shot 
 was next day recovered from the mound. It had 
 been discharged at the distance of twenty-one 
 yards, with a charge of 16 ounces of powder, and 
 had penetrated one yard and a half, splitting the 
 mass in various directions. The land was seen 
 once, and at noon we had drifted eight miles to 
 the north, being nearly in midchannel ; but the 
 whole body of the ice was very close, infinitely 
 too much so for any vessel to have made way. 
 The temperature varied from 30° to 36°+ ; and 
 ice was formed on all the fresh water pools 
 
 r'p 
 
 »/ 
 
382 
 
 CAULKING, &C. 
 
 [CHAP.Vr. 
 
 I. 
 
 (luring the night. Barometer 29.95. A few 
 holes, some distance apart, showed themselves in 
 the evening, but, on the whole, the ice was ex- 
 tremely close. The carpenters completed and 
 had made a good job of the fore-foot, which was 
 well secured with three plates of iron. 
 
 June 29th. Land was fiiintly seen from S. S. E. 
 to S. W. ; the work went on as usual. At noon 
 the south-east wind had drifted us a little to the 
 west, the ice being very close and no land in 
 sight. Temperature from 32° to 36° + . Nothing 
 transpired to alter our condition, for the wind 
 with singular constancy kept to its old point of 
 south-east, and consequently wedged the ice 
 closer than ever 5 nevertheless all opportunities 
 were seized to do whatever might accelerate our 
 release from this icy cradle, and the carpenters 
 were again busied in caulking the butt ends of 
 the planking, as they came day by day within 
 reach. 
 
 On June 30th, four white whales appeared 
 in a small hole of water near the ship, and 
 occasionally a seal popped up its head. The 
 laborious work upon the mounds went on cheerily, 
 and though some of the men began to be affected 
 with inflamed eyes, they did not on that account 
 shrink from their duty. They had all along 
 worn each a small screen of green veil j but finding 
 that this did not effectually answer the purpose, they 
 
CHAP.Vi.] INAUSPICIOUS COLD. 
 
 dSS 
 
 contrived to make goggles witli crape over the 
 ends, instead of glass, with other devices not 
 without ingenuity. The most distressing event, 
 however, was another instance of a relapse, in 
 the person of Mr. Mould the assistant surgeon, 
 who was very lame and altogether far from well. 
 Gibbs, too, could not but be considered in an 
 extremely precarious state, and his limbs, poor 
 fellow, were dreadfully shrunk, and so weak, that 
 he could not walk the length of the lower deck 
 without assistance. In clearing away the ice 
 from the fractured parts of the stern-post, apiece 
 of its doubling two feet six inches in length, ex- 
 tending from the four feet six inches mark to the 
 seven feet, and consequently under water, was 
 brought up by the carpenters, who further 
 ascertained that the outer stern-post had been 
 forced aft, and at the eight feet eight inches 
 mark it had opened from the wooden ends one 
 inch and a quarter. The night brought no change, 
 and on July 1st the work was continued as before, 
 but so cold had it been, that not only was ice 
 formed on the fresh pools, but young ice was 
 seen even round the edge of the floe on the sea 
 water ; a strange phenomenon in the middle of 
 summer, and not very auspicious for our hopes ; 
 and, indeed an open passage could now hardly be 
 expected, ifwewere tojudge from whatsurrounded 
 us, for the entire body of ice was not only closely 
 
 t(h 
 
 )■■•■>' 
 
 fi : i 
 
384 
 
 CHEERFUL LAnOUIlS. [CHAT.VI. 
 
 
 I 
 
 
 m m 
 
 wedged, but was more to the westward, more 
 packed, and altogether more unfavourable to the 
 prospect of a speedy release than a month before. 
 In fact, all depended on the direction of the 
 wind, as must ever be the case in the navigation 
 of these seas. Unless that be favourable for 
 driving out to sea the western packs of heavy 
 ice, all human efforts must be vain. Land was 
 once made out, bearing S.S.W., and the weather 
 was dull and cold, the temperature having got to 
 80° + . The new moon brought us a north-east 
 breeze, with a dark gloomy sky and abundance 
 of rain, which did not cease throughout the 
 night. One or two small calves started up from 
 between the cracks alongside, and on July 2d 
 the ice began to open out a little, having a 
 limited space to niove in towards the main land 
 to leeward. The temperature varied only from 
 30° to 33" + . No variation of any sort inter- 
 vened to relieve the dull aspect of affairs, but 
 July 3d at least brought us what we had not ex- 
 perienced fur a fortnight — a fine day. We now 
 discovered one part of the floe, on the starboard 
 beam, less thick than the part at which we had 
 been working ; and the men having got the ice- 
 saw to work, and singing to time as they lifted 
 it up and let it down, made such progress, 
 that in the course of the forenoon, though the 
 general thickness averaged from twelve to four- 
 
LHAP.VI.] SAWING AWAV THE ICE. 
 
 886 
 
 tccn feet, they got througli thirty feet ; whilst^ 
 on the otlier side of the ship, another party was 
 busy in clearing away the ice from the crack 
 leading athwart the forefoot to the extremity of 
 the floe in that direction. In the meantime the 
 ship remained precisely in the same position* 
 The observations made us a few mile? to the 
 north and west, the latitude being (JS" I7' N., 
 and longitude 7'i" 39' W. Finding the ice be- 
 came thicker as the work approached the ship, it 
 was necessary to have a longer saw j accordingly, 
 the armourer, by means of the forge, formed two 
 into one, thirty feet long, which, however, from 
 its comparative thinness, we were apprehensive 
 would not be strong enough. No change took 
 place throughout the night, but the ice remained 
 so pa» ked, that, had the sea||in been farther 
 advanced, the whole would moit certainly have 
 been connected im one iramense body. As it 
 was, the temperature did not sink below freezing 
 point, though it arrived at it, as indeed it had 
 done foi* some time, within a degree or two. 
 
 Oil July 4th the large saw was put into 
 motion, and answered remarkabiv well, its own 
 .weight being sufficient to carry it down without 
 any other incumbrance. With it, iiierefore, we 
 made better progress, though the ice was often 
 as much as twenty feet thick, and by noon, had 
 cut to a main crack, the least pressure against 
 
 c c 
 
 ill 
 
 I :!| 
 
 Mi 
 
 ; r 
 I 
 
M> 
 
 386 
 
 EMPLOYMENT FOB ARMOURER. [cHAP.VI. 
 
 I 
 
 I. f '■'' i 
 
 I .' it 
 
 which, it was hoped, would carry away the piece 
 altogether. The wind having veered to N.N.E., 
 made the ice a little more slack, though it re- 
 mained still perfectly fixed. Having sawed as 
 far as we could, the next step was to extricate 
 the saw itself, in attempting which, having been 
 accidentally broken in two, it was again repaired 
 by our industrious and zealous armourer, who 
 never seemed more delighted than when he had 
 plenty of work on his hands. We now made a 
 fresh survey of the ice directly astern of the ship j 
 and, finding that some places were much thinner 
 than others, we forthwith commenced digging 
 and sinking a trench, from the edge of the floe 
 towards, and in a line with, the keel, preparatory 
 to trying what might be effected with the long 
 saw. The rest of the afternoon was employed by 
 the carpenters putting in two screw ring-bolts, 
 about three feet fiom, and on a level with, the 
 eleven feet mark, according to a plan by the 
 carpenter, Mr. Smith, for securing the wooden 
 ends and injured parts of the ship's dead wood. 
 This consisted in simply passing the stream chain 
 under the heel of the stern-post, through both 
 ring-bolts, and securing it firmly on deck abaft, 
 the object being to prevent any further damage 
 tliereabouts, either from the ice or sea. 
 
 On July 5th, land, which proved to be Salis- 
 bury Island, was distinctly seen at N.W. by N., 
 
CHAP. VI.] LABOURS CONTINUED, 387 
 
 and some water could be made out from the 
 mast-head, between south and west, but the ice 
 near us was so close, that there would have been 
 little difficulty in walking five or six miles in any 
 direction. Indeed, it could not be otherwise 
 with these never-ending easterly winds. As 
 early as 4" a. m. the crew were working the long 
 saw astern, and by noon had cut through twenty, 
 five feet, or more, of sixteen-feet ice. On all 
 these occasions the first lieutenant never quitted 
 them, early or late, frequently putting his hand 
 to the ropes himself, as did some of the mates 
 and wairant officers ; and it is but justice to say, 
 that nothing could exceed the cheerfulness and 
 order in which this laborious daily toil was en- 
 countered. The strictest regulations were ob- 
 served respecting the changing of boots and 
 stockings, &c., each time the men came on 
 board, and again on returning to work, so that 
 there were no complaints or illness of any kind 
 from the constant exposure. Boards and plankinff 
 were provided for them to stand upon, and a 
 weak mixture of lime-juice was issued, at stated 
 mtervals, to counteract any ill effect that might 
 arise from too copious a use of cold water. New 
 ice was nightly formed on all the pools, and 
 sometimes at the edges of the salt water, though 
 according to the thermometer, the tempcratui-e 
 
 c c 2 
 
 III 
 
 i '^ !' 
 
 ' ii I 
 
 li 
 

 '. ', 
 
 388 IMPEDIMENTS FROM CALVES. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 had only Varied from 33" to 34" + , the excess 
 having been 40"+ in the southern exposurcr 
 Notv^^ithstanding the compactness of the ice, the 
 ship was this afternoon whirled round several 
 times; and some calves becoming entangled 
 with our floe near the part where the people 
 were sawing, so impeded them, that the utmost 
 achieved was only five feet. 
 
 Early on July 6th the work was renewed j but 
 from having cut in too slanting a direction, little 
 was then accomplished : nevertheless, such was- 
 their energy, that by noon fifty-three feet alto- 
 gether were completed, through a thickness of 
 twenty-six feet. Other parties were not behind 
 in their endeavours, and three good sized calves 
 were extricated from underneath heavier pieces, 
 whilst another was heard by the first Lieutenant 
 and myself grinding its passage out towards the^ 
 edge of the floe. The entire body of the ice 
 continued close as before, and Salisbury Island 
 bore about W. by N., the latitude being63'^20' N., 
 longitude 75° 25' W. Nothing could exceed the 
 gloominess of the weather ; and though from 
 the rain that fell it might have been expected 
 to clear, there was no improvement, and neither 
 wind nor ice seemed disposed to change. On 
 July 7th some rumbling noises were heard 
 by the officer of the watch, the precise cause of 
 
CHTAP.VI.J NEW HEN T DISCOVERED. 3gg 
 
 which he was prevented by the fog from ascer^ 
 ta;.iing. The crew assembled at the customary 
 hour, and renewed their labour cheerily, though 
 some were obliged to stand in the water 
 which covered that part of the ice, in order to 
 guide the saw. Fearing the consequences of 
 this unavoidable exposure, I took care that they 
 were often reheved, and an extra allowance of 
 oatmeal, with a small quantity of spirits, was 
 issued. Pieces of ice of various dimensions 
 were either disentangled, or started up of their 
 own accord, from between the broad crack athwart 
 the bow and on both sides of the ship ; and as 
 a further encouragement to us, we saw for the 
 first time an entirely new rent through a thick 
 part of the floe, which opened into the line of 
 work made with the saw By noon another 
 space of twenty.five feet . i oeen cut through, 
 although a depth of from twenty-four to thirty 
 feet of tough solid ice had to be penetrated at 
 every motion of the saw ; and on examining the 
 marks on the stern-post, it wa^ seen that the 
 ship's draught was 8 feet 91 inches, and that she 
 had settled down 5k inches. The general body of 
 ice continued deplorably close, while the tempe- 
 rature ranged between 32° and 43"+; the wind 
 at east, and the barometer 29*94. A single seal 
 was seen, the only one for many days. 
 
 July 8th, It was found by the marks on the 
 stern-post, &c. that theshiphadsunk three quarters 
 
 c c 3 
 
 iifa^^' 
 
 m^ 
 
390 
 
 RIGGING SET UP. [CHAP.VI.^ 
 
 lr» 
 
 m 
 
 m J 
 
 of an inch forward, and risen half an inch abaft. 
 The crew were early at their work, and felt the 
 comfort of the extra allowance. The ice main- 
 tained a similar thickness, and by noon another 
 twenty-two feet were gained, which made alto- 
 getherone hundred feet since the commencement; 
 in fact, they were now approaching the stern, and 
 at intervals they heard loud cracks close to 
 them, as if something were yielding underneath. 
 Considering that the event might taike place at 
 a moment when least looked for, to the great 
 danger of the people, I ordered ladders and ropes, 
 to be hung from the stern within their reach, 
 to which, if requisite, they might cling. They 
 however seemed quite indifferent about the 
 matter, and sang and worked as merrily as if 
 they had been on terra firma. Easterly winds 
 still prevailed, as did the gloomy sky ; but though 
 the land was often obscured, yet once the Labra- 
 dor coast appeared bearing from S. W. to S« W. 
 by W., and Salisbury Island from N. W. by W. 
 to N. W. by N., making us much about the same 
 spot where we had been a month ago. The ice 
 was impenetrably close. At midnight there was 
 what seemed to be a dark water sky to the south- 
 ward, along the coast, or it might be only the 
 clouds, which were frequently seen hanging over 
 the skirts of the land. 
 
 On July 9th the fineness of the day tempted 
 us to set up the rigging, and forego what we never 
 
CHAP. VI.] 
 
 OCCUPATIONS. 
 
 391 
 
 did omit except on urgent occasions, the ob- 
 servance of divine service j but a fine day was so 
 uncommon, that we were glad to take advantage 
 of it under any circumstances. The ice continued 
 as close as ever, there being only one small liole 
 of water near the ship. Here some narwhales 
 came to breathe; and, as their timidity is extreme, 
 they would scarcely have ventured so near, had 
 there been any other place for the purpose. At 
 noon SaUsbury Island was in sight from the deck, 
 much in the same bearing as before. The latter 
 part of the day was employed in erecting with 
 the spare topmasts a pair of sheers, to transport 
 the temporary rudder aft, and get it over the 
 ship's side, in case the original one could not be 
 brought into use when the ship floated. At mid- 
 night the ice round us was slightly in motion but 
 still kept close. 
 
 July 10th. Water was discovered about six miles 
 off, from S. W. to S. E., along the Labrador coast, 
 and at noon Salisbury Island bore W. N. W. The 
 people resumed their sawing in the early morning; 
 and, although from the hardness of the ice, they 
 did not make their usual progress, yet they kept 
 hard at work, in the hope of reaching the stern- 
 post in another twenty-four hours. Not far from 
 them, others were cutting a nev/ trench at right 
 angles to the ship, where it was intended to saw, 
 in order, if possible, to disunite some of the ice 
 
 c c 4 
 
 lii 
 
 :' M 
 
 I 
 
S92 
 
 nErORT OF THE Sllip's DRIFT. [cHAP.VIi 
 
 i w j 
 
 on which we were partly borne up. Already, 
 indeed, it was so split by cracks, and our own 
 exertions, that it seemed almost certain that the 
 first commotion, when the whole body should 
 begin to drift, would release us. The wind having 
 blown from the east twenty-two days, at last 
 veered to west; the weather became fine; and the 
 temperature veered from 32°+ to 46°+. 
 
 The following statement of the drift of the 
 ship, whilst beset in the ice, between the 1st of 
 January and the SOth of June 1837, was drawn 
 up by Mr. Saunders (acting Master). 
 
 Course 
 Between Ist Jan. and 1st Feb. 
 
 If. Feb. & Ist March. 
 
 1st Mar. & 2d April 
 
 2d April & Ist May 
 
 Ist May & SOth May 
 
 S.23° 4' E. 
 S. 38° 12' E. 
 S.62M5' E. 
 S.69P59' E. 
 S. 60=00' E. 
 
 SOth May & SOth June S.87°SS' E. 
 
 Distance. 
 
 6 Miles. 
 36 „ 
 29 „ 
 46 „ 
 70 „ 
 47 
 
 » 
 
 January 1st, 
 February 1st, 
 March 1st, 
 April 2d, 
 May 1st, 
 May SOth, 
 
 Latitude observed. 
 64.° 51' 00" N. 
 64° 45' 00" N. 
 64° 16' 00" N. 
 64° 05' 00" N. 
 63° 49' 00" N. 
 63^^ 14' 00" N. 
 63" 12' 00" N. 
 
 Longitude observed. 
 82° 25' 00" W. 
 82° 19'00" W. 
 81° 26' 00" W. 
 80° S7' SO" W. 
 78° 54' SO" W. 
 76° 38' 45" W. 
 74° 54' 00" W. 
 
 June SOth, 
 
 Thus it appears that the aggregate drift for 
 six months only amounted two hundred and 
 thirty-four miles. 
 
 Some more narwhales appeared again in a 
 hole close by, and a seal drew itself on the ice, 
 
/ 
 
 1 1 
 
 111 
 
 
 « d 
 
U: 
 
 •His 
 
 ■■I 
 
 
 m 
 
 HBH 
 
 {HM| 
 
 I^Bm 
 
 iw 
 
 |^^^^Mn|t.. 191 
 
 IPI 
 
I 
 
 ft 
 
 t 
 
 I 
 
 5B^v 
 
 i 
 
 10"'.. 
 if 
 
 jm si' 
 
 ^nMJt^'^W. 
 
 ,, i, 
 
 
 M 
 
 n 
 
 i 
 
 > 
 
 ■ ' i 
 
 . 'i 
 
 
 i , 
 
 
 1 
 
 ^ 
 
 ll^^^l 
 
 
 ■BI^^^H 
 
 .+j 
 
 ■fl^^H 
 
 ■^ 
 
 I^H 
 
 ii 
 
 ^^1 
 
 
 I^^H 
 
 El 
 
 Hll^^l 
 
 
 
 
 y.^^^^i 
 
 r 
 
 1 
 
:;! 
 
 1/,^ 
 
 «i m .1 !•' 
 
 * 
 
CHAP. VI.] SHIP BURSTS HER DONDS. 
 
 395 
 
 no doubt to have a quiet lounge in the sunshine. 
 This, however, the keenness of our sportsmen 
 would not permit; and though they failed in their 
 benevolent intentions, they effectually friglitened 
 the visitors away. 
 
 The light air from the westward had been so 
 far beneficial as to loosen the ice, which was 
 tranquil or in motion according to the tide, and 
 whilst in motion several calves rose up from 
 about and under the fore-foot. Early on July 
 11th Salisbury Island bore W.N. W. seven or 
 eight leagues distant. The ice now acquired a 
 more rapid drift ; and an old floe piece, having 
 been driven against us, forced up some light ice 
 by its pressure, but without breaking a morsel of 
 our impregnable rock. The crew had resumed 
 their customary labour ; and, as they drew nearer 
 to the stern-post, v irious noises and crackings 
 beneath them plainly hinted that something 
 more than usual was in progress. After brcakfas*t 
 I visited them, and the other parties, who were 
 busy extricating calves and cutting a trench, as 
 previously stated. Scarcely had I taken a few 
 turns on deck and descended to my cabin, when 
 a loud rumbling notified that the ship had 
 broken her icy bonds and was sliding gently 
 down into her own elem nt. I ran instantly 
 on deck, and joined in the cheers of the offi- 
 cers and njcn, who, dispersed on different pieces 
 
 .,1 i 
 
 m 
 
 ^1 ,1' 
 
 i 
 
891 
 
 NOVELTY OF SCENE. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 ii^ 
 
 ,iji 
 
 m 1; 
 
 11- 
 
 ii i 
 
 VI 
 
 
 of ice, took this significant method of express- 
 ing their feelings. It was a sight not to be 
 forgotten. Standing on tlie tafrail, I saw the 
 dark bubbling water below, and enormous masses 
 of ice gently vibrating and springing to the sur- 
 face J the lirtit Lieutenant was just climbing 
 over the stern, while other groups were standing 
 apart, separated by this new gulf; and the spars, 
 together with working implements, were resting 
 half in the water, half on the ice, whilst the 
 saw, the instrument whereby this sudden effect 
 had been produced, was bent double, and in that 
 position forcibly detained by the body it had 
 severed. 
 
 I was then informed that having cut to within 
 four feet of the stern-post, they had ceased for 
 a few minutes, to refresh themselves, when the 
 disruption took place, barely giving them time to 
 clamber up as they could for safety ; whilst in the 
 midst of all this bustle the first Lieutenant, finding 
 himself raised up by the ice on which he stood 
 to the highest step of one of the stem ladders, 
 was seen composedly mounting it to come on 
 board. Nor were the other parties less fortunate 
 in escaping accidents; so that our joy on the oc- 
 casion was not saddened by any serious misfor- 
 tune. We soon found that the ship had only 
 sunk down to the ten feet seven inches and a 
 (luartcr mark foi*ward, and to the eleven feet nine 
 
 ' 
 
N 
 
 CHAP. VI.] WELL SOUNDED. 
 
 395 
 
 inches aft, having a heel of about two streaks over 
 to port. The first thing w vs to sound the well, 
 the water in which increased four inches in a 
 quarter of an hour; and, supposing that this might 
 be attributable to the change of the ship's plane, 
 whereby the water which had been lodged astern 
 was allowed to come forward, it produced for the 
 moment but little uneasiness. I soon however 
 perceived tJiat not only the offensive odour of the 
 well water wap --Tie, but that what there was, was 
 equally salt ^vith tin sea water alongside. 
 
 As the slii. re.ster: almost entirely on the star- 
 board bilge, e ruturally hoped that the first 
 twirl of tide would set her fully at liberty j and 
 in this hope the top-gallant masts were fielded, 
 the yards crossed, and every thing put in readil 
 ness to make sail. At noon the ice was stUl 
 close except immediately round the ship. Mean- 
 time an increased quantity of water found its way 
 into the well, which in four hours, notwithstan- 
 ding the constant use of one pump, had filled to 
 the depth of nineteen inches. Subsequently, we 
 gained two inches on the leak, which thence, 
 forth kept pretty steady at ten or twelve inches. 
 Below this, without the use of other means, it 
 could not be reduced. The ponderous bodies 
 that had hemmed us round for nine months and 
 more, the objects of our terror, and yet perhaps 
 the appointed means of safety, were now seeri 
 
 
 
 I if 
 
 i>. 
 
396 
 
 STERN'POST SHATTERED. [cHAP. VI. 
 
 
 m V: 
 
 floating away, dark and discoloured, among tlie 
 fresh and unspotted ice. We were now able 
 to see clearly that the stern-post was sadly 
 shattered; entirely broken from the starboard 
 side, and projecting fully three feet and a half 
 over to port. What other injury there might be 
 we could not yet divine, as the keel and lower 
 part of the hull were firmly imbedded in solid 
 ice on both sides, though chiefly on the starboard, 
 where a heavy fragment of the old floe still ad- 
 hered. Imagining that additional weight in the 
 ship might assist in breaking the under ice away, 
 we hauled alongside of a small floe, where there 
 was a pool of fresh water, and having got the 
 engine to work with a long hose, shortly com- 
 pleted our water to nineteen tons. But finding 
 this without the effect desired, all sail was set ; 
 and then, after bracing the yards in the most 
 advantageous manner for our purpose, the officers 
 and men sallied alternately from the one to the 
 other side, and then fore and aft, still however 
 without effect ; for although this shook the ship 
 it shook the ice also, and the two, forming one 
 connected body, merely undulated slightly to- 
 gether. Sail, however, was kept set ; and with 
 or ' extraordinary appendage, we drifted gently 
 wherever the wind, which happened to be fair, 
 listed to take us. Our motion did not exceed a 
 quarter of a mile an hour; and, notwithstanding 
 
CHAP.VI.] LEAK NOT REDUCED^ 
 
 397 
 
 *» 
 
 that detached pieces of greater or less dimensions 
 were frequently encountered, they did little else 
 tlian produce some deviation in the line of drift. 
 Much water opened in sight to the southward and 
 to the south-west, but the breeze was W.N.W., 
 and we were driven about S.S.E. Throughout 
 the night the pump was incessantly going, by 
 which means, though the water at one time 
 gained upon us, we were enabled generally 
 to keep even with the leak, though not to 
 reduce it. 
 
 July 12th. The wind c ntinuing light, stud- 
 ding sails and royals were set, the ship drifting 
 as before. Some shores were placed under the 
 fore chains, in the hope that they might assist to 
 lift the ship off; but I was apprehensive that a 
 strong purchase might have the effect of tearing 
 away any fractured or splintered parts that 
 should happen to be imbedded in the ice. In- 
 deed, it was evident that great caution was 
 required in the endeavour to release her entirely 
 from her icy coating, as well on account of the 
 damage which was already known, as of the 
 further injuries that might have been sustained 
 along the keel, which we were in no condition 
 at that time to ascertain. It was, therefore, 
 determined to have recourse again to the saw, 
 which was forthwith put into order by our able 
 armourer, the whole of the crew that could be 
 spared from the pumps being, in the meantime. 
 
 
 :'l 
 
 i' 
 
39S 
 
 PROSPECTS CONSIDERED. [CHAP.VI, 
 
 ' > f' t) . 
 
 tj .1 
 
 ! , ,.'■ Jrv 
 
 .,t 
 
 employed in throwing off the surface of two of 
 the three or four solid hummocks which yet 
 remained alongside, while others of the same party 
 cut a trench at right angles to the ship's beam, 
 preparatory to using the saw. At noon there were 
 some narwhales near, and flocks of loons flew past; 
 but there were few or no gulls. Owing to the 
 haziness of the weather no land was in sight. 
 
 As I now hoped that a few days at most would 
 yield the Terror to my own control, it became 
 necessary for me to decide as to the possibility of 
 accomplisliing the original purpose of the expe- 
 dition J and, although the altered state of the 
 health of almost all on board made the prospect 
 less favourable than it had been ten months 
 ago, yet I had not, until recently, entertained a 
 doubt of executing in part, if not entirely, the 
 mission on which I had been despatched It 
 cannot, however, be denied that the loss of three 
 valuable men, the entire disability of four or 
 five others, the symptoms of disease lingering 
 in many more — to say nothing of some of the 
 officers who were visibly effected — had, together 
 with Dr. Donovan's letter on the subject, ah'eady 
 given me great uneasiness ; and now that the 
 known damage of the ship proved to be far beyond 
 what I had anticipated, or rather had hoped 
 against hope ; this, with her leakage, and other 
 injuries, apprehended though not known, forced 
 uie to contemplate the possibility of a different 
 
CHAP. VI.] officers' opinion. 
 
 399 
 
 conclusion. Unwilling, however, to admit a 
 thought so destructive of all my fondly-cherished 
 liopes and wishes, I demanded the written opi- 
 nion of the three Lieutenants and Master. These, 
 in separate communications, and for various rea- 
 sons, decided that nothing was left but to get the 
 ship to England without delay ; and my own 
 sense of duty finally concurring in this opinion, 
 the resolution was most reluctantly adopted. 
 
 In the afternoon we got the saw to work, 
 and by 5" p. m. had cut to within a few 
 feet of the ship's side, when, the ice being 
 closer ahead, sail was reduced. We then drift,ed 
 alongoide of a floe, round a point of which we 
 contrived to pass about midnight, and saw much 
 open water to the south-east. - : 
 
 July 13th. Though there was ice in every 
 direction, we continued to drift about a quarter 
 of a mile an hour. Some small calves found 
 their way from beneath our clog, and it was with 
 great satisfaction that we contemplated the in- 
 creased breadth of the saw line -a satisfaction 
 not lessened by the discovery that the ship had 
 settled more down, her draught now being abaft 
 thirteen feet eight inches, and forward twelve 
 feet eight. Neither, with the incessant working 
 of one pump, had the water accumulated in the 
 well beyond eleven inches. At 9'' a.m. there 
 was a moderate breeze from the westward with 
 
 •f 
 
400 
 
 DISRUPTION NEAR SHIP. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 a tilin mist, and, to our unaccustomed eyes a 
 sight almost marvellous, a gentle swell on an 
 apparently unbroken surface. It was thought 
 the agitation, slight as it was, might crack or 
 break the ice alongside ; but as it proved other- 
 wise, two warps fixed to ice anchors, and lead- 
 ing to either extremity of the ship, were firmly 
 attached at a favourable angle for separating and 
 entirely disuniting the entire mass; however, 
 while we were in the act of heaving a powerful 
 strain on the warps, it suddenly split diagonally 
 from a hummocky point about fifteen paces from 
 the starboard bow,, along its outer edge, to some- 
 where near the after part of the main chains. 
 Th3 detached portion, on which were two men, 
 (a third being in the dingy, close to them), was 
 instantaneously splintered into three pieces, two 
 of which, singularly enough, were separately 
 occupied by the persons just mentioned, who, 
 standing steadily on the whirling and heaving 
 ice, thus violently discarded, gave a hearty 
 cheer, while their companion, having lost his 
 balance from the sudden jerking of the dingy, 
 lay stretched at full length, and grasping the gun- 
 whale on each side. The cheering however was 
 turned to astonishment, as they watched the ship 
 slowly rising and heeling over to port. We on 
 board had been surprised that no counter action 
 occurred, and were beginning to wonder that the 
 
CHAP. VI.] PERILOUS EMEUGENCY. 
 
 1^01 
 
 vessel did not recover her equilibrium, but were 
 now startled by the conviction that she was 
 gradually going over ; and the great inclination 
 rendering it impossible to stand on deck, every 
 one clungon to windward as he best could. Then 
 it was we beheld the strange and appalling spec- 
 tacle of what may be fitly termed a submerged 
 berg, fixed low down with one end to the ship's 
 side, while the other, with the purchase of a long 
 lever, advantageously placed at a right angle 
 with the keel, was slowly rising towards the 
 surface. Meanwhile, those who happened to be 
 below, finding every thing falling, rushed or 
 clambered on deck, where they saw the ship on 
 her beam-ends, with the lee boats touching the 
 water, and felt that a few moments only trem- 
 bled between them and eternity. Yet in that 
 awful crisis there was no confusion ; the sails 
 were clewed up and lowered ; fresh men from 
 former crews were stationed in the boats, which 
 again were rather unhooked than lowered ; the 
 barge was hoisted out ; and with a promptitude 
 and presence of mind which I shall ever remem- 
 ber with admiration, the whole five were pro- 
 visioned and filled with arms, ammunition, and 
 clothing, and veered astern clear of danger. The 
 pumps were never quitted, and though ex- 
 pecting that the ship might capsize, yet the 
 question of "Does the leak gain on us*?" was 
 
 1) D 
 
 * 
 
\ 
 
 I I'l 
 
 1. .''« 
 
 .;' 
 
 H 
 
 M 
 
 ill 
 
 ■( 
 
 1 
 
 i 
 
 402 AWKWARDNESS OF SITUATION. [CHAP. VI. 
 
 ik ked, and when answered in the negative, there 
 was still a manifestation of hope. Our fate, how- 
 ever, yet hung in suspense, for not in the 
 smallest degree did the ship right ; luipps'y for 
 us there was a dead calm, which perhiitttd us 
 to examine the berg. 
 
 At the only part along the side, where 
 we could effective I V act, h was found to be 
 four fathoms thick, and along thi/' it was deter- 
 mined to cut with liie saw, if, providcntiiillv, 
 tin*e were sspared us for the operation. On 
 goifKt round outside with the first Lieutenant, 
 I counted nearly fourteen planks below the 
 filled i>^; pari of the main chains to the edge 
 of thti water, the angle of inclination being about 
 twenty "five degrees, while on the lee side I stepped 
 from the boat's thwart on deck. Looking at 
 the bottom, we perceived that the keel, from the 
 fore-foot aft, was torn and ragged, but to what 
 extent the damage extended could not yet be 
 ascertained. The exceeding awkwardness of 
 our situation occasioned some difficulty in 
 slinging and placing the stages and sheers for 
 sawing, but this was surmounted j and by 11'' a.m. 
 the work was begun, and went on cheerily. 
 The men were told that much depended on their 
 exertions, and were encouraged to finish their 
 task the same day. Provisions were issued on 
 deck, and weak grog supplied occasionally ; and 
 thus fortified, and assisted by the ofiir'ss, they 
 
at 
 
 CHAP. VI.] CREW HAUD AT WORK. 403 
 
 sang and worked with that characteristic indif- 
 ference to peril vhich has been so often admired 
 in British seamen. While we were thus occu- 
 pied, several seahorses came up, and after 
 listening and stretching out their necks with a 
 sort of curious stupidity as they drew them- 
 selves on the ice, they seemed undecided whether 
 to remain or not; at length, however, they 
 tumbled their uncouth bulks into the water, and 
 disappeared. Meantime, considerable progress, 
 as was imagined, was made with the saw ; but,' 
 on sounding, it was found that instead of cutting 
 up and down it had taken a slanting course, and 
 thus obliged us to recommence ; and the lower 
 part, too, proved so hard, that a longer time was 
 required for finishing the half yet undone 
 Seeing this, and reflecting that the heaviest 
 part was detached, the same process was tried 
 from aft j and, this being found to be easier, by 
 midnight then; remained but twenty-five feet 
 to cut, for connecting the two sections. Again 
 the crew were supplied with food, making the 
 third pound to each man since the commence- 
 ment of the work in the forenoon ; but, on this 
 occasion, hot cocoa was given instead of grog. 
 After one hour's rest the laborious duty was re^ 
 sumed, and,;stimulated with the desire of seeing 
 the ship once more upright, they did not relax 
 until nature asserted her prerogative. 
 
 D D 2 
 
 (I 
 
 IN 
 
 f !il 
 
404. 
 
 SHIP RIGHTS. 
 
 [chap. VI. 
 
 ,H ; 
 
 'i/, 
 
 After 2*" a. m., July 14th, many became so 
 fligged and drowsy that, in spite of the energetic 
 remonstrancesof the first Lieutenant, they worked 
 mechanically, with their eyes shut ; and there- 
 fore, anxious as I was that all should be accom- 
 plished before a change of weather or other con- 
 tingency should interfere, and though ten feet 
 only were wanting to unite the fore and aft line, 
 I gave direction that all should quit the ice, and 
 lie down for two hours. It was remarked, about 
 that time, that the ship had righted a few inches, 
 but still no one could move about the deck with- 
 out holding on by the ropes to windward. The 
 people had crept under the shelter of the deck 
 to escape from the chilling air of the morning 
 (for filmy ice was forming on the sea) j the 
 officers were dispersed about the deck above ; and 
 I was contemplating the languid action of those 
 whose turn it was to take the pumps, and more 
 particularly, three or four jaded forms, stretched 
 out in death-like slumber on the lee side — when, 
 suddenly, there was a sensible yielding bfciieath 
 the feet, with the grating sound of breaking ice, 
 and, before a word could be spoken, the liberated 
 ship righted entirely; while broken spars, the 
 bent saw, and the massy berg, were all in com- 
 motion together. Quick as they could spring, 
 the crew jumped on deck, and I know not how 
 many cheers commemorated the joyful occasion. 
 
 ^ 
 
VI. 
 
 ! SO 
 
 etic 
 
 ked 
 
 3re- 
 
 3m- 
 
 :on- 
 
 feet 
 
 ne, 
 
 a,nd 
 
 out 
 
 les, 
 
 ith- 
 
 rhe 
 
 2ck 
 
 ing 
 
 the 
 
 md 
 
 ose 
 
 ore 
 
 led 
 
 !'i 
 
 en, 
 ath 
 ce, 
 ted 
 the 
 m- 
 
 ow 
 
 m. 
 
 W^M 
 

 ml 
 
 
 ^1: 
 
 Jl, 
 
 j ■ 
 
 i 1 • 'i^ 
 
 • 
 
 ; 1 
 i 
 
 
 
 J. 
 
 If •• i 
 
 Hi 
 
 ■' If 
 
i(1 
 
 '^» 
 
 a 
 
 S 
 
 H 
 
 H 
 
 hi i> 
 
 1 
 
 ' .-1 
 
 
 ]' 
 
 ill 
 
• '( 
 
 v> 
 
 1H1 
 
 I *' 
 
CHAP. VI.] GRATIPyiNO IlEFLECTIONS. 405 
 
 It was u scene not to be forgotten by the spec- 
 tators. It wanted but one day to complete four 
 months since the ship had been thrown upon 
 the ice. In that period what extraordinary 
 phenomena we had witnessed— what manifold 
 mercies had shielded us when all seemed des- 
 perate, and now we were free : the good ship 
 was once more in her own element, and subject 
 to the will of man 1 I aimost doubted the reality 
 of what I saw. yy 
 
 The crew were agiiw alive for duty; and 
 having unloaded and hoisted up the boats, the 
 termination, as we hoped, of our weary anxieties 
 was celebrated by the distribution of a little grog 
 to the crew, who, after three cheers, which they 
 requested permission to give, to myself and the 
 officers, the fine 'fellows were sent to their 
 hammocks. The officers were glad to follow 
 the example of the men : Lieutenant Smyth, in 
 particular, must have been greatly flitigued ; for 
 since the 21st of June he had been himself daily 
 at work, and his exertions throughout this trying 
 affiiir were as meritorious as they were harassing. 
 Two accidents only happened, from first to last, 
 and one of these was slight; the other, as having 
 befidlen an invalid, was more serious, but yet 
 not dangerous. What might have happened had 
 the people remained on the ice it is difficult to 
 conjecture ; bu as it rose and fell against the 
 
 DD 3 
 
 I 
 
 f., 
 
 / 
 
 •\h 
 
 I ': 
 
 » fi'ii 
 
M 
 
 J 
 
 I' I 
 
 i' ! 
 
 H^r'l 
 
 ui'i 
 
 It 
 
 
 I; 
 
 406 
 
 CLEARING DECKS. [CHAP.VI, 
 
 ship's side, which again, on leaning over, pressed 
 upon it, there is reason to apprehend that few 
 would have survived that fetal crush. Wonder- 
 ful, therefore, was the whole I and well might 
 we repeat with the Psalmist, "They that go 
 down to the sea in ships, and occupy their busi- 
 ness m great waters ; these men see the works 
 of the Lord, and his wonders in the deep." 
 Who amongst us can ever forget that day ? 
 
 The ship, though tolerably upright, had a 
 trifling list to port : her draught of water, after 
 the consumption of one year's food, was reduced 
 only one foot, being fourteen feet eight inches 
 forward, and fourteen feet seven abaft. Left to 
 her own guidance, she went slowly before the 
 wind, avoiding, in a remarkable manner, the 
 many pieces of drift ice which surrounded her. 
 At noon the weather was beautiful. I now 
 heard from the carpenter, that during the time 
 the ship was on her beam ends, the midship 
 part of the upp'^r deck rose up, while both the 
 ends were unsupported 5 a trial which, in his 
 opinion, no other vessel could have withstood, 
 but must inevitably have broken her back, and 
 been in great danger of sinking. As soon as the 
 hands were turned up, we commenced clearing 
 the decks, and in endeavouring to stow away the 
 gunner's stores, it was discovered that the water 
 was pouring into the ship in two rills, which, 
 
CHAP. VI. j POMPS AT wonic. 
 
 407 
 
 finding their way by the stem-post, fell over the 
 transom with a gush. Every thing was imm&- 
 diately cleared out to enable the carpenter to 
 get at the leak, and most of the things Were 
 wet from having been under water. The casks 
 in which bread was stowed, being water-tight^ 
 little or no injury had been sustained by this 
 important article* The water in the Well had 
 been kept under, at first with three, and sub- 
 sequently with two pumps, constantly at work ; 
 and, even when the carpenters seemed to check 
 the stream, which lashed through the leak, still 
 those on deck could not relax in their efforts. 
 
 July 15th. To the N.E. there was a pack of 
 solid ice, and the drift ice was too thick to allow 
 the ship to yaw about amongst it ; the little head- 
 sail, therefore, that had been set, was taken in, 
 and we began to pass a chain round and under 
 the projecting part of the stern-post, heaving it 
 so tight as to secure it against the effect of a 
 heavy sea. The old rudder was now, by the 
 help of the sheers erected for that purpose, 
 taken on board, and the new one hoisted out 
 and hung in its proper place. Sail was then set, 
 and, having tacked under some disadvantage, we 
 entertained a very favourable opinion of the 
 result of the experiment. The ship, however, 
 was very leewardly, and the shock occasioned by 
 the first piece of ice that struck agamst her, 
 
 D D 4 
 
 a I: 
 
 III 
 
 V' 
 
 i 
 

 f «i >i 
 
 P^<4 
 
 h' 1. 1 y 
 
 I i 
 
 408 EXPEDITION FRUSTRATED. [cHAP.VI. 
 
 showed clearly how much she was shaken and 
 weakened. I had waited for the verification of 
 my apprehensions, before I could bring myself 
 finally to relinquish the object of my mission ; 
 but my last hope having now vanished,— the ship 
 crazy, broken, and leaky,^I had no longer a 
 choice ; and, accordingly, assembling the crew 
 on the quarter deck, I told them they were now 
 going home. It may be well pardoned them 
 that their countenances brightened at the intel- 
 iigence, and their feelings were manifested by 
 three hearty cheers. 
 
 Thus in effect ended an expedition, from 
 which, had it been permitted to reach its port 
 of disembarkation, it was reasonable to expect 
 the full accomplishment of its objects. Un- 
 controllable circumstances prevented it. The 
 problem itself, which it was intended to solve, 
 remains of course unaltered. Whether, notwith- 
 standing a repulse which may fairly be considered 
 as accidental, a further trial is to be made, is a 
 question for the consideration of those to whose 
 zeal and perseverance the science of geography 
 is already so deeply indebted. 
 
 The wind having got to the eastward, the 
 ship was kept in the open water off Charies 
 Island, in readiness to avail itself of any lead 
 towards the mouth of the Strait. Another leak 
 was discovered, which again intruded on our 
 
 J 
 
CHAP. VI.] SLOW PROGRESS OF SHIP. 409 
 
 Sunday semce. At noon, the eastern point of 
 Charles Island bore S. ^ W., and the ice con- 
 tmuing packed to the eastward, we contented 
 ourselves with standing off and on. The ship, 
 however, was so leewardly, that by noon, July 17th,* 
 we were only opposite to the east end of the same 
 island, having made but seven miles to wind- 
 ward in twenty-four hours ; though, in smooth 
 water, with all reefs out and top-gallant sails 
 set. Ihe leaks had been partially stopped ; but 
 another passage was soon found out through 
 and between the lining and the sides, and the 
 same quantity of water made its way into the 
 ship as before. As there was little prospect of 
 much improvement in this respect, a different 
 mode of working the pumps was adopted, and 
 conduits were laid down and caulked, from the 
 pumps to the ship's sides, in order to carry off 
 the water without wetting the deck. We now 
 sailed among loose ice, avoiding as carefully as 
 possible any concussion ; for the shock even of 
 a small piece made the ship's frame tremble in a 
 manner that proved beyond doubt her rickety 
 condition. Night as it advanced, brought rain 
 with fog, and a freshening breeze wiiich induced 
 us to shorten sail, and having tacked from the 
 edge of the pack, we hove to. 
 
 Next day, July 18th, the topsails were freble 
 reefed, and as the same misty weather prevailed 
 
410 
 
 HAINY WEATHER. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 much caution and dexterity were required on 
 the part of the officers in keeping clear of drift 
 ice. All hands were yet occupied during the 
 day in clearing those parts of the after hold ad- 
 jacent to the leaks, and in restowing such as had 
 already been disturbed. The carpenters detected 
 a considerable rising in the lining of the star- 
 board side of the bread-room, just between the 
 sleeper and the stringer, against which there had 
 been so violent a pressure for many months past. 
 He secured it with sixteen long nails. Though 
 the wind had got round to the westward, yet, 
 thick and rainy as the weather was, all that could 
 be done was to steer clear of the ice ; but on July 
 19th, the wind again veered to the north, and 
 compelled us to beat to windward, to avoid being 
 driven on the southern shore. At noon it rained 
 heavily, and the ice was closely packed to the 
 north-east. The two pumps were kept going as 
 before, the leak making about four feet of water 
 per hour. Temperature 35°-^. In the afternoon 
 the freshening of the breeze made it necessary 
 to reef the to >sails, and we continued skirting 
 the f'dge of the pack until after midnight, when 
 on the 20th, the ice beginning to stream off, and 
 drift in v.'s quantities towards the southern 
 land, it was requisite to make an effort to elude 
 it, for fear of l>eing carried with it in that direc- 
 tion. This, of necessity, threw us into the midst 
 
CHAP. VI. J DIFFICULTY OF STEERING. 
 
 411 
 
 of it } and, unmanageable as the ship was, and 
 always going to leeward, the utmost attention on 
 the part of tho^e on deck could not prevent her 
 striking or grazing against various pieces, from 
 the concussion of which she suffered greatly. 
 Observing that the ice opened out to the north- 
 east, in which direction I wished to go, for the pur- 
 pose of returning along the known track of the 
 iiorth shore, rather than by the unfrequented, and 
 almost unknown navigation of the south one, ad- 
 vantage was taken of the circumstance j and, though 
 greatly annoyed by numerous unavoidable shocks 
 from the drift ice, sufficient distance was gained 
 to bring in sight the coast along which we had 
 passed last year. Such, however, was the diffi- 
 culty of steering clear of concussions, and 
 so great the importance of saving our new 
 rudder, which was in dauger of being carried 
 away, that further progress was impossible j and 
 as by good fortune an extensive floe was near, 
 the ship was got to it and made fast by the 
 usual means of ice anchors. At that time, one 
 compact sheet of ice filled the Straits from shore 
 to shore, and extended to the utmost limit of 
 view to the eastward. At noon Charles Island 
 bore (east end) W.S.W, and the Labrador shore 
 stretched to the south and east, terminating in a 
 point The temperature was 37°-f, and 44°+ in 
 the sun. That of the sea water which in a free 
 
 i 
 
 \l\ 
 
 ir 
 
!■. I 
 
 412 ship's DRAUGI!T INCREASED. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 space was 35" + , was, when surrounded with ice, 
 only 31° + . The effectual labours of the car- 
 penter began to be manifested by a small but 
 perceptible diminution of the depth of water in 
 the well: in consequence, however, of the 
 wood becoming sodden, the ship had increased 
 her draught of water about two and a half inches. 
 We found ourselves setting, as was supposed, 
 fast to the south-east ; and, in the evening, the 
 floe to which we were attached split into three 
 pieces, though leaving our part stiJl large enough 
 to hang on by. 
 
 July 21st. The ice had driven us nearer to 
 the Labrador Coast, a few miles from which was 
 an island conjectured to be that called Weggs. 
 The main shore was high and apparently rocky, 
 behig diversified by hill and valley, where streaks 
 and patches of snow yet remained. The channel 
 between it and Charles Island seemed wide, and 
 probably contributed to form some of the eccen- 
 tric whirls, or currents, which every now and then 
 visibly affected the ice. In the forenoon we 
 w -e obliged to get more warps out, to haul the 
 ship out of the way of such floe pieces as threat- 
 ened to drive against the rudder; for, though the 
 south shore might have been approached, there 
 was not the smallest opening to the north and 
 cast, nor indeed to the west. Two whales were 
 seen, and a narwhale, together with a few boat- 
 
CHAP. VI.] 
 
 HILLY COAST. 
 
 413 
 
 swains. At noon Charles Island bore W. by N. 
 about eight leagues distant. There was much 
 drift ice incommoding us in the afternoon, when 
 the ship was hauled alongside the floe to allow 
 of our fdling our tanks with fresh water. There 
 must have been a perfect block to the east ; for 
 though the wind was westerly, and, consequently, 
 down the Straits, we moved only to the south- 
 ward with the ice, which took us nearer and 
 nearer the shore. About 6^ 30™ there was a 
 probability of getting three or four miles to the 
 south-east, whereupon we cast off from the floe 
 and made sail, and, having accomplished the 
 distance at 8^ p. m., we again made fast to a 
 large floe. This had certainly been exposed to 
 heavy pressure, for many blocks and masses 
 of ice were thrown upon it, to the height of 
 fiite^ri ^ r twenty feet. 
 
 Jul> ^^2d, presented one glare of ice to the north- 
 east and south-eitst from shore to shore, and at 
 noon, we found by the observations that our 
 drift had rather c:ir5v:^d m in shore ; so that we 
 had now an opporti r ty of beholding the coast in 
 all its frowning grandeur. It rose into high 
 hills, deserving the name of mountains, and 
 these were broken into numerous vallies, that 
 after shelving in some places towards the sea, 
 terminated abruptly in fearful precipices and 
 perpendicular cliffs, accessible only to birds. 
 
 j4 
 
IIJ 
 
 ' !i 
 
 w 
 
 A ' ili 
 
 
 
 414 FLOE-PIECES IN MOTION. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 Some islands lay off, and, though evidently of no 
 mean altitude, were completely in shade under 
 these towering cliffs. Harbours pnd deep bights 
 were sufficiently defined, but all were choked 
 with ice, and unapproachable except by such 
 pressure as we had no desire to experience. 
 Two pumps were still required to keep the ship 
 free. A whale was seen and several morses. 
 Throughout the afternoon large floe pieces were 
 observed to be setting in atmost every direction, 
 even against the wind, which had considerably 
 increased in strength; and frequently we were 
 not a little embarrassed to protect the rudder 
 against their assault, being compelled to make 
 use of warps to avoid them. The carpenter, on 
 examining the lining below, found that the 
 water trickled through still higher than before, 
 and that, in consequence, the ship's draught was 
 augmented to fourteen feet eleven inches fore 
 and aft, being three inches deeper than when 
 she righted from the ice. 
 
 Finding that the ice continued in motion, and 
 that there was a lead somewhat nearer the land, 
 I now decided on trying it, a^ not the slightest 
 probability appeared of an opening towards the 
 north shore, where, on the contrary, the view 
 presented only one compact body of impene- 
 trable ice. Although, therefore, I was not with- 
 out some anxiety of being closed in against the 
 
CHAP. VI. 
 
 CHAP. VI.] FREAK OF THE SHIP. 
 
 415 
 
 tly of no 
 ie under 
 jp bights 
 
 choked 
 by such 
 )erience. 
 the ship 
 
 morses. 
 :es were 
 irection, 
 iderably 
 we were 
 
 rudder 
 
 make 
 Iter, on 
 bat the 
 
 before, 
 ^ht was 
 les fore 
 
 1 when 
 
 3n, and 
 e land, 
 ightest 
 ds the 
 le view 
 npene- 
 t with- 
 ist the 
 
 shore, if, as was not impossible, the breeze 
 should veer to the north and drive all the wind- 
 ward ice ■ pon us ; yet I had, in fact, no alter- 
 native. At 8^ 50"* p. M. the surrounding masses 
 began to diift to the south-east ; and, coasting 
 off from the floe, we threaded an in-shore lead 
 under easy sail until 11** p. m., when farther 
 progress being interrupted by the closing of the 
 ice, the ship was kept beating to windward of 
 the pack until the morning of July 23d, with 
 the view of taking the first favourable opening 
 that presented itself. The ship, however, de- 
 cided the point herself rather more quickly than 
 was anticipated; for, refusing to answer the 
 helm, which had been put a-lee for tacking, she 
 drove bodily to leeward into the pack, to the 
 great risk of carrying aw? - the rudder and the 
 remainder of the stern-post. This freak cost us 
 some severe shocks in forcing a passage to a 
 floe, round whose point we contrived to get by 
 means of warping; and, as the prospect was rather 
 more promising, sail was kept on the ship, and she 
 bored her way with many sharp concussions and 
 infinite windings till about 1^ p. m., wi^en, having 
 run between twenty and thirty miljs, she was 
 stopped by the usual impediment. Trifling as 
 this distance may appear, it seemed considerable 
 to us who had been so long driven wherever 
 wind and tide chose to carry us. The line of 
 
 :;:|. 
 
 I f-^ 
 
( ' 
 
 
 lit) 
 
 Nl9 
 
 i- 
 
 
 iv' 
 
 iu 
 
 Ih' 
 
 urn 
 
 HBi 
 
 
 w 
 
 
 l''^l 
 
 |\i3 
 
 I'll 
 
 k! 
 
 m 
 
 416 
 
 VISITED BY ESQUIMAUX. [CHAl'.VI. 
 
 coast was still mountainous and imposing, with a 
 singularly irregular outline, partially lost in a 
 horizontjil band of fleecy clouds, whic . tl? ^ fine- 
 ness of the day allowed to dwell there. Nor 
 was variety wanting; for, besides num! rous 
 dark and rugged islands extending fvoni point 
 to point, there were spacious bays and harboui , 
 almost land-locked, and stretching so far inland 
 as to lose their sombre aspect in the soft 1 'ue of 
 the distance. In one place there was an amphi- 
 theatre of frowning hills, the bases of which 
 were buried in mist, while the picturesque sum- 
 mits stood out clear and defined, touched here 
 and there with snow, producing an effect most 
 striking, but of which no description could give 
 an adequate idea. Four noisy natives of the 
 Esquimaux race had the hardihood to venture 
 through much difficult drift ice to the ship, from 
 whence, however, they returned amply rewarded, 
 and the richest of their tribe. Some of the pre- 
 sents, supplied for that purpose by government, 
 were given to them, together with a few brass 
 medals, having the ship's name on one side, and 
 a figure of Britannia on the other. The north 
 shore could be seen from deck. 
 
 In the evening the ice became rather slacker, 
 and an intimation of the freshening of the 
 westerly wind was given by the slipping of the 
 warp over the head of the hummock to which it 
 
CHAP.VI.] ANOTHER INVAUO. 
 
 417 
 
 w fast( led, in consequenc he increased 
 
 sti tining ^ the ship. Early , July 24th a 
 tf pting lead appearing in the right direction, 
 that is to say, slanting off the shore, sail was 
 agair made, and leaving the floe, under the 
 influence of a liesh breeze, we proceeded three 
 or four miles without ; y imnediment from ice. 
 At the end of that distance, uowever, the ship 
 was compelled to bore an vy masses, and 
 
 in so doing there was no bility of escaping 
 
 many serious blows that )k her whole frame, 
 though still without appai . nt injury. At 9" 30"* 
 the impracticability of proceeding further became 
 oparent, and we made fast to an extensive old 
 floe, of the yellow tinted kind, which happened 
 to be at hand. I ought to mention that, at one 
 time, we fancied a brigantine was in sight, which, 
 as the day became clearer, turned out to be an 
 iceberg, being over towards the north shore. 
 We had succeeded in diawing away from the 
 land about twenty miles, and the whole of the 
 forenoon we were set considerably to the south- 
 east. The hope of getting entirely iree of 
 the ice and breathing a different air had diffused 
 fresh spirits in most of our invalids ; but it was 
 annoying to find a new patient in the list, and 
 one, too, who had passed through the regions of 
 the winter without evincing the least symptom 
 of disorder. The whole affair, indeed was inex- 
 
 E E 
 
 M 
 
 i: 
 
^^i. 
 
IMAGE EVALUATION 
 TEST TARGET (MT-3) 
 
 V. 
 
 A 
 
 
 
 < V". % 
 
 
 Z 
 ^ 
 
 
 1.0 
 
 I.I 
 
 11.25 
 
 1^ 1 2.8 
 u 1^ 
 
 2.5 
 
 20 
 
 111= 
 
 U IIIIII.6 
 
 ^ 
 
 %""' 
 
 vl 
 
 9^ > 
 
 7 
 
 
 /> 
 
 7 
 
 /A 
 
 Photographic 
 
 Sciences 
 
 Corporation 
 
 23 WEST MAIN STREET 
 
 WEBSTER, N.Y. 14580 
 
 (716) 872-4503 
 
 
i" 4 
 
 '^°J%i 
 
 
N 
 
 
 I 
 
 -^IS TLOES NUMEROUS, [CHAP.VI. 
 
 plicable to the medical officers, as we had had the 
 advantage of the best provisions, and assuredly 
 every comfort which persons situated as we 
 were could possess. At l*- p m. catching a 
 glimpse of an opening we left the floe, but after 
 some boring were stopped, and again held on by 
 the heaviest floe we had seen since the winter. 
 There had been immense pressure on it, as with 
 the floes in Fox's Channel, whence, judgmg 
 from its dirty yellow colour, it had in all pro- 
 bability come. In the evening we made another 
 attempt, which, after an hour's trial, was again 
 relinquished, and we made fast as before to 
 another floe, a great number of which lay ^^ 
 every direction. 
 
 July 25th. The westerly breeze now failed 
 us, and up to noon the ice was infinitely too 
 close to permit our moving. After some time 
 however, the ship was warped from floe to floe, 
 as circumstances admitted, and at ^'^ p.m., just 
 when it was thought that further progress was 
 hopeless, and we were about to make fast, the ice 
 gradually opened out, and sail being immedi- 
 ately crowded on the ship, she went with hard 
 boring between very heavy ice, at thj rate of 
 two or three knots an hour, as was imagined, 
 directly towards the north shore. 
 
 ^ July 26th. It fell partially calm, but after 
 8" A. M, a light air sprang up j and, though com- 
 
CHAP. VI. J 
 
 CURRENTS. 
 
 419 
 
 pletely hampered with ice of all descriptions, for 
 the berg was then plainly discerned from deck, yet 
 we thumped and glided on from piece to piece, 
 and thus contrived to make a kind of devious 
 course to the east-north-east. The Labrador 
 coast was thrown up considerably by refraction, 
 and, even allowing for this, appeared much 
 nearer than our estimated run gave us reason to 
 suppose. At noon tiiis was accounted for by 
 the discovery that, though the longitude was 
 considerably to the east, the latitude was actu- 
 ally a few miles south of yesterday»s, thus 
 demonstrating the influence of a current set- 
 ting from the west along the Labrador shore, 
 directly contrary to the set described by other 
 officers as existing on the north side of the 
 Straits. This fact corresponded with what we 
 had already experienced somewhere about Mill 
 Islands, where it may be remembered some 
 overfalls were seen, which, together with a 
 strong set down Fox's Channel, so completely 
 overpowered the sailing qualities of the Terror, 
 that for two days she was unable to beat through 
 them. It is not improbable, therefore, that the 
 upward current, becoming dissipated and broken 
 along the sinuosities of the northern shore, may 
 be finally turned by the stronger one from Fox's 
 Channel, the effect of which would be that the 
 set would be carried between the islands towards 
 
 EE 2 
 
 
 ■ . , 
 
 ^t. 
 
420 
 
 SLOW PROGRESS. f CHAP. VI* 
 
 Charles Island, and thence east into the Atlantic, 
 as we found to be the case in fact. 
 
 During the remainder of the day, and until 
 noon of the 27th, the wind was light, but still 
 strong enough to enable us to sail and bore 
 among extremely heavy ice, which, from pieces 
 of moderate dimensions, all at once changed its 
 character to enormous floes, completely blocking 
 up the passage across. We could therefore only 
 coast along them, as well as the impediments 
 permitted.* Our progress, therefore, was neces- 
 sarily slow; but after g*' p. m. a casual slack 
 taking place, the ship forced her way a few 
 miles ahead, striking with startling violence, but 
 yet, as on former occasions, without increasing 
 her leakage, though a great deal of oakum had 
 worked from out the seams under the counter. 
 The ice was of an extraordinary thickness, and 
 had, moreover, long projecting tongues two or 
 three fathoms below the surface, which so ob- 
 structed our course that, though the ship's head 
 pointed often N.N.E., we only made good a 
 S.E. line of direction. By midnight the entire 
 body of ice closed in and beset us ; and the 
 appearance, at the same time, of a faint aurora, 
 brought about the recollection of last autumn. 
 
 * Two pieces of ice with fragments, refuse, &c. passed us. 
 They were conjectured to have come from one of the Hudson's 
 Bay Company's ships probably passing along the north coast. 
 
CHAP. VI.] REFRACTION OF OBJECTS. 
 
 421 
 
 July ^8th brought no difference in our pro- 
 spects, except indeed the unwonted presence, at 
 this season of the year, of no fewer than nine or 
 ten large bergs, the produce of Davis's Straits^ 
 proving the prevalence of easterly winds from 
 seaward, although of late we had experienced 
 westerly ones in Hudson's Strait. Bergs of 
 this description are always described, by those 
 employed in the Greenland fishery, to *hold,* 
 as it is termed, a great deal of water ; but every 
 one of these, so far as could be discerned from 
 the mast-head, was hemmed tightly round with 
 ice, nor was water visible in any j)oint of the 
 compass, with the sinfr^e exception of a narrow 
 lane towards the Labrador shore. At noon the 
 centre of Long Island bore S. W. There 
 was, and had been for two days, considerable 
 refraction of objects. The ship did not go her 
 own length ahead, by l y ^' wer derived 
 from her sails, and at nig' thj ice was unusually 
 close-packed ; but what most astonished us' 
 was a gentle swell, which perceptibly agitated 
 the whole body around us, and indicated the- 
 neighbourhood of open water, disturbed by strong 
 easterly winds ; so that, having, in a manned 
 exhausted the fine westerly breeze which had 
 brought us thus far through the seemingly end- 
 less nuisance (for it was now one year since we, 
 first encountered it), our ship gently drifted to 
 
 E E 3 
 
!( I ' 
 
 ki 
 
 4>22 POSITION AS BEFORE. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 thesouth-east, in a sort of neutral territory between 
 the confines of the polar and temperate regions. 
 
 July 29th. It was in vain that topmast and 
 top-gallant studding sails were set, for though 
 they seemed to hug the gentle air aloft, we re- 
 inained immovable. Daylight however proved, 
 by the altered appearance of Long Island, that 
 our drift had been southerly, and this was farther 
 verified by the appearance of some flocks of ducks 
 flying from the land towards the north. At noon 
 our position was much the same, only that land, 
 supposed to be Green Island, was observed to 
 bear south-east. The temperature was 54°, hav- 
 ing risen from 33°+. We were still completely 
 beset, and as the day declined, the wind, gra- 
 dually veering to the eastward, so interlocked 
 the points of ice as to give the appearance of one 
 vast floe. In the twenty-four hours, according 
 to the noon observation of July 30th, our drift 
 had been a little westerly, and full fifteen miles 
 due south, which brought us still nearer to some 
 low ishnds lying off Long Island, With every 
 available sail set, the ship iiad forged ahead 
 about twice her own length in four hours ; and 
 though more or less sail was carried, according 
 to the strength of the breeze, at midnight only 
 a few hundred paces of distance had been 
 gained. 
 
 On July 31st, so close was the ice, that there 
 
GHAP.VI.] REVOLUTION OF ICE ASTERN. 
 
 423 
 
 was ho possibility of keeping the ship's head in the 
 right direction, or preventing her from drifting bo- 
 dily towards the land : sail, therefore, was shortened, 
 and we made fast to the largest piece near. By this 
 measure, however, our way to the south was rather 
 increased than diminished, and sail was again set ; 
 when, after drifting considerably to leeward, her 
 head was at length forced in the right direction, 
 and she went ahead about twice her own length. 
 Then,findingallfurther exertion useless, theformer 
 plan of carrying out an ice-anchor to the heaviest 
 piece was adopted, and, the sails being furled^ 
 we remained quiet until 10** 30"* a. m., when, by 
 a sudden revolution of the ice astern, a weighty 
 mass came in contact with the rudder, and, be- 
 fore we could warp out of danger, had well nigh 
 carried it away. A few minutes, however, 
 sufficed to haul the ship's broadside to the larger 
 piece, where we lay secure. It might have been 
 expected, from our previous drift with a westerly 
 breeze, that now that the wind had drawn round 
 to the north-east we should have been driven still 
 more to the southward, where some low rocks, 
 apparently not much above the water, were 
 ready to receive us. But here again was another 
 anomaly; for, notwithstanding the drag of the 
 ship against the ice to which she was anchored, 
 greatly to our astonishment she went to wind- 
 ward, almost, indeed, in the wind's eye, so that 
 
 £ E 4 
 
424 PUMPS STILL REQUIRED. [cHAP.VL, 
 
 by nightfall the coast of Long Island, whose 
 rugged rocks were contemplated eight hours 
 l^efore with no agreeable sensations, was beginning 
 to assume a fainter tinge, and to give place to 
 the loom of some uncertain land, conjectured to 
 be Green Island, bearing about east. 
 
 Heavy rain, similar to that ordinarily met with 
 at the edge of a pack, or at least in the vicinity of 
 open water, together with thick weather, effectu- 
 ally screened the shore from view. This continu- 
 ing throughout the night, on August 1st we had 
 no means of ascertaining our position otherwise 
 than by sounding; but as this gave one hundred 
 and twenty.eight fathoms water, on a muddy 
 bottom, all cause for anxiety was at an end. 
 The ice continued to slacken about the ship 
 and to windward, and at noon the tempera, 
 ture was 34". Two pumps were always required 
 to keep the ship free; and, notwithstanding 
 our present sheltered situation, yet the jerking 
 and concussions received from passing ice added 
 to the effect of a slight swell, just sufficient to 
 swing the broadside at intervals against the 
 piece to which we were attached, had contri- 
 buted to weaken still further the after part of 
 the ship, so that, to use the carpenter?s phrase* 
 «the bolts wept;" or, in other words, were 
 already sufficiently loosened to allow of the 
 Waters oozing between them and the wooci* 
 
 H 
 
 J^ 
 
CHAP.Vr.] SHIP STRUCK BY A PLOE. 
 
 4gJ 
 
 The result was an increase of water in the well, 
 amounting now m a little more than five feet 
 per hour, and an apprehension tliat it would be 
 still further augmented on exposure to a rolling 
 sea. Several heavy remnants of floes hovered for 
 three or four hours of a rainy night alarmingly 
 near our rudder and quarter ; and, anxious as 
 we were to guard these tender and important 
 points, it was not a little curious to observe the 
 eccentric movements of those huge masses j 
 now pressing directly towards us, now turning 
 aside and athwart the previous course, as it were 
 reluctantly retreating ; then again, as if urged by 
 fresh vigour, turning slowly round, and gradu- 
 ally reapproaching ; until suddenly, under some 
 powerful but unseen influence, their whirling 
 ceased, and they started off with accelerated 
 speed in a straight undeviating line, immediately 
 against the wind, ploughing up or tossing aside 
 every impediment that crossed their way. Rain 
 fell all night, up to noon of Av ijst 2d, the 
 wind continuing north-east and the ice close, 
 whilst a gentle swell occasionally agitated the 
 ship. No land could be seen. At 2" 40"' p. m. 
 a sudden commotion took place among the ice, 
 perhaps occasioned by the spring tide, which 
 drove a large floe against the ship, upon the star- 
 board quarter, ^yith a crash that brought most 
 of the officers on deck. Fortunately, the blow 
 
 IF 
 
42G 
 
 HKAVY MISTS. 
 
 CciiAP.vr. 
 
 if f- 
 
 r 
 ft 
 
 was not rc^^eatccl; and, after a lapse of two 
 hours, it floated away to tlie leeward, whither, 
 indeed, all tlie lighter ice seemed to be drifting, 
 in the direction of south-east. The same dark 
 thick weather, with incessant rain, prevailed 
 throughout the night, the ice being often very 
 slack, and then closing again with some degree 
 of violence. 
 
 August 3d. Finding that the stern was more 
 exposed than the bow, which had the shelter of 
 a projecting point of our holding piece, the ship 
 was turned round end for end, and secured ; 
 though, such was the uncertain action of the 
 drift ice, that it was little better than chance 
 which was the better direction. At noon we 
 were still in the dark as to our position; but, 
 judging from the numerous flocks of loons flying 
 backwards and forwards morning and evening, 
 it was conjectured that the land could not be 
 very remote. Meanwhile, the easterly wind and 
 mist continued, the temperature varying from 
 32° to 37° + . About ^- P.M. the ice closed 
 rapidly around us; and a heavy floe which had 
 been at rest for some hours, acquiring instant 
 speed, struck our holding piece so forcibly as to 
 split it, leaving, however, a remnant sufficient 
 for our purpose, when some necessaiy alterations 
 had been made with the warp. At 4^ there 
 was a partial clearing above, and some low land 
 
CHAP. VI.] TWO BERGS DISCOVEUliU. 
 
 427 
 
 was indistinctly seen, bearing E.S.E. ; but the 
 return of the mist again obscured it, and left us 
 ignorant of wliat part it was. Immense flocks 
 of loons kept constantly flying in every direction, 
 betraying a restlessness altogether unaccountable. 
 There was no lack of water, which, however, 
 they seemed to disregard ; so that had not we 
 caught a glimpse of our position, I should have 
 certainly thought we were not far from the rocks 
 where they roosted. Not long after this, two 
 bergs were discovered ; and the wind having 
 veered to north-west, and the ice become more 
 apart, I determined on casting off from what 
 had carried us safely through three days of mist. 
 I was utterly at a loss to know whether the ship 
 was north or south of her last ascertained posi- 
 tion ; but, as the horizon was visible for about four 
 miles, and nothing appeared to indicate land, we 
 warped a short distance, and then made sail. 
 The ice continued slack, and we had the satis- 
 faction to find that the ship glided through the 
 water, tliough not without the usual penalty of 
 some sev . ;, shocks, which made her tremble to 
 her very keel. The carpenter had been assidu- 
 ously employed in an attempt to force up a 
 quantity of oakum and tallow between the 
 doubling and the rents in the stern-post, in the 
 hope of choking some portion of the leaks 
 thereabouts j and the experiment, so far as he 
 
 
 <J 
 
428 
 
 A SMART OAI.E. 
 
 [CHAP.Vr. 
 
 could judge from the disappearance of the 
 material used, was attended wifli tolerable suc- 
 cess. At midnight there was almost a calm, and 
 the whole body of ice began to set fast to the 
 south. However, on the 1th, tiie breeze revisited 
 us, and with more or less obstruction we went 
 on under the same sail. The ice now lay more 
 in streams than formerly ; and between these 
 there was so much water, as to induce the ice- 
 mate to suppose we had got to the edge of the 
 pack. That this was not the fact was subse- 
 quently proved by our being again slightly 
 hampered at noon, when by the latitude of 
 67" 47' N., it was evident that notwithstanding 
 the northern course which had been steered, 
 we had still crept to the southward. At 4*" p. m. 
 Green Island was clearly visible from S.E. to 
 E.S.E., considerably to the south of us, although 
 bearing north by the charts; a circumstance 
 easily accounted for, as it had only been seen by 
 the dead reckoning of one of our predecessors, 
 and marked down accordingly. Its true position 
 is in latitude 60° 30' north, and longitude 
 67° 526' SO" west. 
 
 As the sun declined, the weather cleared and 
 brought on a fresh breeze that shortly increased 
 to a smart gale; and the ice being closer and 
 heavier than in the early part of the day, it became- 
 requisite to shorten sail and close-reef the top^ 
 
CIIAP.VI.J SPLENDTi) METEOR. 
 
 42f} 
 
 sails, to lessen the violence of the shocks 
 unavoidably received. Some of these, indeed, 
 were sufficiently alarming to cause anxiety for 
 the safety of the rudder ; for, as we were in what 
 is called a loose pack, with no piece large 
 enough to make the ship fast to, she drifled 
 against them broadside on, and, drawing her 
 length along with much pressure under the 
 quarter, threw a powerful strain on the stern- 
 post. 
 
 On August 5th, about 2^ a. m., a splendid 
 comet-like meteor appeared in the south-east, 
 which darting from somewhere near thezenitJi in 
 a brilliant prismatic blaze, and, taking a direction 
 towards the horizon, burst about fifteen degrees 
 above it, and after scattering rays of beautiful 
 sparks, vanished altogether. Towards morning 
 a ground swell was felt, and the ice becoming 
 much slacker, and the wind lighter, (though 
 still fresh), we made some way to the north, 
 having passed two large bergs, which the night 
 before were barely in sight. Green Island, too, 
 was distant and much refracted. We now, for 
 the first time since leaving Charles Island, got 
 into a space of eight or ten miles of open water, 
 and setting the main sail we beat to windward to 
 round a point of ice, which, however, was not 
 effected by noon. The latitude was found to be 
 60" 54', and there seemed a reasonable proba- 
 
4,80 
 
 DARK-COLOURED BERGS. [cHAP.VI. 
 
 m 
 
 ,1 
 
 
 
 h 1 
 
 bility of getting still more to the north, which I 
 considered the only certain way of avoiding the 
 southerly set, and accomplishing a speedy pass- 
 age out of the Strait. Easterly winds must have 
 been unusually prevalent hereabouts, since a 
 large proportion of the heavy ice, recently 
 encountered, was decidedly the produce of the 
 deep bays and inlets in the neighbourhood of 
 Davis's Strait, as was evident from their 
 weather-beaten form, and the difference of colour, 
 which was of a purer white and deeper blue 
 than what we had been accustomed to. In addi- 
 tion to these, there were the bergs spreading at 
 every point, but which, with a northerly or west- 
 erly wind, would, long before this time, have been 
 far on their journey towards the banks of New- 
 foundland or the Gulf Stream. After three or 
 four tacks wa reached open water at 6^ p. m., at 
 which time Green Island was but just in sight, 
 and the north shore, with Button's isles on 
 the other side, soon came into view. The 
 wind having abated, all sail was crowded on 
 the ship, and at 8^ p. m., there were but three 
 or four bergs and some straggling streams of ice 
 to be seen, while a peculiar gloom of a leaden 
 grey tinge, the effect of a dark sky on open 
 water, seemed, to eyes inured to a twelvemonth's 
 glare of Polar ice, unusually dull and heavy. 
 But it had not power to damp the joy that 
 
CHAP. VI. J INVALIDS CHEER, 
 
 431 
 
 beamed on every countenance, at the long 
 wished for liberation that now quickly broke 
 upon us. Our invalids became animated; and, 
 even the few who were seriously affected, and 
 Iiad long worn the sallow livery of disease, 
 raised their feeble frames from their beds, and, 
 with a smile, once more thought of home. 
 Snow appeared to be still lingering on the high 
 land from Terra Nieva to the East Bluff, the 
 denuded parts of which were strangely striated 
 by the refracted ice clinging close along the 
 sinuosities o'" *.he coast. One of the lower 
 savage islands, alone, was seen dark and solitary 
 in the opening j and beyond it, in colour not 
 much deeper than the sky, was the bulky form 
 of Resolution, the Calpe of the Strait. 
 
 With more or less obstruction from adverse 
 tide or current, we pursued our joyous course, 
 until on August 6th calm and rain for a while 
 checked itj soon, however, a light air again 
 sprang up, and at noon we were hastening on- 
 wards. We ROW hauled up more for the land, 
 in order to clear the extreme point of some 
 stream ice, but were puzzled at seeing only 
 four hills to the north, instead of Resolution 
 Island; the latter, however, was at length 
 discovered in tlie shape of a narrow horizontal 
 line far up in the clouds, on the dispersion of 
 which we found ourselves nearly opposite to 
 Hatton's headland. Every sail that could be 
 
 ij 
 
842 EXTftA MEAL ALLOWED. fcHAP.Vl. 
 
 set was spread to the breeze ; though, scarcely 
 had we fairly launched into the wide opening 
 of Davis's Strait, than we were compelled to 
 put the ship under snug canvass. In the midst 
 of one of the squalls the look-out man called 
 out " ice ahead ;" and before there was time 
 to perform any evolution, we were right among 
 it: luckily, it was only the straggling edge of 
 a loose stream, which was passed without in- 
 jury, though it required the utmost vigilance 
 to steer clear of the numerous bergs seen 
 dimly through the haze of a starless night. 
 
 Early on August 7th Resolution Island was 
 just in sight, astern ; and, under the influence 
 of a most promising westerly breeze, sail was 
 again crowded, while active measures were 
 adopted to hoist inboard and firmly secure 
 our boats, anchors, &c., for the voyage across. 
 One circumstance alone gave cause for uneasi- 
 ness, and this was the working of the injured parts 
 of the stern-posts and keel by which more water 
 necessarily found admission. A strong shore was 
 immediately fixed to counteract it, which in 
 some respects answered well; though it was 
 not altogether effective, since the pumps were 
 constantly required to keep the ship free. The 
 arduous duty thus imposed on a weakened 
 crew, together with other considerations, induced 
 the surgeon to recommend an additional meal 
 of pre.scH'vcd meat in the week, with more an- 
 
CH'?.Vr.] SHATTERED CONDITION OF SHIP. iSS 
 
 ti.scYirbutics. It had been observed, indeed, that 
 the apprehension of sickness had induced most 
 of the men to go without food, except such 
 as they could save up of fresh provision, 
 rather than take their regular allowance of salt 
 meat. We now went cheerily along between 
 ice bergs of an extent and altitude such as I 
 had never before witnessed, until, leaving them 
 far behind, the temperature of the sea-water 
 gradually increased from 36" to 41" +, and indi- 
 cated our entrahce into a warmer climate. 
 
 August 9th. The shattered condition of the 
 after part of the ship forced itself hourly more 
 on our notice, and, though yet unexposed to any 
 thing beyond a moderate sea, the rickety state of 
 the stern-post and other parts, such as the dead- 
 wood, heel-hook, and heel-knee, as well as t!?e 
 increased leakage between the lining, rendered 
 immediate attention necessary, before the arrival 
 of a gale should put us to too severe a test. Con- 
 sequently the heel chains were again set up, and 
 being brought over each quarter were hove tight 
 by the capstan ; and in order to prevent the 
 scarphingof the doubling on the keel from break- 
 ing adrift, as was apprehended by the carpenter, 
 as well as to secure the doubling itself, a length 
 of the stream-chain cable was passed under the 
 bottom of the ship, four feet before the mizen 
 mast, hove tight by the capstan, and finally im- 
 
 if, 
 
 1 
 
 r F 
 
4S4 BREEZE OFF CAPE FAREWELL. [CHAP.VI. 
 
 lis 
 M 
 
 moveably fastened to six ring bolts on the quarter 
 deck. The effect vas at once manifested, by a 
 great diminution in the working of the parts 
 already mentioned, and in a less agreeable way, 
 by impeding our rate of sailing ; a trifling con- 
 sideration, however, when compared with the 
 benefit received. Another man was added to the 
 sick list, a second showed symptoms of scurvy, 
 and the same evening Mr. Webster, the gunner, 
 was similarly affected. Nothing could be more 
 favourable than the wind and weather had hitherto 
 been since quitting Hudson's Strait, but though 
 many additional bolts and supports bad been 
 placed abafl, yet the working of the ship, as she 
 was thrown about by the sea or swell, began 
 sensibly to loosen the bolt-heads in the heel-hook, 
 while the lining was much swollen. The only 
 immediate remedy for these unavoidable evils, 
 was the substituting more shores to counteract the 
 effect, and give what strength we could. . 
 
 August 1 1th. The stay bolts in the tiller broke, 
 owing to a rather heavy swell from the south- 
 west acting against a northerly breeze, which 
 rolled us about a great deal. From that time 
 we went on slowly, without material change, until 
 the 15th, when, having rounded the broad point 
 of Cape Farewell, we were all at once exposed to 
 a swell from the north east, which, though the 
 breeze entirely died away, increased to such a 
 
CHAP. VI.] INCREASE OF LEAKAGE. 435 
 
 degree as to resemble the sea off the Cape of 
 Cxood Hope more than anything else. The con- 
 sequences to us were serious indeed, for, from the 
 unavoidable pitching, rolling, and straining of 
 the ship, the entire stem frame became more 
 and more loosened. The fastenings and bolts were 
 nckety and twisted : this naturally slackened the 
 preventer lashings, till that time of great utility 
 and an additional quantity of water, now forcibly 
 rushing in from a variety of places, warned us 
 how little we had to depend upon for safety, ex- 
 cept the providential care which had hitherto been 
 our stay and comfort. We did not however neglect 
 to put four extra screw eye-bolts on each side of 
 the heel-knee, through which ten turns of two- 
 inch rope were passed for a lashfng, that in some 
 measure relieved the immense strain previously 
 ^ustained by the others. Nevertheless the leaks 
 did not abate, and owing to the quantity of coals 
 stowed in bulk below, and the manner in which 
 we had been thrown about, the limber holes had 
 got choked, so that on inspection not less than 
 fourteen inches of water were found over the 
 casing of the water-courses. This obliged us to 
 cut a hole through the bulkhead on the star- 
 board side, to allow of its egresp to the pump 
 well, and when it was done, the service of the 
 whole crew, properly divided into parties, wa^ 
 required for upwards of three hours and twenty 
 
 F F 2 
 
436 
 
 CRAZY STATE OF THE SHIP. [cHAP. Vf. 
 
 ■A 
 
 minutes, out of the four hours of each watch, to 
 keep the ship free. In fact she was becoming 
 daily more sodden and heavy, as was proved by 
 her diminished rate of sailing, which now, under 
 every advantage of wind and sea, never exceeded 
 five knots an hour. Generally, however, she 
 averaged from two to three, and in moderate 
 weather with any swell still less. 
 
 August 18th. The keel chain having been 
 slackened, owing probably to the working of the 
 damaged part, was again hove tight with the cap- 
 stan. The effect of this was soon shown, for the 
 shores and fastenings below, where the carpenter 
 of the watch was stationed, were observed by him 
 to be set firm, thus proving beyond all doubt the 
 loosened state of the under portion of the ship. 
 Thus patched up, while favoured with moderate 
 weather, we made reasonable progTess j but dur- 
 ing any abatement of the breeze, the rolling and 
 plunging of the ship excited much anxiety, for 
 the leaks still gained, and the altered appearance 
 of the crew plainly evinced the change that was 
 taking place, from their incessant labour. Nor 
 could it be concealed that the quantity of water 
 always rushing backward and forward below, was 
 beginning to affect the equilibrium of the ship, 
 which now visibly heeled over to starboard. The 
 favourable conjunction of circumstances which 
 had carried us thus far without any squall or 
 
 i i 
 
 
CHAP. VI.] WATER REACHES MAGAZINE. 437 
 
 tempest, encouraged many in the hope that we 
 might be altogether exempted from such un- 
 welcome visitations. 
 
 On August the 28th, however, the clouds 
 grew dark and gloomy, whilst misty scud drove 
 rapidly before the coming gale, and the heavy 
 roll of the sea threw us about in every direction. 
 The bulicheads being considerably loosened, 
 worked so much, that it became necessary to 
 introduce numerous wedges. These for a time 
 answered the purpose of keeping them firm, 
 especially when by carrying a press of sail the 
 ship could be kept well over on one side ; but 
 on examining below, it was fouiid that the bolts 
 and tree-nails in the after-part of the sail-room 
 were started, which in consequence was so much 
 weakened, as to allow the rushing in of a stream 
 of water between the lining. This again de- 
 manded immediate attention, and though the 
 ingenuity of our able carpenter enabled him to 
 check its progress in that particular place, it soon 
 forced its way to another. 
 
 August 31st. The continuance of the gale 
 augmented our difficulties, for a fresh leak was 
 discovered on the larboard side of the heel-knee, 
 and a considerable quantity of water found its 
 way into the magazine and injured the powder. 
 The bread-room, too, was partially flooded, and 
 the entire stern-frame worked with every roll, 
 
 1' F 3 
 
 Ufc 
 
438 
 
 CASCADE IN BREAD-ROOM. [cHAP.V. 
 
 to such an extent, that it seemed almost impos- 
 sible to keep the ship from filling. The heel 
 chains being found slack, were again about to be 
 set up, when it was ascertained that the screw 
 ring-bolt fixed in the outer dead-wood on the 
 larboard side had been carried away, so that the 
 loosening of the chain was not to be wondered 
 at. It was, therefore, hauled up, while the 
 remaining one, on which alone we had now to 
 depend, was set as tight as possible. Still the 
 water rushed violently in below, more especially 
 about the stern-post and heel-hook ; and oozing 
 through different parts higher up, fell like a 
 cascade into the bread-room and *run.* Two 
 more screw ring-bolts were now driven into each 
 side of the heel-knee, which was secured by a 
 lashing of eighteen turns of two-and-a-half inch 
 rope, while, apprehensive that further injury had 
 been sustained about the keel, another length of 
 chain was passed under the bottom, and set well 
 tight to a partof itself across the after-part of the 
 quarter deck. The ship was becoming exces- 
 sively uneasy ; for the unabated fury of the gale, 
 strengthened by squalls, raised a long breaking 
 sea, in which she plunged so heavily, that it was 
 oflen unusually long before she recovered her- 
 self. It was evident she was hourly getting 
 more water-logged, and the straining and creak- 
 ing of her whole frame, the working of the 
 
 
CIIAP.VI.] 
 
 SHIP SINKING. 
 
 430 
 
 
 bulkheads, which actually raised the officers' 
 bed-places, the rickety twisting occasioned by 
 the fore and aft motion, and the prolonged dull 
 roll to windward, to say nothing of the cascade- 
 like rushing of the water within,— all these were 
 certain indications of a consummation which no 
 exertions of ours would probably be sufficiently 
 long to defer. Whilst thus seriously anxious, 
 I was acquainted, shortly after midnight, by 
 Lieutenant Smyth, that the crew were no longer 
 equal to the task of keeping the leaks under, 
 and that, consequently, we were sinking. Such^ 
 indeed, was for the moment the fact ; but the 
 fine fellows, though dreadfully exhausted, again 
 rallied, and cheered and aided by the officers, 
 worked with renewed vigour, until once more 
 they accomplished, and thenceforth maintained 
 their object. 
 
 Up to this moment I had intended to proceed 
 to Stromness, but it now became absolutely 
 necessary to make for the nearest land, and as 
 Lough Swilly, on the Irish coast, offered the 
 easiest access, that harbour was at once selected. 
 However, on putting the ship before the gale, 
 she was so difficult to steer as to compel us to 
 take in all the sail off the main-mast, and to de- 
 pend on a treble-reefed fore-top-sail, fore-sail, &c. ; 
 even then she was so wild as to be scarcely ma- 
 nageable. The crew were now so harassed with 
 
 F F 4 
 
 i^ll 
 
440 
 
 A SAIL DESCRIED. [cHAP.VI. 
 
 I 
 
 hi I 
 
 
 unremitted work at tlie pumps, which could not 
 be left for a moment, that tliey were fast wear- 
 ing out. To aggravate our disasters, the ship, 
 too, laboured so as to make it impossible to light 
 a fire, and thus deprived us of the nourisii- 
 ment essential for the restoration of our ex- 
 hausted energies. This, how over, was in some 
 measure compensated by a liberal allowance of 
 preserved meats, which, on this, as on many 
 other occasions, we had four.d extremely useful. 
 
 The weather continued very boisterous, and 
 so thick that llockall, though within ten miles 
 of us, was not seen. A heavy sea now struck 
 the afler-part of the ship, and, to complete our 
 misfortunes, sprung the main piece of the rudder 
 on the larboard side, not far from the deck. 
 Happily we were enabled to get at it, and by 
 passing seventeen turns of strong whale line 
 round the injured part, we contrived to secure 
 it. ('Still, as successive seas came rolling thickly 
 upon us, we Watched with intense solicitude the 
 result, well knowing that if it gave way again 
 the safety of the ship was hopeless, even if life 
 itself could be preserved. 
 
 On we struggled, crazy and waterlogged, but 
 the gale abated; and on Sept. 3d, crowding 
 every stitch of canvass, we descried a sail in the 
 distance, the first we had yet seen. Under 
 ordinary circumstances a signal would have been 
 

 CHAP. VI.] CAST ANCHOR IN LOUGH 8WILLY. 441 
 
 made to attract her attention, but time was too 
 precious with us now that we were pressing for- 
 ward for our lives ; and about two o'clock in the 
 afternoon, within half an hour of our calculation, 
 the joyful sound of land was announced from the 
 look-out man at the mast head. It was late 
 when we closed it, and being anxious to obtain a 
 pilot, rockets, blue lights, and guns were fired 
 for that purpose, but no one came ; wherefore, 
 trusting to the soundings, we glided silently past 
 the lights of the fishermen's cottage, and near 
 midnight anchored safely in Lough Swilly. 
 
 Fifteen long months had elapsed since that 
 pleasing sound of a falling anchor had greeted 
 us ; and when we reflected on what had passed 
 in that interval, and, above all, on the difference 
 which a few hours had made in our prospects, 
 we could not but feel devoutly grateful to Pro- 
 vidence for the mercy which had been vouch- 
 safed us. It was impossible immediately to 
 compose our feelings into tranquillity, and the 
 remainder of the night was passed in a state of 
 feverish excitement. When morning came, 
 with what indescribable delight did we inhale 
 the fragrance and contemplate the beauty of 
 the land. Imagination could scarcely picture a 
 scene so enchanting as to our weary and frost- 
 dazzled sight appeared that soft and lovely land- 
 scape, with its fresh green tints and beautiful 
 
 f 
 
I 
 
 M§ 
 
 THE TERROU RUN ON SHORE. [ciIAr.VI, 
 
 ^rie'ty of hill an -I dale- It was an enjoyment 
 to be tr.'lt but once in t uf*\ and how much was 
 that enjoyment enhanced when the wind sud- 
 denly change ' anti blow a gale off shore, which 
 but a few hours earlier oust have driven us back 
 to sea, and, in all probability, terminated our 
 labours in a difterent wav. 
 
 Harassed and worn out by extreme toil, the 
 crew were no longer able to work as formerly, 
 and though ably assisted by the officers and 
 men of Her Majesty's service stationed along 
 the coast, and especially by Lieutenant Murray, 
 and the officers and crew of the Wickham, 
 yet the Terror was gradually sinking by the 
 head, when finding that their united efforts 
 were unequal to keep her afloat, it was deter- 
 mined as the last resource to run her ashore on 
 a small sandy beach selected for the purpose. 
 It was found at low water that upwards of 
 twenty feet of the keel, together with ten feet 
 of the stern-post, were driven over more than 
 three feet and a half on one side, leaving a 
 frightful opening astern for the free ingress of 
 the water. The forefoot too was entirely gone, 
 besides numerousbolts either loosened or b-uken ;. 
 and when, besides this, the strained and t.vj^^e'J 
 state of the ship's frame was considered, tiieie was 
 not one on board who did not express astonish- 
 i:^^iii that we had ever floated across the Atlantic. 
 
CIIAP.VI.]! SAIL FOR ENGLAND. 
 
 44d 
 
 i 
 
 Her Majesty's Govi mment being informed of 
 our situation unci of the sickness that had pre- 
 vailed, under *he effecifi of which seven were still 
 suffering, immediately sent a vessel round for 
 the conveyance of tliC invalids to De\onport. 
 They had in the meantime been committed to 
 the care of Dr. Evans, at Burncranah, from whose 
 judicious treatment the greatest benefits were 
 derived. 
 
 A party of shipwrights from Chatham was 
 also sent under the direction of Mr. Rice, in the 
 Columbia Steamer, which was eventually laden 
 with a part of our stores, and whose coir niander, 
 a Mr. Thompson, lost no opportunity ol render- 
 ing every aid in his power. The zealou: atten- 
 tion of Mr. Rice and the indefatigable ex rtions 
 of his party are best attested by the fact th.it the 
 work was completed about the 18th of Oct )ber, 
 when the Terror was hauled off to the ancho'age 
 and again prepared for sea. Nor must I here < init 
 to mention the hospitality displayed by many 
 estimable families in the neighbourhood of Loi ^h 
 Swilly. To their attentions, indeed, may be 
 attributed the speedy restoration to health of 
 many of the officers, who, equally with my- 
 self, will ever retain a lively recollection of 
 their kindness. • 
 
 When all was ready, occasionally assisted by 
 the Columbia, we made sail along the coast, and 
 
 m 
 
 f 
 
911 
 
 44^ 
 
 ARllIVAL AT CHATHAM. [CHAP.VI.i 
 
 with only one detention at Lock Ryan, arrived 
 first at Devonportand subsequently at Chatham, 
 where the Terror was put out of commission 
 and taken intp dock. 
 
 n 
 
ion 
 
 
! 
 
 
 ::; *^1^X"*21i''S-^"^'~"°' '■ 
 
 
 "a.f t^ iu^tk del 
 
 Jj -Bajius Utb. 
 
 
 Lcairtan,.: KurrayjUicm^jle 3«^ 
 
■■>^!^- 
 
 ■^4- 
 
 -^ 
 
 J..Ba3iuj.U(i. 
 
 .\\ 
 
 ) 
 
11 
 
 ■■^■t 
 
 f, 
 
Mr. Rice says, — " I beg to lay before you a 
 sketch of the fractured stern-post and run of 
 the ship, copied from an outline taken with 
 great accuracy by Lieutenant Smyth, with a 
 camera lucida, feeling sure that such a repre- 
 sentation will give a better idea of the nature of 
 the damage than any thing short of actually 
 seeing the ship." 
 


./ 
 
75" 
 
 Broken ?} ^ 
 
 jo^ Dip 86° 56 
 
 ^ ,. 
 
 4j« 
 
 <v 
 
 IU'DSON 
 
 and the NOE 
 
 UTHAMP 
 
 Showing" t 
 H.M. S. 
 Cap t a in 
 during the 
 
 The lotshaded pctrts 
 y>fTn the Surfers of 
 ... Show& the Ship^ tro 
 
 with the nudn body 
 The letters alontf eaeh days 
 ' true I of the wuui and <S& 
 
 JVf)It T. 
 
7*0° 
 
 CHART 
 or 
 
 HUDSON'S STRAIT 
 
 and the NORTH COAST of 
 
 S O UTHAM PTO N 1 S LA N D 
 
 Showing the Track oi' 
 H. M. S T E K R O R 
 
 Cap tain Geo r(jf e Back 
 during the years 1836, 1837. 
 
 JTie wwhaded parti qf the Coc^t line are copied 
 j'rytm the Sur%evji of Si/- Kdward Furrv A- (apf Lvon . 
 
 Show* the .S'hifi^ trtuJc when under Sail . 
 
 when bejret and dri/hnt/ . 
 
 with the mtii/i body of tee . 
 
 The letters aJanp each days traek show the prevailing direttion 
 
 ' true I of t>w wind and die futures itt j'orce . 
 
 TOR T 
 
 olr" 
 
 NH 
 
 6^ 
 
 .(i6 I 
 
 I 
 
 G5 
 
 61 
 
 .63 
 
 / 
 
■"•c 
 
 ./ 
 
 / 
 
 I 
 
 i 
 
 I 
 
 o 
 
 en 
 
 > 
 
 •A 
 
 dc»i 
 
 w 
 
 ,t*^ 
 
 
 M^. 
 
 / 
 
 J 
 
 / 
 
 <S^ 
 
 > 
 
 ^*> 
 
 C.PnBlm)kr 
 
 ( 
 
 V 
 J 
 
 Z' 
 
 y 
 
 ^'' Man* ell 
 ' Island 
 
 7K» 
 
Imidon /iii/tj/Atti aay>/\ 
 
 law tvJ,t of I'miiani^t bv J.Mirrav June 28 '!" 1338. 
 
h<yon /hili:,Mxl aaamiu^ toJctor'l',trliamattbv JMurrav June 28*!' 1838. 
 
j.d-cwjiitT SciflpT 
 
i 
 
 i!^ 
 
 «^'|« "m Mumfmtmwtm^ 
 
 41 
 
 I 
 
 
 r 1 
 
 p 
 
 ) 
 
 ^w^-^iiasmisimhSmi^iMti^ 
 
 mm'- 
 
I 
 
 I 
 
 i 
 
 APPENDIX. 
 
 'a 
 
 t 
 
 .. 
 
 mm: 
 
i 
 
 w 
 
 i I 
 
 I ! 
 
APPENDIX. 
 
 The few birds and animals obtained during the 
 expedition are so familiar to the readers of Arctic 
 zoology as to render any notice of them altogether 
 unnecessary; it may be mentioned, however, that a 
 very small halibut (the only fish seen) was found in the 
 beak of the Lestris Pomarinus. 
 
 The Temperature was taken hourly by the different 
 officers, and carefully arranged by Lieut. Smyth, but 
 the Monthly Means alone are inserted here. 
 
 The Latitudes, Longitudes, Variation, and Dip are 
 selected from the Observations of Lieut. O, Stanley. 
 
 ' W 
 
 G G 
 
 i 
 
i 
 
 450 
 
 APPENDIX. 
 
 00 
 
 a 
 ki 
 s 
 o 
 
 u 
 ■§> 
 
 o 
 
 Cm 
 
 O 
 
 CQ 
 
 iz; 
 •< 
 
 IS 
 
 » 
 
 O 
 
 i 
 I 
 
 i 
 
 1 
 
 -'^' 
 tf 
 
 • 
 
 3^ 
 
 CM 
 
 <N 
 
 2 ifi 
 
 'k 
 
 1j 
 
 ^^^^^ 
 
 
 II 
 
 o 8 S S 
 
 6 
 
 a 
 
 04 
 
 I 
 
 
 a 
 
 S 
 
 3 
 
 -a 
 
 a 
 
 2? • 
 
 •S.'il-o 
 
 S 
 
 
 
 CO 
 
 
 I- 
 
 O CM 
 1-1 0^ 
 
 
 1 
 
 1 
 
 !• 
 
 t 
 
 
 I- 
 
 
 
 to 
 «5 
 
 
 to 
 
 0* 
 
 CO 
 
 04 
 
 00 
 
 0> 
 
 O) 
 
 
 § 
 
 0» 
 
 8 8 2 
 
 00 
 
 
 
 01 
 
 ^1 
 
 0» 
 
 a 
 
 (M 
 
 S3 
 
 05 
 
 at 
 
 00 .H 
 
 0« (M 
 
 O) 
 
 05 
 0> 
 
 Oi 
 
 01 
 
 00 
 O) 
 
 
 00 
 
 04 
 
 E 
 
 I 
 
 i 
 
 o 
 
 01 
 O) 
 
 01 
 
 o 
 
 Oi 
 04 
 
 Wi 
 
 O) 
 01 
 
 o 
 
 so 
 
 0» 
 
 CO 
 04 
 
 CO 
 0> 
 
 O) 
 04 
 
 <o 
 
 01 
 
 04 
 
 CO 
 
 CO 
 
 o 
 CO 
 
 04 
 
 04 
 
 f-< 00 
 
 CO T}< 
 
 o o 
 
 00 CO 
 
 04 
 
 CO 
 
 o 
 
 o 
 
 CO 
 
 o 
 
 CO 
 
 00 
 
 01 
 
 <o 
 
 O! 
 
 CO 
 
 o 
 
 CO 
 
 * 
 
 o 
 
 CO 
 
 04 
 
 CO 
 
 o 
 
 CO 
 
 s 
 
 00 
 
 9) 
 
 04 
 
 «5 
 
 00 
 
 04 
 
 «0 
 
 00 
 
 00 
 
 04 04 
 
 1^ 
 
 Ol 
 
 04 
 
 Ol 
 
 04 
 
 i 
 
 18^ 
 
 s 
 
 a 
 
 E 
 
 X 
 CD 
 
 'J" 
 O 
 
 O 
 
 CO 
 
 o 
 
 CO 
 
 o 
 
 04 
 
 0> 
 V4 
 
 CO 
 
 o 
 
 04 
 
 00 
 
 o 
 
 04 
 
 00 
 
 o> 
 
 04 
 
 S §5 
 
 0» 
 01 
 
 O) 
 04 
 
 o> 
 
 04 
 
 00 
 CO 
 
 04 
 
 04 
 
 00 
 04 
 
 00 
 
 o 
 
 04 
 
 u 
 
 8 
 
 SI'S 
 
 
 a 
 c 
 
 CO 
 CO 
 
 o 
 
 CO 
 
 
 04 
 
 «5 
 
 o» 
 
 04 
 
 O 
 CO 
 
 05 
 04 
 
 ^ 
 rf 
 
 05 
 
 O) 
 
 05 
 
 05 
 04 
 
 o 
 
 00 
 
 o 
 
 CO 
 
 00 
 
 o 
 
 00 
 
 00 
 
 CO 
 
 05 
 0» 
 
 04 
 05 
 
 0> 
 04 
 
 04 
 
 to 
 
 O O 
 CO « 
 
 CO 
 00 
 
 o 
 
 CO 
 
 "5 
 
 o 
 
 CO 
 
 00 
 00 
 
 o 
 
 CO 
 
 CO 
 
 O- 
 
 co 
 
 o 
 
 CO 
 
 o 
 
 CO 
 
 t' 
 
 ■* 
 
 o 
 
 CO 
 
 o 
 
 04 
 
 o 
 
 CO 
 
 a 
 
 I 
 
 1< 
 
 o 
 
 CO 
 
 00 
 04 
 
 •s 
 
 01 
 
 a. 
 
 ^ 
 
 i 
 
 CO 
 
 J. •* 
 
 04 
 
 oo 
 
 00 
 04 
 
 +g + 
 
 CO , 
 CO + 
 
 P . -: 
 
 . "5 
 
 I 2 I o I d I c5 . 04 
 
 I 04 I 04 I CO 1 ri + i^ 
 
 ,04 .« 
 
 + '-' +* 4.*^ j.'^i 
 ^-1 ^M +C0 +(0 
 
 CO 
 
 ^ 
 
 CO 
 04 
 
 01 
 
 o 
 
 00 
 
 +:: 
 
 01 
 
 4^ 
 
 CO 
 
 E 
 
 a 
 
 e 
 
 I 
 
 + s 
 
 -*1 
 
 ^ ?! -i5;i§?i^i;Sio,5|to 
 
 04 
 
 04 
 04 
 
 05 
 04 
 
 ■^n ^ ^ ?l+^+^+2+<^+gJ4.^ ^ ^ s 
 
 I 
 
 a 
 
 I 
 
 
 " O) 
 
 aco 
 c oo 
 
 « o 
 
 u *> 
 
 5co 
 
 lU 00 
 
 o -^ 
 
 n en 
 
 «& 
 
 lU 3 
 
 •^< 
 
 ^c 
 
 Ml- 
 
 3 2 
 c S 
 
 n o 
 
 0^ 
 
 "a! 
 
 c§ 
 
 •s- 
 
 

 Ol <!(< 
 
 
 CO • 
 
 .3 I^ 
 
 B'-J 
 « o 
 
 a CO 
 
 CO en 
 
 «a 
 
 «J s 
 
 'Si 
 
 Mfc, 
 
 •3 2 
 
 s a 
 
 CO O 
 
 Ort< 
 
 O 
 
 N 
 
 o 
 
 .2 
 
 B 
 O 
 
 S . 
 
 i 
 
 'S. 
 
 < 
 
 o 2 
 
 
 5^ 
 
 
 
 
 a s 
 
 
 U X! 
 
 
 ■^ O 
 
 
 
 
 fi O 
 
 
 go 
 
 ■* 
 
 g 
 
 APPENDIX. 
 
 451 
 
 E 
 
 A Table of the Latitudes, Longitudes, and Variation. 
 
 Date. 
 
 Latitude. 
 
 Longitude. 
 
 Varlat". 
 
 Date. 
 
 Latitude. 
 
 Longitude. 
 
 Variat". 
 
 
 N. 
 
 w. 
 
 w. 
 
 
 N. 
 
 W. 
 
 W. 
 
 1836. 
 
 o / '/ 
 
 O ' II 
 
 o / 
 
 1836. 
 
 O 1 II 
 
 t II 
 
 o ' 
 
 June 24 
 
 59 57 00 
 
 4 41 00 
 
 26i 
 
 Aug. 9 
 
 63 30 00 
 
 72 48 DR 
 
 
 25 
 
 59 58 00 
 
 7 11 00 
 
 
 10 
 
 63 36 DR 
 
 73 40 DR 
 
 
 26 
 
 59 19 00 
 
 8 47 00 
 
 23 50 
 
 11 
 
 63 33 00 
 
 73 45 00 
 
 
 27 
 
 59 J 9 00 
 
 11 46 00 
 
 24 50 
 
 12 
 
 63 24 38 
 
 73 53 00 
 
 62 15 
 
 28 
 
 59 43 00 
 
 13 28 00 
 
 
 13 
 
 63 26 00 
 
 74 29 30 
 
 
 29 
 
 60 52 00 
 
 14 31 00 
 
 
 14 
 
 64 10 DR 
 
 76 22 DR 
 
 
 SO 
 
 60 45 00 
 
 13 55 00 
 
 37 42 
 
 15 
 
 64 06 00 
 
 77 19 00 
 
 57 37 
 
 
 
 
 
 16 
 
 64 23 00 
 
 77 45 00 
 
 56 3 
 
 July 1 
 
 59 55 BR 
 
 17 46 DR 
 
 41 00 
 
 17 
 
 64 42 00 
 
 80 05 00 
 
 
 2 
 
 59 56 00 
 
 20 19 00 
 
 
 18 
 
 64 57 00 
 
 81 00 00 
 
 
 3 
 
 60 11 DR 
 
 22 20 00 
 
 43 17 
 
 21 
 
 65 8 00 
 
 81 15 00 
 
 
 4 
 
 59 59 00 
 
 24 51 00 
 
 45 00 
 
 22 
 
 65 28 00 
 
 81 15 00 
 
 
 5 
 
 60 20 00 
 
 97 22 DR 
 
 
 23 
 
 65 42 00 
 
 82 00 00 
 
 49 52 
 
 6 
 
 61 08 DR 
 
 27 45 DR 
 
 
 25 
 
 65 47 00 
 
 82 12 30 
 
 61 11 
 
 7 
 
 60 11 DR 
 
 27 24 DR 
 
 
 26 
 
 65 45 00 
 
 82 12 00 
 
 61 33 
 
 8 
 
 59 50 DR 
 
 29 19 DR 
 
 
 29 
 
 Q5 49 00 
 
 82 06 00 
 
 
 9 
 
 60 22 DR 
 
 30 23 DR 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 10 
 
 59 20 00 
 
 31 41 00 
 
 44 42 
 
 Sept. 1 
 
 65 42 00 
 
 82 02 00 
 
 
 11 
 
 58 10 00 
 
 32 57 00 
 
 45 00 
 
 3 
 
 65 26 00 
 
 82 21 15 
 
 
 13 
 
 58 4 00 
 
 34 41 00 
 
 
 4 
 
 65 12 55 
 
 82 05 30 
 
 
 14 
 
 57 06 00 
 
 34 01 00 
 
 
 5 
 
 65 5 00 
 
 82 10 00 
 
 
 15 
 
 56 57 00 
 
 35 07 DR 
 
 
 8 
 
 65 6 15 
 
 82 43 DR 
 
 
 16 
 
 57 54 00 
 
 35 00 DR 
 
 41 00 
 
 9 
 
 65 7 30 
 
 82 41 15 
 
 
 17 
 
 58 19 00 
 
 33 42 00 
 
 
 10 
 
 65 5 00 
 
 82 38 00 
 
 
 18 
 
 57 39 00 
 
 33 39 00 
 
 
 18 
 
 65 12 30 
 
 83 10 30 
 
 
 19 
 
 57 14 00 
 
 35 07 00 
 
 
 19 
 
 65 14 25 
 
 83 17 00 
 
 
 20 
 
 56 50 DR 
 
 36 30 DR 
 
 
 26 
 
 65 18 00 
 
 83 40 30 
 
 
 21 
 
 57 13 DR 
 
 40 10 DR 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 22 
 
 57 26 DR 
 
 43 29 DR 
 
 
 Oct. 5 
 
 65 15 00 
 
 83 37 15 
 
 
 23 
 
 57 31 00 
 
 44 17 DR 
 
 
 30 
 
 65 15 00 
 
 83 44 07 
 
 
 24 
 
 58 03 DR 
 
 46 33 DR 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 25 
 
 57 53 DR 
 
 48 48 DR 
 
 
 Nov. 7 
 
 65 12 50 
 
 83 32 00 
 
 
 26 
 
 57 23 DR 
 
 53 28 DR 
 
 
 21 
 
 65 10 12 
 
 83 9 
 
 
 27 
 
 58 29 00 
 
 55 56 DR 
 
 
 22 
 
 65 14 30 
 
 83 20 
 
 
 28 
 
 60 02 00 
 
 58 22 DR 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 29 
 
 60 15 DR 
 
 61 00 DR 
 
 
 Station L 
 
 65 12 24 
 
 83 39 SO 
 
 57 57 
 
 30 
 
 60 17 00 
 
 61 57 00 
 
 49 00 
 
 
 
 
 
 31 
 
 60 22 00 
 
 62 42 00 
 
 52 37 
 
 1837. 
 Jan. 4 
 
 64 52 10 
 
 82 23 00 
 
 
 Aug. I 
 
 60 43 27 
 
 63 35 30 
 
 
 8 
 
 64 49 30 
 
 82 13 00 
 
 
 2 
 
 61 15 DR 
 
 65 19 DR 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 3 
 
 61 39 00 
 
 67 70 00 
 
 
 Stat'IL 
 
 64 44 38 
 
 82 07 09 
 
 
 4 
 
 62 4 00 
 
 68 12 30 
 
 54 00 
 
 
 
 
 
 5 
 
 62 30 16 
 
 69 33 00 
 
 
 Jan. 31 
 
 64 46 15 
 
 82 06 10 
 
 
 G 
 
 62 39 00 
 
 70 54 00 
 
 • 
 
 
 
 
 
 8 
 
 63 22 00 
 
 72 23 00 
 
 58 45 
 
 Feb. 1 
 
 64 45 50 
 
 82 5 45 
 
 
 fi 
 
 il 
 
 t 1 
 
 G G 2 
 
452 
 
 APPENDIX.: 
 
 A ^le of the Latitudes, Longitu des. &c.^ontinued. 
 
 N. 
 
 O I II 
 
 64 57 15 
 64 49 31 
 64 58 3(? 
 64 32 5 
 64 28 50 
 64 26 18 
 64 21 C7 
 64 18 58 
 64 \Q 
 64 \Q 34 
 64 17 50 
 64 16 47 
 64 15 17 
 64 14 50 
 64 12 00 
 
 64 13 \5 
 64 \\ 58 
 64 10 00 
 64 10 07 
 64 08 26 
 64 04 03 
 64 3 3 
 64 1 33 
 64 5 57 
 64 10 00 
 64 6 00 
 
 Date. Latitude. Longitude. Variatn. Date, 
 
 63 59 00 
 63 57 00 
 63 5\ 23 
 63 49 12 
 63 48 45 
 
 63 53 22 
 
 64 4 45 
 64 5 38 
 ^^ 55 00 
 63 52 28 
 63 51 30 
 63 58 00 
 63 54 00 
 
 63 48 44 
 63 40 51 
 63 43 56 
 63 43 56 
 63 39 37 
 63 36 47 
 
 W. 
 
 O I II 
 
 81 49 
 81 48 00 
 81 38 45 
 81 33 30 
 81 31 00 
 81 28 30 
 81 25 15 
 81 24 00 
 81 21 O 
 81 23 00 
 8i 18 45 
 81 15 00 
 81 13 00 
 81 \5 00 
 81 11 30 
 
 81 10 00 
 81 07 30 
 81 03 00 
 80 59 00 
 80 56 00 
 80 A6 00 
 80 38 
 80 41 00 
 80 38 00 
 80 40 00 
 80 44 00 
 
 Latitude. 
 
 80 33 00 
 80 28 00 
 80 17 00 
 80 15 00 
 80 14 00 
 80 11 00 
 So 22 00 
 80 14 00 
 80 13 00 
 80 7 37 
 79 49 O 
 79 00 00 
 78 44 00 
 
 78 45 00 
 78 35 15 
 78 42 15 
 78 42 30 
 78 48 45 
 78 47 00 
 
 54 00 
 54 00 
 
 49 03 
 
 Sunset. 
 
 N. 
 
 O t II 
 
 63 28 16 
 63 19 25 
 63 14 32 
 63 11 48 
 62 58 41 
 62 59 54 
 62 59 07 
 
 62 58 31 
 
 63 01 00 
 63 3 47 
 63 2 13 
 63 6 59 
 63 9 39 
 
 63 13 44 
 63 12 40 
 63 10 56 
 
 62 57 59 
 
 63 00 40 
 63 5 15 
 62 57 36 
 62 49 38 
 62 55 5 
 62 52 55 
 
 62 47 27 
 
 63 10 30 
 63 12 00 
 
 63 16 18 
 63 20 00 
 63 16 10 
 63 )4 17 
 63 2 15 
 62 50 35 
 
 Longitude. 
 
 Variat". 
 
 62 26 47 
 61 44 9 
 61 35 17 
 61 36 9 
 61 19 41 
 61 10 16 
 60 58 20 
 
 60 58 00 
 
 61 00 00 
 60 51 30 
 
 60 55 00 
 
 61 17 00 
 
 w. 
 
 O I II 
 
 78 47 00 
 78 39 45 
 78 41 15 
 77 37 00 
 77 44 15 
 77 39 50 
 77 31 55 
 77 24 47 
 77 52 25 
 77 10 01 
 76 41 53 
 76 19 35 
 76 23 00 
 
 75 49 00 
 75 35 00 
 75 9 15 
 
 74 43 45 
 
 75 1 15 
 75 5 45 
 74 49 30 
 74 45 45 
 74 6 15 
 73 58 15 
 
 73 55 SO 
 
 74 15 45 
 74 21 30 
 
 74 47 30 
 
 75 20 30 
 75 27 30 
 75 25 30 
 74 35 45 
 
 72 29 00 
 
 73 07 00 
 73 10 30 
 71 00 30 
 71 12 15 
 70 48 00 
 69 21 30 
 69 21 15 
 69 31 45 
 
 W. 
 
 ' 
 
 53 00 
 
 56 12 
 
 69 10 45 
 
 ( 
 
 69 3 15 
 
 
 67 36 00 
 
 
 66 48 00 
 
 
 65 54 00 
 
 
 a 
 o 
 
 CO j 
 
 s * 
 
 CS 
 
 o I 
 to , 
 
 g I 
 
 Ph 
 u 
 v 
 
 a 
 o 
 
 S t 
 
 a 
 o 
 
 o 
 > 
 u 
 
 
 ki. 
 
> /.'I 
 
 le. 
 
 Variat" 
 
 W. 
 
 ' 
 
 
 5 
 5 
 
 
 5 
 
 APPENDIX. 
 
 453 
 
 • 53 00 
 
 56 12 
 
 i 
 
 i 
 
454. 
 
 , I 
 
 
 f 
 
 .APPENDIX. 
 
 ^ 
 ^ 
 
 <o 
 
 <n 
 
 «o 
 
 »-- 
 
 « 
 
 o 
 
 o 
 
 «> 
 
 pH 
 
 
 
 
••• 
 
 ^ 
 
 s 
 
 1.; 
 
 1^- 
 
 
 ^>r^ 
 
 o v> 
 
 S^s 
 
 «5^ 
 
 -3 , 
 
 ^« 
 
 S'S 
 
 S?"^ 
 
 '^ K 
 
 >>a 
 
 •♦* 3 
 
 « ■« 
 
 *> . 
 
 w ►. 
 
 •si 
 
 '^ S 
 
 c '3 
 
 0.2 
 
 ^ C9 
 
 
 ca 1^ 
 
 IS^ 
 
 « . 
 
 w . 
 
 
 
 »^ 
 
 >-) 
 
 3 O 
 
 « 
 
 »-4 
 
 o 
 
 >o 
 
 *< 
 
 M 
 
 o 
 
 <£) 
 
 ,8 
 
 APPENDIX. 
 
 I 
 
 O "K 
 
 ^ 
 
 .s 
 
 g 
 
 ^ 
 
 a. 
 
 _§ 
 
 # 
 
 ^ 
 
 ■3 
 
 •y 
 
 S 
 
 ^ 
 
 « 
 
 ■3 
 
 t» 
 
 :S 
 
 
 .& 
 
 s 
 
 
 ■a 
 
 1 
 
 
 
 ll 
 
 1 
 
 
 
 > § 
 
 1 
 
 0) 
 
 1 
 
 1 
 
 
 "? 
 
 1 
 
 1 
 
 l3fl 
 
 s . 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 •11 
 
 5 
 •? 
 
 1 
 
 1^ 
 
 8 b 
 
 1 
 
 8 
 
 ?<T' 
 
 •M aj 
 
 
 
 •« (■-• 
 
 (U «► 
 
 a> 
 
 V 
 
 4; ►-« 
 
 
 ■5 
 
 5 
 
 5°o. 
 
 H S 
 
 a 
 
 c 
 
 a"' 
 
 o 
 
 O 
 
 O 
 
 O 
 
 « I III 
 
 w) Sd 8) Si's _ 
 
 ^ J 3 r I 
 
 
 ■a ^ 
 
 II 
 
 •a 
 
 •9 
 
 IIP 
 
 OO w«o OO0O o ooo 
 
 to « 
 
 00 ©1 
 
 
 o 
 
 (O 
 
 « 
 o 
 
 o 
 
 •-< t- 00 
 V U) U) 
 
 U5 «o U5 U5 
 
 O 
 
 
 
 U5 
 
 01 
 U5 
 
 to 
 
 
 11 »5 
 00 W 
 
 to O 
 
 If) «i 
 
 to to 
 
 o o 
 
 tn 
 
 00 
 
 CO 
 
 00 
 
 
 CI 01 
 
 m 
 
 00 
 
 •H O 
 
 00 00 
 
 o 
 
 o 
 
 00 
 
 8 
 
 IN 
 
 to 
 
 00 
 "5 
 
 
 (N ^ N 
 
 <M 00 
 
 to 
 
 «5 
 
 to 
 
 to 
 
 to 
 
 to 
 
 to to 
 
 •o 
 
 to 
 
 00 
 «5 
 
 to 
 
 Ol 
 
 01 
 
 to 
 
 CO 
 «5 
 
 01 
 
 to 
 
 pi 
 
 tJ -3 
 
 CO 00 
 
 J3 J J3 
 
 «d -w -M 
 
 S o 
 
 01 « 
 
 
 I 
 
 ^ 
 
 CO "S 
 00 t» 
 
 .a 
 
 J3 
 
 
 
 tN 
 
 00 
 
 a a 
 
 CM ©1 
 
 CO 
 
 
 ^ 
 
 •a 3 
 
 1 
 
 455 
 
 -d B 
 
 V w 
 
lii 
 
 45G 
 
 APrENDIX. 
 
 Observations with Fox's Dipping Needle. 
 
 June 7th, 1836, in Chatham dock-yard - 
 June 9th -. Ditto - - _ 
 
 August 10th, on the ice in Hudson's Strait, 1 
 lat. 63" 33' N., long. 73° 45' W. - I ] 
 
 } 
 
 Dip. 
 
 t 
 
 68 58 
 68 5b 
 
 89 55 
 
 87 40 
 87 14 
 
 October 31st, in a snow h it in Frozen Strait, 
 lat. 65° 45' N., long. 83° 48' W. - 
 
 November 16th, in a snow hut off Cape Com- "I 
 fort, lat. 65° 10' N. long. 83° 06' W. - 1 
 
 January 6th, 1837, in a snow hut off Cape 1 
 
 Fisher, lat. 64° 50 N., long. 82° 18' W. -J ®^ ^^ 
 
 February 9th, in a snow hut off Cape Fisher, 1 
 (Ther.l5°), lat. 64°29'N., long.81°31'W. j 
 
 March 24th, on the ice off Terror Point, 
 lat. 64° 10' N., long. 80° 40' W. - I 
 
 87 05 
 
 } 
 
 87 03 
 
 London : 
 
 Printed by A. Spottiswoode, 
 New-Street- Square. 
 
Albemarlf Street. 
 
 >. 
 
 58 
 
 58 
 
 55 
 
 40 
 14 
 
 07 
 35 
 )3 
 
 MR. MURRAY'S 
 
 ANNOUNCEMENT OF NEW BOOKS IN THE 
 PRESS, OR IN PREPARATION. 
 
 JULY, 1838. 
 
 UNIVERSAL BIOGRAPHY. 
 
 The character of our general Biographies, as measured with some 
 now existing elsewhere, must be allowed to be unworthy of the 
 literary and scientific fame and resources of this country. We have 
 no works of the class that are not at once narrow in plan, and 
 clumsy in exepution ; but even had their original defects been less 
 discreditable, the lapse of time must have been sufficient to render 
 them comparatively useless, 
 
 Mr. Murray has, during several years, had his attention fixed 
 upon this remarkable deficiency ; and he is now enabled to promise 
 the speedy issue of a 
 
 DETAILED PROSPECTUS 
 
 OF A 
 
 NEW BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY 
 
 UPON A LARGE SCALE. 
 
 Arrangements are made by which he has secured the assistance, 
 in every department, of persons who are acknowledged to have 
 reached distinguished eminence in their several pursuits; and the 
 general supervision is entrusted to a few gentlemen, capable of 
 giving unity of purpose and tone to the whole mass of materials. 
 
 It is the object of the Editors to combine accuracy of statement 
 with a certain liveliness in style and method, so as to furnish at 
 once a tmstworthy book of reference, and a large collection of 
 instructive and amusing reading. No party or sectarian feelino-s 
 or prejudices will be allowed to interfere; and though the illus- 
 trious persons of our own country, whether dead or living, must 
 of course be treated at greater length than others, such space shall 
 be given to all really great names, that the English Student may 
 henceforth be independent of foreign repositories. 
 
 The Work will appear in Monthly Parts, 8vo. 
 
 *«* Communications, suggestions, and proposals, addressed to the 
 Editors, will be welcomed with every attention and consideration. 
 
 \1 
 
 il 
 
MR. MURRAY'S LIST OF NEW HOOI 
 
 THE GREAT LOUD CHATHAM. 
 ^'2^¥f ^.^^'"^^^^N^E or WILLIAM PITT. First 
 
 Edited by the Executors of his Sou, JOHN, 
 8vo. Vol.1. Ready. 
 
 Earl of Chatham. _ 
 EARL of CHATHAM. 
 
 NOTICES OP THE 
 GOVERNMENT and PEOPLE of AUSTRIA 
 
 To whit4i is added a JOURNEY from VI I«:NN A 
 through STYRIA, ILLYRIA, ami iSTRrA. to TRIESTE 
 
 and POLA. 
 By PETER EVAN TURNBULL, Esq., F.R.S. F.S.A. 
 
 CAPTAIN BACK, R.N. 
 An AUTHENTIC NARRATIVE of the PERILS 
 
 and ESCAPE of HER MAJESTY'S SHIP TERROR, after 
 having beer. Enclosed from more than Twelve Months in the 
 ice ot Hudson s Strait and Fox's Channel 
 By CAPTAIN BACK, R.N. 
 With numerous Views, Drawn on the Spot by Captain Smyth, 
 Illustratmg the Dangerous Situation of the Vessel. 8vo. Ready. 
 
 WILLIAM SCROPE, Esq. 
 The ART of DEER-STALKING ; illustrated by a 
 
 Narrative of a few days' Sport in the Forest of Alholl, with 
 some Account of the Nature and Habits of the Deer, and a short 
 Description of the Scotch Forests, their Legends and Super- 
 Spnn^^""^' ""^ Poachers, Freebooters, &c. &c. By WILLIAM 
 SCROPE, Esq.. F.L.S. Illustrated from the Drawings and 
 Paintmgs of Edwin and Charles Landseer, R.A. RoyalSvo. 
 
 I 
 
 CHARLES LYELL, Esq. 
 ELEMENTS of GEOLOGY, for the Use of Begin- 
 
 ners. ° 
 
 By CHARLES LYELL, Esq., F.R.S., F.G.S.. 
 
 Author of the ' Principles of Geology.' 
 
 With numerous Views and Diagrams, Explanatory and Illustrative • 
 
 and Figures of Fossils. 1vol. 12mo. ' 
 
 LORD MA HON. 
 HISTORY of ENGLAND, from the Peace 
 UTRECHT to the Peace of AIX-LA-CHAPELLE. 
 By LORD MAHON. 
 Volume IIL (which completes the Work). 8vo. 
 
 of 
 
^ 
 
 MR. MURRAY'S LIST OF NKVV BOOKS. 
 
 3 
 
 THE LATE WILLIAM MOORCROFT. 
 TRAVELS in the HIMALAYAN PRO\ INCES 
 
 of III DOSTAN and the PANJAB, in LADAKII and 
 KASHMIR, in PESHAWAR, KABAL, KUNDUZ and 
 BOKHARA. 
 
 By Mr. WILLIAM MOOIU ROFT and 
 Mr. GEORGE TREBKCK. 
 
 Prepared for the Press from Origiiuil Jonrnals nnd 
 
 C'lrrespondence. 
 By HORACE HAYMAN WILSON. M.A., F.R.S. 
 
 With an elaborate Mup, by John Aiihowsmith, and Plates. 
 
 2 vols. 8vo. 
 
 LORD BYRON. 
 LETTERS, JOURNALS, and PROSE WORKS 
 
 of LORD BYRON, including his LIFE by THOMAS 
 MOORE. Printed uniforndy with the recent Edition of his 
 Works. Complete in one volume, with Original Notes, now first 
 published, wjth Portrait anil Frontispiece. Koyal 6vo, 
 
 RODERICK IMPEY MURCHISON, Esq. 
 
 The ' SILURIAN REGION,' and Adjacent Coun- 
 ties of ENGLAND and WALES, Geologically Illustrated; 
 including Salop, Hereford, Radnor, Montgomery, Brecknock, 
 Caermarthen, Penibroke, Monmouth, Worcester, Gloucester, aiid 
 Stafford. 
 
 By R. I. MURCHISON, F.R.S., 
 Vice-President of the Geo' tgical Society, F.L.S., Hon. Member 
 
 R.I.A., &c. &c. 
 2 vols. Royal 4to. With large Geological Map, Views, Coloured 
 Sections, and numerous Plates of Organic Remains. Price Five 
 Guineas to Subscribers; Eight Guineas to the Public. 
 
 ' \| 
 
 VISCOUNT ROYSTON. 
 The REMAINS of the Late LORD VISCOUNT 
 
 ROYSTON, with a Memoir of hi , Life. 
 By the Rev. HENRY PEPYS, B.D., Prebendary of Wells. 
 Royal 8vo. Ready. 
 
 of 
 
 HENRY HALLAM, Esq. 
 
 An INTRODUCTION to the HISTORY of LITE- 
 RATURE in the XVth. XVIth, and XVIIth. Centuries. 
 By HENRY HALLAM, F.S.A. 
 Volun)es II,, III., IV. 8vo., which complete the Work. 
 
MR. MUKUAYS LIST OF NEW BOOKS. 
 NRW GUIDES TO THE CONTINENT 
 
 HAND-BOOK FOR TUAVKLLKHS 
 
 SWITZERLAND. SAVOY, and PIEDMONT 
 
 With a Map. PoHt 8vo. 
 
 A HAND-BOOK for TRAVELLERS 
 NORTHERN EUROPE. 
 
 HKINfl A OUIDK TO 
 
 DENMARK. NORWAY, SWEDEN and RUSSIA. 
 
 With Map and Plans. Pont 8vo. 
 
 Rev.IJ H. MILMAN'S Edition of GIBBON 
 
 Vol. V. With Map. 8vo. (On the Ist August.) 
 THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON. 
 The Eleventh Volume of DISPATCHES md TOR 
 
 ,?^SPONpENCE of His Grace the DUKF c^ WEI LING 
 rON. Edited by COLONEL GURWOOD 8vo Ready. 
 
 GENERAL WOLFE. 
 . MEMOIRS of GENERAL WOLFE, 
 
 MTiU r- r '^^^ Conqueror of Canada. 
 
 With Extracts from his Correspondence. 2 vols. Post 8vo. 
 
 POPULAR GEOGRAPHY, containing ail that 
 
 most deserves to be known of the Nature and Histo^ of the 
 ult^^Jl-'r' "^ '^'l ^"I"" '^ ^" P'"^^^"^ ^" 'he Public a Popular 
 
 embrac^ equally Historical and Physical °Geo^->-raphv a Jn 
 especally to be ment....ed, since the fbrmer branl She ScE 
 of Geography ,s generally omitted in works hitherto nubliZd 
 which are rather books of reference • while thk 11'^ !i r ' 
 general perusal, as well as for reference ^'"^"'^ ^""^ 
 
 BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY 
 A Smaller UNIVERSAL BIOGRAPHY. Alpha- 
 betically arranged In One closely printed VoLUMf 8vo 
 Contaunng, by a Novel Arrangement, more InformaUon bv onr' 
 third than any similar Work of equal bulk '"'°""*"''" ^y °n«- 
 
MR. MURRAY'S LIST OF NKW BOOKS. 
 
 NEW SCHOOL BOOKS. 
 
 A New CLASSICAL DICTIONARY of AN- 
 
 CIKNT MYTHOLOGY, HISTORY, lUOGIiyVPHY, iiiul 
 OEOORAPHY, on an improved plan. Broii<rlit up to the 
 knowlcdf^e of the present time, nnd 'nclnding the HeHeurches and 
 Discoveries of the German Scholars and ArchteoIosiiunH. One 
 closely printed Volume. 8vo. To be published in Monthly Parts. 
 
 EXERCISES ill LATIN ELEGIACS ; or, a Col- 
 
 lection of English Notes, admitting of Easy Version into Latin 
 Hexiimeters and Pentameters, intended to form Part L of Helps 
 to Correctness of Taste in Latin and (Jreek Composition, with 
 Prefatory Rules. By the Rev. WILLIAM OXEN HAM, As- 
 sistant Muster of Harrow School, Foolscap Bvo, 
 
 . REV. CHARLES WORDSWORTH. 
 
 A New GRT-EK GRAMMAR, for the Use of 
 Scho()ls. By . le Rev. . HARLES WORDSWORTH, MA, 
 
 late Stmlent of Cl ist Cli /ch, and Second Master ol Winchester 
 School. 12mo. 
 
 CANADA. 
 Exposition and Defence of EARL RATIIURST'S 
 
 Administration of the Affairs of these Provinces when Colonial 
 Secretary, during the years 1822 to 1827, inclusive. By the 
 Right Hon. Sir R. WILMOT HORTON, G.C.H., &c. &c. 8vo. 
 
 The OATH in the CATHOLIC RELIEF BILL 
 
 Considered. By the Right Hon. Sm R. WILMOT HORTON, 
 G.C.H., &c. &c. 8vo. 
 
 NEW BOOKS 
 
 RECENTLY PUBLISHED. 
 
 WILLIAM WILBERFORCE. 
 
 MEMOIRS of the LIFE of WILLIAM WILBER- 
 FORCE. By his Sonv, ROBERT ISAAC WILBERFORCE, 
 M.A.. Vicar of East Farleigh, and SAMUEL WILBER- 
 FORCE, M.A., Rector of Brighstone. .5 vols, post 8vo. 45^. 
 
 LA kit .^.^t: .^i -..^ *^J» — 
 
6 
 
 MR. MURRAY'S LIST OF NEW BOOKS. 
 
 If/ 
 I 
 
 w 
 
 l1 
 
 h 
 
 in 
 
 It 
 
 i. 
 
 \l 
 
 t¥, 
 
 ri ^ 
 
 r3 
 
 REV. H. H. MILMAN. 
 
 '^»1,?^''- ^- ^- OILMAN'S Edition of GIBBON'S 
 ROMAN EMPIRE. Vols. I. to III., illustrated with Hi;. 
 
 monTh.y'JoTu.es.'^" ''■ ''''■ '^^ '' ^°"'P'^*«^ "' ^-'- 
 
 hpTw'^l'T^ V^^ f*^?''"' ^"^ ^^" '« universally allowed to 
 be a Work for which the Literature .,f Europe affords no substi- 
 tute. Ihis Edition contains the un mutilated Text of Gibbon 
 carefully revised, particnlarly in the Quotations. It is illustrated 
 with Notes to correct the errors of Gibbon, and especially to put 
 the unwary reader on his guard against his mis-statements con- 
 cerning Christianity. Mr. Milmam has also collected all the in- 
 M rnir ^hat has been brought to light in recent times by 
 M. GuizoT, and other French and German Historians, and by 
 Documen s not accessible to Gibbon ; thus rendering this the only 
 pertect iiidition. ^ 
 
 J. G. WILKINSON, Esq. 
 The MANNERS and CUSTOMS of the ANCIENT 
 EGYPTIANS. By J. G. WILKINSON, F.R.S., MR S L 
 
 Illustrated by Four Hundred and Fifty Engravings on Wood and 
 btone and many Coloured Plates. Fro.n Original Drawinc^ 
 ■made by the Author, during Twelve Years' Residence in Egypt 
 Ihebes, &c. 3 vols. 8vo. 3/. 3*. bJi' » 
 
 THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON 
 
 '^!ifn?^.?^^'^^"^^ «f *^^^ I^UKE of WELLING- 
 
 and ihp Fv T- ^""*^'"i"ff .*^« Battles of Vittoria and Sorauren, 
 and the Expulsion from Spam of the French Army under Mar- 
 shal Soult, m August, 1813. 8vo. 20* 
 
 Till W?i"p^' !' '" continuation of the First and Second Editions. 
 Ihe Second Edition of Volumes I. to IX. is now ready. 
 
 ART and ARTISTS irj ENGLAND ; 
 
 Being Letters written during a Season in London, and' Visits to 
 .he Seats ot the Nobdity and Gentry in the country; wi h D ! 
 scriptions of the Public and Private Collections of Work of 
 Art Sketches of Society, &c. By G. F. WAAGEN, Director 
 of the Royal Gallery at Berlin. 3 vols. Post 8vo. SU.Td 
 
 ADMIRAL LORD HOWE. 
 The LIFE of RICHARD EARL HOWE K G 
 
 /.dmiral of the Fleet and General of Marines' 
 By SIR JOHN BARROW, Bart., F R.S. " * 
 With a Portrait, &c. 8vo. 125. 
 
MR. MURRAY'S LIST OF NKVV BOOKS. J 
 
 IJEUTENANT WELLSTED. 
 TRAVELS in ARABIA. I. In the Province of 
 
 Oman. 2. In the Peninsula of Mount Sinai. 3. Along the 
 shores of the Red Sea. 
 
 By LIEUTENANT WELLSTED, F.R.S., I.N. 
 With Twelve Maps and other Illustrations. 2 vols. 8vo. 24*. 
 
 DISCOURSES ON 
 
 SIX SUBJECTS from the CARTOONS of 
 
 RAPHAEL. 
 
 Preached in the Chapel of Bowood. 
 By the REV. W. LISLE BOWLES, Canon Residentiary of Sarum. 
 Illustrated (by permission of the Publisher) with a beautiful 
 Frontispiece from the " Book of the Ca-'ioons." Second Edition. 
 8vo, 9s. 6d. 
 
 SIR ROBERT PEEL, Bart. 
 
 SPEECH of the RIGHT HON. SIR ROBERT 
 PEEL, Bart., on Mr. GROTE'S MOTION for the BALLOT. 
 
 8vo. Is. 6d. 
 
 UNDER THE AUTHORITY OF HER MAJESTY'S 
 COMMISSION. 
 
 STATE PAPERS 
 
 During the Reign of KING HENRY the Vlllth. 
 Vols. IV. and V. 4to., only 205. each. 
 
 The 4th and 5th volumes illustrate the political relations between the 
 Courts of England and Scotland at that sera, and comprise the 
 Correspondence of King Henry VIH., Queen Margaret, Cardinal 
 Wolsey, the Duke of Albany, King James V., the several Am- 
 bassadors of the two Kingdoms, and the successive Officers Com- 
 manding on the Scottish Border. 
 
 The Commissioners being sensible of the extreme importance 
 of the works pubhshed under their authority, in theit influence on 
 
 • the historical literature of the country, and of the advantage that 
 must accrue from their being extensively circulated, have deemed 
 it expedient to fix such a low price on them, as will bring them 
 within the means of a widely-extended class of readers. 
 
 They have, therefore, under the* sanction of the Lords Com- 
 missioners of Her Majesty's Treasury, come to the resolution of 
 limiting the price of the 4th and 5th volumes of" State Papers, to 
 20*. per volume, and 40s. per volume for the large paper, as well 
 as to reduce the price of the three preceding volumes to the 
 same rate. 
 
 i 
 
8 
 
 MR. MURRAY'S LIST OF NEW BOOKS. 
 
 (I 
 
 CONVERSATIONS on NATURE and ART, for 
 
 Young Persons. By a LADY. Second Series. 12mo. 6s. 6d. 
 liound. 
 
 The NINTH BRIDGE WATER TREATISE. Bv 
 
 CHARLES BABBAGE, Esq. Second Edition, Enlarged. 
 8vo. 9s. 6d. " 
 
 ♦ This volume here presented to the Public does not form a part of the Series 
 of Works composed under the will of the late Earl of Brid«e«rater. I have, 
 however thought that, in furthering the intentions of the testator bv publishine 
 some reflections on that subject, I might be permitted to connect with them S 
 !.hi» » 'f M **' now become familiarly associated in the public mind with the 
 subject of Natural Rvhgion.'— Extract from the Pre/ace. 
 
 H. J. SHEPHERD, Esq. 
 PEDRO of CASTILE. A Poem. By HENRY 
 
 JOHN SHEPHERD, Esq. Foolscap 8vo. 5^6^ 
 
 THE COUNT DE LABORDE. 
 JOURNEY THROUGH ARABIA PETR^A to 
 
 MOUNT SINAI, and the EXCAVATED CITY of PETRA 
 
 the Edom of the Prophecies. By M. LEON DE LABORDE.' 
 Second Edition, Revised. With Sixty-Five Plates, Woodcuts 
 and Maps. 8vo. 18.?. ' 
 
 DOCTOR ABERCROMBIE. 
 
 On the INTELLECTUAL POWERS, and the IN- 
 VESTIGATION of TRUTH. By JOHN ABEPCROMBIE, 
 M.D., OxoN. and Edin. First Physician to Her Majesty in 
 Scotland. Eighth Edition. Post 8vo. 8*. 6d. Bound. 
 
 CRABBE. 
 The LIFE of the Rev. GEORGE CRABBE. By 
 
 HIS SON. Handsomely Bound, and Illustrated by a Portrait 
 and Fifteen Engravings. Foolscap 8vo. 7s. 6d. 
 
 M. VICTOR COUSIN and Mr. LEONARD HORNER 
 The STATE of EDUCATION in HOLLAND, as 
 
 regards Schools for the Working Classes and the Poor Bv 
 M. VICTOR COUSIN, Peer of France, &c. Translated, with 
 1 rehminary Observations on the necessity of Legislative Mea- 
 sures to extend and improve Education among the Working 
 Classes in Great Britain, and on the course most advisable to 
 pursue at present. By LEONARD HORNER, Esq., F.RS . 
 Post Svo. 9,9. Gd. 
 
By 
 
 By 
 
 MR. MURRAY'S LIST OF NEW BOOKS. y 
 
 THE AUTHOR OF TREMAINE. 
 On the TRUE CHARACTER ot the REVOLU- 
 TION of 1688, and the Real Amount of that Great Precefient; 
 in which the Doctrines raised upon them by Locke, Mackin- 
 tosh, Price, Hallam, Blackstone, and others, are critically 
 considered; to which is added a Review of the Opinions of Mr 
 Fox, in his Historical Work on James il., and of Locke upon 
 tlie Right of Resistance, with a detailed Examination of tiie 
 Case of Lord Russell. 
 
 By R. PLUMER WARD, Esq.. Author of «' Tremaine." 
 2 vols. Post 8vo. 16s. 
 
 BUTTMANN'S CATALOGUE of the IRREGU- 
 LAR GREEK VERBS, with all the Tenses that are extant ; 
 their Formation, Meaning, and Usages, accompanied by a Com- 
 plete Index. Translated from Buttmann's " Ausfuhrliche Sprach- 
 lehre." By the Rev. J. R. FISHLAKE, Translator of "Butt- 
 mann's Lexilogus." 8vo. Ts. 6d. 
 
 SIR WALTER SCOTT. 
 
 The LIFE of SIR WALTER SCOTT, Bart., 
 
 By J. G. LOCKHART,Esq., his Literary Executor. Complete 
 in 7 volumes. Post 8vo. 
 
 J. G. LOCKHART, Es^ 
 The LIFE of ROBERT BURNS. By J. G. LOCK- 
 HART. Uniform with the Works of Scott, Byron, and Crabbe 
 Fourth Edition. Fcap 8vo. 6s. 6d. 
 
 SPECIMENS and FAC-SIMILES of ANCIENT 
 
 WRITINGS DISCOVERED on the WALLS and STREETS 
 
 of FOMPEIL oixvj:.i:.xo 
 
 By the Rpv. CHRISTOPHER WORDSWORTH, M. A 
 
 Head Master of Harrow School, Author of" Athens and AtticL." 
 With Numerous Woodcuts. 8vo. 5j. 
 
 NEW GUIDE TO THE CONTINENT. 
 A HAND-BOOK for TRAVELLERS upon the 
 
 CONTINENT. Part I. Being a Guide to Holland and Bel- 
 gium, the Rhine from Holland to Switzerland, to Prussia and 
 Northern Germany, Containing descriptions of the Principal 
 Cities, their Museums, Picture GalL.ies, &c ; the great High 
 Roads, the most interesting and picturesque Districts, and the 
 most frequented Watering Places ; with Directions for Travellers, 
 and Hints for Tours. A New Edition, corrected, and aug- 
 mented with a Map. Post 8vo.. stoutly bound, lOs. 
 
 i 
 
10 
 
 MR. MURRAY'S LIST OF NEW BOOKS. 
 
 H 
 
 it ■ 
 
 f'}: 
 
 r. „^,, '^™ ^^^^^ HALFORD, Bart. 
 
 fS^f'KB^^^'^^ °f ">« SUCCESSFUL 
 
 l^n^VoftsVT^: "^ '"* HENRY HALFORD, 
 ,^ . „,„ BISHOP HEBER. 
 
 KaI nffh^f P^? '■"^ ^™^ SUNDAY in the 
 
 Third Edi- 
 
 THE MARQUESS WELLESLEY. 
 nf'th^M^^^J^^^^ ^"^ CORRESPONDENCE 
 
 VOYAGE de I'ARABIE PETREE. 
 
 Par M. LEON de LABORDE. 
 
 laJd'lin^F original magnificent French Work recently trans- 
 nrinl \ ?"!'"H; f ^^'y '^™'»«d number of Copies were 
 pnnted and the Book is now become rare. With'^ Seven v 
 L^rge Plates and Forty Woodcuts. Folio. 12L *'"" ^^^^"^^ 
 
 SIR HUMPHRY DAVY. 
 CONSOLATIONS in TRAVEL- or thp TA«iT 
 
 «art., late P.R.S. Third Edition. Foolscap 8vo. 6*. 
 H. GALLY KNIGHT, Esq. 
 The NORMANS in SICILY; or, Notes of I Jour- 
 
 ''?,rt" •" -^'^CILY in the Autumn of 1836, chiefly illustrative 
 ' Notes ofa Tour in Normfndy.?"/o'stl:o:' Kc/. """''" '^ 
 
 ILLUSTRATIONS of the NORMANS in SICILY 
 
 Being a Series of Drawings of the Saracenic and Norman Re- 
 
 F,rv.lf:Lr"t';. '■"" '■ ■"" "• ^°«°- <=""'"^"^'^ 
 
 A MEMOIR of PEREGRINE BERTIE, Eleventh ' 
 Elizabeths Forces ]n the Low Countries and in Prance and 
 
 GETrRAT,oT'''^^S ''''''^E^'''A'*T '» the FOURTH 
 l»b^JlHATION. Witli Portrait. 8\o. 8s. 6rf. 
 
MR. MURRAY'S LIST OF NEW BOOKS. 
 
 11 
 
 ROBERT SOUTH EY, Esq. 
 The BOOK of the CHURCH. 
 
 By ROBERT SOUTHEY, Esq. 
 
 Fourth Edition, Corrected, and Improved by the Insertion of all 
 
 the Authorities, and a Copious Index. 1 vol. 8vo. 125. 
 
 MRS. SOMERVILLE. 
 
 On the CONNEXION of the PHYSICAL SCI- 
 ENCES. By MARY SOMERVILLE. Fourth Edition. 
 12mo. 105. 6d. 
 
 SIR GEORGE HEAD. 
 A CONTINUATION of the HOME TOUR through 
 
 various parts of ENGLAND, SCOTLAND, and IRELAND, 
 including the CHANNEL ISLANDS and ISLE of MAN. By 
 SIR GEORGE HEAD. Post 8vo. 9s. 6d. 
 
 JESSE'S 
 
 GLEANINGS in NATURAL HISTORY. 
 
 Fourth Edition of the Three Series. In 2 vols. With Woodcuts. 
 
 Fcap. 8vo. 12s. 
 
 JOURNAL of a NATURALIST. 
 
 Fourth and Cheaper Edition. With Illustrations. Post 8vo. 
 
 JOURNAL of the GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. 
 
 Vol. III. Part 2. With Maps, &c. Bvo. 2*. 6d. 
 Contents : — W. I. Hamilton, Esq. Notes of a Journey in Asia 
 Minor.— Captain Vetch, on the Political Geography and Geogra- 
 phical Nomenclature of Australia. — Lieut. Whitelock. Sketch of 
 the Islands and Coast at the Entrance of the Persian Gulf. — 
 William Ainsworth, Esq., on the Geography of the Cilician and 
 Syrian Gates.~Lieut. R. Ethersey, on the Bore in the Gulf of 
 Cambay. — Mr. T. Spratt, on the supposed Situation of Minoa and 
 Nisffia. — Professor Baer, on the Ground Ice or Frozen Soil of 
 Siberia. — Messrs. Dease and T. Simpson, recent Arctic Dis- 
 coveries. — Monsieur De Falbe, heights obtained during the 
 Campaign to Kostantinah, in September, 1 837.— Lieut.-Colonel 
 Chesney, on the Bay of Antioch, and the Ruins of Seleueia Pieria. 
 —Sketch of the Progress of Geography, and of the labours of the 
 Royal Geographical Society during the years 1837-8. By the 
 Secretary. 
 
CONTENTS OF MR. MURRAY'S LIST OF BOOKS. 
 
 
 A New Biographical Clctiouary . * • 
 
 A'jetcrombie on the Inti^llectual Powers . . 
 
 /fabLage's Bridegwater Treatise . . . 
 
 Lack, Captain, Perils and Escape of Her Majesty's Ship Terror 
 
 Barrow's Life of Howe . i . . 
 
 Biographical Dictionary, a suialler . . . 
 
 Bowles Discourses on the Cartoons . . i 
 
 Buttman's Irregular Oreek Verbs . . 
 
 Byron, Lord, Life and Prose Works . . 
 
 rhatham Papers . • • . 
 
 Classical Dictionary for Iischools ... 
 
 Conversations on Nature and Art . . . 
 
 Cousin on Education in Holland . . . 
 
 Crabbe's Life by his Son j « . . 
 
 Davy's Consolations in Travel . . . . 
 
 Geographical Journal, Vol. VIII. . . . 
 
 Geography, Popular, for Schoi'ls . . • 
 
 Haltbrd, Sir Henry, New EsHay . 
 
 Hallam's, Dr., Literary History, Vols. II., III., luhi IV. . 
 
 Hand-buok for Travellers in Switzerland aud Sav.iy • 
 
 Hand-book for i ravellers in Denmark, Norway, ^weOsi, and Riisuia 
 
 I: -iiKi-l'ook for 'yiavellers on the Continent, New Editi.)a 
 
 H^'ui's Home Tour . . • . 
 
 HeLfi !» Pa:; ih Sermons .... 
 
 Hortou'sSis' R. Wilniol, i'efenceof EarlBathurst's Canadian Administrati 
 
 „ Oath on the Catholic Relief Bill considered 
 
 Jesse's »rl\ .■injfs in Natural History . . . 
 
 Knight.'* 7s icraaan in Sicily . . . 
 
 Illustratio\!s of . . . . 
 
 Laborde's Visit to Petraea and Mount Sinai . . 
 
 Voyage de I'Arabie PetrSe . • • 
 
 Lockharl's Life of Burns .... 
 
 Lyell, Charles, Elements of Geology . . 
 
 Mahon's, Lord, History of England, Vol. III. • . 
 
 Memoir of Peregrine Bertie .... 
 Milman's Gibbon, Vols. I. to HI. . . • 
 
 Vol. IV. .... 
 
 Moorcrofl's Travels .... 
 
 Murchison's Silurian Region . . 
 
 Naturalist, Journal of • • • • 
 
 Oxeuham's Latin Elegiacs . . • 
 
 Pedro of Castille .... 
 
 Peel'i, Sir Robert, Speech on Ballot . 
 
 Royston, Viscount, Remains of • • • 
 
 Scott, Sir Walter, Life of . . • . 
 
 Scrope's Art of Deer Stalking 
 
 Somervillc, Mary, on the Physical Sciences . 
 
 Southey's Book of the Church 
 
 Siate Papers, published by Her Majesty's Commission, Vols. IV. and V. 
 
 TurcbuU's Notices of Austria 
 
 Wn-igen's Art and Artists in England . 
 
 Ward's True Character of the Revolution of 1688 
 
 Wellesley's, Marquis, Dispatches 
 
 Wellington's Dispatches, Vol. XI. . • 
 
 Wellsted's Travels in Ambia .... 
 
 Wilberforce's Life .... 
 
 Wilkinson's Ancient Egyptians . • . 
 
 Wolfe, Life of General .... 
 
 Wordsworth's Pompeian Inscriptions . . . 
 
 Wordsworth, i /. Charles, New Greek Grammar , 
 
 ion 
 
 Page 
 
 8 
 8 
 
 6 
 4 
 7 
 
 9 
 
 ;i 
 2 
 5 
 8 
 8 
 
 ib. 
 
 10 
 
 11 
 4 
 
 10 
 3 
 4 
 
 ib, 
 9 
 
 11 
 
 10 
 5 
 
 ib. 
 
 11 
 
 10 
 
 ib. 
 8 
 
 10 
 9 
 2 
 
 ib. 
 
 10 
 6 
 4 
 3 
 3 
 
 n 
 
 5 
 8 
 7 
 3 
 9 
 2 
 11 
 ib. 
 7 
 2 
 6 
 9 
 10 
 4,6 
 7 
 5 
 6 
 4 
 9 
 5 
 
BOOKS. 
 
 IU1& 
 
 ministration 
 red 
 
 and 
 
 V. 
 
 Page 
 
 8 
 8 
 2 
 
 4 
 7 
 'J 
 3 
 t 
 5 
 8 
 8 
 
 ib. 
 
 10 
 
 11 
 
 4 
 
 10 
 
 3 
 
 4 
 
 ib. 
 
 9 
 
 11 
 
 10 
 
 5 
 
 ib. 
 
 11 
 
 10 
 
 ib. 
 
 8 
 
 10 
 
 9 
 
 2 
 
 ib. 
 
 10 
 
 6 
 
 4 
 
 3 
 
 3 
 
 11 
 
 5 
 
 8 
 
 7 
 
 3 
 
 9 
 
 2 
 
 11 
 
 ib. 
 
 7 
 
 2 
 
 6 
 
 9 
 
 10 
 
 4,6 
 
 7 
 
 5 
 
 6 
 
 4 
 
 9 
 
 5