<h2>CHAPTER XLIII.</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE FEARFUL SITUATION.</div>
<div class='cap'>ONE of the anchors of the "Polaris," in starting
on the night of the separation, tore off a
large piece of the floe with three men upon it.
As the "Polaris" swept past them they cried out
in agony, "What shall we do?" Captain Buddington
shouted back, "We can do nothing for
you. You have boats and provisions; you must
shift for yourselves." This was the last word from
the "Polaris."</div>
<p>Seeing the sad plight of these men, Captain
Tyson, who from the first had been upon the floe,
took "the donkey," a little scow which had been
tossed upon the ice, and attempted to rescue them.
But the donkey almost at once sunk, and he
jumped back upon the floe and launched one of
the boats. Some of the other men started in the
other boat at the same time, and the three men
were soon united to the rest of the floe party.</p>
<p>One of the last things Tyson drew out of the
way of the vessel as its heel was grinding against
the parting floe were some musk-ox skins. They
lay across a widening crack, and in a moment
more would have been sunk in the deep, or crushed
between colliding hummocks. Rolled up in
one of them, and cozily nestling together, were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</SPAN></span>
two of Hans's children! Does not God care for
<i>children</i>!</p>
<p>Our darkness and storm-beset party did not dare
to move about much, for they could not tell the
size of the ice on which they stood, nor at what
moment they might step off into the surging waters.
So they rolled themselves up in the musk-ox skins
and <i>slept</i>! Captain Tyson alone did not lie down,
but walked cautiously about during the night.
The morning came, and with it a revelation of
their surroundings. <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Hugh'">Huge</ins> bergs were in sight
which had in the storm and darkness charged
upon the floe, and caused the breaking up of the
preceding night. It had been a genuine Arctic
assault. Their own raft was nearly round, and
about four miles in circumference, and immovably
locked between several grounded bergs. It was
snow-covered, and full of hillocks and intervening
ponds of water which the brief summer sun had
melted from their sides. Those who had laid
down were covered with snow, and looked like
little mounds. When the party roused, the first
thing they thought of was the ship. But she was
nowhere to be seen. A lead opened to the shore
inviting their escape to the land. Captain Tyson
ordered the men to get the boats in immediate
readiness, reminding them of the uncertainty of
the continued opening of the water, and of the
absolute necessity of instant escape from the floe
in order to regain the ship and save their lives.
But the men were in no hurry, and obedience to
orders had long been out of their line. They<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</SPAN></span>
were hungry and tired, and were determined to eat
first; and they didn't want a cold meal, and so
they made tea and chocolate, and cooked canned
meat. This done they must change their wet
clothes for dry ones.</p>
<p>In the mean time the drifting ice <i>was</i> in a hurry
and had shut up in part the lead. But Tyson was
determined to try to reach the shore though the
difficulties had so greatly increased during the
delay. The boats were laden and launched, but
when they were about half way to the shore the
lead closed, and they returned to the floe and
hauled up the boats. Just then the "Polaris"
was seen under both steam and sail. She was
eight or ten miles away, but signals were set to
attract her attention, and she was watched with a
glass with intense interest until she disappeared
behind an island. Soon after, Captain Tyson sent
two men to a distant part of the floe to a house
made of poles, which he had erected for the stores
soon after they began to be thrown from the vessel.
In going for these poles the steamer was again
seen, apparently fast in the ice behind the island.
She could not then come to the floe party, being
beset and without boats, and so Tyson ordered the
men to get the boats ready for another attempt to
reach the land, and thus in time connect with the
vessel. He lightened the boats of all articles not
absolutely necessary, that they might be drawn to
the water safely and with speed. He then went
ahead to find the nearest and best route for embarking.
The grounded bergs in the mean while,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</SPAN></span>
relaxed their grasp upon the explorers' ice-raft,
and they began to drift southward. With malicious
intent, on came a terrific snow-storm at the
same time. Tyson hurried back to hasten up the
men. They were in no hurry, but, with grumbling
and trifling, finally made ready as they pretended,
one boat crowded with every thing both needful
and worthless. When at last it was dragged to
the water's edge, it was ascertained that the larger
part of the oars and the rudder had been left at
the camp far in the rear. In this crippled condition
the boat was launched. But not only oars
and rudder, but <i>will</i> on the part of the men was
wanting. So the boat was drawn upon the floe,
and left with all its valuables near the water. The
night was approaching, the storm was high, and
the men were weary, so no attempt was made to
return it to the old camp. All went back to the
middle of the floe. Tyson, Mr. Meyers, one of
the scientific corps, and the Esquimo, made a canvas
shelter, using the poles as a frame, and the
others camped near them. Captain Tyson, after
eating a cold supper, rolled himself in a musk-ox
skin, and lay down for the first sleep he had sought
for forty-eight hours. His condition seemed to be
a specially hard one. While, on the night of the
great disaster, he was striving to save the general
stores, the saving of which proved the salvation
of the company, others were looking after their
personal property, so they had their full supply of
furs and fire-arms, while his were left in the ship.
He, however, slept soundly until the morning,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</SPAN></span>
when he was startled by a shriek from the Esquimo.
The floe had played them an Arctic trick;
it had broken and set the whole party adrift on an
ice-raft not more than one hundred and fifty yards
square. What remained of their old floe of four
miles' circumference contained the house made of
poles, in which remained six bags of bread, and
the loaded boat, in which were the greater part of
their valuables. Here was a fearful state of things!
Yet one boat remained with which they might have
gone after the other one, but the men seemed infatuated
and refused to go. Away the little raft
sailed, crumbling as it went, assuring its passengers
that they must all stow away in their one boat or
soon be dropped in the sea. For four days they
thus drifted, during which the Esquimo shot several
seals. On the twenty-first Joe was using the
spy-glass, and suddenly shouted for joy. He had
spied the lost boat lodged on a part of the old floe
which had swung against the little raft of our party.
He and Captain Tyson, with a dog-team, instantly
started for it, and after a hard pull returned with
boat and cargo. Soon after, their old floe, in an
accommodating mood, thrust itself against the
one they were on, the boats were passed over,
and every thing was again together—boats and
provisions.</p>
<p>Let us now look around upon our party more
critically. The whole number was twenty, including
the ten weeks' old Charlie Polaris, who, of
course, was somebody. As we have stated, <i>all</i> the
Esquimo were of this party. Both the cook and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</SPAN></span>
steward were here. Much the larger number of
the dogs belonging to the expedition were on the
floe, but no sledges. Fortunately, in addition to
the two boats, one of the kayaks had been saved.
It might, in the skillful hands of a Joe, meet some
emergency.</p>
<p>As there was only faint hope now of again seeing
the "Polaris," and as their ice-boat seemed to
sail farther and farther from the shore, they began
to make the best winter-quarters their circumstances
allowed. Under the direction of Joe, as
architect and builder, several snow houses were
put up. One was occupied by Captain Tyson and
Mr. Myers; one by Joe and family; a larger one
by the men; and one was used for the provisions,
and one for a cook house. All these were united
by an arched passage way. Hans and family located
their house apart from the others, but near.</p>
<p>The huts erected, their next pressing need was
sledges. The men, with great difficulty, dragged
some lumber from the old store-house, and a
passable one was made.</p>
<p>Though the quantity of provisions was quite large,
yet with nineteen persons to consume it, (not to
reckon little Charlie's mouth, who looked elsewhere
for his supply,) and with possibly no addition
for six months, it was alarmingly small. Besides,
in their unprincipled greed, some of the
party broke into the store-room and took more
than a fair allowance. So the party agreed upon
two meals a day, and a weighed allowance at each
meal.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It was now the last of October. The sun had
ceased to show his pleasant face, and the long
night was setting in. To add to their discomfort,
the question of light and fuel assumed a serious
aspect. The men, either from want of skill or
patience, or both, did not succeed well in using
seal fat for these purposes, in the Esquimo fashion;
so they began, with a reckless disregard to
their future safety, to break up and burn one of
the boats.</p>
<p>Hans, with a true Esquimo instinct, when the
short allowance pinched him, began to kill and
eat the dogs. He might be excused, however.
Four children, with their faces growing haggard,
looked to him for food.</p>
<p>Thus situated, our floe party drifted far away
from the land—drifting on and on, whether they
slept or woke—drifting they knew not to what
end.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</SPAN></span></p>
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