<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<br/><br/>
<SPAN name="img-front"></SPAN>
<center>
<ANTIMG CLASS="imgcenter" SRC="images/img-front.jpg" ALT="The Arctic Council, discussing a plan of search for Sir John Franklin. From the National Portrait Gallery." BORDER="2" WIDTH="658" HEIGHT="482">
<H4 CLASS="h4center" STYLE="width: 658px">
The Arctic Council, discussing a plan of search for Sir John Franklin. <br/>
From the National Portrait Gallery.
</h4>
</center>
<br/><br/><br/>
<h1> ADVENTURERS <br/> OF THE FAR NORTH </h1>
<h2> A Chronicle of the Frozen Seas </h2>
<br/>
<h3> BY </h3>
<h2> STEPHEN LEACOCK </h2>
<br/><br/><br/>
<h4>
TORONTO
<br/>
GLASGOW, BROOK & COMPANY
<br/>
1914
</h4>
<br/><br/><br/>
<h5>
<i>Copyright in all Countries subscribing to<br/>
the Berne Convention</i><br/>
</h5>
<br/><br/><br/>
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="Pix"></SPAN>ix}</SPAN>
<h2> CONTENTS </h2>
<table ALIGN="center" WIDTH="80%">
<tr>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%"> </td>
<td ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="80%"> </td>
<td ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">Page</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">I. </td>
<td ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
<SPAN href="#chap01">THE GREAT ELIZABETHAN NAVIGATORS</SPAN></td>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">
1</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">II. </td>
<td ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
<SPAN href="#chap02">HEARNE'S OVERLAND JOURNEY TO THE NORTHERN OCEAN</SPAN></td>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">
34</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">III. </td>
<td ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
<SPAN href="#chap03">MACKENZIE DESCENDS THE GREAT RIVER OF THE NORTH</SPAN></td>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">
70</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">IV. </td>
<td ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
<SPAN href="#chap04">THE MEMORABLE EXPLOITS OF SIR JOHN FRANKLIN</SPAN></td>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">
89</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">V. </td>
<td ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
<SPAN href="#chap05">THE TRAGEDY OF FRANKLIN'S FATE</SPAN></td>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">
112</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">VI. </td>
<td ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
<SPAN href="#chap06">EPILOGUE. THE CONQUEST OF THE POLE</SPAN></td>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">
136</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top"> </td>
<td ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
<SPAN href="#biblio">BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE</SPAN></td>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">
147</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top"> </td>
<td ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
<SPAN href="#index">INDEX</SPAN></td>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">
149</td>
</tr>
</table>
<br/><br/><br/>
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="Pxi"></SPAN>xi}</SPAN>
<h2> ILLUSTRATIONS </h2>
<table ALIGN="center" WIDTH="80%">
<tr>
<td ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
<SPAN href="#img-front">
THE ARCTIC COUNCIL DISCUSSING A PLAN OF SEARCH FOR
SIR JOHN FRANKLIN</SPAN> <br/>
From the National Portrait Gallery.
</td>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">
<i>Frontispiece</i>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
<SPAN href="#img-001">
ROUTES OF EXPLORERS IN THE FAR NORTH</SPAN><br/>
Map by Bartholomew.
</td>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">
<i>Facing page</i> 1
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
<SPAN href="#img-042">
SAMUEL HEARNE</SPAN> <br/>
From the Dominion Archives.
</td>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">
" " 42
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
<SPAN href="#img-050">
FORT CHURCHILL OR PRINCE OF WALES</SPAN><br/>
From a drawing by Samuel Hearne.
</td>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">
" " 50
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
<SPAN href="#img-070">
SIR ALEXANDER MACKENZIE</SPAN><br/>
From a painting by Lawrence.
</td>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">
" " 70
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
<SPAN href="#img-112">
SIR JOHN FRANKLIN</SPAN><br/>
From the National Portrait Gallery.
</td>
<td ALIGN="right" VALIGN="top">
" " 112
</td></tr>
</table>
<br/><br/><br/>
<SPAN name="img-001"></SPAN>
<center>
<SPAN href="images/img-001.jpg">
<ANTIMG CLASS="imgcenter" SRC="images/img-001t.jpg" ALT="Routes of Explorers in the Far North" BORDER="2" WIDTH="929" HEIGHT="572"></SPAN>
<H4 CLASS="h4center" STYLE="width: 929px">
Routes of Explorers in the Far North
</h4>
</center>
<br/><br/><br/>
<SPAN name="chap01"></SPAN>
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P1"></SPAN>1}</SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER I </h3>
<h4>
THE GREAT ELIZABETHAN NAVIGATORS
</h4>
<p>The map of Canada offers to the eye and to the imagination a vast
country more than three thousand miles in width. Its eastern face
presents a broken outline to the wild surges of the Atlantic. Its
western coast commands from majestic heights the broad bosom of the
Pacific. Along its southern boundary is a fertile country of lake and
plain and woodland, loud already with the murmur of a rising industry,
and in summer waving with the golden wealth of the harvest.</p>
<p>But on its northern side Canada is set fast against the frozen seas of
the Pole and the desolate region of barren rock and ice-bound island
that is joined to the polar ocean by a common mantle of snow. For
hundreds and hundreds of miles the vast fortress of ice rears its
battlements of shining glaciers. The unending sunshine of the Arctic
summer falls upon untrodden snow. The cold light of the
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P2"></SPAN>2}</SPAN>
aurora
illumines in winter an endless desolation. There is no sound, save
when at times the melting water falls from the glistening sides of some
vast pinnacle of ice, or when the leaden sea forces its tide between
the rock-bound islands. Here in this vast territory civilization has
no part and man no place. Life struggles northward only to die out in
the Arctic cold. The green woods of the lake district and the blossoms
of the prairies are left behind. The fertility of the Great West gives
place to the rock-strewn wilderness of the barren grounds. A stunted
and deformed vegetation fights its way to the Arctic Circle. Rude
grasses and thin moss cling desperately to the naked rock. Animal life
pushes even farther. The seas of the frozen ocean still afford a
sustenance. Even mankind is found eking out a savage livelihood on the
shores of the northern sea. But gradually all fades, until nothing is
left but the endless plain of snow, stretching towards the Pole.</p>
<p>Yet this frozen northern land and these forbidding seas have their
history. Deeds were here done as great in valour as those which led to
the conquest of a Mexico or the acquisition of a Peru. But unlike the
captains and conquerors of the South, the explorers have
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P3"></SPAN>3}</SPAN>
come and
gone and left behind no trace of their passage. Their hopes of a land
of gold, their vision of a new sea-way round the world, are among the
forgotten dreams of the past. Robbed of its empty secret, the North
still stretches silent and untenanted with nothing but the splendid
record of human courage to illuminate its annals.</p>
<p>For us in our own day, the romance that once clung about the northern
seas has drifted well nigh to oblivion. To understand it we must turn
back in fancy three hundred years. We must picture to ourselves the
aspect of the New World at the time when Elizabeth sat on the throne of
England, and when the kingdoms of western Europe, Britain, France, and
Spain, were rising from the confusion of the Middle Ages to national
greatness. The existence of the New World had been known for nearly a
hundred years. But it still remained shadowed in mystery and
uncertainty. It was known that America lay as a vast continent, or
island, as men often called it then, midway between Europe and the
great empires of the East. Columbus, and after him Verrazano and
others, had explored its eastern coast, finding everywhere a land of
dense forests, peopled here and there with naked savages that fled at
their
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P4"></SPAN>4}</SPAN>
approach. The servants of the king of Spain had penetrated
its central part and reaped, in the spoils of Mexico, the reward of
their savage bravery. From the central isthmus Balboa had first seen
the broad expanse of the Pacific. On this ocean the Spaniard Pizarro
had been borne to the conquest of Peru. Even before that conquest
Magellan had passed the strait that bears his name, and had sailed
westward from America over the vast space that led to the island
archipelago of Eastern Asia. Far towards the northern end of the great
island, the fishermen of the Channel ports had found their way in
yearly sailings to the cod banks of Newfoundland. There they had
witnessed the silent procession of the great icebergs that swept out of
the frozen seas of the north, and spoke of oceans still unknown,
leading one knew not whither. The boldest of such sailors, one Jacques
Cartier, fighting his way westward had entered a great gulf that yawned
in the opening side of the continent, and from it he had advanced up a
vast river, the like of which no man had seen. Hundreds of miles from
the gulf he had found villages of savages, who pointed still westward
and told him of wonderful countries of gold and silver that lay beyond
the palisaded settlement of Hochelaga.</p>
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P5"></SPAN>5}</SPAN>
<p>But the discoveries of Columbus and those who followed him had not
solved but had only opened the mystery of the western seas. True, a
way to the Asiatic empire had been found. The road discovered by the
Portuguese round the base of Africa was known. But it was long and
arduous beyond description. Even more arduous was the sea-way found by
Magellan: the whole side of the continent must be traversed. The
dreadful terrors of the straits that separate South America from the
Land of Fire must be essayed: and beyond that a voyage of thirteen
thousand miles across the Pacific, during which the little caravels
must slowly make their way northward again till the latitude of Cathay
was reached, parallel to that of Spain itself. For any other sea-way
to Asia the known coast-line of America offered an impassable barrier.
In only one region, and that as yet unknown, might an easier and more
direct way be found towards the eastern empires. This was by way of
the northern seas, either round the top of Asia or, more direct still
perhaps, by entering those ice-bound seas that lay beyond the Great
Banks of Newfoundland and the coastal waters visited by Jacques
Cartier. Into the entrance of these waters the ships of the Cabots
flying the
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P6"></SPAN>6}</SPAN>
English flag had already made their way at the close of
the fifteenth century. They seem to have reached as far, or nearly as
far, as the northern limits of Labrador, and Sebastian Cabot had said
that beyond the point reached by their ships the sea opened out before
them to the west. No further exploration was made, indeed, for
three-quarters of a century after the Cabots, but from this time on the
idea of a North-West Passage and the possibility of a great achievement
in this direction remained as a tradition with English seamen.</p>
<p>It was natural, then, that the English sailors of the sixteenth century
should turn to the northern seas. The eastern passage, from the German
Ocean round the top of Russia and Asia, was first attempted. As early
as the reign of Edward the Sixth, a company of adventurers, commonly
called the Muscovy Company, sailed their ships round the north of
Norway and opened a connection with Russia by way of the White Sea.
But the sailing masters of the company tried in vain to find a passage
in this direction to the east. Their ships reached as far as the Kara
Sea at about the point where the present boundary of European Russia
separates it from Siberia. Beyond this extended countless leagues of
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P7"></SPAN>7}</SPAN>
impassable ice and the rock-bound desolation of Northern Asia.</p>
<p>It remained to seek a passage in the opposite direction by way of the
Arctic seas that lay above America. To find such a passage and with it
a ready access to Cathay and the Indies became one of the great
ambitions of the Elizabethan age. There is no period when great things
might better have been attempted. It was an epoch of wonderful
national activity and progress: the spirit of the nation was being
formed anew in the Protestant Reformation and in the rising conflict
with Spain. It was the age of Drake, of Raleigh, of Shakespeare, the
time at which were aroused those wide ambitions which were to give
birth to the British Empire.</p>
<p>In thinking of the exploits of these Elizabethan sailors in the Arctic
seas, we must try to place ourselves at their point of view, and
dismiss from our minds our own knowledge of the desolate and hopeless
region against which their efforts were directed. The existence of
Greenland, often called Frisland, and of Labrador was known from the
voyages of the Cabots and the Corte-Reals. It was known that between
these two coasts the sea swept in a powerful current out of the north.
Of
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P8"></SPAN>8}</SPAN>
what lay beyond nothing was known. There seemed no reason why
Frobisher, or Davis, or Henry Hudson might not find the land trend away
to the south again and thus offer, after a brief transit of the
dangerous waters of the north, a smooth and easy passage over the
Pacific.</p>
<p>Perhaps we can best understand the hopes and ambitions of the time if
we turn to the writings of the Elizabethans themselves. One of the
greatest of them, Sir Humphrey Gilbert, afterwards lost in the northern
seas, wrote down at large his reasons for believing that the passage
was feasible and that its discovery would be fraught with the greatest
profit to the nation. In his <i>Discourse to prove a North-West Passage
to Cathay</i>, Gilbert argues that all writers from Plato down have spoken
of a great island out in the Atlantic; that this island is America
which must thus have a water passage all round it; that the ocean
currents moving to the west across the Atlantic and driven along its
coast, as Cartier saw, past Newfoundland, evidently show that the water
runs on round the top of America. A North-West Passage must therefore
exist. Of the advantages to be derived from its discovery Gilbert was
in no doubt.</p>
<br/>
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P9"></SPAN>9}</SPAN>
<p class="block">
It were the only way for our princes [he wrote] to possess themselves
of the wealth of all the east parts of the world which is infinite.
Through the shortness of the voyage, we should be able to sell all
manner of merchandise brought from thence far better cheap than either
the Portugal or Spaniard doth or may do. Also we might sail to divers
very rich countries, both civil and others, out of both their
jurisdiction [that of the Portuguese and Spaniards], where there is to
be found great abundance of gold, silver, precious stones, cloth of
gold, silks, all manner of spices, grocery wares, and other kinds of
merchandise of an inestimable price.</p>
<br/>
<p>Gilbert also speaks of the possibility of colonizing the regions thus
to be discovered. The quaint language in which he describes the
chances of what is now called 'imperial expansion' is not without its
irony:</p>
<br/>
<p class="block">
We might inhabit some part of those countries [he says], and settle
there such needy people of our country which now trouble the
commonwealth, and through want here at home are enforced to commit
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P10"></SPAN>10}</SPAN>
outrageous offences whereby they are daily consumed with the gallows.
We shall also have occasion to set poor men's children to learn
handicrafts and thereby to make trifles and such like, which the
Indians and those people do much esteem: by reason whereof there should
be none occasion to have our country cumbered with loiterers,
vagabonds, and such like idle persons.</p>
<br/>
<p>Undoubtedly Gilbert's way of thinking was also that of many of the
great statesmen and sailors of his day. Especially was this the case
with Sir Martin Frobisher, a man, we are told, 'thoroughly furnished
with knowledge of the sphere and all other skills appertaining to the
art of navigation.' The North-West Passage became the dream of
Frobisher's ambition. Year after year he vainly besought the queen's
councillors to sanction an expedition. But the opposition of the
powerful Muscovy Company was thrown against the project. Frobisher,
although supported by the influence of the Earl of Warwick, agitated
and argued in vain for fifteen years, till at last in 1574 the
necessary licence was granted and the countenance of the queen was
assured to the enterprise. Even then about two years
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P11"></SPAN>11}</SPAN>
passed
before the preparations could be completed.</p>
<p>Frobisher's first expedition was on a humble scale. His company
numbered in all thirty-five men. They embarked in two small barques,
the <i>Gabriel</i> and the <i>Michael</i>, neither of them of more than
twenty-five tons, and a pinnace of ten tons. They carried food for a
year. The ships dropped down the Thames on June 7, 1576, and as they
passed Greenwich, where the queen's court was, the little vessels made
a brave show by the discharge of their ordnance. Elizabeth waved her
hand from a window to the departing ships and sent one of her gentlemen
aboard to say that she had 'a good liking of their doings.' From such
small acts of royal graciousness has often sprung a wonderful devotion.</p>
<p>Frobisher's little ships struck boldly out on the Atlantic. They ran
northward first, and crossed the ocean along the parallel of sixty
degrees north latitude. Favourable winds and strong gales bore them
rapidly across the sea. On July 11, they sighted the southern capes of
Greenland, or Frisland, as they called it, that rose like pinnacles of
steeples, snow-crowned and glittering on the horizon. They essayed a
landing, but the masses of shore ice and the
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P12"></SPAN>12}</SPAN>
drifting fog baffled
their efforts. Here off Cape Desolation the full fury of the Arctic
gales broke upon their ships. The little pinnace foundered with all
hands. The <i>Michael</i> was separated from her consort in the storm, and
her captain, losing heart, made his way back to England to report
Frobisher cast away. But no terror of the sea could force Frobisher
from his purpose. With his single ship the <i>Gabriel</i>, its mast sprung,
its top-mast carried overboard in the storm, he drove on towards the
west. He was 'determined,' so writes a chronicler of his voyages, 'to
bring true proof of what land and sea might be so far to the
northwestwards beyond any that man hath heretofore discovered.' His
efforts were rewarded. On July 28, a tall headland rose on the
horizon, Queen Elizabeth's Foreland, so Frobisher named it. As the
<i>Gabriel</i> approached, a deep sound studded with rocky islands at its
mouth opened to view. Its position shows that the vessel had been
carried northward and westward past the coast of Labrador and the
entrance of Hudson Strait. The voyagers had found their way to the
vast polar island now known as Baffin Island. Into this, at the point
which the ship had reached, there extends a deep inlet,
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P13"></SPAN>13}</SPAN>
called
after its discoverer, Frobisher's Strait. Frobisher had found a new
land, and its form, with a great sea passage running westward and land
both north and south of it, made him think that this was truly the
highway to the Orient. He judged that the land seen to the north was
part of Asia, reaching out and overlapping the American continent. For
many days heavy weather and fog and the danger of the drifting ice
prevented a landing. The month of August opened with calm seas and
milder weather. Frobisher and his men were able to land in the ship's
boat. They found before them a desolate and uninviting prospect, a
rock-bound coast fringed with islands and with the huge masses of
grounded icebergs.</p>
<p>For nearly a month Frobisher's ship stood on and off the coast. Fresh
water was taken on board. In a convenient spot the ship was beached
and at low tide repairs were made and leaks were stopped in the
strained timbers of her hull. In the third week, canoes of savages
were seen, and presently the natives were induced to come on board the
<i>Gabriel</i> and barter furs for looking-glasses and trinkets. The
savages were 'like Tartars with long black hair, broad faces, and flat
noses.' They seemed friendly and well-disposed. Five of the English
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P14"></SPAN>14}</SPAN>
sailors ventured to join the natives on land, contrary to the
express orders of the captain. They never returned, nor could any of
the savages be afterwards induced to come within reach. One man only,
paddling in the sea in his skin canoe, was enticed to the ship's side
by the tinkling of a little bell, and so seized and carried away. But
his own sailors, though he vainly searched the coast, Frobisher saw no
more. After a week's delay, the <i>Gabriel</i> set sail (on August 26) for
home, and in spite of terrific gales was safely back at her anchorage
at Harwich early in October.</p>
<p>Contrary to what we should suppose, the voyage was viewed as a
brilliant success. The queen herself named the newly found rocks and
islands Meta Incognita. Frobisher was at once 'specially famous for
the great hope he brought of a passage to Cathay.' A strange-looking
piece of black rock that had been carried home in the <i>Gabriel</i> was
pronounced by a metallurgist, one Baptista Agnello, to contain gold;
true, Agnello admitted in confidence that he had 'coaxed nature' to
find the precious metal. But the rumour of the thing was enough. The
cupidity of the London merchants was added to the ambitions of the
court. There was no trouble about finding
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P15"></SPAN>15}</SPAN>
ships and immediate
funds for a second expedition.</p>
<p>The new enterprise was carried out in the following year (1577). The
<i>Gabriel</i> and the <i>Michael</i> sailed again, and with them one of the
queen's ships, the <i>Aid</i>. This time the company included a number of
soldiers and gentlemen adventurers. The main object was not the
discovery of the passage but the search for gold.</p>
<p>The expedition sailed out of Harwich on May 31, 1577, following the
route by the north of Scotland. A week's sail brought the ships 'with
a merrie wind' to the Orkneys. Here a day or so was spent in obtaining
water. The inhabitants of these remote islands were found living in
stone huts in a condition almost as primitive as that of American
savages. 'The good man, wife, children, and other members of the
family,' wrote Master Settle, one of Frobisher's company, 'eat and
sleep on one side of the house and the cattle on the other, very
beastly and rude.' From the Orkneys the ships pursued a very northerly
course, entering within the Arctic Circle and sailing in the perpetual
sunlight of the polar day. Near Iceland they saw huge pine trees
drifting, roots and all, across the ocean. Wild storms
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P16"></SPAN>16}</SPAN>
beset them
as they passed the desolate capes of Greenland. At length, on July 16,
the navigators found themselves off the headlands of Meta Incognita.</p>
<p>Here Frobisher and his men spent the summer. The coast and waters were
searched as far as the inclement climate allowed. The savages were
fierce and unfriendly. A few poor rags of clothing found among the
rocks bespoke the fate of the sailors of the year before. Fierce
conflicts with the natives followed. Several were captured. One woman
so hideous and wrinkled with age that the mariners thought her a witch
was released in pious awe. A younger woman, with a baby at her back,
was carried captive to the English ships. The natives in return
watched their opportunity and fell fiercely on the English as occasion
offered, leaping headlong from the rocks into the sea rather than
submit to capture.</p>
<p>To the perils of conflict was added the perpetual danger of moving ice.
Even in the summer seas, great gales blew and giant masses of ice drove
furiously through the strait. No passage was possible. In vain
Frobisher landed on both the northern and the southern sides and tried
to penetrate the rugged country. All about the land was barren and
forbidding.
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P17"></SPAN>17}</SPAN>
Mountains of rough stone crowned with snow blocked
the way. No trees were seen and no vegetation except a scant grass
here and there upon the flatter spaces of the rocks.</p>
<p>But neither the terrors of the ice nor the fear of the savages could
damp the ardour of the explorers. The landing of Frobisher and his men
on Meta Incognita was carried out with something of the pomp, dear to
an age of chivalrous display, that marked the landing of Columbus on
the tropic island of San Salvador. The captain and his men moved in
marching order: they knelt together on the barren rock to offer thanks
to God and to invoke a blessing on their queen. Great cairns of stone
were piled high here and there, as a sign of England's sovereignty,
while as they advanced against the rugged hills of the interior, the
banner of their country was proudly carried in the van. Their thoughts
were not of glory only. It was with the ardour of treasure-seekers
that they fell to their task, forgetting in the lust for gold the chill
horror of their surroundings; and, when the Arctic sunlight glittered
on the splintered edges of the rocks, the crevices of the barren stone
seemed to the excited minds of the explorers to be filled with virgin
gold, carried by subterranean
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P18"></SPAN>18}</SPAN>
streams. The three ships were
loaded deep with worthless stone, a fitting irony on their quest.
Then, at the end of August, they were turned again eastward for
England. Tempest and fog enveloped their passage. The ships were
driven asunder. Each thought the others lost. But, by good fortune,
all safely arrived, the captain's ship landing at Milford Haven, the
others at Bristol and Yarmouth.</p>
<p>Fortunately for Frobisher the worthless character of the freight that
he brought home was not readily made clear by the crude methods of the
day. For the next summer found him again off the shores of Meta
Incognita eagerly searching for new mines. This time he bore with him
a large company and ample equipment. Fifteen ships in all sailed under
his command. Among his company were miners and artificers. The frames
of a house, ready to set up, were borne in the vessels. Felton, a
ship's captain, and a group of Frobisher's gentlemen were to be left
behind to spend the winter in the new land.</p>
<p>From the first the voyage was inauspicious. The ships had scarcely
entered the straits before a great storm broke upon them. Land and sea
were blotted out in driving snow. The open water into which they had
sailed was soon
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P19"></SPAN>19}</SPAN>
filled with great masses of ice which the tempest
cast furiously against the ships. To their horror the barque
<i>Dionise</i>, rammed by the ice, went down in the swirling waters. With
her she carried all her cargo, including a part of the timbers of the
house destined for the winter's habitation. But the stout courage of
the mariners was undismayed. All through the evening and the night
they fought against the ice: with capstan bars, with boats' oars, and
with great planks they thrust it from the ships. Some of the men
leaped down upon the moving floes and bore with might and main against
the ships to break the shock. At times the little vessels were lifted
clear out of the sea, their sides torn with the fierce blows of the
ice-pack, their seams strained and leaking. All night they looked for
instant death. But, with the coming of the morning, the wind shifted
to the west and cleared the ice from the sea, and God sent to the
mariners, so runs their chronicle, 'so pleasant a day as the like we
had not of a long time before, as after punishment consolation.'</p>
<p>But their dangers were not ended. As the ships stood on and off the
land, they fell in with a great berg of ice that reared its height four
hundred feet above the masts, and lay
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P20"></SPAN>20}</SPAN>
extended for a half mile in
length. This they avoided. But a few days later, while they were
still awaiting a landing, a great mist rolled down upon the seas, so
that for five days and nights all was obscurity and no ship could see
its consorts. Current and tide drove the explorers to and fro till
they drifted away from the mouth of Frobisher Strait southward and
westward. Then another great sound opened before them to the west.
This was the passage of Hudson Strait, and, had Frobisher followed it,
he would have found the vast inland sea of Hudson Bay open to his
exploration. But, intent upon his search for ore, he fought his way
back to the inhospitable waters that bear his name. There at an island
which had been christened the Countess of Warwick's Island, the fleet
was able to assemble by August 1. But the ill-fortune of the
enterprise demanded the abandonment of all idea of settlement.
Frobisher and his men made haste to load their vessels with the
worthless rock which abounded in the district. In one 'great black
island alone' there was discovered such a quantity of it that 'if the
goodness might answer the plenty thereof, it might reasonably suffice
all the gold-gluttons of the world.' In leaving Meta Incognita,
Frobisher and his
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P21"></SPAN>21}</SPAN>
companions by no means intended that the
enterprise should be definitely abandoned. Such timbers of the house
as remained they buried for use next year. A little building, or fort,
of stone was erected, to test whether it would stand against the frost
of the Arctic winter. In it were set a number of little toys, bells,
and knives to tempt the cupidity of the Eskimos, who had grown wary and
hostile to the newcomers. Pease, corn, and grain were sown in the
scant soil as a provision for the following summer. On the last day of
August, the fleet departed on its homeward voyage. The passage was
long and stormy. The ships were scattered and found their way home as
best they might, some to one harbour and some to another. But by the
beginning of October, the entire fleet was safely back in its own
waters.</p>
<p>The expectations of a speedy return to Meta Incognita were doomed to
disappointment. The ore that the ships carried proved to be but
worthless rock, and from the commercial point of view the whole
expedition was a failure. Frobisher was never able to repeat his
attempt to find the North-West Passage. In its existence his faith
remained as firm as ever. But, although his three voyages resulted in
no discoveries of
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P22"></SPAN>22}</SPAN>
profit to England, his name should stand high on
the roll of honour of great English sea-captains. He brought to bear
on his task not only the splendid courage of his age, but also the
earnest devotion and intense religious spirit which marked the best men
of the period of the Reformation. The first article of Frobisher's
standing orders to his fleet enjoined his men to banish swearing, dice,
and card-playing and to worship God twice a day in the service of the
Church of England. The watchword of the fleet, to be called out in fog
or darkness as a means of recognition was 'Before the World was God,'
and the answer shouted back across the darkness, 'After God came Christ
His Son.' At all convenient times and places, sermons were preached to
the company of the fleet by Frobisher's chaplain, Master Wolfall, a
godly man who had left behind in England a 'large living and a good
honest woman to wife and very towardly children,' in order to spread
the Gospel in the new land. Frobisher's personal bravery was of the
highest order. We read how in the rage of a storm he would venture
tasks from which even his boldest sailors shrank in fear. Once, when
his ship was thrown on her beam ends and the water poured into the
waist, the commander worked his way along
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P23"></SPAN>23}</SPAN>
the lee side of the
vessel, engulfed in the roaring surges, to free the sheets. With these
qualities Martin Frobisher combined a singular humanity towards both
those whom he commanded and natives with whom he dealt. It is to be
regretted that a man of such high character and ability should have
spent his efforts on so vain a task.</p>
<p>Although the gold mines of Meta Incognita had become discredited, it
was not long before hope began to revive in the hearts of the English
merchants. The new country produced at least valuable sealskins.
There was always the chance, too, that a lucky discovery of a Western
Passage might bring fabulous wealth to the merchant adventurers. It
thus happened that not many years elapsed before certain wealthy men of
London and the West Country, especially one Master William Sanderson,
backed by various gentlemen of the court, decided to make another
venture. They chose as their captain and chief pilot John Davis, who
had already acquired a reputation as a bold and skilful mariner. In
1585 Davis, in command of two little ships, the <i>Sunshine</i> and the
<i>Moonshine</i>, set out from Dartmouth. The memory of this explorer will
always be associated with the great
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P24"></SPAN>24}</SPAN>
strait or arm of the sea which
separates Greenland from the Arctic islands of Canada, and which bears
his name. To these waters, his three successive voyages were directed,
and he has the honour of being the first on the long roll of navigators
whose watchword has been 'Farther North,' and who have carried their
ships nearer and nearer to the pole.</p>
<p>Davis started by way of the English Channel and lay storm-bound for
twelve days under the Scilly Islands, a circumstance which bears
witness to the imperfect means of navigation of the day and to the
courage of seamen. The ships once able to put to sea, the voyage was
rapid, and in twenty days Davis was off the south-west coast of
Greenland. All about the ships were fog and mist, and a great roaring
noise which the sailors thought must be the sea breaking on a beach.
They lay thus for a day, trying in vain for soundings and firing guns
in order to know the whereabouts of the ships. They lowered their
boats and found that the roaring noise came from the grinding of the
ice pack that lay all about them. Next day the fog cleared and
revealed the coast, which they said was the most deformed rocky and
mountainous land that ever they saw. This was Greenland. The
commander,
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P25"></SPAN>25}</SPAN>
suiting a name to the miserable prospect before him,
called it the Land of Desolation.</p>
<p>Davis spent nearly a fortnight on the coast. There was little in the
inhospitable country to encourage his exploration. Great cliffs were
seen glittering as with gold or crystal, but the ore was the same as
that which Frobisher had brought from Meta Incognita and the voyagers
had been warned. Of vegetation there was nothing but scant grass and
birch and willow growing like stunted shrubs close to the ground.
Eskimos were seen plying along the coast in their canoes of seal skin.
They called to the English sailors in a deep guttural speech, low in
the throat, of which nothing was intelligible. One of them pointed
upwards to the sun and beat upon his breast. By imitating this
gesture, which seemed a pledge of friendship, the sailors were able to
induce the natives to approach. They presently mingled freely with
Davis's company. The captain shook hands with all who came to him, and
there was a great show of friendliness on both sides. A brisk trade
began. The savages eagerly handed over their garments of sealskin and
fur, their darts, oars, and everything that they had, in return for
little trifles, even for pieces of paper. They seemed to the English
sailors a very tractable
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P26"></SPAN>26}</SPAN>
people, void of craft and double dealing.
Seeing that the English were eager to obtain furs, they pointed to the
hills inland, as if to indicate that they should go and bring a large
supply. But Davis was anxious for further exploration, and would not
delay his ships. On August 1, the wind being fair, he put to sea,
directing his course to the north-west. In five days he reached the
land on the other side of Davis Strait. This was the shore of what is
now called Baffin Island, in latitude 66° 40', and hence considerably
to the north of the strait which Frobisher had entered. At this season
the sea was clear of ice, and Davis anchored his ships under a great
cliff that glittered like gold. He called it Mount Raleigh, and the
sound which opened out beside it Exeter Sound. A large headland to the
south was named Cape Walsingham in honour of the queen's secretary.
Davis and his men went ashore under Mount Raleigh, where they saw four
white bears of 'a monstrous bigness,' three of which they killed with
their guns and boar-spears. There were low shrubs growing among the
cliffs and flowers like primroses. But the whole country as far as
they could see was without wood or grass. Nothing was in sight except
the open iceless sea to the east and on the land side
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P27"></SPAN>27}</SPAN>
great
mountains of stone. Though the land offered nothing to their search,
the air was moderate and the weather singularly mild. The broad sheet
of open water, of the very colour of the ocean itself, buoyed up their
hopes of the discovery of the Western Passage. Davis turned his ships
to the south, coasting the shore. Here and there signs of man were
seen, a pile of stones fashioned into a rude wall and a human skull
lying upon the rock. The howling of wolves, as the sailors thought it,
was heard along the shore; but when two of these animals were killed
they were seen to be dogs like mastiffs with sharp ears and bushy
tails. A little farther on sleds were found, one made of wood and sawn
boards, the other of whalebone. Presently the coast-line was broken
into a network of barren islands with great sounds between. When Davis
sailed southward he reached and passed the strait that had been the
scene of Frobisher's adventures and, like Frobisher himself, also
passed by the opening of Hudson Strait. Davis was convinced that
somewhere on this route was the passage that he sought. But the winds
blew hard from the west, rendering it difficult to prosecute his
search. The short season was already closing in, and it was dangerous
to
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P28"></SPAN>28}</SPAN>
linger. Reluctantly the ships were turned homeward, and,
though separated at sea, the <i>Sunshine</i> and the <i>Moonshine</i> arrived
safely at Dartmouth within two hours of each other.</p>
<p>While this first expedition had met with no conspicuous material
success, Davis was yet able to make two other voyages to the same
region in the two following seasons. In his second voyage, that of
1586, he sailed along the edge of the continent from above the Arctic
Circle to the coast of Labrador, a distance of several hundred miles.
His search convinced him that if a passage existed at all it must lie
somewhere among the great sounds that opened into the coast, one of
which, of course, proved later on to be the entrance to Hudson Bay.
Moreover, Davis began to see that, owing to the great quantity of
whales in the northern waters, and the ease with which seal-skins and
furs could be bought from the natives, these ventures might be made a
source of profit whether the Western Passage was found or not. In his
second voyage alone he bought from the Eskimos five hundred sealskins.
The natives seem especially to have interested him, and he himself
wrote an account of his dealings with them. They were found to be
people of good stature, well proportioned in body,
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P29"></SPAN>29}</SPAN>
with broad
faces and small eyes, wide mouths, for the most part unbearded, and
with great lips. They were, so Davis said, 'very simple in their
conversation, but marvellous thievish.' They made off with a boat that
lay astern of the <i>Moonshine</i>, cut off pieces from clothes that were
spread out to dry, and stole oars, spears, swords, and indeed anything
within their reach. Articles made of iron seemed to offer an
irresistible temptation: in spite of all pledges of friendship and of
the lifting up of hands towards the sun which the Eskimos renewed every
morning, they no sooner saw iron than they must perforce seize upon it.
To stop their pilfering, Davis was compelled to fire off a cannon among
them, whereat the savages made off in wild terror. But in a few hours
they came flocking back again, holding up their hands to the sun and
begging to be friends. 'When I perceived this,' said Davis, 'it did
but minister unto me an occasion of laughter to see their simplicity
and I willed that in no case should they be any more hardly used, but
that our own company should be more vigilant to keep their things,
supposing it to be very hard in so short a time to make them know their
own evils.'</p>
<p>The natives ate all their meat raw, lived
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P30"></SPAN>30}</SPAN>
mostly on fish and 'ate
grass and ice with delight.' They were rarely out of the water, but
lived in the nature of fishes except when 'dead sleep took them,' and
they lay down exhausted in a warm hollow of the rocks. Davis found
among them copper ore and black and red copper. But Frobisher's
experience seems to have made him loath to hunt for mineral treasure.</p>
<p>On his last voyage (1587) Davis made a desperate attempt to find the
desired passage by striking boldly towards the Far North. He skirted
the west shore of Greenland and with favourable winds ran as far north
as 72° 12', thus coming into the great sheet of polar water now called
Baffin Bay. This was at the end of the month of June. In these
regions there was perpetual day, the sun sweeping in a great circle
about the heavens and standing five degrees above the horizon even at
midnight. To the northward and westward, as far as could be seen,
there was nothing but open sea. Davis thought himself almost in sight
of the goal. Then the wind turned and blew fiercely out of the north.
Unable to advance, Davis drove westward across the path of the gale.
At forty leagues from Greenland, he came upon a sheet of ice that
forced him to turn back
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P31"></SPAN>31}</SPAN>
towards the south. 'There was no ice
towards the north,' he wrote, in relating his experience, 'but a great
sea, free, large, very salt and blue and of an unsearchable depth. It
seemed most manifest that the passage was free and without impediment
towards the north.'</p>
<p>When Davis returned home, he was still eager to try again. But the
situation was changed. Walsingham, who had encouraged his enterprise,
was dead, and the whole energy of the nation was absorbed in the great
struggle with Spain. Davis sailed no more to the northern seas. With
each succeeding decade it became clear that the hopes aroused by the
New World lay not in finding a passage by the ice-blocked sounds of the
north, but in occupying the vast continent of America itself. Many
voyages were indeed attempted before the hope of a northern passage to
the Indies was laid aside. Weymouth, Knight, and others followed in
the track of Frobisher and Davis. But nothing new was found. The
sea-faring spirit and the restless adventure which characterized the
Elizabethan period outlived the great queen. The famous voyage of
Henry Hudson in 1610 revealed the existence of the great inland sea
which bears his name.
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P32"></SPAN>32}</SPAN>
Hudson, already famous as an explorer and
for his discovery of the Hudson river, was sent out by Sir John
Wolstenholme and Sir Dudley Digges to find the North-West Passage. The
story of his passage of the strait, his discovery of the great bay, the
mutiny of his men and his tragic and mysterious fate forms one of the
most thrilling narratives in the history of exploration. But it
belongs rather to the romantic story of the great company whose
corporate title recalls his name and memory, than to the present
narrative.</p>
<p>After Hudson came the exploits of Bylot, one of his pilots, and a
survivor of the tragedy, and of William Baffin, who tried to follow
Davis's lead in searching for the Western Passage in the very confines
of the polar sea. Finally there came (1631) the voyage of Captain Luke
Fox, who traversed the whole western coast of Hudson Bay and proved
that from the main body of its waters there was no outlet to the
Pacific. The hope of a North-West Passage in the form of a wide and
glittering sea, an easy passage to Asia, was dead. Other causes were
added to divert attention from the northern waters. The definite
foundation of the colonies of Virginia and Massachusetts Bay opened the
path to new
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P33"></SPAN>33}</SPAN>
hopes and even wider ambitions of Empire. Then, as
the seventeenth century moved on its course, the shadow of civil strife
fell dark over England. The fierce struggle of the Great Rebellion
ended for a time all adventure overseas. When it had passed, the days
of bold sea-farers gazing westward from the decks of their little
caravels over the glittering ice of the Arctic for a pathway to the
Orient were gone, and the first period of northern adventure had come
to an end.</p>
<br/><br/><br/>
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<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P34"></SPAN>34}</SPAN>
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