<h3> CHAPTER IV </h3>
<h4>
THE MEMORABLE EXPLOITS OF SIR JOHN FRANKLIN
</h4>
<p>The generation now passing away can vividly recall, as one of the
deepest impressions of its childhood, the profound and sustained
interest excited by the mysterious fate of Sir John Franklin. His
splendid record by sea and land, the fact that he was one of 'Nelson's
men' and had fought at Copenhagen and Trafalgar, his feats as an
explorer in the unknown wilds of North America and the torrid seas of
Australasia, and, more than these, his high Christian courage and his
devotion to the flag and country that he served—all had made of
Franklin a hero whom the nation delighted to honour. His departure in
1846 with his two stout ships the <i>Erebus</i> and the <i>Terror</i> and a total
company of one hundred and thirty-four men, including some of the
ablest naval officers of the day, was hailed with high hopes that the
mysterious north would at length be
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P90"></SPAN>90}</SPAN>
robbed of its secret. Then,
as the years passed and the ships never returned, and no message from
the explorers came out of the silent north, the nation, defiant of
difficulty and danger, bent its energies towards the discovery of their
fate. No less than forty-two expeditions were sent out in search of
the missing ships. The efforts of the government were seconded by the
munificence of private individuals, and by the generosity of naval
officers who gladly gave their services for no other reward than the
honour of the enterprise. The energies of the rescue parties were
quickened by the devotion of Lady Franklin, who refused to abandon
hope, and consecrated her every energy and her entire fortune to the
search for her lost husband. Her conduct and her ardent appeals awoke
a chivalrous spirit at home and abroad; men such as Kane, Bellot,
M'Clintock and De Haven volunteered their services in the cause. At
length, as with the passage of years anxiety deepened into despair, and
as little by little it was learned that all were lost, the brave story
of the death of Franklin and his men wrote itself in imperishable
letters on the hearts of their fellow-countrymen. It found no parallel
till more than half a century later, when another and a
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P91"></SPAN>91}</SPAN>
similar
tragedy in the silent snows of the Antarctic called forth again the
mingled pride and anguish with which Britain honours the memory of
those fallen in her cause.</p>
<p>John Franklin belonged to the school of naval officers trained in the
prolonged struggle of the great war with France. He entered the Royal
Navy in 1800 at fourteen years of age, and within a year was engaged on
his ship, the <i>Polyphemus</i>, in the great sea-fight at Copenhagen.
During the brief truce that broke the long war after 1801, Franklin
served under Flinders, the great explorer of the Australasian seas. On
his way home in 1803 he was shipwrecked in Torres Strait, and, with
ninety-three others of the company of H.M.S. <i>Porpoise</i>, was cast up on
a sandbar, seven hundred and fifty miles from the nearest port. The
party were rescued, Franklin reached England, and at once set out on a
voyage to the China seas in the service of the East India Company.
During the voyage the merchant fleet with which he sailed offered
battle to a squadron of French men-of-war, which fled before them. The
next year saw Franklin serving as signal midshipman on board the
<i>Bellerophon</i> at Trafalgar. He remained in active service during the
war, served in America, and was
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P92"></SPAN>92}</SPAN>
wounded in the British attempt to
capture New Orleans. After the war Franklin, now a lieutenant, found
himself, like so many other naval officers, unable, after the stirring
life of the past fifteen years, to settle into the dull routine of
peace service. Maritime discovery, especially since his voyage with
Flinders, had always fascinated his mind, and he now offered himself
for service in that Arctic region with which his name will ever be
associated.</p>
<p>The long struggle of the war had halted the progress of discoveries in
the northern seas. But on the conclusion of peace the attention of the
nation, and of naval men in particular, was turned again towards the
north. The Admiralty naturally sought an opportunity of giving
honourable service to their officers and men. Great numbers of them
had been thrown out of employment. Some migrated to the colonies or
even took service abroad. At the same time the writings of Captain
Scoresby, a whaling captain of scientific knowledge who published an
account of the Greenland seas, and the influence of such men as Sir
John Barrow, the secretary of the Admiralty, did much to create a
renewal of public interest in the north. It was now recognized that
the North-West Passage offered no commercial
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P93"></SPAN>93}</SPAN>
attractions. But it
was felt that it would not be for the honour of the nation that the
splendid discoveries of Hearne, Cook and Mackenzie should remain
uncompleted. To trace the Arctic water-way from the Atlantic to the
Pacific became now a supreme object, not of commercial interest, but of
geographical research and of national pride. To this was added the
fact that the progress of physical and natural science was opening up
new fields of investigation for the explorers of the north.</p>
<p>Franklin first sailed north in 1818, as second in command of the first
Arctic expedition of the nineteenth century. Two brigs, H.M.S.
<i>Dorothea</i> under Captain Buchan, and H.M.S. <i>Trent</i> under Lieutenant
John Franklin, set out from the Thames with a purpose which in audacity
at least has never been surpassed. The new sentiment of supreme
confidence in the navy inspired by the conquest of the seas is evinced
by the fact that these two square-rigged sailing ships, clumsy and
antiquated, built up with sundry extra beams inside and iron bands
without, were directed to sail straight north across the North Pole and
down the world on the other side. They did their best. They went
churning northward through the foaming seas, and when they found that
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P94"></SPAN>94}</SPAN>
the ice was closing in on them, and that they were being blown
down upon it in a gale as on to a lee shore, the order was given to put
the helm up and charge full speed at the ice. It was the only possible
way of escape, and it meant either sudden and awful death under the ice
floes or else the piling up of the ships safe on top of them—'taking
the ice' as Arctic sailors call it. The <i>Dorothea</i> and the <i>Trent</i>
went driving at the ice with such a gale of snow about them that
neither could see the other as they ran. They 'took the ice' with a
mighty crash, amid a wild confusion of the elements, and when the storm
cleared the two old hulls lay shattered but safe on the surface of the
ice-pack. The whole larboard side of the <i>Dorothea</i> was smashed, but
they brought her somehow to Spitzbergen, and there by wonderful
patching enabled her to sail home.</p>
<p>The next year (1819) Lieutenant Franklin was off again on an Arctic
journey, the record of which, written by himself, forms one of the most
exciting stories of adventure ever written. The design this time was
to follow the lead of Hearne and Mackenzie. Beginning where their
labours ended, Franklin proposed to embark on the polar sea in canoes
and follow the coast line. Franklin left England at the
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P95"></SPAN>95}</SPAN>
end of
May. He was accompanied by Dr Richardson, a naval surgeon, afterwards
Sir John Richardson, and second only to Franklin himself as an explorer
and writer, Midshipman Back, later on to be Admiral Sir George Back,
Midshipman Hood, and one Hepburn, a stout-hearted sailor of the Royal
Navy. They sailed in the Hudson's Bay Company ship <i>Prince of Wales</i>,
and passed through the straits to York Factory. Thence by canoe they
went inland, up the Hayes river, through Lake Winnipeg and thence up
the Saskatchewan to Cumberland House, a Hudson's Bay fort established
by Samuel Hearne a few years after his famous journey. From York
Factory to Cumberland House was a journey of six hundred and ninety
miles. But this was only a beginning. During the winter of 1819-20
Franklin and his party made their way from Cumberland House to Fort
Chipewyan on Lake Athabaska, a distance, by the route traversed, of
eight hundred and fifty-seven miles. From this fort the party,
accompanied by Canadian voyageurs and Indian guides, made their way, in
the summer of 1820, to Fort Providence, a lonely post of the North-West
Company lying in latitude 62° on the northern shore of the Great Slave
Lake.</p>
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P96"></SPAN>96}</SPAN>
<p>These were the days of rivalry, and even open war, between the two
great fur companies, the Hudson's Bay and the North-West. The
Admiralty had commended Franklin's expeditions to the companies, who
were to be requisitioned for the necessary supplies. But the disorders
of the fur trade, and the demoralization of the Indians, owing to the
free distribution of ardent spirits by the rival companies, rendered it
impossible for the party to obtain adequate supplies and stores.
Undeterred by difficulties, Franklin set out from Fort Providence to
make his way to the Arctic seas at the mouth of the Coppermine. The
expedition reached the height of land between the Great Slave Lake and
the Coppermine, on the borders of the country which had been the scene
of Hearne's exploits. The northern forest is here reduced to a thin
growth of stunted pine and willow. It was now the end of August. The
brief northern summer was drawing to its close. It was impossible to
undertake the navigation of the Arctic coast till the ensuing summer.
Franklin and his party built some rude log shanties which they called
Fort Enterprise. Here, after having traversed over two thousand miles
in all from York Factory, they spent their second winter in the
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P97"></SPAN>97}</SPAN>
north. It was a season of great hardship. With the poor materials at
their hand it was impossible to make their huts weatherproof. The wind
whistled through the ill-plastered seams of the logs. So intense was
the winter cold that the trees about the fort froze hard to their
centres. In cutting firewood the axes splintered as against stone. In
the officers' room the thermometer, sixteen feet from the log fire,
marked as low as fifteen degrees below zero in the day and forty below
at night. For food the party lived on deer's meat with a little fish,
tea twice a day (without sugar), and on Sunday a cup of chocolate as
the luxury of the week to every man. But, undismayed by cold and
hardship, they kept stoutly at their work. Richardson investigated the
mosses and lichens beneath the snow and acquainted himself with the
mineralogy of the neighbourhood. Franklin and the two lieutenants
carried out observations, their fingers freezing with the cold of
forty-six below zero at noon of the brief three-hour day in the heart
of winter. Sunday was a day of rest. The officers dressed in their
best attire. Franklin read the service of the Church of England to his
assembled company. For the French-Canadian Roman Catholics, Franklin
did the best he
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P98"></SPAN>98}</SPAN>
could; he read to them the creed of the Church of
England in French. In the leisure part of the day a bundle of London
newspapers was perused again and again.</p>
<p>The winter passed safely; the party now entered upon the most arduous
part of their undertaking. Canoes were built and dragged on improvised
sledges to the Coppermine. Franklin descended the river, surveying its
course as he went. He passed by the scene of the massacre witnessed by
Hearne, and found himself, late in July of 1821, on the shores of the
Arctic. The distance from Fort Enterprise was three hundred and
thirty-four miles, for one hundred and seventeen of which the canoes
and baggage had been hauled over snow and ice.</p>
<p>Franklin and his followers, in two canoes, embarked on the polar sea
and traced the course of the coast eastward for five hundred and fifty
miles. The sailors were as men restored to their own element. But the
Canadian voyageurs were filled with dread at the great waves of the
open ocean. All that Franklin saw of the Arctic coast encouraged his
belief that the American continent is separated by stretches of sea
from the great masses of land that had been already discovered in the
Arctic.
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P99"></SPAN>99}</SPAN>
The North-West Passage, ice-blocked and useless, was
still a geographical fact. Eager in the pursuit of his investigations
he went on eastward as long as he dared—too long in fact. Food was
running low. His voyageurs had lost heart, appalled at the immense
spaces of ice and sea through which their frail canoes went onward into
the unknown. Reluctantly, Franklin decided to turn back. But it was
too late to return by water. The northern gales drove the ice in
against the coast. Franklin and his men, dragging and carrying one of
the canoes, took to the land, in order to make their way across the
barren grounds. By this means they hoped to reach the upper waters of
the Coppermine and thence Fort Enterprise, where supplies were to have
been placed for them during the summer. Their journey was disastrous.
Bitter cold set in as they marched. Food failed them. Day after day
they tramped on, often with blinding snow in their faces, with no other
sustenance than the bitter weed called <i>tripe de roche</i> that can here
and there be scraped from the rocks beneath the snow. At times they
found frozen remnants of deer that had been killed by wolves, a few
bones with putrid meat adhering to them. These they eagerly devoured.
But
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P100"></SPAN>100}</SPAN>
often day after day passed without even this miserable
sustenance. At night they lay down beside a clump of willows, trying,
often in vain, to make a fire of the green twigs dragged from under the
snow. So great was their famine, Franklin says, that the very
sensation of hunger passed away, leaving only an exhaustion too great
for words. Lieutenant Back, gaunt and emaciated, staggered forward
leaning on a stick, refusing to give in. Richardson could hardly walk,
while Lieutenant Hood, emaciated to the last degree, was helped on by
his comrades as best they could. The Canadians and Indians suffered
less in body, but, lacking the stern purpose of the officers, they were
distraught with the horror of the death that seemed to await them. In
their fear they had refused to carry the canoe, and had smashed it and
thrown it aside. In this miserable condition the party reached, on
September 26, the Coppermine river, to find it flowing still unfrozen
in an angry flood which they could not cross. In vain they ranged the
banks above and below. Below them was a great lake; beside and above
them a swift, deep current broken by rapids. There was no crossing.
They tried to gather willow faggots, and bind them into a raft. But
the green wood sank so
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P101"></SPAN>101}</SPAN>
easily that only one man could get upon
the raft: to paddle or pole it in the running water was impossible. A
line was made of strips of skin, and Richardson volunteered to swim the
river so as to haul the raft across with the line. The bitter cold of
the water paralysed his limbs. He was seen to sink beneath the leaping
waters. His companions dragged him back to the bank, where for hours
he lay as if lifeless beside the fire of willow branches, so emaciated
that he seemed a mere skeleton when they took off his wet clothing.
His comrades gazed at him with a sort of horror. Thus for days they
waited. At last, with infinite patience, one of the Canadians made a
sort of canoe with willow sticks and canvas. In this, with a line
attached, they crossed the river one by one.</p>
<p>They were now only forty miles from Fort Enterprise. But their
strength was failing. Hood could not go on. The party divided.
Franklin and Back went forward with most of the men, while Richardson
and sailor Hepburn volunteered to stay with Hood till help could be
sent. The others left them in a little tent, with some rounds of
ammunition and willow branches gathered for the fire. A little further
on the march, three of Franklin's followers,
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P102"></SPAN>102}</SPAN>
too exhausted to go
on, dropped out, proposing to make their way back to Richardson and
Hood.</p>
<p>The little party at the tent in the snow waited in vain. Days passed,
and no help came. One of the three men who had left Franklin, an
Indian called Michel, joined them, saying that the others had gone
astray in the snow. But he was strange and sullen, sleeping apart and
wandering off by himself to hunt. Presently, from the man's strange
talk and from some meat which he brought back from his hunting and
declared to be part of a wolf, Richardson realized the awful truth that
Michel had killed his companions and was feeding on their bodies. A
worse thing followed. Richardson and Hepburn, gathering wood a few
days later, heard the report of a gun from beside the fire where they
had left Lieutenant Hood, who was now in the last stage of exhaustion.
They returned to find Michel beside the dead body of their comrade. He
had been shot through the back of the head. Michel swore that Hood had
killed himself. Richardson knew the truth, but both he and Hepburn
were too enfeebled by privation to offer fight to the armed and
powerful madman. The three set out for Fort Enterprise, Michel
carrying a loaded gun, two
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P103"></SPAN>103}</SPAN>
pistols and a bayonet, muttering to
himself and evidently meditating a new crime. Richardson, a man of
iron nerve, forestalled him. Watching his opportunity, he put a pistol
to the Indian's head and blew his brains out.</p>
<p>Richardson and Hepburn dragged themselves forward mile by mile,
encouraged by the thought of the blazing fires and the abundant food
that they expected to find at Fort Enterprise. They reached the fort
just in the dusk of an October evening. All about it was silence.
There were no tracks in the newly fallen snow. Only a thin thread of
smoke from the chimney gave a sign of life. Hurriedly they made their
way in. To their horror and dismay they found Franklin and three
companions, two Canadians and an Indian, stretched out in the last
stages of famine. 'No words can convey an idea,' wrote Dr Richardson
later on, 'of the filth and wretchedness that met our eyes on looking
around. Our own misery had stolen upon us by degrees and we were
accustomed to the contemplation of each other's emaciated figures, but
the ghastly countenances, dilated eye-balls, and sepulchral voices of
Captain Franklin and those with him were more than we could bear.'
Franklin, on his part, was equally dismayed at the appearance of
Richardson and Hepburn.
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P104"></SPAN>104}</SPAN>
'We were all shocked,' he says in his
journal, 'at beholding the emaciated countenances of the doctor and
Hepburn, as they strongly evidenced their extremely debilitated state.
The alteration in our appearance was equally distressing to them, for
since the swellings had subsided we were little more than skin and
bone. The doctor particularly remarked the sepulchral tone of our
voices, which he requested us to make more cheerful if possible,
unconscious that his own partook of the same key.'</p>
<p>Franklin related to the new-comers how he and his followers had reached
Fort Enterprise, and to their infinite disappointment and grief had
found it perfectly desolate. There was no depot of provisions, as had
been arranged, nor any trace of a letter or other message from the
traders at Fort Providence or from the Indians. Lieutenant Back, who
had reached the fort a little in advance of Franklin, had gone on in
the hope of finding Indian hunters, or perhaps of reaching Fort
Providence and sending relief. They had no food except a little <i>tripe
de roche</i>, and Franklin had thus found himself, as he explained to
Richardson, in the deserted fort with five companions, in a state of
utter destitution. Food there was none.
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P105"></SPAN>105}</SPAN>
From the refuse heaps
of the winter before, now buried under the snow, they dug out pieces of
bone and a few deer-skins; on this, with a little <i>tripe de roche</i>,
they endeavoured to subsist. The log house was falling into decay.
The seams gaped and the piercing air entered on every side with the
thermometer twenty below zero. Franklin and his companions had tried
in vain to stop the chinks and to make a fire by tearing up the rough
boards of the floor. But their strength was insufficient. Already for
two weeks before their arrival at Fort Enterprise they had had no meat.
It was impossible that they could have existed long in the miserable
shelter of the deserted fort. Franklin had endeavoured to go on.
Leaving three of his companions, now too exhausted to walk far, he and
the other two, a Canadian and an Eskimo, set out to try to reach help
in the direction of Fort Providence. The snow was deep, and their
strength was so far gone that in six hours they only struggled four
miles on their way. At night they lay down beside one another in the
snow, huddled together for warmth, with a bitter wind blowing over
their emaciated bodies. The next morning, in recommencing their march,
Franklin stumbled and fell, breaking his snow-shoe in the
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P106"></SPAN>106}</SPAN>
fall.
Realizing that he could never hope to traverse the one hundred and
eighty-six miles to Fort Providence, he directed his companions to go
on, and he himself made his way back to Fort Enterprise. There he had
remained for a fortnight until found by Richardson and Hepburn. So
weak had Franklin and his three companions become that they could not
find the strength to go on cutting down the log buildings of the fort
to make a fire. Adam, the Indian, lay prostrate in his bunk, his body
covered with hideous swellings. The two Canadians, Peltier and
Samandré, suffered such pain in their joints that they could scarcely
move a step. A herd of deer had appeared on the ice of the river near
by, but none of the men had strength to pursue them, nor could any one
of them, said Franklin, have found the strength to raise a gun and fire
it.</p>
<p>Such had been the position of things when Richardson and Hepburn,
themselves almost in the last stage of exhaustion, found their unhappy
comrades. Richardson was a man of striking energy, of the kind that
knows no surrender. He set himself to gather wood, built up a blazing
fire, dressed as well as he could the swollen body of the Indian, and
tried to bring some order into the filth and squalor
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P107"></SPAN>107}</SPAN>
of the hut.
Hepburn meantime had killed a partridge, which the doctor then divided
among them in six parts, the first fresh meat that Franklin and those
with him had tasted for thirty-one days. This done, 'the doctor,' so
runs Franklin's story, 'brought out his prayer book and testament, and
some prayers and psalms and portions of scripture appropriate to the
situation were read.'</p>
<p>But beyond the consolation of manifesting a brave and devout spirit,
there was little that Richardson could do for his companions. The
second night after his arrival Peltier died. There was no strength
left in the party to lift his body out into the snow. It lay beside
them in the hut, and before another day passed Samandré, the other
Canadian, lay dead beside it. For a week the survivors remained in the
hut, waiting for death. Then at last, and just in time, help reached
them.</p>
<p>On November 7, nearly a month after Franklin's first arrival at the
fort, they heard the sound of a musket and the shouting of men outside.
Three Indians stood before the door. The valiant Lieutenant Back,
after sufferings almost as great as their own, had reached a band of
Indian hunters and had sent three men travelling at top speed with
enough food to
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P108"></SPAN>108}</SPAN>
keep the party alive till further succour could be
brought. Franklin and his friends were saved by one of the narrowest
escapes recorded in the history of northern adventure. Another week
passed before the relief party of the Indians reached them, and even
then Franklin and his companions were so enfeebled by privation that
they could only travel with difficulty, and a month passed before they
found themselves safe and sound within the shelter of Fort Providence
on the Great Slave Lake. There they remained till the winter passed.
A seven weeks' journey took them to York Factory on Hudson Bay, whence
they sailed to England. Franklin's journey overland and on the waters
of the polar sea had covered in all five thousand five hundred and
fifty miles and had occupied nearly three years.</p>
<p>On his return to England Franklin found himself at once the object of a
wide public interest. Already during his absence he had been made a
commander, and the Admiralty now promoted him to the rank of captain,
while the national recognition of his services was shortly afterwards
confirmed by the honour of knighthood. One might think that after the
perils which he had braved and the horrors which he had experienced,
Sir John would have
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P109"></SPAN>109}</SPAN>
been content to retire upon his laurels. But
it was not so. There is something in the snow-covered land of the
Arctic, its isolation from the world and the long silence of its winter
darkness, that exercises a strange fascination upon those who have the
hardihood to brave its perils. It was a moment too when interest in
Arctic discovery and the advancement thereby of scientific knowledge
had reached the highest point yet known. During Franklin's absence
Captain Ross and Lieutenant Parry had been sent by sea into the Arctic
waters. Parry had met with wonderful success, striking from Baffin Bay
through the northern archipelago and reaching half-way to Bering Strait.</p>
<p>Franklin was eager to be off again. The year 1825 saw him start once
more to resume the survey of the polar coast of America. The plan now
was to learn something of the western half of the North American coast,
so as to connect the discoveries of Sir Alexander Mackenzie with those
made by Cook and others through Bering Strait. Franklin was again
accompanied by his gallant friend, Dr Richardson. They passed again
overland through the fur country, where the recent union of the rival
companies had brought about a new era. They descended the Mackenzie
river,
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P110"></SPAN>110}</SPAN>
wintered on Great Bear Lake, and descended thence to the
sea. Franklin struck out westward, his party surveying the coast in
open boats. Their journey from their winter quarters to the sea and
along the coast covered a thousand miles, and extended to within one
hundred and sixty miles of the point that had then been reached by
explorers from Bering Strait. At the same time Richardson, going
eastward from the Mackenzie, surveyed the coast as far as the
Coppermine river. Their discoveries thus connected the Pacific waters
with the Atlantic, with the exception of one hundred and sixty miles on
the north-west, where water was known to exist and only ice blocked the
way, and of a line north and south which should bring the discoveries
of Parry into connection with those of Franklin. These two were the
missing links now needed in the chain of the North-West Passage.</p>
<p>But more than twenty years were to elapse before the discoveries thus
made were carried to their completion. Franklin himself, claimed by
other duties, was unable to continue his work in the Arctic, and his
appointment to the governorship of Tasmania called him for a time to
another sphere. Yet, little by little, the exploration of the Arctic
regions was carried
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P111"></SPAN>111}</SPAN>
on, each explorer adding something to what
was already known, and each hoping that the honour of the discovery of
the great passage would fall to his lot. Franklin's comrade Back, now
a captain and presently to be admiral, made his way in 1834 from Canada
to the polar sea down the river that bears his name. Three years later
Simpson, in the service of the Hudson's Bay Company, succeeded in
traversing the coast from the Mackenzie to Point Barrow, completing the
missing link in the western end of the chain. John and James Ross
brought the exploration of the northern archipelago to a point that
made it certain that somewhere or other a way through must exist to
connect Baffin Bay with the coastal waters. At last the time came, in
1844, when the British Admiralty determined to make a supreme effort to
unite the explorations of twenty-five years by a final act of
discovery. The result was the last expedition of Sir John Franklin,
glorious in its disaster, and leaving behind it a tale that will never
be forgotten while the annals of the British nation remain.</p>
<br/><br/><br/>
<SPAN name="chap05"></SPAN>
<SPAN CLASS="pagenum">{<SPAN name="P112"></SPAN>112}</SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />