University of Virginia Library


119

Scene, a stupendous region of icebergs and snow. The bare mast of a half-buried ship stands amongst the rifts and ridges. The figures of Two Men, covered closely with furs and skins, slowly emerge from beneath the winter housing of the deck, and descend upon the snow by an upper ladder, and steps cut below in the frozen wall of snow. They advance upon the ice.
1st Man.
We are out of hearing now: give thy heart words.

[They walk in silence some steps further, and then pause.
2nd Man.
Here 'midst the sea's unfathomable ice,
Life-piercing cold and the remorseless night
Which blinds our thoughts, nor changes its dead face,
Save in the 'ghast smile of the hopeless moon,
Must slowly close our sum of wasted hours,
And with them all the enterprising dreams,
Efforts, endurance, and resolve which make
The power and glory of us Englishmen.

1st Man.
It may be so.

2nd Man.
Oh, doubt not but it must.
Day after day, week crawling after week,
So slowly that they scarcely seem to move,
Nor we to know it till our calendar
Shows us that months have lapsed away, and left
Our drifting time while here our bodies lie,
Like melancholy blots upon the snow.
Thus have we lived, and gradually seen
By calculations which appear to mock
Our hearts with their false figures, that 'tis now
Three years since we were cut from off the world,
By these impregnable walls of solid ocean!

1st Man.
All this is true: the physical elements
We thought to conquer, are too strong for us.


120

2nd Man.
We have felt the crush of battle, side by side;
Seen our best friends, with victory in their eyes,
Suddenly smitten down, a mangled heap,
And thought our own turn might be next; yet never
Drooped we in spirit, or such horror felt
As in the voiceless tortures of this place
Which freezes up the mind.

1st Man.
Not yet.

2nd Man.
I feel it.
Death, flying red-eyed from the cannon's mouth,
Were child's play to confront, compared with this:
Inch by inch famine in the silent frost,
The cold anatomies of our dear friends,
One by one carried in their rigid sheets
To lie beneath the snow, till he that's last
Creeps to the lonely horror of his berth
Within the vacant ship; and while the bears
Grope round and round, thinks of his distant home,
Those dearest to him—glancing rapidly
Through his past life—then with a wailful sigh,
And a brief prayer, his soul becomes a blank.

1st Man.
This is despair: I'll hear no more of it.
We have provisions still.

2nd Man.
And for how long?

1st Man.
A flock of wild birds may pass over us,
And some our shots may reach.

2nd Man.
And by this chance
Find food for one day more.

1st Man.
Yes, and thank God;
For preservation the next day may come,
And rescue from old England.

2nd Man.
All our fuel
Is nearly gone; and as the last log burns,

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And falls in ashes, so may we foresee
The frozen circle sitting round.

1st Man.
Nay, nay—

2nd Man.
Have we not burnt bulkhead, partition, door,
Till one grim family, with glassy eyes
And hollow voices, crouch beneath the deck,
Which soon—our only safeguard—we must burn?

1st Man.
Our boats, loose spars, our masts—the forecastle—
Must serve us ere that pass. But if indeed
Nothing avail, and no help penetrate
To this remote place, inaccessible
Perchance for years, except to some wild bird—
Or creature, stranger than the crimson snow—
We came here knowing all this might befall,
And set our lives at stake. God's will be done.
I, too, have felt the horrors of our fate;
Jammed in a moving field of solid ice,
Borne onward day and night we knew not where,
Till the loud cracking sounds reverberating
Far distant, were soon followed by the rending
Of the vast pack, whose heaving blocks and wedges
Like crags broke loose, all rose to our destruction,
As by some ghastly instinct. Then the hand
Of winter smote the all-congealing air,
And with its freezing tempest piled on high
These massy fragments which environ us,—
Cathedrals many-spired, by lightning riven;
Sharp-angled chaos-heaps of palaced cities,
With splintered pyramids, and broken towers,
That yawn for ever at the bursting moon,
And her four pallid flame-spouts:—now, appalled
By the long roar o' the cloud-like avalanche,—

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Now, by the stealthy creeping of the glaciers
In silence tow'rds our frozen ships. So Death
Hath often whispered to me in the night,
And I have seen him in the Aurora-gleam,
Smile as I rose and came upon the deck;
Or when the icicle's prismatic glance
Bright, flashing—and then, colourless, unmoved ice,
Emblem'd our passing life, and its cold end.
O, friend in many perils, fail not now!
Am I not, e'en as thou art, utterly sick
Of my own heavy heart, and loading clothes?
A mind, that in its firmest hour hath fits
Of madness for some change, that shoot across
Its stedfastness, and scarce are trampled down:
Yet, friend, I will not let my spirit sink,
Nor shall mine eyes, e'en with snow-blindness veiled,
Man's great prerogative of inward sight
Forego, nor cease therein to speculate
On England's feeling for her countrymen;
Whereof relief will some day surely come.

2nd Man.
I well believe it; but, I feel, too late.

1st Man.
Then, if too late, one noble task remains,
And one consoling thought: we, to the last,
With firmness, order, and considerate care,
Will act as though our death-beds were at home,
Gray heads with honour sinking to the tomb;
So future ages shall record that we,
Imprisoned in these frozen horrors, held
Our sense of duty, both to man and God.

(The muffled beat of the ship's bell sounds for evening prayers.) The Two Men return; they ascend the steps in the snow—then the ladder—and disappear beneath the snow-covered housing of the deck.
 

The “Two men” are supposed to have been Sir John Franklin, and his First Lieutenant.