University of Virginia Library


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Sir John Franklin.

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Sir John Franklin sailed on his last expedition in 1845, with the Erebus and Terror, vessels which the same year had returned with Sir John Ross from the Antarctic expedition. Government continued the search after Franklin till 1854. Then hope was abandoned, and the Admiralty determined to remove from the Navy List the names of the officers of the Erebus and Terror, and to consider them as having died in Her Majesty's service. The only vestiges discovered in the later searches were obtained by Rae, who, in his first overland expedition, reported to the Admiralty in 1852, found floating in Parker Bay two pieces of wood, the one with a clasp or band of iron, and the other with two nails in it, bearing the Government mark. They were unquestionably relics from Franklin's vessels, and were the first proof that a Northwest Passage existed. In his second expedition, Rae obtained from the Esquimaux the fatal news of the catastrophe of Franklin's crews. The last Government expedition of search returned in 1854: the Fox, the private expedition of Lady Franklin, under Captain Mc Clintock, sailed in 1857, and was away three years.

Argument.

Introduction—The First Winter spent by Franklin in the Arctic Region—The First Spring—Failure and Cessation of the Government Expeditions of Search—The Last Expedition sent by Lady Franklin—The Franklin Relics—Conclusion.

Where the meridians narrow; where the ice
Sets its white teeth against the world, a vice
Which grips the countless islets of the sea,
Northwards we watch; our slackened hands the key

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Of the last problem of the world enfold.
Where the cold northern desert lies unrolled
Beneath the signs that never drink the wave,
A voice is heard, our brethren from their grave
In resurrection, they who sought and found
In life, in death; they tell us that unbound
The mystery lies, the adamantine chain
About the rough fell of the northern main
Is broken now; they tell us all their praise
By silence; silently before our gaze
They rise: they tell us not of death; they died.
Why should they speak of death who have untied
The knot which England strove to loose of old
From those first days when she alone was bold
To emulate the glory on your brows,
Columbus and Da Gama? earth avows
No greater deed; alone did England choose
Those uncouth seas; her sons alone had thews
Sufficient that toward both east and west,
They should attempt the north, whether to wrest
Their doubled passage round the Northern Rock,
Which bars the eastward voyage, and unlock
The sevenfold mouth of Dwina; or to thread
From belt to belt the gulfs and channels led
About the sunken crest of that half-sphere
Which westward greets the Pole: England holds here
The old renown, and still the Vikings ride:
Willoughby died, and Franklin too hath died;

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Chancellor won, and Franklin too hath won.
Come then, and witness where the ice-fields run
To glacier edges upon boundless shores,
Where the moraine runs ruinous, where soars
The monumental berg, her stony folds
The numb and sterile earth with pain upholds
Above the sulky margin of the sea,
Half buried in primæval apathy
By waters washing round her island-limbs,
Half crusted in her frozen scales, while swims
The dull air round her, warped and woofed with snows,
And frost-smoke streaming from her gnashing floes.
Come then, and listen to the solemn voice
Which reaches us so newly o'er the poise
Of earth and water; listen, ere the rush
Of onward time as solemnly shall hush
The voice which speaks in its solemnities;
Ere memory parts, ere time this deed shall prize
As not the latest on his roll of deeds;
And much shall be forgotten which now pleads
With recent sorrow.
By the supreme laws
Of being, in the human heart a cause
Exists, which seeks for ever the unknown:
This still draws close the links mysterious thrown
Between the worlds of matter and of thought;
Still animates the deep relation, fraught

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With subtlest truth, of every outward thing
To the deep soul within the senses' ring.
Now, therefore, they are dearest to our race
Who spring with swiftest foot toward the chase
Of things unknown; and open to our gaze
Another means to grasp the hidden ways
Of that infinitude, which circles round
Our narrow life; another knowledge found
Demands our thanks; now, therefore, we unite
In saddened praise of those whose noble might
Has filled the Elizabethan chart, unrolled
By those who knew God's edicts from of old,
The circumnavigation that should be
By man accomplished: they laboriously
In their outgoings from our silver isle
Strove anciently in ships to reconcile
The face of nature with the thoughts of God,
As man conceives thereof: upon that road
Perished in victory the men we mourn,
Hailing in death creation's latest bourne.
Three lustres have been measured since they passed
From mortal view; the hero soul who cast
His threescore years behind him, and refused
The honours ripely due; and they who cruised
With him of old beyond the icy zone:
They took from hands heroic as their own
The world-famed ships returned from other goal,
From wandering round the starless southern pole,

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The Erebus, the Terror; and they sailed:
The whalers saw them to an iceberg haled,
Waiting their passage through Lancaster Sound:
And since that day no human eye has found
Those mariners, but they have passed from men.
Fell the first lustre from the summer when
They parted, ere at all their track was gained:
The startled world had sought them, had unchained
Squadrons of rescue, scaled from isle to isle
That archipelago of death, awhile
In hope, but soon with dire inquietude,
For token none appeared, nor sign of good;
Until at length some happy news was found
Of their first winter upon Arctic ground,
And their first summer: this the happier news.
They had passed onward, gallant ships and crews,
And that great heart which harmonized the whole
To its firm purpose, onward, till the roll
Of summer seas was stiffened into death:
Then had they anchored in the isle beneath
North Devon, that shore which stretches stark and rude
Three parts toward the highest latitude;
Long had they struggled in the ice-choked seas,
Steering to gain the northernmost degrees,
That they might issue by the channel named
Of Wellington; until the autumn aimed
His bitter arrows and forbade their path.
The vision deepens now amid the wrath

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Of avalanches, in the very heart
Of desolation; round in every part
Sweep out illusive channels, and the wind
From every quarter bears down scaly rind
Of broken floe and pack, which whirls along
By tempest launched, with tempest fury strong;
And these would rip and rend the thing that dares
Oppose them; while about the coast which stares
With frozen eyes upon the frozen sea,
Are shifted piece by piece incessantly.
The breaking floes, which cling with talons sharp
To desolate headland, cliff, and scar, and scarp,
Above the heaving of the tortured main.
We see those barks, like ghosts that wildly wane,
Flitting from point to point, essaying still
The illusive channels, and with swiftest skill
Foiling the icy grasp; an instant more
And they were crushed 'twixt icy shore and shore:
But as a spirit may survive the strife
Of all the base besetments of a life,
And keep itself serene, and pure and safe,
So they survive, surmounting like the waif
Of those wild waves; so they avoid the close
Of ice which fain would drift them in its throes
Far down the Atlantic: lo, at length they hail
The strand of Beechy, furl the shattered sail,
And rest; their winter appanage lies here.
Therefore, thou desert islet, thou art dear

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For ever to the comrades of the brave;
Upon thy shores they wintered; by the grave
Thrice piled on thee thou 'rt dear; the rescuers found
After five years the relics on thy ground;
On thee the tokens of the sojourn lone
They saw; three monuments of simple stone
To three who died; the ordered mounds for store,
The armoury, the anchor beds, the shore
Traversed by sledge-ruts, and the ruined sites
Of observation, and the secret bights
Where lay the ships; the garden terraces
Of lichens, poppies, and anemones.
Ah, desolate island of the frozen wave,
What dost thou hold? A garden and a grave!
Here then they lay; they saw the winter night
Deepen upon them, as the sun his flight
Into the Scorpion urged; until adown
The unshaded darkness sunk with deeper frown,
Unbroken, till the moon bedewed the vault
With splendid light, Orion made assault
On darkness with his flaming sword; arose
The false Aurora from her long repose,
And vainly spread her wings of phosphor forth
To shroud the unpaling loadstar of the north:
Her splendours sweep through half the stars, they shine
With nebulous lustre, liquid, opaline;
Then burst with purpling anger through the gloom,
And the far-stretching pallid snows illume

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With crimson shadows and with bickering flaws;
A spectral dance, which grows a heavy cause
To simple minds of melancholy dread;
As if the Lapland sorceries had led
Illusion round the pole; that long eclipse
Wrought out weird phantasies; behold where dips
With hissing steam of fire into the sea
Some lurid star; where some discoloured tree
Branches across the zenith, some vast arc
All tremulously spans the purple dark;
Refraction lifts the hummocks into hills;
The fissures gleam like wavy lines of rills
From darkling mountains poured; upon the sight
The illumined vapours glow with fairy light;
The darkness whispers o'er the boundless plain,
Vast sighs, as if some monster in his pain
Rose on uneasy pillow; burst the seams
Of ice with awful crash, and sudden gleams
Of dark and rushing water, which o'erfills
The fissures, till the strong-ribbed crystal thrills;
As if the region terrors strove to shake
The soul of man, brave man! The heart may quake,
The flesh may shrivel, but the will shall wait
Unmoved: God gave man will to conquer fate.
Then in the month when shines the Northern Crown,
A fickle dawn arises far adown
The southern sky, traversing briefest space
Of heaven, and vanishing without a trace;

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So over chaos when God first made light
Without a sun, the vision flitted bright,
Then died away, and the first day was done.
But morn by morn the promise of the sun
Grows clear; the south is filled with crimson flocks
In place of that grim darkness and its shocks:
Behind the cloud-bars undulates and flows
A subtle radiance; this too clears and grows
To white intensity, and then the shroud
Bursts from the sun-god, and the clammy crowd
Of vapours rustles into golden foam
Before his prow; heaven is again his home.
Ah, then they issued from their cabined sleep,
They watched the thaw pervading through the deep
Beneath a light that sets not: wildly pour
The glacial torrents from the hills that bore
The avalanche; the glistening ice-fields crawl
Like snakes along the tideways; grandly fall
The loosened bergs to welter on their way;
And brightly dance the blue free waves, and play
The thawing monsters; heaves its hoary flakes
The Arctic whale, the solemn walrus makes
Unwieldy mirth, the seal with human eyes
Flaps o'er the fragments; burst a thousand cries
From the wild sea-birds sailing northward all,
The ptarmigan, the eider duck; they call
The little dovekie from his winter watch
Upon the ice to secret haunts, where snatch

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Once more their struggling life those mountain flowers
Which bloom on Arctic wastes or Alpine towers
Alike: sweet crowfoot, hardy saxafrage,
And acid sorrel; these o'ergrow the age
Of hoary headland, and of desolate lea;
Yea, willow and sweet purple bleaberry,
Dwarfed into miniature by ceaseless frost,
These clothe the splintered ledges; they have lost
Their uprightness, along the rocks they trail,
Fearing the icy wind; and thin and pale
Live on for love of all the life that is:
The wavy hair-grass weaves its phantasies
In little circles o'er the reindeer moss.
So scanty is the spring to those who cross
The northern desert; yet that winter lone
And scanty spring were brightest days that shone
For those who died: two direful winters more
They passed, unblessed by any sheltering shore,
Nipped in the ice: strained forth in vain the sail,
The steam-drift did but freeze upon the gale:
The cruel pack still gripped them, still delayed
Nineteen long months, and scarce one mile they made
For every month: then came the bitter end.
And nought was heard, though England still did send
Through summers six her succours; efforts vain
Columbia added; yet the northern main
Hid its dread secret, nought of comfort more;
Though tenderly the seekers did explore

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Coast-line and stream, as brothers tenderly
For brothers dead: England, upon the sea
Thy name is greatest, and 'tis nowhere writ
More grandly than upon the isles which split
The frozen ocean into thousand streams;
For every headland, every channel gleams
With names for ever precious in our story,
E'en from of old, from that first break of glory
Which makes our little island shine a star
Set in the nether heaven: they sought afar,
Yet what was left those seekers now to find?
Death, only death was left by time behind,
Or victory, or death in victory.
And this was ravished from the ghostly sea,
And this one seeker out of many found:
For first in Parker Bay, that western sound
Which joins the clear Pacific, he descried
Those iron-banded timbers which the tide
Was drifting; those torn shreds of oak and pine
Proclaim the guerdon won, the glory thine,
Franklin; for they in western straits were laid;
Wherefore the North-west Passage thou hadst made,
And thine the prize for which our chivalry
Still rode the northern tempests; yea, the sea
Eastward and westward joins a slender hand
O'er the new world; and shattered pole and band
Are hero's lance left shivered in the lists.
Another thing that seeker in the mists

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Of fate had found; the wandering Esquimaux
A spectral band had met long years ago,
As lives are counted;—pallid faces set
Toward the south, gaunt bodies toiling yet
For life; they saw them dragging still the sledge,
Heavy as death, along the rugged edge
Of that vast ice-stream which, with monstrous tread,
An avalanche that fills an ocean's bed,
Crashes its way by shattered floe and floe,
Not swifter than descends the hardened snow
From Alps through ages; lo, they take their way
Toward the Great Fish River, where, they say,
God may send deer to shoot; and all the waste
Shall end, and all the toil and panic haste.
Again those wanderers spake, a tale of dread:
They saw them scattered, famished, frozen, dead,
Upon the snow; their bones were bleaching there,
The snow their shroud, the ice their sepulchre:
Oh victory, and death in victory!
No more did England struggle hopelessly
The dead to gather, since the tale was told;
Enough had perished in the hungry cold.
No more, she cried, my sons shall trust those waves,
Enough have died; their peace be on their graves;
Beneath an ever-rising tomb they lie,
Their deathless star regards them from the sky;
Enough have died; the living to console
Be ours; the dead we seek not: from the roll

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Of living men their names were blotted out;
Yes, further venture had been less devout.
Now, hither, Hope, embracing thy despair;
Now hither, Faith, who through the unseen air
Dost track thy dead as living: give me light
From your deep presence; let me tell aright
The deed of her whom all men celebrate;
Who took the tokens of her husband's fate
With heart unblenching; who, though England stayed,
Stayed not her hands from seeking, but obeyed
The passionate instinct that was sure to find,
Though seeking life no more: ah, too unkind
Had been the years, nor hope of life remained:
She sought to vindicate the fame attained
By such a death, and fully to proclaim,
If it might be, his triumph and the name
Of his achievement. Welcome, was her cry,
That greater word, that life of those who die,
Fame, fame! Well knew she that he was the first
This wondrous century who had traversed
Those hidden chambers: that he lived as one
From whose firm eyes a vision has not gone,
And kept his gaze beyond the hopes and fears
Of common life, and counted out his years
By coasts explored and latitudes attained,
The new Ulysses: death at length had deigned,

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She knew, to lay the crown on such a brow:
'Twas his to make, 'twas hers to prove, his vow.
Ah, lady, worthy thou of her who gave
Her banner to her hero, not to wave
O'er her last bed but o'er his triumph; then
In her first beauty died: thy voice and pen
Stirred England, knit the iron nerve which strove
To gather its own dead; and now for love
Of him and thee, behold, in three years' space
From that first pause of search, another chase
Flits o'er the waters, skirts the grinding pack,
And spends as many years upon the track
As spent the dead: well freighted for thy part,
Oh little bark, with many a lion heart;
For all had given their lives, and some had given
Large grants to speed thy way; well had she striven
For this who sent thee forth, within thy hold
Storing her faith sublime, her prayers untold.
Long time they tarried on their darksome way,
What bring they now? They have returned to-day.
They saw the northern miracles; they cleft
Heart-deep the mystery; their triumph left
Its record on the desert of the scene.
They passed to where the dead alive had been;
Probation held they nigh as long and stern
As slew the dead; therefore they bid us learn
From their own tale how suffered they who died.
They saw the sky turn o'er them, multiplied

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In false horizons, japing moons and suns,
And irised zones, so fair and false at once,
So mocked the very heavens on those who died.
They saw mirage of cold, not heat: how wide
The rainbow-tinted pediments uphold
Ellora, Memphis, or Telmessus old;
So laughed the ready tomb on those who died.
They paled in monstrous night; and they did hide
The pallor of their faces from the sun:
His beams would blind them, glaring forth anon:
So did they pale, and so did shrink, who died.
They split the floes, they took the pack, defied
The toppling icebergs; sheathed in icy drift,
Themselves an iceberg, they did veer and shift
With pain in bitter change of frost and thaw;
Their patient strength the heavy sledge did draw
League after league and month by month around
The iron islet and the frozen sound:
So sailed, so ranged, so laboured they who died.
They shook with famine as they did divide
After the weary march their scanty store:
They shook with cold upon the icy floor,
Where scantly they were hutted from the blast:
Enough; behold how ere the final fast,
How ere th' eternal sleep, they shook who died.
For all was true; they could but pause beside
Those cairns, those sepulchres, which told the tale
That rumour told before; they could but quail

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At sight of that grim ice-stream which had gripped,
Those grisly floes, which at the last had nipped
To death the ships; they could but trace the path
Where the lost feet had stumbled o'er the swath
Of the ribbed ice; they could but weep at thought
Of southern snow-cloud, which had gently caught
The weary ones, and wound them in its pall:
But tears and sweat are frozen ere they fall
With those who seek the dead who died so well.
The bleaching skeleton of one who fell
Beneath Cape Herschel, fallen on his face,
Lies stretched to witness that it was the grace
Of those dead mariners to win the way,
To snatch the secret from the dragon play
Of all the north; a worthy witness he
Of such an enterprise as needs must be
By death fulfilled: they saw him where he lay
In his mute witness through that monstrous day
Whose hours are months; and through that lengthened night
Whose fires avail the sky alone to light,
Not show the earth: he lay as he had died.
And so they bring their relics from the side
Of the gaunt glacier home; we hold them here:
Each shattered fragment England clasps; revere
In these the relics of the dead; behold
In these the trophies of the brave, as old

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And worn they lie amid memorials proud,
With veneration be their worth allowed.
Behold them; there are things of daily need,
Exempt from use how long! No man shall read
Their pathos decent and magnanimous
With unmoved eye; and things that bear for us
A loftier import—take of all the sum;
The books of piety so worn by numb,
Dead hands that prayed; and that discoloured rag
Those hands upbore through all: 'twas England's flag.
And shall their fame be lost? The butterfly
Flitting beneath that Hyperborean sky,
Chilled by the glacial blast, shall sink and spread
Its stiffened wings upon the snow; a bed
Shall soon be scooped; life's dying warmth suffice
To dig the grave for death: anon shall rise
A little mound, that shall as truly lie
To north as any magnet, for the fly
So swayed in death his wings; the traveller
By that small grave his lonely course may steer.
Things perish not in death; a presence grows
From human deeds, which, as the wondrous rose
Of morning turns the wan and wasteful grey
In heaven to glorious warmth, and brings the day
To darksome places; as the boreal light
Flushes the chilly fields of shadeless white;
Doth so transform the realm of the unknown,
That northern waste of spirit, till 'tis grown

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Full of sweet human presence, peopled widely
With memory, thought, and hope; no longer idly
Dissevered from true use: and since to all
That man attains, some failure still must fall,
Nor aught be perfect, happy let us hail
You, noble spirits, who did only fail
In death alone: hail, happy on your bier
Of snow: the spirit rises, falls the tear.