""The best laid schemes o" mice an" men Gang aft a-gley, An" lea"e us nought but grief and pain, For promised joy".
Another day and another voyage will be needed for the balloon adventures.
"Well," he added, more cheerily, "our cruise has not been in vain, you know. I have taken many meteorological observations. We have scaled the heights of mighty Mount Terror, and we have proved that Right whales do abound in these seas; so that we have really re-opened a long-lost industry."
"We sailed in search of fortune," said Frank; "we have got some, haven"t we, sir?"
"If we manage to get clear of this somewhat dangerous pack and to reach Kerguelen Island, I think we"ll lay in enough sea-elephant skins and blubber to make up a rich and splendid cargo.
"But," he added, looking towards the monster icebergs, "I do wish these fellows were farther off."
"I suppose we couldn"t blow them up, could we?" said innocent Conal.
Talbot laughed.
"My dear boy," he answered, "if we could blow these blocks up, we might try our skill on the rock of Gibraltar next."
Although the autumn was already far advanced and dreary winter on ahead, still Talbot did not despair of getting clear before it came on.
This forenoon all hands were set at work to clear the ice from under the bows.
Hard work indeed, but it was finished eventually with the aid of good gunpowder. Small cases of this were placed under the packs of pancake by means of a long pole, and fired with waterproof fuses. The smashed-up pieces were thrust in under the main pack, and so in time the _Flora M"Vayne_ found herself on an even keel.
The officers and crew could breathe more freely now, and sat down to dinner with that hearty appet.i.te which hard work, if interesting, never fails to call up.
A whole month pa.s.sed away.
There was no change, and seldom even a breath of wind, but the nights were now very long indeed, and soon, very soon, it would be all night.
Another month went slowly by.
It was now far on in May, and June in these lat.i.tudes means the dead depth of winter.
"There isn"t the ghost of a chance, Morgan," said Talbot one morning while breakfasting by lamp-light; "there isn"t the slightest chance of our getting clear away from here, till spring winds break up the ice and carry us north and away."
Morgan did not answer directly.
He was thinking.
"How about provisions, sir?" he asked at last.
"Well, we ought to have enough of every sort to last for a year, and by that time, please Heaven, we shall be safe in Cape Town harbour.
"But," he added, "I was going to talk to you on this very subject."
"Well, sir."
"Well, mate, I think it would be as well to take an inventory. Have a thorough overhaul, you know, and see what condition everything is in."
The motion was carried.
But it took them three days--if we can call them days--to complete the survey and restore everything, in a ship-shape condition, to its place again.
The stores were all not only abundant but excellent, with the exception of some casks of greens that they put much store on. They would now have to depend upon a daily supply of lime-juice to prevent hands getting down with the scourge of these seas, namely, scurvy.
On the very night the survey was ended came another half-gale of wind from the south. There were the same terrible noises all around them, and as far as they could make out, the sea of ice was a perfect chaos.
No one could shout loud enough for his nearest companion to hear him, and the crew lived in constant terror of the ship being crushed.
When at long last the storm ceased, they discovered by the starlight, and very much to their delight, that the terrible neighbours, those monster bergs, had shifted their site during the gale.
They had, in fact, driven past the vessel"s bows--what a mercy they came not near!--and were now fully seventy yards down to leeward.
The wind had fallen quite, and all had become still again.
"We have reason to be thankful to G.o.d for our marvellous escape," said Talbot.
"But may not the bergs drift back, or be blown down upon us?" said Frank, who was of a very inquiring turn of mind.
"Wherever they drift, Frank, we too shall drift, but the send of the current or sea beneath us is, I believe, northward now; and if the wind blows in winter as it must in spring, it will bear us towards the north-west. So one danger is removed or minimized."
"Hurrah!" cried Frank, who was nothing if not impulsive, "hurrah!"
"No chance, I suppose, sir," he said, "of getting any letters from home?"
"Not for a day or two, Frank," said Talbot, smiling.
"Well, but it is a good thing we have books to read, isn"t it, Conal?"
"And pens and ink?"
"Yes, pens and ink, and my fiddle."
"And my bagpipes," said Duncan emphatically.
"Oh, Duncan, we hadn"t forgotten that or these."
"When I get them over my shoulder," said Duncan, "and put my drones in order, I don"t think there will be much chance of your forgetting them."
Now wild winter had come in earnest,
"To rule the varied year".
It did not seem, however, that there was going to be a great deal of variety about it.
The wind was gone entirely for the time being, and the strange stars and Southern Cross shone down on the snowy and radiant plain, with a brilliancy that is quite unknown in more northern climes.
Great care was taken to keep the correct time, and to take observations three times a day.