""You don"t think there is land over there somewhere?"
""Nope."
""Didn"t take notice that the face of your "pa.s.sage" was granite or quartz rocks, hey? Didn"t notice all them animals and birds, hey?--"
""Look out!" yelled the man ahead with the dog-sledge.
"A strange, whirring noise was heard in the foggy light, that sounded over our heads. We all dropped to the ground, and the noise increased, until a big flock of huge birds pa.s.sed over us in rapid flight north.
There must have been thousands of them. Captain Burrows brought his shot-gun to his shoulder and fired. There were some wild screams in the air, and a bird came down to the ice with a loud thud. It looked very large a hundred feet away, but sight is very deceiving in this white country in the semi-darkness. We found it a species of duck, rather large and with gorgeous plumage.
""Goin" north, to Eli"s "pa.s.sage" to lay her eggs on the ice," said the captain, half sarcastically.
"We reached the ship in safety, and the captain and I spent long hours in trying to form some plan for getting beyond the great ice-ring.
""If it"s warm up there, and everything that we"ve seen says it is, all this cold water that"s going north gets warm and goes out some place; and rest you, son, wherever it goes out, there"s a hole in the ice."
"Here we were interrupted by the mate, who said that there were queer things going on overhead, and some of the sailors were ready to mutiny unless the return trip was commenced. Captain Burrows went on deck at once, and you may be sure I followed at his heels.
""What"s wrong here?" demanded the captain, in his roaring tone, stepping into the midst of the crew.
""A judgment against this pryin" into G.o.d"s secrets, sir," said an English sailor, in an awe-struck voice. "Look at the signs, sir,"
pointing overhead.
"Captain Burrows and I both looked over our heads, and there saw an impressive sight, indeed. A vast colored map of an unknown world hung in the clouds over us--a mirage from the aurora. It looked very near, and was so distinct that we could distinguish polar bears on the ice-crags.
One man insisted that the mainmast almost touched one snowy peak, and most of them actually believed that it was an inverted part of some world, slowly coming down to crush us. Captain Burrows looked for several minutes before he spoke. Then he said: "My men, this is the grandest proof of all that Providence is helping us. This thing that you see is only a picture; it"s a mirage, the reflection of a portion of the earth on the sky. Just look, and you will see that it"s in the shape of a crescent, and we are almost in the center of it; and, I tell you, it"s a picture of the country just in front of us. See this peak? See that low place where we went up? There is the great wall we saw, the open sea beyond it, and, bless me, if it don"t look like something green over in the middle of that ocean! See, here is the "Duncan McDonald," as plain as A, B, C, right overhead. Now, there"s nothing to be afraid of in that; if it"s a warning, it"s a good one--and if any one wants to go home to his mother"s, and is old enough, _he can walk_!"
[Ill.u.s.tration: "A white city ... was visible for an instant."]
"The captain looked around, but the sailors were as cool as he was--they were rea.s.sured by his honest explanation. Then he took me by the arm, and, pointing to the painting in the sky, said: "Old man Providence again, son, sure as you are born; do you see that lane through the great ring? There"s an open, fairly straight pa.s.sage to the inner ocean, except that it"s closed by about three miles of ice on our side; see it there, on the port side?"
"Yes, I could see it, but I asked Captain Burrows how he could account for the open pa.s.sages beyond and the wall of ice in front; it was cold water going in.
""It"s strange," he answered, shading his eye with his hand, and looking long at the picture of the clear pa.s.sage, like a great ca.n.a.l between the beetling cliffs. All at once, he grasped my arm and said in excitement, pointing towards the outer end of the pa.s.sage: "Look!"
"As I looked at the mirage again, the great ma.s.s of ice in front commenced to slowly turn over, outwardly.
""It"s an iceberg, sir, only an iceberg!" said the captain, excitedly, "and she is just holding that pa.s.sage because the current keeps her up against the hole; now, she will wear out some day, and then--in goes the "Duncan McDonald"!"
""But there are others to take its place," and I pointed to three other bergs, apparently some twenty miles away, plainly shown in the sky; "they are the reinforcements to hold the pa.s.sage."
""Looks that way, son, but by the great American buzzard, we"ll get in there somehow, if we have to blow that berg up."
"As we looked, the picture commenced to disappear, not fade, but to go off to one side, just as a picture leaves the screen of a magic lantern.
Over the inner ocean there appeared dark clouds; but this part was visible last, and the clouds seemed to break at the last moment, and a white city, set in green fields and forests, was visible for an instant, a great golden dome in the center remaining in view after the rest of the city was invisible.
""A rainbow of promise, son," said the captain.
"I looked around. The others had grown tired of looking, and were gone.
Captain Burrows and myself were the only ones that saw the city.
"We got under way for an hour, and then stood by near the berg until eight bells the next morning; but you must remember it was half dark all the time up there then. While Captain Burrows and myself were at breakfast, he cudgeled his brains over ways and means for moving that ice, or preventing other bergs from taking its place. When we went on deck, our berg was some distance from the mouth of the pa.s.sage, and steadily floating away. Captain Burrows steamed the ship cautiously up toward the pa.s.sage; there was a steady current coming out.
""I reckon," said Eli Jeffries, "they must have a six-months" ebb and flow up in that ocean."
""If that"s the case, said Captain Burrows, "the sooner we get in, the better;" and he ordered the "Duncan McDonald" into the breach in the world of ice.
"Gentlemen, suffice it to say that we found that pa.s.sage perfectly clear, and wider as we proceeded. This we did slowly, keeping the lead going constantly. The first mate reported the needle of the compa.s.s working curiously, dipping down hard, and sparking--something he had never seen. Captain Burrows only said: "Let her spark!"
"As we approached the inner ocean, as we called it, the pa.s.sage was narrow; it became very dark and the waters roared ahead. I feared a fall or rapid, but the "Duncan McDonald" could not turn back. The noise was only the surf on the great crags within. As the ship pa.s.sed out into the open sea beyond, the needle of the compa.s.s turned clear around and pointed back. "Do you know, son," said Captain Burrows, "that I believe the so-called magnetic pole is a great ring around the true Pole, and that we just pa.s.sed it there? The whole inside of this mountain looks to me like rusted iron instead of stone, anyhow.""
Here our story-teller rested and dozed for a few minutes; then rousing up, he said: "I"ll tell you the rest to-morrow; yes, to-morrow; I"m tired now. To-morrow I"ll tell you about a wonderful country; wonderful cities; wonderful people! I"ll show you solar pictures such as you never saw, of scenes, places, and people you never dreamed of. I will show you implements that will prove that there"s a country where gold is as common as tin at home--where they make knives and forks and stew-pans of it! I"ll show you writing more ancient and more interesting than the most treasured relics in our Sanscrit libraries. I"ll tell you of the two years I spent in another world. I"ll tell you of the precious cargo that went to the bottom of the frozen ocean with the staunch little ship, "Duncan McDonald;" of the bravest, n.o.blest commander, and the sweetest angel of a woman that ever breathed and lived and loved. I"ll tell you of my escape and the h.e.l.l I"ve been through. To-morrow--"
He dozed off for a few moments again.
"But I"ve got enough in this pack to turn the world inside out with wonder--ah, what a sensation it will be, what an educational feature! It will send out a hundred harum-scarum expeditions to find Polaria--but there are few commanders like Captain Burrows; he could do it, the rest of "em will die in the ice. But when I get to San Fran----. Say, captain, how long will it take to get there, and how long before you start?"
Enoch and I exchanged glances, and Enoch answered: "We wa"n"t goin" to "Frisco."
"Around the Horn, then?" inquired the stranger, sitting up. "But you will land me in "Frisco, won"t you? I can"t wait, I must--"
"We"re goin" _in_," said Enoch; "goin" north, for a three-years"
cruise."
"North!" shouted the stranger, wildly. "Three years in that h.e.l.l of ice.
Three years! My G.o.d! North! North!"
He was dancing around the deck like a maniac, trying to put his pack-loop over his head. Enoch went toward him, to tell him how he could go on the "Enchantress," but he looked wildly at him, ran forward and sprang out on the bowsprit, and from there to the jib. Enoch saw he was out of his mind, and ordered two sailors to bring him in. As they sprang on to the bow, he stood up and screamed:
"No! No! No! Three years! Three lives! Three h.e.l.ls! I never--"
One of the men reached for him here, but he kicked at the sailor viciously, and turning sidewise, sprang into the water below.
A boat, already in the water, was manned instantly; but the worn-out body of another North Pole explorer had gone to the sands of the bottom where so many others have gone before; evidently his heavy pack had held him down, there to guard the story it could tell--in death as he had in life.
THE END
DANGER SIGNALS
Remarkable, Exciting And Unique Examples Of The Bravery, Daring And Stoicism In The Midst Of Danger Of TRAIN DISPATCHERS AND RAILROAD ENGINEERS
By
JOHN A. HILL and JASPER EWING BRADY
ABSORBING STORIES OF MEN WITH NERVES OF STEEL, INDOMITABLE COURAGE AND WONDERFUL ENDURANCE
Fully Ill.u.s.trated