A Book of Discovery by M. B. Synge (the snowy day read aloud txt) π
Thus beautifully did the children of men express their earliest idea of the world's distribution of land and water.
And where, on our modern maps, was this little earth, and what was it like? Did trees and flowers cover the land? Did rivers flow into the sea? Listen again to the old tradition that still rings down the ages--
"And the Lord God planted a garden eastward in Eden ... and a river went out of Eden to water the garden; and from thence it was parted, and became four heads. The name of the first is Pison ... and the name of the second river is Gihon; the name of the third river is Hiddekel (Tigris). And the fourth river is Euphrates."
[Illustration: THE GARDEN OF EDE
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"I am fully alive to the complication in the situation arising out of Amundsen's presence in the Antarctic," wrote the English explorer, "but as any attempt at a race might have been fatal to our chance of getting to the Pole at all, I decided to do exactly as I should have done had not Amundsen been here. If he gets to the Pole he will be bound to do it rapidly with dogs, and one foresees that success will justify him."
Although the Norwegian explorer left his winter quarters on 8th September for his dash to the Pole, he started too early; three of his party had their feet frostbitten, and the dogs suffered severely, so he turned back, and it was not till 20th October, just a week before Scott's start, that he began in real earnest his historic journey. He was well off for food, for whales were plentiful on the shores of the Bay, and seals, penguins, and gulls abounded. The expedition was well equipped, with eight explorers, four sledges, and thirteen dogs attached to each.
"Amundsen is a splendid leader, supreme in organisation, and the essential in Antarctic travel is to think out the difficulties before they arise." So said those who worked with him on his most successful journey.
Through dense fog and blinding blizzards the Norwegians now made their way south, their Norwegian skis and sledges proving a substantial help. The crevasses in the ice were very bad; one dog dropped in and had to be abandoned; another day the dogs got across, but the sledge fell in, and it was necessary to climb down the crevasse, unpack the sledge, and pull up piece by piece till it was possible to raise the empty sledge. So intense was the cold that the very brandy froze in the bottle and was served out in lumps.
"It did not taste much like brandy then," said the men, "but it burnt our throats as we sucked it."
The dogs travelled well. Each man was responsible for his own team; he fed them and made them fond of him. Thus all through November the Norwegians travelled south, till they reached the vast plateau described by Shackleton. One tremendous peak, fifteen thousand feet high, they named "Frithjof Nansen."
On 14th December they reached their goal; the weather was beautiful, the ground perfect for sledging.
"At 3 p.m. we made halt," says Amundsen. "According to our reckoning, we had reached our destination. All of us gathered round the coloursβa beautiful silken flag; all hands took hold of it, and, planting it on the spot, we gave the vast plateau on which the Pole is situate the name of 'The King Haakon VII.' It was a vast plain, alike in all directions, mile after mile."
Here in brilliant sunshine the little party camped, taking observations till 17th December, when, fastening to the ground a little tent with the Norwegian flag and the Fram pennant, they gave it the name "Polheim" and started for home.
CAPTAIN ROALD AMUNDSEN TAKING SIGHTS AT THE SOUTH POLE CAPTAIN ROALD AMUNDSEN TAKING SIGHTS AT THE SOUTH POLE.From a photograph, by permission of Mr. John Murray and the Illustrated London News.
So the North and South Poles yielded up their well-hoarded secrets after centuries of waiting, within two and a half years of one another.
They had claimed more lives than any exploration had done before, or is ever likely to do again.
And so ends the last of these great earth-storiesβstories which have made the world what it is to-dayβand we may well say with one of the most successful explorers of our times, "The future may give us thrilling stories of the conquest of the air, but the spirit of man has mastered the earth."
Abram, 4.
Abyssinia, 344-7.
Afghanistan, 36.
Africa, 20-2, 72, 103, 127, 339.
Africa, Central, 349-56, 391-402, 442-500.
Africa, South, 152, 173-6, 440.
Africa, West Coast, 22, 30, 139, 143-51, 349.
Agricola, 68.
Alaska, 317, 334, 338.
Albert Nyanza, 470.
Albuquerque, Alphonso d', 184-8.
Alexander the Great, 35-43.
Alexandria, 45, 74.
Alfred the Great, 96.
Almagro, Diego de, 220.
Almeida, Francisco, 184-6.
Almeida, Lorenzo, 185-6.
Alvarado, Pedro de, 206, 208.
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