<h2> CHAPTER IX <br/> <span class="s08">The Great Blow Falls</span> </h2>
<p>January 5th dawned in nowise different from other
days. I kept the anchor watch from 3 to 4 a.m., arousing
automatically without being called. Almost at once I
felt a suggestion of suspense in the atmosphere; what it
was I could not tell. But at 7.30 that morning Mr.
Hussey came down to the wardroom with the order
that all hands must muster forthwith on the poop. We
dressed quietly, asking ourselves what this portended.
It was a dismal morning; the South Georgian sky was
weeping copiously, and we donned oilskins and waterproofs
as a matter of course, and got us to the poop,
where we were joined by the rest of the hands from
forrard, included amongst them being Mr. Jeffrey, who
had been confined to his bunk ever since we left Rio,
with a torn muscle in his thigh. When the doctor saw
him he was very wroth and ordered him back to his
bunk again, saying that no permission had been given
for such a mad action; but before this little incident
ceased, Mr. Wild came to us, his face drawn and terribly
downcast.</p>
<p>“Boys,” he said, “I have terrible news for you all.
Sir Ernest Shackleton died early this morning. The
expedition will carry on. That’s all.” And then he
turned to Dell, our boatswain, and said: “You’ll carry
on the same, Dell.”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” replied Dell. There was no more to be
said. Whole volumes of dramatic rhetoric could not
have conveyed the sad, sad truth to our hearts more
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_103' name='Page_103' href='#Page_103'>103</SPAN></span>
convincingly. We did not expect this tragedy; when
it came, therefore, it was staggering.</p>
<p>Mr. Wild left us, and we slowly dispersed to our
quarters, walking quietly, hushing our voices, for we
were in the presence of death; a hero had passed
on. During the rest of the day we talked of nothing
else, recalling his kindnesses, his interest in us all, his
genial comradeship, his staunch courage and indomitable
determination in the face of the most trying odds.
A great man had left us, and the ship was lonely.</p>
<p>He had died suddenly, almost painlessly we were
glad to know. To the last he retained his old courage
and good cheer; then in the chilly solitudes he went
hence, mourned by all as trustworthy leader, loyal shipmate
and wise counsellor. After midday he was
wrapped up in our silken ensign and reverently lowered
into a motor-launch and taken ashore, for Mr. Wild
decided that all that was mortal of one of Britain’s
heroes should worthily lie in the soil of the land he had
served so well. That was the last I saw of the Boss.</p>
<p>So, wrapped in his country’s flag, to which he had
brought nothing but honour—the flag he loved with a
genuinely passionate devotion that was not merely expressed
in words but also in stirring deeds—the great
British Antarctic explorer passed from amongst us.
His name will live when many others are forgotten; for
the men he led, who were his friends, must necessarily
pass down to the generations the truth of his greatness.</p>
<p>They took him ashore, intending to dispatch his
body to the England he loved; and we others, his
followers and devoted disciples, were left behind to
mourn.</p>
<p>By the natural law of the sea the command passed
to the next senior, Commander Frank Wild, one who
was prepared to carry out to the last letter the programme
of the man who had conceived the expedition.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_104' name='Page_104' href='#Page_104'>104</SPAN></span>
It could not have been entrusted to a worthier substitute.
Commander Wild was engaged on his fifth
Antarctic expedition; he knew intimately every phase of
the work involved, and there is no question that had
both hemispheres been fine-combed, a better man could
not have been selected.</p>
<p>Cæsar died, another Cæsar reigned in his stead; but
it took some time for our minds to adapt themselves to
the altered order of things, and for many days life was
hazy, fogged and unreal. For it needs the narrow environment
of a small ship, I think, to enable one to
understand what death can really mean. In a shore
community, with many outside interests, the loss of even
a great man is merely a matter for temporary regret;
but aboard ship when one goes hence his loss is
grievously felt: familiar echoes cease, the impact of the
dead man’s personality seems to vanish entirely and
leave the vessel without its soul.</p>
<p>It was not immediately possible to convey the sad
tidings to the outer civilized world. South Georgia is
not in telegraphic touch with England, or, indeed, any
country, and our wireless was so limited in its scope
that it was hopeless for us to expect to transmit the
message of Shackleton’s death. Thus, lacking all
knowledge of Lady Shackleton’s desire, Commander
Wild decided to send the body of our leader to England;
and ashore there in the little hospital the mortal remains
were prepared for the final journey. Mr. Hussey was
delegated to form the escort; he was one of the most
competent members of the staff, and his loss to the expedition
would be irreparable, but a good man deserves
good companionship on his progress to the tomb, and
Commander Wild considered Mr. Hussey best qualified
for the sad duty. Right sorry we were to lose him;
right sorry was he to go, for he was the life and soul
of the party; always provided with a quip and a jest to
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_105' name='Page_105' href='#Page_105'>105</SPAN></span>
ease off the foulest conditions, and his laughter made
even the worst days seem shot through with sudden sunbursts.</p>
<p>There was a steamer named the <i>Professor Gruvel</i>
lying in the harbour. As she was due to clear for Monte
Video in about ten days’ time, her captain was prevailed
upon to convey the coffin thus far, where it could be
transhipped for home. It subsequently transpired, however,
that Lady Shackleton preferred that our leader’s
grave should be dug in such a position that it would
command the Gateway to the South; but long ere he
came back to the scene of one of his greatest exploits,
we, his comrades, were faring southward ho! with our
new leader imbued with desire to fulfil all Sir Ernest’s
ambitions.</p>
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