<h2> PART FIVE. AMONG THE ICE PACKS </h2>
<p>FOR the next forty-five days our time was employed in dodging icebergs and
hunting channels; indeed, had we not been favored with a strong south wind
and a small boat, I doubt if this story could have ever been given to the
world.</p>
<p>At last, there came a morning when my father said: "My son, I think we are
to see home. We are almost through the ice. See! the open water lies
before us."</p>
<p>However, there were a few icebergs that had floated far northward into the
open water still ahead of us on either side, stretching away for many
miles. Directly in front of us, and by the compass, which had now righted
itself, due north, there was an open sea.</p>
<p>"What a wonderful story we have to tell to the people of Stockholm,"
continued my father, while a look of pardonable elation lighted up his
honest face. "And think of the gold nuggets stowed away in the hold!"</p>
<p>I spoke kind words of praise to my father, not alone for his fortitude and
endurance, but also for his courageous daring as a discoverer, and for
having made the voyage that now promised a successful end. I was grateful,
too, that he had gathered the wealth of gold we were carrying home.</p>
<p>While congratulating ourselves on the goodly supply of provisions and
water we still had on hand, and on the dangers we had escaped, we were
startled by hearing a most terrific explosion, caused by the tearing apart
of a huge mountain of ice. It was a deafening roar like the firing of a
thousand cannon. We were sailing at the time with great speed, and
happened to be near a monstrous iceberg which to all appearances was as
immovable as a rockbound island. It seemed, however, that the iceberg had
split and was breaking apart, whereupon the balance of the monster along
which we were sailing was destroyed, and it began dipping from us. My
father quickly anticipated the danger before I realized its awful
possibilities. The iceberg extended down into the water many hundreds of
feet, and, as it tipped over, the portion coming up out of the water
caught our fishing-craft like a lever on a fulcrum, and threw it into the
air as if it had been a foot-ball.</p>
<p>Our boat fell back on the iceberg, that by this time had changed the side
next to us for the top. My father was still in the boat, having become
entangled in the rigging, while I was thrown some twenty feet away.</p>
<p>I quickly scrambled to my feet and shouted to my father, who answered:
"All is well." Just then a realization dawned upon me. Horror upon horror!
The blood froze in my veins. The iceberg was still in motion, and its
great weight and force in toppling over would cause it to submerge
temporarily. I fully realized what a sucking maelstrom it would produce
amid the worlds of water on every side. They would rush into the
depression in all their fury, like white-fanged wolves eager for human
prey.</p>
<p>In this supreme moment of mental anguish, I remember glancing at our boat,
which was lying on its side, and wondering if it could possibly right
itself, and if my father could escape. Was this the end of our struggles
and adventures? Was this death? All these questions flashed through my
mind in the fraction of a second, and a moment later I was engaged in a
life and death struggle. The ponderous monolith of ice sank below the
surface, and the frigid waters gurgled around me in frenzied anger. I was
in a saucer, with the waters pouring in on every side. A moment more and I
lost consciousness.</p>
<p>When I partially recovered my senses, and roused from the swoon of a
half-drowned man, I found myself wet, stiff, and almost frozen, lying on
the iceberg. But there was no sign of my father or of our little fishing
sloop. The monster berg had recovered itself, and, with its new balance,
lifted its head perhaps fifty feet above the waves. The top of this island
of ice was a plateau perhaps half an acre in extent.</p>
<p>I loved my father well, and was grief-stricken at the awfulness of his
death. I railed at fate, that I, too, had not been permitted to sleep with
him in the depths of the ocean. Finally, I climbed to my feet and looked
about me. The purple-domed sky above, the shoreless green ocean beneath,
and only an occasional iceberg discernible! My heart sank in hopeless
despair. I cautiously picked my way across the berg toward the other side,
hoping that our fishing craft had righted itself.</p>
<p>Dared I think it possible that my father still lived? It was but a ray of
hope that flamed up in my heart. But the anticipation warmed my blood in
my veins and started it rushing like some rare stimulant through every
fiber of my body.</p>
<p>I crept close to the precipitous side of the iceberg, and peered far down,
hoping, still hoping. Then I made a circle of the berg, scanning every
foot of the way, and thus I kept going around and around. One part of my
brain was certainly becoming maniacal, while the other part, I believe,
and do to this day, was perfectly rational.</p>
<p>I was conscious of having made the circuit a dozen times, and while one
part of my intelligence knew, in all reason, there was not a vestige of
hope, yet some strange fascinating aberration bewitched and compelled me
still to beguile myself with expectation. The other part of my brain
seemed to tell me that while there was no possibility of my father being
alive, yet, if I quit making the circuitous pilgrimage, if I paused for a
single moment, it would be acknowledgment of defeat, and, should I do
this, I felt that I should go mad. Thus, hour after hour I walked around
and around, afraid to stop and rest, yet physically powerless to continue
much longer. Oh! horror of horrors! to be cast away in this wide expanse
of waters without food or drink, and only a treacherous iceberg for an
abiding place. My heart sank within me, and all semblance of hope was
fading into black despair.</p>
<p>Then the hand of the Deliverer was extended, and the death-like stillness
of a solitude rapidly becoming unbearable was suddenly broken by the
firing of a signal-gun. I looked up in startled amazement, when, I saw,
less than a half-mile away, a whaling-vessel bearing down toward me with
her sail full set.</p>
<p>Evidently my continued activity on the iceberg had attracted their
attention. On drawing near, they put out a boat, and, descending
cautiously to the water's edge, I was rescued, and a little later lifted
on board the whaling-ship.</p>
<p>I found it was a Scotch whaler, "The Arlington." She had cleared from
Dundee in September, and started immediately for the Antarctic, in search
of whales. The captain, Angus MacPherson, seemed kindly disposed, but in
matters of discipline, as I soon learned, possessed of an iron will. When
I attempted to tell him that I had come from the "inside" of the earth,
the captain and mate looked at each other, shook their heads, and insisted
on my being put in a bunk under strict surveillance of the ship's
physician.</p>
<p>I was very weak for want of food, and had not slept for many hours.
However, after a few days' rest, I got up one morning and dressed myself
without asking permission of the physician or anyone else, and told them
that I was as sane as anyone.</p>
<p>The captain sent for me and again questioned me concerning where I had
come from, and how I came to be alone on an iceberg in the far off
Antarctic Ocean. I replied that I had just come from the "inside" of the
earth, and proceeded to tell him how my father and myself had gone in by
way of Spitzbergen, and come out by way of the South Pole country,
whereupon I was put in irons. I afterward heard the captain tell the mate
that I was as crazy as a March hare, and that I must remain in confinement
until I was rational enough to give a truthful account of myself.</p>
<p>Finally, after much pleading and many promises, I was released from irons.
I then and there decided to invent some story that would satisfy the
captain, and never again refer to my trip to the land of "The Smoky God,"
at least until I was safe among friends.</p>
<p>Within a fortnight I was permitted to go about and take my place as one of
the seamen. A little later the captain asked me for an explanation. I told
him that my experience had been so horrible that I was fearful of my
memory, and begged him to permit me to leave the question unanswered until
some time in the future. "I think you are recovering considerably," he
said, "but you are not sane yet by a good deal." "Permit me to do such
work as you may assign," I replied, "and if it does not compensate you
sufficiently, I will pay you immediately after I reach Stockholm—to
the last penny." Thus the matter rested.</p>
<p>On finally reaching Stockholm, as I have already related, I found that my
good mother had gone to her reward more than a year before. I have also
told how, later, the treachery of a relative landed me in a madhouse,
where I remained for twenty-eight years—seemingly unending years—and,
still later, after my release, how I returned to the life of a fisherman,
following it sedulously for twenty-seven years, then how I came to
America, and finally to Los Angeles, California. But all this can be of
little interest to the reader. Indeed, it seems to me the climax of my
wonderful travels and strange adventures was reached when the Scotch
sailing-vessel took me from an iceberg on the Antarctic Ocean.</p>
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