<p><SPAN name="XXII" id="XXII"></SPAN></p>
<h4>
CHAPTER XXII.
</h4>
<h4>
GETTING NEAR THE POLE.
</h4>
<p>Hour after hour passed away, and still Hatteras persevered in his weary
watch, though his hopes appeared doomed to disappointment.</p>
<p>At length, about six in the evening, a dim, hazy, shapeless sort of mist
seemed to rise far away between sea and sky. It was not a cloud, for it
was constantly vanishing, and then reappearing next minute.</p>
<p>Hatteras was the first to notice this peculiar phenomenon; but after an
hour's scrutiny through his telescope, he could make nothing of it.</p>
<p>All at once, however, some sure indication met his eye, and stretching out
his arm to the horizon, he shouted, in a clear ringing voice--</p>
<p>"Land! land!"</p>
<p>His words produced an electrical effect on his companions, and every man
rushed to his side.</p>
<p>"I see it, I see it," said Clawbonny.</p>
<p>"Yes, yes, so do I! " exclaimed Johnson.</p>
<p>"It is a cloud," said Altamont.</p>
<p>"Land! land!" repeated Hatteras, in tones of absolute conviction.</p>
<p>Even while he spoke the appearance vanished, and when it returned again
the Doctor fancied he caught a gleam of light about the smoke for an
instant.</p>
<p>[Illustration: "It is a volcano!" he exclaimed.-P.217]</p>
<p>"It is a volcano!" he exclaimed.</p>
<p>"A volcano?" repeated Altamont.</p>
<p>"Undoubtedly."</p>
<p>[Illustration: ]</p>
<p>"In so high a latitude?"</p>
<p>"Why not? Is not Iceland a volcanic island-indeed, almost made of
volcanoes, one might say?"</p>
<p>"Well, has not our famous countryman, James Ross, affirmed the existence
of two active volcanoes, the Erebus and the Terror, on the Southern
Continent, in longitude 170° and latitude 78°? Why, then, should not
volcanoes be found near the North Pole?"</p>
<p>"It is possible, certainly," replied Altamont.</p>
<p>"Ah, now I see it distinctly," exclaimed the Doctor." It is a volcano!"</p>
<p>"Let us make right for it then," said Hatteras.</p>
<p>[Illustration: ]</p>
<p>It was impossible longer to doubt the proximity of the coast. In
twenty-four hours, probably, the bold navigators might hope to set foot on
its untrodden soil. But strange as it was, now that they were so near the
goal of their voyage, no one showed the joy which might have been
expected. Each man sat silent, absorbed in his own thoughts, wondering
what sort of place this Pole must be. The birds seemed to shun it, for
though it was evening, they were all flying towards the south with
outspread wings. Was it, then, so inhospitable, that not so much as a
sea-gull or a ptarmigan could find a shelter? The fish, too, even the
large cetacea, were hastening away through the transparent waters. What</p>
<p>[Illustration: ]</p>
<p>could cause this feeling either of repulsion or terror?</p>
<p>At last sleep overcame the tired men, and one after another dropped off,
leaving Hatteras to keep watch.</p>
<p>He took the helm, and tried his best not to close his eyes, for he grudged
losing precious time; but the slow motion of the vessel rocked him into a
state of such irresistible somnolence that, in spite of himself, he was
soon, like his companions, locked fast in deep slumber. He began to dream,
and imagination brought back all the scenes of his past life. He dreamt of
his ship, the <i>Forward</i>, and of the traitors that had burnt it. Again
he felt all the agonies of disappointment and failure, and forgot his
actual situation. Then the scene changed, and he saw himself at the Pole
unfurling the Union Jack!</p>
<p>While memory and fancy were thus busied, an enormous cloud of an olive
tinge had begun to darken sea and sky. A hurricane was at hand. The first
blast of the tempest roused the captain and his companions, and they were
on their feet in an instant, ready to meet it. The sea had risen
tremendously, and the ship was tossing violently up and down on the
billows. Hatteras took the helm again, and kept a firm hold of it, while
Johnson and Bell baled out the water which was constantly dashing over the
ship.</p>
<p>It was a difficult matter to preserve the right course, for the thick fog
made it impossible to see more than a few yards off.</p>
<p>This sudden tempest might well seem to such excited men, a stern
prohibition against further approach to the Pole; but it needed but a
glance at their resolute faces to know that they would neither yield to
winds nor waves, but go right on to the end.</p>
<p>[Illustration: ]</p>
<p>For a whole day the struggle lasted, death threatening them each moment;
but about six in the evening, just as the fury of the waves seemed at its
highest pitch, there came a sudden calm. The wind was stilled as if
miraculously, and the sea became smooth as glass.</p>
<p>Then came a most extraordinary inexplicable phenomenon.</p>
<p>The fog, without dispersing, became strangely luminous, and the sloop
sailed along in a zone of electric light. Mast, sail, and rigging appeared
pencilled in black against the phosphorescent sky with wondrous
distinctness. The men were bathed in light, and their faces shone with a
fiery glow.</p>
<p>"The volcano!" exclaimed Hatteras.</p>
<p>"Is it possible?" said Bell.</p>
<p>"No, no!" replied Clawbonny. "We should be suffocated with its flames so
near."</p>
<p>"Perhaps it is the reflection," suggested Altamont.</p>
<p>"Not that much even, for then we must be near land, and in that case we
should hear the noise of the eruption."</p>
<p>"What is it, then?" asked the captain.</p>
<p>"It is a cosmical phenomenon," replied the Doctor, "seldom met hitherto.
If we go on, we shall soon get out of our luminous sphere and be back in
the darkness and tempest again."</p>
<p>"Well, let's go on, come what may," said Hatteras.</p>
<p>The Doctor was right. Gradually the fog began to lose its light, and then
its transparency, and the howling wind was heard not far off. A few
minutes more, and the little vessel was caught in a violent squall, and
swept back into the cyclone.</p>
<p>But the hurricane had fortunately turned a point towards the south, and
left the vessel free to run before the wind straight towards the Pole.
There was imminent danger of her sinking, for she sped along at frenzied
speed, and any sudden collision with rock or iceberg must have inevitably
dashed her to pieces.</p>
<p>But not a man on board counselled prudence. They were intoxicated with the
danger, and no speed could be quick enough to satisfy their longing
impatience to reach the unknown.</p>
<p>At last they began evidently to near the coast. Strange symptoms were
manifest in the air; the fog suddenly rent like a curtain torn by the
wind; and for an instant, like a flash of lightning, an immense column of
flame was seen on the horizon.</p>
<p>"The volcano! the volcano!" was the simultaneous exclamation.</p>
<p>But the words had hardly passed their lips before the fantastic vision had
vanished. The wind suddenly changed to south-east, and drove the ship back
again from the land.</p>
<p>"Confound it!" said Hatteras; "we weren't three miles from the coast."</p>
<p>However, resistance was impossible. All that could be done was to keep
tacking; but every few minutes the little sloop would be thrown on her
side, though she righted herself again immediately obedient to the helm.</p>
<p>As Hatteras stood with dishevelled hair, grasping the helm as if welded to
his hand, he seemed the animating soul of the ship.</p>
<p>All at once, a fearful sight met his gaze.</p>
<p>Scarcely twenty yards in front was a great block of ice coming right
towards them, mounting and falling on the stormy billows, ready to
overturn at any moment and crush them in its descent.</p>
<p>But this was not the only danger that threatened the bold navigators. The
iceberg was packed with white bears, huddling close together, and
evidently beside themselves with terror.</p>
<p>The iceberg made frightful lurches, sometimes inclining at such a sharp
angle that the animals rolled pell-mell over each other and set up a loud
growling, which mingled with the roar of the elements and made a terrible
concert.</p>
<p>For a quarter of an hour, which seemed a whole century, the sloop sailed
on in this formidable company, sometimes a few yards distant and sometimes
near enough to touch. The Greenland dogs trembled for fear, but Duk was
quite imperturbable. At last the iceberg lost ground, and got driven by
the wind further and further away till it disappeared in the fog, only at
intervals betraying its presence by the ominous growls of its equipage.</p>
<p>[Illustration: Mast and sail were torn off, and went flying away through
the darkness like some large white bird.-P.224]</p>
<p>The storm now burst forth with redoubled fury. The little barque was
lifted bodily out of the water, and whirled round and round with the most
frightful rapidity. Mast and sail were torn off, and went flying away
through the darkness like some large white bird. A whirlpool began to form
among the waves, drawing down the ship gradually by its irresistible
suction.</p>
<p>[Illustration: ]</p>
<p>Deeper and deeper she sank, whizzing round at such tremendous speed that
to the poor fellows on board, the water seemed motionless. All five men
stood erect, gazing at each other in speechless terror. But suddenly the
ship rose perpendicularly, her prow went above the edge of the vortex, and
getting out of the centre of attraction by her own velocity, she escaped
at a tangent from the circumference, and was thrown far beyond, swift as a
ball from a cannon's mouth.</p>
<p>Altamont, the Doctor, Johnson, and Bell were pitched flat on the planks.
When they got up, Hatteras had disappeared!</p>
<p>It was two o'clock in the morning.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />