Chapter 14 - PREPARATIONS: THE SPRING JOURNEY
					Scott's Last Expedition 
					- The Journals of Captain R. F. Scott
					Contents 
						and Preface Chapters:
						Chapter 1 
						| Chapter 
						2 | Chapter 
						3 | Chapter 
						4 | Chapter 
						5 | Chapter 
						6 | Chapter 
						7 | Chapter 
						8 | Chapter 
						9 | Chapter 
						10 | 
						Chapter 11 |
						Chapter 12 
						| Chapter 
						13 | 
						Chapter 14 |
						Chapter 15 
						| Chapter 
						16 | 
						Chapter 17 |
						Chapter 18 
						| Chapter 
						19 | 
						Chapter 20 
						|  Appendix
						Summary
						(2 pages) of the Terra 
						Nova Expedition |
						The Men of 
						the Expedition
Friday, September 1
A very windy night, 
					dropping to gusts in morning, preceding beautifully calm, bright 
					day. If September holds as good as August we shall not have 
					cause of complaint. Meares and Demetri started for Hut Point 
					just before noon. The dogs were in fine form. Demetri's 
					team came over the hummocky tide crack at full gallop, depositing 
					the driver on the snow. Luckily some of us were standing on 
					the floe. I made a dash at the bow of the sledge as it dashed 
					past and happily landed on top; Atkinson grasped at the same 
					object, but fell, and was dragged merrily over the ice. The 
					weight reduced the pace, and others soon came up and stopped 
					the team. Demetri was very crestfallen. He is extremely active 
					and it's the first time he's been unseated.
There 
					is no real reason for Meares' departure yet awhile, but 
					he chose to go and probably hopes to train the animals better 
					when he has them by themselves. As things are, this seems like 
					throwing out the advance guard for the summer campaign.
					
I have been working very hard at sledging figures with Bowers' 
					able assistance. The scheme develops itself in the light of 
					these figures, and I feel that our organisation will not be 
					found wanting, yet there is an immense amount of detail, and 
					every arrangement has to be more than usually elastic to admit 
					of extreme possibilities of the full success or complete failure 
					of the motors.
I think our plan will carry us through 
					without the motors (though in that case nothing else must fail), 
					and will take full advantage of such help as the motors may 
					give. Our spring travelling is to be limited order. E. Evans, 
					Gran, and Forde will go out to find and re-mark 'Corner 
					Camp.' Meares will then carry out as much fodder as possible 
					with the dogs. Simpson, Bowers, and I are going to stretch our 
					legs across to the Western Mountains. There is no choice but 
					to keep the rest at home to exercise the ponies. It's not 
					going to be a light task to keep all these frisky little beasts 
					in order, as their food is increased. To-day the change in masters 
					has taken place: by the new arrangement
Wilson takes 
					Nobby Cherry-Garrard takes Michael Wright takes Chinaman Atkinson 
					takes Jehu.
The new comers seem very pleased with their 
					animals, though they are by no means the pick of the bunch.
					
Sunday, September 3
The weather still 
					remains fine, the temperature down in the minus thirties. All 
					going well and everyone in splendid spirits. Last night Bowers 
					lectured on Polar clothing. He had worked the subject up from 
					our Polar library with critical and humorous ability, and since 
					his recent journey he must be considered as entitled to an authoritative 
					opinion of his own. The points in our clothing problems are 
					too technical and too frequently discussed to need special notice 
					at present, but as a result of a new study of Arctic precedents 
					it is satisfactory to find it becomes more and more evident 
					that our equipment is the best that has been devised for the 
					purpose, always excepting the possible alternative of skins 
					for spring journeys, an alternative we have no power to adopt. 
					In spite of this we are making minor improvements all the time.
					
Sunday, September 10
A whole week since 
					the last entry in my diary. I feel very negligent of duty, but 
					my whole time has been occupied in making detailed plans for 
					the Southern journey. These are finished at last, I am glad 
					to say; every figure has been checked by Bowers, who has been 
					an enormous help to me. If the motors are successful, we shall 
					have no difficulty in getting to the Glacier, and if they fail, 
					we shall still get there with any ordinary degree of good fortune. 
					To work three units of four men from that point onwards requires 
					no small provision, but with the proper provision it should 
					take a good deal to stop the attainment of our object. I have 
					tried to take every reasonable possibility of misfortune into 
					consideration, and to so organise the parties as to be prepared 
					to meet them. I fear to be too sanguine, yet taking everything 
					into consideration I feel that our chances ought to be good. 
					The animals are in splendid form. Day by day the ponies get 
					fitter as their exercise increases, and the stronger, harder 
					food toughens their muscles. They are very different animals 
					from those which we took south last year, and with another month 
					of training I feel there is not one of them but will make light 
					of the loads we shall ask them to draw. But we cannot spare 
					any of the ten, and so there must always be anxiety of the disablement 
					of one or more before their work is done.
E. R. Evans, 
					Forde, and Gran left early on Saturday for Corner Camp. I hope 
					they will have no difficulty in finding it. Meares and Demetri 
					came back from Hut Point the same afternoon--the dogs are wonderfully 
					fit and strong, but Meares reports no seals up in the region, 
					and as he went to make seal pemmican, there was little object 
					in his staying. I leave him to come and go as he pleases, merely 
					setting out the work he has to do in the simplest form. I want 
					him to take fourteen bags of forage (130 lbs. each) to Corner 
					Camp before the end of October and to be ready to start for 
					his supporting work soon after the pony party--a light task 
					for his healthy teams. Of hopeful signs for the future none 
					are more remarkable than the health and spirit of our people. 
					It would be impossible to imagine a more vigorous community, 
					and there does not seem to be a single weak spot in the twelve 
					good men and true who are chosen for the Southern advance. All 
					are now experienced sledge travellers, knit together with a 
					bond of friendship that has never been equalled under such circumstances. 
					Thanks to these people, and more especially to Bowers and Petty 
					Officer Evans, there is not a single detail of our equipment 
					which is not arranged with the utmost care and in accordance 
					with the tests of experience.
It is good to have arrived 
					at a point where one can run over facts and figures again and 
					again without detecting a flaw or foreseeing a difficulty.
					
I do not count on the motors--that is a strong point in 
					our case--but should they work well our earlier task of reaching 
					the Glacier will be made quite easy. Apart from such help I 
					am anxious that these machines should enjoy some measure of 
					success and justify the time, money, and thought which have 
					been given to their construction. I am still very confident 
					of the possibility of motor traction, whilst realising that 
					reliance cannot be placed on it in its present untried evolutionary 
					state--it is satisfactory to add that my own view is the most 
					cautious one held in our party. Day is quite convinced he will 
					go a long way and is prepared to accept much heavier weights 
					than I have given him. Lashly's opinion is perhaps more 
					doubtful, but on the whole hopeful. Clissold is to make the 
					fourth man of the motor party. I have already mentioned his 
					mechanical capabilities. He has had a great deal of experience 
					with motors, and Day is delighted to have his assistance.
					
We had two lectures last week--the first from Debenham dealing 
					with General Geology and having special reference to the structures 
					of our region. It cleared up a good many points in my mind concerning 
					the gneissic base rocks, the Beacon sand-stone, and the dolerite 
					intrusions. I think we shall be in a position to make fairly 
					good field observations when we reach the southern land.
					
The scientific people have taken keen interest in making 
					their lectures interesting, and the custom has grown of illustrating 
					them with lantern slides made from our own photographs, from 
					books, or from drawings of the lecturer. The custom adds to 
					the interest of the subject, but robs the reporter of notes. 
					The second weekly lecture was given by Ponting. His store of 
					pictures seems unending and has been an immense source of entertainment 
					to us during the winter. His lectures appeal to all and are 
					fully attended. This time we had pictures of the Great Wall 
					and other stupendous monuments of North China. Ponting always 
					manages to work in detail concerning the manners and customs 
					of the peoples in the countries of his travels; on Friday he 
					told us of Chinese farms and industries, of hawking and other 
					sports, most curious of all, of the pretty amusement of flying 
					pigeons with aeolian whistling pipes attached to their tail 
					feathers.
Ponting would have been a great asset to our 
					party if only on account of his lectures, but his value as pictorial 
					recorder of events becomes daily more apparent. No expedition 
					has ever been illustrated so extensively, and the only difficulty 
					will be to select from the countless subjects that have been 
					recorded by his camera--and yet not a single subject is treated 
					with haste; the first picture is rarely counted good enough, 
					and in some cases five or six plates are exposed before our 
					very critical artist is satisfied.
This way of going 
					to work would perhaps be more striking if it were not common 
					to all our workers here; a very demon of unrest seems to stir 
					them to effort and there is now not a single man who is not 
					striving his utmost to get good results in his own particular 
					department.
It is a really satisfactory state of affairs 
					all round. If the Southern journey comes off, nothing, not even 
					priority at the Pole, can prevent the Expedition ranking as 
					one of the most important that ever entered the polar regions.
					
On Friday Cherry-Garrard produced the second volume of the 
					S.P.T
on the whole an improvement on the first. Poor Cherry 
					perspired over the editorial, and it bears the signs of labour--the 
					letterpress otherwise is in the lighter strain: Taylor again 
					the most important contributor, but now at rather too great 
					a length; Nelson has supplied a very humorous trifle; the illustrations 
					are quite delightful, the highwater mark of Wilson's ability. 
					The humour is local, of course, but I've come to the conclusion 
					that there can be no other form of popular journal.
The 
					weather has not been good of late, but not sufficiently bad 
					to interfere with exercise, &c.
Thursday, 
					September 14
Another interregnum. I have been exceedingly 
					busy finishing up the Southern plans, getting instruction in 
					photographing, and preparing for our jaunt to the west. I held 
					forth on the 'Southern Plans' yesterday; everyone was 
					enthusiastic, and the feeling is general that our arrangements 
					are calculated to make the best of our resources. Although people 
					have given a good deal of thought to various branches of the 
					subject, there was not a suggestion offered for improvement. 
					The scheme seems to have earned full confidence: it remains 
					to play the game out.
The last lectures of the season 
					have been given. On Monday Nelson gave us an interesting little 
					resume of biological questions, tracing the evolutionary development 
					of forms from the simplest single-cell animals.
To-night 
					Wright tackled 'The Constitution of Matter' with the 
					latest ideas from the Cavendish Laboratory: it was a tough subject, 
					yet one carries away ideas of the trend of the work of the great 
					physicists, of the ends they achieve and the means they employ. 
					Wright is inclined to explain matter as velocity; Simpson claims 
					to be with J.J. Thomson in stressing the fact that gravity is 
					not explained.
These lectures have been a real amusement 
					and one would be sorry enough that they should end, were it 
					not for so good a reason.
I am determined to make some 
					better show of our photographic work on the Southern trip than 
					has yet been accomplished--with Ponting as a teacher it should 
					be easy. He is prepared to take any pains to ensure good results, 
					not only with his own work but with that of others--showing 
					indeed what a very good chap he is.
To-day I have been 
					trying a colour screen--it is an extraordinary addition to one's 
					powers.
To-morrow Bowers, Simpson, Petty Officer Evans, 
					and I are off to the west. I want to have another look at the 
					Ferrar Glacier, to measure the stakes put out by Wright last 
					year, to bring my sledging impressions up to date (one loses 
					details of technique very easily), and finally to see what we 
					can do with our cameras. I haven't decided how long we shall 
					stay away or precisely where we shall go; such vague arrangements 
					have an attractive side.
We have had a fine week, but 
					the temperature remains low in the twenties, and to-day has 
					dropped to -35°. I shouldn't wonder if we get a cold snap.
					
Sunday, October 1
Returned on Thursday 
					from a remarkably pleasant and instructive little spring journey, 
					after an absence of thirteen days from September 15. We covered 
					152 geographical miles by sledging (175 statute miles) in 10 
					marching days. It took us 2 1/2 days to reach Butter Point (28 
					1/2 miles geog.), carrying a part of the Western Party stores 
					which brought our load to 180 lbs. a man. Everything very comfortable; 
					double tent great asset. The 16th: a most glorious day till 
					4 P.M., then cold southerly wind. We captured many frost-bites. 
					Surface only fairly good; a good many heaps of loose snow which 
					brought sledge up standing. There seems a good deal more snow 
					this side of the Strait; query, less wind.
Bowers insists 
					on doing all camp work; he is a positive wonder. I never met 
					such a sledge traveller.
The sastrugi all across the 
					strait have been across, the main S. by E. and the other E.S.E., 
					but these are a great study here; the hard snow is striated 
					with long wavy lines crossed with lighter wavy lines. It gives 
					a sort of herringbone effect.
After depositing this extra 
					load we proceeded up the Ferrar Glacier; curious low ice foot 
					on left, no tide crack, sea ice very thinly covered with snow. 
					We are getting delightfully fit. Bowers treasure all round, 
					Evans much the same. Simpson learning fast. Find the camp life 
					suits me well except the turning out at night! three times last 
					night. We were trying nose nips and face guards, marching head 
					to wind all day.
We reached Cathedral Rocks on the 19th. 
					Here we found the stakes placed by Wright across the glacier, 
					and spent the remainder of the day and the whole of the 20th 
					in plotting their position accurately. (Very cold wind down 
					glacier increasing. In spite of this Bowers wrestled with theodolite. 
					He is really wonderful. I have never seen anyone who could go 
					on so long with bare fingers. My own fingers went every few 
					moments.)We saw that there had been movement and roughly measured 
					it as about 30 feet. (The old Ferrar Glacier is more lively 
					than we thought.) After plotting the figures it turns out that 
					the movement varies from 24 to 32 feet at different stakes--this 
					is 7 1/2 months. This is an extremely important observation, 
					the first made on the movement of the coastal glaciers; it is 
					more than I expected to find, but small enough to show that 
					the idea of comparative stagnation was correct. Bowers and I 
					exposed a number of plates and films in the glacier which have 
					turned out very well, auguring well for the management of the 
					camera on the Southern journey.
On the 21st we came down 
					the glacier and camped at the northern end of the foot. (There 
					appeared to be a storm in the Strait; cumulus cloud over Erebus 
					and the whalebacks. Very stormy look over Lister occasionally 
					and drift from peaks; but all smiling in our Happy Valley. Evidently 
					this is a very favoured spot.) From thence we jogged up the 
					coast on the following days, dipping into New Harbour and climbing 
					the moraine, taking angles and collecting rock specimens. At 
					Cape Bernacchi we found a quantity of pure quartz in situ , 
					and in it veins of copper ore. I got a specimen with two or 
					three large lumps of copper included. This is the first find 
					of minerals suggestive of the possibility of working.
					
The next day we sighted a long, low ice wall, and took it 
					at first for a long glacier tongue stretching seaward from the 
					land. As we approached we saw a dark mark on it. Suddenly it 
					dawned on us that the tongue was detached from the land, and 
					we turned towards it half recognising familiar features. As 
					we got close we saw similarity to our old Erebus Glacier Tongue, 
					and finally caught sight of a flag on it, and suddenly realised 
					that it might be the piece broken off our old Erebus Glacier 
					Tongue. Sure enough it was; we camped near the outer end, and 
					climbing on to it soon found the depot of fodder left by Campbell 
					and the line of stakes planted to guide our ponies in the autumn. 
					So here firmly anchored was the huge piece broken from the Glacier 
					Tongue in March, a huge tract about 2 miles long, which has 
					turned through half a circle, so that the old western end is 
					now towards the east. Considering the many cracks in the ice 
					mass it is most astonishing that it should have remained intact 
					throughout its sea voyage.
At one time it was suggested 
					that the hut should be placed on this Tongue. What an adventurous 
					voyage the occupants would have had! The Tongue which was 5 
					miles south of C. Evans is now 40 miles W.N.W. of it.
					
From the Glacier Tongue we still pushed north. We reached 
					Dunlop Island on the 24th just before the fog descended on us, 
					and got a view along the stretch of coast to the north which 
					turns at this point.
Dunlop Island has undoubtedly been 
					under the sea. We found regular terrace beaches with rounded 
					waterworn stones all over it; its height is 65 feet. After visiting 
					the island it was easy for us to trace the same terrace formation 
					on the coast; in one place we found waterworn stones over 100 
					feet above sea-level. Nearly all these stones are erratic and, 
					unlike ordinary beach pebbles, the under sides which lie buried 
					have remained angular.
Unlike the region of the Ferrar 
					Glacier and New Harbour, the coast to the north of C. Bernacchi 
					runs on in a succession of rounded bays fringed with low ice 
					walls. At the headlands and in irregular spots the gneissic 
					base rock and portions of moraines lie exposed, offering a succession 
					of interesting spots for a visit in search of geological specimens. 
					Behind this fringe there is a long undulating plateau of snow 
					rounding down to the coast; behind this again are a succession 
					of mountain ranges with deep-cut valleys between. As far as 
					we went, these valleys seem to radiate from the region of the 
					summit reached at the head of the Ferrar Glacier.
As 
					one approaches the coast, the 'tablecloth' of snow in 
					the foreground cuts off more and more of the inland peaks, and 
					even at a distance it is impossible to get a good view of the 
					inland valleys. To explore these over the ice cap is one of 
					the objects of the Western Party.
So far, I never imagined 
					a spring journey could be so pleasant.
On the afternoon 
					of the 24th we turned back, and covering nearly eleven miles, 
					camped inside the Glacier Tongue. After noon on the 25th we 
					made a direct course for C. Evans, and in the evening camped 
					well out in the Sound. Bowers got angles from our lunch camp 
					and I took a photographic panorama, which is a good deal over 
					exposed.
We only got 2 1/2 miles on the 26th when a heavy 
					blizzard descended on us. We went on against it, the first time 
					I have ever attempted to march into a blizzard; it was quite 
					possible, but progress very slow owing to wind resistance. Decided 
					to camp after we had done two miles. Quite a job getting up 
					the tent, but we managed to do so, and get everything inside 
					clear of snow with the help of much sweeping.
With care 
					and extra fuel we have managed to get through the snowy part 
					of the blizzard with less accumulation of snow than I ever remember, 
					and so everywhere all round experience is helping us. It continued 
					to blow hard throughout the 27th, and the 28th proved the most 
					unpleasant day of the trip. We started facing a very keen, frostbiting 
					wind. Although this slowly increased in force, we pushed doggedly 
					on, halting now and again to bring our frozen features round. 
					It was 2 o'clock before we could find a decent site for 
					a lunch camp under a pressure ridge. The fatigue of the prolonged 
					march told on Simpson, whose whole face was frostbitten at one 
					time--it is still much blistered. It came on to drift as we 
					sat in our tent, and again we were weather-bound. At 3 the drift 
					ceased, and we marched on, wind as bad as ever; then I saw an 
					ominous yellow fuzzy appearance on the southern ridges of Erebus, 
					and knew that another snowstorm approached. Foolishly hoping 
					it would pass us by I kept on until Inaccessible Island was 
					suddenly blotted out. Then we rushed for a camp site, but the 
					blizzard was on us. In the driving snow we found it impossible 
					to set up the inner tent, and were obliged to unbend it. It 
					was a long job getting the outer tent set, but thanks to Evans 
					and Bowers it was done at last. We had to risk frostbitten fingers 
					and hang on to the tent with all our energy: got it secured 
					inch by inch, and not such a bad speed all things considered. 
					We had some cocoa and waited. At 9 P.M. the snow drift again 
					took off, and we were now so snowed up, we decided to push on 
					in spite of the wind.
We arrived in at 1.15 A.M., pretty 
					well done. The wind never let up for an instant; the temperature 
					remained about -16°, and the 21 statute miles which we marched 
					in the day must be remembered amongst the most strenuous in 
					my memory.
Except for the last few days, we enjoyed a 
					degree of comfort which I had not imagined impossible on a spring 
					journey. The temperature was not particularly high, at the mouth 
					of the Ferrar it was -40°, and it varied between -15° and 
					-40° throughout. Of course this is much higher than it would 
					be on the Barrier, but it does not in itself promise much comfort. 
					The amelioration of such conditions we owe to experience. We 
					used one-third more than the summer allowance of fuel. This, 
					with our double tent, allowed a cosy hour after breakfast and 
					supper in which we could dry our socks, &c., and put them 
					on in comfort. We shifted our footgear immediately after the 
					camp was pitched, and by this means kept our feet glowingly 
					warm throughout the night. Nearly all the time we carried our 
					sleeping-bags open on the sledges. Although the sun does not 
					appear to have much effect, I believe this device is of great 
					benefit even in the coldest weather--certainly by this means 
					our bags were kept much freer of moisture than they would have 
					been had they been rolled up in the daytime. The inner tent 
					gets a good deal of ice on it, and I don't see any easy 
					way to prevent this.
The journey enables me to advise 
					the Geological Party on their best route to Granite Harbour: 
					this is along the shore, where for the main part the protection 
					of a chain of grounded bergs has preserved the ice from all 
					pressure. Outside these, and occasionally reaching to the headlands, 
					there is a good deal of pressed up ice of this season, together 
					with the latest of the old broken pack. Travelling through this 
					is difficult, as we found on our return journey. Beyond this 
					belt we passed through irregular patches where the ice, freezing 
					at later intervals in the season, has been much screwed. The 
					whole shows the general tendency of the ice to pack along the 
					coast.
The objects of our little journey were satisfactorily 
					accomplished, but the greatest source of pleasure to me is to 
					realise that I have such men as Bowers and P.O. Evans for the 
					Southern journey. I do not think that harder men or better sledge 
					travellers ever took the trail. Bowers is a little wonder. I 
					realised all that he must have done for the C. Crozier Party 
					in their far severer experience.
In spite of the late 
					hour of our return everyone was soon afoot, and I learned the 
					news at once. E.R. Evans, Gran, and Forde had returned from 
					the Corner Camp journey the day after we left. They were away 
					six nights, four spent on the Barrier under very severe conditions--the 
					minimum for one night registered -73°.
I am glad to 
					find that Corner Camp showed up well; in fact, in more than 
					one place remains of last year's pony walls were seen. This 
					removes all anxiety as to the chance of finding the One Ton 
					Camp.
On this journey Forde got his hand badly frostbitten. 
					I am annoyed at this, as it argues want of care; moreover there 
					is a good chance that the tip of one of the fingers will be 
					lost, and if this happens or if the hand is slow in recovery, 
					Forde cannot take part in the Western Party. I have no one to 
					replace him.
E.R. Evans looks remarkably well, as also 
					Gran.
The ponies look very well and all are reported 
					to be very buckish.
Wednesday, October 3
					We have had a very bad weather spell. Friday, the day after 
					we returned, was gloriously fine--it might have been a December 
					day, and an inexperienced visitor might have wondered why on 
					earth we had not started to the South, Saturday supplied a reason; 
					the wind blew cold and cheerless; on Sunday it grew worse, with 
					very thick snow, which continued to fall and drift throughout 
					the whole of Monday. The hut is more drifted up than it has 
					ever been, huge piles of snow behind every heap of boxes, &c., 
					all our paths a foot higher; yet in spite of this the rocks 
					are rather freer of snow. This is due to melting, which is now 
					quite considerable. Wilson tells me the first signs of thaw 
					were seen on the 17th.
Yesterday the weather gradually 
					improved, and to-day has been fine and warm again. One fine 
					day in eight is the record immediately previous to this morning.
					
E.R. Evans, Debenham, and Gran set off to the Turk's 
					Head on Friday morning, Evans to take angles and Debenham to 
					geologise; they have been in their tent pretty well all the 
					time since, but have managed to get through some work. Gran 
					returned last night for more provisions and set off again this 
					morning, Taylor going with him for the day. Debenham has just 
					returned for food. He is immensely pleased at having discovered 
					a huge slicken-sided fault in the lavas of the Turk's Head. 
					This appears to be an unusual occurrence in volcanic rocks, 
					and argues that they are of considerable age. He has taken a 
					heap of photographs and is greatly pleased with all his geological 
					observations. He is building up much evidence to show volcanic 
					disturbance independent of Erebus and perhaps prior to its first 
					upheaval.
Meares has been at Hut Point for more than 
					a week; seals seem to be plentiful there now. Demetri was back 
					with letters on Friday and left on Sunday. He is an excellent 
					boy, full of intelligence.
Ponting has been doing some 
					wonderfully fine cinematograph work. My incursion into photography 
					has brought me in close touch with him and I realise what a 
					very good fellow he is; no pains are too great for him to take 
					to help and instruct others, whilst his enthusiasm for his own 
					work is unlimited.
His results are wonderfully good, 
					and if he is able to carry out the whole of his programme, we 
					shall have a cinematograph and photographic record which will 
					be absolutely new in expeditionary work.
A very serious 
					bit of news to-day. Atkinson says that Jehu is still too weak 
					to pull a load. The pony was bad on the ship and almost died 
					after swimming ashore from the ship--he was one of the ponies 
					returned by Campbell. He has been improving the whole of the 
					winter and Oates has been surprised at the apparent recovery; 
					he looks well and feeds well, though a very weedily built animal 
					compared with the others. I had not expected him to last long, 
					but it will be a bad blow if he fails at the start. I'm 
					afraid there is much pony trouble in store for us.
Oates 
					is having great trouble with Christopher, who didn't at 
					all appreciate being harnessed on Sunday, and again to-day he 
					broke away and galloped off over the floe.
On such occasions 
					Oates trudges manfully after him, rounds him up to within a 
					few hundred yards of the stable and approaches cautiously; the 
					animal looks at him for a minute or two and canters off over 
					the floe again. When Christopher and indeed both of them have 
					had enough of the game, the pony calmly stops at the stable 
					door. If not too late he is then put into the sledge, but this 
					can only be done by tying up one of his forelegs; when harnessed 
					and after he has hopped along on three legs for a few paces, 
					he is again allowed to use the fourth. He is going to be a trial, 
					but he is a good strong pony and should do yeoman service.
					
Day is increasingly hopeful about the motors. He is an ingenious 
					person and has been turning up new rollers out of a baulk of 
					oak supplied by Meares, and with Simpson's small motor as 
					a lathe. The motors may save the situation. I have been busy 
					drawing up instructions and making arrangements for the ship, 
					shore station, and sledge parties in the coming season. There 
					is still much work to be done and much, far too much, writing 
					before me.
Time simply flies and the sun steadily climbs 
					the heavens. Breakfast, lunch, and supper are now all enjoyed 
					by sunlight, whilst the night is no longer dark.
Notes 
					at End of Volume
'When they after their headstrong 
					manner, conclude that it is their duty to rush on their journey 
					all weathers; ... '--'Pilgrim's Progress.'
					
'Has any grasped the low grey mist which stands Ghostlike 
					at eve above the sheeted lands.'
A bad attack of 
					integrity!!
'Who is man and what his place, Anxious 
					asks the heart perplext, In the recklessness of space, Worlds 
					with worlds thus intermixt, What has he, this atom creature, 
					In the infinitude of nature?'
F.T. PALGRAVE.
					
It is a good lesson--though it may be a hard one--for a 
					man who had dreamed of a special (literary) fame and of making 
					for himself a rank among the world's dignitaries by such 
					means, to slip aside out of the narrow circle in which his claims 
					are recognised, and to find how utterly devoid of significance 
					beyond that circle is all he achieves and all he aims at.
					
He might fail from want of skill or strength, but deep in 
					his sombre soul he vowed that it should never be from want of 
					heart.
'Every durable bond between human beings is 
					founded in or heightened by some element of competition.'--R.L. 
					STEVENSON.
'All natural talk is a festival of ostentation.'--R.L. 
					STEVENSON.
'No human being ever spoke of scenery 
					for two minutes together, which makes me suspect we have too 
					much of it in literature. The weather is regarded as the very 
					nadir and scoff of conversational topics.'--R.L. STEVENSON.
					
CHAPTER XV 
					- THE LAST WEEKS AT CAPE EVANS
