قراءة كتاب In Northern Mists: Arctic Exploration in Early Times (Volume 1 of 2)

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In Northern Mists: Arctic Exploration in Early Times (Volume 1 of 2)

In Northern Mists: Arctic Exploration in Early Times (Volume 1 of 2)

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 2

corrections and additions to the original text.

FRIDTJOF NANSEN

Lysaker, August 1911

 

 


CONTENTS

CHAP.   PAGE
  INTRODUCTION 1
I. ANTIQUITY, BEFORE PYTHEAS 7
II. PYTHEAS OF MASSALIA: THE VOYAGE TO THULE 43
III. ANTIQUITY, AFTER PYTHEAS 74
IV. THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES 125
V. THE AWAKENING OF MEDIÆVAL KNOWLEDGE OF THE NORTH 168
VI. FINNS, SKRIDFINNS [LAPPS], AND THE FIRST SETTLEMENT OF SCANDINAVIA 203
VII. THE VOYAGES OF THE NORSEMEN: DISCOVERY OF ICELAND AND GREENLAND 233
VIII. VOYAGES TO THE UNINHABITED PARTS OF GREENLAND IN THE MIDDLE AGES 279
IX. WINELAND THE GOOD, THE FORTUNATE ISLES, AND THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA 312

 

 


INTRODUCTION

“For my purpose holds
To sail beyond the sunset and the baths
Of all the Western stars until I die.”
Tennyson, “Ulysses.”

 

In the beginning the world appeared to mankind like a fairy tale; everything that lay beyond the circle of familiar experience was a shifting cloudland of the fancy, a playground for all the fabled beings of mythology; but in the farthest distance, towards the west and north, was the region of darkness and mists, where sea, land and sky were merged into a congealed mass—and at the end of all gaped the immeasurable mouth of the abyss, the awful void of space.

Out of this fairy world, in course of time, the calm and sober lines of the northern landscape appeared. With unspeakable labour the eye of man has forced its way gradually towards the north, over mountains and forests, and tundra, onward through the mists along the vacant shores of the polar sea—the vast stillness, where so much struggle and suffering, so many bitter failures, so many proud victories, have vanished without a trace, muffled beneath the mantle of snow.

When our thoughts go back through the ages in a waking dream, an endless procession passes before us—like a single mighty epic of the human mind’s power of devotion to an idea, right or wrong—a procession of struggling, frost-covered figures in heavy clothes, some erect and powerful, others weak and bent so that they can scarcely drag themselves along before the sledges, many of them emaciated and dying of hunger, cold and scurvy; but all looking out before them towards the unknown, beyond the sunset, where the goal of their struggle is to be found.

We see a Pytheas, intelligent and courageous, steering northward from the Pillars of Hercules for the discovery of Britain and Northern Europe; we see hardy Vikings, with an Ottar, a Leif Ericson at their head, sailing in undecked boats across the ocean into ice and tempest and clearing the mists from an unseen world; we see a Davis, a Baffin forcing their way to the north-west and opening up new routes, while a Hudson, unconquered by ice and winter, finds a lonely grave on a deserted shore, a victim of shabby pilfering. We see the bright form of a Parry surpassing all as he forces himself on; a Nordenskiöld, broad-shouldered and confident, leading the way to new visions; a Toll mysteriously disappearing in the drifting ice. We see men driven to despair, shooting and eating each other; but at the same time we see noble figures, like a De Long, trying to save their journals from destruction, until they sink and die.

Midway in the procession comes a long file of a hundred and thirty men hauling heavy boats and sledges back to the south, but they are falling in their tracks; one after another they lie there, marking the line of route with their corpses—they are Franklin’s men.

And now we come to the latest drama, the Greenlander Brönlund dragging himself forward over the ice-fields through cold and winter darkness, after the leader Mylius-Erichsen and his comrade, Hagen, have both stiffened in the snow during the long and

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