LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
| [IN THE PRIDE OF HER YOUTH. Colour Photograph by F. Hurley] |
| [The Leader] |
| [The Weddell Sea Party] |
| [Young Emperor Penguins] |
| [A Huge Floe of Consolidated Pack] |
| [Samson] |
| [Ice-Flowers] |
| [Midnight off the New Land] |
| [New Land: Caird Coast] |
| [Close Under the Barrier] |
| [Trying to cut a way for the Ship through the Ice to a Lead ahead (February 14, 1915)] |
| [The Night Watchman’s Story] |
| [The Dying Sun: The Endurance firmly frozen in] |
| [The Rampart Berg] |
| [A Bi-Weekly Performance: Scrubbing out the “Ritz”] |
| [Pylon Avenue] |
| [The Long, Long Night] |
| [The Pups] |
| [Ice-Pressure Approaching the Ship] |
| [Ice-Rafting] |
| [The Returning Sun] |
| [Wild and Shackleton in the Heavy Pressure] |
| [Exercising the Dogs] |
| [Crab-eater Seals] |
| [The Beginning of the End] |
| [“Within a few Seconds she heeled over until she had a List of Thirty Degrees to Port”] |
| [Almost Overwhelmed] |
| [Attack of the floes] |
| [“The Driving Floe, moving laterally across the Stern, split the Rudder and tore out the Rudder-Post and Stern-Post”] |
| [The End] |
| [A Week Later] |
| [“The Wreckage lies around in Dismal Confusion”] |
| [The First Attempt to reach the Land 346 Miles Away] |
| [Ocean Camp] |
| [The Look-out at Ocean Camp] |
| [The Emergency Sledges being packed in case of a sudden break up of the Ice] |
| [The Sledges packed and ready] |
| [Relaying the James Caird] |
| [Potash and Perlmutter] |
| [“Loneliness”: Patience Camp] |
| [The Kitchen at Patience Camp] |
| [The Stove at Patience Camp constructed out of old Oil-drums] |
| [Worsley taking Observations of the Sun to determine our Position] |
| [“We cut Steps in this Twenty-five Foot Slab and it makes a fine Look-out”] |
| [“There was no Sleep for us that Night, so we lit the Blubber Stove”] |
| [Hauling up the Boats for the Night] |
| [The Reeling Berg] |
| [Sailing South Again] |
| [The First Landing ever made on Elephant Island, April 15, 1916] |
| [“We Pulled the Three Boats a little Higher on the Beach”] |
| [Rough sketch map of landing place and first camp at C. Valentine, Elephant Island] |
| [The First Drink and Hot Food for Three-and-a-Half Days] |
| [Mount Frank Houlder, Elephant Island] |
| [Launching the James Caird] |
| [The Stancomb Wills] |
| [In Sight of our Goal: Nearing South Georgia] |
| [Landing on South Georgia] |
| [Cave Cove on South Georgia] |
| [Surroundings of King Haakon Bay] |
| [Plan of Sleeping Berths in Cave] |
| [Sea Elephants on South Georgia] |
| [The Cliffs we descended whilst crossing the Island] |
| [One of the Glaciers we Crossed] |
| [A Typical View in South Georgia] |
| [Rough Memory Map of Route Across South Georgia] |
| [Panorama of South Georgia] |
| [The Yelcho] |
| [Arrival at Punta Arenas with the Rescued Men] |
| [Frank Wild, Second in Command of the Expedition] |
| [Our Dugout] |
| [The Hut on Elephant Island] |
| [View of Interior of Hut on Elephant Island] |
| [Marooned on Elephant Island] |
| [Elephant Island] |
| [The Rescue Ship Sighted] |
| [“All Safe! All Well!”] |
| [View through a Cave on Elephant Island] |
| [The Aurora] |
| [Ice Stalactites at the Entrance to a Cave on Elephant Island] |
| [A Newly-frozen Lead] |
| [The Ross Sea Party] |
| [Mackintosh and Spencer-Smith being dragged on the sledge] |
| [“The Rudder was bent over to Starboard and Smashed”] |
| [“Next Morning the Jury-Rudder was Shipped”] |
| [Ice Nomenclature: 1. Young Ice (Bay Ice of Scoresby) in the Middle Distance] |
| [2. Light Pack] |
| [3. Heavy Hummocked Pack] |
| [4. Hummocky Pack and Frozen Lead of Young-Ice] |
| [5. Close Pack] |
| [6. Open Pack] |
| [7. Very Open Pack, approximating to Drift-ice] |
| [8. Drift-Ice] |
| [“The Rookery”] |
| [The Anemometer covered with Rime] |
| [Map: The Voyage of the Endurance] |
PREFACE
After the conquest of the South Pole by Amundsen, who, by a narrow margin of days only, was in advance of the British Expedition under Scott, there remained but one great main object of Antarctic journeyings—the crossing of the South Polar continent from sea to sea.
When I returned from the Nimrod Expedition on which we had to turn back from our attempt to plant the British flag on the South Pole, being beaten by stress of circumstances within ninety-seven miles of our goal, my mind turned to the crossing of the continent, for I was morally certain that either Amundsen or Scott would reach the Pole on our own route or a parallel one. After hearing of the Norwegian success I began to make preparations to start a last great journey—so that the first crossing of the last continent should be achieved by a British Expedition.
We failed in this object, but the story of our attempt is the subject for the following pages, and I think that though failure in the actual accomplishment must be recorded, there are chapters in this book of high adventure, strenuous days, lonely nights, unique experiences, and, above all, records of unflinching determination, supreme loyalty, and generous self-sacrifice on the part of my men which, even in these days that have witnessed the sacrifices of nations and regardlessness of self on the part of individuals, still will be of interest to readers who now turn gladly from the red horror of war and the strain of the last five years to read, perhaps with more understanding minds, the tale of the White Warfare of the South. The struggles, the disappointments, and the endurance of this small party of Britishers, hidden away for nearly two years in the fastnesses of the Polar ice, striving to carry out the ordained task and ignorant of the crises through which the world was passing, make a story which is unique in the history of Antarctic exploration.
Owing to the loss of the Endurance and the disaster to the Aurora, certain documents relating mainly to the organization and preparation of the Expedition have been lost; but, anyhow, I had no intention of presenting a detailed account of the scheme of preparation, storing, and other necessary but, to the general reader, unimportant affairs, as since the beginning of this century, every book on Antarctic exploration has dealt fully with this matter. I therefore briefly place before you the inception and organization of the Expedition, and insert here the copy of the programme which I prepared in order to arouse the interest of the general public in the Expedition.
“The Trans-continental Party.
“The first crossing of the Antarctic continent, from sea to sea via the Pole, apart from its historic value, will be a journey of great scientific importance.
“The distance will be roughly 1800 miles, and the first half of this, from the Weddell Sea to the Pole, will be over unknown ground. Every step will be an advance in geographical science. It will be learned whether the great Victoria chain of mountains, which has been traced from the Ross Sea to the Pole, extends across the continent and thus links up (except for the ocean break) with the Andes of South America, and whether the great plateau around the Pole dips gradually towards the Weddell Sea.