Letters From High Latitudes By Lord Dufferin















































































 -  The fishermen could not
put to sea on account of the darkness, and the inhabitants
of the Orkney islands were - Page 77
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The Fishermen Could Not Put To Sea On Account Of The Darkness, And The Inhabitants Of The Orkney Islands Were Frightened Out Of Their Senses By Showers Of What They Thought Must Be Black Snow.

On the 9th of April, the lava began to overflow, and ran for five miles in a southwesterly direction,

Whilst, some days later, - in order that no element might be wanting to mingle in this devil's charivari, - a vast column of water, like Robin Hood's second arrow, split up through the cinder pillar to the height of several hundred feet; the horror of the spectacle being further enhanced by an accompaniment of subterranean cannonading and dire reports, heard at a distance of fifty miles.

Striking as all this must have been, it sinks into comparative tameness and insignificance, beside the infinitely more terrible phenomena which attended the eruption of another volcano, called Skapta jokul.

Of all countries in Europe, Iceland is the one which has been the most minutely mapped, not even excepting the ordnance survey of Ireland. The Danish Government seem to have had a hobby about it, and the result has been a chart so beautifully executed, that every little crevice, each mountain torrent, each flood of lava, is laid down with an accuracy perfectly astonishing. One huge blank, however, in the south-west corner of this map of Iceland, mars the integrity of its almost microscopic delineations. To every other part of the island the engineer has succeeded in penetrating; one vast space alone of about four hundred square miles has defied his investigation. Over the area occupied by the Skapta Jokul, amid its mountain-cradled fields of snow and icy ridges, no human foot has ever wandered.

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