New Zealand - A General History And Collection Of Voyages And Travels - Volume 14 - By Robert Kerr









































































 -  This, when it came, served only to increase our
apprehensions, by exhibiting to our view those huge mountains of ice - Page 122
New Zealand - A General History And Collection Of Voyages And Travels - Volume 14 - By Robert Kerr - Page 122 of 885 - First - Home

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This, When It Came, Served Only To Increase Our Apprehensions, By Exhibiting To Our View Those Huge Mountains Of Ice, Which In The Night We Had Passed Without Seeing.

These unfavourable circumstances, together with dark nights, at this advanced season of the year, quite discouraged me from putting

In execution a resolution I had taken of crossing the Antarctic Circle once more. Accordingly, at four o'clock in the morning, we stood to the north, with a very hard gale at E.S.E., accompanied with snow and sleet, and a very high sea from the same point, which made great destruction among the ice islands. This circumstance, far from being of any advantage to us, greatly increased the number of pieces we had to avoid. The large pieces which break from the ice islands, are much more dangerous than the islands themselves. The latter are so high out of water, that we can generally see them, unless the weather be very thick and dark, before we are very near them. Whereas the others cannot be seen in the night, till they are under the ship's bows. These dangers were, however, now become so familiar to us, that the apprehensions they caused were never of long duration; and were, in some measure, compensated both by the seasonable supplies of fresh water these ice islands afforded us, (without which we must have been greatly distressed,) and also by their very romantic appearance, greatly heightened by the foaming and dashing of the waves into the curious holes and caverns which are formed in many of them; the whole exhibiting a view which at once filled the mind with admiration and horror, and can only be described by the hand of an able painter.[3]

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