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SEVEN MONTHS IN THE ICE.

A ghostly ship, which might well have been that of the " Ancient Mariner" of Coleridge, sailed into Eona's Voe, Shetland, on the 2nd of April. Battered and crushed, sails and cordage blown away, spars and planking destroyed, gaunt scurvy-stricken human beings loolcedover the remnants of her bulwarks, dead men on her 'deck, and dying men below— such was the spectacle upon which the people who had put off from the shore gazed with amazement and horror. The vessel was the whale ship Diana, of Hull, which (says the " Scotsman,") sailed in the month of May last year from Lerwick with a crew of fifty-four men all told, of whom about thirty were Shetlanders and the rest. English, and was last heard of beset in the ice in the month of September. As the tidings of the ship's arrival went through Shetland, the relatives of her crew journeyed to her to meet their living and to claim their dead. No one was missing. Her captain, with, nine of his men dead by i his side, lay on the bridge. Five men were fit for duty ; and of these two were able to crawl aloft,; and the remainder were lying below sick or dying. As the ship came into the port another man died. Most pitiable sights of all were the ship's boys, with their young faces wearing a. strange aged look not easily to be described. The name of the brave surgeon of the ship, who, by his unceasing exertions and admirable example, did so much to save those of his shipmates who have returned, is Charles Edward Smith, of London, once a student in Edinburgh University, Subjoined is a summary of a statement made by one of the survivors : — "The vessel was suddenly and unexpectedly shut up in the ice to the south of Coutt's Inlet on the 23rd September, and the crew liad at once to be put upon short allowance. Enduring great privations from the cold and the want of sufficient food, they gradually drifted . southwards until, towards the end of December, the vessel got into Frobisher's Straits, where she received such nips in the ice as to induce the men to leave the vessel and encamp on the ice in a tent. They could not, Jiowever, stand this, and had to return to the ship, where the captain died. His body, wrapped up in canvas, was laid on the bridge. In the course of the following weeks every available part of the vessel was used for fuel, as well as the boats, oil, &c. -By the end of February all the meat, coffee, sugar, tea, and tobacco had been consumed, scurvy broke out, and the men began to die ' fast. After enduring considerable sufferings and .miseries, the ice gave way on the 17th. March, and the battered vessel, with Jier dead and living crew, got into the open sea, making icona's Toe on April 2, as abovementioned. " Had we been out another night," said the narrator, "none of us would have stood it. The night before, three of my watch dropped down at the pumps, and only four of us were able for duty, and they not much to speak of. We came into that port with nine corpses ' lying on the bridge ; and after we haa anchored, one of the sick hands calledput from his berth — 'Take away this dead man* from me 1' and then we found that he had been dead for some time 5 so that was the tenth, and. we laid him on the bridge, too. . The people in the neighbourhood were uncommonly kind — I never met with so much attention in all my life. After I left the ship another man died, and there are two or three more who won't live, I doubt ; but the boys, although they are pretty bad, will get over it. I feel myself a deal better than I did when I landed." A correspondent of the " Scotsman" adds the following : — " On sighting the land it was resolved to run the ship ashore in the first convenient place tliey came to. On entering jßona's Voe a boat came off to them from the shore. The man at the wheel was so excited when he saw the boat that he fainted. With the aid of the men from the shore the ship was brought to an anchor, and a messenger despatched to Lerwick. About twenty of the crew are in a fearful state with scurvy, some not expected to live, and the rest quite unfit for work. Every possible attention has been paid to the men since their arrival. The ship sprung a leak in December, and has only been kept afloat by incessantly working the pumps. The surgeon, Mr. Charles E. Smith, deserves great credit for Ms exertions, not only in his profession, but also in assisting to work the ship. Had it not been for his attention to the men, it is doubtful whether any of them would have survived. The captain called the crew together shortly before Ms death, and told them liow he felt under the responsibility of having the charge of fifty-eight souls, reminded them of what he had done for their rescue, and then prayed with them. Tlie occasion was felt by all to be a very solemn one. Captain, G-ravill was a very pious man."

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HBH18670706.2.25

Bibliographic details

Hawke's Bay Herald, Volume 11, Issue 856, 6 July 1867, Page 4

Word Count
900

SEVEN MONTHS IN THE ICE. Hawke's Bay Herald, Volume 11, Issue 856, 6 July 1867, Page 4

SEVEN MONTHS IN THE ICE. Hawke's Bay Herald, Volume 11, Issue 856, 6 July 1867, Page 4