[The World of Ice by Robert Michael Ballantyne]@TWC D-Link book
The World of Ice

CHAPTER VI
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Directly in their way, just beyond the line of floe-ice against which they were alternately thumping and grinding, lay a group of bergs.
There was no possibility of avoiding them, and the only question was, whether they were to be dashed to pieces on their hard blue sides, or, perchance, in some providential nook to find a refuge from the storm.
"There's an open lead between them and the floe-ice," exclaimed Bolton in a hopeful tone of voice, seizing an ice-pole and leaping on the gunwale.
"Look alive, men, with your poles," cried the captain, "and shove with a will!" The "Ay, ay, sir," of the men was uttered with a heartiness that showed how powerfully this gleam of hope acted on their spirits; but a new damp was cast over them when, on gaining the open passage, they discovered that the bergs were not at rest, but were bearing down on the floe-ice with slow but awful momentum, and threatening to crush the ship between the two.

Just then a low berg came driving up from the southward, dashing the spray over its sides, and with its forehead ploughing up the smaller ice as if in scorn.

A happy thought flashed across the captain's mind.
"Down the quarter boat," he cried.
In an instant it struck the water, and four men were on the thwarts.
"Cast an ice-anchor on that berg." Peter Grim obeyed the order, and, with a swing that Hercules would have envied, planted it securely.

In another moment the ship was following in the wake of this novel tug! It was a moment of great danger, for the bergs encroached on their narrow canal as they advanced, obliging them to brace the yards to clear the impending ice-walls, and they shaved the large berg so closely that the port quarter-boat would have been crushed if it had not been taken from the davits.

Five minutes of such travelling brought them abreast of a grounded berg, to which they resolved to make fast.


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