Read The Discovery Of Slowness Online
Authors: Sten Nadolny
âBut for that we have eternal life.'
âI don't long for eternal life,' answered John. âBut I lack the years between twenty and thirty. If there had been no war, perhaps I would have already discovered a lot by now.' He said this without bitterness, because the discoveries might still take place.
As he looked at the shaggy tree and mused, old names and faces occurred to him again, one after the other. Dr Richardson learned a little about Mary Rose, Sherard Lound, Westall, Simmons, Dr Orme. âYou'll see them again,' Dr Richardson consoled him, âas sure as parallel lines meet in infinity.' John contradicted him: âOnly if one follows them in the right direction, for parallel lines must, of course, lose themselves on the other side.' At some point he also explained Franklin's System to the doctor. âWell and good,' answered the other, âbut it isn't sufficient to draw strength from slowness. It's only a method, and God is much more than a method. You, too, will need Him, perhaps even on this journey.'
John remembered the verse inscribed on the old church bell at St James's in Spilsby that was broken last year. Not wanting to leave the doctor without a reply, he recited it:
The glass doth run
The globe doth go
Wake up from sin â
Why sleep you so?
Why it had entered his head he didn't know, but when he had told it to the doctor, they both went to sleep at last.
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After four months, Back and Wentzel returned. They had achieved nothing and blamed each other for it. None of the promised supplies had reached Fort Providence, and on Musk Ox Island in the Great Slave Lake they found only a few sacks of flour and sugar, as well as several opened bottles of liquor. They had, however, found the promised Eskimo interpreters there.
Back had tried in his way to get supplies in Fort Providence. Wentzel, he said, had let him down. âHe shows greater understanding for the supposedly dire straits of the fur traders than for ours. He didn't stand up for us.' Wentzel retorted, âMr Back shouted at the gentlemen in charge. You don't get anywhere that way.'
If the Indians exerted themselves and worked hard at hunting, perhaps enough food could be gathered for the journey after all.
Snow melted more and more. The lake burst and sang. It was May.
Hood went on loving Green Stockings, who was pregnant. By whom? In addition to Hood's own understanding there was another version.
The Eskimo interpreters were flat-nosed, woolly-haired fellows with wiry bodies. Their names were Tattanoeack and Hoeutoerock, meaning something like Belly and Ear. Since no one could pronounce their names, John called them Augustus and Junius. They were not very resourceful hunters, but were excellent anglers. It seemed as though they could almost smell fish through the thickest ice.
* * *
By 14 June rivers and lakes were navigable enough to allow John to decide that they should start. Maps and notes were locked in a small side room of the blockhouse. Hepburn nailed a drawing on the door showing a menacing fist raised with a blue, shimmering dagger. Since there in the north everyone was entitled to use a hut â whether Indian or white â the maps had to be protected in some way. Akaitcho agreed that the drawing would be more helpful than a lock.
It was the first warm day, and it quickly became so hot that they sweated. Swarms of mosquitoes, sandflies and horseflies enveloped them, so that they felt as though they were walking in the shade. Nobody could say where these insects had come from so quickly and how they knew that they could tap humans for blood. Hepburn, slapping his face without catching any of the tormentors, asked furiously, âWhat do they do when no expedition comes through here?'
Since the heavily laden canoes still had to be dragged on runners over snow and ice, the expedition got no farther than five miles on the first day. At night it was so cold that nobody could sleep. Shaken by frost, Hepburn shouted into the dark, âThe beasts won't survive this!' In that he was mistaken, however.
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Green Stockings did not come. She stayed behind with the tribe. One of Akaitcho's warriors stayed behind, too â for her. Everyone except Hood knew this. Even John.
Hood talked of returning at the end of the journey to live with Green Stockings in Fort Providence, or wherever. They all nodded and remained silent. Even Back kept his mouth shut.
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John Franklin was admired by the Indians for not killing a single fly. When one of them stung him while he was adjusting the sextant he gently blew it off the back of his hand, saying, âThere's enough room in the world for both of us.' Akaitcho asked Wentzel, âWhy does he do it?' and Wentzel asked John. The answer: âI can neither eat it nor conquer it.' âThat's right,' Back whispered behind John's back. âHe'd never catch a mosquito.'
Wentzel heard this remark and passed it on to John. Conversely,
John was equally sure that Back would pass on to him-everything that Wentzel secretly told him as well, and that neither of them would ever understand how little this interested him.
Nothing escaped Akaitcho â not John's disappointment over the fur-trading companies and Back's foolishness or the tensions within the group. One day he said, âWolves are different. They love each other, touch each other's noses, and feed each other.' Adam translated.
John became slightly unsure. He could hardly answer Akaitcho without talking more or less about his companions. So at first he merely bowed his head and kept silent. By evening he had an answer: âI've thought a great deal about the wolves. They have the advantage of not being able to talk about each other.'
Now Akaitcho bowed.
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After four weeks they had almost reached the mouth of the Coppermine river. From here on they might at any time meet up with Eskimos getting copper from the riverbank. Akaitcho thought it best to wander south with his tribe. He was probably unsure just how his warriors would deal with the Eskimos. âThey say about us that we're half man and half dog. They themselves drink raw blood, and eat maggots and dried mice. We'd better urn back. From now on you'll have to feed yourselves.'
It was agreed that Wentzel would go with them and stock Fort Enterprise with food and ammunition in case the expedition failed and they didn't reach Parry's ship.
Hood wanted to know from Akaitcho where the tribe would be next spring. With an inscrutable face Akaitcho explained that they would be in the region south of the Great Bear Lake. Keskarrah held out his hand and said, âWhen you're starving, drink a lot or you'll die.'
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Here it was again, the good wrinkled elephant hide of the sea! Soon East Indiamen would glide through here in long columns, as well as ships bound for Australia, San Francisco, Panama or the Sandwich Islands. But actually â of what interest were passenger ships to John? He had to laugh. He was in fine spirits.
It was quiet here on the hill. From the moss-covered knoll the men peered beyond the estuary of the Coppermine river to the sea. In the distance, two flat, snow-covered islands were marked off against a pale pink sky â or was it ice this soon? The air felt like a void. Of insects not a trace. Except for the rustling of their clothes and the cracking of their ankles, they heard not a sound.
Before John's eyes lay unknown land, quiet and limitless like his father's garden decades ago. And the sea was indestructible. A thousand fleets had not left a trace. The sea looked different every day and remained the same, till all eternity. As long as there was the sea, the world was not wretched.
John's reverie was suddenly interrupted, for the
voyageurs
came up to him and declared, with great determination, their unwillingness to go on the ocean in their fragile canoes. Back told them it was not at all dangerous. Hood thought it might be beautiful. Richardson knew with certainty that a hand above us protects us all. Hepburn grumbled, âAre you men or aren't you?'
John heard it all with only half an ear. Since he respected the
voyageurs
, they waited only for what he had to say. He looked far away while arranging his sentences. Then he turned and looked at Solomon Bélanger, and said, âThis isn't just a walk. But greater dangers lie behind us than lie ahead.' He looked again at the sea, then spoke into the silence as though he spoke to himself: âElse what we started can't be continued. It's part of our expedition.'
Solomon Bélanger decided that it would just have to be done. Back made a face. The rest of the British admired John openly. They got ready to move on.
Back seemed unable to get rid of something â a desire for mockery, a malice, a rage. But no one was waiting to hear his opinion, no one like himself. Therefore, he eventually said to Hood as if to apologise, âI don't like these addresses. He acts like a saint whom everyone must support, like some kind of Nelson.'
A
field full of bones and skulls, split by the blades of Indian battle axes â that was the spot at Bloody Falls where fifty years before Samuel Hearne had been unable to prevent the bloodshed.
John Franklin knew he needed Eskimos. He feared they would not have forgotten the long-ago disaster. Where people did not keep records about themselves, the past was not harmless. The slain men at the bottom of Copenhagen harbour came back to him often, even now. âBehave like gentlemen.' âNo fear of that.' How little help these phrases offered once one was a commander.
It was quite possible to instill confidence in two or three natives approaching slowly. It got bad only if an entire tribe or no one at all showed up.
The bay was empty; not even birds could be seen. John held a list of names in his hand intended for mountains, rivers, capes, and bays: Flinders, Barrow, Banks, names of British companions, and of Berens, governor of the Hudson's Bay Company. Oh, names! If they starved or were killed here, none of the names would stick to these rocks. But now they at least helped him to overcome his unease. He had walked all over the field of bones as he had walked all over the battlefield of Winceby with the apothecary. He had wanted to make clear what the crux of their meeting with the Eskimos would be. But for Back these old bones were obviously only proof that the Eskimos could be managed if they became troublesome.
Suddenly Hepburn's eyes were riveted on the sea. âGood heavens! It's starting!' On the periphery of his field of vision
John noticed only that the bay had somehow darkened. He turned.
About a hundred kayaks and a few larger boats were coming their way. They approached almost soundlessly, the way game is stalked on a hunt. The whites rushed to their rifles. John shouted: âLoad and put on safety! But not one shot, not even a warning shot, or a shot by accident. We'd be lost.'
Clearly the Eskimos had followed each of their moves, for the boats made a ninety-degree turn, synchronised like a school of fish, and steered toward a point on the shore a hundred yards away from the British.
âI'll go alone with Augustus,' John said calmly. âIf anything happens to me, Dr Richardson will be in command.'
âAnd if you're taken hostage so they can get to us and murder us all?' asked Back.
âWe've got to have their spirits on our side,' answered John. âOh, well. Do what I say.'
Augustus was instructed to keep two steps behind John. They walked as slowly as Akaitcho had walked at Fort Providence. Perhaps even more slowly. From Akaitcho and Matthew Flinders, John had learned what it took to be a chief.
Meanwhile, the Eskimos, who had landed, were standing about like a thick-furred pack, motionlessly scenting, all staring in the same direction. Many of their faces were tattooed; their hair was black. John thought it would be difficult to tell them apart. Now he stopped and gripped Augustus's arm firmly. He counted silently to twenty, then said, âStart your speech.'
Augustus knew what he had to say. John had made sure he had memorised the sentences. He had also checked, with Junius's help, whether they meant what he wanted to say: peaceful intentions, presents, bartering food for âgood things'; had they seen a big ship coming from the direction dawn comes from? And, again and again, peace.
When Augustus finished, the Eskimos threw their arms in the air and clapped their hands high above their heads like an enthusiastic opera audience. What the hell did clapping mean in this part of the world? Perhaps not applause at all.
Loudly and rhythmically they all shouted in unison, â
TEYMA! TEYMA
!'
John hoped this didn't mean revenge. He thought of
DEATH OR GLORY
and
BREAD OR BLOOD
. He couldn't ask Augustus because he was surrounded by clapping Eskimos; nor did he want to run after him. Everything, he knew, depended on his own show of dignity. So he remained standing, accepting the ever-swelling chorus of Teyma cheerfully and proudly as an act of homage, hoping intensely that it didn't mean more than âGood day.'
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âTeyma' meant âPeace'.
The presents were distributed: two kettles and several knives. Now the bartering began. The Eskimos offered bows and arrows, spears and wooden goggles, wanting anything they caught sight of in the way of equipment and metal objects. Soon they began to take what they needed. With the friendliest smiles in the world they nudged forward and were everywhere, stealing Back's pistol and Hepburn's coat. Back wanted to retrieve his pistol, but they shouted loudly âTeyma!' and didn't give it up.
John sat like a mountain and didn't stir. He knew that he was the last person who could protect himself from these nimble fingers. He therefore asked Hepburn to join him. Just then an Eskimo tried to pull a button off his uniform jacket. John only looked at him with concentration. Hepburn rapped him across the fingers and pointed at Hood, who was offering buttons for barter. For a while this worked.
The situation was confused and could be managed only by waiting. John sensed that the fate of the expedition would be sealed if he were to rise, show agitation and shout commands. Besides, the Eskimos knew very well what rifles and pistols could do. When one of the whites came near his weapon, several Eskimos clung to him, shouting âTeyma! Teyma!' in unison and patting him, gently and in cadence, on the left side of his chest.
Hood found a rope and tied the box of nautical instruments so tightly to his thigh that nobody could steal it without dragging him along as well. Then he pulled out his sketchbook and began to draw one of the women. He devoted a great deal of effort to the
tattoos on her face, the bones of her forehead, her eyes. Eskimos clustered behind him, looking over his shoulder, telling the model in loud voices which part of her body was being worked on. The woman readily held out everything she believed required special precision: teeth, tongue, right and left ear, feet. The outcome was an odd picture: the details did not produce the accustomed whole, but it pleased the Eskimos very much. They stood bowing their heads right and left to take in all the subtleties. Almost all of them came to watch. When he had finished the sketch, Hood gave it to his model as a gift, kissing her hand. For a moment she stood stock still with pleasure; then she did a handstand.
But now came the sorcerer. Laden with the head and furry coat of a bear, he circled several times around the whites on all fours, growling and groaning. Augustus explained that this might indicate misfortune: the sorcerer believed drawing and painting were dangerous. Suddenly all the Eskimos ran away. They rushed to their boats and paddled away in great haste, leaving behind many of the objects they had acquired with so much cunning and skill â including even some of the things they had obtained through barter. The woman left her picture behind but grabbed the protractor, that drawing instrument Hood used to commit his readings of landscapes to paper. At the last moment, she changed her mind, returned the protractor, and grabbed her picture after all. She leaped into the last boat â an open boat in which only women were sitting. Within a few minutes the bay was as empty as it had been in the morning.
âWe're saved,' said Dr Richardson, âbut it was a failure just the same. We'll never get anything to eat out of those people.' Augustus confirmed this: âThey don't want to have anything to do with us. They're Inuit from the western shore. In the summer they live in huts of driftwood, in the winter in igloos made of ice, but always on land. They've met whites now and then and had bad experiences with them. They wanted to kill us, but too many powerful spirits were on our side. The Spirit of the Bear wanted to eat us, but the Great Woman Who Lives under the Sea would not allow anything to happen to us.'
âThen let's go out to sea,' John countered. âShe can protect us even better there.'
   Â
On 21 August they pitched their tents at Point Turnagain. Their problems had increased. The lengthy, drawn-out Bathurst Inlet had not proved to be the long-sought water connection with Hudson's Bay. It was simply another bay which came to an end: five days in and five days out again along the opposite side, and August was half over. Following this disappointment, they paddled eastwards along the shore until they eventually had to give up hope of reaching Parry's ship before the onset of winter. They had marched on foot to the next large point of the Kent Peninsula and had named it Point Turnagain for the present â their renewed and now final return.
They were hungry.
Not even fishing brought in enough food, to say nothing of hunting. If only there had been time to learn from the Eskimos what they needed to know about fishing-grounds and seal territories. Augustus and Junius were not at home here. Or if only they had had better rifles with a longer range: there was no cover to hide behind in this bare country when stalking game â if game was sighted at all.
This was not how they had imagined the Arctic coast. They had expected not this dead silence but seals and walruses on ice-floes and rocks, and polar bears swaying over hills, cliffs full of auks and other large birds, a fiery sea of red flowers â music for the eye.
John had intended to name the place for Wilberforce, the fighter against slavery. But now that they were turning back here, this was out of the question. The philanthropist deserved better than a point that marked an end of the line.
The
voyageurs
were pleased about life for the first time in a long while â they were getting back on land. On the other hand, the Eskimo interpreters were disturbed: deep inland, the Woman Who Lives under the Sea would not be able to protect them.
âThe captain of the
Blossom
might have remained a happy man, and the
Blossom
a happy ship, if they had not ⦠Have I told you
this story before? God knows, hunger makes me soft-headed.' Richardson fell silent.
Lacunae opened up in their memory, and there was no strength left for reflections or meaningful conversations. The only thing that had become stronger was their capacity for unbridled fantasy. Delicious pemmican was waiting for them in Fort Enterprise, with well-aged halves of reindeer carcasses, rum and tobacco, tea and zwieback. And Hood was talking about Green Stockings. The child must be born by now.
Onward. On to the south-west until they reached the fort. Hunger displaced all other worries: the
voyageurs
didn't bat an eyelid when in crossing Coronation Gulf in the open sea their boats were surprised by a heavy storm coming up from behind; they fought all day to keep the light canoes from capsizing, and towards evening the storm chased them towards a rocky shore at breakneck speed. The sailors thought the end was near; the
voyageurs
, on the other hand, saw land â at last land, tent sites and rich meals. John sat stoically in the boat, entering each of the islands in his logbook as they passed by on the right and left, while Hood bent over his sketchbook and drew the outlines showing how the rocks were formed right under the foam of the sea. âMaps, observations, reports and pictures,' John had said. âOnce we start to think only in terms of meat and firewood, we won't get very far.' It was a similar situation in the storm. So they held out, each in his own way, until they reached a sheltering bay which no rational mind could have expected or hardly an eye could have seen. They landed in fog and darkness and collapsed just where they stood.
In his dream, John saw images of storm and rescue and of a newly built, perfectly functioning picture rotor which projected them on a wall. He tried to impress the construction graphically on his memory, but in the morning he could no longer put it together. Still, he felt renewed vigour: whenever machines appeared in his dreams, his sleep was especially sound.
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A few days later, by the estuary of a river John named after Hood, they jettisoned their superfluous baggage â above all,
the remaining presents â and piled it on a small knoll, built a stone pyramid over it, and placed a British flag on top. At least they wanted the Eskimos to meet their successors in a friendlier way.
Then they paddled up the Hood river until a gigantic waterfall forced them to a halt. Between rock needles rising up like walls, the torrents of water plunged down in cascades â a lonely, treeless place of solemn beauty. It was a good place for the name of the liberator of the slaves, and the appropriate counterpart to Hearne's Bloody Fall. Contentedly John entered the name âWilberforce' on his map.
It had turned cold, and game or tracks were nowhere to be discovered. The pemmican was at an end. Junius pointed at the rocks: a slimy lichen that was edible grew on the wall face. It tasted awful, but it was better than nothing. At night everyone lay awake in the tent. They observed that the lichen caused vomiting and diarrhoea. Hood suffered the most. He kept nothing inside him.
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On the next day, 28 August, again only two fish and one partridge; also two sacks of rock lichens. The
voyageurs
called them
tripes de roche
â ârock tripe.' John had the large canoe rebuilt to make two smaller ones, which were easier to carry and sufficient for crossing rivers. Then two more miles of walking, very arduous. Thus ended the day. It was snowing.
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None of the Englishmen was a good hunter. John was not quick enough, Back not sufficiently patient, Hood was a bad shot, and the doctor was shortsighted. At most, Hepburn had some luck now and then. It was a fact that without Crédit, Vaillant, Solomon Bélanger, Michel Teroaoteh and the interpreters they would have starved to death. But recently the better a
voyageur
was as a hunter, the more he tended to ignore orders. For days and nights they stayed away from the camp, refused to account for used or retained ammunition, and secretly consumed some of the game they had shot by themselves. Only Solomon Bélanger remained honest.