[ti:The Mountaineering Club Orchestra - Cruising In The Ice] [ar:The Mountaineering Club Orchestra] [al:A Start on Such a Night Is Full of Promise] [la:EN] [re:LRCgenerator.com] [ve:3.00] [00:06.36]As we leave the land behind us we are followed by hundreds [00:08.88]of kittiwakes, in billowy masses of white and blue, chattering [00:11.98]in endless chorus, now sinking as they swoop low on extended [00:15.69]wing over the vessel's wake, now rising as they soar lightly in [00:19.41]their graceful evolutions up towards the blue sky. [00:22.87]Between heavens and seas, the black form of the Jason, labouring and moaning [00:26.90]as her engines drive her westward. Behind us the rocky coast [00:30.21]of Iceland, a fringe of violet blue, is slowly sinking into the [00:33.33]sea. Behind us lie home and life : what lies before us ? We [00:37.84]cannot tell, but it must be beautiful. A start on such a night [00:42.08]is full of promise. [00:44.35]I am sitting alone in the stern of the vessel and gazing out [00:47.93]into the night at the gathering clouds, which, still tinged by [00:51.28]the sun, are sailing over the horizon to the north-west. Behind [00:54.75]them lies Greenland, as yet invisible. [00:58.06]All nature is, as it were, sunk in her own dreams, and [01:01.11]gently and quietly the mind, too, is drawn back into itself [01:04.33]to pursue the train of its own thoughts, which unconsciously [01:07.34]borrow a reflection of the colours of the sky. [01:10.64]Among all things that are beautiful in life are not such [01:14.04]nights most beautiful? [01:15.26]And life - is it much more than hope and remembrance? [01:18.61]Hope is of the morning, it may be, but on such nights as this [01:20.47]do not memories, all the fair memories of bygone days, arise [01:24.42]dewy and fresh from the mists of the distant past, and sweep [01:28.07]by in a long undulating train, sunlit and alluring, till they dis- [01:31.81]appear once more in the melting western glow? And all [01:35.52]that is mean, all that is odious, lies behind, sunk in the dark [01:38.78]ocean of oblivion. [01:41.10]The very next day, June 5, we reached the ice, which this [01:44.57]year has come a long way south. [01:48.06]The impression which the floe-ice of the Arctic seas makes [01:49.40]upon the traveller the first time he sees it is very remarkable. (...) [01:52.91]The drifting ice, a huge white glittering expanse stretching as far as the eye can reach, and throwing a white reflection [01:58.88]far around upon the air and mist ; the dark sea, often showing [02:03.25]black as ink against the white ; and above all this a sky, now [02:06.71]gleaming cloudless and pale-blue, now dark and threatening [02:10.20]vrith driving scud, or again wrapped in densest fog - now [02:14.10]glowing in all the rich poetry of sunrise or sunset colour, [02:17.68]or slumbering through the lingering twilight of the summer [02:20.18]night. And then in the dark season of the year come those [02:23.69]wonderful nights of glittering stars and northern lights playing [02:26.75]far and wide above the icy deserts, or when the moon, here [02:30.35]most melancholy, wanders on her silent way through scenes [02:34.00]of desolation and death. In these regions the heavens count [02:37.44]for more than elsewhere ; they give colour and character, [02:41.34]while the landscape, simple and unvarying, has no power to [02:44.25]draw the eye. [02:45.83]Never shall I forget the first time I entered these regions.