Survivor: The Autobiography (66 page)

I bank steeply around and set my course southeastward, cutting across the bouldered fjords, flying low over the hilltop farms, the rock fences and the small, green fields of Kerry. Now, I can check the engine – All cylinders hitting on the left switch – All cylinders hitting on the right – And all instrument readings are normal.

Sheep and cattle graze on their sloping pastures. Horse-drawn carts crawl along their shiny roads. People move across walled-in barnyards, through doorways of the primitive stone buildings. It must be a hard place to gain a living from the soil. And it would be worse than New England for a forced landing.

Even the wish to sleep has left, and with it the phantoms and voices. I didn’t notice their absence before; but now, as I settle down for the last six hundred miles to Paris, I realize that they remained behind with the fishing fleet. They vanished with that first strange touch of Europe and of man. Since I sighted those specks on the water, I’ve been as wide awake as though I started the flight this morning after a warm breakfast and a full night’s sleep. The thought of floating off in a bed of feathers has lost its attractiveness.

Time is no longer endless, or the horizon destitute of hope. The strain of take-off, storm, and ocean, lies behind. There’ll be no second night above the clouds, no more grappling with misty walls of ice. There’s only one more island to cross – only the narrow tip of an island. I look at England’s outline on my map. And then, within an hour, I’ll see the coast of France; and beyond that, Paris and Le Bourget. As Nova Scotia and Newfoundland were stepping-stones from America, Ireland and England are stepping-stones to Europe. Yesterday, each strip of sea I crossed was an advance messenger of the ocean. Today, these islands down below are heralds to a continent.

It’s as though a curtain has fallen behind me, shutting off the stagelike unreality of this transatlantic flight. It’s been like a theatre where the play carries you along in time and place until you forget you’re only a spectator. You grow unaware of the walls around you, of the programme clasped in your hand, even of your body, its breath, pulse, and being. You live with the actors and the setting, in a different age and place. It’s not until the curtain drops that consciousness and body reunite. Then, you turn your back on the stage, step out into the cool night, under the lights of streets, between the displays of store windows. You feel life surging in the crowd around you, life as it was when you entered the theatre, hours before. Life is real. It always was real. The stage, of course, was the dream. All that transpired there is now a memory, shut off by the curtain, by the doors of the theatre, by the passing minutes of time.

Striking Ireland was like leaving the doors of a theatre – phantoms for actors; cloud islands and temples for settings; the ocean behind me, an empty stage. The flight across is already like a dream. I’m over villages and fields, back to land and wakefulness and a type of flying that I know. I’m myself again, in earthly skies and over earthly ground. My hands and feet and eyelids move, and I can think as I desire. That third, controlling element has retired to the background. I’m no longer three existences in one. My mind is able to command, and my body follows out its orders with precision.

Ireland, England, France, Paris! The night at Paris!
This
night at Paris – less than six hours from Now –
France and Paris!
It’s like a fairy tale. Yesterday I walked on Roosevelt Field; today I’ll walk on Le Bourget.

SOURCES & ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The editor has made every effort to locate all persons having any rights in the selections appearing in this anthology and to secure permission from the holders of such rights. Any queries regarding the use of material should be addressed to the editor c/o the publishers.

Andrée, S. A., Nils Strindberg, Knut Fraenkel,
The Andrée Diaries
, John Lane The Bodley Head, 1931

Barrington, A. J., ‘Diary of a West Coast Prospecting Party’,
Early Travellers in New Zealand
, ed. Nancy M. Taylor, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1959

Blashford-Snell, J.,
A Taste for Adventure
, Readers Union, 1979

Bonatti, W.,
On the Heights
, Rupert Hart-Davis, 1964

Byrd, R. E.,
Alone
, Neville Spearman, 1955

Callahan, S.,
Adrift
, Bantam Press, 1986. Copyright © Steven Callahan 1986

Casteret, N.,
The Descent of Pierre Saint-Martin
, Dent, 1955

Corbett, J.,
The Temple Tiger
, Oxford India Paperbacks, 1997

Cousteau, J.,
The Silent World of Jacques Cousteau
, Hamish Hamilton, 1953

Danziger, N.,
Danziger’s Travels
, Paladin, 1988. Copyright © N. Danziger 1987. Reprinted by Permission of Harper Collins Publishers.

Drummond, E., ‘Mirror, Mirror’,
Ascent
, 1973

Fiennes, R.,
To the Ends of the Earth
, Mandarin, 1995. Copyright © Ranulph Fiennes 1983. Reprinted by permission of Curtis Brown

Fleming, P.,
News from Tartary
, Futura, 1980. Reprinted by permission

Giles, E.,
Australia Twice Traversed
, 1889

Hedin, S.,
My Life as an Explorer
, Cassell, 1926

Herzog, M.,
Annapurna
, Jonathan Cape

Heyerdahl, T.,
The Kon-Tiki Expedition
, Penguin, 1963

Hillary, E.,
High Adventure
, Hodder & Stoughton, 1957

Lindbergh, C.,
The Spirit of St Louis
, John Murray 1953

Mawson, D.,
The Home of the Blizzard
, Hodder & Stoughton, 1930

Ridgway, J., Blyth, C.,
Fighting Chance
, Paul Hamlyn, 1966. Copyright © J. Ridgway & C. Blyth 1966

Roosevelt, T.,
Through the Brazilian Wilderness
, John Murray, 1914

Saint-Exupéry, A. de, Wind, Sand & Stars, Heinemann, 1939. Trans. copyright © Lewis Galantíre

Scott, R. F.,
Scott’s Last Expedition
, John Murray, 1923

Shackleton., E.,
South
, Lyons Press, 1998

Snow, S., ‘Kings of the Equator’,
Explorers’ And Travellers’ Tales
, ed. O. Tcherine, The Adventurers Club, 1963. Copyright © Sebastian Snow 1958

Thomas, B., ‘The First Crossing of the Great Souths Arabian Desert’,
Explorer’s All
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Van der Post, L.,
Venture to the Interior
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Waterton, C.,
Wanderings in South America
, Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1891

ENDNOTES

1
. Because of this blinding, suffocating drift, in the Antarctic winds of only moderate velocity have the punishing force of full-fledged hurricanes elsewhere.

2
. Half a gale. The velocity of wind is denoted by numbers (1–10).

3
. The gorge of the Olivine River, into which Forgotten River flows.

4
. Alabaster Pass.

5
. Lost Trail Pass into Montana on the west slope of the Continental Divide.

6
. Bitterroot River, originally named Clark’s River by the explorers.

7
. At Weippe, Idaho.

8
. The Chopunnish, or Nez Perces, were located on the Salmon and Snake rivers.

9
. These stoves were fuelled with butane gas.

10
. Singular of Bedouin.

11
. The night’s vigil proved to have been unnecessary, for at dawn the tracks of a sand-wolf were traced near by; its whoop had been mistaken for the war-cry of raiders in the final act.

12
. Familiar to British breeders as the Salukhi hound.

13
. Native women.

14
. The Prince of Ala-shan.

15
. Colonel Prejevalesky’s setter.

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