258 WORST JOURNEY IN THE WORLD 
got more frost-bitten than the others, and wanted more fat, 
I also got heartburn. However, before taking more fat I 
increased my biscuits to 24 oz., but this did not satisfy 
me; I wanted fat. Bill and I now took the same diet, he 
giving me 4 oz. of butter which he could not eat, and I 
giving him 4 oz. of biscuit which did not satisfy my 
wants. We both therefore had 12 0z. pemmican, 16 oz. 
biscuit and 4 oz. butter a day, but we did not always 
finish our butter. This is an extremely good ration, and we 
had enough to eat during most of this journey. We cer- 
tainly could not have faced the conditions without. 
I will not say that I was entirely easy in my mind as 
we lay out that blizzard somewhere off Terror Point; I 
don’t know how the others were feeling. The unearthly 
banging going on underneath us may have had something 
to do with it. But we were quite lost in the pressure and it 
might be the deuce and all to get out in the dark. The 
wind eddied and swirled quite out of its usual straight- 
forward way, and the tent got badly snowed up: our 
sledge had disappeared long ago. The position was not 
altogether a comfortable one. 
Tuesday night and Wednesday it blew up to force 10, 
temperature from - 7° to +2°. And then it began to 
modify and get squally. By 3 a.m. on Thursday (July 13) 
the wind had nearly ceased, the temperature was falling 
and the stars were shining through detached clouds. We 
were soon getting our breakfast, which always consisted 
of tea, followed by pemmican. We soaked our biscuits 
in both. Then we set to work to dig out the sledges and 
tent, a big job taking several hours. At last we got started. 
In that jerky way in which I was still managing to jot a 
few sentences down each night as a record, I wrote: 
“Did 74 miles during day—seems a marvellous run 
—rose and fell over several ridges of Terror—in afternoon 
suddenly came on huge crevasse on one of these—we were 
quite high on Terror—moon saved us walking in—it 
might have taken sledge and all.” 
To do seven miles in a day, a distance which had taken 
us nearly a week in the past, was very heartening. The 
