EITTEH COLD MORNING. 237 



CHAP. XV. 



Bitter Cold. — Eeindeer-shooting. — Three right and left 

 Shots. — Delight of the Sailors. — Black Fox. — Ponche a 

 la Spitzberg. — Description of the Eeindeer. — High Con- 

 dition he attains. — Excellence of his Elesh. — His Igno- 

 rance of Man. — Anecdotes. — Pine Valley. — Unexplored 

 Channel. — Near Heinlopen Straits. — Unjust Attack. 

 — Marrow-bones. — Ice-borne Boulders. — Good "Bag." 

 — Two singular Mountains. — Thymen's Straits. — Meri- 

 torious Deer. — Eeceipt for Kabobs. — Splendid Deer 

 Porest. — Eejoin the Sloop. 



By seven in tlie evening we had readied the 

 anchorage opposite to a valley where I had 

 killed some reindeer ia 1858 ; but it being 

 Sunday we did not land, nor was there any 

 inducement to do so, as we could see the 

 entire valley with telescopes from the deck, 

 and there was not a single reindeer visible 

 in it. 



On the 25th we went ashore in both boats 

 at 4 A.M. of a bitterly cold morniag (thermo- 

 meter 16° in the companion-way). After 

 hauling the boats high and dry out of the reach 



