[The Great Stone of Sardis by Frank R. Stockton]@TWC D-Link book
The Great Stone of Sardis

CHAPTER XXV
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But in regard to any other expedition reaching the open polar sea under the ice, Sammy had grave doubts.

If a whale could not get out of that sea there was every reason why nobody else should try to get into it; the Dipsey's entrance was the barest scratch, and he would not try it again if the north pole were marked out by a solid mountain of gold.
Roland Clewe refused in all personal interviews to receive the laudations offered him as the discoverer of the pole.

It was true that the expedition had been planned by him, and all the arrangements and mechanisms which had insured its success were of his invention, but he steadily insisted that Mr.Gibbs and Sammy, as representatives of the party, should be awarded the glory of the great discovery.
The remarkable success of this most remarkable expedition aroused a widespread spirit of arctic exploration.

Not only were voyages under the ice discussed and planned, but there was a strong feeling in favor of overland travel by means of the electric-motor sledges; and in England and Norway expeditions were organized for the purpose of reaching the polar sea in this way.

It was noticed in most that was written and said upon this subject that one of the strongest inducements for arctic expeditions was the fact that there would be found on the shores of the polar sea a telegraph station, by means of which instantaneous news of success could be transmitted.
The interest of sportsmen, especially of the hunters of big game, was greatly excited by the statement that there was a whale in the polar sea.


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