您现在的位置:首页>>英语泛读教程三>>UNIT 5

It's Tough at the Top

 

Mount Everest has long been a great attraction to millions of people throughout the world. Many people have risked and lost their lives in the course of expedition. Modern explorers, however, are becoming more fascinated by the ultimate fate of earlier doomed explorers.

  

"Because it's there," George Mallory reportedly replied when asked why he wanted to climb Mount Everest. The only man to take part in all three of the British pioneering expeditions in the 1920s, Mallory was driven by a fascination to reach the summit of the mountain with which he had formed a strong personal bond with. "It's an hell-like mountain, cold and treacherous," he once wrote in a letter home from Everest Base Camp. "The risks of getting caught are too great; the margin of strength when men are at great heights is too small. Perhaps it is mere folly to go up again. But how can I be out of the hunt?"

In 1920 when Francis Younghusband, the President of the Royal Geographical Society (RGS), first put forward the idea of supporting an expedition to Everest, the mountain was still a mystery. At 8,848 meters Everest was almost 1,500 meters higher than anyone had previously climbed. There was even doubt as to whether it was possible to breathe at such altitude. At the time no one had been within 65 kilometers of the mountain, which could only be approached through the unknown kingdoms of Nepal or China's Tibet.

With the North and South Poles already discovered, Younghusband had his sights set on the "third pole", setting up the joint RGS/Alpine Club, Mount Everest Committee. "The accomplishment of such a feat will elevate the human spirit and will give man, especially us geographers, a feeling that we are acquiring a true mastery of our surroundings. This is the incalculable good which the ascent of Mount Everest will confer," he said.

High Hopes

George Mallory and Andrew Irvine had set out from Camp VI on 8 June 1924, attempting to become the first men to set foot on the summit. They never returned. Today, with more than 550 mountaineers from 20 countries having reached the summit, the mystery has shifted away from Everest the mountain, towards Mallory the man. In March 1999, 75 years after Mallory's death on the mountain, the Mallory and Irvine Research Expedition set out for Everest, not because it was there, but because he was. Leader of the 1999 expedition Eric Simonson and his team were hoping to discover whether or not the two men achieved their goal before they died.

They had only a few clues to go on. In 1933 an ice axe, thought to be Irvine's, had been found on the route, and in 1975, the body of a climber was discovered nearby by a Chinese climber who described it as being an "old English dead" on account of the vintage clothes the body still wore. However, the identity of the dead climber has never been confirmed. Simonson's team expected to relocate the body during their high level search. They anticipated it to be Irvine, the inexperienced Oxford graduate who had possibly fallen, dropping his ice axe on the icy slabs of Everest's North Face. Mallory's fate was unknown.    

Searching amongst the snow gullies and scouring ledges at 8 320 meters, Simonson's team discovered a body, the skin bleached porcelain white by the sun. It was lying face down, head and arms frozen into the earth. Only the collars of the tattered clothes were intact and on one was uncovered a manufacturer's label, still legible despite years of vicious assaults by ice and wind. Beneath this was another label, which they could all easily read. In simple carefully stitched letters was written: G Mallory. Mallory,'s name on the clothes so surprised the search party their first thought was to wonder why Irvine had been wearing his climbing partner's shirt. The discovery of Mallory's body prompted admiration of expedition search member, Jake Norton. "As a climber, to know what Mallory did was phenomenal. He was a powerful tough guy, who fought till the end," he told reporters.

During the early decades of the twentieth century, it was this strength, tenacity and love of adventure which had established Mallory as a leading figure in the close-knit climbing world. He was an obvious choice for the Mount Everest Committee as part of the first reconnaissance expedition in 1921. For Mallory this was the opportunity of a lifetime. It was a challenge, but that only increased its appeal, for as he once said: " To refuse the adventure is to run the risk of drying up like a pea in its shell."

By 1924, after two exhausting and unsuccessful attempts to the mountain on expeditions in 1921 and 1922, his early enthusiasm began to wane. He was now 38 years old. A family man with three children, he had just begun a teaching job at Cambridge. Yet, he couldn't resist one final attempt to complete a task he had started. Meeting Irvine, recommended by Noel Odell, the expedition's geologist, buoyed him up for the challenge. Although Irvine was young with no track record as a climber, he was strong, resourceful and good-natured. The expedition "superman", they called him. Mallory had warmed to him immediately, describing him as "a fine fellow", who should, "prove a splendid companion on the mountain."

Before departing for the 1924 expedition Mallory had confided in a friend that it would be, "more of war than an adventure", and that he was prepared for a siege on the summit. Two attempts were to be made, one with oxygen and one without but Everest repelled both attempts. Mallory's climbing teams were defeated through lack of oxygen and exhaustion. He refused to give up and was determined to risk one last try. Only Odell and Irvine were in a fit state to partner him. For Mallory it was a simple choice. He threw his lot in with Irvine and the pair set off on their fatal summit bid.

The day after Mallory and Irvine departed for the summit, Odell saw them for the last time from a crag at 7 925 meters. A sudden clearing above him unveiled the whole summit ridge. On a snow slope, clinging to the steep North Face, he noticed, first Mallory, then Irvine approach a broad rock step. As he stood, his eyes tracking them against the mosaic of rock and snow, the weather closed in again, clouding their fate for the next 75 years.

    Frozen to the Core

In finding Mallory's body, Simonson's team had helped to come to a theory of how he had died. Prior to the recent expedition it was thought that Mallory and Irvine had been climbing at 8 535 meters, and could have either fallen or simply laid down exhausted in the snow to die. But after seeing the body, Norton is sure they were climbing tied together when Mallory fell. "There was a rope wrapped round his waist. You could see black and blues on him, he probably had internal bleeding. He slid down the North Face digging into the snow or gravel, crossed his legs in pain and died a few moments later."

Other more significant questions remain. Despite the initial find of the body, Everest was reluctant to give away too many more clues. The team failed to find the camera, lent to Mallory by his climbing partner Howard Somervell, the existence of which may prove whether or not the pair made it to the top. However, searching for needles in a hostile, windscorched haystack of rock and ice is a perilous business. Between 8 230 meters and the summit, Simonson's team counted 17 other bodies, besides Mallory's. In the face of such danger the expedition's fascination with the man, must be almost as great as the man's own fascination with the mountain.

Macabre though Simonson's quest is, it is not unique. In the autumn of 1984 the face of John Torrington appeared in national newspapers. What was unusual about this was that Torrington had been dead for 138 years, buried under 1.8 meters of Arctic permafrost. Torrington had been chief Stoker aboard the Erebus which along with the Terror sailed with Sir John Franklin during his expedition to chart the Northwest Passage. The expedition had set sail from the Thames River on 19 May 1845, carrying with it the hope of the nation for the discovery of a navigable route through the Arctic into the Pacific Ocean.

Neither ship was ever seen again and 129 men lost their lives in a polar enigma which mesmerized Victorian Britain. The conclusion of the 25 major search expeditions, which set out to solve the puzzle was that Franklin's men had succumbed to scurry, starvation, stress and hypothermia. In 1981 American anthropologist Owen Beattie, set out to apply modern scientific and forensic technique to any remaining evidence of Franklin's expedition. Over the following five years Beattie scoured Franklin's expedition sites for clues. His most grisly task was the exhumation and autopsies of three expedition members, one of whom was John Torrington.

For men buried in the year that the Corn Laws were repealed, they were in a remarkable state of preservation. Being kept in the frozen earth since 1846 had prevented major outward appearances of decay. Torrington looked very much as he has done in life; skin was still on his face, he had kept his teeth, eyes and most of his hair. Samples of his body tissue looked almost recent in origin and certain bacterial stains collected had even survived the big freeze.

The autopsy showed Torrington was an ill man when he died. His lungs were blackened with atmospheric pollutants and he showed evidence of tuberculosis. There were also signs that the ultimate cause of death had been pneumonia. However, what struck Beattie most were abnormally high levels of lead found in samples of hair, indicating acute lead poisoning. Lead poisoning can lead to weakness, fatigue, stupor, neurosis and erratic behavior, far from ideal conditions for surviving long exposure to the harsh Arctic environment. Beattie confirmed the elevated lead levels in John Hartnell and William Braine, the two other exhumed bodies. In 1845, tinned preserved food was a modern invention, tin cans having been only patented in England in 1811. They were made from a wrought-iron sheet bent into a cylinder and joined along the seam with solder containing more than 90 percent lead. Franklin's expedition carried nearly 8 000 lead-soldered tins containing meat, soup, vegetables and pemmican─a pressed cake of shredded dry meat. Beattie's examination of tins collected near the site of the graves confirmed the high levels of lead in the solder and also that the side seams of some tins were incomplete, increasing the risk of contamination.

Beattie's gruesome raising of Franklin's dead, had answered the age-old question of what happened to the ill-fated Northwest Passage expedition. Weakened by the physical and neurological side effects of lead poisoning, the men would have not been physically able to fight off the diseases that were the eventual cause of death.

 

    The Missing Link

   Simonson's expedition returned from Everest at the start of June 1999. He has similar hopes of answering the questions surrounding the last hours of Mallory and Irvine. Although Mallory's camera was not recovered, various other artifacts were unearthed, including an oxygen bottle, Mallory's watch, an altimeter, glacier goggles, a pocketknife and several letters from family members. An American documentary team, who traveled with the expedition, is already planning to run a series of forensic examination on the artifacts, similar to those of Beattie. They hope to piece together the many possible scenarios of Mallory and Irvine's last day. Beattie's solution to the Franklin mystery took four expeditions and Simonson is not expecting miracles. Already he is looking ahead to the next year and planning a second expedition. Next time he wants to look for Irvine's body and the elusive camera, which he still believes is on the mountain. But for the present, the mystery of both the man and the mountain live on.

(1 973 words)

(From Geographical, September 1999 )

TOP   

北京语言大学网络教育学院 (屏幕分辨率:800*600)