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Authors: Wayne Johnston

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Dr. Cook dedicated the articles to the memory of Francis Stead, the “resourceful, patient, kind and reflective Dr. Stead, to whose courage and ingenuity the surviving members of the North Greenland expedition, myself included, owe their lives.” He said that had Francis
Stead lived, he would one day have taken his place among the great explorers of the world, “although I can think of no man to whom self-glorification mattered less, no explorer whose motives were more pure than Dr. Stead’s. He laboured in the service of mankind, his goal the furtherance of human knowledge. For him, as for all explorers worthy of the name, exploration was not a contest but a calling.”

I fastened on this description of Francis Stead’s character. No one, not even Dr. Cook in his letters to me, not even my mother or Uncle Edward in his excoriations, had ever described him at such length. The dedication and description were no doubt inspired in part by guilt, and were perhaps written in the knowledge, or with the possibility in mind, that I would read them.

The
Century
articles were less interesting than the photographs. They were written in the tone of adventure stories. “Dr. Cook confronts perils of the Arctic and survives!” read the subheadline to one story, whose headline read, “STRANDED.” The articles were nothing like his letters, and it occurred to me that the former might have been ghost-written.

In a future letter to me, Dr. Cook would say this of the photographs:

“How often I told myself that if we did not survive, the photographs I took would be our legacy. I remember thinking, What a pity if by the time they are found, they are spoiled, or are spoiled by some well-intended fool before they make it home. I wrote a letter for whomever might have happened on the ship after we were gone, instructing him on the importance of the photographs and their proper care. My main concern, of course, was for the welfare of the crew, but I could do little more for them than they could do for me. I stayed on deck or on the ice all day exposing plates. One hundred of them. With the poison we had planned to use to kill animals for specimens, I made prussic acid, which passed for a fixing agent when my hypo ran out. Needless to say, I had the darkroom to myself. To think that, out there in the Antarctic, my life was never more at risk than when I was at my photographs!”

According to the credits, all the photographs had been taken by Dr. Cook. Polar bears, penguins. One of the ice-bound
Belgica
looking almost haloed in the moonlight, its masts, spars, rigging, furled sails and lifeboats rimed with frost. Three crew members, two of whom, according to the caption, “hailed from Newfoundland,” looking cheerful despite their thirteen-month confinement in the ice. There was one photograph of the burial in a trench of ice of Lt. Emile Danco, who, in spite of Dr. Cook’s ministrations, had died from pneumonia.

By far the most interesting of the photographs were those of Dr. Cook—that is, those he had taken of himself. I had seen photographs of him before in newspapers, but none like these.

There were six photographs, each titled “Dr. Cook, self-portrait.” It seemed somehow apt that he should have no one to take his picture but himself. To me, it was the measure of his solitude, the loneliness of the life he led. Who better to photograph a man who, having gone for so long without friendship, had written as he had to a sixteen-year-old he had never met?

He always photographed himself in profile, always from the right, never, except in one case, looking at the camera, seeming not to know that it was there as he stared off at some point outside the frame. This illusion was subverted by the caption, “self-portrait,” and by the high quality of the photograph, evidence of the effort he had put into it, into making himself seem disdainful of the camera. The amount of contrivance that had gone into making the photograph seem uncontrived.

I tried to imagine him out there in the Antarctic, setting up his camera on its tripod, looking to an observer as if he was preparing to photograph whatever the lens was pointed at, then coming out from beneath the blanket to assume his position in front of the camera, composing his expression, clicking the button on the shutter release that was attached by a cord to the camera. He could not have been satisfied with just one try. He could not have been sure that in one try, or even in ten, he would get a photograph that he liked or would survive the journey home. Click after click of the
button, puff after puff of smoke, slide after slide of magnesium igniting, the polar white for an instant becoming whiter with an incandescence that in the photographs was reflected in his eyes. Dr. Cook, posing for hours, engrossed in self-commemoration in the middle of the Antarctic, watched from afar by his subordinates, who, while he was thus engaged, went about some tedious tasks he had assigned them. Self-portrait. Another way of saying that in every one of these pictures, in his right hand, which is always out of frame, he holds the shutter release.

I could manage no suspension of disbelief when I looked at those photographs, could not help seeing the out-of-frame camera or the shutter release in his unseen hand.

“Self-portrait, 1898.” Glass-plate negative, the method used in studio portraits—a studio being the only place other explorers would have their portraits taken, for in a portrait one is meant to look one’s polished best. Like Peary, who in his portraits always looked so forthright, so earnest, so unashamed of wanting to create a good impression. But not Dr. Cook. In one photograph he faced away from the camera, almost at a right angle, turned just enough towards it that both eyes were in the picture, the far one hardly more than a glint of light on the bridge of his nose, the near one partially obscured by a lock of hair he could not have bothered brushing back. He looked as though no one would see the photographs but him, as if the camera was a means of self-examination, as if his intention was to produce a picture of himself that he could study in detachment, pore over to see what this individual could tell him of his species.

None of the photographs showed enough of his surroundings to give a sense of context. Some snow on a rock behind him, over his shoulder a glimpse of what only someone who knew the circumstances of the photograph would recognize as cloud or ice. One photo of him indoors, in profile to a bare wall. Another, captioned “Cook the photographer, by Dr. Cook,” must have been a photograph of his reflection in a mirror, taken so close to the mirror you could not see any of its border, Dr. Cook holding in his hands a large box camera
and smiling: a photograph of a man staring into his own eyes. A clever trick. And perhaps, therefore, that smile.

The only hint to the uninformed of what was taking place when these photographs were snapped was his dishevelment: his long hair, uneven beard, sunken eyes, gaunt complexion; the frayed edges of his coat and shirt. He looked resigned to the fact that by the time the world saw these images of him, he would be no more.

I scrutinized Dr. Cook’s face in the photographs, searching for ways that he resembled me. I stood in front of a mirror that hung on the wall of my bedroom and compared my face to the face in one of the photographs from
Century
, which I had pasted on the glass (and which I took down afterwards so that no one else would see it). I looked at my reflected face. I looked at Dr. Cook’s face. I felt foolish. The mirror was no help. I had fancied that, using it, I would be able to see both of our images at once, but the only way to see Dr. Cook’s was to look away from mine and vice versa. I had never examined my face in this manner before, assessing every feature, staring into my own eyes. I felt self-conscious and at a disadvantage to Dr. Cook in his time-stopped, static world, his face composed, frozen, while mine changed from one moment to the next. It was not until I placed a recent photograph of myself beside the photographs of him that I was able to make a proper comparison, though still I did not find what I was hoping for. We did not look completely unalike, but nor was there an unmistakable resemblance.

I took from my bureau drawer a photograph of Francis Stead that I had cut from the newspaper, the photograph that had run with the story of his disappearance. I placed the three photographs side by side on my dresser. I looked as much like Francis Stead as I did like Dr. Cook. Or rather, I bore no particular resemblance to either. I placed a photograph of my mother (“Amelia, the wicked one”) in between those of my father and Dr. Cook, and the one of me directly below hers. My mother with Dr. Stead on one side and Dr. Cook on the other. (I did not, it seemed to me, even resemble my mother. I hoped this meant that in other, less superficial ways, we were also unalike.)
Judging by how old she looked, the photograph must have been taken just before or just after her trip to New York, on one side or the other of her meeting with Dr. Cook.

I tried to imagine a blending of my mother’s features with those of Dr. Cook, but I could not. They were of opposite physical types, she delicate and small-boned to the point of near translucency, while he was generally large-featured. His hair was straight but thick, his forehead high. He had full lips, sharp cheekbones and a nose that looked thinner in profile than it did from the front. He had let his hair grow long on the expedition, though it looked as if he had washed and brushed it frequently. His beard was unkempt, but affectedly so, as if he was cultivating a certain look, as if he did not trust being an explorer to make him look like one.

Perhaps, when I was older, I would look more like Dr. Cook, I thought, until I realized that no one who did not have eyes like his could ever really look like him.

Though he almost never looked at the camera, the first thing I noticed in all the photographs were his eyes. Whether he was at the centre of the photograph or just within the frame—if his face made up the entire photograph or just a fraction of it—my eyes went instantly to his and would have, I was certain, even if I had never heard of him before. However much my face changed as I matured, I would never have eyes like his. It was partly because of their shape: the whites were so large that the asymmetric lids did not reach the irises, either above or below, so the irises were wholly visible. But there was something else about them, an impression they conveyed for which I could find no words.

• C
HAPTER
T
EN

My dearest Devlin:

In my second letter to you, I spoke of redressing the harm I have done. What, if these letters are the first step on the path to atonement, is to be the second step?

I decided, during my long confinement in the Antarctic, that I owe you nothing less than to
be
your father. I also decided that a public acknowledgment of my patrimony would be folly for both of us, not only for the reasons I set forth in my first letter, but because it would deprive me of my most valued possession, and therefore would prevent me from giving or leaving it to you
.

I am an explorer. Before all else—doctor, brother, husband (should it be God’s will that I become one)—but excepting father, I am an explorer. What greater thing, therefore, can I offer than to make you one? What greater thing can I offer you but my vocation?

When you are old enough, and strong enough, will you go with me on my expeditions? It would mean a great deal to me, more than you can possibly imagine, if one day you said yes
.

As I wrote to you before, I have often taken the sons of rich men with me on my journeys to the Arctic. They think that by sailing to the North with Dr. Cook, they make their passage into manhood. At the same time, I am under instruction from their fee-paying fathers to satisfy their every need and make sure they endure just enough hardship to convince them that they are having an
“adventure.” A trip north with me has been the graduation present of many a student from Harvard and Yale
.

I mention these young men only to allay any concerns you may have about your lack of experience in Arctic travel. I am quite adept at taking young men to the Arctic and bringing them back home alive and well again. With the Arctic, as with all things, there has to be a first time. Even to those of us who know it best, it was once unknown
.

It must seem strange to you, my extending this invitation, in light of what happened to Francis Stead and the part in it that, however inadvertently, I played
.

I must confess that it is not only by way of discharging my debt to you, not only so that, as father and son, we might assay a common goal, that I am making this request. Nor am I unaware of how presumptuous it is of me to ask that you commit to such an undertaking with a man whose hand you have yet to shake, whose face in the real light of existence you have yet to see, who has forbidden you to write to him
.

If you were to join me on my expeditions, I would make you my protégé. And if, under any circumstances, it becomes apparent that I will never realize my life’s ambition, you, my son, if by then you felt I had prepared you well enough, could take up my quest
.

I have felt more oppressively than ever lately, in the wake of the Antarctic expedition, what the Eskimos call
piblocto,
the weight of the world, pressing down upon me. The strain of standing alone beneath that weight, supporting it without even the hope of being relieved of it at some point in the future now seems more than I can bear. Often, during the long wait in the Antarctic for a deliverance that for all I knew might never come, I thought of you, took solace in knowing that even if I died, I would leave behind a son who might himself have sons and daughters. I thought of my first wife, Libby, and our unnamed baby girl, and of how, when Francis Stead told me that the boy whom all the world thought was his was really mine, it seemed that both of my lost children had been restored to me
.

Not even if he had sons old enough to play the part could Robert Peary see the point of protégés. The only success that will please Peary is his own. But I, too, it seems, am trapped. No one but you can free me from the isolation of ambition. Nor would renouncing my ambition free me, even if I could renounce it, for I believe that I was called to my vocation as priests and ministers are called to theirs. I believe that, as I once wrote of Francis Stead, I labour not only for myself, but in the service of mankind
.

It may seem to you that there are any number of young men who would be willing to pledge themselves to me—men in their twenties who, unlike you, are now old enough to go with me on my expeditions; men I could now be tutoring instead of waiting for you to come of age, thus increasing the likelihood that I or someone of my tutelage will gain the prize. But none of them is my son
.

You are only twenty years old. It may be that you are too young to understand the implications of saying yes or no. For yourself
and
for me. It would not be fair to exact from you a promise that years from now you might regret but would hold yourself to anyway because you gave your word
.

You could say no and think that your doing so was the cause of some misfortune I might suffer in the years to come, some mishap in the Arctic that, if not for my preoccupying doubt, would not have happened
.

So let me be clear about what it is that I am asking of you. First, any feelings of guilt on your part would be unwarranted. You should not accept my invitation out of fear of what will happen to me if you do not. I have described my condition only so that you could better understand my nature, not to extort from you the answer that would please me most
.

I am sure that your aunt and uncle, for obvious reasons, would not want you to take up exploration. Weighed against the consideration of whatever distress you might cause them are things for which I and no man I have ever met can find the words
.

One either feels in one’s heart and in one’s soul a desire for the
sort of life I lead or one does not. It is my hope that you do. If you do, if, as I suspect, the lure of the Old Ice runs as surely in your blood as it does in mine, no litany of the hazards you would face would deter you. If I am wrong and you do not feel as I do, then such a litany would likewise be unnecessary
.

But you are young. And therefore, the only answer that I will not accept, at least not now, is yes. You may tell me no, or you may tell me perhaps, but you may not tell me yes. (Write your answer on this envelope and leave it for your uncle Edward as you did with the other letters I sent you.) If your answer is perhaps, then we will leave it so until you are old enough to fully understand what saying yes or no might mean. If your answer is no, I will understand and will make no further efforts to convince you. But I will go on writing to you
.

If, by the time you are old enough to travel in the Arctic, I have not reached the pole, I will take you with me and teach you everything I know, things that fewer than half a dozen men alive could teach you
.

And if, at some point, I am forced to renounce exploration, I would not be sorry if you attained the pole instead of me
.

If, with my help, you reach the pole first, I will have ensured that no man who does not deserve it wins the prize
.

Dr. Frederick Cook
April 19, 1900

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