| The rescue from Elephant Island |
In this final portion of the book, we are given details of how Shackleton, Worsely, and Crean made a journey across South Georgia to a whaling port, the others at South Georgia were saved, and a ship made a rescue mission and saved those on Elephant Island. The end is very fast, as readers are very intrigued and anxious to find how the novel will finally play out. Shackleton’s unfailing love for his crew finally paid off when in the end, every last person survived the voyage that had lasted years. Each person lived to tell their story of their expedition that had started on the Endurance, and taken them through thousands of miles of the Antarctic area. They had been brave, valiant, tough, cooperative, and altruistic through it all.
In relation to real life, this feeling of the end of a long journey is hardly comparable to anything. One thing I can think that sort of compares is the story of the Chilean minors. They had been trapped with no hope for escape for days, but they never gave up wishing that they would be saved. Eventually, rescuers worked for weeks trying to devise a way to get each man up to safety. Food and water were brought down, and ultimately, things were done to be able to save them. Being finally reunited with their families must have been a celebration like no other. In a similar way, the crew of the Endurance must have felt so blessed to have survived what no one thought was survivable. Words don’t really describe what they probably felt when they saw their loved ones after their journey, it’s simply indescribable.
The literary term that is best presented in this last section is simple sentence. When Shackleton is brought face to face with the manager and is asked who he is, all he says is, “My name is Shackleton.” With this sentence everything is changed. People who thought they had died were shocked and Shackleton knew that he would finally be able to rescue his men. That very statement was one of the most important simple sentences in the entire novel.
