We were watching Shackleton’s 
            last trip on TV and we’d 
            got to the point where the ship 
            was finally stuck and pushed
            up on a thirty degree 
            tilt. It had started leaking. 
            The men unloaded supplies 
            and set up camp on the ice.
          Then it began
            first the mast snapped
            (surprisingly)
            then the rest of
            the boat collapsed
            amidst the loud 
            cracks of timbers
            splitting in half.
          Then the shelf 
            above the TV 
            began to go. 
            (It was loaded 
            with box files full 
            of papers that 
            Nick kept just in 
            case.) We didn’t 
            notice at first 
            we were too impressed 
            at the convincing 
            nature of the 
            sound effects.
          Then there was a 
            really loud crack
            Quick said Nick. If 
            that goes the whole
            thing could explode.
          So, in the grey and white light 
            (even with colour there’s not 
            a lot in Antarctica)
            forming a human chain of 
            two, we moved box files from the 
            shelf onto the floor hoping 
            the splintering noise would soon stop.
          Then . . . Look! Nick gasped.
          
            What? Disaster 
                  surely.
                               Look how
                  you’re throwing them 
                  down all in a 
                  muddle. Keep them 
                in their order. 
             
          They are. They’re just 
                  on their sides. Keep 
                  going. (The TV 
                was worrying me.)
          We missed the bit 
            where the whole ship 
            disintegrates 
            like kindling wood
            and disappears 
            under the ice.
            And that was the 
            thing I was most
            wanting to see. 
          Look! said Nick. The shelf’s slipped off.
  It’ll just take a couple
  of nails to fix it. I felt
            doubtful. With Shackleton’s men
            there’d been a ship’s carpenter.
          Standing in the 
            wreckage of the
            room, we watched as
            they sailed lifeboats
            to Elephant
            Island then on
            to South Georgia,
            crossed glaciers to
            Stromness Station
            in thirty-six
            continuous hours,
            so as to find
            a boat and save
            the other men.
          Despite it all
            he never thrashed
            himself about
            how he shouldn’t have
            done it, regretted
            the foolhardy
            or careless things,
            but just made sure
            that in the end
            everyone was
            brought back safely.
          Even with just 
            a couple of
            nails he could
            make sure we were
            brought back safely.