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Unit Two: Sailing Round the World -2

He received a warm welcome from the Australians and from his family who had flown there to meet him.

On shore, Chichester could not walk without help.

Everybody said the same thing: he had done enough; he must not go any further. But he did not listen.

After resting in Sydney for a few weeks, Chichester set off once more in spite of his friends' attempts to dissuade him.

The second half of his voyage was by far the more dangerous part, during which he sailed round the treacherous Cape Horn.

On 29 January he left Australia. The mext night, the blackest he had ever known, the sea became so rough that the boat almost turned over.

Food, clothes, and broken glass were all mixed together.

Fortunately, bed and went to sleep. When he woke up, the sea had become calm the nearest person he could contact by radio, unless there was a ship nearby, Wild be on an island 885 miles away.

After succeeding in sailing round Cape Horn, Chichester sent the followiing radio message to London:

" I feel as if I had wakened from a nightmare. Wild horses could not drag me down to Cape Horn and that sinister Southern Ocean again."

Just before 9 o'clock on Sunday evening 28 May, 1967, he arrived back in England, where a quarter of a million people were waiting to welcome him.

Queeh Elizabeth II knigthed him with the very sword that Queen Elizabeth I had sailed round the world for the first time.

The whole voyage from England and back had covered 28, 500 miles.

It had taken him nine months , of which the sailing time was 226 days. He had done what he wanted to accomplish.

Like many other adventurers, Chichester had experienced fear and conquered it.

In doing so, he had undoubtedly learnt something about himself.

Moreover, in the modern age when human beings depend so much on machines, he had given men throughout the world new pride.