In an age obsessed with progress, there are still places the modern world refuses to name. The decade following the Great War was meant to belong to engines, radios, and reason. Maps were thought complete, borders settled, and the heavens reduced to equations. Yet beneath the confidence of the 1920s lingered an unspoken anxiety-that something ancient had been buried rather than defeated, concealed rather than disproven. Governments classified more than they revealed. Admiralties quietly redacted latitudes. Certain expeditions never returned, and others returned altered, speaking less of distance and more of judgment. This account does not begin as a tale of heresy or madness, but of faith pressed into motion. The men who set out did not seek to overthrow doctrine or replace God with discovery. Quite the opposite. They believed-quietly, stubbornly-that Scripture described a world larger than the one permitted by official charts, and that the ice at the edge of the earth was not merely frozen sea, but a veil. A boundary. A mercy. What follows is drawn from journals never published, letters never mailed, and testimonies dismissed as delirium by those who found them inconvenient. Names have been altered where necessary, not to protect reputations, but to preserve lives. Some truths, once spoken aloud, demand consequences. This is not a story of conquest. No flags are planted, no claims staked. It is the record of men who crossed a threshold believing they would find emptiness, and instead found remembrance. A land untouched by industry. A sky unscarred by smoke. And beings older than nations, older than recorded time, whose existence confirms not humanity's greatness, but its exile. Beyond the icewall lies no promise of salvation, nor an invitation to return to Eden. What lies there stands as witness-to rebellion, to judgment, and to a divine order that has not forgotten its own laws. The world beyond was not hidden because it was insignificant, but because it was dangerous to those unprepared to see it. Read, then, not as a traveler seeking routes, nor as a scholar hunting proof, but as one standing at the edge of revelation. What is written here was never meant to inspire belief. Belief already existed. It was meant to test it.
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