TWENTY THOUSAND
LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA
CONTENTS
PART I
CHAPTER
I
A SHIFTING REEF
II
PRO AND CON
III
I FORM MY RESOLUTION
IV
NED LAND
V
AT A VENTURE
VI
AT FULL STEAM
VII
AN UNKNOWN SPECIES OF WHALE
VIII
MOBILIS IN MOBILI
IX
NED LAND'S TEMPERS
X
THE MAN OF THE SEAS
XI
ALL BY ELECTRICITY
XII
SOME FIGURES
XIII
THE BLACK RIVER
XIV
A NOTE OF INVITATION
XV
A WALK ON THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA
XVI
A SUBMARINE FOREST
XVII
FOUR THOUSAND LEAGUES UNDER THE PACIFIC
XVIII
VANIKORO
XIX
TORRES STRAITS
XX
A FEW DAYS ON LAND
XXI
CAPTAIN NEMO'S THUNDERBOLT
XXII
"AEGRI SOMNIA"
XXIII
THE CORAL KINGDOM
CONTENTS
PART II
CHAPTER
I
THE INDIAN OCEAN
II
A NOVEL PROPOSAL OF CAPTAIN NEMO'S
III
A PEARL OF TEN MILLIONS
IV
THE RED SEA
V
THE ARABIAN TUNNEL
VI
THE GRECIAN ARCHIPELAGO
VII
THE MEDITERRANEAN IN FORTY-EIGHT HOURS
VIII
VIGO BAY
IX
A VANISHED CONTINENT
X
THE SUBMARINE COAL-MINES
XI
THE SARGASSO SEA
XII
CACHALOTS AND WHALES
XIII
THE ICEBERG
XIV
THE SOUTH POLE
XV
ACCIDENT OR INCIDENT?
XVI
WANT OF AIR
XVII
FROM CAPE HORN TO THE AMAZON
XVIII
THE POULPS
XIX
THE GULF STREAM
XX
FROM LATITUDE 47° 24' TO LONGITUDE 17° 28'
XXI
A HECATOMB
XXII
THE LAST WORDS OF CAPTAIN NEMO
XXIII
CONCLUSION
PART ONE
CHAPTER I
A SHIFTING REEF
The year 1866 was signalised by a
remarkable incident, a mysterious and puzzling phenomenon, which doubtless
no one has yet forgotten. Not to mention rumours which agitated the maritime
population and excited the public mind, even in the interior of continents,
seafaring men were particularly excited. Merchants, common sailors, captains
of vessels, skippers, both of Europe and America, naval officers of all
countries, and the Governments of several States on the two continents, were
deeply interested in the matter.
For some time past vessels had been met by
"an enormous thing," a long object, spindle-shaped, occasionally
phosphorescent, and infinitely larger and more rapid in its movements than a
whale.
The facts relating to this apparition
(entered in various log-books) agreed in most respects as to the shape of
the object or creature in question, the untiring rapidity of its movements,
its surprising power of locomotion, and the peculiar life with which it
seemed endowed. If it was a whale, it surpassed in size all those hitherto
classified in science. Taking into consideration the mean of observations
made at divers times—rejecting the timid estimate of those who assigned to
this object a length of two hundred feet, equally with the exaggerated
opinions which set it down as a mile in width and three in length—we might
fairly conclude that this mysterious being surpassed greatly all dimensions
admitted by the learned ones of the day, if it existed at all. And that it
DID exist was an undeniable fact; and, with that tendency which disposes the
human mind in favour of the marvellous, we can understand the excitement
produced in the entire world by this supernatural apparition. As to classing
it in the list of fables, the idea was out of the question.
On the 20th of July, 1866, the steamer
Governor Higginson, of the Calcutta and Burnach Steam Navigation Company,
had met this moving mass five miles off the east coast of Australia. Captain
Baker thought at first that he was in the presence of an unknown sandbank;
he even prepared to determine its exact position when two columns of water,
projected by the mysterious object, shot with a hissing noise a hundred and
fifty feet up into the air. Now, unless the sandbank had been submitted to
the intermittent eruption of a geyser, the Governor Higginson had to do
neither more nor less than with an aquatic mammal, unknown till then, which
threw up from its blow-holes columns of water mixed with air and vapour.
Similar facts were observed on the 23rd of
July in the same year, in the Pacific Ocean, by the Columbus, of the West
India and Pacific Steam Navigation Company. But this extraordinary creature
could transport itself from one place to another with surprising velocity;
as, in an interval of three days, the Governor Higginson and the Columbus
had observed it at two different points of the chart, separated by a
distance of more than seven hundred nautical leagues.
Fifteen days later, two thousand miles
farther off, the Helvetia, of the Compagnie-Nationale, and the Shannon, of
the Royal Mail Steamship Company, sailing to windward in that portion of the
Atlantic lying between the United States and Europe, respectively signalled
the monster to each other in 42° 15' N. lat. and 60° 35' W. long. In these
simultaneous observations they thought themselves justified in estimating
the minimum length of the mammal at more than three hundred and fifty feet,
as the Shannon and Helvetia were of smaller dimensions than it, though they
measured three hundred feet over all.
Now the largest whales, those which
frequent those parts of the sea round the Aleutian, Kulammak, and Umgullich
islands, have never exceeded the length of sixty yards, if they attain that.
In every place of great resort the monster
was the fashion. They sang of it in the cafes, ridiculed it in the papers,
and represented it on the stage. All kinds of stories were circulated
regarding it. There appeared in the papers caricatures of every gigantic and
imaginary creature, from the white whale, the terrible "Moby Dick" of
sub-arctic regions, to the immense kraken, whose tentacles could entangle a
ship of five hundred tons and hurry it into the abyss of the ocean. The
legends of ancient times were even revived.
Then burst forth the unending argument
between the believers and the unbelievers in the societies of the wise and
the scientific journals. "The question of the monster" inflamed all minds.
Editors of scientific journals, quarrelling with believers in the
supernatural, spilled seas of ink during this memorable campaign, some even
drawing blood; for from the sea-serpent they came to direct personalities.
During the first months of the year 1867
the question seemed buried, never to revive, when new facts were brought
before the public. It was then no longer a scientific problem to be solved,
but a real danger seriously to be avoided. The question took quite another
shape. The monster became a small island, a rock, a reef, but a reef of
indefinite and shifting proportions.
On the 5th of March, 1867, the Moravian, of
the Montreal Ocean Company, finding herself during the night in 27° 30' lat.
and 72° 15' long., struck on her starboard quarter a rock, marked in no
chart for that part of the sea. Under the combined efforts of the wind and
its four hundred horse power, it was going at the rate of thirteen knots.
Had it not been for the superior strength of the hull of the Moravian, she
would have been broken by the shock and gone down with the 237 passengers
she was bringing home from Canada.
The accident happened about five o'clock in
the morning, as the day was breaking. The officers of the quarter-deck
hurried to the after-part of the vessel. They examined the sea with the most
careful attention. They saw nothing but a strong eddy about three cables'
length distant, as if the surface had been violently agitated. The bearings
of the place were taken exactly, and the Moravian continued its route
without apparent damage. Had it struck on a submerged rock, or on an
enormous wreck? They could not tell; but, on examination of the ship's
bottom when undergoing repairs, it was found that part of her keel was
broken.
This fact, so grave in itself, might
perhaps have been forgotten like many others if, three weeks after, it had
not been re-enacted under similar circumstances. But, thanks to the
nationality of the victim of the shock, thanks to the reputation of the
company to which the vessel belonged, the circumstance became extensively
circulated.
The 13th of April, 1867, the sea being
beautiful, the breeze favourable, the Scotia, of the Cunard Company's line,
found herself in 15° 12' long. and 45° 37' lat. She was going at the speed
of thirteen knots and a half.
At seventeen minutes past four in the
afternoon, whilst the passengers were assembled at lunch in the great
saloon, a slight shock was felt on the hull of the Scotia, on her quarter, a
little aft of the port-paddle.
The Scotia had not struck, but she had been
struck, and seemingly by something rather sharp and penetrating than blunt.
The shock had been so slight that no one had been alarmed, had it not been
for the shouts of the carpenter's watch, who rushed on to the bridge,
exclaiming, "We are sinking! we are sinking!" At first the passengers were
much frightened, but Captain Anderson hastened to reassure them. The danger
could not be imminent. The Scotia, divided into seven compartments by strong
partitions, could brave with impunity any leak. Captain Anderson went down
immediately into the hold. He found that the sea was pouring into the fifth
compartment; and the rapidity of the influx proved that the force of the
water was considerable. Fortunately this compartment did not hold the
boilers, or the fires would have been immediately extinguished. Captain
Anderson ordered the engines to be stopped at once, and one of the men went
down to ascertain the extent of the injury. Some minutes afterwards they
discovered the existence of a large hole, two yards in diameter, in the
ship's bottom. Such a leak could not be stopped; and the Scotia, her paddles
half submerged, was obliged to continue her course. She was then three
hundred miles from Cape Clear, and, after three days' delay, which caused
great uneasiness in Liverpool, she entered the basin of the company.
The engineers visited the Scotia, which was
put in dry dock. They could scarcely believe it possible; at two yards and a
half below water-mark was a regular rent, in the form of an isosceles
triangle. The broken place in the iron plates was so perfectly defined that
it could not have been more neatly done by a punch. It was clear, then, that
the instrument producing the perforation was not of a common stamp and,
after having been driven with prodigious strength, and piercing an iron
plate 1 3/8 inches thick, had withdrawn itself by a backward motion.
Such was the last fact, which resulted in
exciting once more the torrent of public opinion. From this moment all
unlucky casualties which could not be otherwise accounted for were put down
to the monster.
Upon this imaginary creature rested the
responsibility of all these shipwrecks, which unfortunately were
considerable; for of three thousand ships whose loss was annually recorded
at Lloyd's, the number of sailing and steam-ships supposed to be totally
lost, from the absence of all news, amounted to not less than two hundred!
Now, it was the "monster" who, justly or
unjustly, was accused of their disappearance, and, thanks to it,
communication between the different continents became more and more
dangerous. The public demanded sharply that the seas should at any price be
relieved from this formidable cetacean.[1]
CHAPTER II
PRO AND CON
At the period when these events took place,
I had just returned from a scientific research in the disagreeable territory
of Nebraska, in the United States. In virtue of my office as Assistant
Professor in the Museum of Natural History in Paris, the French Government
had attached me to that expedition. After six months in Nebraska, I arrived
in New York towards the end of March, laden with a precious collection. My
departure for France was fixed for the first days in May. Meanwhile I was
occupying myself in classifying my mineralogical, botanical, and zoological
riches, when the accident happened to the Scotia.
I was perfectly up in the subject which was
the question of the day. How could I be otherwise? I had read and reread all
the American and European papers without being any nearer a conclusion. This
mystery puzzled me. Under the impossibility of forming an opinion, I jumped
from one extreme to the other. That there really was something could not be
doubted, and the incredulous were invited to put their finger on the wound
of the Scotia.
On my arrival at New York the question was
at its height. The theory of the floating island, and the unapproachable
sandbank, supported by minds little competent to form a judgment, was
abandoned. And, indeed, unless this shoal had a machine in its stomach, how
could it change its position with such astonishing rapidity?
From the same cause, the idea of a floating
hull of an enormous wreck was given up.
There remained, then, only two possible
solutions of the question, which created two distinct parties: on one side,
those who were for a monster of colossal strength; on the other, those who
were for a submarine vessel of enormous motive power.
But this last theory, plausible as it was,
could not stand against inquiries made in both worlds. That a private
gentleman should have such a machine at his command was not likely. Where,
when, and how was it built? and how could its construction have been kept
secret? Certainly a Government might possess such a destructive machine. And
in these disastrous times, when the ingenuity of man has multiplied the
power of weapons of war, it was possible that, without the knowledge of
others, a State might try to work such a formidable engine.
But the idea of a war machine fell before
the declaration of Governments. As public interest was in question, and
transatlantic communications suffered, their veracity could not be doubted.
But how admit that the construction of this submarine boat had escaped the
public eye? For a private gentleman to keep the secret under such
circumstances would be very difficult, and for a State whose every act is
persistently watched by powerful rivals, certainly impossible.
Upon my arrival in New York several persons
did me the honour of consulting me on the phenomenon in question. I had
published in France a work in quarto, in two volumes, entitled Mysteries of
the Great Submarine Grounds. This book, highly approved of in the learned
world, gained for me a special reputation in this rather obscure branch of
Natural History. My advice was asked. As long as I could deny the reality of
the fact, I confined myself to a decided negative. But soon, finding myself
driven into a corner, I was obliged to explain myself point by point. I
discussed the question in all its forms, politically and scientifically; and
I give here an extract from a carefully-studied article which I published in
the number of the 30th of April. It ran as follows:
"After examining one by one the different
theories, rejecting all other suggestions, it becomes necessary to admit the
existence of a marine animal of enormous power.
"The great depths of the ocean are entirely
unknown to us. Soundings cannot reach them. What passes in those remote
depths—what beings live, or can live, twelve or fifteen miles beneath the
surface of the waters—what is the organisation of these animals, we can
scarcely conjecture. However, the solution of the problem submitted to me
may modify the form of the dilemma. Either we do know all the varieties of
beings which people our planet, or we do not. If we do NOT know them all—if
Nature has still secrets in the deeps for us, nothing is more conformable to
reason than to admit the existence of fishes, or cetaceans of other kinds,
or even of new species, of an organisation formed to inhabit the strata
inaccessible to soundings, and which an accident of some sort has brought at
long intervals to the upper level of the ocean.
"If, on the contrary, we DO know all living
kinds, we must necessarily seek for the animal in question amongst those
marine beings already classed; and, in that case, I should be disposed to
admit the existence of a gigantic narwhal.
"The common narwhal, or unicorn of the sea,
often attains a length of sixty feet. Increase its size fivefold or tenfold,
give it strength proportionate to its size, lengthen its destructive
weapons, and you obtain the animal required. It will have the proportions
determined by the officers of the Shannon, the instrument required by the
perforation of the Scotia, and the power necessary to pierce the hull of the
steamer.
"Indeed, the narwhal is armed with a sort
of ivory sword, a halberd, according to the expression of certain
naturalists. The principal tusk has the hardness of steel. Some of these
tusks have been found buried in the bodies of whales, which the unicorn
always attacks with success. Others have been drawn out, not without
trouble, from the bottoms of ships, which they had pierced through and
through, as a gimlet pierces a barrel. The Museum of the Faculty of Medicine
of Paris possesses one of these defensive weapons, two yards and a quarter
in length, and fifteen inches in diameter at the base.
"Very well! suppose this weapon to be six
times stronger and the animal ten times more powerful; launch it at the rate
of twenty miles an hour, and you obtain a shock capable of producing the
catastrophe required. Until further information, therefore, I shall maintain
it to be a sea-unicorn of colossal dimensions, armed not with a halberd, but
with a real spur, as the armoured frigates, or the `rams' of war, whose
massiveness and motive power it would possess at the same time. Thus may
this puzzling phenomenon be explained, unless there be something over and
above all that one has ever conjectured, seen, perceived, or experienced;
which is just within the bounds of possibility."
These last words were cowardly on my part;
but, up to a certain point, I wished to shelter my dignity as professor, and
not give too much cause for laughter to the Americans, who laugh well when
they do laugh. I reserved for myself a way of escape. In effect, however, I
admitted the existence of the "monster." My article was warmly discussed,
which procured it a high reputation. It rallied round it a certain number of
partisans. The solution it proposed gave, at least, full liberty to the
imagination. The human mind delights in grand conceptions of supernatural
beings. And the sea is precisely their best vehicle, the only medium through
which these giants (against which terrestrial animals, such as elephants or
rhinoceroses, are as nothing) can be produced or developed.
The industrial and commercial papers
treated the question chiefly from this point of view. The Shipping and
Mercantile Gazette, the Lloyd's List, the Packet-Boat, and the Maritime and
Colonial Review, all papers devoted to insurance companies which threatened
to raise their rates of premium, were unanimous on this point. Public
opinion had been pronounced. The United States were the first in the field;
and in New York they made preparations for an expedition destined to pursue
this narwhal. A frigate of great speed, the Abraham Lincoln, was put in
commission as soon as possible. The arsenals were opened to Commander
Farragut, who hastened the arming of his frigate; but, as it always happens,
the moment it was decided to pursue the monster, the monster did not appear.
For two months no one heard it spoken of. No ship met with it. It seemed as
if this unicorn knew of the plots weaving around it. It had been so much
talked of, even through the Atlantic cable, that jesters pretended that this
slender fly had stopped a telegram on its passage and was making the most of
it.
So when the frigate had been armed for a
long campaign, and provided with formidable fishing apparatus, no one could
tell what course to pursue. Impatience grew apace, when, on the 2nd of July,
they learned that a steamer of the line of San Francisco, from California to
Shanghai, had seen the animal three weeks before in the North Pacific Ocean.
The excitement caused by this news was extreme. The ship was revictualled
and well stocked with coal.
Three hours before the Abraham Lincoln left
Brooklyn pier, I received a letter worded as follows:
To M. ARONNAX, Professor
in the Museum of Paris, Fifth Avenue Hotel, New York.
SIR,—If you will consent to join the
Abraham Lincoln in this expedition, the Government of the United States will
with pleasure see France represented in the enterprise. Commander Farragut
has a cabin at your disposal.
Very cordially yours, J.B.
HOBSON, Secretary of Marine.
CHAPTER III
I FORM MY RESOLUTION
Three seconds before the arrival of J. B.
Hobson's letter I no more thought of pursuing the unicorn than of attempting
the passage of the North Sea. Three seconds after reading the letter of the
honourable Secretary of Marine, I felt that my true vocation, the sole end
of my life, was to chase this disturbing monster and purge it from the
world.
But I had just returned from a fatiguing
journey, weary and longing for repose. I aspired to nothing more than again
seeing my country, my friends, my little lodging by the Jardin des Plantes,
my dear and precious collections—but nothing could keep me back! I forgot
all—fatigue, friends and collections—and accepted without hesitation the
offer of the American Government.
"Besides," thought I, "all roads lead back
to Europe; and the unicorn may be amiable enough to hurry me towards the
coast of France. This worthy animal may allow itself to be caught in the
seas of Europe (for my particular benefit), and I will not bring back less
than half a yard of his ivory halberd to the Museum of Natural History." But
in the meanwhile I must seek this narwhal in the North Pacific Ocean, which,
to return to France, was taking the road to the antipodes.
"Conseil," I called in an impatient voice.
Conseil was my servant, a true, devoted
Flemish boy, who had accompanied me in all my travels. I liked him, and he
returned the liking well. He was quiet by nature, regular from principle,
zealous from habit, evincing little disturbance at the different surprises
of life, very quick with his hands, and apt at any service required of him;
and, despite his name, never giving advice—even when asked for it.
Conseil had followed me for the last ten
years wherever science led. Never once did he complain of the length or
fatigue of a journey, never make an objection to pack his portmanteau for
whatever country it might be, or however far away, whether China or Congo.
Besides all this, he had good health, which defied all sickness, and solid
muscles, but no nerves; good morals are understood. This boy was thirty
years old, and his age to that of his master as fifteen to twenty. May I be
excused for saying that I was forty years old?
But Conseil had one fault: he was
ceremonious to a degree, and would never speak to me but in the third
person, which was sometimes provoking.
"Conseil," said I again, beginning with
feverish hands to make preparations for my departure.
Certainly I was sure of this devoted boy.
As a rule, I never asked him if it were convenient for him or not to follow
me in my travels; but this time the expedition in question might be
prolonged, and the enterprise might be hazardous in pursuit of an animal
capable of sinking a frigate as easily as a nutshell. Here there was matter
for reflection even to the most impassive man in the world. What would
Conseil say?
"Conseil," I called a third time.
Conseil appeared.
"Did you call, sir?" said he, entering.
"Yes, my boy; make preparations for me and
yourself too. We leave in two hours."
"As you please, sir," replied Conseil,
quietly.
"Not an instant to lose; lock in my trunk
all travelling utensils, coats, shirts, and stockings—without counting, as
many as you can, and make haste."
"And your collections, sir?" observed
Conseil.
"They will keep them at the hotel."
"We are not returning to Paris, then?" said
Conseil.
"Oh! certainly," I answered, evasively, "by
making a curve."
"Will the curve please you, sir?"
"Oh! it will be nothing; not quite so
direct a road, that is all. We take our passage in the Abraham, Lincoln."
"As you think proper, sir," coolly replied
Conseil.
"You see, my friend, it has to do with the
monster—the famous narwhal. We are going to purge it from the seas. A
glorious mission, but a dangerous one! We cannot tell where we may go; these
animals can be very capricious. But we will go whether or no; we have got a
captain who is pretty wide-awake."
Our luggage was transported to the deck of
the frigate immediately. I hastened on board and asked for Commander
Farragut. One of the sailors conducted me to the poop, where I found myself
in the presence of a good-looking officer, who held out his hand to me.
"Monsieur Pierre Aronnax?" said he.
"Himself," replied I. "Commander Farragut?"
"You are welcome, Professor; your cabin is
ready for you."
I bowed, and desired to be conducted to the
cabin destined for me.
The Abraham Lincoln had been well chosen
and equipped for her new destination. She was a frigate of great speed,
fitted with high-pressure engines which admitted a pressure of seven
atmospheres. Under this the Abraham Lincoln attained the mean speed of
nearly eighteen knots and a third an hour—a considerable speed, but,
nevertheless, insufficient to grapple with this gigantic cetacean.
The interior arrangements of the frigate
corresponded to its nautical qualities. I was well satisfied with my cabin,
which was in the after part, opening upon the gunroom.
"We shall be well off here," said I to
Conseil.
"As well, by your honour's leave, as a
hermit-crab in the shell of a whelk," said Conseil.
I left Conseil to stow our trunks
conveniently away, and remounted the poop in order to survey the
preparations for departure.
At that moment Commander Farragut was
ordering the last moorings to be cast loose which held the Abraham Lincoln
to the pier of Brooklyn. So in a quarter of an hour, perhaps less, the
frigate would have sailed without me. I should have missed this
extraordinary, supernatural, and incredible expedition, the recital of which
may well meet with some suspicion.
But Commander Farragut would not lose a day
nor an hour in scouring the seas in which the animal had been sighted. He
sent for the engineer.
"Is the steam full on?" asked he.
"Yes, sir," replied the engineer.
"Go ahead," cried Commander Farragut.
CHAPTER IV
NED LAND
Captain Farragut was a good seaman, worthy
of the frigate he commanded. His vessel and he were one. He was the soul of
it. On the question of the monster there was no doubt in his mind, and he
would not allow the existence of the animal to be disputed on board. He
believed in it, as certain good women believe in the leviathan—by faith, not
by reason. The monster did exist, and he had sworn to rid the seas of it.
Either Captain Farragut would kill the narwhal, or the narwhal would kill
the captain. There was no third course.
The officers on board shared the opinion of
their chief. They were ever chatting, discussing, and calculating the
various chances of a meeting, watching narrowly the vast surface of the
ocean. More than one took up his quarters voluntarily in the cross-trees,
who would have cursed such a berth under any other circumstances. As long as
the sun described its daily course, the rigging was crowded with sailors,
whose feet were burnt to such an extent by the heat of the deck as to render
it unbearable; still the Abraham Lincoln had not yet breasted the suspected
waters of the Pacific. As to the ship's company, they desired nothing better
than to meet the unicorn, to harpoon it, hoist it on board, and despatch it.
They watched the sea with eager attention.
Besides, Captain Farragut had spoken of a
certain sum of two thousand dollars, set apart for whoever should first
sight the monster, were he cabin-boy, common seaman, or officer.
I leave you to judge how eyes were used on
board the Abraham Lincoln.
For my own part I was not behind the
others, and, left to no one my share of daily observations. The frigate
might have been called the Argus, for a hundred reasons. Only one amongst
us, Conseil, seemed to protest by his indifference against the question
which so interested us all, and seemed to be out of keeping with the general
enthusiasm on board.
I have said that Captain Farragut had
carefully provided his ship with every apparatus for catching the gigantic
cetacean. No whaler had ever been better armed. We possessed every known
engine, from the harpoon thrown by the hand to the barbed arrows of the
blunderbuss, and the explosive balls of the duck-gun. On the forecastle lay
the perfection of a breech-loading gun, very thick at the breech, and very
narrow in the bore, the model of which had been in the Exhibition of 1867.
This precious weapon of American origin could throw with ease a conical
projectile of nine pounds to a mean distance of ten miles.
Thus the Abraham Lincoln wanted for no
means of destruction; and, what was better still she had on board Ned Land,
the prince of harpooners.
Ned Land was a Canadian, with an uncommon
quickness of hand, and who knew no equal in his dangerous occupation. Skill,
coolness, audacity, and cunning he possessed in a superior degree, and it
must be a cunning whale to escape the stroke of his harpoon.
Ned Land was about forty years of age; he
was a tall man (more than six feet high), strongly built, grave and
taciturn, occasionally violent, and very passionate when contradicted. His
person attracted attention, but above all the boldness of his look, which
gave a singular expression to his face.
Who calls himself Canadian calls himself
French; and, little communicative as Ned Land was, I must admit that he took
a certain liking for me. My nationality drew him to me, no doubt. It was an
opportunity for him to talk, and for me to hear, that old language of
Rabelais, which is still in use in some Canadian provinces. The harpooner's
family was originally from Quebec, and was already a tribe of hardy
fishermen when this town belonged to France.
Little by little, Ned Land acquired a taste
for chatting, and I loved to hear the recital of his adventures in the polar
seas. He related his fishing, and his combats, with natural poetry of
expression; his recital took the form of an epic poem, and I seemed to be
listening to a Canadian Homer singing the Iliad of the regions of the North.
I am portraying this hardy companion as I
really knew him. We are old friends now, united in that unchangeable
friendship which is born and cemented amidst extreme dangers. Ah, brave Ned!
I ask no more than to live a hundred years longer, that I may have more time
to dwell the longer on your memory.
Now, what was Ned Land's opinion upon the
question of the marine monster? I must admit that he did not believe in the
unicorn, and was the only one on board who did not share that universal
conviction. He even avoided the subject, which I one day thought it my duty
to press upon him. One magnificent evening, the 30th July (that is to say,
three weeks after our departure), the frigate was abreast of Cape Blanc,
thirty miles to leeward of the coast of Patagonia. We had crossed the tropic
of Capricorn, and the Straits of Magellan opened less than seven hundred
miles to the south. Before eight days were over the Abraham Lincoln would be
ploughing the waters of the Pacific.
Seated on the poop, Ned Land and I were
chatting of one thing and another as we looked at this mysterious sea, whose
great depths had up to this time been inaccessible to the eye of man. I
naturally led up the conversation to the giant unicorn, and examined the
various chances of success or failure of the expedition. But, seeing that
Ned Land let me speak without saying too much himself, I pressed him more
closely.
"Well, Ned," said I, "is it possible that
you are not convinced of the existence of this cetacean that we are
following? Have you any particular reason for being so incredulous?"
The harpooner looked at me fixedly for some
moments before answering, struck his broad forehead with his hand (a habit
of his), as if to collect himself, and said at last, "Perhaps I have, Mr.
Aronnax."
"But, Ned, you, a whaler by profession,
familiarised with all the great marine mammalia—YOU ought to be the last to
doubt under such circumstances!"
"That is just what deceives you,
Professor," replied Ned. "As a whaler I have followed many a cetacean,
harpooned a great number, and killed several; but, however strong or
well-armed they may have been, neither their tails nor their weapons would
have been able even to scratch the iron plates of a steamer."
"But, Ned, they tell of ships which the
teeth of the narwhal have pierced through and through."
"Wooden ships—that is possible," replied
the Canadian, "but I have never seen it done; and, until further proof, I
deny that whales, cetaceans, or sea-unicorns could ever produce the effect
you describe."
"Well, Ned, I repeat it with a conviction
resting on the logic of facts. I believe in the existence of a mammal power
fully organised, belonging to the branch of vertebrata, like the whales, the
cachalots, or the dolphins, and furnished with a horn of defence of great
penetrating power."
"Hum!" said the harpooner, shaking his head
with the air of a man who would not be convinced.
"Notice one thing, my worthy Canadian," I
resumed. "If such an animal is in existence, if it inhabits the depths of
the ocean, if it frequents the strata lying miles below the surface of the
water, it must necessarily possess an organisation the strength of which
would defy all comparison."
"And why this powerful organisation?"
demanded Ned.
"Because it requires incalculable strength
to keep one's self in these strata and resist their pressure. Listen to me.
Let us admit that the pressure of the atmosphere is represented by the
weight of a column of water thirty-two feet high. In reality the column of
water would be shorter, as we are speaking of sea water, the density of
which is greater than that of fresh water. Very well, when you dive, Ned, as
many times 32 feet of water as there are above you, so many times does your
body bear a pressure equal to that of the atmosphere, that is to say, 15 lb.
for each square inch of its surface. It follows, then, that at 320 feet this
pressure equals that of 10 atmospheres, of 100 atmospheres at 3,200 feet,
and of 1,000 atmospheres at 32,000 feet, that is, about 6 miles; which is
equivalent to saying that if you could attain this depth in the ocean, each
square three-eighths of an inch of the surface of your body would bear a
pressure of 5,600 lb. Ah! my brave Ned, do you know how many square inches
you carry on the surface of your body?"
"I have no idea, Mr. Aronnax."
"About 6,500; and as in reality the
atmospheric pressure is about 15 lb. to the square inch, your 6,500 square
inches bear at this moment a pressure of 97,500 lb."
"Without my perceiving it?"
"Without your perceiving it. And if you are
not crushed by such a pressure, it is because the air penetrates the
interior of your body with equal pressure. Hence perfect equilibrium between
the interior and exterior pressure, which thus neutralise each other, and
which allows you to bear it without inconvenience. But in the water it is
another thing."
"Yes, I understand," replied Ned, becoming
more attentive; "because the water surrounds me, but does not penetrate."
"Precisely, Ned: so that at 32 feet beneath
the surface of the sea you would undergo a pressure of 97,500 lb.; at 320
feet, ten times that pressure; at 3,200 feet, a hundred times that pressure;
lastly, at 32,000 feet, a thousand times that pressure would be 97,500,000
lb.—that is to say, that you would be flattened as if you had been drawn
from the plates of a hydraulic machine!"
"The devil!" exclaimed Ned.
"Very well, my worthy harpooner, if some
vertebrate, several hundred yards long, and large in proportion, can
maintain itself in such depths—of those whose surface is represented by
millions of square inches, that is by tens of millions of pounds, we must
estimate the pressure they undergo. Consider, then, what must be the
resistance of their bony structure, and the strength of their organisation
to withstand such pressure!"
"Why!" exclaimed Ned Land, "they must be
made of iron plates eight inches thick, like the armoured frigates."
"As you say, Ned. And think what
destruction such a mass would cause, if hurled with the speed of an express
train against the hull of a vessel."
"Yes—certainly—perhaps," replied the
Canadian, shaken by these figures, but not yet willing to give in.
"Well, have I convinced you?"
"You have convinced me of one thing, sir,
which is that, if such animals do exist at the bottom of the seas, they must
necessarily be as strong as you say."
"But if they do not exist, mine obstinate
harpooner, how explain the accident to the Scotia?"
CHAPTER V
AT A VENTURE
The voyage of the Abraham Lincoln was for a
long time marked by no special incident. But one circumstance happened which
showed the wonderful dexterity of Ned Land, and proved what confidence we
might place in him.
The 30th of June, the frigate spoke some
American whalers, from whom we learned that they knew nothing about the
narwhal. But one of them, the captain of the Monroe, knowing that Ned Land
had shipped on board the Abraham Lincoln, begged for his help in chasing a
whale they had in sight. Commander Farragut, desirous of seeing Ned Land at
work, gave him permission to go on board the Monroe. And fate served our
Canadian so well that, instead of one whale, he harpooned two with a double
blow, striking one straight to the heart, and catching the other after some
minutes' pursuit.
Decidedly, if the monster ever had to do
with Ned Land's harpoon, I would not bet in its favour.
The frigate skirted the south-east coast of
America with great rapidity. The 3rd of July we were at the opening of the
Straits of Magellan, level with Cape Vierges. But Commander Farragut would
not take a tortuous passage, but doubled Cape Horn.
The ship's crew agreed with him. And
certainly it was possible that they might meet the narwhal in this narrow
pass. Many of the sailors affirmed that the monster could not pass there,
"that he was too big for that!"
The 6th of July, about three o'clock in the
afternoon, the Abraham Lincoln, at fifteen miles to the south, doubled the
solitary island, this lost rock at the extremity of the American continent,
to which some Dutch sailors gave the name of their native town, Cape Horn.
The course was taken towards the north-west, and the next day the screw of
the frigate was at last beating the waters of the Pacific.
"Keep your eyes open!" called out the
sailors.
And they were opened widely. Both eyes and
glasses, a little dazzled, it is true, by the prospect of two thousand
dollars, had not an instant's repose.
I myself, for whom money had no charms, was
not the least attentive on board. Giving but few minutes to my meals, but a
few hours to sleep, indifferent to either rain or sunshine, I did not leave
the poop of the vessel. Now leaning on the netting of the forecastle, now on
the taffrail, I devoured with eagerness the soft foam which whitened the sea
as far as the eye could reach; and how often have I shared the emotion of
the majority of the crew, when some capricious whale raised its black back
above the waves! The poop of the vessel was crowded on a moment. The cabins
poured forth a torrent of sailors and officers, each with heaving breast and
troubled eye watching the course of the cetacean. I looked and looked till I
was nearly blind, whilst Conseil kept repeating in a calm voice:
"If, sir, you would not squint so much, you
would see better!"
But vain excitement! The Abraham Lincoln
checked its speed and made for the animal signalled, a simple whale, or
common cachalot, which soon disappeared amidst a storm of abuse.
But the weather was good. The voyage was
being accomplished under the most favourable auspices. It was then the bad
season in Australia, the July of that zone corresponding to our January in
Europe, but the sea was beautiful and easily scanned round a vast
circumference.
The 20th of July, the tropic of Capricorn
was cut by 105d of longitude, and the 27th of the same month we crossed the
Equator on the 110th meridian. This passed, the frigate took a more decided
westerly direction, and scoured the central waters of the Pacific. Commander
Farragut thought, and with reason, that it was better to remain in deep
water, and keep clear of continents or islands, which the beast itself
seemed to shun (perhaps because there was not enough water for him!
suggested the greater part of the crew). The frigate passed at some distance
from the Marquesas and the Sandwich Islands, crossed the tropic of Cancer,
and made for the China Seas. We were on the theatre of the last diversions
of the monster: and, to say truth, we no longer LIVED on board. The entire
ship's crew were undergoing a nervous excitement, of which I can give no
idea: they could not eat, they could not sleep—twenty times a day, a
misconception or an optical illusion of some sailor seated on the taffrail,
would cause dreadful perspirations, and these emotions, twenty times
repeated, kept us in a state of excitement so violent that a reaction was
unavoidable.
And truly, reaction soon showed itself. For
three months, during which a day seemed an age, the Abraham Lincoln furrowed
all the waters of the Northern Pacific, running at whales, making sharp
deviations from her course, veering suddenly from one tack to another,
stopping suddenly, putting on steam, and backing ever and anon at the risk
of deranging her machinery, and not one point of the Japanese or American
coast was left unexplored.
The warmest partisans of the enterprise now
became its most ardent detractors. Reaction mounted from the crew to the
captain himself, and certainly, had it not been for the resolute
determination on the part of Captain Farragut, the frigate would have headed
due southward. This useless search could not last much longer. The Abraham
Lincoln had nothing to reproach herself with, she had done her best to
succeed. Never had an American ship's crew shown more zeal or patience; its
failure could not be placed to their charge—there remained nothing but to
return.
This was represented to the commander. The
sailors could not hide their discontent, and the service suffered. I will
not say there was a mutiny on board, but after a reasonable period of
obstinacy, Captain Farragut (as Columbus did) asked for three days'
patience. If in three days the monster did not appear, the man at the helm
should give three turns of the wheel, and the Abraham Lincoln would make for
the European seas.
This promise was made on the 2nd of
November. It had the effect of rallying the ship's crew. The ocean was
watched with renewed attention. Each one wished for a last glance in which
to sum up his remembrance. Glasses were used with feverish activity. It was
a grand defiance given to the giant narwhal, and he could scarcely fail to
answer the summons and "appear."
Two days passed, the steam was at half
pressure; a thousand schemes were tried to attract the attention and
stimulate the apathy of the animal in case it should be met in those parts.
Large quantities of bacon were trailed in the wake of the ship, to the great
satisfaction (I must say) of the sharks. Small craft radiated in all
directions round the Abraham Lincoln as she lay to, and did not leave a spot
of the sea unexplored. But the night of the 4th of November arrived without
the unveiling of this submarine mystery.
The next day, the 5th of November, at
twelve, the delay would (morally speaking) expire; after that time,
Commander Farragut, faithful to his promise, was to turn the course to the
south-east and abandon for ever the northern regions of the Pacific.
The frigate was then in 31° 15' N. lat. and
136° 42' E. long. The coast of Japan still remained less than two hundred
miles to leeward. Night was approaching. They had just struck eight bells;
large clouds veiled the face of the moon, then in its first quarter. The sea
undulated peaceably under the stern of the vessel.
At that moment I was leaning forward on the
starboard netting. Conseil, standing near me, was looking straight before
him. The crew, perched in the ratlines, examined the horizon which
contracted and darkened by degrees. Officers with their night glasses
scoured the growing darkness: sometimes the ocean sparkled under the rays of
the moon, which darted between two clouds, then all trace of light was lost
in the darkness.
In looking at Conseil, I could see he was
undergoing a little of the general influence. At least I thought so. Perhaps
for the first time his nerves vibrated to a sentiment of curiosity.
"Come, Conseil," said I, "this is the last
chance of pocketing the two thousand dollars."
"May I be permitted to say, sir," replied
Conseil, "that I never reckoned on getting the prize; and, had the
government of the Union offered a hundred thousand dollars, it would have
been none the poorer."
"You are right, Conseil. It is a foolish
affair after all, and one upon which we entered too lightly. What time lost,
what useless emotions! We should have been back in France six months ago."
"In your little room, sir," replied
Conseil, "and in your museum, sir; and I should have already classed all
your fossils, sir. And the Babiroussa would have been installed in its cage
in the Jardin des Plantes, and have drawn all the curious people of the
capital!"
"As you say, Conseil. I fancy we shall run
a fair chance of being laughed at for our pains."
"That's tolerably certain," replied
Conseil, quietly; "I think they will make fun of you, sir. And, must I say
it——?"
"Go on, my good friend."
"Well, sir, you will only get your
deserts."
"Indeed!"
"When one has the honour of being a savant
as you are, sir, one should not expose one's self to——"
Conseil had not time to finish his
compliment. In the midst of general silence a voice had just been heard. It
was the voice of Ned Land shouting:
"Look out there! The very thing we are
looking for—on our weather beam!"
CHAPTER VI
AT FULL STEAM
At this cry the whole ship's crew hurried
towards the harpooner—commander, officers, masters, sailors, cabin boys;
even the engineers left their engines, and the stokers their furnaces.
The order to stop her had been given, and
the frigate now simply went on by her own momentum. The darkness was then
profound, and, however good the Canadian's eyes were, I asked myself how he
had managed to see, and what he had been able to see. My heart beat as if it
would break. But Ned Land was not mistaken, and we all perceived the object
he pointed to. At two cables' length from the Abraham Lincoln, on the
starboard quarter, the sea seemed to be illuminated all over. It was not a
mere phosphoric phenomenon. The monster emerged some fathoms from the water,
and then threw out that very intense but mysterious light mentioned in the
report of several captains. This magnificent irradiation must have been
produced by an agent of great SHINING power. The luminous part traced on the
sea an immense oval, much elongated, the centre of which condensed a burning
heat, whose overpowering brilliancy died out by successive gradations.
"It is only a massing of phosphoric
particles," cried one of the officers.
"No, sir, certainly not," I replied. "That
brightness is of an essentially electrical nature. Besides, see, see! it
moves; it is moving forwards, backwards; it is darting towards us!"
A general cry arose from the frigate.
"Silence!" said the captain. "Up with the
helm, reverse the engines."
The steam was shut off, and the Abraham
Lincoln, beating to port, described a semicircle.
"Right the helm, go ahead," cried the
captain.
These orders were executed, and the frigate
moved rapidly from the burning light.
I was mistaken. She tried to sheer off, but
the supernatural animal approached with a velocity double her own.
We gasped for breath. Stupefaction more
than fear made us dumb and motionless. The animal gained on us, sporting
with the waves. It made the round of the frigate, which was then making
fourteen knots, and enveloped it with its electric rings like luminous dust.
Then it moved away two or three miles,
leaving a phosphorescent track, like those volumes of steam that the express
trains leave behind. All at once from the dark line of the horizon whither
it retired to gain its momentum, the monster rushed suddenly towards the
Abraham Lincoln with alarming rapidity, stopped suddenly about twenty feet
from the hull, and died out—not diving under the water, for its brilliancy
did not abate—but suddenly, and as if the source of this brilliant emanation
was exhausted. Then it reappeared on the other side of the vessel, as if it
had turned and slid under the hull. Any moment a collision might have
occurred which would have been fatal to us. However, I was astonished at the
manoeuvres of the frigate. She fled and did not attack.
On the captain's face, generally so
impassive, was an expression of unaccountable astonishment.
"Mr. Aronnax," he said, "I do not know with
what formidable being I have to deal, and I will not imprudently risk my
frigate in the midst of this darkness. Besides, how attack this unknown
thing, how defend one's self from it? Wait for daylight, and the scene will
change."
"You have no further doubt, captain, of the
nature of the animal?"
"No, sir; it is evidently a gigantic
narwhal, and an electric one."
"Perhaps," added I, "one can only approach
it with a torpedo."
"Undoubtedly," replied the captain, "if it
possesses such dreadful power, it is the most terrible animal that ever was
created. That is why, sir, I must be on my guard."
The crew were on their feet all night. No
one thought of sleep. The Abraham Lincoln, not being able to struggle with
such velocity, had moderated its pace, and sailed at half speed. For its
part, the narwhal, imitating the frigate, let the waves rock it at will, and
seemed decided not to leave the scene of the struggle. Towards midnight,
however, it disappeared, or, to use a more appropriate term, it "died out"
like a large glow-worm. Had it fled? One could only fear, not hope it. But
at seven minutes to one o'clock in the morning a deafening whistling was
heard, like that produced by a body of water rushing with great violence.
The captain, Ned Land, and I were then on
the poop, eagerly peering through the profound darkness.
"Ned Land," asked the commander, "you have
often heard the roaring of whales?"
"Often, sir; but never such whales the
sight of which brought me in two thousand dollars. If I can only approach
within four harpoons' length of it!"
"But to approach it," said the commander,
"I ought to put a whaler at your disposal?"
"Certainly, sir."
"That will be trifling with the lives of my
men."
"And mine too," simply said the harpooner.
Towards two o'clock in the morning, the
burning light reappeared, not less intense, about five miles to windward of
the Abraham Lincoln. Notwithstanding the distance, and the noise of the wind
and sea, one heard distinctly the loud strokes of the animal's tail, and
even its panting breath. It seemed that, at the moment that the enormous
narwhal had come to take breath at the surface of the water, the air was
engulfed in its lungs, like the steam in the vast cylinders of a machine of
two thousand horse-power.
"Hum!" thought I, "a whale with the
strength of a cavalry regiment would be a pretty whale!"
We were on the qui vive till daylight, and
prepared for the combat. The fishing implements were laid along the hammock
nettings. The second lieutenant loaded the blunder busses, which could throw
harpoons to the distance of a mile, and long duck-guns, with explosive
bullets, which inflicted mortal wounds even to the most terrible animals.
Ned Land contented himself with sharpening his harpoon—a terrible weapon in
his hands.
At six o'clock day began to break; and,
with the first glimmer of light, the electric light of the narwhal
disappeared. At seven o'clock the day was sufficiently advanced, but a very
thick sea fog obscured our view, and the best spy glasses could not pierce
it. That caused disappointment and anger.
I climbed the mizzen-mast. Some officers
were already perched on the mast-heads. At eight o'clock the fog lay heavily
on the waves, and its thick scrolls rose little by little. The horizon grew
wider and clearer at the same time. Suddenly, just as on the day before, Ned
Land's voice was heard:
"The thing itself on the port quarter!"
cried the harpooner.
Every eye was turned towards the point
indicated. There, a mile and a half from the frigate, a long blackish body
emerged a yard above the waves. Its tail, violently agitated, produced a
considerable eddy. Never did a tail beat the sea with such violence. An
immense track, of dazzling whiteness, marked the passage of the animal, and
described a long curve.
The frigate approached the cetacean. I
examined it thoroughly.
The reports of the Shannon and of the
Helvetia had rather exaggerated its size, and I estimated its length at only
two hundred and fifty feet. As to its dimensions, I could only conjecture
them to be admirably proportioned. While I watched this phenomenon, two jets
of steam and water were ejected from its vents, and rose to the height of
120 feet; thus I ascertained its way of breathing. I concluded definitely
that it belonged to the vertebrate branch, class mammalia.
The crew waited impatiently for their
chief's orders. The latter, after having observed the animal attentively,
called the engineer. The engineer ran to him.
"Sir," said the commander, "you have steam
up?"
"Yes, sir," answered the engineer.
"Well, make up your fires and put on all
steam."
Three hurrahs greeted this order. The time
for the struggle had arrived. Some moments after, the two funnels of the
frigate vomited torrents of black smoke, and the bridge quaked under the
trembling of the boilers.
The Abraham Lincoln, propelled by her
wonderful screw, went straight at the animal. The latter allowed it to come
within half a cable's length; then, as if disdaining to dive, it took a
little turn, and stopped a short distance off.
This pursuit lasted nearly three-quarters
of an hour, without the frigate gaining two yards on the cetacean. It was
quite evident that at that rate we should never come up with it.
"Well, Mr. Land," asked the captain, "do
you advise me to put the boats out to sea?"
"No, sir," replied Ned Land; "because we
shall not take that beast easily."
"What shall we do then?"
"Put on more steam if you can, sir. With
your leave, I mean to post myself under the bowsprit, and, if we get within
harpooning distance, I shall throw my harpoon."
"Go, Ned," said the captain. "Engineer, put
on more pressure."
Ned Land went to his post. The fires were
increased, the screw revolved forty-three times a minute, and the steam
poured out of the valves. We heaved the log, and calculated that the Abraham
Lincoln was going at the rate of 18 1/2 miles an hour.
But the accursed animal swam at the same
speed.
For a whole hour the frigate kept up this
pace, without gaining six feet. It was humiliating for one of the swiftest
sailers in the American navy. A stubborn anger seized the crew; the sailors
abused the monster, who, as before, disdained to answer them; the captain no
longer contented himself with twisting his beard—he gnawed it.
The engineer was called again.
"You have turned full steam on?"
"Yes, sir," replied the engineer.
The speed of the Abraham Lincoln increased.
Its masts trembled down to their stepping holes, and the clouds of smoke
could hardly find way out of the narrow funnels.
They heaved the log a second time.
"Well?" asked the captain of the man at the
wheel.
"Nineteen miles and three-tenths, sir."
"Clap on more steam."
The engineer obeyed. The manometer showed
ten degrees. But the cetacean grew warm itself, no doubt; for without
straining itself, it made 19 3/10 miles.
What a pursuit! No, I cannot describe the
emotion that vibrated through me. Ned Land kept his post, harpoon in hand.
Several times the animal let us gain upon it.—"We shall catch it! we shall
catch it!" cried the Canadian. But just as he was going to strike, the
cetacean stole away with a rapidity that could not be estimated at less than
thirty miles an hour, and even during our maximum of speed, it bullied the
frigate, going round and round it. A cry of fury broke from everyone!
At noon we were no further advanced than at
eight o'clock in the morning.
The captain then decided to take more
direct means.
"Ah!" said he, "that animal goes quicker
than the Abraham Lincoln. Very well! we will see whether it will escape
these conical bullets. Send your men to the forecastle, sir."
The forecastle gun was immediately loaded
and slewed round. But the shot passed some feet above the cetacean, which
was half a mile off.
"Another, more to the right," cried the
commander, "and five dollars to whoever will hit that infernal beast."
An old gunner with a grey beard—that I can
see now—with steady eye and grave face, went up to the gun and took a long
aim. A loud report was heard, with which were mingled the cheers of the
crew.
The bullet did its work; it hit the animal,
and, sliding off the rounded surface, was lost in two miles depth of sea.
The chase began again, and the captain,
leaning towards me, said:
"I will pursue that beast till my frigate
bursts up."
"Yes," answered I; "and you will be quite
right to do it."
I wished the beast would exhaust itself,
and not be insensible to fatigue like a steam engine. But it was of no use.
Hours passed, without its showing any signs of exhaustion.
However, it must be said in praise of the
Abraham Lincoln that she struggled on indefatigably. I cannot reckon the
distance she made under three hundred miles during this unlucky day,
November the 6th. But night came on, and overshadowed the rough ocean.
Now I thought our expedition was at an end,
and that we should never again see the extraordinary animal. I was mistaken.
At ten minutes to eleven in the evening, the electric light reappeared three
miles to windward of the frigate, as pure, as intense as during the
preceding night.
The narwhal seemed motionless; perhaps,
tired with its day's work, it slept, letting itself float with the
undulation of the waves. Now was a chance of which the captain resolved to
take advantage.
He gave his orders. The Abraham Lincoln
kept up half steam, and advanced cautiously so as not to awake its
adversary. It is no rare thing to meet in the middle of the ocean whales so
sound asleep that they can be successfully attacked, and Ned Land had
harpooned more than one during its sleep. The Canadian went to take his
place again under the bowsprit.
The frigate approached noiselessly, stopped
at two cables' lengths from the animal, and following its track. No one
breathed; a deep silence reigned on the bridge. We were not a hundred feet
from the burning focus, the light of which increased and dazzled our eyes.
At this moment, leaning on the forecastle
bulwark, I saw below me Ned Land grappling the martingale in one hand,
brandishing his terrible harpoon in the other, scarcely twenty feet from the
motionless animal. Suddenly his arm straightened, and the harpoon was
thrown; I heard the sonorous stroke of the weapon, which seemed to have
struck a hard body. The electric light went out suddenly, and two enormous
waterspouts broke over the bridge of the frigate, rushing like a torrent
from stem to stern, overthrowing men, and breaking the lashings of the
spars. A fearful shock followed, and, thrown over the rail without having
time to stop myself, I fell into the sea.
CHAPTER VII
AN UNKNOWN SPECIES OF WHALE
This unexpected fall so stunned me that I
have no clear recollection of my sensations at the time. I was at first
drawn down to a depth of about twenty feet. I am a good swimmer (though
without pretending to rival Byron or Edgar Poe, who were masters of the
art), and in that plunge I did not lose my presence of mind. Two vigorous
strokes brought me to the surface of the water. My first care was to look
for the frigate. Had the crew seen me disappear? Had the Abraham Lincoln
veered round? Would the captain put out a boat? Might I hope to be saved?
The darkness was intense. I caught a
glimpse of a black mass disappearing in the east, its beacon lights dying
out in the distance. It was the frigate! I was lost.
"Help, help!" I shouted, swimming towards
the Abraham Lincoln in desperation.
My clothes encumbered me; they seemed glued
to my body, and paralysed my movements.
I was sinking! I was suffocating!
"Help!"
This was my last cry. My mouth filled with
water; I struggled against being drawn down the abyss. Suddenly my clothes
were seized by a strong hand, and I felt myself quickly drawn up to the
surface of the sea; and I heard, yes, I heard these words pronounced in my
ear:
"If master would be so good as to lean on
my shoulder, master would swim with much greater ease."
I seized with one hand my faithful
Conseil's arm.
"Is it you?" said I, "you?"
"Myself," answered Conseil; "and waiting
master's orders."
"That shock threw you as well as me into
the sea?"
"No; but, being in my master's service, I
followed him."
The worthy fellow thought that was but
natural.
"And the frigate?" I asked.
"The frigate?" replied Conseil, turning on
his back; "I think that master had better not count too much on her."
"You think so?"
"I say that, at the time I threw myself
into the sea, I heard the men at the wheel say, `The screw and the rudder
are broken.'
"Broken?"
"Yes, broken by the monster's teeth. It is
the only injury the Abraham Lincoln has sustained. But it is a bad look-out
for us—she no longer answers her helm."
"Then we are lost!"
"Perhaps so," calmly answered Conseil.
"However, we have still several hours before us, and one can do a good deal
in some hours."
Conseil's imperturbable coolness set me up
again. I swam more vigorously; but, cramped by my clothes, which stuck to me
like a leaden weight, I felt great difficulty in bearing up. Conseil saw
this.
"Will master let me make a slit?" said he;
and, slipping an open knife under my clothes, he ripped them up from top to
bottom very rapidly. Then he cleverly slipped them off me, while I swam for
both of us.
Then I did the same for Conseil, and we
continued to swim near to each other.
Nevertheless, our situation was no less
terrible. Perhaps our disappearance had not been noticed; and, if it had
been, the frigate could not tack, being without its helm. Conseil argued on
this supposition, and laid his plans accordingly. This quiet boy was
perfectly self-possessed. We then decided that, as our only chance of safety
was being picked up by the Abraham Lincoln's boats, we ought to manage so as
to wait for them as long as possible. I resolved then to husband our
strength, so that both should not be exhausted at the same time; and this is
how we managed: while one of us lay on our back, quite still, with arms
crossed, and legs stretched out, the other would swim and push the other on
in front. This towing business did not last more than ten minutes each; and
relieving each other thus, we could swim on for some hours, perhaps till
day-break. Poor chance! but hope is so firmly rooted in the heart of man!
Moreover, there were two of us. Indeed I declare (though it may seem
improbable) if I sought to destroy all hope—if I wished to despair, I could
not.
The collision of the frigate with the
cetacean had occurred about eleven o'clock in the evening before. I reckoned
then we should have eight hours to swim before sunrise, an operation quite
practicable if we relieved each other. The sea, very calm, was in our
favour. Sometimes I tried to pierce the intense darkness that was only
dispelled by the phosphorescence caused by our movements. I watched the
luminous waves that broke over my hand, whose mirror-like surface was
spotted with silvery rings. One might have said that we were in a bath of
quicksilver.
Near one o'clock in the morning, I was
seized with dreadful fatigue. My limbs stiffened under the strain of violent
cramp. Conseil was obliged to keep me up, and our preservation devolved on
him alone. I heard the poor boy pant; his breathing became short and
hurried. I found that he could not keep up much longer.
"Leave me! leave me!" I said to him.
"Leave my master? Never!" replied he. "I
would drown first."
Just then the moon appeared through the
fringes of a thick cloud that the wind was driving to the east. The surface
of the sea glittered with its rays. This kindly light reanimated us. My head
got better again. I looked at all points of the horizon. I saw the frigate!
She was five miles from us, and looked like a dark mass, hardly discernible.
But no boats!
I would have cried out. But what good would
it have been at such a distance! My swollen lips could utter no sounds.
Conseil could articulate some words, and I heard him repeat at intervals,
"Help! help!"
Our movements were suspended for an
instant; we listened. It might be only a singing in the ear, but it seemed
to me as if a cry answered the cry from Conseil.
"Did you hear?" I murmured.
"Yes! Yes!"
And Conseil gave one more despairing cry.
This time there was no mistake! A human
voice responded to ours! Was it the voice of another unfortunate creature,
abandoned in the middle of the ocean, some other victim of the shock
sustained by the vessel? Or rather was it a boat from the frigate, that was
hailing us in the darkness?
Conseil made a last effort, and, leaning on
my shoulder, while I struck out in a desperate effort, he raised himself
half out of the water, then fell back exhausted.
"What did you see?"
"I saw——" murmured he; "I saw—but do not
talk—reserve all your strength!"
What had he seen? Then, I know not why, the
thought of the monster came into my head for the first time! But that voice!
The time is past for Jonahs to take refuge in whales' bellies! However,
Conseil was towing me again. He raised his head sometimes, looked before us,
and uttered a cry of recognition, which was responded to by a voice that
came nearer and nearer. I scarcely heard it. My strength was exhausted; my
fingers stiffened; my hand afforded me support no longer; my mouth,
convulsively opening, filled with salt water. Cold crept over me. I raised
my head for the last time, then I sank.
At this moment a hard body struck me. I
clung to it: then I felt that I was being drawn up, that I was brought to
the surface of the water, that my chest collapsed—I fainted.
It is certain that I soon came to, thanks
to the vigorous rubbings that I received. I half opened my eyes.
"Conseil!" I murmured.
"Does master call me?" asked Conseil.
Just then, by the waning light of the moon
which was sinking down to the horizon, I saw a face which was not Conseil's
and which I immediately recognised.
"Ned!" I cried.
"The same, sir, who is seeking his prize!"
replied the Canadian.
"Were you thrown into the sea by the shock
to the frigate?"
"Yes, Professor; but more fortunate than
you, I was able to find a footing almost directly upon a floating island."
"An island?"
"Or, more correctly speaking, on our
gigantic narwhal."
"Explain yourself, Ned!"
"Only I soon found out why my harpoon had
not entered its skin and was blunted."
"Why, Ned, why?"
"Because, Professor, that beast is made of
sheet iron."
The Canadian's last words produced a sudden
revolution in my brain. I wriggled myself quickly to the top of the being,
or object, half out of the water, which served us for a refuge. I kicked it.
It was evidently a hard, impenetrable body, and not the soft substance that
forms the bodies of the great marine mammalia. But this hard body might be a
bony covering, like that of the antediluvian animals; and I should be free
to class this monster among amphibious reptiles, such as tortoises or
alligators.
Well, no! the blackish back that supported
me was smooth, polished, without scales. The blow produced a metallic sound;
and, incredible though it may be, it seemed, I might say, as if it was made
of riveted plates.
There was no doubt about it! This monster,
this natural phenomenon that had puzzled the learned world, and over thrown
and misled the imagination of seamen of both hemispheres, it must be owned
was a still more astonishing phenomenon, inasmuch as it was a simply human
construction.
We had no time to lose, however. We were
lying upon the back of a sort of submarine boat, which appeared (as far as I
could judge) like a huge fish of steel. Ned Land's mind was made up on this
point. Conseil and I could only agree with him.
Just then a bubbling began at the back of
this strange thing (which was evidently propelled by a screw), and it began
to move. We had only just time to seize hold of the upper part, which rose
about seven feet out of the water, and happily its speed was not great.
"As long as it sails horizontally,"
muttered Ned Land, "I do not mind; but, if it takes a fancy to dive, I would
not give two straws for my life."
The Canadian might have said still less. It
became really necessary to communicate with the beings, whatever they were,
shut up inside the machine. I searched all over the outside for an aperture,
a panel, or a manhole, to use a technical expression; but the lines of the
iron rivets, solidly driven into the joints of the iron plates, were clear
and uniform. Besides, the moon disappeared then, and left us in total
darkness.
At last this long night passed. My
indistinct remembrance prevents my describing all the impressions it made. I
can only recall one circumstance. During some lulls of the wind and sea, I
fancied I heard several times vague sounds, a sort of fugitive harmony
produced by words of command. What was, then, the mystery of this submarine
craft, of which the whole world vainly sought an explanation? What kind of
beings existed in this strange boat? What mechanical agent caused its
prodigious speed?
Daybreak appeared. The morning mists
surrounded us, but they soon cleared off. I was about to examine the hull,
which formed on deck a kind of horizontal platform, when I felt it gradually
sinking.
"Oh! confound it!" cried Ned Land, kicking
the resounding plate. "Open, you inhospitable rascals!"
Happily the sinking movement ceased.
Suddenly a noise, like iron works violently pushed aside, came from the
interior of the boat. One iron plate was moved, a man appeared, uttered an
odd cry, and disappeared immediately.
Some moments after, eight strong men, with
masked faces, appeared noiselessly, and drew us down into their formidable
machine.
CHAPTER VIII
MOBILIS IN MOBILI
This forcible abduction, so roughly carried
out, was accomplished with the rapidity of lightning. I shivered all over.
Whom had we to deal with? No doubt some new sort of pirates, who explored
the sea in their own way. Hardly had the narrow panel closed upon me, when I
was enveloped in darkness. My eyes, dazzled with the outer light, could
distinguish nothing. I felt my naked feet cling to the rungs of an iron
ladder. Ned Land and Conseil, firmly seized, followed me. At the bottom of
the ladder, a door opened, and shut after us immediately with a bang.
We were alone. Where, I could not say,
hardly imagine. All was black, and such a dense black that, after some
minutes, my eyes had not been able to discern even the faintest glimmer.
Meanwhile, Ned Land, furious at these
proceedings, gave free vent to his indignation.
"Confound it!" cried he, "here are people
who come up to the Scotch for hospitality. They only just miss being
cannibals. I should not be surprised at it, but I declare that they shall
not eat me without my protesting."
"Calm yourself, friend Ned, calm yourself,"
replied Conseil, quietly. "Do not cry out before you are hurt. We are not
quite done for yet."
"Not quite," sharply replied the Canadian,
"but pretty near, at all events. Things look black. Happily, my bowie knife
I have still, and I can always see well enough to use it. The first of these
pirates who lays a hand on me——"
"Do not excite yourself, Ned," I said to
the harpooner, "and do not compromise us by useless violence. Who knows that
they will not listen to us? Let us rather try to find out where we are."
I groped about. In five steps I came to an
iron wall, made of plates bolted together. Then turning back I struck
against a wooden table, near which were ranged several stools. The boards of
this prison were concealed under a thick mat, which deadened the noise of
the feet. The bare walls revealed no trace of window or door. Conseil, going
round the reverse way, met me, and we went back to the middle of the cabin,
which measured about twenty feet by ten. As to its height, Ned Land, in
spite of his own great height, could not measure it.
Half an hour had already passed without our
situation being bettered, when the dense darkness suddenly gave way to
extreme light. Our prison was suddenly lighted, that is to say, it became
filled with a luminous matter, so strong that I could not bear it at first.
In its whiteness and intensity I recognised that electric light which played
round the submarine boat like a magnificent phenomenon of phosphorescence.
After shutting my eyes involuntarily, I opened them, and saw that this
luminous agent came from a half globe, unpolished, placed in the roof of the
cabin.
"At last one can see," cried Ned Land, who,
knife in hand, stood on the defensive.
"Yes," said I; "but we are still in the
dark about ourselves."
"Let master have patience," said the
imperturbable Conseil.
The sudden lighting of the cabin enabled me
to examine it minutely. It only contained a table and five stools. The
invisible door might be hermetically sealed. No noise was heard. All seemed
dead in the interior of this boat. Did it move, did it float on the surface
of the ocean, or did it dive into its depths? I could not guess.
A noise of bolts was now heard, the door
opened, and two men appeared.
One was short, very muscular,
broad-shouldered, with robust limbs, strong head, an abundance of black
hair, thick moustache, a quick penetrating look, and the vivacity which
characterises the population of Southern France.
The second stranger merits a more detailed
description. I made out his prevailing qualities directly:
self-confidence—because his head was well set on his shoulders, and his
black eyes looked around with cold assurance; calmness—for his skin, rather
pale, showed his coolness of blood; energy—evinced by the rapid contraction
of his lofty brows; and courage—because his deep breathing denoted great
power of lungs.
Whether this person was thirty-five or
fifty years of age, I could not say. He was tall, had a large forehead,
straight nose, a clearly cut mouth, beautiful teeth, with fine taper hands,
indicative of a highly nervous temperament. This man was certainly the most
admirable specimen I had ever met. One particular feature was his eyes,
rather far from each other, and which could take in nearly a quarter of the
horizon at once.
This faculty—(I verified it later)—gave him
a range of vision far superior to Ned Land's. When this stranger fixed upon
an object, his eyebrows met, his large eyelids closed around so as to
contract the range of his vision, and he looked as if he magnified the
objects lessened by distance, as if he pierced those sheets of water so
opaque to our eyes, and as if he read the very depths of the seas.
The two strangers, with caps made from the
fur of the sea otter, and shod with sea boots of seal's skin, were dressed
in clothes of a particular texture, which allowed free movement of the
limbs. The taller of the two, evidently the chief on board, examined us with
great attention, without saying a word; then, turning to his companion,
talked with him in an unknown tongue. It was a sonorous, harmonious, and
flexible dialect, the vowels seeming to admit of very varied accentuation.
The other replied by a shake of the head,
and added two or three perfectly incomprehensible words. Then he seemed to
question me by a look.
I replied in good French that I did not
know his language; but he seemed not to understand me, and my situation
became more embarrassing.
"If master were to tell our story," said
Conseil, "perhaps these gentlemen may understand some words."
I began to tell our adventures,
articulating each syllable clearly, and without omitting one single detail.
I announced our names and rank, introducing in person Professor Aronnax, his
servant Conseil, and master Ned Land, the harpooner.
The man with the soft calm eyes listened to
me quietly, even politely, and with extreme attention; but nothing in his
countenance indicated that he had understood my story. When I finished, he
said not a word.
There remained one resource, to speak
English. Perhaps they would know this almost universal language. I knew
it—as well as the German language—well enough to read it fluently, but not
to speak it correctly. But, anyhow, we must make ourselves understood.
"Go on in your turn," I said to the
harpooner; "speak your best Anglo-Saxon, and try to do better than I."
Ned did not beg off, and recommenced our
story.
To his great disgust, the harpooner did not
seem to have made himself more intelligible than I had. Our visitors did not
stir. They evidently understood neither the language of England nor of
France.
Very much embarrassed, after having vainly
exhausted our speaking resources, I knew not what part to take, when Conseil
said:
"If master will permit me, I will relate it
in German."
But in spite of the elegant terms and good
accent of the narrator, the German language had no success. At last,
nonplussed, I tried to remember my first lessons, and to narrate our
adventures in Latin, but with no better success. This last attempt being of
no avail, the two strangers exchanged some words in their unknown language,
and retired.
The door shut.
"It is an infamous shame," cried Ned Land,
who broke out for the twentieth time. "We speak to those rogues in French,
English, German, and Latin, and not one of them has the politeness to
answer!"
"Calm yourself," I said to the impetuous
Ned; "anger will do no good."
"But do you see, Professor," replied our
irascible companion, "that we shall absolutely die of hunger in this iron
cage?"
"Bah!" said Conseil, philosophically; "we
can hold out some time yet."
"My friends," I said, "we must not despair.
We have been worse off than this. Do me the favour to wait a little before
forming an opinion upon the commander and crew of this boat."
"My opinion is formed," replied Ned Land,
sharply. "They are rascals."
"Good! and from what country?"
"From the land of rogues!"
"My brave Ned, that country is not clearly
indicated on the map of the world; but I admit that the nationality of the
two strangers is hard to determine. Neither English, French, nor German,
that is quite certain. However, I am inclined to think that the commander
and his companion were born in low latitudes. There is southern blood in
them. But I cannot decide by their appearance whether they are Spaniards,
Turks, Arabians, or Indians. As to their language, it is quite
incomprehensible."
"There is the disadvantage of not knowing
all languages," said Conseil, "or the disadvantage of not having one
universal language."
As he said these words, the door opened. A
steward entered. He brought us clothes, coats and trousers, made of a stuff
I did not know. I hastened to dress myself, and my companions followed my
example. During that time, the steward—dumb, perhaps deaf—had arranged the
table, and laid three plates.
"This is something like!" said Conseil.
"Bah!" said the angry harpooner, "what do
you suppose they eat here? Tortoise liver, filleted shark, and beef steaks
from seadogs."
"We shall see," said Conseil.
The dishes, of bell metal, were placed on
the table, and we took our places. Undoubtedly we had to do with civilised
people, and, had it not been for the electric light which flooded us, I
could have fancied I was in the dining-room of the Adelphi Hotel at
Liverpool, or at the Grand Hotel in Paris. I must say, however, that there
was neither bread nor wine. The water was fresh and clear, but it was water
and did not suit Ned Land's taste. Amongst the dishes which were brought to
us, I recognised several fish delicately dressed; but of some, although
excellent, I could give no opinion, neither could I tell to what kingdom
they belonged, whether animal or vegetable. As to the dinner-service, it was
elegant, and in perfect taste. Each utensil—spoon, fork, knife, plate—had a
letter engraved on it, with a motto above it, of which this is an exact
facsimile:
MOBILIS IN MOBILI
N
The letter N was no doubt the initial of
the name of the enigmatical person who commanded at the bottom of the seas.
Ned and Conseil did not reflect much. They
devoured the food, and I did likewise. I was, besides, reassured as to our
fate; and it seemed evident that our hosts would not let us die of want.
However, everything has an end, everything
passes away, even the hunger of people who have not eaten for fifteen hours.
Our appetites satisfied, we felt overcome with sleep.
"Faith! I shall sleep well," said Conseil.
"So shall I," replied Ned Land.
My two companions stretched themselves on
the cabin carpet, and were soon sound asleep. For my own part, too many
thoughts crowded my brain, too many insoluble questions pressed upon me, too
many fancies kept my eyes half open. Where were we? What strange power
carried us on? I felt—or rather fancied I felt—the machine sinking down to
the lowest beds of the sea. Dreadful nightmares beset me; I saw in these
mysterious asylums a world of unknown animals, amongst which this submarine
boat seemed to be of the same kind, living, moving, and formidable as they.
Then my brain grew calmer, my imagination wandered into vague
unconsciousness, and I soon fell into a deep sleep.
CHAPTER IX
NED LAND'S TEMPERS
How long we slept I do not know; but our
sleep must have lasted long, for it rested us completely from our fatigues.
I woke first. My companions had not moved, and were still stretched in their
corner.
Hardly roused from my somewhat hard couch,
I felt my brain freed, my mind clear. I then began an attentive examination
of our cell. Nothing was changed inside. The prison was still a prison—the
prisoners, prisoners. However, the steward, during our sleep, had cleared
the table. I breathed with difficulty. The heavy air seemed to oppress my
lungs. Although the cell was large, we had evidently consumed a great part
of the oxygen that it contained. Indeed, each man consumes, in one hour, the
oxygen contained in more than 176 pints of air, and this air, charged (as
then) with a nearly equal quantity of carbonic acid, becomes unbreathable.
It became necessary to renew the atmosphere
of our prison, and no doubt the whole in the submarine boat. That gave rise
to a question in my mind. How would the commander of this floating
dwelling-place proceed? Would he obtain air by chemical means, in getting by
heat the oxygen contained in chlorate of potash, and in absorbing carbonic
acid by caustic potash? Or—a more convenient, economical, and consequently
more probable alternative—would he be satisfied to rise and take breath at
the surface of the water, like a whale, and so renew for twenty-four hours
the atmospheric provision?
In fact, I was already obliged to increase
my respirations to eke out of this cell the little oxygen it contained, when
suddenly I was refreshed by a current of pure air, and perfumed with saline
emanations. It was an invigorating sea breeze, charged with iodine. I opened
my mouth wide, and my lungs saturated themselves with fresh particles.
At the same time I felt the boat rolling.
The iron-plated monster had evidently just risen to the surface of the ocean
to breathe, after the fashion of whales. I found out from that the mode of
ventilating the boat.
When I had inhaled this air freely, I
sought the conduit pipe, which conveyed to us the beneficial whiff, and I
was not long in finding it. Above the door was a ventilator, through which
volumes of fresh air renewed the impoverished atmosphere of the cell.
I was making my observations, when Ned and
Conseil awoke almost at the same time, under the influence of this reviving
air. They rubbed their eyes, stretched themselves, and were on their feet in
an instant.
"Did master sleep well?" asked Conseil,
with his usual politeness.
"Very well, my brave boy. And you, Mr.
Land?"
"Soundly, Professor. But, I don't know if I
am right or not, there seems to be a sea breeze!"
A seaman could not be mistaken, and I told
the Canadian all that had passed during his sleep.
"Good!" said he. "That accounts for those
roarings we heard, when the supposed narwhal sighted the Abraham Lincoln."
"Quite so, Master Land; it was taking
breath."
"Only, Mr. Aronnax, I have no idea what
o'clock it is, unless it is dinner-time."
"Dinner-time! my good fellow? Say rather
breakfast-time, for we certainly have begun another day."
"So," said Conseil, "we have slept
twenty-four hours?"
"That is my opinion."
"I will not contradict you," replied Ned
Land. "But, dinner or breakfast, the steward will be welcome, whichever he
brings."
"Master Land, we must conform to the rules
on board, and I suppose our appetites are in advance of the dinner hour."
"That is just like you, friend Conseil,"
said Ned, impatiently. "You are never out of temper, always calm; you would
return thanks before grace, and die of hunger rather than complain!"
Time was getting on, and we were fearfully
hungry; and this time the steward did not appear. It was rather too long to
leave us, if they really had good intentions towards us. Ned Land, tormented
by the cravings of hunger, got still more angry; and, notwithstanding his
promise, I dreaded an explosion when he found himself with one of the crew.
For two hours more Ned Land's temper
increased; he cried, he shouted, but in vain. The walls were deaf. There was
no sound to be heard in the boat; all was still as death. It did not move,
for I should have felt the trembling motion of the hull under the influence
of the screw. Plunged in the depths of the waters, it belonged no longer to
earth: this silence was dreadful.
I felt terrified, Conseil was calm, Ned
Land roared.
Just then a noise was heard outside. Steps
sounded on the metal flags. The locks were turned, the door opened, and the
steward appeared.
Before I could rush forward to stop him,
the Canadian had thrown him down, and held him by the throat. The steward
was choking under the grip of his powerful hand.
Conseil was already trying to unclasp the
harpooner's hand from his half-suffocated victim, and I was going to fly to
the rescue, when suddenly I was nailed to the spot by hearing these words in
French:
"Be quiet, Master Land; and you, Professor,
will you be so good as to listen to me?"
CHAPTER X
THE MAN OF THE SEAS
It was the commander of the vessel who thus
spoke.
At these words, Ned Land rose suddenly. The
steward, nearly strangled, tottered out on a sign from his master. But such
was the power of the commander on board, that not a gesture betrayed the
resentment which this man must have felt towards the Canadian. Conseil
interested in spite of himself, I stupefied, awaited in silence the result
of this scene.
The commander, leaning against the corner
of a table with his arms folded, scanned us with profound attention. Did he
hesitate to speak? Did he regret the words which he had just spoken in
French? One might almost think so.
After some moments of silence, which not
one of us dreamed of breaking, "Gentlemen," said he, in a calm and
penetrating voice, "I speak French, English, German, and Latin equally well.
I could, therefore, have answered you at our first interview, but I wished
to know you first, then to reflect. The story told by each one, entirely
agreeing in the main points, convinced me of your identity. I know now that
chance has brought before me M. Pierre Aronnax, Professor of Natural History
at the Museum of Paris, entrusted with a scientific mission abroad, Conseil,
his servant, and Ned Land, of Canadian origin, harpooner on board the
frigate Abraham Lincoln of the navy of the United States of America."
I bowed assent. It was not a question that
the commander put to me. Therefore there was no answer to be made. This man
expressed himself with perfect ease, without any accent. His sentences were
well turned, his words clear, and his fluency of speech remarkable. Yet, I
did not recognise in him a fellow-countryman.
He continued the conversation in these
terms:
"You have doubtless thought, sir, that I
have delayed long in paying you this second visit. The reason is that, your
identity recognised, I wished to weigh maturely what part to act towards
you. I have hesitated much. Most annoying circumstances have brought you
into the presence of a man who has broken all the ties of humanity. You have
come to trouble my existence."
"Unintentionally!" said I.
"Unintentionally?" replied the stranger,
raising his voice a little. "Was it unintentionally that the Abraham Lincoln
pursued me all over the seas? Was it unintentionally that you took passage
in this frigate? Was it unintentionally that your cannon-balls rebounded off
the plating of my vessel? Was it unintentionally that Mr. Ned Land struck me
with his harpoon?"
I detected a restrained irritation in these
words. But to these recriminations I had a very natural answer to make, and
I made it.
"Sir," said I, "no doubt you are ignorant
of the discussions which have taken place concerning you in America and
Europe. You do not know that divers accidents, caused by collisions with
your submarine machine, have excited public feeling in the two continents. I
omit the theories without number by which it was sought to explain that of
which you alone possess the secret. But you must understand that, in
pursuing you over the high seas of the Pacific, the Abraham Lincoln believed
itself to be chasing some powerful sea-monster, of which it was necessary to
rid the ocean at any price."
A half-smile curled the lips of the
commander: then, in a calmer tone:
"M. Aronnax," he replied, "dare you affirm
that your frigate would not as soon have pursued and cannonaded a submarine
boat as a monster?"
This question embarrassed me, for certainly
Captain Farragut might not have hesitated. He might have thought it his duty
to destroy a contrivance of this kind, as he would a gigantic narwhal.
"You understand then, sir," continued the
stranger, "that I have the right to treat you as enemies?"
I answered nothing, purposely. For what
good would it be to discuss such a proposition, when force could destroy the
best arguments?
"I have hesitated some time," continued the
commander; "nothing obliged me to show you hospitality. If I chose to
separate myself from you, I should have no interest in seeing you again; I
could place you upon the deck of this vessel which has served you as a
refuge, I could sink beneath the waters, and forget that you had ever
existed. Would not that be my right?"
"It might be the right of a savage," I
answered, "but not that of a civilised man."
"Professor," replied the commander,
quickly, "I am not what you call a civilised man! I have done with society
entirely, for reasons which I alone have the right of appreciating. I do
not, therefore, obey its laws, and I desire you never to allude to them
before me again!"
This was said plainly. A flash of anger and
disdain kindled in the eyes of the Unknown, and I had a glimpse of a
terrible past in the life of this man. Not only had he put himself beyond
the pale of human laws, but he had made himself independent of them, free in
the strictest acceptation of the word, quite beyond their reach! Who then
would dare to pursue him at the bottom of the sea, when, on its surface, he
defied all attempts made against him?
What vessel could resist the shock of his
submarine monitor? What cuirass, however thick, could withstand the blows of
his spur? No man could demand from him an account of his actions; God, if he
believed in one—his conscience, if he had one—were the sole judges to whom
he was answerable.
These reflections crossed my mind rapidly,
whilst the stranger personage was silent, absorbed, and as if wrapped up in
himself. I regarded him with fear mingled with interest, as, doubtless,
OEdiphus regarded the Sphinx.
After rather a long silence, the commander
resumed the conversation.
"I have hesitated," said he, "but I have
thought that my interest might be reconciled with that pity to which every
human being has a right. You will remain on board my vessel, since fate has
cast you there. You will be free; and, in exchange for this liberty, I shall
only impose one single condition. Your word of honour to submit to it will
suffice."
"Speak, sir," I answered. "I suppose this
condition is one which a man of honour may accept?"
"Yes, sir; it is this: It is possible that
certain events, unforeseen, may oblige me to consign you to your cabins for
some hours or some days, as the case may be. As I desire never to use
violence, I expect from you, more than all the others, a passive obedience.
In thus acting, I take all the responsibility: I acquit you entirely, for I
make it an impossibility for you to see what ought not to be seen. Do you
accept this condition?"
Then things took place on board which, to
say the least, were singular, and which ought not to be seen by people who
were not placed beyond the pale of social laws. Amongst the surprises which
the future was preparing for me, this might not be the least.
"We accept," I answered; "only I will ask
your permission, sir, to address one question to you—one only."
"Speak, sir."
"You said that we should be free on board."
"Entirely."
"I ask you, then, what you mean by this
liberty?"
"Just the liberty to go, to come, to see,
to observe even all that passes here save under rare circumstances—the
liberty, in short, which we enjoy ourselves, my companions and I."
It was evident that we did not understand
one another.
"Pardon me, sir," I resumed, "but this
liberty is only what every prisoner has of pacing his prison. It cannot
suffice us."
"It must suffice you, however."
"What! we must renounce for ever seeing our
country, our friends, our relations again?"
"Yes, sir. But to renounce that unendurable
worldly yoke which men believe to be liberty is not perhaps so painful as
you think."
"Well," exclaimed Ned Land, "never will I
give my word of honour not to try to escape."
"I did not ask you for your word of honour,
Master Land," answered the commander, coldly.
"Sir," I replied, beginning to get angry in
spite of my self, "you abuse your situation towards us; it is cruelty."
"No, sir, it is clemency. You are my
prisoners of war. I keep you, when I could, by a word, plunge you into the
depths of the ocean. You attacked me. You came to surprise a secret which no
man in the world must penetrate—the secret of my whole existence. And you
think that I am going to send you back to that world which must know me no
more? Never! In retaining you, it is not you whom I guard—it is myself."
These words indicated a resolution taken on
the part of the commander, against which no arguments would prevail.
"So, sir," I rejoined, "you give us simply
the choice between life and death?"
"Simply."
"My friends," said I, "to a question thus
put, there is nothing to answer. But no word of honour binds us to the
master of this vessel."
"None, sir," answered the Unknown.
Then, in a gentler tone, he continued:
"Now, permit me to finish what I have to
say to you. I know you, M. Aronnax. You and your companions will not,
perhaps, have so much to complain of in the chance which has bound you to my
fate. You will find amongst the books which are my favourite study the work
which you have published on `the depths of the sea.' I have often read it.
You have carried out your work as far as terrestrial science permitted you.
But you do not know all—you have not seen all. Let me tell you then,
Professor, that you will not regret the time passed on board my vessel. You
are going to visit the land of marvels."
These words of the commander had a great
effect upon me. I cannot deny it. My weak point was touched; and I forgot,
for a moment, that the contemplation of these sublime subjects was not worth
the loss of liberty. Besides, I trusted to the future to decide this grave
question. So I contented myself with saying:
"By what name ought I to address you?"
"Sir," replied the commander, "I am nothing
to you but Captain Nemo; and you and your companions are nothing to me but
the passengers of the Nautilus."
Captain Nemo called. A steward appeared.
The captain gave him his orders in that strange language which I did not
understand. Then, turning towards the Canadian and Conseil:
"A repast awaits you in your cabin," said
he. "Be so good as to follow this man.
"And now, M. Aronnax, our breakfast is
ready. Permit me to lead the way."
"I am at your service, Captain."
I followed Captain Nemo; and as soon as I
had passed through the door, I found myself in a kind of passage lighted by
electricity, similar to the waist of a ship. After we had proceeded a dozen
yards, a second door opened before me.
I then entered a dining-room, decorated and
furnished in severe taste. High oaken sideboards, inlaid with ebony, stood
at the two extremities of the room, and upon their shelves glittered china,
porcelain, and glass of inestimable value. The plate on the table sparkled
in the rays which the luminous ceiling shed around, while the light was
tempered and softened by exquisite paintings.
In the centre of the room was a table
richly laid out. Captain Nemo indicated the place I was to occupy.
The breakfast consisted of a certain number
of dishes, the contents of which were furnished by the sea alone; and I was
ignorant of the nature and mode of preparation of some of them. I
acknowledged that they were good, but they had a peculiar flavour, which I
easily became accustomed to. These different aliments appeared to me to be
rich in phosphorus, and I thought they must have a marine origin.
Captain Nemo looked at me. I asked him no
questions, but he guessed my thoughts, and answered of his own accord the
questions which I was burning to address to him.
"The greater part of these dishes are
unknown to you," he said to me. "However, you may partake of them without
fear. They are wholesome and nourishing. For a long time I have renounced
the food of the earth, and I am never ill now. My crew, who are healthy, are
fed on the same food."
"So," said I, "all these eatables are the
produce of the sea?"
"Yes, Professor, the sea supplies all my
wants. Sometimes I cast my nets in tow, and I draw them in ready to break.
Sometimes I hunt in the midst of this element, which appears to be
inaccessible to man, and quarry the game which dwells in my submarine
forests. My flocks, like those of Neptune's old shepherds, graze fearlessly
in the immense prairies of the ocean. I have a vast property there, which I
cultivate myself, and which is always sown by the hand of the Creator of all
things."
"I can understand perfectly, sir, that your
nets furnish excellent fish for your table; I can understand also that you
hunt aquatic game in your submarine forests; but I cannot understand at all
how a particle of meat, no matter how small, can figure in your bill of
fare."
"This, which you believe to be meat,
Professor, is nothing else than fillet of turtle. Here are also some
dolphins' livers, which you take to be ragout of pork. My cook is a clever
fellow, who excels in dressing these various products of the ocean. Taste
all these dishes. Here is a preserve of sea-cucumber, which a Malay would
declare to be unrivalled in the world; here is a cream, of which the milk
has been furnished by the cetacea, and the sugar by the great fucus of the
North Sea; and, lastly, permit me to offer you some preserve of anemones,
which is equal to that of the most delicious fruits."
I tasted, more from curiosity than as a
connoisseur, whilst Captain Nemo enchanted me with his extraordinary
stories.
"You like the sea, Captain?"
"Yes; I love it! The sea is everything. It
covers seven tenths of the terrestrial globe. Its breath is pure and
healthy. It is an immense desert, where man is never lonely, for he feels
life stirring on all sides. The sea is only the embodiment of a supernatural
and wonderful existence. It is nothing but love and emotion; it is the
`Living Infinite,' as one of your poets has said. In fact, Professor, Nature
manifests herself in it by her three kingdoms—mineral, vegetable, and
animal. The sea is the vast reservoir of Nature. The globe began with sea,
so to speak; and who knows if it will not end with it? In it is supreme
tranquillity. The sea does not belong to despots. Upon its surface men can
still exercise unjust laws, fight, tear one another to pieces, and be
carried away with terrestrial horrors. But at thirty feet below its level,
their reign ceases, their influence is quenched, and their power disappears.
Ah! sir, live—live in the bosom of the waters! There only is independence!
There I recognise no masters! There I am free!"
Captain Nemo suddenly became silent in the
midst of this enthusiasm, by which he was quite carried away. For a few
moments he paced up and down, much agitated. Then he became more calm,
regained his accustomed coldness of expression, and turning towards me:
"Now, Professor," said he, "if you wish to
go over the Nautilus, I am at your service."
Captain Nemo rose. I followed him. A double
door, contrived at the back of the dining-room, opened, and I entered a room
equal in dimensions to that which I had just quitted.
It was a library. High pieces of furniture,
of black violet ebony inlaid with brass, supported upon their wide shelves a
great number of books uniformly bound. They followed the shape of the room,
terminating at the lower part in huge divans, covered with brown leather,
which were curved, to afford the greatest comfort. Light movable desks, made
to slide in and out at will, allowed one to rest one's book while reading.
In the centre stood an immense table, covered with pamphlets, amongst which
were some newspapers, already of old date. The electric light flooded
everything; it was shed from four unpolished globes half sunk in the volutes
of the ceiling. I looked with real admiration at this room, so ingeniously
fitted up, and I could scarcely believe my eyes.
"Captain Nemo," said I to my host, who had
just thrown himself on one of the divans, "this is a library which would do
honour to more than one of the continental palaces, and I am absolutely
astounded when I consider that it can follow you to the bottom of the seas."
"Where could one find greater solitude or
silence, Professor?" replied Captain Nemo. "Did your study in the Museum
afford you such perfect quiet?"
"No, sir; and I must confess that it is a
very poor one after yours. You must have six or seven thousand volumes
here."
"Twelve thousand, M. Aronnax. These are the
only ties which bind me to the earth. But I had done with the world on the
day when my Nautilus plunged for the first time beneath the waters. That day
I bought my last volumes, my last pamphlets, my last papers, and from that
time I wish to think that men no longer think or write. These books,
Professor, are at your service besides, and you can make use of them
freely."
I thanked Captain Nemo, and went up to the
shelves of the library. Works on science, morals, and literature abounded in
every language; but I did not see one single work on political economy; that
subject appeared to be strictly proscribed. Strange to say, all these books
were irregularly arranged, in whatever language they were written; and this
medley proved that the Captain of the Nautilus must have read
indiscriminately the books which he took up by chance.
"Sir," said I to the Captain, "I thank you
for having placed this library at my disposal. It contains treasures of
science, and I shall profit by them."
"This room is not only a library," said
Captain Nemo, "it is also a smoking-room."
"A smoking-room!" I cried. "Then one may
smoke on board?"
"Certainly."
"Then, sir, I am forced to believe that you
have kept up a communication with Havannah."
"Not any," answered the Captain. "Accept
this cigar, M. Aronnax; and, though it does not come from Havannah, you will
be pleased with it, if you are a connoisseur."
I took the cigar which was offered me; its
shape recalled the London ones, but it seemed to be made of leaves of gold.
I lighted it at a little brazier, which was supported upon an elegant bronze
stem, and drew the first whiffs with the delight of a lover of smoking who
has not smoked for two days.
"It is excellent, but it is not tobacco."
"No!" answered the Captain, "this tobacco
comes neither from Havannah nor from the East. It is a kind of sea-weed,
rich in nicotine, with which the sea provides me, but somewhat sparingly."
At that moment Captain Nemo opened a door
which stood opposite to that by which I had entered the library, and I
passed into an immense drawing-room splendidly lighted.
It was a vast, four-sided room, thirty feet
long, eighteen wide, and fifteen high. A luminous ceiling, decorated with
light arabesques, shed a soft clear light over all the marvels accumulated
in this museum. For it was in fact a museum, in which an intelligent and
prodigal hand had gathered all the treasures of nature and art, with the
artistic confusion which distinguishes a painter's studio.
Thirty first-rate pictures, uniformly
framed, separated by bright drapery, ornamented the walls, which were hung
with tapestry of severe design. I saw works of great value, the greater part
of which I had admired in the special collections of Europe, and in the
exhibitions of paintings. The several schools of the old masters were
represented by a Madonna of Raphael, a Virgin of Leonardo da Vinci, a nymph
of Corregio, a woman of Titan, an Adoration of Veronese, an Assumption of
Murillo, a portrait of Holbein, a monk of Velasquez, a martyr of Ribera, a
fair of Rubens, two Flemish landscapes of Teniers, three little "genre"
pictures of Gerard Dow, Metsu, and Paul Potter, two specimens of Gericault
and Prudhon, and some sea-pieces of Backhuysen and Vernet. Amongst the works
of modern painters were pictures with the signatures of Delacroix, Ingres,
Decamps, Troyon, Meissonier, Daubigny, etc.; and some admirable statues in
marble and bronze, after the finest antique models, stood upon pedestals in
the corners of this magnificent museum. Amazement, as the Captain of the
Nautilus had predicted, had already begun to take possession of me.
"Professor," said this strange man, "you
must excuse the unceremonious way in which I receive you, and the disorder
of this room."
"Sir," I answered, "without seeking to know
who you are, I recognise in you an artist."
"An amateur, nothing more, sir. Formerly I
loved to collect these beautiful works created by the hand of man. I sought
them greedily, and ferreted them out indefatigably, and I have been able to
bring together some objects of great value. These are my last souvenirs of
that world which is dead to me. In my eyes, your modern artists are already
old; they have two or three thousand years of existence; I confound them in
my own mind. Masters have no age."
"And these musicians?" said I, pointing out
some works of Weber, Rossini, Mozart, Beethoven, Haydn, Meyerbeer, Herold,
Wagner, Auber, Gounod, and a number of others, scattered over a large model
piano-organ which occupied one of the panels of the drawing-room.
"These musicians," replied Captain Nemo,
"are the contemporaries of Orpheus; for in the memory of the dead all
chronological differences are effaced; and I am dead, Professor; as much
dead as those of your friends who are sleeping six feet under the earth!"
Captain Nemo was silent, and seemed lost in
a profound reverie. I contemplated him with deep interest, analysing in
silence the strange expression of his countenance. Leaning on his elbow
against an angle of a costly mosaic table, he no longer saw me,—he had
forgotten my presence.
I did not disturb this reverie, and
continued my observation of the curiosities which enriched this
drawing-room.
Under elegant glass cases, fixed by copper
rivets, were classed and labelled the most precious productions of the sea
which had ever been presented to the eye of a naturalist. My delight as a
professor may be conceived.
The division containing the zoophytes
presented the most curious specimens of the two groups of polypi and
echinodermes. In the first group, the tubipores, were gorgones arranged like
a fan, soft sponges of Syria, ises of the Moluccas, pennatules, an admirable
virgularia of the Norwegian seas, variegated unbellulairae, alcyonariae, a
whole series of madrepores, which my master Milne Edwards has so cleverly
classified, amongst which I remarked some wonderful flabellinae oculinae of
the Island of Bourbon, the "Neptune's car" of the Antilles, superb varieties
of corals—in short, every species of those curious polypi of which entire
islands are formed, which will one day become continents. Of the
echinodermes, remarkable for their coating of spines, asteri, sea-stars,
pantacrinae, comatules, asterophons, echini, holothuri, etc., represented
individually a complete collection of this group.
A somewhat nervous conchyliologist would
certainly have fainted before other more numerous cases, in which were
classified the specimens of molluscs. It was a collection of inestimable
value, which time fails me to describe minutely. Amongst these specimens I
will quote from memory only the elegant royal hammer-fish of the Indian
Ocean, whose regular white spots stood out brightly on a red and brown
ground, an imperial spondyle, bright-coloured, bristling with spines, a rare
specimen in the European museums—(I estimated its value at not less than
L1000); a common hammer-fish of the seas of New Holland, which is only
procured with difficulty; exotic buccardia of Senegal; fragile white bivalve
shells, which a breath might shatter like a soap-bubble; several varieties
of the aspirgillum of Java, a kind of calcareous tube, edged with leafy
folds, and much debated by amateurs; a whole series of trochi, some a
greenish-yellow, found in the American seas, others a reddish-brown, natives
of Australian waters; others from the Gulf of Mexico, remarkable for their
imbricated shell; stellari found in the Southern Seas; and last, the rarest
of all, the magnificent spur of New Zealand; and every description of
delicate and fragile shells to which science has given appropriate names.
Apart, in separate compartments, were
spread out chaplets of pearls of the greatest beauty, which reflected the
electric light in little sparks of fire; pink pearls, torn from the
pinna-marina of the Red Sea; green pearls of the haliotyde iris; yellow,
blue and black pearls, the curious productions of the divers molluscs of
every ocean, and certain mussels of the water-courses of the North; lastly,
several specimens of inestimable value which had been gathered from the
rarest pintadines. Some of these pearls were larger than a pigeon's egg, and
were worth as much, and more than that which the traveller Tavernier sold to
the Shah of Persia for three millions, and surpassed the one in the
possession of the Imaum of Muscat, which I had believed to be unrivalled in
the world.
Therefore, to estimate the value of this
collection was simply impossible. Captain Nemo must have expended millions
in the acquirement of these various specimens, and I was thinking what
source he could have drawn from, to have been able thus to gratify his fancy
for collecting, when I was interrupted by these words:
"You are examining my shells, Professor?
Unquestionably they must be interesting to a naturalist; but for me they
have a far greater charm, for I have collected them all with my own hand,
and there is not a sea on the face of the globe which has escaped my
researches."
"I can understand, Captain, the delight of
wandering about in the midst of such riches. You are one of those who have
collected their treasures themselves. No museum in Europe possesses such a
collection of the produce of the ocean. But if I exhaust all my admiration
upon it, I shall have none left for the vessel which carries it. I do not
wish to pry into your secrets: but I must confess that this Nautilus, with
the motive power which is confined in it, the contrivances which enable it
to be worked, the powerful agent which propels it, all excite my curiosity
to the highest pitch. I see suspended on the walls of this room instruments
of whose use I am ignorant."
"You will find these same instruments in my
own room, Professor, where I shall have much pleasure in explaining their
use to you. But first come and inspect the cabin which is set apart for your
own use. You must see how you will be accommodated on board the Nautilus."
I followed Captain Nemo who, by one of the
doors opening from each panel of the drawing-room, regained the waist. He
conducted me towards the bow, and there I found, not a cabin, but an elegant
room, with a bed, dressing-table, and several other pieces of excellent
furniture.
I could only thank my host.
"Your room adjoins mine," said he, opening
a door, "and mine opens into the drawing-room that we have just quitted."
I entered the Captain's room: it had a
severe, almost a monkish aspect. A small iron bedstead, a table, some
articles for the toilet; the whole lighted by a skylight. No comforts, the
strictest necessaries only.
Captain Nemo pointed to a seat.
"Be so good as to sit down," he said. I
seated myself, and he began thus:
CHAPTER XI
ALL BY ELECTRICITY
"Sir," said Captain Nemo, showing me the
instruments hanging on the walls of his room, "here are the contrivances
required for the navigation of the Nautilus. Here, as in the drawing-room, I
have them always under my eyes, and they indicate my position and exact
direction in the middle of the ocean. Some are known to you, such as the
thermometer, which gives the internal temperature of the Nautilus; the
barometer, which indicates the weight of the air and foretells the changes
of the weather; the hygrometer, which marks the dryness of the atmosphere;
the storm-glass, the contents of which, by decomposing, announce the
approach of tempests; the compass, which guides my course; the sextant,
which shows the latitude by the altitude of the sun; chronometers, by which
I calculate the longitude; and glasses for day and night, which I use to
examine the points of the horizon, when the Nautilus rises to the surface of
the waves."
"These are the usual nautical instruments,"
I replied, "and I know the use of them. But these others, no doubt, answer
to the particular requirements of the Nautilus. This dial with movable
needle is a manometer, is it not?"
"It is actually a manometer. But by
communication with the water, whose external pressure it indicates, it gives
our depth at the same time."
"And these other instruments, the use of
which I cannot guess?"
"Here, Professor, I ought to give you some
explanations. Will you be kind enough to listen to me?"
He was silent for a few moments, then he
said:
"There is a powerful agent, obedient,
rapid, easy, which conforms to every use, and reigns supreme on board my
vessel. Everything is done by means of it. It lights, warms it, and is the
soul of my mechanical apparatus. This agent is electricity."
"Electricity?" I cried in surprise.
"Yes, sir."
"Nevertheless, Captain, you possess an
extreme rapidity of movement, which does not agree well with the power of
electricity. Until now, its dynamic force has remained under restraint, and
has only been able to produce a small amount of power."
"Professor," said Captain Nemo, "my
electricity is not everybody's. You know what sea-water is composed of. In a
thousand grammes are found 96 1/2 per cent. of water, and about 2 2/3 per
cent. of chloride of sodium; then, in a smaller quantity, chlorides of
magnesium and of potassium, bromide of magnesium, sulphate of magnesia,
sulphate and carbonate of lime. You see, then, that chloride of sodium forms
a large part of it. So it is this sodium that I extract from the sea-water,
and of which I compose my ingredients. I owe all to the ocean; it produces
electricity, and electricity gives heat, light, motion, and, in a word, life
to the Nautilus."
"But not the air you breathe?"
"Oh! I could manufacture the air necessary
for my consumption, but it is useless, because I go up to the surface of the
water when I please. However, if electricity does not furnish me with air to
breathe, it works at least the powerful pumps that are stored in spacious
reservoirs, and which enable me to prolong at need, and as long as I will,
my stay in the depths of the sea. It gives a uniform and unintermittent
light, which the sun does not. Now look at this clock; it is electrical, and
goes with a regularity that defies the best chronometers. I have divided it
into twenty-four hours, like the Italian clocks, because for me there is
neither night nor day, sun nor moon, but only that factitious light that I
take with me to the bottom of the sea. Look! just now, it is ten o'clock in
the morning."
"Exactly."
"Another application of electricity. This
dial hanging in front of us indicates the speed of the Nautilus. An electric
thread puts it in communication with the screw, and the needle indicates the
real speed. Look! now we are spinning along with a uniform speed of fifteen
miles an hour."
"It is marvelous! And I see, Captain, you
were right to make use of this agent that takes the place of wind, water,
and steam."
"We have not finished, M. Aronnax," said
Captain Nemo, rising. "If you will allow me, we will examine the stern of
the Nautilus."
Really, I knew already the anterior part of
this submarine boat, of which this is the exact division, starting from the
ship's head: the dining-room, five yards long, separated from the library by
a water-tight partition; the library, five yards long; the large
drawing-room, ten yards long, separated from the Captain's room by a second
water-tight partition; the said room, five yards in length; mine, two and a
half yards; and, lastly a reservoir of air, seven and a half yards, that
extended to the bows. Total length thirty five yards, or one hundred and
five feet. The partitions had doors that were shut hermetically by means of
india-rubber instruments, and they ensured the safety of the Nautilus in
case of a leak.
I followed Captain Nemo through the waist,
and arrived at the centre of the boat. There was a sort of well that opened
between two partitions. An iron ladder, fastened with an iron hook to the
partition, led to the upper end. I asked the Captain what the ladder was
used for.
"It leads to the small boat," he said.
"What! have you a boat?" I exclaimed, in
surprise.
"Of course; an excellent vessel, light and
insubmersible, that serves either as a fishing or as a pleasure boat."
"But then, when you wish to embark, you are
obliged to come to the surface of the water?"
"Not at all. This boat is attached to the
upper part of the hull of the Nautilus, and occupies a cavity made for it.
It is decked, quite water-tight, and held together by solid bolts. This
ladder leads to a man-hole made in the hull of the Nautilus, that
corresponds with a similar hole made in the side of the boat. By this double
opening I get into the small vessel. They shut the one belonging to the
Nautilus; I shut the other by means of screw pressure. I undo the bolts, and
the little boat goes up to the surface of the sea with prodigious rapidity.
I then open the panel of the bridge, carefully shut till then; I mast it,
hoist my sail, take my oars, and I'm off."
"But how do you get back on board?"
"I do not come back, M. Aronnax; the
Nautilus comes to me."
"By your orders?"
"By my orders. An electric thread connects
us. I telegraph to it, and that is enough."
"Really," I said, astonished at these
marvels, "nothing can be more simple."
After having passed by the cage of the
staircase that led to the platform, I saw a cabin six feet long, in which
Conseil and Ned Land, enchanted with their repast, were devouring it with
avidity. Then a door opened into a kitchen nine feet long, situated between
the large store-rooms. There electricity, better than gas itself, did all
the cooking. The streams under the furnaces gave out to the sponges of
platina a heat which was regularly kept up and distributed. They also heated
a distilling apparatus, which, by evaporation, furnished excellent drinkable
water. Near this kitchen was a bathroom comfortably furnished, with hot and
cold water taps.
Next to the kitchen was the berth-room of
the vessel, sixteen feet long. But the door was shut, and I could not see
the management of it, which might have given me an idea of the number of men
employed on board the Nautilus.
At the bottom was a fourth partition that
separated this office from the engine-room. A door opened, and I found
myself in the compartment where Captain Nemo—certainly an engineer of a very
high order—had arranged his locomotive machinery. This engine-room, clearly
lighted, did not measure less than sixty-five feet in length. It was divided
into two parts; the first contained the materials for producing electricity,
and the second the machinery that connected it with the screw. I examined it
with great interest, in order to understand the machinery of the Nautilus.
"You see," said the Captain, "I use
Bunsen's contrivances, not Ruhmkorff's. Those would not have been powerful
enough. Bunsen's are fewer in number, but strong and large, which experience
proves to be the best. The electricity produced passes forward, where it
works, by electro-magnets of great size, on a system of levers and
cog-wheels that transmit the movement to the axle of the screw. This one,
the diameter of which is nineteen feet, and the thread twenty-three feet,
performs about 120 revolutions in a second."
"And you get then?"
"A speed of fifty miles an hour."
"I have seen the Nautilus manoeuvre before
the Abraham Lincoln, and I have my own ideas as to its speed. But this is
not enough. We must see where we go. We must be able to direct it to the
right, to the left, above, below. How do you get to the great depths, where
you find an increasing resistance, which is rated by hundreds of
atmospheres? How do you return to the surface of the ocean? And how do you
maintain yourselves in the requisite medium? Am I asking too much?"
"Not at all, Professor," replied the
Captain, with some hesitation; "since you may never leave this submarine
boat. Come into the saloon, it is our usual study, and there you will learn
all you want to know about the Nautilus."
CHAPTER XII
SOME FIGURES
A moment after we were seated on a divan in
the saloon smoking. The Captain showed me a sketch that gave the plan,
section, and elevation of the Nautilus. Then he began his description in
these words:
"Here, M. Aronnax, are the several
dimensions of the boat you are in. It is an elongated cylinder with conical
ends. It is very like a cigar in shape, a shape already adopted in London in
several constructions of the same sort. The length of this cylinder, from
stem to stern, is exactly 232 feet, and its maximum breadth is twenty-six
feet. It is not built quite like your long-voyage steamers, but its lines
are sufficiently long, and its curves prolonged enough, to allow the water
to slide off easily, and oppose no obstacle to its passage. These two
dimensions enable you to obtain by a simple calculation the surface and
cubic contents of the Nautilus. Its area measures 6,032 feet; and its
contents about 1,500 cubic yards; that is to say, when completely immersed
it displaces 50,000 feet of water, or weighs 1,500 tons.
"When I made the plans for this submarine
vessel, I meant that nine-tenths should be submerged: consequently it ought
only to displace nine-tenths of its bulk, that is to say, only to weigh that
number of tons. I ought not, therefore, to have exceeded that weight,
constructing it on the aforesaid dimensions.
"The Nautilus is composed of two hulls, one
inside, the other outside, joined by T-shaped irons, which render it very
strong. Indeed, owing to this cellular arrangement it resists like a block,
as if it were solid. Its sides cannot yield; it coheres spontaneously, and
not by the closeness of its rivets; and its perfect union of the materials
enables it to defy the roughest seas.
"These two hulls are composed of steel
plates, whose density is from .7 to .8 that of water. The first is not less
than two inches and a half thick and weighs 394 tons. The second envelope,
the keel, twenty inches high and ten thick, weighs only sixty-two tons. The
engine, the ballast, the several accessories and apparatus appendages, the
partitions and bulkheads, weigh 961.62 tons. Do you follow all this?"
"I do."
"Then, when the Nautilus is afloat under
these circumstances, one-tenth is out of the water. Now, if I have made
reservoirs of a size equal to this tenth, or capable of holding 150 tons,
and if I fill them with water, the boat, weighing then 1,507 tons, will be
completely immersed. That would happen, Professor. These reservoirs are in
the lower part of the Nautilus. I turn on taps and they fill, and the vessel
sinks that had just been level with the surface."
"Well, Captain, but now we come to the real
difficulty. I can understand your rising to the surface; but, diving below
the surface, does not your submarine contrivance encounter a pressure, and
consequently undergo an upward thrust of one atmosphere for every thirty
feet of water, just about fifteen pounds per square inch?"
"Just so, sir."
"Then, unless you quite fill the Nautilus,
I do not see how you can draw it down to those depths."
"Professor, you must not confound statics
with dynamics or you will be exposed to grave errors. There is very little
labour spent in attaining the lower regions of the ocean, for all bodies
have a tendency to sink. When I wanted to find out the necessary increase of
weight required to sink the Nautilus, I had only to calculate the reduction
of volume that sea-water acquires according to the depth."
"That is evident."
"Now, if water is not absolutely
incompressible, it is at least capable of very slight compression. Indeed,
after the most recent calculations this reduction is only .000436 of an
atmosphere for each thirty feet of depth. If we want to sink 3,000 feet, I
should keep account of the reduction of bulk under a pressure equal to that
of a column of water of a thousand feet. The calculation is easily verified.
Now, I have supplementary reservoirs capable of holding a hundred tons.
Therefore I can sink to a considerable depth. When I wish to rise to the
level of the sea, I only let off the water, and empty all the reservoirs if
I want the Nautilus to emerge from the tenth part of her total capacity."
I had nothing to object to these
reasonings.
"I admit your calculations, Captain," I
replied; "I should be wrong to dispute them since daily experience confirms
them; but I foresee a real difficulty in the way."
"What, sir?"
"When you are about 1,000 feet deep, the
walls of the Nautilus bear a pressure of 100 atmospheres. If, then, just now
you were to empty the supplementary reservoirs, to lighten the vessel, and
to go up to the surface, the pumps must overcome the pressure of 100
atmospheres, which is 1,500 lbs. per square inch. From that a power——"
"That electricity alone can give," said the
Captain, hastily. "I repeat, sir, that the dynamic power of my engines is
almost infinite. The pumps of the Nautilus have an enormous power, as you
must have observed when their jets of water burst like a torrent upon the
Abraham Lincoln. Besides, I use subsidiary reservoirs only to attain a mean
depth of 750 to 1,000 fathoms, and that with a view of managing my machines.
Also, when I have a mind to visit the depths of the ocean five or six mlles
below the surface, I make use of slower but not less infallible means."
"What are they, Captain?"
"That involves my telling you how the
Nautilus is worked."
"I am impatient to learn."
"To steer this boat to starboard or port,
to turn, in a word, following a horizontal plan, I use an ordinary rudder
fixed on the back of the stern-post, and with one wheel and some tackle to
steer by. But I can also make the Nautilus rise and sink, and sink and rise,
by a vertical movement by means of two inclined planes fastened to its
sides, opposite the centre of flotation, planes that move in every
direction, and that are worked by powerful levers from the interior. If the
planes are kept parallel with the boat, it moves horizontally. If slanted,
the Nautilus, according to this inclination, and under the influence of the
screw, either sinks diagonally or rises diagonally as it suits me. And even
if I wish to rise more quickly to the surface, I ship the screw, and the
pressure of the water causes the Nautilus to rise vertically like a balloon
filled with hydrogen."
"Bravo, Captain! But how can the steersman
follow the route in the middle of the waters?"
"The steersman is placed in a glazed box,
that is raised about the hull of the Nautilus, and furnished with lenses."
"Are these lenses capable of resisting such
pressure?"
"Perfectly. Glass, which breaks at a blow,
is, nevertheless, capable of offering considerable resistance. During some
experiments of fishing by electric light in 1864 in the Northern Seas, we
saw plates less than a third of an inch thick resist a pressure of sixteen
atmospheres. Now, the glass that I use is not less than thirty times
thicker."
"Granted. But, after all, in order to see,
the light must exceed the darkness, and in the midst of the darkness in the
water, how can you see?"
"Behind the steersman's cage is placed a
powerful electric reflector, the rays from which light up the sea for half a
mile in front."
"Ah! bravo, bravo, Captain! Now I can
account for this phosphorescence in the supposed narwhal that puzzled us so.
I now ask you if the boarding of the Nautilus and of the Scotia, that has
made such a noise, has been the result of a chance rencontre?"
"Quite accidental, sir. I was sailing only
one fathom below the surface of the water when the shock came. It had no bad
result."
"None, sir. But now, about your rencontre
with the Abraham Lincoln?"
"Professor, I am sorry for one of the best
vessels in the American navy; but they attacked me, and I was bound to
defend myself. I contented myself, however, with putting the frigate hors de
combat; she will not have any difficulty in getting repaired at the next
port."
"Ah, Commander! your Nautilus is certainly
a marvellous boat."
"Yes, Professor; and I love it as if it
were part of myself. If danger threatens one of your vessels on the ocean,
the first impression is the feeling of an abyss above and below. On the
Nautilus men's hearts never fail them. No defects to be afraid of, for the
double shell is as firm as iron; no rigging to attend to; no sails for the
wind to carry away; no boilers to burst; no fire to fear, for the vessel is
made of iron, not of wood; no coal to run short, for electricity is the only
mechanical agent; no collision to fear, for it alone swims in deep water; no
tempest to brave, for when it dives below the water it reaches absolute
tranquillity. There, sir! that is the perfection of vessels! And if it is
true that the engineer has more confidence in the vessel than the builder,
and the builder than the captain himself, you understand the trust I repose
in my Nautilus; for I am at once captain, builder, and engineer."
"But how could you construct this wonderful
Nautilus in secret?"
"Each separate portion, M. Aronnax, was
brought from different parts of the globe."
"But these parts had to be put together and
arranged?"
"Professor, I had set up my workshops upon
a desert island in the ocean. There my workmen, that is to say, the brave
men that I instructed and educated, and myself have put together our
Nautilus. Then, when the work was finished, fire destroyed all trace of our
proceedings on this island, that I could have jumped over if I had liked."
"Then the cost of this vessel is great?"
"M. Aronnax, an iron vessel costs L145 per
ton. Now the Nautilus weighed 1,500. It came therefore to L67,500, and
L80,000 more for fitting it up, and about L200,000, with the works of art
and the collections it contains."
"One last question, Captain Nemo."
"Ask it, Professor."
"You are rich?"
"Immensely rich, sir; and I could, without
missing it, pay the national debt of France."
I stared at the singular person who spoke
thus. Was he playing upon my credulity? The future would decide that.
CHAPTER XIII
THE BLACK RIVER
The portion of the terrestrial globe which
is covered by water is estimated at upwards of eighty millions of acres.
This fluid mass comprises two billions two hundred and fifty millions of
cubic miles, forming a spherical body of a diameter of sixty leagues, the
weight of which would be three quintillions of tons. To comprehend the
meaning of these figures, it is necessary to observe that a quintillion is
to a billion as a billion is to unity; in other words, there are as many
billions in a quintillion as there are units in a billion. This mass of
fluid is equal to about the quantity of water which would be discharged by
all the rivers of the earth in forty thousand years.
During the geological epochs the ocean
originally prevailed everywhere. Then by degrees, in the silurian period,
the tops of the mountains began to appear, the islands emerged, then
disappeared in partial deluges, reappeared, became settled, formed
continents, till at length the earth became geographically arranged, as we
see in the present day. The solid had wrested from the liquid thirty-seven
million six hundred and fifty-seven square miles, equal to twelve billions
nine hundred and sixty millions of acres.
The shape of continents allows us to divide
the waters into five great portions: the Arctic or Frozen Ocean, the
Antarctic, or Frozen Ocean, the Indian, the Atlantic, and the Pacific
Oceans.
The Pacific Ocean extends from north to
south between the two Polar Circles, and from east to west between Asia and
America, over an extent of 145 degrees of longitude. It is the quietest of
seas; its currents are broad and slow, it has medium tides, and abundant
rain. Such was the ocean that my fate destined me first to travel over under
these strange conditions.
"Sir," said Captain Nemo, "we will, if you
please, take our bearings and fix the starting-point of this voyage. It is a
quarter to twelve; I will go up again to the surface."
The Captain pressed an electric clock three
times. The pumps began to drive the water from the tanks; the needle of the
manometer marked by a different pressure the ascent of the Nautilus, then it
stopped.
"We have arrived," said the Captain.
I went to the central staircase which
opened on to the platform, clambered up the iron steps, and found myself on
the upper part of the Nautilus.
The platform was only three feet out of
water. The front and back of the Nautilus was of that spindle-shape which
caused it justly to be compared to a cigar. I noticed that its iron plates,
slightly overlaying each other, resembled the shell which clothes the bodies
of our large terrestrial reptiles. It explained to me how natural it was, in
spite of all glasses, that this boat should have been taken for a marine
animal.
Toward the middle of the platform the
longboat, half buried in the hull of the vessel, formed a slight
excrescence. Fore and aft rose two cages of medium height with inclined
sides, and partly closed by thick lenticular glasses; one destined for the
steersman who directed the Nautilus, the other containing a brilliant
lantern to give light on the road.
The sea was beautiful, the sky pure.
Scarcely could the long vehicle feel the broad undulations of the ocean. A
light breeze from the east rippled the surface of the waters. The horizon,
free from fog, made observation easy. Nothing was in sight. Not a quicksand,
not an island. A vast desert.
Captain Nemo, by the help of his sextant,
took the altitude of the sun, which ought also to give the latitude. He
waited for some moments till its disc touched the horizon. Whilst taking
observations not a muscle moved, the instrument could not have been more
motionless in a hand of marble.
"Twelve o'clock, sir," said he. "When you
like——"
I cast a last look upon the sea, slightly
yellowed by the Japanese coast, and descended to the saloon.
"And now, sir, I leave you to your
studies," added the Captain; "our course is E.N.E., our depth is twenty-six
fathoms. Here are maps on a large scale by which you may follow it. The
saloon is at your disposal, and, with your permission, I will retire."
Captain Nemo bowed, and I remained alone, lost in thoughts all bearing on
the commander of the Nautilus.
For a whole hour was I deep in these
reflections, seeking to pierce this mystery so interesting to me. Then my
eyes fell upon the vast planisphere spread upon the table, and I placed my
finger on the very spot where the given latitude and longitude crossed.
The sea has its large rivers like the
continents. They are special currents known by their temperature and their
colour. The most remarkable of these is known by the name of the Gulf
Stream. Science has decided on the globe the direction of five principal
currents: one in the North Atlantic, a second in the South, a third in the
North Pacific, a fourth in the South, and a fifth in the Southern Indian
Ocean. It is even probable that a sixth current existed at one time or
another in the Northern Indian Ocean, when the Caspian and Aral Seas formed
but one vast sheet of water.
At this point indicated on the planisphere
one of these currents was rolling, the Kuro-Scivo of the Japanese, the Black
River, which, leaving the Gulf of Bengal, where it is warmed by the
perpendicular rays of a tropical sun, crosses the Straits of Malacca along
the coast of Asia, turns into the North Pacific to the Aleutian Islands,
carrying with it trunks of camphor-trees and other indigenous productions,
and edging the waves of the ocean with the pure indigo of its warm water. It
was this current that the Nautilus was to follow. I followed it with my eye;
saw it lose itself in the vastness of the Pacific, and felt myself drawn
with it, when Ned Land and Conseil appeared at the door of the saloon.
My two brave companions remained petrified
at the sight of the wonders spread before them.
"Where are we, where are we?" exclaimed the
Canadian. "In the museum at Quebec?"
"My friends," I answered, making a sign for
them to enter, "you are not in Canada, but on board the Nautilus, fifty
yards below the level of the sea."
"But, M. Aronnax," said Ned Land, "can you
tell me how many men there are on board? Ten, twenty, fifty, a hundred?"
"I cannot answer you, Mr. Land; it is
better to abandon for a time all idea of seizing the Nautilus or escaping
from it. This ship is a masterpiece of modern industry, and I should be
sorry not to have seen it. Many people would accept the situation forced
upon us, if only to move amongst such wonders. So be quiet and let us try
and see what passes around us."
"See!" exclaimed the harpooner, "but we can
see nothing in this iron prison! We are walking—we are sailing—blindly."
Ned Land had scarcely pronounced these
words when all was suddenly darkness. The luminous ceiling was gone, and so
rapidly that my eyes received a painful impression.
We remained mute, not stirring, and not
knowing what surprise awaited us, whether agreeable or disagreeable. A
sliding noise was heard: one would have said that panels were working at the
sides of the Nautilus.
"It is the end of the end!" said Ned Land.
Suddenly light broke at each side of the
saloon, through two oblong openings. The liquid mass appeared vividly lit up
by the electric gleam. Two crystal plates separated us from the sea. At
first I trembled at the thought that this frail partition might break, but
strong bands of copper bound them, giving an almost infinite power of
resistance.
The sea was distinctly visible for a mile
all round the Nautilus. What a spectacle! What pen can describe it? Who
could paint the effects of the light through those transparent sheets of
water, and the softness of the successive gradations from the lower to the
superior strata of the ocean?
We know the transparency of the sea and
that its clearness is far beyond that of rock-water. The mineral and organic
substances which it holds in suspension heightens its transparency. In
certain parts of the ocean at the Antilles, under seventy-five fathoms of
water, can be seen with surprising clearness a bed of sand. The penetrating
power of the solar rays does not seem to cease for a depth of one hundred
and fifty fathoms. But in this middle fluid travelled over by the Nautilus,
the electric brightness was produced even in the bosom of the waves. It was
no longer luminous water, but liquid light.
On each side a window opened into this
unexplored abyss. The obscurity of the saloon showed to advantage the
brightness outside, and we looked out as if this pure crystal had been the
glass of an immense aquarium.
"You wished to see, friend Ned; well, you
see now."
"Curious! curious!" muttered the Canadian,
who, forgetting his ill-temper, seemed to submit to some irresistible
attraction; "and one would come further than this to admire such a sight!"
"Ah!" thought I to myself, "I understand
the life of this man; he has made a world apart for himself, in which he
treasures all his greatest wonders."
For two whole hours an aquatic army
escorted the Nautilus. During their games, their bounds, while rivalling
each other in beauty, brightness, and velocity, I distinguished the green
labre; the banded mullet, marked by a double line of black; the round-tailed
goby, of a white colour, with violet spots on the back; the Japanese
scombrus, a beautiful mackerel of these seas, with a blue body and silvery
head; the brilliant azurors, whose name alone defies description; some
banded spares, with variegated fins of blue and yellow; the woodcocks of the
seas, some specimens of which attain a yard in length; Japanese salamanders,
spider lampreys, serpents six feet long, with eyes small and lively, and a
huge mouth bristling with teeth; with many other species.
Our imagination was kept at its height,
interjections followed quickly on each other. Ned named the fish, and
Conseil classed them. I was in ecstasies with the vivacity of their
movements and the beauty of their forms. Never had it been given to me to
surprise these animals, alive and at liberty, in their natural element. I
will not mention all the varieties which passed before my dazzled eyes, all
the collection of the seas of China and Japan. These fish, more numerous
than the birds of the air, came, attracted, no doubt, by the brilliant focus
of the electric light.
Suddenly there was daylight in the saloon,
the iron panels closed again, and the enchanting vision disappeared. But for
a long time I dreamt on, till my eyes fell on the instruments hanging on the
partition. The compass still showed the course to be E.N.E., the manometer
indicated a pressure of five atmospheres, equivalent to a depth of twenty
five fathoms, and the electric log gave a speed of fifteen miles an hour. I
expected Captain Nemo, but he did not appear. The clock marked the hour of
five.
Ned Land and Conseil returned to their
cabin, and I retired to my chamber. My dinner was ready. It was composed of
turtle soup made of the most delicate hawks bills, of a surmullet served
with puff paste (the liver of which, prepared by itself, was most
delicious), and fillets of the emperor-holocanthus, the savour of which
seemed to me superior even to salmon.
I passed the evening reading, writing, and
thinking. Then sleep overpowered me, and I stretched myself on my couch of
zostera, and slept profoundly, whilst the Nautilus was gliding rapidly
through the current of the Black River.
CHAPTER XIV
A NOTE OF INVITATION
The next day was the 9th of November. I
awoke after a long sleep of twelve hours. Conseil came, according to custom,
to know "how I passed the night," and to offer his services. He had left his
friend the Canadian sleeping like a man who had never done anything else all
his life. I let the worthy fellow chatter as he pleased, without caring to
answer him. I was preoccupied by the absence of the Captain during our
sitting of the day before, and hoping to see him to-day.
As soon as I was dressed I went into the
saloon. It was deserted. I plunged into the study of the shell treasures
hidden behind the glasses.
The whole day passed without my being
honoured by a visit from Captain Nemo. The panels of the saloon did not
open. Perhaps they did not wish us to tire of these beautiful things.
The course of the Nautilus was E.N.E., her
speed twelve knots, the depth below the surface between twenty-five and
thirty fathoms.
The next day, 10th of November, the same
desertion, the same solitude. I did not see one of the ship's crew: Ned and
Conseil spent the greater part of the day with me. They were astonished at
the puzzling absence of the Captain. Was this singular man ill?—had he
altered his intentions with regard to us?
After all, as Conseil said, we enjoyed
perfect liberty, we were delicately and abundantly fed. Our host kept to his
terms of the treaty. We could not complain, and, indeed, the singularity of
our fate reserved such wonderful compensation for us that we had no right to
accuse it as yet.
That day I commenced the journal of these
adventures which has enabled me to relate them with more scrupulous
exactitude and minute detail.
11th November, early in the morning. The
fresh air spreading over the interior of the Nautilus told me that we had
come to the surface of the ocean to renew our supply of oxygen. I directed
my steps to the central staircase, and mounted the platform.
It was six o'clock, the weather was cloudy,
the sea grey, but calm. Scarcely a billow. Captain Nemo, whom I hoped to
meet, would he be there? I saw no one but the steersman imprisoned in his
glass cage. Seated upon the projection formed by the hull of the pinnace, I
inhaled the salt breeze with delight.
By degrees the fog disappeared under the
action of the sun's rays, the radiant orb rose from behind the eastern
horizon. The sea flamed under its glance like a train of gunpowder. The
clouds scattered in the heights were coloured with lively tints of beautiful
shades, and numerous "mare's tails," which betokened wind for that day. But
what was wind to this Nautilus, which tempests could not frighten!
I was admiring this joyous rising of the
sun, so gay, and so life-giving, when I heard steps approaching the
platform. I was prepared to salute Captain Nemo, but it was his second (whom
I had already seen on the Captain's first visit) who appeared. He advanced
on the platform, not seeming to see me. With his powerful glass to his eye,
he scanned every point of the horizon with great attention. This examination
over, he approached the panel and pronounced a sentence in exactly these
terms. I have remembered it, for every morning it was repeated under exactly
the same conditions. It was thus worded:
"Nautron respoc lorni virch."
What it meant I could not say.
These words pronounced, the second
descended. I thought that the Nautilus was about to return to its submarine
navigation. I regained the panel and returned to my chamber.
Five days sped thus, without any change in
our situation. Every morning I mounted the platform. The same phrase was
pronounced by the same individual. But Captain Nemo did not appear.
I had made up my mind that I should never
see him again, when, on the 16th November, on returning to my room with Ned
and Conseil, I found upon my table a note addressed to me. I opened it
impatiently. It was written in a bold, clear hand, the characters rather
pointed, recalling the German type. The note was worded as follows:
TO PROFESSOR
ARONNAX, On board the Nautilus. 16th of November, 1867.
Captain Nemo invites Professor Aronnax to a
hunting-party, which will take place to-morrow morning in the forests of the
Island of Crespo. He hopes that nothing will prevent the Professor from
being present, and he will with pleasure see him joined by his companions.
CAPTAIN NEMO, Commander of
the Nautilus.
"A hunt!" exclaimed Ned.
"And in the forests of the Island of
Crespo!" added Conseil.
"Oh! then the gentleman is going on terra
firma?" replied Ned Land.
"That seems to me to be clearly indicated,"
said I, reading the letter once more.
"Well, we must accept," said the Canadian.
"But once more on dry ground, we shall know what to do. Indeed, I shall not
be sorry to eat a piece of fresh venison."
Without seeking to reconcile what was
contradictory between Captain Nemo's manifest aversion to islands and
continents, and his invitation to hunt in a forest, I contented myself with
replying:
"Let us first see where the Island of
Crespo is."
I consulted the planisphere, and in 32° 40'
N. lat. and 157° 50' W. long., I found a small island, recognised in 1801 by
Captain Crespo, and marked in the ancient Spanish maps as Rocca de la Plata,
the meaning of which is The Silver Rock. We were then about eighteen hundred
miles from our starting-point, and the course of the Nautilus, a little
changed, was bringing it back towards the southeast.
I showed this little rock, lost in the
midst of the North Pacific, to my companions.
"If Captain Nemo does sometimes go on dry
ground," said I, "he at least chooses desert islands."
Ned Land shrugged his shoulders without
speaking, and Conseil and he left me.
After supper, which was served by the
steward, mute and impassive, I went to bed, not without some anxiety.
The next morning, the 17th of November, on
awakening, I felt that the Nautilus was perfectly still. I dressed quickly
and entered the saloon.
Captain Nemo was there, waiting for me. He
rose, bowed, and asked me if it was convenient for me to accompany him. As
he made no allusion to his absence during the last eight days, I did not
mention it, and simply answered that my companions and myself were ready to
follow him.
We entered the dining-room, where breakfast
was served.
"M. Aronnax," said the Captain, "pray,
share my breakfast without ceremony; we will chat as we eat. For, though I
promised you a walk in the forest, I did not undertake to find hotels there.
So breakfast as a man who will most likely not have his dinner till very
late."
I did honour to the repast. It was composed
of several kinds of fish, and slices of sea-cucumber, and different sorts of
seaweed. Our drink consisted of pure water, to which the Captain added some
drops of a fermented liquor, extracted by the Kamschatcha method from a
seaweed known under the name of Rhodomenia palmata. Captain Nemo ate at
first without saying a word. Then he began:
"Sir, when I proposed to you to hunt in my
submarine forest of Crespo, you evidently thought me mad. Sir, you should
never judge lightly of any man."
"But Captain, believe me——"
"Be kind enough to listen, and you will
then see whether you have any cause to accuse me of folly and
contradiction."
"I listen."
"You know as well as I do, Professor, that
man can live under water, providing he carries with him a sufficient supply
of breathable air. In submarine works, the workman, clad in an impervious
dress, with his head in a metal helmet, receives air from above by means of
forcing pumps and regulators."
"That is a diving apparatus," said I.
"Just so, but under these conditions the
man is not at liberty; he is attached to the pump which sends him air
through an india-rubber tube, and if we were obliged to be thus held to the
Nautilus, we could not go far."
"And the means of getting free?" I asked.
"It is to use the Rouquayrol apparatus,
invented by two of your own countrymen, which I have brought to perfection
for my own use, and which will allow you to risk yourself under these new
physiological conditions without any organ whatever suffering. It consists
of a reservoir of thick iron plates, in which I store the air under a
pressure of fifty atmospheres. This reservoir is fixed on the back by means
of braces, like a soldier's knapsack. Its upper part forms a box in which
the air is kept by means of a bellows, and therefore cannot escape unless at
its normal tension. In the Rouquayrol apparatus such as we use, two india
rubber pipes leave this box and join a sort of tent which holds the nose and
mouth; one is to introduce fresh air, the other to let out the foul, and the
tongue closes one or the other according to the wants of the respirator. But
I, in encountering great pressures at the bottom of the sea, was obliged to
shut my head, like that of a diver in a ball of copper; and it is to this
ball of copper that the two pipes, the inspirator and the expirator, open."
"Perfectly, Captain Nemo; but the air that
you carry with you must soon be used; when it only contains fifteen per
cent. of oxygen it is no longer fit to breathe."
"Right! But I told you, M. Aronnax, that
the pumps of the Nautilus allow me to store the air under considerable
pressure, and on those conditions the reservoir of the apparatus can furnish
breathable air for nine or ten hours."
"I have no further objections to make," I
answered. "I will only ask you one thing, Captain—how can you light your
road at the bottom of the sea?"
"With the Ruhmkorff apparatus, M. Aronnax;
one is carried on the back, the other is fastened to the waist. It is
composed of a Bunsen pile, which I do not work with bichromate of potash,
but with sodium. A wire is introduced which collects the electricity
produced, and directs it towards a particularly made lantern. In this
lantern is a spiral glass which contains a small quantity of carbonic gas.
When the apparatus is at work this gas becomes luminous, giving out a white
and continuous light. Thus provided, I can breathe and I can see."
"Captain Nemo, to all my objections you
make such crushing answers that I dare no longer doubt. But, if I am forced
to admit the Rouquayrol and Ruhmkorff apparatus, I must be allowed some
reservations with regard to the gun I am to carry."
"But it is not a gun for powder," answered
the Captain.
"Then it is an air-gun."
"Doubtless! How would you have me
manufacture gun powder on board, without either saltpetre, sulphur, or
charcoal?"
"Besides," I added, "to fire under water in
a medium eight hundred and fifty-five times denser than the air, we must
conquer very considerable resistance."
"That would be no difficulty. There exist
guns, according to Fulton, perfected in England by Philip Coles and Burley,
in France by Furcy, and in Italy by Landi, which are furnished with a
peculiar system of closing, which can fire under these conditions. But I
repeat, having no powder, I use air under great pressure, which the pumps of
the Nautilus furnish abundantly."
"But this air must be rapidly used?"
"Well, have I not my Rouquayrol reservoir,
which can furnish it at need? A tap is all that is required. Besides M.
Aronnax, you must see yourself that, during our submarine hunt, we can spend
but little air and but few balls."
"But it seems to me that in this twilight,
and in the midst of this fluid, which is very dense compared with the
atmosphere, shots could not go far, nor easily prove mortal."
"Sir, on the contrary, with this gun every
blow is mortal; and, however lightly the animal is touched, it falls as if
struck by a thunderbolt."
"Why?"
"Because the balls sent by this gun are not
ordinary balls, but little cases of glass. These glass cases are covered
with a case of steel, and weighted with a pellet of lead; they are real
Leyden bottles, into which the electricity is forced to a very high tension.
With the slightest shock they are discharged, and the animal, however strong
it may be, falls dead. I must tell you that these cases are size number
four, and that the charge for an ordinary gun would be ten."
"I will argue no longer," I replied, rising
from the table. "I have nothing left me but to take my gun. At all events, I
will go where you go."
Captain Nemo then led me aft; and in
passing before Ned's and Conseil's cabin, I called my two companions, who
followed promptly. We then came to a cell near the machinery-room, in which
we put on our walking-dress.
CHAPTER XV
A WALK ON THE BOTTOM OF THE
SEA
This cell was, to speak correctly, the
arsenal and wardrobe of the Nautilus. A dozen diving apparatuses hung from
the partition waiting our use.
Ned Land, on seeing them, showed evident
repugnance to dress himself in one.
"But, my worthy Ned, the forests of the
Island of Crespo are nothing but submarine forests."
"Good!" said the disappointed harpooner,
who saw his dreams of fresh meat fade away. "And you, M. Aronnax, are you
going to dress yourself in those clothes?"
"There is no alternative, Master Ned."
"As you please, sir," replied the
harpooner, shrugging his shoulders; "but, as for me, unless I am forced, I
will never get into one."
"No one will force you, Master Ned," said
Captain Nemo.
"Is Conseil going to risk it?" asked Ned.
"I follow my master wherever he goes,"
replied Conseil.
At the Captain's call two of the ship's
crew came to help us dress in these heavy and impervious clothes, made of
india-rubber without seam, and constructed expressly to resist considerable
pressure. One would have thought it a suit of armour, both supple and
resisting. This suit formed trousers and waistcoat. The trousers were
finished off with thick boots, weighted with heavy leaden soles. The texture
of the waistcoat was held together by bands of copper, which crossed the
chest, protecting it from the great pressure of the water, and leaving the
lungs free to act; the sleeves ended in gloves, which in no way restrained
the movement of the hands. There was a vast difference noticeable between
these consummate apparatuses and the old cork breastplates, jackets, and
other contrivances in vogue during the eighteenth century.
Captain Nemo and one of his companions (a
sort of Hercules, who must have possessed great strength), Conseil and
myself were soon enveloped in the dresses. There remained nothing more to be
done but to enclose our heads in the metal box. But, before proceeding to
this operation, I asked the Captain's permission to examine the guns.
One of the Nautilus men gave me a simple
gun, the butt end of which, made of steel, hollow in the centre, was rather
large. It served as a reservoir for compressed air, which a valve, worked by
a spring, allowed to escape into a metal tube. A box of projectiles in a
groove in the thickness of the butt end contained about twenty of these
electric balls, which, by means of a spring, were forced into the barrel of
the gun. As soon as one shot was fired, another was ready.
"Captain Nemo," said I, "this arm is
perfect, and easily handled: I only ask to be allowed to try it. But how
shall we gain the bottom of the sea?"
"At this moment, Professor, the Nautilus is
stranded in five fathoms, and we have nothing to do but to start."
"But how shall we get off?"
"You shall see."
Captain Nemo thrust his head into the
helmet, Conseil and I did the same, not without hearing an ironical "Good
sport!" from the Canadian. The upper part of our dress terminated in a
copper collar upon which was screwed the metal helmet. Three holes,
protected by thick glass, allowed us to see in all directions, by simply
turning our head in the interior of the head-dress. As soon as it was in
position, the Rouquayrol apparatus on our backs began to act; and, for my
part, I could breathe with ease.
With the Ruhmkorff lamp hanging from my
belt, and the gun in my hand, I was ready to set out. But to speak the
truth, imprisoned in these heavy garments, and glued to the deck by my
leaden soles, it was impossible for me to take a step.
But this state of things was provided for.
I felt myself being pushed into a little room contiguous to the wardrobe
room. My companions followed, towed along in the same way. I heard a
water-tight door, furnished with stopper plates, close upon us, and we were
wrapped in profound darkness.
After some minutes, a loud hissing was
heard. I felt the cold mount from my feet to my chest. Evidently from some
part of the vessel they had, by means of a tap, given entrance to the water,
which was invading us, and with which the room was soon filled. A second
door cut in the side of the Nautilus then opened. We saw a faint light. In
another instant our feet trod the bottom of the sea.
And now, how can I retrace the impression
left upon me by that walk under the waters? Words are impotent to relate
such wonders! Captain Nemo walked in front, his companion followed some
steps behind. Conseil and I remained near each other, as if an exchange of
words had been possible through our metallic cases. I no longer felt the
weight of my clothing, or of my shoes, of my reservoir of air, or my thick
helmet, in the midst of which my head rattled like an almond in its shell.
The light, which lit the soil thirty feet
below the surface of the ocean, astonished me by its power. The solar rays
shone through the watery mass easily, and dissipated all colour, and I
clearly distinguished objects at a distance of a hundred and fifty yards.
Beyond that the tints darkened into fine gradations of ultramarine, and
faded into vague obscurity. Truly this water which surrounded me was but
another air denser than the terrestrial atmosphere, but almost as
transparent. Above me was the calm surface of the sea. We were walking on
fine, even sand, not wrinkled, as on a flat shore, which retains the
impression of the billows. This dazzling carpet, really a reflector,
repelled the rays of the sun with wonderful intensity, which accounted for
the vibration which penetrated every atom of liquid. Shall I be believed
when I say that, at the depth of thirty feet, I could see as if I was in
broad daylight?
For a quarter of an hour I trod on this
sand, sown with the impalpable dust of shells. The hull of the Nautilus,
resembling a long shoal, disappeared by degrees; but its lantern, when
darkness should overtake us in the waters, would help to guide us on board
by its distinct rays.
Soon forms of objects outlined in the
distance were discernible. I recognised magnificent rocks, hung with a
tapestry of zoophytes of the most beautiful kind, and I was at first struck
by the peculiar effect of this medium.
It was then ten in the morning; the rays of
the sun struck the surface of the waves at rather an oblique angle, and at
the touch of their light, decomposed by refraction as through a prism,
flowers, rocks, plants, shells, and polypi were shaded at the edges by the
seven solar colours. It was marvellous, a feast for the eyes, this
complication of coloured tints, a perfect kaleidoscope of green, yellow,
orange, violet, indigo, and blue; in one word, the whole palette of an
enthusiastic colourist! Why could I not communicate to Conseil the lively
sensations which were mounting to my brain, and rival him in expressions of
admiration? For aught I knew, Captain Nemo and his companion might be able
to exchange thoughts by means of signs previously agreed upon. So, for want
of better, I talked to myself; I declaimed in the copper box which covered
my head, thereby expending more air in vain words than was perhaps wise.
Various kinds of isis, clusters of pure
tuft-coral, prickly fungi, and anemones formed a brilliant garden of
flowers, decked with their collarettes of blue tentacles, sea-stars studding
the sandy bottom. It was a real grief to me to crush under my feet the
brilliant specimens of molluscs which strewed the ground by thousands, of
hammerheads, donaciae (veritable bounding shells), of staircases, and red
helmet-shells, angel-wings, and many others produced by this inexhaustible
ocean. But we were bound to walk, so we went on, whilst above our heads
waved medusae whose umbrellas of opal or rose-pink, escalloped with a band
of blue, sheltered us from the rays of the sun and fiery pelagiae, which, in
the darkness, would have strewn our path with phosphorescent light.
All these wonders I saw in the space of a
quarter of a mile, scarcely stopping, and following Captain Nemo, who
beckoned me on by signs. Soon the nature of the soil changed; to the sandy
plain succeeded an extent of slimy mud which the Americans call "ooze,"
composed of equal parts of silicious and calcareous shells. We then
travelled over a plain of seaweed of wild and luxuriant vegetation. This
sward was of close texture, and soft to the feet, and rivalled the softest
carpet woven by the hand of man. But whilst verdure was spread at our feet,
it did not abandon our heads. A light network of marine plants, of that
inexhaustible family of seaweeds of which more than two thousand kinds are
known, grew on the surface of the water.
I noticed that the green plants kept nearer
the top of the sea, whilst the red were at a greater depth, leaving to the
black or brown the care of forming gardens and parterres in the remote beds
of the ocean.
We had quitted the Nautilus about an hour
and a half. It was near noon; I knew by the perpendicularity of the sun's
rays, which were no longer refracted. The magical colours disappeared by
degrees, and the shades of emerald and sapphire were effaced. We walked with
a regular step, which rang upon the ground with astonishing intensity; the
slightest noise was transmitted with a quickness to which the ear is
unaccustomed on the earth; indeed, water is a better conductor of sound than
air, in the ratio of four to one. At this period the earth sloped downwards;
the light took a uniform tint. We were at a depth of a hundred and five
yards and twenty inches, undergoing a pressure of six atmospheres.
At this depth I could still see the rays of
the sun, though feebly; to their intense brilliancy had succeeded a reddish
twilight, the lowest state between day and night; but we could still see
well enough; it was not necessary to resort to the Ruhmkorff apparatus as
yet. At this moment Captain Nemo stopped; he waited till I joined him, and
then pointed to an obscure mass, looming in the shadow, at a short distance.
"It is the forest of the Island of Crespo,"
thought I; and I was not mistaken.
CHAPTER XVI
A SUBMARINE FOREST
We had at last arrived on the borders of
this forest, doubtless one of the finest of Captain Nemo's immense domains.
He looked upon it as his own, and considered he had the same right over it
that the first men had in the first days of the world. And, indeed, who
would have disputed with him the possession of this submarine property? What
other hardier pioneer would come, hatchet in hand, to cut down the dark
copses?
This forest was composed of large
tree-plants; and the moment we penetrated under its vast arcades, I was
struck by the singular position of their branches—a position I had not yet
observed.
Not an herb which carpeted the ground, not
a branch which clothed the trees, was either broken or bent, nor did they
extend horizontally; all stretched up to the surface of the ocean. Not a
filament, not a ribbon, however thin they might be, but kept as straight as
a rod of iron. The fuci and llianas grew in rigid perpendicular lines, due
to the density of the element which had produced them. Motionless yet, when
bent to one side by the hand, they directly resumed their former position.
Truly it was the region of perpendicularity!
I soon accustomed myself to this fantastic
position, as well as to the comparative darkness which surrounded us. The
soil of the forest seemed covered with sharp blocks, difficult to avoid. The
submarine flora struck me as being very perfect, and richer even than it
would have been in the arctic or tropical zones, where these productions are
not so plentiful. But for some minutes I involuntarily confounded the
genera, taking animals for plants; and who would not have been mistaken? The
fauna and the flora are too closely allied in this submarine world.
These plants are self-propagated, and the
principle of their existence is in the water, which upholds and nourishes
them. The greater number, instead of leaves, shoot forth blades of
capricious shapes, comprised within a scale of colours pink, carmine, green,
olive, fawn, and brown.
"Curious anomaly, fantastic element!" said
an ingenious naturalist, "in which the animal kingdom blossoms, and the
vegetable does not!"
In about an hour Captain Nemo gave the
signal to halt; I, for my part, was not sorry, and we stretched ourselves
under an arbour of alariae, the long thin blades of which stood up like
arrows.
This short rest seemed delicious to me;
there was nothing wanting but the charm of conversation; but, impossible to
speak, impossible to answer, I only put my great copper head to Conseil's. I
saw the worthy fellow's eyes glistening with delight, and, to show his
satisfaction, he shook himself in his breastplate of air, in the most
comical way in the world.
After four hours of this walking, I was
surprised not to find myself dreadfully hungry. How to account for this
state of the stomach I could not tell. But instead I felt an insurmountable
desire to sleep, which happens to all divers. And my eyes soon closed behind
the thick glasses, and I fell into a heavy slumber, which the movement alone
had prevented before. Captain Nemo and his robust companion, stretched in
the clear crystal, set us the example.
How long I remained buried in this
drowsiness I cannot judge, but, when I woke, the sun seemed sinking towards
the horizon. Captain Nemo had already risen, and I was beginning to stretch
my limbs, when an unexpected apparition brought me briskly to my feet.
A few steps off, a monstrous sea-spider,
about thirty-eight inches high, was watching me with squinting eyes, ready
to spring upon me. Though my diver's dress was thick enough to defend me
from the bite of this animal, I could not help shuddering with horror.
Conseil and the sailor of the Nautilus awoke at this moment. Captain Nemo
pointed out the hideous crustacean, which a blow from the butt end of the
gun knocked over, and I saw the horrible claws of the monster writhe in
terrible convulsions. This incident reminded me that other animals more to
be feared might haunt these obscure depths, against whose attacks my
diving-dress would not protect me. I had never thought of it before, but I
now resolved to be upon my guard. Indeed, I thought that this halt would
mark the termination of our walk; but I was mistaken, for, instead of
returning to the Nautilus, Captain Nemo continued his bold excursion. The
ground was still on the incline, its declivity seemed to be getting greater,
and to be leading us to greater depths. It must have been about three
o'clock when we reached a narrow valley, between high perpendicular walls,
situated about seventy-five fathoms deep. Thanks to the perfection of our
apparatus, we were forty-five fathoms below the limit which nature seems to
have imposed on man as to his submarine excursions.
I say seventy-five fathoms, though I had no
instrument by which to judge the distance. But I knew that even in the
clearest waters the solar rays could not penetrate further. And accordingly
the darkness deepened. At ten paces not an object was visible. I was groping
my way, when I suddenly saw a brilliant white light. Captain Nemo had just
put his electric apparatus into use; his companion did the same, and Conseil
and I followed their example. By turning a screw I established a
communication between the wire and the spiral glass, and the sea, lit by our
four lanterns, was illuminated for a circle of thirty-six yards.
As we walked I thought the light of our
Ruhmkorff apparatus could not fail to draw some inhabitant from its dark
couch. But if they did approach us, they at least kept at a respectful
distance from the hunters. Several times I saw Captain Nemo stop, put his
gun to his shoulder, and after some moments drop it and walk on. At last,
after about four hours, this marvellous excursion came to an end. A wall of
superb rocks, in an imposing mass, rose before us, a heap of gigantic
blocks, an enormous, steep granite shore, forming dark grottos, but which
presented no practicable slope; it was the prop of the Island of Crespo. It
was the earth! Captain Nemo stopped suddenly. A gesture of his brought us
all to a halt; and, however desirous I might be to scale the wall, I was
obliged to stop. Here ended Captain Nemo's domains. And he would not go
beyond them. Further on was a portion of the globe he might not trample
upon.
The return began. Captain Nemo had returned
to the head of his little band, directing their course without hesitation. I
thought we were not following the same road to return to the Nautilus. The
new road was very steep, and consequently very painful. We approached the
surface of the sea rapidly. But this return to the upper strata was not so
sudden as to cause relief from the pressure too rapidly, which might have
produced serious disorder in our organisation, and brought on internal
lesions, so fatal to divers. Very soon light reappeared and grew, and, the
sun being low on the horizon, the refraction edged the different objects
with a spectral ring. At ten yards and a half deep, we walked amidst a shoal
of little fishes of all kinds, more numerous than the birds of the air, and
also more agile; but no aquatic game worthy of a shot had as yet met our
gaze, when at that moment I saw the Captain shoulder his gun quickly, and
follow a moving object into the shrubs. He fired; I heard a slight hissing,
and a creature fell stunned at some distance from us. It was a magnificent
sea-otter, an enhydrus, the only exclusively marine quadruped. This otter
was five feet long, and must have been very valuable. Its skin,
chestnut-brown above and silvery underneath, would have made one of those
beautiful furs so sought after in the Russian and Chinese markets: the
fineness and the lustre of its coat would certainly fetch L80. I admired
this curious mammal, with its rounded head ornamented with short ears, its
round eyes, and white whiskers like those of a cat, with webbed feet and
nails, and tufted tail. This precious animal, hunted and tracked by
fishermen, has now become very rare, and taken refuge chiefly in the
northern parts of the Pacific, or probably its race would soon become
extinct.
Captain Nemo's companion took the beast,
threw it over his shoulder, and we continued our journey. For one hour a
plain of sand lay stretched before us. Sometimes it rose to within two yards
and some inches of the surface of the water. I then saw our image clearly
reflected, drawn inversely, and above us appeared an identical group
reflecting our movements and our actions; in a word, like us in every point,
except that they walked with their heads downward and their feet in the air.
Another effect I noticed, which was the
passage of thick clouds which formed and vanished rapidly; but on reflection
I understood that these seeming clouds were due to the varying thickness of
the reeds at the bottom, and I could even see the fleecy foam which their
broken tops multiplied on the water, and the shadows of large birds passing
above our heads, whose rapid flight I could discern on the surface of the
sea.
On this occasion I was witness to one of
the finest gun shots which ever made the nerves of a hunter thrill. A large
bird of great breadth of wing, clearly visible, approached, hovering over
us. Captain Nemo's companion shouldered his gun and fired, when it was only
a few yards above the waves. The creature fell stunned, and the force of its
fall brought it within the reach of dexterous hunter's grasp. It was an
albatross of the finest kind.
Our march had not been interrupted by this
incident. For two hours we followed these sandy plains, then fields of algae
very disagreeable to cross. Candidly, I could do no more when I saw a
glimmer of light, which, for a half mile, broke the darkness of the waters.
It was the lantern of the Nautilus. Before twenty minutes were over we
should be on board, and I should be able to breathe with ease, for it seemed
that my reservoir supplied air very deficient in oxygen. But I did not
reckon on an accidental meeting which delayed our arrival for some time.
I had remained some steps behind, when I
presently saw Captain Nemo coming hurriedly towards me. With his strong hand
he bent me to the ground, his companion doing the same to Conseil. At first
I knew not what to think of this sudden attack, but I was soon reassured by
seeing the Captain lie down beside me, and remain immovable.
I was stretched on the ground, just under
the shelter of a bush of algae, when, raising my head, I saw some enormous
mass, casting phosphorescent gleams, pass blusteringly by.
My blood froze in my veins as I recognised
two formidable sharks which threatened us. It was a couple of tintoreas,
terrible creatures, with enormous tails and a dull glassy stare, the
phosphorescent matter ejected from holes pierced around the muzzle.
Monstrous brutes! which would crush a whole man in their iron jaws. I did
not know whether Conseil stopped to classify them; for my part, I noticed
their silver bellies, and their huge mouths bristling with teeth, from a
very unscientific point of view, and more as a possible victim than as a
naturalist.
Happily the voracious creatures do not see
well. They passed without seeing us, brushing us with their brownish fins,
and we escaped by a miracle from a danger certainly greater than meeting a
tiger full-face in the forest. Half an hour after, guided by the electric
light we reached the Nautilus. The outside door had been left open, and
Captain Nemo closed it as soon as we had entered the first cell. He then
pressed a knob. I heard the pumps working in the midst of the vessel, I felt
the water sinking from around me, and in a few moments the cell was entirely
empty. The inside door then opened, and we entered the vestry.
There our diving-dress was taken off, not
without some trouble, and, fairly worn out from want of food and sleep, I
returned to my room, in great wonder at this surprising excursion at the
bottom of the sea.
CHAPTER XVII
FOUR THOUSAND LEAGUES UNDER
THE PACIFIC
The next morning, the 18th of November, I
had quite recovered from my fatigues of the day before, and I went up on to
the platform, just as the second lieutenant was uttering his daily phrase.
I was admiring the magnificent aspect of
the ocean when Captain Nemo appeared. He did not seem to be aware of my
presence, and began a series of astronomical observations. Then, when he had
finished, he went and leant on the cage of the watch-light, and gazed
abstractedly on the ocean. In the meantime, a number of the sailors of the
Nautilus, all strong and healthy men, had come up onto the platform. They
came to draw up the nets that had been laid all night. These sailors were
evidently of different nations, although the European type was visible in
all of them. I recognised some unmistakable Irishmen, Frenchmen, some
Sclaves, and a Greek, or a Candiote. They were civil, and only used that odd
language among themselves, the origin of which I could not guess, neither
could I question them.
The nets were hauled in. They were a large
kind of "chaluts," like those on the Normandy coasts, great pockets that the
waves and a chain fixed in the smaller meshes kept open. These pockets,
drawn by iron poles, swept through the water, and gathered in everything in
their way. That day they brought up curious specimens from those productive
coasts.
I reckoned that the haul had brought in
more than nine hundredweight of fish. It was a fine haul, but not to be
wondered at. Indeed, the nets are let down for several hours, and enclose in
their meshes an infinite variety. We had no lack of excellent food, and the
rapidity of the Nautilus and the attraction of the electric light could
always renew our supply. These several productions of the sea were
immediately lowered through the panel to the steward's room, some to be
eaten fresh, and others pickled.
The fishing ended, the provision of air
renewed, I thought that the Nautilus was about to continue its submarine
excursion, and was preparing to return to my room, when, without further
preamble, the Captain turned to me, saying:
"Professor, is not this ocean gifted with
real life? It has its tempers and its gentle moods. Yesterday it slept as we
did, and now it has woke after a quiet night. Look!" he continued, "it wakes
under the caresses of the sun. It is going to renew its diurnal existence.
It is an interesting study to watch the play of its organisation. It has a
pulse, arteries, spasms; and I agree with the learned Maury, who discovered
in it a circulation as real as the circulation of blood in animals.
"Yes, the ocean has indeed circulation, and
to promote it, the Creator has caused things to multiply in it—caloric,
salt, and animalculae."
When Captain Nemo spoke thus, he seemed
altogether changed, and aroused an extraordinary emotion in me.
"Also," he added, "true existence is there;
and I can imagine the foundations of nautical towns, clusters of submarine
houses, which, like the Nautilus, would ascend every morning to breathe at
the surface of the water, free towns, independent cities. Yet who knows
whether some despot——"
Captain Nemo finished his sentence with a
violent gesture. Then, addressing me as if to chase away some sorrowful
thought:
"M. Aronnax," he asked, "do you know the
depth of the ocean?"
"I only know, Captain, what the principal
soundings have taught us."
"Could you tell me them, so that I can suit
them to my purpose?"
"These are some," I replied, "that I
remember. If I am not mistaken, a depth of 8,000 yards has been found in the
North Atlantic, and 2,500 yards in the Mediterranean. The most remarkable
soundings have been made in the South Atlantic, near the thirty-fifth
parallel, and they gave 12,000 yards, 14,000 yards, and 15,000 yards. To sum
up all, it is reckoned that if the bottom of the sea were levelled, its mean
depth would be about one and three-quarter leagues."
"Well, Professor," replied the Captain, "we
shall show you better than that I hope. As to the mean depth of this part of
the Pacific, I tell you it is only 4,000 yards."
Having said this, Captain Nemo went towards
the panel, and disappeared down the ladder. I followed him, and went into
the large drawing-room. The screw was immediately put in motion, and the log
gave twenty miles an hour.
During the days and weeks that passed,
Captain Nemo was very sparing of his visits. I seldom saw him. The
lieutenant pricked the ship's course regularly on the chart, so I could
always tell exactly the route of the Nautilus.
Nearly every day, for some time, the panels
of the drawing-room were opened, and we were never tired of penetrating the
mysteries of the submarine world.
The general direction of the Nautilus was
south-east, and it kept between 100 and 150 yards of depth. One day,
however, I do not know why, being drawn diagonally by means of the inclined
planes, it touched the bed of the sea. The thermometer indicated a
temperature of 4.25 (cent.): a temperature that at this depth seemed common
to all latitudes.
At three o'clock in the morning of the 26th
of November the Nautilus crossed the tropic of Cancer at 172° long. On 27th
instant it sighted the Sandwich Islands, where Cook died, February 14, 1779.
We had then gone 4,860 leagues from our starting-point. In the morning, when
I went on the platform, I saw two miles to windward, Hawaii, the largest of
the seven islands that form the group. I saw clearly the cultivated ranges,
and the several mountain-chains that run parallel with the side, and the
volcanoes that overtop Mouna-Rea, which rise 5,000 yards above the level of
the sea. Besides other things the nets brought up, were several flabellariae
and graceful polypi, that are peculiar to that part of the ocean. The
direction of the Nautilus was still to the south-east. It crossed the
equator December 1, in 142° long.; and on the 4th of the same month, after
crossing rapidly and without anything in particular occurring, we sighted
the Marquesas group. I saw, three miles off, Martin's peak in Nouka-Hiva,
the largest of the group that belongs to France. I only saw the woody
mountains against the horizon, because Captain Nemo did not wish to bring
the ship to the wind. There the nets brought up beautiful specimens of fish:
some with azure fins and tails like gold, the flesh of which is unrivalled;
some nearly destitute of scales, but of exquisite flavour; others, with bony
jaws, and yellow-tinged gills, as good as bonitos; all fish that would be of
use to us. After leaving these charming islands protected by the French
flag, from the 4th to the 11th of December the Nautilus sailed over about
2,000 miles.
During the daytime of the 11th of December
I was busy reading in the large drawing-room. Ned Land and Conseil watched
the luminous water through the half-open panels. The Nautilus was immovable.
While its reservoirs were filled, it kept at a depth of 1,000 yards, a
region rarely visited in the ocean, and in which large fish were seldom
seen.
I was then reading a charming book by Jean
Mace, The Slaves of the Stomach, and I was learning some valuable lessons
from it, when Conseil interrupted me.
"Will master come here a moment?" he said,
in a curious voice.
"What is the matter, Conseil?"
"I want master to look."
I rose, went, and leaned on my elbows
before the panes and watched.
In a full electric light, an enormous black
mass, quite immovable, was suspended in the midst of the waters. I watched
it attentively, seeking to find out the nature of this gigantic cetacean.
But a sudden thought crossed my mind. "A vessel!" I said, half aloud.
"Yes," replied the Canadian, "a disabled
ship that has sunk perpendicularly."
Ned Land was right; we were close to a
vessel of which the tattered shrouds still hung from their chains. The keel
seemed to be in good order, and it had been wrecked at most some few hours.
Three stumps of masts, broken off about two feet above the bridge, showed
that the vessel had had to sacrifice its masts. But, lying on its side, it
had filled, and it was heeling over to port. This skeleton of what it had
once been was a sad spectacle as it lay lost under the waves, but sadder
still was the sight of the bridge, where some corpses, bound with ropes,
were still lying. I counted five—four men, one of whom was standing at the
helm, and a woman standing by the poop, holding an infant in her arms. She
was quite young. I could distinguish her features, which the water had not
decomposed, by the brilliant light from the Nautilus. In one despairing
effort, she had raised her infant above her head—poor little thing!—whose
arms encircled its mother's neck. The attitude of the four sailors was
frightful, distorted as they were by their convulsive movements, whilst
making a last effort to free themselves from the cords that bound them to
the vessel. The steersman alone, calm, with a grave, clear face, his grey
hair glued to his forehead, and his hand clutching the wheel of the helm,
seemed even then to be guiding the three broken masts through the depths of
the ocean.
What a scene! We were dumb; our hearts beat
fast before this shipwreck, taken as it were from life and photographed in
its last moments. And I saw already, coming towards it with hungry eyes,
enormous sharks, attracted by the human flesh.
However, the Nautilus, turning, went round
the submerged vessel, and in one instant I read on the stern—"The Florida,
Sunderland."
CHAPTER XVIII
VANIKORO
This terrible spectacle was the forerunner
of the series of maritime catastrophes that the Nautilus was destined to
meet with in its route. As long as it went through more frequented waters,
we often saw the hulls of shipwrecked vessels that were rotting in the
depths, and deeper down cannons, bullets, anchors, chains, and a thousand
other iron materials eaten up by rust. However, on the 11th of December we
sighted the Pomotou Islands, the old "dangerous group" of Bougainville, that
extend over a space of 500 leagues at E.S.E. to W.N.W., from the Island
Ducie to that of Lazareff. This group covers an area of 370 square leagues,
and it is formed of sixty groups of islands, among which the Gambier group
is remarkable, over which France exercises sway. These are coral islands,
slowly raised, but continuous, created by the daily work of polypi. Then
this new island will be joined later on to the neighboring groups, and a
fifth continent will stretch from New Zealand and New Caledonia, and from
thence to the Marquesas.
One day, when I was suggesting this theory
to Captain Nemo, he replied coldly:
"The earth does not want new continents,
but new men."
Chance had conducted the Nautilus towards
the Island of Clermont-Tonnere, one of the most curious of the group, that
was discovered in 1822 by Captain Bell of the Minerva. I could study now the
madreporal system, to which are due the islands in this ocean.
Madrepores (which must not be mistaken for
corals) have a tissue lined with a calcareous crust, and the modifications
of its structure have induced M. Milne Edwards, my worthy master, to class
them into five sections. The animalcule that the marine polypus secretes
live by millions at the bottom of their cells. Their calcareous deposits
become rocks, reefs, and large and small islands. Here they form a ring,
surrounding a little inland lake, that communicates with the sea by means of
gaps. There they make barriers of reefs like those on the coasts of New
Caledonia and the various Pomoton islands. In other places, like those at
Reunion and at Maurice, they raise fringed reefs, high, straight walls, near
which the depth of the ocean is considerable.
Some cable-lengths off the shores of the
Island of Clermont I admired the gigantic work accomplished by these
microscopical workers. These walls are specially the work of those
madrepores known as milleporas, porites, madrepores, and astraeas. These
polypi are found particularly in the rough beds of the sea, near the
surface; and consequently it is from the upper part that they begin their
operations, in which they bury themselves by degrees with the debris of the
secretions that support them. Such is, at least, Darwin's theory, who thus
explains the formation of the atolls, a superior theory (to my mind)
to that given of the foundation of the madreporical works, summits of
mountains or volcanoes, that are submerged some feet below the level of the
sea.
I could observe closely these curious
walls, for perpendicularly they were more than 300 yards deep, and our
electric sheets lighted up this calcareous matter brilliantly. Replying to a
question Conseil asked me as to the time these colossal barriers took to be
raised, I astonished him much by telling him that learned men reckoned it
about the eighth of an inch in a hundred years.
Towards evening Clermont-Tonnerre was lost
in the distance, and the route of the Nautilus was sensibly changed. After
having crossed the tropic of Capricorn in 135° longitude, it sailed W.N.W.,
making again for the tropical zone. Although the summer sun was very strong,
we did not suffer from heat, for at fifteen or twenty fathoms below the
surface, the temperature did not rise above from ten to twelve degrees.
On 15th of December, we left to the east
the bewitching group of the Societies and the graceful Tahiti, queen of the
Pacific. I saw in the morning, some miles to the windward, the elevated
summits of the island. These waters furnished our table with excellent fish,
mackerel, bonitos, and some varieties of a sea-serpent.
On the 25th of December the Nautilus sailed
into the midst of the New Hebrides, discovered by Quiros in 1606, and that
Bougainville explored in 1768, and to which Cook gave its present name in
1773. This group is composed principally of nine large islands, that form a
band of 120 leagues N.N.S. to S.S.W., between 15° and 2° S. lat., and 164
deg. and 168° long. We passed tolerably near to the Island of Aurou, that at
noon looked like a mass of green woods, surmounted by a peak of great
height.
That day being Christmas Day, Ned Land
seemed to regret sorely the non-celebration of "Christmas," the family fete
of which Protestants are so fond. I had not seen Captain Nemo for a week,
when, on the morning of the 27th, he came into the large drawing-room,
always seeming as if he had seen you five minutes before. I was busily
tracing the route of the Nautilus on the planisphere. The Captain came up to
me, put his finger on one spot on the chart, and said this single word.
"Vanikoro."
The effect was magical! It was the name of
the islands on which La Perouse had been lost! I rose suddenly.
"The Nautilus has brought us to Vanikoro?"
I asked.
"Yes, Professor," said the Captain.
"And I can visit the celebrated islands
where the Boussole and the Astrolabe struck?"
"If you like, Professor."
"When shall we be there?"
"We are there now."
Followed by Captain Nemo, I went up on to
the platform, and greedily scanned the horizon.
To the N.E. two volcanic islands emerged of
unequal size, surrounded by a coral reef that measured forty miles in
circumference. We were close to Vanikoro, really the one to which Dumont
d'Urville gave the name of Isle de la Recherche, and exactly facing the
little harbour of Vanou, situated in 16° 4' S. lat., and 164° 32' E. long.
The earth seemed covered with verdure from the shore to the summits in the
interior, that were crowned by Mount Kapogo, 476 feet high. The Nautilus,
having passed the outer belt of rocks by a narrow strait, found itself among
breakers where the sea was from thirty to forty fathoms deep. Under the
verdant shade of some mangroves I perceived some savages, who appeared
greatly surprised at our approach. In the long black body, moving between
wind and water, did they not see some formidable cetacean that they regarded
with suspicion?
Just then Captain Nemo asked me what I knew
about the wreck of La Perouse.
"Only what everyone knows, Captain," I
replied.
"And could you tell me what everyone knows
about it?" he inquired, ironically.
"Easily."
I related to him all that the last works of
Dumont d'Urville had made known—works from which the following is a brief
account.
La Perouse, and his second, Captain de
Langle, were sent by Louis XVI, in 1785, on a voyage of circumnavigation.
They embarked in the corvettes Boussole and the Astrolabe, neither of which
were again heard of. In 1791, the French Government, justly uneasy as to the
fate of these two sloops, manned two large merchantmen, the Recherche and
the Esperance, which left Brest the 28th of September under the command of
Bruni d'Entrecasteaux.
Two months after, they learned from Bowen,
commander of the Albemarle, that the debris of shipwrecked vessels had been
seen on the coasts of New Georgia. But D'Entrecasteaux, ignoring this
communication—rather uncertain, besides—directed his course towards the
Admiralty Islands, mentioned in a report of Captain Hunter's as being the
place where La Perouse was wrecked.
They sought in vain. The Esperance and the
Recherche passed before Vanikoro without stopping there, and, in fact, this
voyage was most disastrous, as it cost D'Entrecasteaux his life, and those
of two of his lieutenants, besides several of his crew.
Captain Dillon, a shrewd old Pacific
sailor, was the first to find unmistakable traces of the wrecks. On the 15th
of May, 1824, his vessel, the St. Patrick, passed close to Tikopia, one of
the New Hebrides. There a Lascar came alongside in a canoe, sold him the
handle of a sword in silver that bore the print of characters engraved on
the hilt. The Lascar pretended that six years before, during a stay at
Vanikoro, he had seen two Europeans that belonged to some vessels that had
run aground on the reefs some years ago.
Dillon guessed that he meant La Perouse,
whose disappearance had troubled the whole world. He tried to get on to
Vanikoro, where, according to the Lascar, he would find numerous debris of
the wreck, but winds and tides prevented him.
Dillon returned to Calcutta. There he
interested the Asiatic Society and the Indian Company in his discovery. A
vessel, to which was given the name of the Recherche, was put at his
disposal, and he set out, 23rd January, 1827, accompanied by a French agent.
The Recherche, after touching at several
points in the Pacific, cast anchor before Vanikoro, 7th July, 1827, in that
same harbour of Vanou where the Nautilus was at this time.
There it collected numerous relics of the
wreck—iron utensils, anchors, pulley-strops, swivel-guns, an 18 lb. shot,
fragments of astronomical instruments, a piece of crown work, and a bronze
clock, bearing this inscription—"Bazin m'a fait," the mark of the foundry of
the arsenal at Brest about 1785. There could be no further doubt.
Dillon, having made all inquiries, stayed
in the unlucky place till October. Then he quitted Vanikoro, and directed
his course towards New Zealand; put into Calcutta, 7th April, 1828, and
returned to France, where he was warmly welcomed by Charles X.
But at the same time, without knowing
Dillon's movements, Dumont d'Urville had already set out to find the scene
of the wreck. And they had learned from a whaler that some medals and a
cross of St. Louis had been found in the hands of some savages of Louisiade
and New Caledonia. Dumont d'Urville, commander of the Astrolabe, had then
sailed, and two months after Dillon had left Vanikoro he put into Hobart
Town. There he learned the results of Dillon's inquiries, and found that a
certain James Hobbs, second lieutenant of the Union of Calcutta, after
landing on an island situated 8° 18' S. lat., and 156° 30' E. long., had
seen some iron bars and red stuffs used by the natives of these parts.
Dumont d'Urville, much perplexed, and not knowing how to credit the reports
of low-class journals, decided to follow Dillon's track.
On the 10th of February, 1828, the
Astrolabe appeared off Tikopia, and took as guide and interpreter a deserter
found on the island; made his way to Vanikoro, sighted it on the 12th inst.,
lay among the reefs until the 14th, and not until the 20th did he cast
anchor within the barrier in the harbour of Vanou.
On the 23rd, several officers went round
the island and brought back some unimportant trifles. The natives, adopting
a system of denials and evasions, refused to take them to the unlucky place.
This ambiguous conduct led them to believe that the natives had ill-treated
the castaways, and indeed they seemed to fear that Dumont d'Urville had come
to avenge La Perouse and his unfortunate crew.
However, on the 26th, appeased by some
presents, and understanding that they had no reprisals to fear, they led M.
Jacquireot to the scene of the wreck.
There, in three or four fathoms of water,
between the reefs of Pacou and Vanou, lay anchors, cannons, pigs of lead and
iron, embedded in the limy concretions. The large boat and the whaler
belonging to the Astrolabe were sent to this place, and, not without some
difficulty, their crews hauled up an anchor weighing 1,800 lbs., a brass
gun, some pigs of iron, and two copper swivel-guns.
Dumont d'Urville, questioning the natives,
learned too that La Perouse, after losing both his vessels on the reefs of
this island, had constructed a smaller boat, only to be lost a second time.
Where, no one knew.
But the French Government, fearing that
Dumont d'Urville was not acquainted with Dillon's movements, had sent the
sloop Bayonnaise, commanded by Legoarant de Tromelin, to Vanikoro, which had
been stationed on the west coast of America. The Bayonnaise cast her anchor
before Vanikoro some months after the departure of the Astrolabe, but found
no new document; but stated that the savages had respected the monument to
La Perouse. That is the substance of what I told Captain Nemo.
"So," he said, "no one knows now where the
third vessel perished that was constructed by the castaways on the island of
Vanikoro?"
"No one knows."
Captain Nemo said nothing, but signed to me
to follow him into the large saloon. The Nautilus sank several yards below
the waves, and the panels were opened.
I hastened to the aperture, and under the
crustations of coral, covered with fungi, syphonules, alcyons, madrepores,
through myriads of charming fish—girelles, glyphisidri, pompherides,
diacopes, and holocentres—I recognised certain debris that the drags had not
been able to tear up—iron stirrups, anchors, cannons, bullets, capstan
fittings, the stem of a ship, all objects clearly proving the wreck of some
vessel, and now carpeted with living flowers. While I was looking on this
desolate scene, Captain Nemo said, in a sad voice:
"Commander La Perouse set out 7th December,
1785, with his vessels La Boussole and the Astrolabe. He first cast anchor
at Botany Bay, visited the Friendly Isles, New Caledonia, then directed his
course towards Santa Cruz, and put into Namouka, one of the Hapai group.
Then his vessels struck on the unknown reefs of Vanikoro. The Boussole,
which went first, ran aground on the southerly coast. The Astrolabe went to
its help, and ran aground too. The first vessel was destroyed almost
immediately. The second, stranded under the wind, resisted some days. The
natives made the castaways welcome. They installed themselves in the island,
and constructed a smaller boat with the debris of the two large ones. Some
sailors stayed willingly at Vanikoro; the others, weak and ill, set out with
La Perouse. They directed their course towards the Solomon Islands, and
there perished, with everything, on the westerly coast of the chief island
of the group, between Capes Deception and Satisfaction."
"How do you know that?"
"By this, that I found on the spot where
was the last wreck."
Captain Nemo showed me a tin-plate box,
stamped with the French arms, and corroded by the salt water. He opened it,
and I saw a bundle of papers, yellow but still readable.
They were the instructions of the naval
minister to Commander La Perouse, annotated in the margin in Louis XVI's
handwriting.
"Ah! it is a fine death for a sailor!" said
Captain Nemo, at last. "A coral tomb makes a quiet grave; and I trust that I
and my comrades will find no other."
CHAPTER XIX
TORRES STRAITS
During the night of the 27th or 28th of
December, the Nautilus left the shores of Vanikoro with great speed. Her
course was south-westerly, and in three days she had gone over the 750
leagues that separated it from La Perouse's group and the south-east point
of Papua.
Early on the 1st of January, 1863, Conseil
joined me on the platform.
"Master, will you permit me to wish you a
happy New Year?"
"What! Conseil; exactly as if I was at
Paris in my study at the Jardin des Plantes? Well, I accept your good
wishes, and thank you for them. Only, I will ask you what you mean by a
`Happy New Year' under our circumstances? Do you mean the year that will
bring us to the end of our imprisonment, or the year that sees us continue
this strange voyage?"
"Really, I do not know how to answer,
master. We are sure to see curious things, and for the last two months we
have not had time for dullness. The last marvel is always the most
astonishing; and, if we continue this progression, I do not know how it will
end. It is my opinion that we shall never again see the like. I think then,
with no offence to master, that a happy year would be one in which we could
see everything."
On 2nd January we had made 11,340 miles, or
5,250 French leagues, since our starting-point in the Japan Seas. Before the
ship's head stretched the dangerous shores of the coral sea, on the
north-east coast of Australia. Our boat lay along some miles from the
redoubtable bank on which Cook's vessel was lost, 10th June, 1770. The boat
in which Cook was struck on a rock, and, if it did not sink, it was owing to
a piece of coral that was broken by the shock, and fixed itself in the
broken keel.
I had wished to visit the reef, 360 leagues
long, against which the sea, always rough, broke with great violence, with a
noise like thunder. But just then the inclined planes drew the Nautilus down
to a great depth, and I could see nothing of the high coral walls. I had to
content myself with the different specimens of fish brought up by the nets.
I remarked, among others, some germons, a species of mackerel as large as a
tunny, with bluish sides, and striped with transverse bands, that disappear
with the animal's life.
These fish followed us in shoals, and
furnished us with very delicate food. We took also a large number of
gilt-heads, about one and a half inches long, tasting like dorys; and flying
pyrapeds like submarine swallows, which, in dark nights, light alternately
the air and water with their phosphorescent light. Among the molluscs and
zoophytes, I found in the meshes of the net several species of alcyonarians,
echini, hammers, spurs, dials, cerites, and hyalleae. The flora was
represented by beautiful floating seaweeds, laminariae, and macrocystes,
impregnated with the mucilage that transudes through their pores; and among
which I gathered an admirable Nemastoma Geliniarois, that was classed among
the natural curiosities of the museum.
Two days after crossing the coral sea, 4th
January, we sighted the Papuan coasts. On this occasion, Captain Nemo
informed me that his intention was to get into the Indian Ocean by the
Strait of Torres. His communication ended there.
The Torres Straits are nearly thirty-four
leagues wide; but they are obstructed by an innumerable quantity of islands,
islets, breakers, and rocks, that make its navigation almost impracticable;
so that Captain Nemo took all needful precautions to cross them. The
Nautilus, floating betwixt wind and water, went at a moderate pace. Her
screw, like a cetacean's tail, beat the waves slowly.
Profiting by this, I and my two companions
went up on to the deserted platform. Before us was the steersman's cage, and
I expected that Captain Nemo was there directing the course of the Nautilus.
I had before me the excellent charts of the Straits of Torres, and I
consulted them attentively. Round the Nautilus the sea dashed furiously. The
course of the waves, that went from south-east to north-west at the rate of
two and a half miles, broke on the coral that showed itself here and there.
"This is a bad sea!" remarked Ned Land.
"Detestable indeed, and one that does not
suit a boat like the Nautilus."
"The Captain must be very sure of his
route, for I see there pieces of coral that would do for its keel if it only
touched them slightly."
Indeed the situation was dangerous, but the
Nautilus seemed to slide like magic off these rocks. It did not follow the
routes of the Astrolabe and the Zelee exactly, for they proved fatal to
Dumont d'Urville. It bore more northwards, coasted the Islands of Murray,
and came back to the south-west towards Cumberland Passage. I thought it was
going to pass it by, when, going back to north-west, it went through a large
quantity of islands and islets little known, towards the Island Sound and
Canal Mauvais.
I wondered if Captain Nemo, foolishly
imprudent, would steer his vessel into that pass where Dumont d'Urville's
two corvettes touched; when, swerving again, and cutting straight through to
the west, he steered for the Island of Gilboa.
It was then three in the afternoon. The
tide began to recede, being quite full. The Nautilus approached the island,
that I still saw, with its remarkable border of screw-pines. He stood off it
at about two miles distant. Suddenly a shock overthrew me. The Nautilus just
touched a rock, and stayed immovable, laying lightly to port side.
When I rose, I perceived Captain Nemo and
his lieutenant on the platform. They were examining the situation of the
vessel, and exchanging words in their incomprehensible dialect.
She was situated thus: Two miles, on the
starboard side, appeared Gilboa, stretching from north to west like an
immense arm. Towards the south and east some coral showed itself, left by
the ebb. We had run aground, and in one of those seas where the tides are
middling—a sorry matter for the floating of the Nautilus. However, the
vessel had not suffered, for her keel was solidly joined. But, if she could
neither glide off nor move, she ran the risk of being for ever fastened to
these rocks, and then Captain Nemo's submarine vessel would be done for.
I was reflecting thus, when the Captain,
cool and calm, always master of himself, approached me.
"An accident?" I asked.
"No; an incident."
"But an incident that will oblige you
perhaps to become an inhabitant of this land from which you flee?"
Captain Nemo looked at me curiously, and
made a negative gesture, as much as to say that nothing would force him to
set foot on terra firma again. Then he said:
"Besides, M. Aronnax, the Nautilus is not
lost; it will carry you yet into the midst of the marvels of the ocean. Our
voyage is only begun, and I do not wish to be deprived so soon of the honour
of your company."
"However, Captain Nemo," I replied, without
noticing the ironical turn of his phrase, "the Nautilus ran aground in open
sea. Now the tides are not strong in the Pacific; and, if you cannot lighten
the Nautilus, I do not see how it will be reinflated."
"The tides are not strong in the Pacific:
you are right there, Professor; but in Torres Straits one finds still a
difference of a yard and a half between the level of high and low seas.
To-day is 4th January, and in five days the moon will be full. Now, I shall
be very much astonished if that satellite does not raise these masses of
water sufficiently, and render me a service that I should be indebted to her
for."
Having said this, Captain Nemo, followed by
his lieutenant, redescended to the interior of the Nautilus. As to the
vessel, it moved not, and was immovable, as if the coralline polypi had
already walled it up with their in destructible cement.
"Well, sir?" said Ned Land, who came up to
me after the departure of the Captain.
"Well, friend Ned, we will wait patiently
for the tide on the 9th instant; for it appears that the moon will have the
goodness to put it off again."
"Really?"
"Really."
"And this Captain is not going to cast
anchor at all since the tide will suffice?" said Conseil, simply.
The Canadian looked at Conseil, then
shrugged his shoulders.
"Sir, you may believe me when I tell you
that this piece of iron will navigate neither on nor under the sea again; it
is only fit to be sold for its weight. I think, therefore, that the time has
come to part company with Captain Nemo."
"Friend Ned, I do not despair of this stout
Nautilus, as you do; and in four days we shall know what to hold to on the
Pacific tides. Besides, flight might be possible if we were in sight of the
English or Provencal coast; but on the Papuan shores, it is another thing;
and it will be time enough to come to that extremity if the Nautilus does
not recover itself again, which I look upon as a grave event."
"But do they know, at least, how to act
circumspectly? There is an island; on that island there are trees; under
those trees, terrestrial animals, bearers of cutlets and roast beef, to
which I would willingly give a trial."
"In this, friend Ned is right," said
Conseil, "and I agree with him. Could not master obtain permission from his
friend Captain Nemo to put us on land, if only so as not to lose the habit
of treading on the solid parts of our planet?"
"I can ask him, but he will refuse."
"Will master risk it?" asked Conseil, "and
we shall know how to rely upon the Captain's amiability."
To my great surprise, Captain Nemo gave me
the permission I asked for, and he gave it very agreeably, without even
exacting from me a promise to return to the vessel; but flight across New
Guinea might be very perilous, and I should not have counselled Ned Land to
attempt it. Better to be a prisoner on board the Nautilus than to fall into
the hands of the natives.
At eight o'clock, armed with guns and
hatchets, we got off the Nautilus. The sea was pretty calm; a slight breeze
blew on land. Conseil and I rowing, we sped along quickly, and Ned steered
in the straight passage that the breakers left between them. The boat was
well handled, and moved rapidly.
Ned Land could not restrain his joy. He was
like a prisoner that had escaped from prison, and knew not that it was
necessary to re-enter it.
"Meat! We are going to eat some meat; and
what meat!" he replied. "Real game! no, bread, indeed."
"I do not say that fish is not good; we
must not abuse it; but a piece of fresh venison, grilled on live coals, will
agreeably vary our ordinary course."
"Glutton!" said Conseil, "he makes my mouth
water."
"It remains to be seen," I said, "if these
forests are full of game, and if the game is not such as will hunt the
hunter himself."
"Well said, M. Aronnax," replied the
Canadian, whose teeth seemed sharpened like the edge of a hatchet; "but I
will eat tiger—loin of tiger—if there is no other quadruped on this island."
"Friend Ned is uneasy about it," said
Conseil.
"Whatever it may be," continued Ned Land,
"every animal with four paws without feathers, or with two paws without
feathers, will be saluted by my first shot."
"Very well! Master Land's imprudences are
beginning."
"Never fear, M. Aronnax," replied the
Canadian; "I do not want twenty-five minutes to offer you a dish, of my
sort."
At half-past eight the Nautilus boat ran
softly aground on a heavy sand, after having happily passed the coral reef
that surrounds the Island of Gilboa.
CHAPTER XX
A FEW DAYS ON LAND
I was much impressed on touching land. Ned
Land tried the soil with his feet, as if to take possession of it. However,
it was only two months before that we had become, according to Captain Nemo,
"passengers on board the Nautilus," but, in reality, prisoners of its
commander.
In a few minutes we were within musket-shot
of the coast. The whole horizon was hidden behind a beautiful curtain of
forests. Enormous trees, the trunks of which attained a height of 200 feet,
were tied to each other by garlands of bindweed, real natural hammocks,
which a light breeze rocked. They were mimosas, figs, hibisci, and palm
trees, mingled together in profusion; and under the shelter of their verdant
vault grew orchids, leguminous plants, and ferns.
But, without noticing all these beautiful
specimens of Papuan flora, the Canadian abandoned the agreeable for the
useful. He discovered a coco-tree, beat down some of the fruit, broke them,
and we drunk the milk and ate the nut with a satisfaction that protested
against the ordinary food on the Nautilus.
"Excellent!" said Ned Land.
"Exquisite!" replied Conseil.
"And I do not think," said the Canadian,
"that he would object to our introducing a cargo of coco-nuts on board."
"I do not think he would, but he would not
taste them."
"So much the worse for him," said Conseil.
"And so much the better for us," replied
Ned Land. "There will be more for us."
"One word only, Master Land," I said to the
harpooner, who was beginning to ravage another coco-nut tree. "Coco-nuts are
good things, but before filling the canoe with them it would be wise to
reconnoitre and see if the island does not produce some substance not less
useful. Fresh vegetables would be welcome on board the Nautilus."
"Master is right," replied Conseil; "and I
propose to reserve three places in our vessel, one for fruits, the other for
vegetables, and the third for the venison, of which I have not yet seen the
smallest specimen."
"Conseil, we must not despair," said the
Canadian.
"Let us continue," I returned, "and lie in
wait. Although the island seems uninhabited, it might still contain some
individuals that would be less hard than we on the nature of game."
"Ho! ho!" said Ned Land, moving his jaws
significantly.
"Well, Ned!" said Conseil.
"My word!" returned the Canadian, "I begin
to understand the charms of anthropophagy."
"Ned! Ned! what are you saying? You, a
man-eater? I should not feel safe with you, especially as I share your
cabin. I might perhaps wake one day to find myself half devoured."
"Friend Conseil, I like you much, but not
enough to eat you unnecessarily."
"I would not trust you," replied Conseil.
"But enough. We must absolutely bring down some game to satisfy this
cannibal, or else one of these fine mornings, master will find only pieces
of his servant to serve him."
While we were talking thus, we were
penetrating the sombre arches of the forest, and for two hours we surveyed
it in all directions.
Chance rewarded our search for eatable
vegetables, and one of the most useful products of the tropical zones
furnished us with precious food that we missed on board. I would speak of
the bread-fruit tree, very abundant in the island of Gilboa; and I remarked
chiefly the variety destitute of seeds, which bears in Malaya the name of
"rima."
Ned Land knew these fruits well. He had
already eaten many during his numerous voyages, and he knew how to prepare
the eatable substance. Moreover, the sight of them excited him, and he could
contain himself no longer.
"Master," he said, "I shall die if I do not
taste a little of this bread-fruit pie."
"Taste it, friend Ned—taste it as you want.
We are here to make experiments—make them."
"It won't take long," said the Canadian.
And, provided with a lentil, he lighted a
fire of dead wood that crackled joyously. During this time, Conseil and I
chose the best fruits of the bread-fruit. Some had not then attained a
sufficient degree of maturity; and their thick skin covered a white but
rather fibrous pulp. Others, the greater number yellow and gelatinous,
waited only to be picked.
These fruits enclosed no kernel. Conseil
brought a dozen to Ned Land, who placed them on a coal fire, after having
cut them in thick slices, and while doing this repeating:
"You will see, master, how good this bread
is. More so when one has been deprived of it so long. It is not even bread,"
added he, "but a delicate pastry. You have eaten none, master?"
"No, Ned."
"Very well, prepare yourself for a juicy
thing. If you do not come for more, I am no longer the king of harpooners."
After some minutes, the part of the fruits
that was exposed to the fire was completely roasted. The interior looked
like a white pasty, a sort of soft crumb, the flavour of which was like that
of an artichoke.
It must be confessed this bread was
excellent, and I ate of it with great relish.
"What time is it now?" asked the Canadian.
"Two o'clock at least," replied Conseil.
"How time flies on firm ground!" sighed Ned
Land.
"Let us be off," replied Conseil.
We returned through the forest, and
completed our collection by a raid upon the cabbage-palms, that we gathered
from the tops of the trees, little beans that I recognised as the "abrou" of
the Malays, and yams of a superior quality.
We were loaded when we reached the boat.
But Ned Land did not find his provisions sufficient. Fate, however, favoured
us. Just as we were pushing off, he perceived several trees, from
twenty-five to thirty feet high, a species of palm-tree.
At last, at five o'clock in the evening,
loaded with our riches, we quitted the shore, and half an hour after we
hailed the Nautilus. No one appeared on our arrival. The enormous
iron-plated cylinder seemed deserted. The provisions embarked, I descended
to my chamber, and after supper slept soundly.
The next day, 6th January, nothing new on
board. Not a sound inside, not a sign of life. The boat rested along the
edge, in the same place in which we had left it. We resolved to return to
the island. Ned Land hoped to be more fortunate than on the day before with
regard to the hunt, and wished to visit another part of the forest.
At dawn we set off. The boat, carried on by
the waves that flowed to shore, reached the island in a few minutes.
We landed, and, thinking that it was better
to give in to the Canadian, we followed Ned Land, whose long limbs
threatened to distance us. He wound up the coast towards the west: then,
fording some torrents, he gained the high plain that was bordered with
admirable forests. Some kingfishers were rambling along the water-courses,
but they would not let themselves be approached. Their circumspection proved
to me that these birds knew what to expect from bipeds of our species, and I
concluded that, if the island was not inhabited, at least human beings
occasionally frequented it.
After crossing a rather large prairie, we
arrived at the skirts of a little wood that was enlivened by the songs and
flight of a large number of birds.
"There are only birds," said Conseil.
"But they are eatable," replied the
harpooner.
"I do not agree with you, friend Ned, for I
see only parrots there."
"Friend Conseil," said Ned, gravely, "the
parrot is like pheasant to those who have nothing else."
"And," I added, "this bird, suitably
prepared, is worth knife and fork."
Indeed, under the thick foliage of this
wood, a world of parrots were flying from branch to branch, only needing a
careful education to speak the human language. For the moment, they were
chattering with parrots of all colours, and grave cockatoos, who seemed to
meditate upon some philosophical problem, whilst brilliant red lories passed
like a piece of bunting carried away by the breeze, papuans, with the finest
azure colours, and in all a variety of winged things most charming to
behold, but few eatable.
However, a bird peculiar to these lands,
and which has never passed the limits of the Arrow and Papuan islands, was
wanting in this collection. But fortune reserved it for me before long.
After passing through a moderately thick
copse, we found a plain obstructed with bushes. I saw then those magnificent
birds, the disposition of whose long feathers obliges them to fly against
the wind. Their undulating flight, graceful aerial curves, and the shading
of their colours, attracted and charmed one's looks. I had no trouble in
recognising them.
"Birds of paradise!" I exclaimed.
The Malays, who carry on a great trade in
these birds with the Chinese, have several means that we could not employ
for taking them. Sometimes they put snares on the top of high trees that the
birds of paradise prefer to frequent. Sometimes they catch them with a
viscous birdlime that paralyses their movements. They even go so far as to
poison the fountains that the birds generally drink from. But we were
obliged to fire at them during flight, which gave us few chances to bring
them down; and, indeed, we vainly exhausted one half our ammunition.
About eleven o'clock in the morning, the
first range of mountains that form the centre of the island was traversed,
and we had killed nothing. Hunger drove us on. The hunters had relied on the
products of the chase, and they were wrong. Happily Conseil, to his great
surprise, made a double shot and secured breakfast. He brought down a white
pigeon and a wood-pigeon, which, cleverly plucked and suspended from a
skewer, was roasted before a red fire of dead wood. While these interesting
birds were cooking, Ned prepared the fruit of the bread-tree. Then the
wood-pigeons were devoured to the bones, and declared excellent. The nutmeg,
with which they are in the habit of stuffing their crops, flavours their
flesh and renders it delicious eating.
"Now, Ned, what do you miss now?"
"Some four-footed game, M. Aronnax. All
these pigeons are only side-dishes and trifles; and until I have killed an
animal with cutlets I shall not be content."
"Nor I, Ned, if I do not catch a bird of
paradise."
"Let us continue hunting," replied Conseil.
"Let us go towards the sea. We have arrived at the first declivities of the
mountains, and I think we had better regain the region of forests."
That was sensible advice, and was followed
out. After walking for one hour we had attained a forest of sago-trees. Some
inoffensive serpents glided away from us. The birds of paradise fled at our
approach, and truly I despaired of getting near one when Conseil, who was
walking in front, suddenly bent down, uttered a triumphal cry, and came back
to me bringing a magnificent specimen.
"Ah! bravo, Conseil!"
"Master is very good."
"No, my boy; you have made an excellent
stroke. Take one of these living birds, and carry it in your hand."
"If master will examine it, he will see
that I have not deserved great merit."
"Why, Conseil?"
"Because this bird is as drunk as a quail."
"Drunk!"
"Yes, sir; drunk with the nutmegs that it
devoured under the nutmeg-tree, under which I found it. See, friend Ned, see
the monstrous effects of intemperance!"
"By Jove!" exclaimed the Canadian, "because
I have drunk gin for two months, you must needs reproach me!"
However, I examined the curious bird.
Conseil was right. The bird, drunk with the juice, was quite powerless. It
could not fly; it could hardly walk.
This bird belonged to the most beautiful of
the eight species that are found in Papua and in the neighbouring islands.
It was the "large emerald bird, the most rare kind." It measured three feet
in length. Its head was comparatively small, its eyes placed near the
opening of the beak, and also small. But the shades of colour were
beautiful, having a yellow beak, brown feet and claws, nut-coloured wings
with purple tips, pale yellow at the back of the neck and head, and emerald
colour at the throat, chestnut on the breast and belly. Two horned, downy
nets rose from below the tail, that prolonged the long light feathers of
admirable fineness, and they completed the whole of this marvellous bird,
that the natives have poetically named the "bird of the sun."
But if my wishes were satisfied by the
possession of the bird of paradise, the Canadian's were not yet. Happily,
about two o'clock, Ned Land brought down a magnificent hog; from the brood
of those the natives call "bari-outang." The animal came in time for us to
procure real quadruped meat, and he was well received. Ned Land was very
proud of his shot. The hog, hit by the electric ball, fell stone dead. The
Canadian skinned and cleaned it properly, after having taken half a dozen
cutlets, destined to furnish us with a grilled repast in the evening. Then
the hunt was resumed, which was still more marked by Ned and Conseil's
exploits.
Indeed, the two friends, beating the
bushes, roused a herd of kangaroos that fled and bounded along on their
elastic paws. But these animals did not take to flight so rapidly but what
the electric capsule could stop their course.
"Ah, Professor!" cried Ned Land, who was
carried away by the delights of the chase, "what excellent game, and stewed,
too! What a supply for the Nautilus! Two! three! five down! And to think
that we shall eat that flesh, and that the idiots on board shall not have a
crumb!"
I think that, in the excess of his joy, the
Canadian, if he had not talked so much, would have killed them all. But he
contented himself with a single dozen of these interesting marsupians. These
animals were small. They were a species of those "kangaroo rabbits" that
live habitually in the hollows of trees, and whose speed is extreme; but
they are moderately fat, and furnish, at least, estimable food. We were very
satisfied with the results of the hunt. Happy Ned proposed to return to this
enchanting island the next day, for he wished to depopulate it of all the
eatable quadrupeds. But he had reckoned without his host.
At six o'clock in the evening we had
regained the shore; our boat was moored to the usual place. The Nautilus,
like a long rock, emerged from the waves two miles from the beach. Ned Land,
without waiting, occupied himself about the important dinner business. He
understood all about cooking well. The "bari-outang," grilled on the coals,
soon scented the air with a delicious odour.
Indeed, the dinner was excellent. Two
wood-pigeons completed this extraordinary menu. The sago pasty, the
artocarpus bread, some mangoes, half a dozen pineapples, and the liquor
fermented from some coco-nuts, overjoyed us. I even think that my worthy
companions' ideas had not all the plainness desirable.
"Suppose we do not return to the Nautilus
this evening?" said Conseil.
"Suppose we never return?" added Ned Land.
Just then a stone fell at our feet and cut
short the harpooner's proposition.
CHAPTER XXI
CAPTAIN NEMO'S THUNDERBOLT
We looked at the edge of the forest without
rising, my hand stopping in the action of putting it to my mouth, Ned Land's
completing its office.
"Stones do not fall from the sky," remarked
Conseil, "or they would merit the name aerolites."
A second stone, carefully aimed, that made
a savoury pigeon's leg fall from Conseil's hand, gave still more weight to
his observation. We all three arose, shouldered our guns, and were ready to
reply to any attack.
"Are they apes?" cried Ned Land.
"Very nearly—they are savages."
"To the boat!" I said, hurrying to the sea.
It was indeed necessary to beat a retreat,
for about twenty natives armed with bows and slings appeared on the skirts
of a copse that masked the horizon to the right, hardly a hundred steps from
us.
Our boat was moored about sixty feet from
us. The savages approached us, not running, but making hostile
demonstrations. Stones and arrows fell thickly.
Ned Land had not wished to leave his
provisions; and, in spite of his imminent danger, his pig on one side and
kangaroos on the other, he went tolerably fast. In two minutes we were on
the shore. To load the boat with provisions and arms, to push it out to sea,
and ship the oars, was the work of an instant. We had not gone two
cable-lengths, when a hundred savages, howling and gesticulating, entered
the water up to their waists. I watched to see if their apparition would
attract some men from the Nautilus on to the platform. But no. The enormous
machine, lying off, was absolutely deserted.
Twenty minutes later we were on board. The
panels were open. After making the boat fast, we entered into the interior
of the Nautilus.
I descended to the drawing-room, from
whence I heard some chords. Captain Nemo was there, bending over his organ,
and plunged in a musical ecstasy.
"Captain!"
He did not hear me.
"Captain!" I said, touching his hand.
He shuddered, and, turning round, said,
"Ah! it is you, Professor? Well, have you had a good hunt, have you
botanised successfully?"
"Yes Captain; but we have unfortunately
brought a troop of bipeds, whose vicinity troubles me."
"What bipeds?"
"Savages."
"Savages!" he echoed, ironically. "So you
are astonished, Professor, at having set foot on a strange land and finding
savages? Savages! where are there not any? Besides, are they worse than
others, these whom you call savages?"
"But Captain——"
"How many have you counted?"
"A hundred at least."
"M. Aronnax," replied Captain Nemo, placing
his fingers on the organ stops, "when all the natives of Papua are assembled
on this shore, the Nautilus will have nothing to fear from their attacks."
The Captain's fingers were then running
over the keys of the instrument, and I remarked that he touched only the
black keys, which gave his melodies an essentially Scotch character. Soon he
had forgotten my presence, and had plunged into a reverie that I did not
disturb. I went up again on to the platform: night had already fallen; for,
in this low latitude, the sun sets rapidly and without twilight. I could
only see the island indistinctly; but the numerous fires, lighted on the
beach, showed that the natives did not think of leaving it. I was alone for
several hours, sometimes thinking of the natives—but without any dread of
them, for the imperturbable confidence of the Captain was catching—sometimes
forgetting them to admire the splendours of the night in the tropics. My
remembrances went to France in the train of those zodiacal stars that would
shine in some hours' time. The moon shone in the midst of the constellations
of the zenith.
The night slipped away without any
mischance, the islanders frightened no doubt at the sight of a monster
aground in the bay. The panels were open, and would have offered an easy
access to the interior of the Nautilus.
At six o'clock in the morning of the 8th
January I went up on to the platform. The dawn was breaking. The island soon
showed itself through the dissipating fogs, first the shore, then the
summits.
The natives were there, more numerous than
on the day before—five or six hundred perhaps—some of them, profiting by the
low water, had come on to the coral, at less than two cable-lengths from the
Nautilus. I distinguished them easily; they were true Papuans, with athletic
figures, men of good race, large high foreheads, large, but not broad and
flat, and white teeth. Their woolly hair, with a reddish tinge, showed off
on their black shining bodies like those of the Nubians. From the lobes of
their ears, cut and distended, hung chaplets of bones. Most of these savages
were naked. Amongst them, I remarked some women, dressed from the hips to
knees in quite a crinoline of herbs, that sustained a vegetable waistband.
Some chiefs had ornamented their necks with a crescent and collars of glass
beads, red and white; nearly all were armed with bows, arrows, and shields
and carried on their shoulders a sort of net containing those round stones
which they cast from their slings with great skill. One of these chiefs,
rather near to the Nautilus, examined it attentively. He was, perhaps, a
"mado" of high rank, for he was draped in a mat of banana-leaves, notched
round the edges, and set off with brilliant colours.
I could easily have knocked down this
native, who was within a short length; but I thought that it was better to
wait for real hostile demonstrations. Between Europeans and savages, it is
proper for the Europeans to parry sharply, not to attack.
During low water the natives roamed about
near the Nautilus, but were not troublesome; I heard them frequently repeat
the word "Assai," and by their gestures I understood that they invited me to
go on land, an invitation that I declined.
So that, on that day, the boat did not push
off, to the great displeasure of Master Land, who could not complete his
provisions.
This adroit Canadian employed his time in
preparing the viands and meat that he had brought off the island. As for the
savages, they returned to the shore about eleven o'clock in the morning, as
soon as the coral tops began to disappear under the rising tide; but I saw
their numbers had increased considerably on the shore. Probably they came
from the neighbouring islands, or very likely from Papua. However, I had not
seen a single native canoe. Having nothing better to do, I thought of
dragging these beautiful limpid waters, under which I saw a profusion of
shells, zoophytes, and marine plants. Moreover, it was the last day that the
Nautilus would pass in these parts, if it float in open sea the next day,
according to Captain Nemo's promise.
I therefore called Conseil, who brought me
a little light drag, very like those for the oyster fishery. Now to work!
For two hours we fished unceasingly, but without bringing up any rarities.
The drag was filled with midas-ears, harps, melames, and particularly the
most beautiful hammers I have ever seen. We also brought up some sea-slugs,
pearl-oysters, and a dozen little turtles that were reserved for the pantry
on board.
But just when I expected it least, I put my
hand on a wonder, I might say a natural deformity, very rarely met with.
Conseil was just dragging, and his net came up filled with divers ordinary
shells, when, all at once, he saw me plunge my arm quickly into the net, to
draw out a shell, and heard me utter a cry.
"What is the matter, sir?" he asked in
surprise. "Has master been bitten?"
"No, my boy; but I would willingly have
given a finger for my discovery."
"What discovery?"
"This shell," I said, holding up the object
of my triumph.
"It is simply an olive porphyry, genus
olive, order of the pectinibranchidae, class of gasteropods, sub-class
mollusca."
"Yes, Conseil; but, instead of being rolled
from right to left, this olive turns from left to right."
"Is it possible?"
"Yes, my boy; it is a left shell."
Shells are all right-handed, with rare
exceptions; and, when by chance their spiral is left, amateurs are ready to
pay their weight in gold.
Conseil and I were absorbed in the
contemplation of our treasure, and I was promising myself to enrich the
museum with it, when a stone unfortunately thrown by a native struck
against, and broke, the precious object in Conseil's hand. I uttered a cry
of despair! Conseil took up his gun, and aimed at a savage who was poising
his sling at ten yards from him. I would have stopped him, but his blow took
effect and broke the bracelet of amulets which encircled the arm of the
savage.
"Conseil!" cried I. "Conseil!"
"Well, sir! do you not see that the
cannibal has commenced the attack?"
"A shell is not worth the life of a man,"
said I.
"Ah! the scoundrel!" cried Conseil; "I
would rather he had broken my shoulder!"
Conseil was in earnest, but I was not of
his opinion. However, the situation had changed some minutes before, and we
had not perceived. A score of canoes surrounded the Nautilus. These canoes,
scooped out of the trunk of a tree, long, narrow, well adapted for speed,
were balanced by means of a long bamboo pole, which floated on the water.
They were managed by skilful, half-naked paddlers, and I watched their
advance with some uneasiness. It was evident that these Papuans had already
had dealings with the Europeans and knew their ships. But this long iron
cylinder anchored in the bay, without masts or chimneys, what could they
think of it? Nothing good, for at first they kept at a respectful distance.
However, seeing it motionless, by degrees they took courage, and sought to
familiarise themselves with it. Now this familiarity was precisely what it
was necessary to avoid. Our arms, which were noiseless, could only produce a
moderate effect on the savages, who have little respect for aught but
blustering things. The thunderbolt without the reverberations of thunder
would frighten man but little, though the danger lies in the lightning, not
in the noise.
At this moment the canoes approached the
Nautilus, and a shower of arrows alighted on her.
I went down to the saloon, but found no one
there. I ventured to knock at the door that opened into the Captain's room.
"Come in," was the answer.
I entered, and found Captain Nemo deep in
algebraical calculations of x and other quantities.
"I am disturbing you," said I, for
courtesy's sake.
"That is true, M. Aronnax," replied the
Captain; "but I think you have serious reasons for wishing to see me?"
"Very grave ones; the natives are
surrounding us in their canoes, and in a few minutes we shall certainly be
attacked by many hundreds of savages."
"Ah!" said Captain Nemo quietly, "they are
come with their canoes?"
"Yes, sir."
"Well, sir, we must close the hatches."
"Exactly, and I came to say to you——"
"Nothing can be more simple," said Captain
Nemo. And, pressing an electric button, he transmitted an order to the
ship's crew.
"It is all done, sir," said he, after some
moments. "The pinnace is ready, and the hatches are closed. You do not fear,
I imagine, that these gentlemen could stave in walls on which the balls of
your frigate have had no effect?"
"No, Captain; but a danger still exists."
"What is that, sir?"
"It is that to-morrow, at about this hour,
we must open the hatches to renew the air of the Nautilus. Now, if, at this
moment, the Papuans should occupy the platform, I do not see how you could
prevent them from entering."
"Then, sir, you suppose that they will
board us?"
"I am certain of it."
"Well, sir, let them come. I see no reason
for hindering them. After all, these Papuans are poor creatures, and I am
unwilling that my visit to the island should cost the life of a single one
of these wretches."
Upon that I was going away; But Captain
Nemo detained me, and asked me to sit down by him. He questioned me with
interest about our excursions on shore, and our hunting; and seemed not to
understand the craving for meat that possessed the Canadian. Then the
conversation turned on various subjects, and, without being more
communicative, Captain Nemo showed himself more amiable.
Amongst other things, we happened to speak
of the situation of the Nautilus, run aground in exactly the same spot in
this strait where Dumont d'Urville was nearly lost. Apropos of this:
"This D'Urville was one of your great
sailors," said the Captain to me, "one of your most intelligent navigators.
He is the Captain Cook of you Frenchmen. Unfortunate man of science, after
having braved the icebergs of the South Pole, the coral reefs of Oceania,
the cannibals of the Pacific, to perish miserably in a railway train! If
this energetic man could have reflected during the last moments of his life,
what must have been uppermost in his last thoughts, do you suppose?"
So speaking, Captain Nemo seemed moved, and
his emotion gave me a better opinion of him. Then, chart in hand, we
reviewed the travels of the French navigator, his voyages of
circumnavigation, his double detention at the South Pole, which led to the
discovery of Adelaide and Louis Philippe, and fixing the hydrographical
bearings of the principal islands of Oceania.
"That which your D'Urville has done on the
surface of the seas," said Captain Nemo, "that have I done under them, and
more easily, more completely than he. The Astrolabe and the Zelee,
incessantly tossed about by the hurricane, could not be worth the Nautilus,
quiet repository of labour that she is, truly motionless in the midst of the
waters.
"To-morrow," added the Captain, rising,
"to-morrow, at twenty minutes to three p.m., the Nautilus shall float, and
leave the Strait of Torres uninjured."
Having curtly pronounced these words,
Captain Nemo bowed slightly. This was to dismiss me, and I went back to my
room.
There I found Conseil, who wished to know
the result of my interview with the Captain.
"My boy," said I, "when I feigned to
believe that his Nautilus was threatened by the natives of Papua, the
Captain answered me very sarcastically. I have but one thing to say to you:
Have confidence in him, and go to sleep in peace."
"Have you no need of my services, sir?"
"No, my friend. What is Ned Land doing?"
"If you will excuse me, sir," answered
Conseil, "friend Ned is busy making a kangaroo-pie which will be a marvel."
I remained alone and went to bed, but slept
indifferently. I heard the noise of the savages, who stamped on the
platform, uttering deafening cries. The night passed thus, without
disturbing the ordinary repose of the crew. The presence of these cannibals
affected them no more than the soldiers of a masked battery care for the
ants that crawl over its front.
At six in the morning I rose. The hatches
had not been opened. The inner air was not renewed, but the reservoirs,
filled ready for any emergency, were now resorted to, and discharged several
cubic feet of oxygen into the exhausted atmosphere of the Nautilus.
I worked in my room till noon, without
having seen Captain Nemo, even for an instant. On board no preparations for
departure were visible.
I waited still some time, then went into
the large saloon. The clock marked half-past two. In ten minutes it would be
high-tide: and, if Captain Nemo had not made a rash promise, the Nautilus
would be immediately detached. If not, many months would pass ere she could
leave her bed of coral.
However, some warning vibrations began to
be felt in the vessel. I heard the keel grating against the rough calcareous
bottom of the coral reef.
At five-and-twenty minutes to three,
Captain Nemo appeared in the saloon.
"We are going to start," said he.
"Ah!" replied I.
"I have given the order to open the
hatches."
"And the Papuans?"
"The Papuans?" answered Captain Nemo,
slightly shrugging his shoulders.
"Will they not come inside the Nautilus?"
"How?"
"Only by leaping over the hatches you have
opened."
"M. Aronnax," quietly answered Captain
Nemo, "they will not enter the hatches of the Nautilus in that way, even if
they were open."
I looked at the Captain.
"You do not understand?" said he.
"Hardly."
"Well, come and you will see."
I directed my steps towards the central
staircase. There Ned Land and Conseil were slyly watching some of the ship's
crew, who were opening the hatches, while cries of rage and fearful
vociferations resounded outside.
The port lids were pulled down outside.
Twenty horrible faces appeared. But the first native who placed his hand on
the stair-rail, struck from behind by some invisible force, I know not what,
fled, uttering the most fearful cries and making the wildest contortions.
Ten of his companions followed him. They
met with the same fate.
Conseil was in ecstasy. Ned Land, carried
away by his violent instincts, rushed on to the staircase. But the moment he
seized the rail with both hands, he, in his turn, was overthrown.
"I am struck by a thunderbolt," cried he,
with an oath.
This explained all. It was no rail; but a
metallic cable charged with electricity from the deck communicating with the
platform. Whoever touched it felt a powerful shock—and this shock would have
been mortal if Captain Nemo had discharged into the conductor the whole
force of the current. It might truly be said that between his assailants and
himself he had stretched a network of electricity which none could pass with
impunity.
Meanwhile, the exasperated Papuans had
beaten a retreat paralysed with terror. As for us, half laughing, we
consoled and rubbed the unfortunate Ned Land, who swore like one possessed.
But at this moment the Nautilus, raised by
the last waves of the tide, quitted her coral bed exactly at the fortieth
minute fixed by the Captain. Her screw swept the waters slowly and
majestically. Her speed increased gradually, and, sailing on the surface of
the ocean, she quitted safe and sound the dangerous passes of the Straits of
Torres.
CHAPTER XXII
"AEGRI SOMNIA"
The following day 10th January, the
Nautilus continued her course between two seas, but with such remarkable
speed that I could not estimate it at less than thirty-five miles an hour.
The rapidity of her screw was such that I could neither follow nor count its
revolutions. When I reflected that this marvellous electric agent, after
having afforded motion, heat, and light to the Nautilus, still protected her
from outward attack, and transformed her into an ark of safety which no
profane hand might touch without being thunderstricken, my admiration was
unbounded, and from the structure it extended to the engineer who had called
it into existence.
Our course was directed to the west, and on
the 11th of January we doubled Cape Wessel, situation in 135° long. and 10°
S. lat., which forms the east point of the Gulf of Carpentaria. The reefs
were still numerous, but more equalised, and marked on the chart with
extreme precision. The Nautilus easily avoided the breakers of Money to port
and the Victoria reefs to starboard, placed at 130° long. and on the 10th
parallel, which we strictly followed.
On the 13th of January, Captain Nemo
arrived in the Sea of Timor, and recognised the island of that name in 122°
long.
From this point the direction of the
Nautilus inclined towards the south-west. Her head was set for the Indian
Ocean. Where would the fancy of Captain Nemo carry us next? Would he return
to the coast of Asia or would he approach again the shores of Europe?
Improbable conjectures both, to a man who fled from inhabited continents.
Then would he descend to the south? Was he going to double the Cape of Good
Hope, then Cape Horn, and finally go as far as the Antarctic pole? Would he
come back at last to the Pacific, where his Nautilus could sail free and
independently? Time would show.
After having skirted the sands of Cartier,
of Hibernia, Seringapatam, and Scott, last efforts of the solid against the
liquid element, on the 14th of January we lost sight of land altogether. The
speed of the Nautilus was considerably abated, and with irregular course she
sometimes swam in the bosom of the waters, sometimes floated on their
surface.
During this period of the voyage, Captain
Nemo made some interesting experiments on the varied temperature of the sea,
in different beds. Under ordinary conditions these observations are made by
means of rather complicated instruments, and with somewhat doubtful results,
by means of thermometrical sounding-leads, the glasses often breaking under
the pressure of the water, or an apparatus grounded on the variations of the
resistance of metals to the electric currents. Results so obtained could not
be correctly calculated. On the contrary, Captain Nemo went himself to test
the temperature in the depths of the sea, and his thermometer, placed in
communication with the different sheets of water, gave him the required
degree immediately and accurately.
It was thus that, either by overloading her
reservoirs or by descending obliquely by means of her inclined planes, the
Nautilus successively attained the depth of three, four, five, seven, nine,
and ten thousand yards, and the definite result of this experience was that
the sea preserved an average temperature of four degrees and a half at a
depth of five thousand fathoms under all latitudes.
On the 16th of January, the Nautilus seemed
becalmed only a few yards beneath the surface of the waves. Her electric
apparatus remained inactive and her motionless screw left her to drift at
the mercy of the currents. I supposed that the crew was occupied with
interior repairs, rendered necessary by the violence of the mechanical
movements of the machine.
My companions and I then witnessed a
curious spectacle. The hatches of the saloon were open, and, as the beacon
light of the Nautilus was not in action, a dim obscurity reigned in the
midst of the waters. I observed the state of the sea, under these
conditions, and the largest fish appeared to me no more than scarcely
defined shadows, when the Nautilus found herself suddenly transported into
full light. I thought at first that the beacon had been lighted, and was
casting its electric radiance into the liquid mass. I was mistaken, and
after a rapid survey perceived my error.
The Nautilus floated in the midst of a
phosphorescent bed which, in this obscurity, became quite dazzling. It was
produced by myriads of luminous animalculae, whose brilliancy was increased
as they glided over the metallic hull of the vessel. I was surprised by
lightning in the midst of these luminous sheets, as though they had been
rivulets of lead melted in an ardent furnace or metallic masses brought to a
white heat, so that, by force of contrast, certain portions of light
appeared to cast a shade in the midst of the general ignition, from which
all shade seemed banished. No; this was not the calm irradiation of our
ordinary lightning. There was unusual life and vigour: this was truly living
light!
In reality, it was an infinite
agglomeration of coloured infusoria, of veritable globules of jelly,
provided with a threadlike tentacle, and of which as many as twenty-five
thousand have been counted in less than two cubic half-inches of water.
During several hours the Nautilus floated
in these brilliant waves, and our admiration increased as we watched the
marine monsters disporting themselves like salamanders. I saw there in the
midst of this fire that burns not the swift and elegant porpoise (the
indefatigable clown of the ocean), and some swordfish ten feet long, those
prophetic heralds of the hurricane whose formidable sword would now and then
strike the glass of the saloon. Then appeared the smaller fish, the balista,
the leaping mackerel, wolf-thorn-tails, and a hundred others which striped
the luminous atmosphere as they swam. This dazzling spectacle was
enchanting! Perhaps some atmospheric condition increased the intensity of
this phenomenon. Perhaps some storm agitated the surface of the waves. But
at this depth of some yards, the Nautilus was unmoved by its fury and
reposed peacefully in still water.
So we progressed, incessantly charmed by
some new marvel. The days passed rapidly away, and I took no account of
them. Ned, according to habit, tried to vary the diet on board. Like snails,
we were fixed to our shells, and I declare it is easy to lead a snail's
life.
Thus this life seemed easy and natural, and
we thought no longer of the life we led on land; but something happened to
recall us to the strangeness of our situation.
On the 18th of January, the Nautilus was in
105° long. and 15° S. lat. The weather was threatening, the sea rough and
rolling. There was a strong east wind. The barometer, which had been going
down for some days, foreboded a coming storm. I went up on to the platform
just as the second lieutenant was taking the measure of the horary angles,
and waited, according to habit till the daily phrase was said. But on this
day it was exchanged for another phrase not less incomprehensible. Almost
directly, I saw Captain Nemo appear with a glass, looking towards the
horizon.
For some minutes he was immovable, without
taking his eye off the point of observation. Then he lowered his glass and
exchanged a few words with his lieutenant. The latter seemed to be a victim
to some emotion that he tried in vain to repress. Captain Nemo, having more
command over himself, was cool. He seemed, too, to be making some objections
to which the lieutenant replied by formal assurances. At least I concluded
so by the difference of their tones and gestures. For myself, I had looked
carefully in the direction indicated without seeing anything. The sky and
water were lost in the clear line of the horizon.
However, Captain Nemo walked from one end
of the platform to the other, without looking at me, perhaps without seeing
me. His step was firm, but less regular than usual. He stopped sometimes,
crossed his arms, and observed the sea. What could he be looking for on that
immense expanse?
The Nautilus was then some hundreds of
miles from the nearest coast.
The lieutenant had taken up the glass and
examined the horizon steadfastly, going and coming, stamping his foot and
showing more nervous agitation than his superior officer. Besides, this
mystery must necessarily be solved, and before long; for, upon an order from
Captain Nemo, the engine, increasing its propelling power, made the screw
turn more rapidly.
Just then the lieutenant drew the Captain's
attention again. The latter stopped walking and directed his glass towards
the place indicated. He looked long. I felt very much puzzled, and descended
to the drawing-room, and took out an excellent telescope that I generally
used. Then, leaning on the cage of the watch-light that jutted out from the
front of the platform, set myself to look over all the line of the sky and
sea.
But my eye was no sooner applied to the
glass than it was quickly snatched out of my hands.
I turned round. Captain Nemo was before me,
but I did not know him. His face was transfigured. His eyes flashed
sullenly; his teeth were set; his stiff body, clenched fists, and head
shrunk between his shoulders, betrayed the violent agitation that pervaded
his whole frame. He did not move. My glass, fallen from his hands, had
rolled at his feet.
Had I unwittingly provoked this fit of
anger? Did this incomprehensible person imagine that I had discovered some
forbidden secret? No; I was not the object of this hatred, for he was not
looking at me; his eye was steadily fixed upon the impenetrable point of the
horizon. At last Captain Nemo recovered himself. His agitation subsided. He
addressed some words in a foreign language to his lieutenant, then turned to
me. "M. Aronnax," he said, in rather an imperious tone, "I require you to
keep one of the conditions that bind you to me."
"What is it, Captain?"
"You must be confined, with your
companions, until I think fit to release you."
"You are the master," I replied, looking
steadily at him. "But may I ask you one question?"
"None, sir."
There was no resisting this imperious
command, it would have been useless. I went down to the cabin occupied by
Ned Land and Conseil, and told them the Captain's determination. You may
judge how this communication was received by the Canadian.
But there was not time for altercation.
Four of the crew waited at the door, and conducted us to that cell where we
had passed our first night on board the Nautilus.
Ned Land would have remonstrated, but the
door was shut upon him.
"Will master tell me what this means?"
asked Conseil.
I told my companions what had passed. They
were as much astonished as I, and equally at a loss how to account for it.
Meanwhile, I was absorbed in my own
reflections, and could think of nothing but the strange fear depicted in the
Captain's countenance. I was utterly at a loss to account for it, when my
cogitations were disturbed by these words from Ned Land:
"Hallo! breakfast is ready."
And indeed the table was laid. Evidently
Captain Nemo had given this order at the same time that he had hastened the
speed of the Nautilus.
"Will master permit me to make a
recommendation?" asked Conseil.
"Yes, my boy."
"Well, it is that master breakfasts. It is
prudent, for we do not know what may happen."
"You are right, Conseil."
"Unfortunately," said Ned Land, "they have
only given us the ship's fare."
"Friend Ned," asked Conseil, "what would
you have said if the breakfast had been entirely forgotten?"
This argument cut short the harpooner's
recriminations.
We sat down to table. The meal was eaten in
silence.
Just then the luminous globe that lighted
the cell went out, and left us in total darkness. Ned Land was soon asleep,
and what astonished me was that Conseil went off into a heavy slumber. I was
thinking what could have caused his irresistible drowsiness, when I felt my
brain becoming stupefied. In spite of my efforts to keep my eyes open, they
would close. A painful suspicion seized me. Evidently soporific substances
had been mixed with the food we had just taken. Imprisonment was not enough
to conceal Captain Nemo's projects from us, sleep was more necessary. I then
heard the panels shut. The undulations of the sea, which caused a slight
rolling motion, ceased. Had the Nautilus quitted the surface of the ocean?
Had it gone back to the motionless bed of water? I tried to resist sleep. It
was impossible. My breathing grew weak. I felt a mortal cold freeze my
stiffened and half-paralysed limbs. My eye lids, like leaden caps, fell over
my eyes. I could not raise them; a morbid sleep, full of hallucinations,
bereft me of my being. Then the visions disappeared, and left me in complete
insensibility.
CHAPTER XXIII
THE CORAL KINGDOM
The next day I woke with my head singularly
clear. To my great surprise, I was in my own room. My companions, no doubt,
had been reinstated in their cabin, without having perceived it any more
than I. Of what had passed during the night they were as ignorant as I was,
and to penetrate this mystery I only reckoned upon the chances of the
future.
I then thought of quitting my room. Was I
free again or a prisoner? Quite free. I opened the door, went to the
half-deck, went up the central stairs. The panels, shut the evening before,
were open. I went on to the platform.
Ned Land and Conseil waited there for me. I
questioned them; they knew nothing. Lost in a heavy sleep in which they had
been totally unconscious, they had been astonished at finding themselves in
their cabin.
As for the Nautilus, it seemed quiet and
mysterious as ever. It floated on the surface of the waves at a moderate
pace. Nothing seemed changed on board.
The second lieutenant then came on to the
platform, and gave the usual order below.
As for Captain Nemo, he did not appear.
Of the people on board, I only saw the
impassive steward, who served me with his usual dumb regularity.
About two o'clock, I was in the
drawing-room, busied in arranging my notes, when the Captain opened the door
and appeared. I bowed. He made a slight inclination in return, without
speaking. I resumed my work, hoping that he would perhaps give me some
explanation of the events of the preceding night. He made none. I looked at
him. He seemed fatigued; his heavy eyes had not been refreshed by sleep; his
face looked very sorrowful. He walked to and fro, sat down and got up again,
took a chance book, put it down, consulted his instruments without taking
his habitual notes, and seemed restless and uneasy. At last, he came up to
me, and said:
"Are you a doctor, M. Aronnax?"
I so little expected such a question that I
stared some time at him without answering.
"Are you a doctor?" he repeated. "Several
of your colleagues have studied medicine."
"Well," said I, "I am a doctor and resident
surgeon to the hospital. I practised several years before entering the
museum."
"Very well, sir."
My answer had evidently satisfied the
Captain. But, not knowing what he would say next, I waited for other
questions, reserving my answers according to circumstances.
"M. Aronnax, will you consent to prescribe
for one of my men?" he asked.
"Is he ill?"
"Yes."
"I am ready to follow you."
"Come, then."
I own my heart beat, I do not know why. I
saw certain connection between the illness of one of the crew and the events
of the day before; and this mystery interested me at least as much as the
sick man.
Captain Nemo conducted me to the poop of
the Nautilus, and took me into a cabin situated near the sailors' quarters.
There, on a bed, lay a man about forty
years of age, with a resolute expression of countenance, a true type of an
Anglo-Saxon.
I leant over him. He was not only ill, he
was wounded. His head, swathed in bandages covered with blood, lay on a
pillow. I undid the bandages, and the wounded man looked at me with his
large eyes and gave no sign of pain as I did it. It was a horrible wound.
The skull, shattered by some deadly weapon, left the brain exposed, which
was much injured. Clots of blood had formed in the bruised and broken mass,
in colour like the dregs of wine.
There was both contusion and suffusion of
the brain. His breathing was slow, and some spasmodic movements of the
muscles agitated his face. I felt his pulse. It was intermittent. The
extremities of the body were growing cold already, and I saw death must
inevitably ensue. After dressing the unfortunate man's wounds, I readjusted
the bandages on his head, and turned to Captain Nemo.
"What caused this wound?" I asked.
"What does it signify?" he replied,
evasively. "A shock has broken one of the levers of the engine, which struck
myself. But your opinion as to his state?"
I hesitated before giving it.
"You may speak," said the Captain. "This
man does not understand French."
I gave a last look at the wounded man.
"He will be dead in two hours."
"Can nothing save him?"
"Nothing."
Captain Nemo's hand contracted, and some
tears glistened in his eyes, which I thought incapable of shedding any.
For some moments I still watched the dying
man, whose life ebbed slowly. His pallor increased under the electric light
that was shed over his death-bed. I looked at his intelligent forehead,
furrowed with premature wrinkles, produced probably by misfortune and
sorrow. I tried to learn the secret of his life from the last words that
escaped his lips.
"You can go now, M. Aronnax," said the
Captain.
I left him in the dying man's cabin, and
returned to my room much affected by this scene. During the whole day, I was
haunted by uncomfortable suspicions, and at night I slept badly, and between
my broken dreams I fancied I heard distant sighs like the notes of a funeral
psalm. Were they the prayers of the dead, murmured in that language that I
could not understand?
The next morning I went on to the bridge.
Captain Nemo was there before me. As soon as he perceived me he came to me.
"Professor, will it be convenient to you to
make a submarine excursion to-day?"
"With my companions?" I asked.
"If they like."
"We obey your orders, Captain."
"Will you be so good then as to put on your
cork jackets?"
It was not a question of dead or dying. I
rejoined Ned Land and Conseil, and told them of Captain Nemo's proposition.
Conseil hastened to accept it, and this time the Canadian seemed quite
willing to follow our example.
It was eight o'clock in the morning. At
half-past eight we were equipped for this new excursion, and provided with
two contrivances for light and breathing. The double door was open; and,
accompanied by Captain Nemo, who was followed by a dozen of the crew, we set
foot, at a depth of about thirty feet, on the solid bottom on which the
Nautilus rested.
A slight declivity ended in an uneven
bottom, at fifteen fathoms depth. This bottom differed entirely from the one
I had visited on my first excursion under the waters of the Pacific Ocean.
Here, there was no fine sand, no submarine prairies, no sea-forest. I
immediately recognised that marvellous region in which, on that day, the
Captain did the honours to us. It was the coral kingdom.
The light produced a thousand charming
varieties, playing in the midst of the branches that were so vividly
coloured. I seemed to see the membraneous and cylindrical tubes tremble
beneath the undulation of the waters. I was tempted to gather their fresh
petals, ornamented with delicate tentacles, some just blown, the others
budding, while a small fish, swimming swiftly, touched them slightly, like
flights of birds. But if my hand approached these living flowers, these
animated, sensitive plants, the whole colony took alarm. The white petals
re-entered their red cases, the flowers faded as I looked, and the bush
changed into a block of stony knobs.
Chance had thrown me just by the most
precious specimens of the zoophyte. This coral was more valuable than that
found in the Mediterranean, on the coasts of France, Italy and Barbary. Its
tints justified the poetical names of "Flower of Blood," and "Froth of
Blood," that trade has given to its most beautiful productions. Coral is
sold for L20 per ounce; and in this place the watery beds would make the
fortunes of a company of coral-divers. This precious matter, often confused
with other polypi, formed then the inextricable plots called "macciota," and
on which I noticed several beautiful specimens of pink coral.
But soon the bushes contract, and the
arborisations increase. Real petrified thickets, long joints of fantastic
architecture, were disclosed before us. Captain Nemo placed himself under a
dark gallery, where by a slight declivity we reached a depth of a hundred
yards. The light from our lamps produced sometimes magical effects,
following the rough outlines of the natural arches and pendants disposed
like lustres, that were tipped with points of fire.
At last, after walking two hours, we had
attained a depth of about three hundred yards, that is to say, the extreme
limit on which coral begins to form. But there was no isolated bush, nor
modest brushwood, at the bottom of lofty trees. It was an immense forest of
large mineral vegetations, enormous petrified trees, united by garlands of
elegant sea-bindweed, all adorned with clouds and reflections. We passed
freely under their high branches, lost in the shade of the waves.
Captain Nemo had stopped. I and my
companions halted, and, turning round, I saw his men were forming a
semi-circle round their chief. Watching attentively, I observed that four of
them carried on their shoulders an object of an oblong shape.
We occupied, in this place, the centre of a
vast glade surrounded by the lofty foliage of the submarine forest. Our
lamps threw over this place a sort of clear twilight that singularly
elongated the shadows on the ground. At the end of the glade the darkness
increased, and was only relieved by little sparks reflected by the points of
coral.
Ned Land and Conseil were near me. We
watched, and I thought I was going to witness a strange scene. On observing
the ground, I saw that it was raised in certain places by slight
excrescences encrusted with limy deposits, and disposed with a regularity
that betrayed the hand of man.
In the midst of the glade, on a pedestal of
rocks roughly piled up, stood a cross of coral that extended its long arms
that one might have thought were made of petrified blood. Upon a sign from
Captain Nemo one of the men advanced; and at some feet from the cross he
began to dig a hole with a pickaxe that he took from his belt. I understood
all! This glade was a cemetery, this hole a tomb, this oblong object the
body of the man who had died in the night! The Captain and his men had come
to bury their companion in this general resting-place, at the bottom of this
inaccessible ocean!
The grave was being dug slowly; the fish
fled on all sides while their retreat was being thus disturbed; I heard the
strokes of the pickaxe, which sparkled when it hit upon some flint lost at
the bottom of the waters. The hole was soon large and deep enough to receive
the body. Then the bearers approached; the body, enveloped in a tissue of
white linen, was lowered into the damp grave. Captain Nemo, with his arms
crossed on his breast, and all the friends of him who had loved them, knelt
in prayer.
The grave was then filled in with the
rubbish taken from the ground, which formed a slight mound. When this was
done, Captain Nemo and his men rose; then, approaching the grave, they knelt
again, and all extended their hands in sign of a last adieu. Then the
funeral procession returned to the Nautilus, passing under the arches of the
forest, in the midst of thickets, along the coral bushes, and still on the
ascent. At last the light of the ship appeared, and its luminous track
guided us to the Nautilus. At one o'clock we had returned.
As soon as I had changed my clothes I went
up on to the platform, and, a prey to conflicting emotions, I sat down near
the binnacle. Captain Nemo joined me. I rose and said to him:
"So, as I said he would, this man died in
the night?"
"Yes, M. Aronnax."
"And he rests now, near his companions, in
the coral cemetery?"
"Yes, forgotten by all else, but not by us.
We dug the grave, and the polypi undertake to seal our dead for eternity."
And, burying his face quickly in his hands, he tried in vain to suppress a
sob. Then he added: "Our peaceful cemetery is there, some hundred feet below
the surface of the waves."
"Your dead sleep quietly, at least,
Captain, out of the reach of sharks."
"Yes, sir, of sharks and men," gravely
replied the Captain.
PART TWO
CHAPTER I
THE INDIAN OCEAN
We now come to the second part of our
journey under the sea. The first ended with the moving scene in the coral
cemetery which left such a deep impression on my mind. Thus, in the midst of
this great sea, Captain Nemo's life was passing, even to his grave, which he
had prepared in one of its deepest abysses. There, not one of the ocean's
monsters could trouble the last sleep of the crew of the Nautilus, of those
friends riveted to each other in death as in life. "Nor any man, either,"
had added the Captain. Still the same fierce, implacable defiance towards
human society!
I could no longer content myself with the
theory which satisfied Conseil.
That worthy fellow persisted in seeing in
the Commander of the Nautilus one of those unknown servants who return
mankind contempt for indifference. For him, he was a misunderstood genius
who, tired of earth's deceptions, had taken refuge in this inaccessible
medium, where he might follow his instincts freely. To my mind, this
explains but one side of Captain Nemo's character. Indeed, the mystery of
that last night during which we had been chained in prison, the sleep, and
the precaution so violently taken by the Captain of snatching from my eyes
the glass I had raised to sweep the horizon, the mortal wound of the man,
due to an unaccountable shock of the Nautilus, all put me on a new track.
No; Captain Nemo was not satisfied with shunning man. His formidable
apparatus not only suited his instinct of freedom, but perhaps also the
design of some terrible retaliation.
At this moment nothing is clear to me; I
catch but a glimpse of light amidst all the darkness, and I must confine
myself to writing as events shall dictate.
That day, the 24th of January, 1868, at
noon, the second officer came to take the altitude of the sun. I mounted the
platform, lit a cigar, and watched the operation. It seemed to me that the
man did not understand French; for several times I made remarks in a loud
voice, which must have drawn from him some involuntary sign of attention, if
he had understood them; but he remained undisturbed and dumb.
As he was taking observations with the
sextant, one of the sailors of the Nautilus (the strong man who had
accompanied us on our first submarine excursion to the Island of Crespo)
came to clean the glasses of the lantern. I examined the fittings of the
apparatus, the strength of which was increased a hundredfold by lenticular
rings, placed similar to those in a lighthouse, and which projected their
brilliance in a horizontal plane. The electric lamp was combined in such a
way as to give its most powerful light. Indeed, it was produced in vacuo,
which insured both its steadiness and its intensity. This vacuum economised
the graphite points between which the luminous arc was developed—an
important point of economy for Captain Nemo, who could not easily have
replaced them; and under these conditions their waste was imperceptible.
When the Nautilus was ready to continue its submarine journey, I went down
to the saloon. The panel was closed, and the course marked direct west.
We were furrowing the waters of the Indian
Ocean, a vast liquid plain, with a surface of 1,200,000,000 of acres, and
whose waters are so clear and transparent that any one leaning over them
would turn giddy. The Nautilus usually floated between fifty and a hundred
fathoms deep. We went on so for some days. To anyone but myself, who had a
great love for the sea, the hours would have seemed long and monotonous; but
the daily walks on the platform, when I steeped myself in the reviving air
of the ocean, the sight of the rich waters through the windows of the
saloon, the books in the library, the compiling of my memoirs, took up all
my time, and left me not a moment of ennui or weariness.
For some days we saw a great number of
aquatic birds, sea-mews or gulls. Some were cleverly killed and, prepared in
a certain way, made very acceptable water-game. Amongst large-winged birds,
carried a long distance from all lands and resting upon the waves from the
fatigue of their flight, I saw some magnificent albatrosses, uttering
discordant cries like the braying of an ass, and birds belonging to the
family of the long-wings.
As to the fish, they always provoked our
admiration when we surprised the secrets of their aquatic life through the
open panels. I saw many kinds which I never before had a chance of
observing.
I shall notice chiefly ostracions peculiar
to the Red Sea, the Indian Ocean, and that part which washes the coast of
tropical America. These fishes, like the tortoise, the armadillo, the
sea-hedgehog, and the Crustacea, are protected by a breastplate which is
neither chalky nor stony, but real bone. In some it takes the form of a
solid triangle, in others of a solid quadrangle. Amongst the triangular I
saw some an inch and a half in length, with wholesome flesh and a delicious
flavour; they are brown at the tail, and yellow at the fins, and I recommend
their introduction into fresh water, to which a certain number of sea-fish
easily accustom themselves. I would also mention quadrangular ostracions,
having on the back four large tubercles; some dotted over with white spots
on the lower part of the body, and which may be tamed like birds; trigons
provided with spikes formed by the lengthening of their bony shell, and
which, from their strange gruntings, are called "seapigs"; also dromedaries
with large humps in the shape of a cone, whose flesh is very tough and
leathery.
I now borrow from the daily notes of Master
Conseil. "Certain fish of the genus petrodon peculiar to those seas, with
red backs and white chests, which are distinguished by three rows of
longitudinal filaments; and some electrical, seven inches long, decked in
the liveliest colours. Then, as specimens of other kinds, some ovoides,
resembling an egg of a dark brown colour, marked with white bands, and
without tails; diodons, real sea-porcupines, furnished with spikes, and
capable of swelling in such a way as to look like cushions bristling with
darts; hippocampi, common to every ocean; some pegasi with lengthened
snouts, which their pectoral fins, being much elongated and formed in the
shape of wings, allow, if not to fly, at least to shoot into the air; pigeon
spatulae, with tails covered with many rings of shell; macrognathi with long
jaws, an excellent fish, nine inches long, and bright with most agreeable
colours; pale-coloured calliomores, with rugged heads; and plenty of
chaetpdons, with long and tubular muzzles, which kill insects by shooting
them, as from an air-gun, with a single drop of water. These we may call the
flycatchers of the seas.
"In the eighty-ninth genus of fishes,
classed by Lacepede, belonging to the second lower class of bony,
characterised by opercules and bronchial membranes, I remarked the
scorpaena, the head of which is furnished with spikes, and which has but one
dorsal fin; these creatures are covered, or not, with little shells,
according to the sub-class to which they belong. The second sub-class gives
us specimens of didactyles fourteen or fifteen inches in length, with yellow
rays, and heads of a most fantastic appearance. As to the first sub-class,
it gives several specimens of that singular looking fish appropriately
called a 'seafrog,' with large head, sometimes pierced with holes, sometimes
swollen with protuberances, bristling with spikes, and covered with
tubercles; it has irregular and hideous horns; its body and tail are covered
with callosities; its sting makes a dangerous wound; it is both repugnant
and horrible to look at."
From the 21st to the 23rd of January the
Nautilus went at the rate of two hundred and fifty leagues in twenty-four
hours, being five hundred and forty miles, or twenty-two miles an hour. If
we recognised so many different varieties of fish, it was because, attracted
by the electric light, they tried to follow us; the greater part, however,
were soon distanced by our speed, though some kept their place in the waters
of the Nautilus for a time. The morning of the 24th, in 12° 5' S. lat., and
94° 33' long., we observed Keeling Island, a coral formation, planted with
magnificent cocos, and which had been visited by Mr. Darwin and Captain
Fitzroy. The Nautilus skirted the shores of this desert island for a little
distance. Its nets brought up numerous specimens of polypi and curious
shells of mollusca. Some precious productions of the species of delphinulae
enriched the treasures of Captain Nemo, to which I added an astraea
punctifera, a kind of parasite polypus often found fixed to a shell.
Soon Keeling Island disappeared from the
horizon, and our course was directed to the north-west in the direction of
the Indian Peninsula.
From Keeling Island our course was slower
and more variable, often taking us into great depths. Several times they
made use of the inclined planes, which certain internal levers placed
obliquely to the waterline. In that way we went about two miles, but without
ever obtaining the greatest depths of the Indian Sea, which soundings of
seven thousand fathoms have never reached. As to the temperature of the
lower strata, the thermometer invariably indicated 4° above zero. I only
observed that in the upper regions the water was always colder in the high
levels than at the surface of the sea.
On the 25th of January the ocean was
entirely deserted; the Nautilus passed the day on the surface, beating the
waves with its powerful screw and making them rebound to a great height. Who
under such circumstances would not have taken it for a gigantic cetacean?
Three parts of this day I spent on the platform. I watched the sea. Nothing
on the horizon, till about four o'clock a steamer running west on our
counter. Her masts were visible for an instant, but she could not see the
Nautilus, being too low in the water. I fancied this steamboat belonged to
the P.O. Company, which runs from Ceylon to Sydney, touching at King
George's Point and Melbourne.
At five o'clock in the evening, before that
fleeting twilight which binds night to day in tropical zones, Conseil and I
were astonished by a curious spectacle.
It was a shoal of argonauts travelling
along on the surface of the ocean. We could count several hundreds. They
belonged to the tubercle kind which are peculiar to the Indian seas.
These graceful molluscs moved backwards by
means of their locomotive tube, through which they propelled the water
already drawn in. Of their eight tentacles, six were elongated, and
stretched out floating on the water, whilst the other two, rolled up flat,
were spread to the wing like a light sail. I saw their spiral-shaped and
fluted shells, which Cuvier justly compares to an elegant skiff. A boat
indeed! It bears the creature which secretes it without its adhering to it.
For nearly an hour the Nautilus floated in
the midst of this shoal of molluscs. Then I know not what sudden fright they
took. But as if at a signal every sail was furled, the arms folded, the body
drawn in, the shells turned over, changing their centre of gravity, and the
whole fleet disappeared under the waves. Never did the ships of a squadron
manoeuvre with more unity.
At that moment night fell suddenly, and the
reeds, scarcely raised by the breeze, lay peaceably under the sides of the
Nautilus.
The next day, 26th of January, we cut the
equator at the eighty-second meridian and entered the northern hemisphere.
During the day a formidable troop of sharks accompanied us, terrible
creatures, which multiply in these seas and make them very dangerous. They
were "cestracio philippi" sharks, with brown backs and whitish bellies,
armed with eleven rows of teeth—eyed sharks—their throat being marked with a
large black spot surrounded with white like an eye. There were also some
Isabella sharks, with rounded snouts marked with dark spots. These powerful
creatures often hurled themselves at the windows of the saloon with such
violence as to make us feel very insecure. At such times Ned Land was no
longer master of himself. He wanted to go to the surface and harpoon the
monsters, particularly certain smooth-hound sharks, whose mouth is studded
with teeth like a mosaic; and large tiger-sharks nearly six yards long, the
last named of which seemed to excite him more particularly. But the
Nautilus, accelerating her speed, easily left the most rapid of them behind.
The 27th of January, at the entrance of the
vast Bay of Bengal, we met repeatedly a forbidding spectacle, dead bodies
floating on the surface of the water. They were the dead of the Indian
villages, carried by the Ganges to the level of the sea, and which the
vultures, the only undertakers of the country, had not been able to devour.
But the sharks did not fail to help them at their funeral work.
About seven o'clock in the evening, the
Nautilus, half-immersed, was sailing in a sea of milk. At first sight the
ocean seemed lactified. Was it the effect of the lunar rays? No; for the
moon, scarcely two days old, was still lying hidden under the horizon in the
rays of the sun. The whole sky, though lit by the sidereal rays, seemed
black by contrast with the whiteness of the waters.
Conseil could not believe his eyes, and
questioned me as to the cause of this strange phenomenon. Happily I was able
to answer him.
"It is called a milk sea," I explained. "A
large extent of white wavelets often to be seen on the coasts of Amboyna,
and in these parts of the sea."
"But, sir," said Conseil, "can you tell me
what causes such an effect? for I suppose the water is not really turned
into milk."
"No, my boy; and the whiteness which
surprises you is caused only by the presence of myriads of infusoria, a sort
of luminous little worm, gelatinous and without colour, of the thickness of
a hair, and whose length is not more than seven-thousandths of an inch.
These insects adhere to one another sometimes for several leagues."
"Several leagues!" exclaimed Conseil.
"Yes, my boy; and you need not try to
compute the number of these infusoria. You will not be able, for, if I am
not mistaken, ships have floated on these milk seas for more than forty
miles."
Towards midnight the sea suddenly resumed
its usual colour; but behind us, even to the limits of the horizon, the sky
reflected the whitened waves, and for a long time seemed impregnated with
the vague glimmerings of an aurora borealis.
CHAPTER II
A NOVEL PROPOSAL OF CAPTAIN
NEMO'S
On the 28th of February, when at noon the
Nautilus came to the surface of the sea, in 9° 4' N. lat., there was land in
sight about eight miles to westward. The first thing I noticed was a range
of mountains about two thousand feet high, the shapes of which were most
capricious. On taking the bearings, I knew that we were nearing the island
of Ceylon, the pearl which hangs from the lobe of the Indian Peninsula.
Captain Nemo and his second appeared at
this moment. The Captain glanced at the map. Then turning to me, said:
"The Island of Ceylon, noted for its
pearl-fisheries. Would you like to visit one of them, M. Aronnax?"
"Certainly, Captain."
"Well, the thing is easy. Though, if we see
the fisheries, we shall not see the fishermen. The annual exportation has
not yet begun. Never mind, I will give orders to make for the Gulf of
Manaar, where we shall arrive in the night."
The Captain said something to his second,
who immediately went out. Soon the Nautilus returned to her native element,
and the manometer showed that she was about thirty feet deep.
"Well, sir," said Captain Nemo, "you and
your companions shall visit the Bank of Manaar, and if by chance some
fisherman should be there, we shall see him at work."
"Agreed, Captain!"
"By the bye, M. Aronnax you are not afraid
of sharks?"
"Sharks!" exclaimed I.
This question seemed a very hard one.
"Well?" continued Captain Nemo.
"I admit, Captain, that I am not yet very
familiar with that kind of fish."
"We are accustomed to them," replied
Captain Nemo, "and in time you will be too. However, we shall be armed, and
on the road we may be able to hunt some of the tribe. It is interesting. So,
till to-morrow, sir, and early."
This said in a careless tone, Captain Nemo
left the saloon. Now, if you were invited to hunt the bear in the mountains
of Switzerland, what would you say?
"Very well! to-morrow we will go and hunt
the bear." If you were asked to hunt the lion in the plains of Atlas, or the
tiger in the Indian jungles, what would you say?
"Ha! ha! it seems we are going to hunt the
tiger or the lion!" But when you are invited to hunt the shark in its
natural element, you would perhaps reflect before accepting the invitation.
As for myself, I passed my hand over my forehead, on which stood large drops
of cold perspiration. "Let us reflect," said I, "and take our time. Hunting
otters in submarine forests, as we did in the Island of Crespo, will pass;
but going up and down at the bottom of the sea, where one is almost certain
to meet sharks, is quite another thing! I know well that in certain
countries, particularly in the Andaman Islands, the negroes never hesitate
to attack them with a dagger in one hand and a running noose in the other;
but I also know that few who affront those creatures ever return alive.
However, I am not a negro, and if I were I think a little hesitation in this
case would not be ill-timed."
At this moment Conseil and the Canadian
entered, quite composed, and even joyous. They knew not what awaited them.
"Faith, sir," said Ned Land, "your Captain
Nemo—the devil take him!—has just made us a very pleasant offer."
"Ah!" said I, "you know?"
"If agreeable to you, sir," interrupted
Conseil, "the commander of the Nautilus has invited us to visit the
magnificent Ceylon fisheries to-morrow, in your company; he did it kindly,
and behaved like a real gentleman."
"He said nothing more?"
"Nothing more, sir, except that he had
already spoken to you of this little walk."
"Sir," said Conseil, "would you give us
some details of the pearl fishery?"
"As to the fishing itself," I asked, "or
the incidents, which?"
"On the fishing," replied the Canadian;
"before entering upon the ground, it is as well to know something about it."
"Very well; sit down, my friends, and I
will teach you."
Ned and Conseil seated themselves on an
ottoman, and the first thing the Canadian asked was:
"Sir, what is a pearl?"
"My worthy Ned," I answered, "to the poet,
a pearl is a tear of the sea; to the Orientals, it is a drop of dew
solidified; to the ladies, it is a jewel of an oblong shape, of a brilliancy
of mother-of-pearl substance, which they wear on their fingers, their necks,
or their ears; for the chemist it is a mixture of phosphate and carbonate of
lime, with a little gelatine; and lastly, for naturalists, it is simply a
morbid secretion of the organ that produces the mother-of-pearl amongst
certain bivalves."
"Branch of molluscs," said Conseil.
"Precisely so, my learned Conseil; and,
amongst these testacea the earshell, the tridacnae, the turbots, in a word,
all those which secrete mother-of-pearl, that is, the blue, bluish, violet,
or white substance which lines the interior of their shells, are capable of
producing pearls."
"Mussels too?" asked the Canadian.
"Yes, mussels of certain waters in
Scotland, Wales, Ireland, Saxony, Bohemia, and France."
"Good! For the future I shall pay
attention," replied the Canadian.
"But," I continued, "the particular mollusc
which secretes the pearl is the pearl-oyster, the meleagrina margaritiferct,
that precious pintadine. The pearl is nothing but a nacreous formation,
deposited in a globular form, either adhering to the oyster shell, or buried
in the folds of the creature. On the shell it is fast; in the flesh it is
loose; but always has for a kernel a small hard substance, may be a barren
egg, may be a grain of sand, around which the pearly matter deposits itself
year after year successively, and by thin concentric layers."
"Are many pearls found in the same oyster?"
asked Conseil.
"Yes, my boy. Some are a perfect casket.
One oyster has been mentioned, though I allow myself to doubt it, as having
contained no less than a hundred and fifty sharks."
"A hundred and fifty sharks!" exclaimed Ned
Land.
"Did I say sharks?" said I hurriedly. "I
meant to say a hundred and fifty pearls. Sharks would not be sense."
"Certainly not," said Conseil; "but will
you tell us now by what means they extract these pearls?"
"They proceed in various ways. When they
adhere to the shell, the fishermen often pull them off with pincers; but the
most common way is to lay the oysters on mats of the seaweed which covers
the banks. Thus they die in the open air; and at the end of ten days they
are in a forward state of decomposition. They are then plunged into large
reservoirs of sea-water; then they are opened and washed."
"The price of these pearls varies according
to their size?" asked Conseil.
"Not only according to their size," I
answered, "but also according to their shape, their water (that is, their
colour), and their lustre: that is, that bright and diapered sparkle which
makes them so charming to the eye. The most beautiful are called virgin
pearls, or paragons. They are formed alone in the tissue of the mollusc, are
white, often opaque, and sometimes have the transparency of an opal; they
are generally round or oval. The round are made into bracelets, the oval
into pendants, and, being more precious, are sold singly. Those adhering to
the shell of the oyster are more irregular in shape, and are sold by weight.
Lastly, in a lower order are classed those small pearls known under the name
of seed-pearls; they are sold by measure, and are especially used in
embroidery for church ornaments."
"But," said Conseil, "is this pearl-fishery
dangerous?"
"No," I answered, quickly; "particularly if
certain precautions are taken."
"What does one risk in such a calling?"
said Ned Land, "the swallowing of some mouthfuls of sea-water?"
"As you say, Ned. By the bye," said I,
trying to take Captain Nemo's careless tone, "are you afraid of sharks,
brave Ned?"
"I!" replied the Canadian; "a harpooner by
profession? It is my trade to make light of them."
"But," said I, "it is not a question of
fishing for them with an iron-swivel, hoisting them into the vessel, cutting
off their tails with a blow of a chopper, ripping them up, and throwing
their heart into the sea!"
"Then, it is a question of——"
"Precisely."
"In the water?"
"In the water."
"Faith, with a good harpoon! You know, sir,
these sharks are ill-fashioned beasts. They turn on their bellies to seize
you, and in that time——"
Ned Land had a way of saying "seize" which
made my blood run cold.
"Well, and you, Conseil, what do you think
of sharks?"
"Me!" said Conseil. "I will be frank, sir."
"So much the better," thought I.
"If you, sir, mean to face the sharks, I do
not see why your faithful servant should not face them with you."
CHAPTER III
A PEARL OF TEN MILLIONS
The next morning at four o'clock I was
awakened by the steward whom Captain Nemo had placed at my service. I rose
hurriedly, dressed, and went into the saloon.
Captain Nemo was awaiting me.
"M. Aronnax," said he, "are you ready to
start?"
"I am ready."
"Then please to follow me."
"And my companions, Captain?"
"They have been told and are waiting."
"Are we not to put on our diver's dresses?"
asked I.
"Not yet. I have not allowed the Nautilus
to come too near this coast, and we are some distance from the Manaar Bank;
but the boat is ready, and will take us to the exact point of disembarking,
which will save us a long way. It carries our diving apparatus, which we
will put on when we begin our submarine journey."
Captain Nemo conducted me to the central
staircase, which led on the platform. Ned and Conseil were already there,
delighted at the idea of the "pleasure party" which was preparing. Five
sailors from the Nautilus, with their oars, waited in the boat, which had
been made fast against the side.
The night was still dark. Layers of clouds
covered the sky, allowing but few stars to be seen. I looked on the side
where the land lay, and saw nothing but a dark line enclosing three parts of
the horizon, from south-west to north west. The Nautilus, having returned
during the night up the western coast of Ceylon, was now west of the bay, or
rather gulf, formed by the mainland and the Island of Manaar. There, under
the dark waters, stretched the pintadine bank, an inexhaustible field of
pearls, the length of which is more than twenty miles.
Captain Nemo, Ned Land, Conseil, and I took
our places in the stern of the boat. The master went to the tiller; his four
companions leaned on their oars, the painter was cast off, and we sheered
off.
The boat went towards the south; the
oarsmen did not hurry. I noticed that their strokes, strong in the water,
only followed each other every ten seconds, according to the method
generally adopted in the navy. Whilst the craft was running by its own
velocity, the liquid drops struck the dark depths of the waves crisply like
spats of melted lead. A little billow, spreading wide, gave a slight roll to
the boat, and some samphire reeds flapped before it.
We were silent. What was Captain Nemo
thinking of? Perhaps of the land he was approaching, and which he found too
near to him, contrary to the Canadian's opinion, who thought it too far off.
As to Conseil, he was merely there from curiosity.
About half-past five the first tints on the
horizon showed the upper line of coast more distinctly. Flat enough in the
east, it rose a little to the south. Five miles still lay between us, and it
was indistinct owing to the mist on the water. At six o'clock it became
suddenly daylight, with that rapidity peculiar to tropical regions, which
know neither dawn nor twilight. The solar rays pierced the curtain of
clouds, piled up on the eastern horizon, and the radiant orb rose rapidly. I
saw land distinctly, with a few trees scattered here and there. The boat
neared Manaar Island, which was rounded to the south. Captain Nemo rose from
his seat and watched the sea.
At a sign from him the anchor was dropped,
but the chain scarcely ran, for it was little more than a yard deep, and
this spot was one of the highest points of the bank of pintadines.
"Here we are, M. Aronnax," said Captain
Nemo. "You see that enclosed bay? Here, in a month will be assembled the
numerous fishing boats of the exporters, and these are the waters their
divers will ransack so boldly. Happily, this bay is well situated for that
kind of fishing. It is sheltered from the strongest winds; the sea is never
very rough here, which makes it favourable for the diver's work. We will now
put on our dresses, and begin our walk."
I did not answer, and, while watching the
suspected waves, began with the help of the sailors to put on my heavy
sea-dress. Captain Nemo and my companions were also dressing. None of the
Nautilus men were to accompany us on this new excursion.
Soon we were enveloped to the throat in
india-rubber clothing; the air apparatus fixed to our backs by braces. As to
the Ruhmkorff apparatus, there was no necessity for it. Before putting my
head into the copper cap, I had asked the question of the Captain.
"They would be useless," he replied. "We
are going to no great depth, and the solar rays will be enough to light our
walk. Besides, it would not be prudent to carry the electric light in these
waters; its brilliancy might attract some of the dangerous inhabitants of
the coast most inopportunely."
As Captain Nemo pronounced these words, I
turned to Conseil and Ned Land. But my two friends had already encased their
heads in the metal cap, and they could neither hear nor answer.
One last question remained to ask of
Captain Nemo.
"And our arms?" asked I; "our guns?"
"Guns! What for? Do not mountaineers attack
the bear with a dagger in their hand, and is not steel surer than lead? Here
is a strong blade; put it in your belt, and we start."
I looked at my companions; they were armed
like us, and, more than that, Ned Land was brandishing an enormous harpoon,
which he had placed in the boat before leaving the Nautilus.
Then, following the Captain's example, I
allowed myself to be dressed in the heavy copper helmet, and our reservoirs
of air were at once in activity. An instant after we were landed, one after
the other, in about two yards of water upon an even sand. Captain Nemo made
a sign with his hand, and we followed him by a gentle declivity till we
disappeared under the waves.
Over our feet, like coveys of snipe in a
bog, rose shoals of fish, of the genus monoptera, which have no other fins
but their tail. I recognized the Javanese, a real serpent two and a half
feet long, of a livid colour underneath, and which might easily be mistaken
for a conger eel if it were not for the golden stripes on its side. In the
genus stromateus, whose bodies are very flat and oval, I saw some of the
most brilliant colours, carrying their dorsal fin like a scythe; an
excellent eating fish, which, dried and pickled, is known by the name of
Karawade; then some tranquebars, belonging to the genus apsiphoroides, whose
body is covered with a shell cuirass of eight longitudinal plates.
The heightening sun lit the mass of waters
more and more. The soil changed by degrees. To the fine sand succeeded a
perfect causeway of boulders, covered with a carpet of molluscs and
zoophytes. Amongst the specimens of these branches I noticed some placenae,
with thin unequal shells, a kind of ostracion peculiar to the Red Sea and
the Indian Ocean; some orange lucinae with rounded shells; rockfish three
feet and a half long, which raised themselves under the waves like hands
ready to seize one. There were also some panopyres, slightly luminous; and
lastly, some oculines, like magnificent fans, forming one of the richest
vegetations of these seas.
In the midst of these living plants, and
under the arbours of the hydrophytes, were layers of clumsy articulates,
particularly some raninae, whose carapace formed a slightly rounded
triangle; and some horrible looking parthenopes.
At about seven o'clock we found ourselves
at last surveying the oyster-banks on which the pearl-oysters are reproduced
by millions.
Captain Nemo pointed with his hand to the
enormous heap of oysters; and I could well understand that this mine was
inexhaustible, for Nature's creative power is far beyond man's instinct of
destruction. Ned Land, faithful to his instinct, hastened to fill a net
which he carried by his side with some of the finest specimens. But we could
not stop. We must follow the Captain, who seemed to guide him self by paths
known only to himself. The ground was sensibly rising, and sometimes, on
holding up my arm, it was above the surface of the sea. Then the level of
the bank would sink capriciously. Often we rounded high rocks scarped into
pyramids. In their dark fractures huge crustacea, perched upon their high
claws like some war-machine, watched us with fixed eyes, and under our feet
crawled various kinds of annelides.
At this moment there opened before us a
large grotto dug in a picturesque heap of rocks and carpeted with all the
thick warp of the submarine flora. At first it seemed very dark to me. The
solar rays seemed to be extinguished by successive gradations, until its
vague transparency became nothing more than drowned light. Captain Nemo
entered; we followed. My eyes soon accustomed themselves to this relative
state of darkness. I could distinguish the arches springing capriciously
from natural pillars, standing broad upon their granite base, like the heavy
columns of Tuscan architecture. Why had our incomprehensible guide led us to
the bottom of this submarine crypt? I was soon to know. After descending a
rather sharp declivity, our feet trod the bottom of a kind of circular pit.
There Captain Nemo stopped, and with his hand indicated an object I had not
yet perceived. It was an oyster of extraordinary dimensions, a gigantic
tridacne, a goblet which could have contained a whole lake of holy-water, a
basin the breadth of which was more than two yards and a half, and
consequently larger than that ornamenting the saloon of the Nautilus. I
approached this extraordinary mollusc. It adhered by its filaments to a
table of granite, and there, isolated, it developed itself in the calm
waters of the grotto. I estimated the weight of this tridacne at 600 lb.
Such an oyster would contain 30 lb. of meat; and one must have the stomach
of a Gargantua to demolish some dozens of them.
Captain Nemo was evidently acquainted with
the existence of this bivalve, and seemed to have a particular motive in
verifying the actual state of this tridacne. The shells were a little open;
the Captain came near and put his dagger between to prevent them from
closing; then with his hand he raised the membrane with its fringed edges,
which formed a cloak for the creature. There, between the folded plaits, I
saw a loose pearl, whose size equalled that of a coco-nut. Its globular
shape, perfect clearness, and admirable lustre made it altogether a jewel of
inestimable value. Carried away by my curiosity, I stretched out my hand to
seize it, weigh it, and touch it; but the Captain stopped me, made a sign of
refusal, and quickly withdrew his dagger, and the two shells closed
suddenly. I then understood Captain Nemo's intention. In leaving this pearl
hidden in the mantle of the tridacne he was allowing it to grow slowly. Each
year the secretions of the mollusc would add new concentric circles. I
estimated its value at L500,000 at least.
After ten minutes Captain Nemo stopped
suddenly. I thought he had halted previously to returning. No; by a gesture
he bade us crouch beside him in a deep fracture of the rock, his hand
pointed to one part of the liquid mass, which I watched attentively.
About five yards from me a shadow appeared,
and sank to the ground. The disquieting idea of sharks shot through my mind,
but I was mistaken; and once again it was not a monster of the ocean that we
had anything to do with.
It was a man, a living man, an Indian, a
fisherman, a poor devil who, I suppose, had come to glean before the
harvest. I could see the bottom of his canoe anchored some feet above his
head. He dived and went up successively. A stone held between his feet, cut
in the shape of a sugar loaf, whilst a rope fastened him to his boat, helped
him to descend more rapidly. This was all his apparatus. Reaching the
bottom, about five yards deep, he went on his knees and filled his bag with
oysters picked up at random. Then he went up, emptied it, pulled up his
stone, and began the operation once more, which lasted thirty seconds.
The diver did not see us. The shadow of the
rock hid us from sight. And how should this poor Indian ever dream that men,
beings like himself, should be there under the water watching his movements
and losing no detail of the fishing? Several times he went up in this way,
and dived again. He did not carry away more than ten at each plunge, for he
was obliged to pull them from the bank to which they adhered by means of
their strong byssus. And how many of those oysters for which he risked his
life had no pearl in them! I watched him closely; his manoeuvres were
regular; and for the space of half an hour no danger appeared to threaten
him.
I was beginning to accustom myself to the
sight of this interesting fishing, when suddenly, as the Indian was on the
ground, I saw him make a gesture of terror, rise, and make a spring to
return to the surface of the sea.
I understood his dread. A gigantic shadow
appeared just above the unfortunate diver. It was a shark of enormous size
advancing diagonally, his eyes on fire, and his jaws open. I was mute with
horror and unable to move.
The voracious creature shot towards the
Indian, who threw himself on one side to avoid the shark's fins; but not its
tail, for it struck his chest and stretched him on the ground.
This scene lasted but a few seconds: the
shark returned, and, turning on his back, prepared himself for cutting the
Indian in two, when I saw Captain Nemo rise suddenly, and then, dagger in
hand, walk straight to the monster, ready to fight face to face with him.
The very moment the shark was going to snap the unhappy fisherman in two, he
perceived his new adversary, and, turning over, made straight towards him.
I can still see Captain Nemo's position.
Holding himself well together, he waited for the shark with admirable
coolness; and, when it rushed at him, threw himself on one side with
wonderful quickness, avoiding the shock, and burying his dagger deep into
its side. But it was not all over. A terrible combat ensued.
The shark had seemed to roar, if I might
say so. The blood rushed in torrents from its wound. The sea was dyed red,
and through the opaque liquid I could distinguish nothing more. Nothing more
until the moment when, like lightning, I saw the undaunted Captain hanging
on to one of the creature's fins, struggling, as it were, hand to hand with
the monster, and dealing successive blows at his enemy, yet still unable to
give a decisive one.
The shark's struggles agitated the water
with such fury that the rocking threatened to upset me.
I wanted to go to the Captain's assistance,
but, nailed to the spot with horror, I could not stir.
I saw the haggard eye; I saw the different
phases of the fight. The Captain fell to the earth, upset by the enormous
mass which leant upon him. The shark's jaws opened wide, like a pair of
factory shears, and it would have been all over with the Captain; but, quick
as thought, harpoon in hand, Ned Land rushed towards the shark and struck it
with its sharp point.
The waves were impregnated with a mass of
blood. They rocked under the shark's movements, which beat them with
indescribable fury. Ned Land had not missed his aim. It was the monster's
death-rattle. Struck to the heart, it struggled in dreadful convulsions, the
shock of which overthrew Conseil.
But Ned Land had disentangled the Captain,
who, getting up without any wound, went straight to the Indian, quickly cut
the cord which held him to his stone, took him in his arms, and, with a
sharp blow of his heel, mounted to the surface.
We all three followed in a few seconds,
saved by a miracle, and reached the fisherman's boat.
Captain Nemo's first care was to recall the
unfortunate man to life again. I did not think he could succeed. I hoped so,
for the poor creature's immersion was not long; but the blow from the
shark's tail might have been his death-blow.
Happily, with the Captain's and Conseil's
sharp friction, I saw consciousness return by degrees. He opened his eyes.
What was his surprise, his terror even, at seeing four great copper heads
leaning over him! And, above all, what must he have thought when Captain
Nemo, drawing from the pocket of his dress a bag of pearls, placed it in his
hand! This munificent charity from the man of the waters to the poor
Cingalese was accepted with a trembling hand. His wondering eyes showed that
he knew not to what super-human beings he owed both fortune and life.
At a sign from the Captain we regained the
bank, and, following the road already traversed, came in about half an hour
to the anchor which held the canoe of the Nautilus to the earth.
Once on board, we each, with the help of
the sailors, got rid of the heavy copper helmet.
Captain Nemo's first word was to the
Canadian.
"Thank you, Master Land," said he.
"It was in revenge, Captain," replied Ned
Land. "I owed you that."
A ghastly smile passed across the Captain's
lips, and that was all.
"To the Nautilus," said he.
The boat flew over the waves. Some minutes
after we met the shark's dead body floating. By the black marking of the
extremity of its fins, I recognised the terrible melanopteron of the Indian
Seas, of the species of shark so properly called. It was more than
twenty-five feet long; its enormous mouth occupied one-third of its body. It
was an adult, as was known by its six rows of teeth placed in an isosceles
triangle in the upper jaw.
Whilst I was contemplating this inert mass,
a dozen of these voracious beasts appeared round the boat; and, without
noticing us, threw themselves upon the dead body and fought with one another
for the pieces.
At half-past eight we were again on board
the Nautilus. There I reflected on the incidents which had taken place in
our excursion to the Manaar Bank.
Two conclusions I must inevitably draw from
it—one bearing upon the unparalleled courage of Captain Nemo, the other upon
his devotion to a human being, a representative of that race from which he
fled beneath the sea. Whatever he might say, this strange man had not yet
succeeded in entirely crushing his heart.
When I made this observation to him, he
answered in a slightly moved tone:
"That Indian, sir, is an inhabitant of an
oppressed country; and I am still, and shall be, to my last breath, one of
them!"
CHAPTER IV
THE RED SEA
In the course of the day of the 29th of
January, the island of Ceylon disappeared under the horizon, and the
Nautilus, at a speed of twenty miles an hour, slid into the labyrinth of
canals which separate the Maldives from the Laccadives. It coasted even the
Island of Kiltan, a land originally coraline, discovered by Vasco da Gama in
1499, and one of the nineteen principal islands of the Laccadive
Archipelago, situated between 10° and 14° 30' N. lat., and 69° 50' 72" E.
long.
We had made 16,220 miles, or 7,500 (French)
leagues from our starting-point in the Japanese Seas.
The next day (30th January), when the
Nautilus went to the surface of the ocean there was no land in sight. Its
course was N.N.E., in the direction of the Sea of Oman, between Arabia and
the Indian Peninsula, which serves as an outlet to the Persian Gulf. It was
evidently a block without any possible egress. Where was Captain Nemo taking
us to? I could not say. This, however, did not satisfy the Canadian, who
that day came to me asking where we were going.
"We are going where our Captain's fancy
takes us, Master Ned."
"His fancy cannot take us far, then," said
the Canadian. "The Persian Gulf has no outlet: and, if we do go in, it will
not be long before we are out again."
"Very well, then, we will come out again,
Master Land; and if, after the Persian Gulf, the Nautilus would like to
visit the Red Sea, the Straits of Bab-el-mandeb are there to give us
entrance."
"I need not tell you, sir," said Ned Land,
"that the Red Sea is as much closed as the Gulf, as the Isthmus of Suez is
not yet cut; and, if it was, a boat as mysterious as ours would not risk
itself in a canal cut with sluices. And again, the Red Sea is not the road
to take us back to Europe."
"But I never said we were going back to
Europe."
"What do you suppose, then?"
"I suppose that, after visiting the curious
coasts of Arabia and Egypt, the Nautilus will go down the Indian Ocean
again, perhaps cross the Channel of Mozambique, perhaps off the Mascarenhas,
so as to gain the Cape of Good Hope."
"And once at the Cape of Good Hope?" asked
the Canadian, with peculiar emphasis.
"Well, we shall penetrate into that
Atlantic which we do not yet know. Ah! friend Ned, you are getting tired of
this journey under the sea; you are surfeited with the incessantly varying
spectacle of submarine wonders. For my part, I shall be sorry to see the end
of a voyage which it is given to so few men to make."
For four days, till the 3rd of February,
the Nautilus scoured the Sea of Oman, at various speeds and at various
depths. It seemed to go at random, as if hesitating as to which road it
should follow, but we never passed the Tropic of Cancer.
In quitting this sea we sighted Muscat for
an instant, one of the most important towns of the country of Oman. I
admired its strange aspect, surrounded by black rocks upon which its white
houses and forts stood in relief. I saw the rounded domes of its mosques,
the elegant points of its minarets, its fresh and verdant terraces. But it
was only a vision! The Nautilus soon sank under the waves of that part of
the sea.
We passed along the Arabian coast of Mahrah
and Hadramaut, for a distance of six miles, its undulating line of mountains
being occasionally relieved by some ancient ruin. The 5th of February we at
last entered the Gulf of Aden, a perfect funnel introduced into the neck of
Bab-el-mandeb, through which the Indian waters entered the Red Sea.
The 6th of February, the Nautilus floated
in sight of Aden, perched upon a promontory which a narrow isthmus joins to
the mainland, a kind of inaccessible Gibraltar, the fortifications of which
were rebuilt by the English after taking possession in 1839. I caught a
glimpse of the octagon minarets of this town, which was at one time the
richest commercial magazine on the coast.
I certainly thought that Captain Nemo,
arrived at this point, would back out again; but I was mistaken, for he did
no such thing, much to my surprise.
The next day, the 7th of February, we
entered the Straits of Bab-el-mandeb, the name of which, in the Arab tongue,
means The Gate of Tears.
To twenty miles in breadth, it is only
thirty-two in length. And for the Nautilus, starting at full speed, the
crossing was scarcely the work of an hour. But I saw nothing, not even the
Island of Perim, with which the British Government has fortified the
position of Aden. There were too many English or French steamers of the line
of Suez to Bombay, Calcutta to Melbourne, and from Bourbon to the Mauritius,
furrowing this narrow passage, for the Nautilus to venture to show itself.
So it remained prudently below. At last about noon, we were in the waters of
the Red Sea.
I would not even seek to understand the
caprice which had decided Captain Nemo upon entering the gulf. But I quite
approved of the Nautilus entering it. Its speed was lessened: sometimes it
kept on the surface, sometimes it dived to avoid a vessel, and thus I was
able to observe the upper and lower parts of this curious sea.
The 8th of February, from the first dawn of
day, Mocha came in sight, now a ruined town, whose walls would fall at a
gunshot, yet which shelters here and there some verdant date-trees; once an
important city, containing six public markets, and twenty-six mosques, and
whose walls, defended by fourteen forts, formed a girdle of two miles in
circumference.
The Nautilus then approached the African
shore, where the depth of the sea was greater. There, between two waters
clear as crystal, through the open panels we were allowed to contemplate the
beautiful bushes of brilliant coral and large blocks of rock clothed with a
splendid fur of green variety of sites and landscapes along these sandbanks
and algae and fuci. What an indescribable spectacle, and what variety of
sites and landscapes along these sandbanks and volcanic islands which bound
the Libyan coast! But where these shrubs appeared in all their beauty was on
the eastern coast, which the Nautilus soon gained. It was on the coast of
Tehama, for there not only did this display of zoophytes flourish beneath
the level of the sea, but they also formed picturesque interlacings which
unfolded themselves about sixty feet above the surface, more capricious but
less highly coloured than those whose freshness was kept up by the vital
power of the waters.
What charming hours I passed thus at the
window of the saloon! What new specimens of submarine flora and fauna did I
admire under the brightness of our electric lantern!
The 9th of February the Nautilus floated in
the broadest part of the Red Sea, which is comprised between Souakin, on the
west coast, and Komfidah, on the east coast, with a diameter of ninety
miles.
That day at noon, after the bearings were
taken, Captain Nemo mounted the platform, where I happened to be, and I was
determined not to let him go down again without at least pressing him
regarding his ulterior projects. As soon as he saw me he approached and
graciously offered me a cigar.
"Well, sir, does this Red Sea please you?
Have you sufficiently observed the wonders it covers, its fishes, its
zoophytes, its parterres of sponges, and its forests of coral? Did you catch
a glimpse of the towns on its borders?"
"Yes, Captain Nemo," I replied; "and the
Nautilus is wonderfully fitted for such a study. Ah! it is an intelligent
boat!"
"Yes, sir, intelligent and invulnerable. It
fears neither the terrible tempests of the Red Sea, nor its currents, nor
its sandbanks."
"Certainly," said I, "this sea is quoted as
one of the worst, and in the time of the ancients, if I am not mistaken, its
reputation was detestable."
"Detestable, M. Aronnax. The Greek and
Latin historians do not speak favourably of it, and Strabo says it is very
dangerous during the Etesian winds and in the rainy season. The Arabian
Edrisi portrays it under the name of the Gulf of Colzoum, and relates that
vessels perished there in great numbers on the sandbanks and that no one
would risk sailing in the night. It is, he pretends, a sea subject to
fearful hurricanes, strewn with inhospitable islands, and `which offers
nothing good either on its surface or in its depths.'"
"One may see," I replied, "that these
historians never sailed on board the Nautilus."
"Just so," replied the Captain, smiling;
"and in that respect moderns are not more advanced than the ancients. It
required many ages to find out the mechanical power of steam. Who knows if,
in another hundred years, we may not see a second Nautilus? Progress is
slow, M. Aronnax."
"It is true," I answered; "your boat is at
least a century before its time, perhaps an era. What a misfortune that the
secret of such an invention should die with its inventor!"
Captain Nemo did not reply. After some
minutes' silence he continued:
"You were speaking of the opinions of
ancient historians upon the dangerous navigation of the Red Sea."
"It is true," said I; "but were not their
fears exaggerated?"
"Yes and no, M. Aronnax," replied Captain
Nemo, who seemed to know the Red Sea by heart. "That which is no longer
dangerous for a modern vessel, well rigged, strongly built, and master of
its own course, thanks to obedient steam, offered all sorts of perils to the
ships of the ancients. Picture to yourself those first navigators venturing
in ships made of planks sewn with the cords of the palmtree, saturated with
the grease of the seadog, and covered with powdered resin! They had not even
instruments wherewith to take their bearings, and they went by guess amongst
currents of which they scarcely knew anything. Under such conditions
shipwrecks were, and must have been, numerous. But in our time, steamers
running between Suez and the South Seas have nothing more to fear from the
fury of this gulf, in spite of contrary trade-winds. The captain and
passengers do not prepare for their departure by offering propitiatory
sacrifices; and, on their return, they no longer go ornamented with wreaths
and gilt fillets to thank the gods in the neighbouring temple."
"I agree with you," said I; "and steam
seems to have killed all gratitude in the hearts of sailors. But, Captain,
since you seem to have especially studied this sea, can you tell me the
origin of its name?"
"There exist several explanations on the
subject, M. Aronnax. Would you like to know the opinion of a chronicler of
the fourteenth century?"
"Willingly."
"This fanciful writer pretends that its
name was given to it after the passage of the Israelites, when Pharaoh
perished in the waves which closed at the voice of Moses."
"A poet's explanation, Captain Nemo," I
replied; "but I cannot content myself with that. I ask you for your personal
opinion."
"Here it is, M. Aronnax. According to my
idea, we must see in this appellation of the Red Sea a translation of the
Hebrew word `Edom'; and if the ancients gave it that name, it was on account
of the particular colour of its waters."
"But up to this time I have seen nothing
but transparent waves and without any particular colour."
"Very likely; but as we advance to the
bottom of the gulf, you will see this singular appearance. I remember seeing
the Bay of Tor entirely red, like a sea of blood."
"And you attribute this colour to the
presence of a microscopic seaweed?"
"Yes."
"So, Captain Nemo, it is not the first time
you have overrun the Red Sea on board the Nautilus?"
"No, sir."
"As you spoke a while ago of the passage of
the Israelites and of the catastrophe to the Egyptians, I will ask whether
you have met with the traces under the water of this great historical fact?"
"No, sir; and for a good reason."
"What is it?"
"It is that the spot where Moses and his
people passed is now so blocked up with sand that the camels can barely
bathe their legs there. You can well understand that there would not be
water enough for my Nautilus."
"And the spot?" I asked.
"The spot is situated a little above the
Isthmus of Suez, in the arm which formerly made a deep estuary, when the Red
Sea extended to the Salt Lakes. Now, whether this passage were miraculous or
not, the Israelites, nevertheless, crossed there to reach the Promised Land,
and Pharaoh's army perished precisely on that spot; and I think that
excavations made in the middle of the sand would bring to light a large
number of arms and instruments of Egyptian origin."
"That is evident," I replied; "and for the
sake of archaeologists let us hope that these excavations will be made
sooner or later, when new towns are established on the isthmus, after the
construction of the Suez Canal; a canal, however, very useless to a vessel
like the Nautilus."
"Very likely; but useful to the whole
world," said Captain Nemo. "The ancients well understood the utility of a
communication between the Red Sea and the Mediterranean for their commercial
affairs: but they did not think of digging a canal direct, and took the Nile
as an intermediate. Very probably the canal which united the Nile to the Red
Sea was begun by Sesostris, if we may believe tradition. One thing is
certain, that in the year 615 before Jesus Christ, Necos undertook the works
of an alimentary canal to the waters of the Nile across the plain of Egypt,
looking towards Arabia. It took four days to go up this canal, and it was so
wide that two triremes could go abreast. It was carried on by Darius, the
son of Hystaspes, and probably finished by Ptolemy II. Strabo saw it
navigated: but its decline from the point of departure, near Bubastes, to
the Red Sea was so slight that it was only navigable for a few months in the
year. This canal answered all commercial purposes to the age of Antonius,
when it was abandoned and blocked up with sand. Restored by order of the
Caliph Omar, it was definitely destroyed in 761 or 762 by Caliph Al-Mansor,
who wished to prevent the arrival of provisions to Mohammed-ben-Abdallah,
who had revolted against him. During the expedition into Egypt, your General
Bonaparte discovered traces of the works in the Desert of Suez; and,
surprised by the tide, he nearly perished before regaining Hadjaroth, at the
very place where Moses had encamped three thousand years before him."
"Well, Captain, what the ancients dared not
undertake, this junction between the two seas, which will shorten the road
from Cadiz to India, M. Lesseps has succeeded in doing; and before long he
will have changed Africa into an immense island."
"Yes, M. Aronnax; you have the right to be
proud of your countryman. Such a man brings more honour to a nation than
great captains. He began, like so many others, with disgust and rebuffs; but
he has triumphed, for he has the genius of will. And it is sad to think that
a work like that, which ought to have been an international work and which
would have sufficed to make a reign illustrious, should have succeeded by
the energy of one man. All honour to M. Lesseps!"
"Yes! honour to the great citizen," I
replied, surprised by the manner in which Captain Nemo had just spoken.
"Unfortunately," he continued, "I cannot
take you through the Suez Canal; but you will be able to see the long jetty
of Port Said after to-morrow, when we shall be in the Mediterranean."
"The Mediterranean!" I exclaimed.
"Yes, sir; does that astonish you?"
"What astonishes me is to think that we
shall be there the day after to-morrow."
"Indeed?"
"Yes, Captain, although by this time I
ought to have accustomed myself to be surprised at nothing since I have been
on board your boat."
"But the cause of this surprise?"
"Well! it is the fearful speed you will
have to put on the Nautilus, if the day after to-morrow she is to be in the
Mediterranean, having made the round of Africa, and doubled the Cape of Good
Hope!"
"Who told you that she would make the round
of Africa and double the Cape of Good Hope, sir?"
"Well, unless the Nautilus sails on dry
land, and passes above the isthmus——"
"Or beneath it, M. Aronnax."
"Beneath it?"
"Certainly," replied Captain Nemo quietly.
"A long time ago Nature made under this tongue of land what man has this day
made on its surface."
"What! such a passage exists?"
"Yes; a subterranean passage, which I have
named the Arabian Tunnel. It takes us beneath Suez and opens into the Gulf
of Pelusium."
"But this isthmus is composed of nothing
but quick sands?"
"To a certain depth. But at fifty-five
yards only there is a solid layer of rock."
"Did you discover this passage by chance?"
I asked more and more surprised.
"Chance and reasoning, sir; and by
reasoning even more than by chance. Not only does this passage exist, but I
have profited by it several times. Without that I should not have ventured
this day into the impassable Red Sea. I noticed that in the Red Sea and in
the Mediterranean there existed a certain number of fishes of a kind
perfectly identical. Certain of the fact, I asked myself was it possible
that there was no communication between the two seas? If there was, the
subterranean current must necessarily run from the Red Sea to the
Mediterranean, from the sole cause of difference of level. I caught a large
number of fishes in the neighbourhood of Suez. I passed a copper ring
through their tails, and threw them back into the sea. Some months later, on
the coast of Syria, I caught some of my fish ornamented with the ring. Thus
the communication between the two was proved. I then sought for it with my
Nautilus; I discovered it, ventured into it, and before long, sir, you too
will have passed through my Arabian tunnel!"
CHAPTER V
THE ARABIAN TUNNEL
That same evening, in 21° 30' N. lat., the
Nautilus floated on the surface of the sea, approaching the Arabian coast. I
saw Djeddah, the most important counting-house of Egypt, Syria, Turkey, and
India. I distinguished clearly enough its buildings, the vessels anchored at
the quays, and those whose draught of water obliged them to anchor in the
roads. The sun, rather low on the horizon, struck full on the houses of the
town, bringing out their whiteness. Outside, some wooden cabins, and some
made of reeds, showed the quarter inhabited by the Bedouins. Soon Djeddah
was shut out from view by the shadows of night, and the Nautilus found
herself under water slightly phosphorescent.
The next day, the 10th of February, we
sighted several ships running to windward. The Nautilus returned to its
submarine navigation; but at noon, when her bearings were taken, the sea
being deserted, she rose again to her waterline.
Accompanied by Ned and Conseil, I seated
myself on the platform. The coast on the eastern side looked like a mass
faintly printed upon a damp fog.
We were leaning on the sides of the
pinnace, talking of one thing and another, when Ned Land, stretching out his
hand towards a spot on the sea, said:
"Do you see anything there, sir?"
"No, Ned," I replied; "but I have not your
eyes, you know."
"Look well," said Ned, "there, on the
starboard beam, about the height of the lantern! Do you not see a mass which
seems to move?"
"Certainly," said I, after close attention;
"I see something like a long black body on the top of the water."
And certainly before long the black object
was not more than a mile from us. It looked like a great sandbank deposited
in the open sea. It was a gigantic dugong!
Ned Land looked eagerly. His eyes shone
with covetousness at the sight of the animal. His hand seemed ready to
harpoon it. One would have thought he was awaiting the moment to throw
himself into the sea and attack it in its element.
At this instant Captain Nemo appeared on
the platform. He saw the dugong, understood the Canadian's attitude, and,
addressing him, said:
"If you held a harpoon just now, Master
Land, would it not burn your hand?"
"Just so, sir."
"And you would not be sorry to go back, for
one day, to your trade of a fisherman and to add this cetacean to the list
of those you have already killed?"
"I should not, sir."
"Well, you can try."
"Thank you, sir," said Ned Land, his eyes
flaming.
"Only," continued the Captain, "I advise
you for your own sake not to miss the creature."
"Is the dugong dangerous to attack?" I
asked, in spite of the Canadian's shrug of the shoulders.
"Yes," replied the Captain; "sometimes the
animal turns upon its assailants and overturns their boat. But for Master
Land this danger is not to be feared. His eye is prompt, his arm sure."
At this moment seven men of the crew, mute
and immovable as ever, mounted the platform. One carried a harpoon and a
line similar to those employed in catching whales. The pinnace was lifted
from the bridge, pulled from its socket, and let down into the sea. Six
oarsmen took their seats, and the coxswain went to the tiller. Ned, Conseil,
and I went to the back of the boat.
"You are not coming, Captain?" I asked.
"No, sir; but I wish you good sport."
The boat put off, and, lifted by the six
rowers, drew rapidly towards the dugong, which floated about two miles from
the Nautilus.
Arrived some cables-length from the
cetacean, the speed slackened, and the oars dipped noiselessly into the
quiet waters. Ned Land, harpoon in hand, stood in the fore part of the boat.
The harpoon used for striking the whale is generally attached to a very long
cord which runs out rapidly as the wounded creature draws it after him. But
here the cord was not more than ten fathoms long, and the extremity was
attached to a small barrel which, by floating, was to show the course the
dugong took under the water.
I stood and carefully watched the
Canadian's adversary. This dugong, which also bears the name of the
halicore, closely resembles the manatee; its oblong body terminated in a
lengthened tail, and its lateral fins in perfect fingers. Its difference
from the manatee consisted in its upper jaw, which was armed with two long
and pointed teeth which formed on each side diverging tusks.
This dugong which Ned Land was preparing to
attack was of colossal dimensions; it was more than seven yards long. It did
not move, and seemed to be sleeping on the waves, which circumstance made it
easier to capture.
The boat approached within six yards of the
animal. The oars rested on the rowlocks. I half rose. Ned Land, his body
thrown a little back, brandished the harpoon in his experienced hand.
Suddenly a hissing noise was heard, and the
dugong disappeared. The harpoon, although thrown with great force; had
apparently only struck the water.
"Curse it!" exclaimed the Canadian
furiously; "I have missed it!"
"No," said I; "the creature is wounded—look
at the blood; but your weapon has not stuck in his body."
"My harpoon! my harpoon!" cried Ned Land.
The sailors rowed on, and the coxswain made
for the floating barrel. The harpoon regained, we followed in pursuit of the
animal.
The latter came now and then to the surface
to breathe. Its wound had not weakened it, for it shot onwards with great
rapidity.
The boat, rowed by strong arms, flew on its
track. Several times it approached within some few yards, and the Canadian
was ready to strike, but the dugong made off with a sudden plunge, and it
was impossible to reach it.
Imagine the passion which excited impatient
Ned Land! He hurled at the unfortunate creature the most energetic
expletives in the English tongue. For my part, I was only vexed to see the
dugong escape all our attacks.
We pursued it without relaxation for an
hour, and I began to think it would prove difficult to capture, when the
animal, possessed with the perverse idea of vengeance of which he had cause
to repent, turned upon the pinnace and assailed us in its turn.
This manoeuvre did not escape the Canadian.
"Look out!" he cried.
The coxswain said some words in his
outlandish tongue, doubtless warning the men to keep on their guard.
The dugong came within twenty feet of the
boat, stopped, sniffed the air briskly with its large nostrils (not pierced
at the extremity, but in the upper part of its muzzle). Then, taking a
spring, he threw himself upon us.
The pinnace could not avoid the shock, and
half upset, shipped at least two tons of water, which had to be emptied;
but, thanks to the coxswain, we caught it sideways, not full front, so we
were not quite overturned. While Ned Land, clinging to the bows, belaboured
the gigantic animal with blows from his harpoon, the creature's teeth were
buried in the gunwale, and it lifted the whole thing out of the water, as a
lion does a roebuck. We were upset over one another, and I know not how the
adventure would have ended, if the Canadian, still enraged with the beast,
had not struck it to the heart.
I heard its teeth grind on the iron plate,
and the dugong disappeared, carrying the harpoon with him. But the barrel
soon returned to the surface, and shortly after the body of the animal,
turned on its back. The boat came up with it, took it in tow, and made
straight for the Nautilus.
It required tackle of enormous strength to
hoist the dugong on to the platform. It weighed 10,000 lb.
The next day, 11th February, the larder of
the Nautilus was enriched by some more delicate game. A flight of
sea-swallows rested on the Nautilus. It was a species of the Sterna
nilotica, peculiar to Egypt; its beak is black, head grey and pointed, the
eye surrounded by white spots, the back, wings, and tail of a greyish
colour, the belly and throat white, and claws red. They also took some dozen
of Nile ducks, a wild bird of high flavour, its throat and upper part of the
head white with black spots.
About five o'clock in the evening we
sighted to the north the Cape of Ras-Mohammed. This cape forms the extremity
of Arabia Petraea, comprised between the Gulf of Suez and the Gulf of
Acabah.
The Nautilus penetrated into the Straits of
Jubal, which leads to the Gulf of Suez. I distinctly saw a high mountain,
towering between the two gulfs of Ras-Mohammed. It was Mount Horeb, that
Sinai at the top of which Moses saw God face to face.
At six o'clock the Nautilus, sometimes
floating, sometimes immersed, passed some distance from Tor, situated at the
end of the bay, the waters of which seemed tinted with red, an observation
already made by Captain Nemo. Then night fell in the midst of a heavy
silence, sometimes broken by the cries of the pelican and other night-birds,
and the noise of the waves breaking upon the shore, chafing against the
rocks, or the panting of some far-off steamer beating the waters of the Gulf
with its noisy paddles.
From eight to nine o'clock the Nautilus
remained some fathoms under the water. According to my calculation we must
have been very near Suez. Through the panel of the saloon I saw the bottom
of the rocks brilliantly lit up by our electric lamp. We seemed to be
leaving the Straits behind us more and more.
At a quarter-past nine, the vessel having
returned to the surface, I mounted the platform. Most impatient to pass
through Captain Nemo's tunnel, I could not stay in one place, so came to
breathe the fresh night air.
Soon in the shadow I saw a pale light, half
discoloured by the fog, shining about a mile from us.
"A floating lighthouse!" said someone near
me.
I turned, and saw the Captain.
"It is the floating light of Suez," he
continued. "It will not be long before we gain the entrance of the tunnel."
"The entrance cannot be easy?"
"No, sir; for that reason I am accustomed
to go into the steersman's cage and myself direct our course. And now, if
you will go down, M. Aronnax, the Nautilus is going under the waves, and
will not return to the surface until we have passed through the Arabian
Tunnel."
Captain Nemo led me towards the central
staircase; half way down he opened a door, traversed the upper deck, and
landed in the pilot's cage, which it may be remembered rose at the extremity
of the platform. It was a cabin measuring six feet square, very much like
that occupied by the pilot on the steamboats of the Mississippi or Hudson.
In the midst worked a wheel, placed vertically, and caught to the
tiller-rope, which ran to the back of the Nautilus. Four light-ports with
lenticular glasses, let in a groove in the partition of the cabin, allowed
the man at the wheel to see in all directions.
This cabin was dark; but soon my eyes
accustomed themselves to the obscurity, and I perceived the pilot, a strong
man, with his hands resting on the spokes of the wheel. Outside, the sea
appeared vividly lit up by the lantern, which shed its rays from the back of
the cabin to the other extremity of the platform.
"Now," said Captain Nemo, "let us try to
make our passage."
Electric wires connected the pilot's cage
with the machinery room, and from there the Captain could communicate
simultaneously to his Nautilus the direction and the speed. He pressed a
metal knob, and at once the speed of the screw diminished.
I looked in silence at the high straight
wall we were running by at this moment, the immovable base of a massive
sandy coast. We followed it thus for an hour only some few yards off.
Captain Nemo did not take his eye from the
knob, suspended by its two concentric circles in the cabin. At a simple
gesture, the pilot modified the course of the Nautilus every instant.
I had placed myself at the port-scuttle,
and saw some magnificent substructures of coral, zoophytes, seaweed, and
fucus, agitating their enormous claws, which stretched out from the fissures
of the rock.
At a quarter-past ten, the Captain himself
took the helm. A large gallery, black and deep, opened before us. The
Nautilus went boldly into it. A strange roaring was heard round its sides.
It was the waters of the Red Sea, which the incline of the tunnel
precipitated violently towards the Mediterranean. The Nautilus went with the
torrent, rapid as an arrow, in spite of the efforts of the machinery, which,
in order to offer more effective resistance, beat the waves with reversed
screw.
On the walls of the narrow passage I could
see nothing but brilliant rays, straight lines, furrows of fire, traced by
the great speed, under the brilliant electric light. My heart beat fast.
At thirty-five minutes past ten, Captain
Nemo quitted the helm, and, turning to me, said:
"The Mediterranean!"
In less than twenty minutes, the Nautilus,
carried along by the torrent, had passed through the Isthmus of Suez.
CHAPTER VI
THE GRECIAN ARCHIPELAGO
The next day, the 12th of February, at the
dawn of day, the Nautilus rose to the surface. I hastened on to the
platform. Three miles to the south the dim outline of Pelusium was to be
seen. A torrent had carried us from one sea to another. About seven o'clock
Ned and Conseil joined me.
"Well, Sir Naturalist," said the Canadian,
in a slightly jovial tone, "and the Mediterranean?"
"We are floating on its surface, friend
Ned."
"What!" said Conseil, "this very night."
"Yes, this very night; in a few minutes we
have passed this impassable isthmus."
"I do not believe it," replied the
Canadian.
"Then you are wrong, Master Land," I
continued; "this low coast which rounds off to the south is the Egyptian
coast. And you who have such good eyes, Ned, you can see the jetty of Port
Said stretching into the sea."
The Canadian looked attentively.
"Certainly you are right, sir, and your
Captain is a first-rate man. We are in the Mediterranean. Good! Now, if you
please, let us talk of our own little affair, but so that no one hears us."
I saw what the Canadian wanted, and, in any
case, I thought it better to let him talk, as he wished it; so we all three
went and sat down near the lantern, where we were less exposed to the spray
of the blades.
"Now, Ned, we listen; what have you to tell
us?"
"What I have to tell you is very simple. We
are in Europe; and before Captain Nemo's caprices drag us once more to the
bottom of the Polar Seas, or lead us into Oceania, I ask to leave the
Nautilus."
I wished in no way to shackle the liberty
of my companions, but I certainly felt no desire to leave Captain Nemo.
Thanks to him, and thanks to his apparatus,
I was each day nearer the completion of my submarine studies; and I was
rewriting my book of submarine depths in its very element. Should I ever
again have such an opportunity of observing the wonders of the ocean? No,
certainly not! And I could not bring myself to the idea of abandoning the
Nautilus before the cycle of investigation was accomplished.
"Friend Ned, answer me frankly, are you
tired of being on board? Are you sorry that destiny has thrown us into
Captain Nemo's hands?"
The Canadian remained some moments without
answering. Then, crossing his arms, he said:
"Frankly, I do not regret this journey
under the seas. I shall be glad to have made it; but, now that it is made,
let us have done with it. That is my idea."
"It will come to an end, Ned."
"Where and when?"
"Where I do not know—when I cannot say; or,
rather, I suppose it will end when these seas have nothing more to teach
us."
"Then what do you hope for?" demanded the
Canadian.
"That circumstances may occur as well six
months hence as now by which we may and ought to profit."
"Oh!" said Ned Land, "and where shall we be
in six months, if you please, Sir Naturalist?"
"Perhaps in China; you know the Nautilus is
a rapid traveller. It goes through water as swallows through the air, or as
an express on the land. It does not fear frequented seas; who can say that
it may not beat the coasts of France, England, or America, on which flight
may be attempted as advantageously as here."
"M. Aronnax," replied the Canadian, "your
arguments are rotten at the foundation. You speak in the future, `We shall
be there! we shall be here!' I speak in the present, `We are here, and we
must profit by it.'"
Ned Land's logic pressed me hard, and I
felt myself beaten on that ground. I knew not what argument would now tell
in my favour.
"Sir," continued Ned, "let us suppose an
impossibility: if Captain Nemo should this day offer you your liberty; would
you accept it?"
"I do not know," I answered.
"And if," he added, "the offer made you
this day was never to be renewed, would you accept it?"
"Friend Ned, this is my answer. Your
reasoning is against me. We must not rely on Captain Nemo's good-will.
Common prudence forbids him to set us at liberty. On the other side,
prudence bids us profit by the first opportunity to leave the Nautilus."
"Well, M. Aronnax, that is wisely said."
"Only one observation—just one. The
occasion must be serious, and our first attempt must succeed; if it fails,
we shall never find another, and Captain Nemo will never forgive us."
"All that is true," replied the Canadian.
"But your observation applies equally to all attempts at flight, whether in
two years' time, or in two days'. But the question is still this: If a
favourable opportunity presents itself, it must be seized."
"Agreed! And now, Ned, will you tell me
what you mean by a favourable opportunity?"
"It will be that which, on a dark night,
will bring the Nautilus a short distance from some European coast."
"And you will try and save yourself by
swimming?"
"Yes, if we were near enough to the bank,
and if the vessel was floating at the time. Not if the bank was far away,
and the boat was under the water."
"And in that case?"
"In that case, I should seek to make myself
master of the pinnace. I know how it is worked. We must get inside, and the
bolts once drawn, we shall come to the surface of the water, without even
the pilot, who is in the bows, perceiving our flight."
"Well, Ned, watch for the opportunity; but
do not forget that a hitch will ruin us."
"I will not forget, sir."
"And now, Ned, would you like to know what
I think of your project?"
"Certainly, M. Aronnax."
"Well, I think—I do not say I hope—I think
that this favourable opportunity will never present itself."
"Why not?"
"Because Captain Nemo cannot hide from
himself that we have not given up all hope of regaining our liberty, and he
will be on his guard, above all, in the seas and in the sight of European
coasts."
"We shall see," replied Ned Land, shaking
his head determinedly.
"And now, Ned Land," I added, "let us stop
here. Not another word on the subject. The day that you are ready, come and
let us know, and we will follow you. I rely entirely upon you."
Thus ended a conversation which, at no very
distant time, led to such grave results. I must say here that facts seemed
to confirm my foresight, to the Canadian's great despair. Did Captain Nemo
distrust us in these frequented seas? or did he only wish to hide himself
from the numerous vessels, of all nations, which ploughed the Mediterranean?
I could not tell; but we were oftener between waters and far from the coast.
Or, if the Nautilus did emerge, nothing was to be seen but the pilot's cage;
and sometimes it went to great depths, for, between the Grecian Archipelago
and Asia Minor we could not touch the bottom by more than a thousand
fathoms.
Thus I only knew we were near the Island of
Carpathos, one of the Sporades, by Captain Nemo reciting these lines from
Virgil:
"Est Carpathio Neptuni gurgite vates,
Caeruleus Proteus,"
as he pointed to a spot on the planisphere.
It was indeed the ancient abode of Proteus,
the old shepherd of Neptune's flocks, now the Island of Scarpanto, situated
between Rhodes and Crete. I saw nothing but the granite base through the
glass panels of the saloon.
The next day, the 14th of February, I
resolved to employ some hours in studying the fishes of the Archipelago; but
for some reason or other the panels remained hermetically sealed. Upon
taking the course of the Nautilus, I found that we were going towards
Candia, the ancient Isle of Crete. At the time I embarked on the Abraham
Lincoln, the whole of this island had risen in insurrection against the
despotism of the Turks. But how the insurgents had fared since that time I
was absolutely ignorant, and it was not Captain Nemo, deprived of all land
communications, who could tell me.
I made no allusion to this event when that
night I found myself alone with him in the saloon. Besides, he seemed to be
taciturn and preoccupied. Then, contrary to his custom, he ordered both
panels to be opened, and, going from one to the other, observed the mass of
waters attentively. To what end I could not guess; so, on my side, I
employed my time in studying the fish passing before my eyes.
In the midst of the waters a man appeared,
a diver, carrying at his belt a leathern purse. It was not a body abandoned
to the waves; it was a living man, swimming with a strong hand, disappearing
occasionally to take breath at the surface.
I turned towards Captain Nemo, and in an
agitated voice exclaimed:
"A man shipwrecked! He must be saved at any
price!"
The Captain did not answer me, but came and
leaned against the panel.
The man had approached, and, with his face
flattened against the glass, was looking at us.
To my great amazement, Captain Nemo signed
to him. The diver answered with his hand, mounted immediately to the surface
of the water, and did not appear again.
"Do not be uncomfortable," said Captain
Nemo. "It is Nicholas of Cape Matapan, surnamed Pesca. He is well known in
all the Cyclades. A bold diver! water is his element, and he lives more in
it than on land, going continually from one island to another, even as far
as Crete."
"You know him, Captain?"
"Why not, M. Aronnax?"
Saying which, Captain Nemo went towards a
piece of furniture standing near the left panel of the saloon. Near this
piece of furniture, I saw a chest bound with iron, on the cover of which was
a copper plate, bearing the cypher of the Nautilus with its device.
At that moment, the Captain, without
noticing my presence, opened the piece of furniture, a sort of strong box,
which held a great many ingots.
They were ingots of gold. From whence came
this precious metal, which represented an enormous sum? Where did the
Captain gather this gold from? and what was he going to do with it?
I did not say one word. I looked. Captain
Nemo took the ingots one by one, and arranged them methodically in the
chest, which he filled entirely. I estimated the contents at more than 4,000
lb. weight of gold, that is to say, nearly L200,000.
The chest was securely fastened, and the
Captain wrote an address on the lid, in characters which must have belonged
to Modern Greece.
This done, Captain Nemo pressed a knob, the
wire of which communicated with the quarters of the crew. Four men appeared,
and, not without some trouble, pushed the chest out of the saloon. Then I
heard them hoisting it up the iron staircase by means of pulleys.
At that moment, Captain Nemo turned to me.
"And you were saying, sir?" said he.
"I was saying nothing, Captain."
"Then, sir, if you will allow me, I will
wish you good night."
Whereupon he turned and left the saloon.
I returned to my room much troubled, as one
may believe. I vainly tried to sleep—I sought the connecting link between
the apparition of the diver and the chest filled with gold. Soon, I felt by
certain movements of pitching and tossing that the Nautilus was leaving the
depths and returning to the surface.
Then I heard steps upon the platform; and I
knew they were unfastening the pinnace and launching it upon the waves. For
one instant it struck the side of the Nautilus, then all noise ceased.
Two hours after, the same noise, the same
going and coming was renewed; the boat was hoisted on board, replaced in its
socket, and the Nautilus again plunged under the waves.
So these millions had been transported to
their address. To what point of the continent? Who was Captain Nemo's
correspondent?
The next day I related to Conseil and the
Canadian the events of the night, which had excited my curiosity to the
highest degree. My companions were not less surprised than myself.
"But where does he take his millions to?"
asked Ned Land.
To that there was no possible answer. I
returned to the saloon after having breakfast and set to work. Till five
o'clock in the evening I employed myself in arranging my notes. At that
moment—(ought I to attribute it to some peculiar idiosyncrasy)—I felt so
great a heat that I was obliged to take off my coat. It was strange, for we
were under low latitudes; and even then the Nautilus, submerged as it was,
ought to experience no change of temperature. I looked at the manometer; it
showed a depth of sixty feet, to which atmospheric heat could never attain.
I continued my work, but the temperature
rose to such a pitch as to be intolerable.
"Could there be fire on board?" I asked
myself.
I was leaving the saloon, when Captain Nemo
entered; he approached the thermometer, consulted it, and, turning to me,
said:
"Forty-two degrees."
"I have noticed it, Captain," I replied;
"and if it gets much hotter we cannot bear it."
"Oh, sir, it will not get better if we do
not wish it."
"You can reduce it as you please, then?"
"No; but I can go farther from the stove
which produces it."
"It is outward, then!"
"Certainly; we are floating in a current of
boiling water."
"Is it possible!" I exclaimed.
"Look."
The panels opened, and I saw the sea
entirely white all round. A sulphurous smoke was curling amid the waves,
which boiled like water in a copper. I placed my hand on one of the panes of
glass, but the heat was so great that I quickly took it off again.
"Where are we?" I asked.
"Near the Island of Santorin, sir," replied
the Captain. "I wished to give you a sight of the curious spectacle of a
submarine eruption."
"I thought," said I, "that the formation of
these new islands was ended."
"Nothing is ever ended in the volcanic
parts of the sea," replied Captain Nemo; "and the globe is always being
worked by subterranean fires. Already, in the nineteenth year of our era,
according to Cassiodorus and Pliny, a new island, Theia (the divine),
appeared in the very place where these islets have recently been formed.
Then they sank under the waves, to rise again in the year 69, when they
again subsided. Since that time to our days the Plutonian work has been
suspended. But on the 3rd of February, 1866, a new island, which they named
George Island, emerged from the midst of the sulphurous vapour near Nea
Kamenni, and settled again the 6th of the same month. Seven days after, the
13th of February, the Island of Aphroessa appeared, leaving between Nea
Kamenni and itself a canal ten yards broad. I was in these seas when the
phenomenon occurred, and I was able therefore to observe all the different
phases. The Island of Aphroessa, of round form, measured 300 feet in
diameter, and 30 feet in height. It was composed of black and vitreous lava,
mixed with fragments of felspar. And lastly, on the 10th of March, a smaller
island, called Reka, showed itself near Nea Kamenni, and since then these
three have joined together, forming but one and the same island."
"And the canal in which we are at this
moment?" I asked.
"Here it is," replied Captain Nemo, showing
me a map of the Archipelago. "You see, I have marked the new islands."
I returned to the glass. The Nautilus was
no longer moving, the heat was becoming unbearable. The sea, which till now
had been white, was red, owing to the presence of salts of iron. In spite of
the ship's being hermetically sealed, an insupportable smell of sulphur
filled the saloon, and the brilliancy of the electricity was entirely
extinguished by bright scarlet flames. I was in a bath, I was choking, I was
broiled.
"We can remain no longer in this boiling
water," said I to the Captain.
"It would not be prudent," replied the
impassive Captain Nemo.
An order was given; the Nautilus tacked
about and left the furnace it could not brave with impunity. A quarter of an
hour after we were breathing fresh air on the surface. The thought then
struck me that, if Ned Land had chosen this part of the sea for our flight,
we should never have come alive out of this sea of fire.
The next day, the 16th of February, we left
the basin which, between Rhodes and Alexandria, is reckoned about 1,500
fathoms in depth, and the Nautilus, passing some distance from Cerigo,
quitted the Grecian Archipelago after having doubled Cape Matapan.
CHAPTER VII
THE MEDITERRANEAN IN
FORTY-EIGHT HOURS
The Mediterranean, the blue sea par
excellence, "the great sea" of the Hebrews, "the sea" of the Greeks, the
"mare nostrum" of the Romans, bordered by orange-trees, aloes, cacti, and
sea-pines; embalmed with the perfume of the myrtle, surrounded by rude
mountains, saturated with pure and transparent air, but incessantly worked
by underground fires; a perfect battlefield in which Neptune and Pluto still
dispute the empire of the world!
It is upon these banks, and on these
waters, says Michelet, that man is renewed in one of the most powerful
climates of the globe. But, beautiful as it was, I could only take a rapid
glance at the basin whose superficial area is two million of square yards.
Even Captain Nemo's knowledge was lost to me, for this puzzling person did
not appear once during our passage at full speed. I estimated the course
which the Nautilus took under the waves of the sea at about six hundred
leagues, and it was accomplished in forty-eight hours. Starting on the
morning of the 16th of February from the shores of Greece, we had crossed
the Straits of Gibraltar by sunrise on the 18th.
It was plain to me that this Mediterranean,
enclosed in the midst of those countries which he wished to avoid, was
distasteful to Captain Nemo. Those waves and those breezes brought back too
many remembrances, if not too many regrets. Here he had no longer that
independence and that liberty of gait which he had when in the open seas,
and his Nautilus felt itself cramped between the close shores of Africa and
Europe.
Our speed was now twenty-five miles an
hour. It may be well understood that Ned Land, to his great disgust, was
obliged to renounce his intended flight. He could not launch the pinnace,
going at the rate of twelve or thirteen yards every second. To quit the
Nautilus under such conditions would be as bad as jumping from a train going
at full speed—an imprudent thing, to say the least of it. Besides, our
vessel only mounted to the surface of the waves at night to renew its stock
of air; it was steered entirely by the compass and the log.
I saw no more of the interior of this
Mediterranean than a traveller by express train perceives of the landscape
which flies before his eyes; that is to say, the distant horizon, and not
the nearer objects which pass like a flash of lightning.
We were then passing between Sicily and the
coast of Tunis. In the narrow space between Cape Bon and the Straits of
Messina the bottom of the sea rose almost suddenly. There was a perfect
bank, on which there was not more than nine fathoms of water, whilst on
either side the depth was ninety fathoms.
The Nautilus had to manoeuvre very
carefully so as not to strike against this submarine barrier.
I showed Conseil, on the map of the
Mediterranean, the spot occupied by this reef.
"But if you please, sir," observed Conseil,
"it is like a real isthmus joining Europe to Africa."
"Yes, my boy, it forms a perfect bar to the
Straits of Lybia, and the soundings of Smith have proved that in former
times the continents between Cape Boco and Cape Furina were joined."
"I can well believe it," said Conseil.
"I will add," I continued, "that a similar
barrier exists between Gibraltar and Ceuta, which in geological times formed
the entire Mediterranean."
"What if some volcanic burst should one day
raise these two barriers above the waves?"
"It is not probable, Conseil."
"Well, but allow me to finish, please, sir;
if this phenomenon should take place, it will be troublesome for M. Lesseps,
who has taken so much pains to pierce the isthmus."
"I agree with you; but I repeat, Conseil,
this phenomenon will never happen. The violence of subterranean force is
ever diminishing. Volcanoes, so plentiful in the first days of the world,
are being extinguished by degrees; the internal heat is weakened, the
temperature of the lower strata of the globe is lowered by a perceptible
quantity every century to the detriment of our globe, for its heat is its
life."
"But the sun?"
"The sun is not sufficient, Conseil. Can it
give heat to a dead body?"
"Not that I know of."
"Well, my friend, this earth will one day
be that cold corpse; it will become uninhabitable and uninhabited like the
moon, which has long since lost all its vital heat."
"In how many centuries?"
"In some hundreds of thousands of years, my
boy."
"Then," said Conseil, "we shall have time
to finish our journey—that is, if Ned Land does not interfere with it."
And Conseil, reassured, returned to the
study of the bank, which the Nautilus was skirting at a moderate speed.
During the night of the 16th and 17th
February we had entered the second Mediterranean basin, the greatest depth
of which was 1,450 fathoms. The Nautilus, by the action of its crew, slid
down the inclined planes and buried itself in the lowest depths of the sea.
On the 18th of February, about three
o'clock in the morning, we were at the entrance of the Straits of Gibraltar.
There once existed two currents: an upper one, long since recognised, which
conveys the waters of the ocean into the basin of the Mediterranean; and a
lower counter-current, which reasoning has now shown to exist. Indeed, the
volume of water in the Mediterranean, incessantly added to by the waves of
the Atlantic and by rivers falling into it, would each year raise the level
of this sea, for its evaporation is not sufficient to restore the
equilibrium. As it is not so, we must necessarily admit the existence of an
under-current, which empties into the basin of the Atlantic through the
Straits of Gibraltar the surplus waters of the Mediterranean. A fact indeed;
and it was this counter-current by which the Nautilus profited. It advanced
rapidly by the narrow pass. For one instant I caught a glimpse of the
beautiful ruins of the temple of Hercules, buried in the ground, according
to Pliny, and with the low island which supports it; and a few minutes later
we were floating on the Atlantic.
CHAPTER VIII
VIGO BAY
The Atlantic! a vast sheet of water whose
superficial area covers twenty-five millions of square miles, the length of
which is nine thousand miles, with a mean breadth of two thousand seven
hundred—an ocean whose parallel winding shores embrace an immense
circumference, watered by the largest rivers of the world, the St. Lawrence,
the Mississippi, the Amazon, the Plata, the Orinoco, the Niger, the Senegal,
the Elbe, the Loire, and the Rhine, which carry water from the most
civilised, as well as from the most savage, countries! Magnificent field of
water, incessantly ploughed by vessels of every nation, sheltered by the
flags of every nation, and which terminates in those two terrible points so
dreaded by mariners, Cape Horn and the Cape of Tempests.
The Nautilus was piercing the water with
its sharp spur, after having accomplished nearly ten thousand leagues in
three months and a half, a distance greater than the great circle of the
earth. Where were we going now, and what was reserved for the future? The
Nautilus, leaving the Straits of Gibraltar, had gone far out. It returned to
the surface of the waves, and our daily walks on the platform were restored
to us.
I mounted at once, accompanied by Ned Land
and Conseil. At a distance of about twelve miles, Cape St. Vincent was dimly
to be seen, forming the south-western point of the Spanish peninsula. A
strong southerly gale was blowing. The sea was swollen and billowy; it made
the Nautilus rock violently. It was almost impossible to keep one's foot on
the platform, which the heavy rolls of the sea beat over every instant. So
we descended after inhaling some mouthfuls of fresh air.
I returned to my room, Conseil to his
cabin; but the Canadian, with a preoccupied air, followed me. Our rapid
passage across the Mediterranean had not allowed him to put his project into
execution, and he could not help showing his disappointment. When the door
of my room was shut, he sat down and looked at me silently.
"Friend Ned," said I, "I understand you;
but you cannot reproach yourself. To have attempted to leave the Nautilus
under the circumstances would have been folly."
Ned Land did not answer; his compressed
lips and frowning brow showed with him the violent possession this fixed
idea had taken of his mind.
"Let us see," I continued; "we need not
despair yet. We are going up the coast of Portugal again; France and England
are not far off, where we can easily find refuge. Now if the Nautilus, on
leaving the Straits of Gibraltar, had gone to the south, if it had carried
us towards regions where there were no continents, I should share your
uneasiness. But we know now that Captain Nemo does not fly from civilised
seas, and in some days I think you can act with security."
Ned Land still looked at me fixedly; at
length his fixed lips parted, and he said, "It is for to-night."
I drew myself up suddenly. I was, I admit,
little prepared for this communication. I wanted to answer the Canadian, but
words would not come.
"We agreed to wait for an opportunity,"
continued Ned Land, "and the opportunity has arrived. This night we shall be
but a few miles from the Spanish coast. It is cloudy. The wind blows freely.
I have your word, M. Aronnax, and I rely upon you."
As I was silent, the Canadian approached
me.
"To-night, at nine o'clock," said he. "I
have warned Conseil. At that moment Captain Nemo will be shut up in his
room, probably in bed. Neither the engineers nor the ship's crew can see us.
Conseil and I will gain the central staircase, and you, M. Aronnax, will
remain in the library, two steps from us, waiting my signal. The oars, the
mast, and the sail are in the canoe. I have even succeeded in getting some
provisions. I have procured an English wrench, to unfasten the bolts which
attach it to the shell of the Nautilus. So all is ready, till to-night."
"The sea is bad."
"That I allow," replied the Canadian; "but
we must risk that. Liberty is worth paying for; besides, the boat is strong,
and a few miles with a fair wind to carry us is no great thing. Who knows
but by to-morrow we may be a hundred leagues away? Let circumstances only
favour us, and by ten or eleven o'clock we shall have landed on some spot of
terra firma, alive or dead. But adieu now till to-night."
With these words the Canadian withdrew,
leaving me almost dumb. I had imagined that, the chance gone, I should have
time to reflect and discuss the matter. My obstinate companion had given me
no time; and, after all, what could I have said to him? Ned Land was
perfectly right. There was almost the opportunity to profit by. Could I
retract my word, and take upon myself the responsibility of compromising the
future of my companions? To-morrow Captain Nemo might take us far from all
land.
At that moment a rather loud hissing noise
told me that the reservoirs were filling, and that the Nautilus was sinking
under the waves of the Atlantic.
A sad day I passed, between the desire of
regaining my liberty of action and of abandoning the wonderful Nautilus, and
leaving my submarine studies incomplete.
What dreadful hours I passed thus!
Sometimes seeing myself and companions safely landed, sometimes wishing, in
spite of my reason, that some unforeseen circumstance, would prevent the
realisation of Ned Land's project.
Twice I went to the saloon. I wished to
consult the compass. I wished to see if the direction the Nautilus was
taking was bringing us nearer or taking us farther from the coast. But no;
the Nautilus kept in Portuguese waters.
I must therefore take my part and prepare
for flight. My luggage was not heavy; my notes, nothing more.
As to Captain Nemo, I asked myself what he
would think of our escape; what trouble, what wrong it might cause him and
what he might do in case of its discovery or failure. Certainly I had no
cause to complain of him; on the contrary, never was hospitality freer than
his. In leaving him I could not be taxed with ingratitude. No oath bound us
to him. It was on the strength of circumstances he relied, and not upon our
word, to fix us for ever.
I had not seen the Captain since our visit
to the Island of Santorin. Would chance bring me to his presence before our
departure? I wished it, and I feared it at the same time. I listened if I
could hear him walking the room contiguous to mine. No sound reached my ear.
I felt an unbearable uneasiness. This day of waiting seemed eternal. Hours
struck too slowly to keep pace with my impatience.
My dinner was served in my room as usual. I
ate but little; I was too preoccupied. I left the table at seven o'clock. A
hundred and twenty minutes (I counted them) still separated me from the
moment in which I was to join Ned Land. My agitation redoubled. My pulse
beat violently. I could not remain quiet. I went and came, hoping to calm my
troubled spirit by constant movement. The idea of failure in our bold
enterprise was the least painful of my anxieties; but the thought of seeing
our project discovered before leaving the Nautilus, of being brought before
Captain Nemo, irritated, or (what was worse) saddened, at my desertion, made
my heart beat.
I wanted to see the saloon for the last
time. I descended the stairs and arrived in the museum, where I had passed
so many useful and agreeable hours. I looked at all its riches, all its
treasures, like a man on the eve of an eternal exile, who was leaving never
to return.
These wonders of Nature, these masterpieces
of art, amongst which for so many days my life had been concentrated, I was
going to abandon them for ever! I should like to have taken a last look
through the windows of the saloon into the waters of the Atlantic: but the
panels were hermetically closed, and a cloak of steel separated me from that
ocean which I had not yet explored.
In passing through the saloon, I came near
the door let into the angle which opened into the Captain's room. To my
great surprise, this door was ajar. I drew back involuntarily. If Captain
Nemo should be in his room, he could see me. But, hearing no sound, I drew
nearer. The room was deserted. I pushed open the door and took some steps
forward. Still the same monklike severity of aspect.
Suddenly the clock struck eight. The first
beat of the hammer on the bell awoke me from my dreams. I trembled as if an
invisible eye had plunged into my most secret thoughts, and I hurried from
the room.
There my eye fell upon the compass. Our
course was still north. The log indicated moderate speed, the manometer a
depth of about sixty feet.
I returned to my room, clothed myself
warmly—sea boots, an otterskin cap, a great coat of byssus, lined with
sealskin; I was ready, I was waiting. The vibration of the screw alone broke
the deep silence which reigned on board. I listened attentively. Would no
loud voice suddenly inform me that Ned Land had been surprised in his
projected flight. A mortal dread hung over me, and I vainly tried to regain
my accustomed coolness.
At a few minutes to nine, I put my ear to
the Captain's door. No noise. I left my room and returned to the saloon,
which was half in obscurity, but deserted.
I opened the door communicating with the
library. The same insufficient light, the same solitude. I placed myself
near the door leading to the central staircase, and there waited for Ned
Land's signal.
At that moment the trembling of the screw
sensibly diminished, then it stopped entirely. The silence was now only
disturbed by the beatings of my own heart. Suddenly a slight shock was felt;
and I knew that the Nautilus had stopped at the bottom of the ocean. My
uneasiness increased. The Canadian's signal did not come. I felt inclined to
join Ned Land and beg of him to put off his attempt. I felt that we were not
sailing under our usual conditions.
At this moment the door of the large saloon
opened, and Captain Nemo appeared. He saw me, and without further preamble
began in an amiable tone of voice:
"Ah, sir! I have been looking for you. Do
you know the history of Spain?"
Now, one might know the history of one's
own country by heart; but in the condition I was at the time, with troubled
mind and head quite lost, I could not have said a word of it.
"Well," continued Captain Nemo, "you heard
my question! Do you know the history of Spain?"
"Very slightly," I answered.
"Well, here are learned men having to
learn," said the Captain. "Come, sit down, and I will tell you a curious
episode in this history. Sir, listen well," said he; "this history will
interest you on one side, for it will answer a question which doubtless you
have not been able to solve."
"I listen, Captain," said I, not knowing
what my interlocutor was driving at, and asking myself if this incident was
bearing on our projected flight.
"Sir, if you have no objection, we will go
back to 1702. You cannot be ignorant that your king, Louis XIV, thinking
that the gesture of a potentate was sufficient to bring the Pyrenees under
his yoke, had imposed the Duke of Anjou, his grandson, on the Spaniards.
This prince reigned more or less badly under the name of Philip V, and had a
strong party against him abroad. Indeed, the preceding year, the royal
houses of Holland, Austria, and England had concluded a treaty of alliance
at the Hague, with the intention of plucking the crown of Spain from the
head of Philip V, and placing it on that of an archduke to whom they
prematurely gave the title of Charles III.
"Spain must resist this coalition; but she
was almost entirely unprovided with either soldiers or sailors. However,
money would not fail them, provided that their galleons, laden with gold and
silver from America, once entered their ports. And about the end of 1702
they expected a rich convoy which France was escorting with a fleet of
twenty-three vessels, commanded by Admiral Chateau-Renaud, for the ships of
the coalition were already beating the Atlantic. This convoy was to go to
Cadiz, but the Admiral, hearing that an English fleet was cruising in those
waters, resolved to make for a French port.
"The Spanish commanders of the convoy
objected to this decision. They wanted to be taken to a Spanish port, and,
if not to Cadiz, into Vigo Bay, situated on the northwest coast of Spain,
and which was not blocked.
"Admiral Chateau-Renaud had the rashness to
obey this injunction, and the galleons entered Vigo Bay.
"Unfortunately, it formed an open road
which could not be defended in any way. They must therefore hasten to unload
the galleons before the arrival of the combined fleet; and time would not
have failed them had not a miserable question of rivalry suddenly arisen.
"You are following the chain of events?"
asked Captain Nemo.
"Perfectly," said I, not knowing the end
proposed by this historical lesson.
"I will continue. This is what passed. The
merchants of Cadiz had a privilege by which they had the right of receiving
all merchandise coming from the West Indies. Now, to disembark these ingots
at the port of Vigo was depriving them of their rights. They complained at
Madrid, and obtained the consent of the weak-minded Philip that the convoy,
without discharging its cargo, should remain sequestered in the roads of
Vigo until the enemy had disappeared.
"But whilst coming to this decision, on the
22nd of October, 1702, the English vessels arrived in Vigo Bay, when Admiral
Chateau-Renaud, in spite of inferior forces, fought bravely. But, seeing
that the treasure must fall into the enemy's hands, he burnt and scuttled
every galleon, which went to the bottom with their immense riches."
Captain Nemo stopped. I admit I could not
see yet why this history should interest me.
"Well?" I asked.
"Well, M. Aronnax," replied Captain Nemo,
"we are in that Vigo Bay; and it rests with yourself whether you will
penetrate its mysteries."
The Captain rose, telling me to follow him.
I had had time to recover. I obeyed. The saloon was dark, but through the
transparent glass the waves were sparkling. I looked.
For half a mile around the Nautilus, the
waters seemed bathed in electric light. The sandy bottom was clean and
bright. Some of the ship's crew in their diving-dresses were clearing away
half-rotten barrels and empty cases from the midst of the blackened wrecks.
From these cases and from these barrels escaped ingots of gold and silver,
cascades of piastres and jewels. The sand was heaped up with them. Laden
with their precious booty, the men returned to the Nautilus, disposed of
their burden, and went back to this inexhaustible fishery of gold and
silver.
I understood now. This was the scene of the
battle of the 22nd of October, 1702. Here on this very spot the galleons
laden for the Spanish Government had sunk. Here Captain Nemo came, according
to his wants, to pack up those millions with which he burdened the Nautilus.
It was for him and him alone America had given up her precious metals. He
was heir direct, without anyone to share, in those treasures torn from the
Incas and from the conquered of Ferdinand Cortez.
"Did you know, sir," he asked, smiling,
"that the sea contained such riches?"
"I knew," I answered, "that they value
money held in suspension in these waters at two millions."
"Doubtless; but to extract this money the
expense would be greater than the profit. Here, on the contrary, I have but
to pick up what man has lost—and not only in Vigo Bay, but in a thousand
other ports where shipwrecks have happened, and which are marked on my
submarine map. Can you understand now the source of the millions I am
worth?"
"I understand, Captain. But allow me to
tell you that in exploring Vigo Bay you have only been beforehand with a
rival society."
"And which?"
"A society which has received from the
Spanish Government the privilege of seeking those buried galleons. The
shareholders are led on by the allurement of an enormous bounty, for they
value these rich shipwrecks at five hundred millions."
"Five hundred millions they were," answered
Captain Nemo, "but they are so no longer."
"Just so," said I; "and a warning to those
shareholders would be an act of charity. But who knows if it would be well
received? What gamblers usually regret above all is less the loss of their
money than of their foolish hopes. After all, I pity them less than the
thousands of unfortunates to whom so much riches well-distributed would have
been profitable, whilst for them they will be for ever barren."
I had no sooner expressed this regret than
I felt that it must have wounded Captain Nemo.
"Barren!" he exclaimed, with animation. "Do
you think then, sir, that these riches are lost because I gather them? Is it
for myself alone, according to your idea, that I take the trouble to collect
these treasures? Who told you that I did not make a good use of it? Do you
think I am ignorant that there are suffering beings and oppressed races on
this earth, miserable creatures to console, victims to avenge? Do you not
understand?"
Captain Nemo stopped at these last words,
regretting perhaps that he had spoken so much. But I had guessed that,
whatever the motive which had forced him to seek independence under the sea,
it had left him still a man, that his heart still beat for the sufferings of
humanity, and that his immense charity was for oppressed races as well as
individuals. And I then understood for whom those millions were destined
which were forwarded by Captain Nemo when the Nautilus was cruising in the
waters of Crete.
CHAPTER IX
A VANISHED CONTINENT
The next morning, the 19th of February, I
saw the Canadian enter my room. I expected this visit. He looked very
disappointed.
"Well, sir?" said he.
"Well, Ned, fortune was against us
yesterday."
"Yes; that Captain must needs stop exactly
at the hour we intended leaving his vessel."
"Yes, Ned, he had business at his bankers."
"His bankers!"
"Or rather his banking-house; by that I
mean the ocean, where his riches are safer than in the chests of the State."
I then related to the Canadian the
incidents of the preceding night, hoping to bring him back to the idea of
not abandoning the Captain; but my recital had no other result than an
energetically expressed regret from Ned that he had not been able to take a
walk on the battlefield of Vigo on his own account.
"However," said he, "all is not ended. It
is only a blow of the harpoon lost. Another time we must succeed; and
to-night, if necessary——"
"In what direction is the Nautilus going?"
I asked.
"I do not know," replied Ned.
"Well, at noon we shall see the point."
The Canadian returned to Conseil. As soon
as I was dressed, I went into the saloon. The compass was not reassuring.
The course of the Nautilus was S.S.W. We were turning our backs on Europe.
I waited with some impatience till the
ship's place was pricked on the chart. At about half-past eleven the
reservoirs were emptied, and our vessel rose to the surface of the ocean. I
rushed towards the platform. Ned Land had preceded me. No more land in
sight. Nothing but an immense sea. Some sails on the horizon, doubtless
those going to San Roque in search of favourable winds for doubling the Cape
of Good Hope. The weather was cloudy. A gale of wind was preparing. Ned
raved, and tried to pierce the cloudy horizon. He still hoped that behind
all that fog stretched the land he so longed for.
At noon the sun showed itself for an
instant. The second profited by this brightness to take its height. Then,
the sea becoming more billowy, we descended, and the panel closed.
An hour after, upon consulting the chart, I
saw the position of the Nautilus was marked at 16° 17' long., and 33° 22'
lat., at 150 leagues from the nearest coast. There was no means of flight,
and I leave you to imagine the rage of the Canadian when I informed him of
our situation.
For myself, I was not particularly sorry. I
felt lightened of the load which had oppressed me, and was able to return
with some degree of calmness to my accustomed work.
That night, about eleven o'clock, I
received a most unexpected visit from Captain Nemo. He asked me very
graciously if I felt fatigued from my watch of the preceding night. I
answered in the negative.
"Then, M. Aronnax, I propose a curious
excursion."
"Propose, Captain?"
"You have hitherto only visited the
submarine depths by daylight, under the brightness of the sun. Would it suit
you to see them in the darkness of the night?"
"Most willingly."
"I warn you, the way will be tiring. We
shall have far to walk, and must climb a mountain. The roads are not well
kept."
"What you say, Captain, only heightens my
curiosity; I am ready to follow you."
"Come then, sir, we will put on our
diving-dresses."
Arrived at the robing-room, I saw that
neither of my companions nor any of the ship's crew were to follow us on
this excursion. Captain Nemo had not even proposed my taking with me either
Ned or Conseil.
In a few moments we had put on our
diving-dresses; they placed on our backs the reservoirs, abundantly filled
with air, but no electric lamps were prepared. I called the Captain's
attention to the fact.
"They will be useless," he replied.
I thought I had not heard aright, but I
could not repeat my observation, for the Captain's head had already
disappeared in its metal case. I finished harnessing myself. I felt them put
an iron-pointed stick into my hand, and some minutes later, after going
through the usual form, we set foot on the bottom of the Atlantic at a depth
of 150 fathoms. Midnight was near. The waters were profoundly dark, but
Captain Nemo pointed out in the distance a reddish spot, a sort of large
light shining brilliantly about two miles from the Nautilus. What this fire
might be, what could feed it, why and how it lit up the liquid mass, I could
not say. In any case, it did light our way, vaguely, it is true, but I soon
accustomed myself to the peculiar darkness, and I understood, under such
circumstances, the uselessness of the Ruhmkorff apparatus.
As we advanced, I heard a kind of pattering
above my head. The noise redoubling, sometimes producing a continual shower,
I soon understood the cause. It was rain falling violently, and crisping the
surface of the waves. Instinctively the thought flashed across my mind that
I should be wet through! By the water! in the midst of the water! I could
not help laughing at the odd idea. But, indeed, in the thick diving-dress,
the liquid element is no longer felt, and one only seems to be in an
atmosphere somewhat denser than the terrestrial atmosphere. Nothing more.
After half an hour's walk the soil became
stony. Medusae, microscopic crustacea, and pennatules lit it slightly with
their phosphorescent gleam. I caught a glimpse of pieces of stone covered
with millions of zoophytes and masses of sea weed. My feet often slipped
upon this sticky carpet of sea weed, and without my iron-tipped stick I
should have fallen more than once. In turning round, I could still see the
whitish lantern of the Nautilus beginning to pale in the distance.
But the rosy light which guided us
increased and lit up the horizon. The presence of this fire under water
puzzled me in the highest degree. Was I going towards a natural phenomenon
as yet unknown to the savants of the earth? Or even (for this thought
crossed my brain) had the hand of man aught to do with this conflagration?
Had he fanned this flame? Was I to meet in these depths companions and
friends of Captain Nemo whom he was going to visit, and who, like him, led
this strange existence? Should I find down there a whole colony of exiles
who, weary of the miseries of this earth, had sought and found independence
in the deep ocean? All these foolish and unreasonable ideas pursued me. And
in this condition of mind, over-excited by the succession of wonders
continually passing before my eyes, I should not have been surprised to meet
at the bottom of the sea one of those submarine towns of which Captain Nemo
dreamed.
Our road grew lighter and lighter. The
white glimmer came in rays from the summit of a mountain about 800 feet
high. But what I saw was simply a reflection, developed by the clearness of
the waters. The source of this inexplicable light was a fire on the opposite
side of the mountain.
In the midst of this stony maze furrowing
the bottom of the Atlantic, Captain Nemo advanced without hesitation. He
knew this dreary road. Doubtless he had often travelled over it, and could
not lose himself. I followed him with unshaken confidence. He seemed to me
like a genie of the sea; and, as he walked before me, I could not help
admiring his stature, which was outlined in black on the luminous horizon.
It was one in the morning when we arrived
at the first slopes of the mountain; but to gain access to them we must
venture through the difficult paths of a vast copse.
Yes; a copse of dead trees, without leaves,
without sap, trees petrified by the action of the water and here and there
overtopped by gigantic pines. It was like a coal-pit still standing, holding
by the roots to the broken soil, and whose branches, like fine black paper
cuttings, showed distinctly on the watery ceiling. Picture to yourself a
forest in the Hartz hanging on to the sides of the mountain, but a forest
swallowed up. The paths were encumbered with seaweed and fucus, between
which grovelled a whole world of crustacea. I went along, climbing the
rocks, striding over extended trunks, breaking the sea bind-weed which hung
from one tree to the other; and frightening the fishes, which flew from
branch to branch. Pressing onward, I felt no fatigue. I followed my guide,
who was never tired. What a spectacle! How can I express it? how paint the
aspect of those woods and rocks in this medium—their under parts dark and
wild, the upper coloured with red tints, by that light which the reflecting
powers of the waters doubled? We climbed rocks which fell directly after
with gigantic bounds and the low growling of an avalanche. To right and left
ran long, dark galleries, where sight was lost. Here opened vast glades
which the hand of man seemed to have worked; and I sometimes asked myself if
some inhabitant of these submarine regions would not suddenly appear to me.
But Captain Nemo was still mounting. I
could not stay behind. I followed boldly. My stick gave me good help. A
false step would have been dangerous on the narrow passes sloping down to
the sides of the gulfs; but I walked with firm step, without feeling any
giddiness. Now I jumped a crevice, the depth of which would have made me
hesitate had it been among the glaciers on the land; now I ventured on the
unsteady trunk of a tree thrown across from one abyss to the other, without
looking under my feet, having only eyes to admire the wild sites of this
region.
There, monumental rocks, leaning on their
regularly-cut bases, seemed to defy all laws of equilibrium. From between
their stony knees trees sprang, like a jet under heavy pressure, and upheld
others which upheld them. Natural towers, large scarps, cut perpendicularly,
like a "curtain," inclined at an angle which the laws of gravitation could
never have tolerated in terrestrial regions.
Two hours after quitting the Nautilus we
had crossed the line of trees, and a hundred feet above our heads rose the
top of the mountain, which cast a shadow on the brilliant irradiation of the
opposite slope. Some petrified shrubs ran fantastically here and there.
Fishes got up under our feet like birds in the long grass. The massive rocks
were rent with impenetrable fractures, deep grottos, and unfathomable holes,
at the bottom of which formidable creatures might be heard moving. My blood
curdled when I saw enormous antennae blocking my road, or some frightful
claw closing with a noise in the shadow of some cavity. Millions of luminous
spots shone brightly in the midst of the darkness. They were the eyes of
giant crustacea crouched in their holes; giant lobsters setting themselves
up like halberdiers, and moving their claws with the clicking sound of
pincers; titanic crabs, pointed like a gun on its carriage; and
frightful-looking poulps, interweaving their tentacles like a living nest of
serpents.
We had now arrived on the first platform,
where other surprises awaited me. Before us lay some picturesque ruins,
which betrayed the hand of man and not that of the Creator. There were vast
heaps of stone, amongst which might be traced the vague and shadowy forms of
castles and temples, clothed with a world of blossoming zoophytes, and over
which, instead of ivy, sea-weed and fucus threw a thick vegetable mantle.
But what was this portion of the globe which had been swallowed by
cataclysms? Who had placed those rocks and stones like cromlechs of
prehistoric times? Where was I? Whither had Captain Nemo's fancy hurried me?
I would fain have asked him; not being able
to, I stopped him—I seized his arm. But, shaking his head, and pointing to
the highest point of the mountain, he seemed to say:
"Come, come along; come higher!"
I followed, and in a few minutes I had
climbed to the top, which for a circle of ten yards commanded the whole mass
of rock.
I looked down the side we had just climbed.
The mountain did not rise more than seven or eight hundred feet above the
level of the plain; but on the opposite side it commanded from twice that
height the depths of this part of the Atlantic. My eyes ranged far over a
large space lit by a violent fulguration. In fact, the mountain was a
volcano.
At fifty feet above the peak, in the midst
of a rain of stones and scoriae, a large crater was vomiting forth torrents
of lava which fell in a cascade of fire into the bosom of the liquid mass.
Thus situated, this volcano lit the lower plain like an immense torch, even
to the extreme limits of the horizon. I said that the submarine crater threw
up lava, but no flames. Flames require the oxygen of the air to feed upon
and cannot be developed under water; but streams of lava, having in
themselves the principles of their incandescence, can attain a white heat,
fight vigorously against the liquid element, and turn it to vapour by
contact.
Rapid currents bearing all these gases in
diffusion and torrents of lava slid to the bottom of the mountain like an
eruption of Vesuvius on another Terra del Greco.
There indeed under my eyes, ruined,
destroyed, lay a town—its roofs open to the sky, its temples fallen, its
arches dislocated, its columns lying on the ground, from which one would
still recognise the massive character of Tuscan architecture. Further on,
some remains of a gigantic aqueduct; here the high base of an Acropolis,
with the floating outline of a Parthenon; there traces of a quay, as if an
ancient port had formerly abutted on the borders of the ocean, and
disappeared with its merchant vessels and its war-galleys. Farther on again,
long lines of sunken walls and broad, deserted streets—a perfect Pompeii
escaped beneath the waters. Such was the sight that Captain Nemo brought
before my eyes!
Where was I? Where was I? I must know at
any cost. I tried to speak, but Captain Nemo stopped me by a gesture, and,
picking up a piece of chalk-stone, advanced to a rock of black basalt, and
traced the one word:
ATLANTIS
What a light shot through my mind!
Atlantis! the Atlantis of Plato, that continent denied by Origen and
Humbolt, who placed its disappearance amongst the legendary tales. I had it
there now before my eyes, bearing upon it the unexceptionable testimony of
its catastrophe. The region thus engulfed was beyond Europe, Asia, and
Lybia, beyond the columns of Hercules, where those powerful people, the
Atlantides, lived, against whom the first wars of ancient Greeks were waged.
Thus, led by the strangest destiny, I was
treading under foot the mountains of this continent, touching with my hand
those ruins a thousand generations old and contemporary with the geological
epochs. I was walking on the very spot where the contemporaries of the first
man had walked.
Whilst I was trying to fix in my mind every
detail of this grand landscape, Captain Nemo remained motionless, as if
petrified in mute ecstasy, leaning on a mossy stone. Was he dreaming of
those generations long since disappeared? Was he asking them the secret of
human destiny? Was it here this strange man came to steep himself in
historical recollections, and live again this ancient life—he who wanted no
modern one? What would I not have given to know his thoughts, to share them,
to understand them! We remained for an hour at this place, contemplating the
vast plains under the brightness of the lava, which was some times
wonderfully intense. Rapid tremblings ran along the mountain caused by
internal bubblings, deep noise, distinctly transmitted through the liquid
medium were echoed with majestic grandeur. At this moment the moon appeared
through the mass of waters and threw her pale rays on the buried continent.
It was but a gleam, but what an indescribable effect! The Captain rose, cast
one last look on the immense plain, and then bade me follow him.
We descended the mountain rapidly, and, the
mineral forest once passed, I saw the lantern of the Nautilus shining like a
star. The Captain walked straight to it, and we got on board as the first
rays of light whitened the surface of the ocean.
CHAPTER X
THE SUBMARINE COAL-MINES
The next day, the 20th of February, I awoke
very late: the fatigues of the previous night had prolonged my sleep until
eleven o'clock. I dressed quickly, and hastened to find the course the
Nautilus was taking. The instruments showed it to be still toward the south,
with a speed of twenty miles an hour and a depth of fifty fathoms.
The species of fishes here did not differ
much from those already noticed. There were rays of giant size, five yards
long, and endowed with great muscular strength, which enabled them to shoot
above the waves; sharks of many kinds; amongst others, one fifteen feet
long, with triangular sharp teeth, and whose transparency rendered it almost
invisible in the water.
Amongst bony fish Conseil noticed some
about three yards long, armed at the upper jaw with a piercing sword; other
bright-coloured creatures, known in the time of Aristotle by the name of the
sea-dragon, which are dangerous to capture on account of the spikes on their
back.
About four o'clock, the soil, generally
composed of a thick mud mixed with petrified wood, changed by degrees, and
it became more stony, and seemed strewn with conglomerate and pieces of
basalt, with a sprinkling of lava. I thought that a mountainous region was
succeeding the long plains; and accordingly, after a few evolutions of the
Nautilus, I saw the southerly horizon blocked by a high wall which seemed to
close all exit. Its summit evidently passed the level of the ocean. It must
be a continent, or at least an island—one of the Canaries, or of the Cape
Verde Islands. The bearings not being yet taken, perhaps designedly, I was
ignorant of our exact position. In any case, such a wall seemed to me to
mark the limits of that Atlantis, of which we had in reality passed over
only the smallest part.
Much longer should I have remained at the
window admiring the beauties of sea and sky, but the panels closed. At this
moment the Nautilus arrived at the side of this high, perpendicular wall.
What it would do, I could not guess. I returned to my room; it no longer
moved. I laid myself down with the full intention of waking after a few
hours' sleep; but it was eight o'clock the next day when I entered the
saloon. I looked at the manometer. It told me that the Nautilus was floating
on the surface of the ocean. Besides, I heard steps on the platform. I went
to the panel. It was open; but, instead of broad daylight, as I expected, I
was surrounded by profound darkness. Where were we? Was I mistaken? Was it
still night? No; not a star was shining and night has not that utter
darkness.
I knew not what to think, when a voice near
me said:
"Is that you, Professor?"
"Ah! Captain," I answered, "where are we?"
"Underground, sir."
"Underground!" I exclaimed. "And the
Nautilus floating still?"
"It always floats."
"But I do not understand."
"Wait a few minutes, our lantern will be
lit, and, if you like light places, you will be satisfied."
I stood on the platform and waited. The
darkness was so complete that I could not even see Captain Nemo; but,
looking to the zenith, exactly above my head, I seemed to catch an undecided
gleam, a kind of twilight filling a circular hole. At this instant the
lantern was lit, and its vividness dispelled the faint light. I closed my
dazzled eyes for an instant, and then looked again. The Nautilus was
stationary, floating near a mountain which formed a sort of quay. The lake,
then, supporting it was a lake imprisoned by a circle of walls, measuring
two miles in diameter and six in circumference. Its level (the manometer
showed) could only be the same as the outside level, for there must
necessarily be a communication between the lake and the sea. The high
partitions, leaning forward on their base, grew into a vaulted roof bearing
the shape of an immense funnel turned upside down, the height being about
five or six hundred yards. At the summit was a circular orifice, by which I
had caught the slight gleam of light, evidently daylight.
"Where are we?" I asked.
"In the very heart of an extinct volcano,
the interior of which has been invaded by the sea, after some great
convulsion of the earth. Whilst you were sleeping, Professor, the Nautilus
penetrated to this lagoon by a natural canal, which opens about ten yards
beneath the surface of the ocean. This is its harbour of refuge, a sure,
commodious, and mysterious one, sheltered from all gales. Show me, if you
can, on the coasts of any of your continents or islands, a road which can
give such perfect refuge from all storms."
"Certainly," I replied, "you are in safety
here, Captain Nemo. Who could reach you in the heart of a volcano? But did I
not see an opening at its summit?"
"Yes; its crater, formerly filled with
lava, vapour, and flames, and which now gives entrance to the life-giving
air we breathe."
"But what is this volcanic mountain?"
"It belongs to one of the numerous islands
with which this sea is strewn—to vessels a simple sandbank—to us an immense
cavern. Chance led me to discover it, and chance served me well."
"But of what use is this refuge, Captain?
The Nautilus wants no port."
"No, sir; but it wants electricity to make
it move, and the wherewithal to make the electricity—sodium to feed the
elements, coal from which to get the sodium, and a coal-mine to supply the
coal. And exactly on this spot the sea covers entire forests embedded during
the geological periods, now mineralised and transformed into coal; for me
they are an inexhaustible mine."
"Your men follow the trade of miners here,
then, Captain?"
"Exactly so. These mines extend under the
waves like the mines of Newcastle. Here, in their diving-dresses, pick axe
and shovel in hand, my men extract the coal, which I do not even ask from
the mines of the earth. When I burn this combustible for the manufacture of
sodium, the smoke, escaping from the crater of the mountain, gives it the
appearance of a still-active volcano."
"And we shall see your companions at work?"
"No; not this time at least; for I am in a
hurry to continue our submarine tour of the earth. So I shall content myself
with drawing from the reserve of sodium I already possess. The time for
loading is one day only, and we continue our voyage. So, if you wish to go
over the cavern and make the round of the lagoon, you must take advantage of
to-day, M. Aronnax."
I thanked the Captain and went to look for
my companions, who had not yet left their cabin. I invited them to follow me
without saying where we were. They mounted the platform. Conseil, who was
astonished at nothing, seemed to look upon it as quite natural that he
should wake under a mountain, after having fallen asleep under the waves.
But Ned Land thought of nothing but finding whether the cavern had any exit.
After breakfast, about ten o'clock, we went down on to the mountain.
"Here we are, once more on land," said
Conseil.
"I do not call this land," said the
Canadian. "And besides, we are not on it, but beneath it."
Between the walls of the mountains and the
waters of the lake lay a sandy shore which, at its greatest breadth,
measured five hundred feet. On this soil one might easily make the tour of
the lake. But the base of the high partitions was stony ground, with
volcanic locks and enormous pumice-stones lying in picturesque heaps. All
these detached masses, covered with enamel, polished by the action of the
subterraneous fires, shone resplendent by the light of our electric lantern.
The mica dust from the shore, rising under our feet, flew like a cloud of
sparks. The bottom now rose sensibly, and we soon arrived at long circuitous
slopes, or inclined planes, which took us higher by degrees; but we were
obliged to walk carefully among these conglomerates, bound by no cement, the
feet slipping on the glassy crystal, felspar, and quartz.
The volcanic nature of this enormous
excavation was confirmed on all sides, and I pointed it out to my
companions.
"Picture to yourselves," said I, "what this
crater must have been when filled with boiling lava, and when the level of
the incandescent liquid rose to the orifice of the mountain, as though
melted on the top of a hot plate."
"I can picture it perfectly," said Conseil.
"But, sir, will you tell me why the Great Architect has suspended
operations, and how it is that the furnace is replaced by the quiet waters
of the lake?"
"Most probably, Conseil, because some
convulsion beneath the ocean produced that very opening which has served as
a passage for the Nautilus. Then the waters of the Atlantic rushed into the
interior of the mountain. There must have been a terrible struggle between
the two elements, a struggle which ended in the victory of Neptune. But many
ages have run out since then, and the submerged volcano is now a peaceable
grotto."
"Very well," replied Ned Land; "I accept
the explanation, sir; but, in our own interests, I regret that the opening
of which you speak was not made above the level of the sea."
"But, friend Ned," said Conseil, "if the
passage had not been under the sea, the Nautilus could not have gone through
it."
We continued ascending. The steps became
more and more perpendicular and narrow. Deep excavations, which we were
obliged to cross, cut them here and there; sloping masses had to be turned.
We slid upon our knees and crawled along. But Conseil's dexterity and the
Canadian's strength surmounted all obstacles. At a height of about 31 feet
the nature of the ground changed without becoming more practicable. To the
conglomerate and trachyte succeeded black basalt, the first dispread in
layers full of bubbles, the latter forming regular prisms, placed like a
colonnade supporting the spring of the immense vault, an admirable specimen
of natural architecture. Between the blocks of basalt wound long streams of
lava, long since grown cold, encrusted with bituminous rays; and in some
places there were spread large carpets of sulphur. A more powerful light
shone through the upper crater, shedding a vague glimmer over these volcanic
depressions for ever buried in the bosom of this extinguished mountain. But
our upward march was soon stopped at a height of about two hundred and fifty
feet by impassable obstacles. There was a complete vaulted arch overhanging
us, and our ascent was changed to a circular walk. At the last change
vegetable life began to struggle with the mineral. Some shrubs, and even
some trees, grew from the fractures of the walls. I recognised some
euphorbias, with the caustic sugar coming from them; heliotropes, quite
incapable of justifying their name, sadly drooped their clusters of flowers,
both their colour and perfume half gone. Here and there some chrysanthemums
grew timidly at the foot of an aloe with long, sickly-looking leaves. But
between the streams of lava, I saw some little violets still slightly
perfumed, and I admit that I smelt them with delight. Perfume is the soul of
the flower, and sea-flowers have no soul.
We had arrived at the foot of some sturdy
dragon-trees, which had pushed aside the rocks with their strong roots, when
Ned Land exclaimed:
"Ah! sir, a hive! a hive!"
"A hive!" I replied, with a gesture of
incredulity.
"Yes, a hive," repeated the Canadian, "and
bees humming round it."
I approached, and was bound to believe my
own eyes. There at a hole bored in one of the dragon-trees were some
thousands of these ingenious insects, so common in all the Canaries, and
whose produce is so much esteemed. Naturally enough, the Canadian wished to
gather the honey, and I could not well oppose his wish. A quantity of dry
leaves, mixed with sulphur, he lit with a spark from his flint, and he began
to smoke out the bees. The humming ceased by degrees, and the hive
eventually yielded several pounds of the sweetest honey, with which Ned Land
filled his haversack.
"When I have mixed this honey with the
paste of the bread-fruit," said he, "I shall be able to offer you a
succulent cake."
"'Pon my word," said Conseil, "it will be
gingerbread."
"Never mind the gingerbread," said I; "let
us continue our interesting walk."
At every turn of the path we were
following, the lake appeared in all its length and breadth. The lantern lit
up the whole of its peaceable surface, which knew neither ripple nor wave.
The Nautilus remained perfectly immovable. On the platform, and on the
mountain, the ship's crew were working like black shadows clearly carved
against the luminous atmosphere. We were now going round the highest crest
of the first layers of rock which upheld the roof. I then saw that bees were
not the only representatives of the animal kingdom in the interior of this
volcano. Birds of prey hovered here and there in the shadows, or fled from
their nests on the top of the rocks. There were sparrow hawks, with white
breasts, and kestrels, and down the slopes scampered, with their long legs,
several fine fat bustards. I leave anyone to imagine the covetousness of the
Canadian at the sight of this savoury game, and whether he did not regret
having no gun. But he did his best to replace the lead by stones, and, after
several fruitless attempts, he succeeded in wounding a magnificent bird. To
say that he risked his life twenty times before reaching it is but the
truth; but he managed so well that the creature joined the honey-cakes in
his bag. We were now obliged to descend toward the shore, the crest becoming
impracticable. Above us the crater seemed to gape like the mouth of a well.
From this place the sky could be clearly seen, and clouds, dissipated by the
west wind, leaving behind them, even on the summit of the mountain, their
misty remnants—certain proof that they were only moderately high, for the
volcano did not rise more than eight hundred feet above the level of the
ocean. Half an hour after the Canadian's last exploit we had regained the
inner shore. Here the flora was represented by large carpets of marine
crystal, a little umbelliferous plant very good to pickle, which also bears
the name of pierce-stone and sea-fennel. Conseil gathered some bundles of
it. As to the fauna, it might be counted by thousands of crustacea of all
sorts, lobsters, crabs, spider-crabs, chameleon shrimps, and a large number
of shells, rockfish, and limpets. Three-quarters of an hour later we had
finished our circuitous walk and were on board. The crew had just finished
loading the sodium, and the Nautilus could have left that instant. But
Captain Nemo gave no order. Did he wish to wait until night, and leave the
submarine passage secretly? Perhaps so. Whatever it might be, the next day,
the Nautilus, having left its port, steered clear of all land at a few yards
beneath the waves of the Atlantic.
CHAPTER XI
THE SARGASSO SEA
That day the Nautilus crossed a singular
part of the Atlantic Ocean. No one can be ignorant of the existence of a
current of warm water known by the name of the Gulf Stream. After leaving
the Gulf of Florida, we went in the direction of Spitzbergen. But before
entering the Gulf of Mexico, about 45° of N. lat., this current divides into
two arms, the principal one going towards the coast of Ireland and Norway,
whilst the second bends to the south about the height of the Azores; then,
touching the African shore, and describing a lengthened oval, returns to the
Antilles. This second arm—it is rather a collar than an arm—surrounds with
its circles of warm water that portion of the cold, quiet, immovable ocean
called the Sargasso Sea, a perfect lake in the open Atlantic: it takes no
less than three years for the great current to pass round it. Such was the
region the Nautilus was now visiting, a perfect meadow, a close carpet of
seaweed, fucus, and tropical berries, so thick and so compact that the stem
of a vessel could hardly tear its way through it. And Captain Nemo, not
wishing to entangle his screw in this herbaceous mass, kept some yards
beneath the surface of the waves. The name Sargasso comes from the Spanish
word "sargazzo" which signifies kelp. This kelp, or berry-plant, is the
principal formation of this immense bank. And this is the reason why these
plants unite in the peaceful basin of the Atlantic. The only explanation
which can be given, he says, seems to me to result from the experience known
to all the world. Place in a vase some fragments of cork or other floating
body, and give to the water in the vase a circular movement, the scattered
fragments will unite in a group in the centre of the liquid surface, that is
to say, in the part least agitated. In the phenomenon we are considering,
the Atlantic is the vase, the Gulf Stream the circular current, and the
Sargasso Sea the central point at which the floating bodies unite.
I share Maury's opinion, and I was able to
study the phenomenon in the very midst, where vessels rarely penetrate.
Above us floated products of all kinds, heaped up among these brownish
plants; trunks of trees torn from the Andes or the Rocky Mountains, and
floated by the Amazon or the Mississippi; numerous wrecks, remains of keels,
or ships' bottoms, side-planks stove in, and so weighted with shells and
barnacles that they could not again rise to the surface. And time will one
day justify Maury's other opinion, that these substances thus accumulated
for ages will become petrified by the action of the water and will then form
inexhaustible coal-mines—a precious reserve prepared by far-seeing Nature
for the moment when men shall have exhausted the mines of continents.
In the midst of this inextricable mass of
plants and sea weed, I noticed some charming pink halcyons and actiniae,
with their long tentacles trailing after them, and medusae, green, red, and
blue.
All the day of the 22nd of February we
passed in the Sargasso Sea, where such fish as are partial to marine plants
find abundant nourishment. The next, the ocean had returned to its
accustomed aspect. From this time for nineteen days, from the 23rd of
February to the 12th of March, the Nautilus kept in the middle of the
Atlantic, carrying us at a constant speed of a hundred leagues in
twenty-four hours. Captain Nemo evidently intended accomplishing his
submarine programme, and I imagined that he intended, after doubling Cape
Horn, to return to the Australian seas of the Pacific. Ned Land had cause
for fear. In these large seas, void of islands, we could not attempt to
leave the boat. Nor had we any means of opposing Captain Nemo's will. Our
only course was to submit; but what we could neither gain by force nor
cunning, I liked to think might be obtained by persuasion. This voyage
ended, would he not consent to restore our liberty, under an oath never to
reveal his existence?—an oath of honour which we should have religiously
kept. But we must consider that delicate question with the Captain. But was
I free to claim this liberty? Had he not himself said from the beginning, in
the firmest manner, that the secret of his life exacted from him our lasting
imprisonment on board the Nautilus? And would not my four months' silence
appear to him a tacit acceptance of our situation? And would not a return to
the subject result in raising suspicions which might be hurtful to our
projects, if at some future time a favourable opportunity offered to return
to them?
During the nineteen days mentioned above,
no incident of any kind happened to signalise our voyage. I saw little of
the Captain; he was at work. In the library I often found his books left
open, especially those on natural history. My work on submarine depths,
conned over by him, was covered with marginal notes, often contradicting my
theories and systems; but the Captain contented himself with thus purging my
work; it was very rare for him to discuss it with me. Sometimes I heard the
melancholy tones of his organ; but only at night, in the midst of the
deepest obscurity, when the Nautilus slept upon the deserted ocean. During
this part of our voyage we sailed whole days on the surface of the waves.
The sea seemed abandoned. A few sailing-vessels, on the road to India, were
making for the Cape of Good Hope. One day we were followed by the boats of a
whaler, who, no doubt, took us for some enormous whale of great price; but
Captain Nemo did not wish the worthy fellows to lose their time and trouble,
so ended the chase by plunging under the water. Our navigation continued
until the 13th of March; that day the Nautilus was employed in taking
soundings, which greatly interested me. We had then made about 13,000
leagues since our departure from the high seas of the Pacific. The bearings
gave us 45° 37' S. lat., and 37° 53' W. long. It was the same water in which
Captain Denham of the Herald sounded 7,000 fathoms without finding the
bottom. There, too, Lieutenant Parker, of the American frigate Congress,
could not touch the bottom with 15,140 fathoms. Captain Nemo intended
seeking the bottom of the ocean by a diagonal sufficiently lengthened by
means of lateral planes placed at an angle of 45° with the water-line of the
Nautilus. Then the screw set to work at its maximum speed, its four blades
beating the waves with in describable force. Under this powerful pressure,
the hull of the Nautilus quivered like a sonorous chord and sank regularly
under the water.
At 7,000 fathoms I saw some blackish tops
rising from the midst of the waters; but these summits might belong to high
mountains like the Himalayas or Mont Blanc, even higher; and the depth of
the abyss remained incalculable. The Nautilus descended still lower, in
spite of the great pressure. I felt the steel plates tremble at the
fastenings of the bolts; its bars bent, its partitions groaned; the windows
of the saloon seemed to curve under the pressure of the waters. And this
firm structure would doubtless have yielded, if, as its Captain had said, it
had not been capable of resistance like a solid block. We had attained a
depth of 16,000 yards (four leagues), and the sides of the Nautilus then
bore a pressure of 1,600 atmospheres, that is to say, 3,200 lb. to each
square two-fifths of an inch of its surface.
"What a situation to be in!" I exclaimed.
"To overrun these deep regions where man has never trod! Look, Captain, look
at these magnificent rocks, these uninhabited grottoes, these lowest
receptacles of the globe, where life is no longer possible! What unknown
sights are here! Why should we be unable to preserve a remembrance of them?"
"Would you like to carry away more than the
remembrance?" said Captain Nemo.
"What do you mean by those words?"
"I mean to say that nothing is easier than
to make a photographic view of this submarine region."
I had not time to express my surprise at
this new proposition, when, at Captain Nemo's call, an objective was brought
into the saloon. Through the widely-opened panel, the liquid mass was bright
with electricity, which was distributed with such uniformity that not a
shadow, not a gradation, was to be seen in our manufactured light. The
Nautilus remained motionless, the force of its screw subdued by the
inclination of its planes: the instrument was propped on the bottom of the
oceanic site, and in a few seconds we had obtained a perfect negative.
But, the operation being over, Captain Nemo
said, "Let us go up; we must not abuse our position, nor expose the Nautilus
too long to such great pressure."
"Go up again!" I exclaimed.
"Hold well on."
I had not time to understand why the
Captain cautioned me thus, when I was thrown forward on to the carpet. At a
signal from the Captain, its screw was shipped, and its blades raised
vertically; the Nautilus shot into the air like a balloon, rising with
stunning rapidity, and cutting the mass of waters with a sonorous agitation.
Nothing was visible; and in four minutes it had shot through the four
leagues which separated it from the ocean, and, after emerging like a
flying-fish, fell, making the waves rebound to an enormous height.
CHAPTER XII
CACHALOTS AND WHALES
During the nights of the 13th and 14th of
March, the Nautilus returned to its southerly course. I fancied that, when
on a level with Cape Horn, he would turn the helm westward, in order to beat
the Pacific seas, and so complete the tour of the world. He did nothing of
the kind, but continued on his way to the southern regions. Where was he
going to? To the pole? It was madness! I began to think that the Captain's
temerity justified Ned Land's fears. For some time past the Canadian had not
spoken to me of his projects of flight; he was less communicative, almost
silent. I could see that this lengthened imprisonment was weighing upon him,
and I felt that rage was burning within him. When he met the Captain, his
eyes lit up with suppressed anger; and I feared that his natural violence
would lead him into some extreme. That day, the 14th of March, Conseil and
he came to me in my room. I inquired the cause of their visit.
"A simple question to ask you, sir,"
replied the Canadian.
"Speak, Ned."
"How many men are there on board the
Nautilus, do you think?"
"I cannot tell, my friend."
"I should say that its working does not
require a large crew."
"Certainly, under existing conditions, ten
men, at the most, ought to be enough."
"Well, why should there be any more?"
"Why?" I replied, looking fixedly at Ned
Land, whose meaning was easy to guess. "Because," I added, "if my surmises
are correct, and if I have well understood the Captain's existence, the
Nautilus is not only a vessel: it is also a place of refuge for those who,
like its commander, have broken every tie upon earth."
"Perhaps so," said Conseil; "but, in any
case, the Nautilus can only contain a certain number of men. Could not you,
sir, estimate their maximum?"
"How, Conseil?"
"By calculation; given the size of the
vessel, which you know, sir, and consequently the quantity of air it
contains, knowing also how much each man expends at a breath, and comparing
these results with the fact that the Nautilus is obliged to go to the
surface every twenty-four hours."
Conseil had not finished the sentence
before I saw what he was driving at.
"I understand," said I; "but that
calculation, though simple enough, can give but a very uncertain result."
"Never mind," said Ned Land urgently.
"Here it is, then," said I. "In one hour
each man consumes the oxygen contained in twenty gallons of air; and in
twenty-four, that contained in 480 gallons. We must, therefore find how many
times 480 gallons of air the Nautilus contains."
"Just so," said Conseil.
"Or," I continued, "the size of the
Nautilus being 1,500 tons; and one ton holding 200 gallons, it contains
300,000 gallons of air, which, divided by 480, gives a quotient of 625.
Which means to say, strictly speaking, that the air contained in the
Nautilus would suffice for 625 men for twenty-four hours."
"Six hundred and twenty-five!" repeated
Ned.
"But remember that all of us, passengers,
sailors, and officers included, would not form a tenth part of that number."
"Still too many for three men," murmured
Conseil.
The Canadian shook his head, passed his
hand across his forehead, and left the room without answering.
"Will you allow me to make one observation,
sir?" said Conseil. "Poor Ned is longing for everything that he can not
have. His past life is always present to him; everything that we are
forbidden he regrets. His head is full of old recollections. And we must
understand him. What has he to do here? Nothing; he is not learned like you,
sir; and has not the same taste for the beauties of the sea that we have. He
would risk everything to be able to go once more into a tavern in his own
country."
Certainly the monotony on board must seem
intolerable to the Canadian, accustomed as he was to a life of liberty and
activity. Events were rare which could rouse him to any show of spirit; but
that day an event did happen which recalled the bright days of the
harpooner. About eleven in the morning, being on the surface of the ocean,
the Nautilus fell in with a troop of whales—an encounter which did not
astonish me, knowing that these creatures, hunted to death, had taken refuge
in high latitudes.
We were seated on the platform, with a
quiet sea. The month of October in those latitudes gave us some lovely
autumnal days. It was the Canadian—he could not be mistaken—who signalled a
whale on the eastern horizon. Looking attentively, one might see its black
back rise and fall with the waves five miles from the Nautilus.
"Ah!" exclaimed Ned Land, "if I was on
board a whaler, now such a meeting would give me pleasure. It is one of
large size. See with what strength its blow-holes throw up columns of air an
steam! Confound it, why am I bound to these steel plates?"
"What, Ned," said I, "you have not
forgotten your old ideas of fishing?"
"Can a whale-fisher ever forget his old
trade, sir? Can he ever tire of the emotions caused by such a chase?"
"You have never fished in these seas, Ned?"
"Never, sir; in the northern only, and as
much in Behring as in Davis Straits."
"Then the southern whale is still unknown
to you. It is the Greenland whale you have hunted up to this time, and that
would not risk passing through the warm waters of the equator. Whales are
localised, according to their kinds, in certain seas which they never leave.
And if one of these creatures went from Behring to Davis Straits, it must be
simply because there is a passage from one sea to the other, either on the
American or the Asiatic side."
"In that case, as I have never fished in
these seas, I do not know the kind of whale frequenting them!"
"I have told you, Ned."
"A greater reason for making their
acquaintance," said Conseil.
"Look! look!" exclaimed the Canadian, "they
approach: they aggravate me; they know that I cannot get at them!"
Ned stamped his feet. His hand trembled, as
he grasped an imaginary harpoon.
"Are these cetaceans as large as those of
the northern seas?" asked he.
"Very nearly, Ned."
"Because I have seen large whales, sir,
whales measuring a hundred feet. I have even been told that those of
Hullamoch and Umgallick, of the Aleutian Islands, are sometimes a hundred
and fifty feet long."
"That seems to me exaggeration. These
creatures are only balaeaopterons, provided with dorsal fins; and, like the
cachalots, are generally much smaller than the Greenland whale."
"Ah!" exclaimed the Canadian, whose eyes
had never left the ocean, "they are coming nearer; they are in the same
water as the Nautilus."
Then, returning to the conversation, he
said:
"You spoke of the cachalot as a small
creature. I have heard of gigantic ones. They are intelligent cetacea. It is
said of some that they cover themselves with seaweed and fucus, and then are
taken for islands. People encamp upon them, and settle there; lights a
fire——"
"And build houses," said Conseil.
"Yes, joker," said Ned Land. "And one fine
day the creature plunges, carrying with it all the inhabitants to the bottom
of the sea."
"Something like the travels of Sinbad the
Sailor," I replied, laughing.
"Ah!" suddenly exclaimed Ned Land, "it is
not one whale; there are ten—there are twenty—it is a whole troop! And I not
able to do anything! hands and feet tied!"
"But, friend Ned," said Conseil, "why do
you not ask Captain Nemo's permission to chase them?"
Conseil had not finished his sentence when
Ned Land had lowered himself through the panel to seek the Captain. A few
minutes afterwards the two appeared together on the platform.
Captain Nemo watched the troop of cetacea
playing on the waters about a mile from the Nautilus.
"They are southern whales," said he; "there
goes the fortune of a whole fleet of whalers."
"Well, sir," asked the Canadian, "can I not
chase them, if only to remind me of my old trade of harpooner?"
"And to what purpose?" replied Captain
Nemo; "only to destroy! We have nothing to do with the whale-oil on board."
"But, sir," continued the Canadian, "in the
Red Sea you allowed us to follow the dugong."
"Then it was to procure fresh meat for my
crew. Here it would be killing for killing's sake. I know that is a
privilege reserved for man, but I do not approve of such murderous pastime.
In destroying the southern whale (like the Greenland whale, an inoffensive
creature), your traders do a culpable action, Master Land. They have already
depopulated the whole of Baffin's Bay, and are annihilating a class of
useful animals. Leave the unfortunate cetacea alone. They have plenty of
natural enemies—cachalots, swordfish, and sawfish—without you troubling
them."
The Captain was right. The barbarous and
inconsiderate greed of these fishermen will one day cause the disappearance
of the last whale in the ocean. Ned Land whistled "Yankee-doodle" between
his teeth, thrust his hands into his pockets, and turned his back upon us.
But Captain Nemo watched the troop of cetacea, and, addressing me, said:
"I was right in saying that whales had
natural enemies enough, without counting man. These will have plenty to do
before long. Do you see, M. Aronnax, about eight miles to leeward, those
blackish moving points?"
"Yes, Captain," I replied.
"Those are cachalots—terrible animals,
which I have met in troops of two or three hundred. As to those, they are
cruel, mischievous creatures; they would be right in exterminating them."
The Canadian turned quickly at the last
words.
"Well, Captain," said he, "it is still
time, in the interest of the whales."
"It is useless to expose one's self,
Professor. The Nautilus will disperse them. It is armed with a steel spur as
good as Master Land's harpoon, I imagine."
The Canadian did not put himself out enough
to shrug his shoulders. Attack cetacea with blows of a spur! Who had ever
heard of such a thing?
"Wait, M. Aronnax," said Captain Nemo. "We
will show you something you have never yet seen. We have no pity for these
ferocious creatures. They are nothing but mouth and teeth."
Mouth and teeth! No one could better
describe the macrocephalous cachalot, which is sometimes more than
seventy-five feet long. Its enormous head occupies one-third of its entire
body. Better armed than the whale, whose upper jaw is furnished only with
whalebone, it is supplied with twenty-five large tusks, about eight inches
long, cylindrical and conical at the top, each weighing two pounds. It is in
the upper part of this enormous head, in great cavities divided by
cartilages, that is to be found from six to eight hundred pounds of that
precious oil called spermaceti. The cachalot is a disagreeable creature,
more tadpole than fish, according to Fredol's description. It is badly
formed, the whole of its left side being (if we may say it), a "failure,"
and being only able to see with its right eye. But the formidable troop was
nearing us. They had seen the whales and were preparing to attack them. One
could judge beforehand that the cachalots would be victorious, not only
because they were better built for attack than their inoffensive
adversaries, but also because they could remain longer under water without
coming to the surface. There was only just time to go to the help of the
whales. The Nautilus went under water. Conseil, Ned Land, and I took our
places before the window in the saloon, and Captain Nemo joined the pilot in
his cage to work his apparatus as an engine of destruction. Soon I felt the
beatings of the screw quicken, and our speed increased. The battle between
the cachalots and the whales had already begun when the Nautilus arrived.
They did not at first show any fear at the sight of this new monster joining
in the conflict. But they soon had to guard against its blows. What a
battle! The Nautilus was nothing but a formidable harpoon, brandished by the
hand of its Captain. It hurled itself against the fleshy mass, passing
through from one part to the other, leaving behind it two quivering halves
of the animal. It could not feel the formidable blows from their tails upon
its sides, nor the shock which it produced itself, much more. One cachalot
killed, it ran at the next, tacked on the spot that it might not miss its
prey, going forwards and backwards, answering to its helm, plunging when the
cetacean dived into the deep waters, coming up with it when it returned to
the surface, striking it front or sideways, cutting or tearing in all
directions and at any pace, piercing it with its terrible spur. What
carnage! What a noise on the surface of the waves! What sharp hissing, and
what snorting peculiar to these enraged animals! In the midst of these
waters, generally so peaceful, their tails made perfect billows. For one
hour this wholesale massacre continued, from which the cachalots could not
escape. Several times ten or twelve united tried to crush the Nautilus by
their weight. From the window we could see their enormous mouths, studded
with tusks, and their formidable eyes. Ned Land could not contain himself;
he threatened and swore at them. We could feel them clinging to our vessel
like dogs worrying a wild boar in a copse. But the Nautilus, working its
screw, carried them here and there, or to the upper levels of the ocean,
without caring for their enormous weight, nor the powerful strain on the
vessel. At length the mass of cachalots broke up, the waves became quiet,
and I felt that we were rising to the surface. The panel opened, and we
hurried on to the platform. The sea was covered with mutilated bodies. A
formidable explosion could not have divided and torn this fleshy mass with
more violence. We were floating amid gigantic bodies, bluish on the back and
white underneath, covered with enormous protuberances. Some terrified
cachalots were flying towards the horizon. The waves were dyed red for
several miles, and the Nautilus floated in a sea of blood: Captain Nemo
joined us.
"Well, Master Land?" said he.
"Well, sir," replied the Canadian, whose
enthusiasm had somewhat calmed; "it is a terrible spectacle, certainly. But
I am not a butcher. I am a hunter, and I call this a butchery."
"It is a massacre of mischievous
creatures," replied the Captain; "and the Nautilus is not a butcher's
knife."
"I like my harpoon better," said the
Canadian.
"Every one to his own," answered the
Captain, looking fixedly at Ned Land.
I feared he would commit some act of
violence, which would end in sad consequences. But his anger was turned by
the sight of a whale which the Nautilus had just come up with. The creature
had not quite escaped from the cachalot's teeth. I recognised the southern
whale by its flat head, which is entirely black. Anatomically, it is
distinguished from the white whale and the North Cape whale by the seven
cervical vertebrae, and it has two more ribs than its congeners. The
unfortunate cetacean was lying on its side, riddled with holes from the
bites, and quite dead. From its mutilated fin still hung a young whale which
it could not save from the massacre. Its open mouth let the water flow in
and out, murmuring like the waves breaking on the shore. Captain Nemo
steered close to the corpse of the creature. Two of his men mounted its
side, and I saw, not without surprise, that they were drawing from its
breasts all the milk which they contained, that is to say, about two or
three tons. The Captain offered me a cup of the milk, which was still warm.
I could not help showing my repugnance to the drink; but he assured me that
it was excellent, and not to be distinguished from cow's milk. I tasted it,
and was of his opinion. It was a useful reserve to us, for in the shape of
salt butter or cheese it would form an agreeable variety from our ordinary
food. From that day I noticed with uneasiness that Ned Land's ill-will
towards Captain Nemo increased, and I resolved to watch the Canadian's
gestures closely.
CHAPTER XIII
THE ICEBERG
The Nautilus was steadily pursuing its
southerly course, following the fiftieth meridian with considerable speed.
Did he wish to reach the pole? I did not think so, for every attempt to
reach that point had hitherto failed. Again, the season was far advanced,
for in the Antarctic regions the 13th of March corresponds with the 13th of
September of northern regions, which begin at the equinoctial season. On the
14th of March I saw floating ice in latitude 55°, merely pale bits of debris
from twenty to twenty-five feet long, forming banks over which the sea
curled. The Nautilus remained on the surface of the ocean. Ned Land, who had
fished in the Arctic Seas, was familiar with its icebergs; but Conseil and I
admired them for the first time. In the atmosphere towards the southern
horizon stretched a white dazzling band. English whalers have given it the
name of "ice blink." However thick the clouds may be, it is always visible,
and announces the presence of an ice pack or bank. Accordingly, larger
blocks soon appeared, whose brilliancy changed with the caprices of the fog.
Some of these masses showed green veins, as if long undulating lines had
been traced with sulphate of copper; others resembled enormous amethysts
with the light shining through them. Some reflected the light of day upon a
thousand crystal facets. Others shaded with vivid calcareous reflections
resembled a perfect town of marble. The more we neared the south the more
these floating islands increased both in number and importance.
At 60° lat. every pass had disappeared.
But, seeking carefully, Captain Nemo soon found a narrow opening, through
which he boldly slipped, knowing, however, that it would close behind him.
Thus, guided by this clever hand, the Nautilus passed through all the ice
with a precision which quite charmed Conseil; icebergs or mountains,
ice-fields or smooth plains, seeming to have no limits, drift-ice or
floating ice-packs, plains broken up, called palchs when they are circular,
and streams when they are made up of long strips. The temperature was very
low; the thermometer exposed to the air marked 2 deg. or 3° below zero, but
we were warmly clad with fur, at the expense of the sea-bear and seal. The
interior of the Nautilus, warmed regularly by its electric apparatus, defied
the most intense cold. Besides, it would only have been necessary to go some
yards beneath the waves to find a more bearable temperature. Two months
earlier we should have had perpetual daylight in these latitudes; but
already we had had three or four hours of night, and by and by there would
be six months of darkness in these circumpolar regions. On the 15th of March
we were in the latitude of New Shetland and South Orkney. The Captain told
me that formerly numerous tribes of seals inhabited them; but that English
and American whalers, in their rage for destruction, massacred both old and
young; thus, where there was once life and animation, they had left silence
and death.
About eight o'clock on the morning of the
16th of March the Nautilus, following the fifty-fifth meridian, cut the
Antarctic polar circle. Ice surrounded us on all sides, and closed the
horizon. But Captain Nemo went from one opening to another, still going
higher. I cannot express my astonishment at the beauties of these new
regions. The ice took most surprising forms. Here the grouping formed an
oriental town, with innumerable mosques and minarets; there a fallen city
thrown to the earth, as it were, by some convulsion of nature. The whole
aspect was constantly changed by the oblique rays of the sun, or lost in the
greyish fog amidst hurricanes of snow. Detonations and falls were heard on
all sides, great overthrows of icebergs, which altered the whole landscape
like a diorama. Often seeing no exit, I thought we were definitely
prisoners; but, instinct guiding him at the slightest indication, Captain
Nemo would discover a new pass. He was never mistaken when he saw the thin
threads of bluish water trickling along the ice-fields; and I had no doubt
that he had already ventured into the midst of these Antarctic seas before.
On the 16th of March, however, the ice-fields absolutely blocked our road.
It was not the iceberg itself, as yet, but vast fields cemented by the cold.
But this obstacle could not stop Captain Nemo: he hurled himself against it
with frightful violence. The Nautilus entered the brittle mass like a wedge,
and split it with frightful crackings. It was the battering ram of the
ancients hurled by infinite strength. The ice, thrown high in the air, fell
like hail around us. By its own power of impulsion our apparatus made a
canal for itself; some times carried away by its own impetus, it lodged on
the ice-field, crushing it with its weight, and sometimes buried beneath it,
dividing it by a simple pitching movement, producing large rents in it.
Violent gales assailed us at this time, accompanied by thick fogs, through
which, from one end of the platform to the other, we could see nothing. The
wind blew sharply from all parts of the compass, and the snow lay in such
hard heaps that we had to break it with blows of a pickaxe. The temperature
was always at 5 deg. below zero; every outward part of the Nautilus was
covered with ice. A rigged vessel would have been entangled in the blocked
up gorges. A vessel without sails, with electricity for its motive power,
and wanting no coal, could alone brave such high latitudes. At length, on
the 18th of March, after many useless assaults, the Nautilus was positively
blocked. It was no longer either streams, packs, or ice-fields, but an
interminable and immovable barrier, formed by mountains soldered together.
"An iceberg!" said the Canadian to me.
I knew that to Ned Land, as well as to all
other navigators who had preceded us, this was an inevitable obstacle. The
sun appearing for an instant at noon, Captain Nemo took an observation as
near as possible, which gave our situation at 51° 30' long. and 67° 39' of
S. lat. We had advanced one degree more in this Antarctic region. Of the
liquid surface of the sea there was no longer a glimpse. Under the spur of
the Nautilus lay stretched a vast plain, entangled with confused blocks.
Here and there sharp points and slender needles rising to a height of 200
feet; further on a steep shore, hewn as it were with an axe and clothed with
greyish tints; huge mirrors, reflecting a few rays of sunshine, half drowned
in the fog. And over this desolate face of nature a stern silence reigned,
scarcely broken by the flapping of the wings of petrels and puffins.
Everything was frozen—even the noise. The Nautilus was then obliged to stop
in its adventurous course amid these fields of ice. In spite of our efforts,
in spite of the powerful means employed to break up the ice, the Nautilus
remained immovable. Generally, when we can proceed no further, we have
return still open to us; but here return was as impossible as advance, for
every pass had closed behind us; and for the few moments when we were
stationary, we were likely to be entirely blocked, which did indeed happen
about two o'clock in the afternoon, the fresh ice forming around its sides
with astonishing rapidity. I was obliged to admit that Captain Nemo was more
than imprudent. I was on the platform at that moment. The Captain had been
observing our situation for some time past, when he said to me:
"Well, sir, what do you think of this?"
"I think that we are caught, Captain."
"So, M. Aronnax, you really think that the
Nautilus cannot disengage itself?"
"With difficulty, Captain; for the season
is already too far advanced for you to reckon on the breaking of the ice."
"Ah! sir," said Captain Nemo, in an
ironical tone, "you will always be the same. You see nothing but
difficulties and obstacles. I affirm that not only can the Nautilus
disengage itself, but also that it can go further still."
"Further to the South?" I asked, looking at
the Captain.
"Yes, sir; it shall go to the pole."
"To the pole!" I exclaimed, unable to
repress a gesture of incredulity.
"Yes," replied the Captain, coldly, "to the
Antarctic pole—to that unknown point from whence springs every meridian of
the globe. You know whether I can do as I please with the Nautilus!"
Yes, I knew that. I knew that this man was
bold, even to rashness. But to conquer those obstacles which bristled round
the South Pole, rendering it more inaccessible than the North, which had not
yet been reached by the boldest navigators—was it not a mad enterprise, one
which only a maniac would have conceived? It then came into my head to ask
Captain Nemo if he had ever discovered that pole which had never yet been
trodden by a human creature?
"No, sir," he replied; "but we will
discover it together. Where others have failed, I will not fail. I have
never yet led my Nautilus so far into southern seas; but, I repeat, it shall
go further yet."
"I can well believe you, Captain," said I,
in a slightly ironical tone. "I believe you! Let us go ahead! There are no
obstacles for us! Let us smash this iceberg! Let us blow it up; and, if it
resists, let us give the Nautilus wings to fly over it!"
"Over it, sir!" said Captain Nemo, quietly;
"no, not over it, but under it!"
"Under it!" I exclaimed, a sudden idea of
the Captain's projects flashing upon my mind. I understood; the wonderful
qualities of the Nautilus were going to serve us in this superhuman
enterprise.
"I see we are beginning to understand one
another, sir," said the Captain, half smiling. "You begin to see the
possibility—I should say the success—of this attempt. That which is
impossible for an ordinary vessel is easy to the Nautilus. If a continent
lies before the pole, it must stop before the continent; but if, on the
contrary, the pole is washed by open sea, it will go even to the pole."
"Certainly," said I, carried away by the
Captain's reasoning; "if the surface of the sea is solidified by the ice,
the lower depths are free by the Providential law which has placed the
maximum of density of the waters of the ocean one degree higher than
freezing-point; and, if I am not mistaken, the portion of this iceberg which
is above the water is as one to four to that which is below."
"Very nearly, sir; for one foot of iceberg
above the sea there are three below it. If these ice mountains are not more
than 300 feet above the surface, they are not more than 900 beneath. And
what are 900 feet to the Nautilus?"
"Nothing, sir."
"It could even seek at greater depths that
uniform temperature of sea-water, and there brave with impunity the thirty
or forty degrees of surface cold."
"Just so, sir—just so," I replied, getting
animated.
"The only difficulty," continued Captain
Nemo, "is that of remaining several days without renewing our provision of
air."
"Is that all? The Nautilus has vast
reservoirs; we can fill them, and they will supply us with all the oxygen we
want."
"Well thought of, M. Aronnax," replied the
Captain, smiling. "But, not wishing you to accuse me of rashness, I will
first give you all my objections."
"Have you any more to make?"
"Only one. It is possible, if the sea
exists at the South Pole, that it may be covered; and, consequently, we
shall be unable to come to the surface."
"Good, sir! but do you forget that the
Nautilus is armed with a powerful spur, and could we not send it diagonally
against these fields of ice, which would open at the shocks."
"Ah! sir, you are full of ideas to-day."
"Besides, Captain," I added,
enthusiastically, "why should we not find the sea open at the South Pole as
well as at the North? The frozen poles of the earth do not coincide, either
in the southern or in the northern regions; and, until it is proved to the
contrary, we may suppose either a continent or an ocean free from ice at
these two points of the globe."
"I think so too, M. Aronnax," replied
Captain Nemo. "I only wish you to observe that, after having made so many
objections to my project, you are now crushing me with arguments in its
favour!"
The preparations for this audacious attempt
now began. The powerful pumps of the Nautilus were working air into the
reservoirs and storing it at high pressure. About four o'clock, Captain Nemo
announced the closing of the panels on the platform. I threw one last look
at the massive iceberg which we were going to cross. The weather was clear,
the atmosphere pure enough, the cold very great, being 12° below zero; but,
the wind having gone down, this temperature was not so unbearable. About ten
men mounted the sides of the Nautilus, armed with pickaxes to break the ice
around the vessel, which was soon free. The operation was quickly performed,
for the fresh ice was still very thin. We all went below. The usual
reservoirs were filled with the newly-liberated water, and the Nautilus soon
descended. I had taken my place with Conseil in the saloon; through the open
window we could see the lower beds of the Southern Ocean. The thermometer
went up, the needle of the compass deviated on the dial. At about 900 feet,
as Captain Nemo had foreseen, we were floating beneath the undulating bottom
of the iceberg. But the Nautilus went lower still—it went to the depth of
four hundred fathoms. The temperature of the water at the surface showed
twelve degrees, it was now only ten; we had gained two. I need not say the
temperature of the Nautilus was raised by its heating apparatus to a much
higher degree; every manoeuvre was accomplished with wonderful precision.
"We shall pass it, if you please, sir,"
said Conseil.
"I believe we shall," I said, in a tone of
firm conviction.
In this open sea, the Nautilus had taken
its course direct to the pole, without leaving the fifty-second meridian.
From 67° 30' to 90 deg., twenty-two degrees and a half of latitude remained
to travel; that is, about five hundred leagues. The Nautilus kept up a mean
speed of twenty-six miles an hour—the speed of an express train. If that was
kept up, in forty hours we should reach the pole.
For a part of the night the novelty of the
situation kept us at the window. The sea was lit with the electric lantern;
but it was deserted; fishes did not sojourn in these imprisoned waters; they
only found there a passage to take them from the Antarctic Ocean to the open
polar sea. Our pace was rapid; we could feel it by the quivering of the long
steel body. About two in the morning I took some hours' repose, and Conseil
did the same. In crossing the waist I did not meet Captain Nemo: I supposed
him to be in the pilot's cage. The next morning, the 19th of March, I took
my post once more in the saloon. The electric log told me that the speed of
the Nautilus had been slackened. It was then going towards the surface; but
prudently emptying its reservoirs very slowly. My heart beat fast. Were we
going to emerge and regain the open polar atmosphere? No! A shock told me
that the Nautilus had struck the bottom of the iceberg, still very thick,
judging from the deadened sound. We had in deed "struck," to use a sea
expression, but in an inverse sense, and at a thousand feet deep. This would
give three thousand feet of ice above us; one thousand being above the
water-mark. The iceberg was then higher than at its borders—not a very
reassuring fact. Several times that day the Nautilus tried again, and every
time it struck the wall which lay like a ceiling above it. Sometimes it met
with but 900 yards, only 200 of which rose above the surface. It was twice
the height it was when the Nautilus had gone under the waves. I carefully
noted the different depths, and thus obtained a submarine profile of the
chain as it was developed under the water. That night no change had taken
place in our situation. Still ice between four and five hundred yards in
depth! It was evidently diminishing, but, still, what a thickness between us
and the surface of the ocean! It was then eight. According to the daily
custom on board the Nautilus, its air should have been renewed four hours
ago; but I did not suffer much, although Captain Nemo had not yet made any
demand upon his reserve of oxygen. My sleep was painful that night; hope and
fear besieged me by turns: I rose several times. The groping of the Nautilus
continued. About three in the morning, I noticed that the lower surface of
the iceberg was only about fifty feet deep. One hundred and fifty feet now
separated us from the surface of the waters. The iceberg was by degrees
becoming an ice-field, the mountain a plain. My eyes never left the
manometer. We were still rising diagonally to the surface, which sparkled
under the electric rays. The iceberg was stretching both above and beneath
into lengthening slopes; mile after mile it was getting thinner. At length,
at six in the morning of that memorable day, the 19th of March, the door of
the saloon opened, and Captain Nemo appeared.
"The sea is open!!" was all he said.
CHAPTER XIV
THE SOUTH POLE
I rushed on to the platform. Yes! the open
sea, with but a few scattered pieces of ice and moving icebergs—a long
stretch of sea; a world of birds in the air, and myriads of fishes under
those waters, which varied from intense blue to olive green, according to
the bottom. The thermometer marked 3° C. above zero. It was comparatively
spring, shut up as we were behind this iceberg, whose lengthened mass was
dimly seen on our northern horizon.
"Are we at the pole?" I asked the Captain,
with a beating heart.
"I do not know," he replied. "At noon I
will take our bearings."
"But will the sun show himself through this
fog?" said I, looking at the leaden sky.
"However little it shows, it will be
enough," replied the Captain.
About ten miles south a solitary island
rose to a height of one hundred and four yards. We made for it, but
carefully, for the sea might be strewn with banks. One hour afterwards we
had reached it, two hours later we had made the round of it. It measured
four or five miles in circumference. A narrow canal separated it from a
considerable stretch of land, perhaps a continent, for we could not see its
limits. The existence of this land seemed to give some colour to Maury's
theory. The ingenious American has remarked that, between the South Pole and
the sixtieth parallel, the sea is covered with floating ice of enormous
size, which is never met with in the North Atlantic. From this fact he has
drawn the conclusion that the Antarctic Circle encloses considerable
continents, as icebergs cannot form in open sea, but only on the coasts.
According to these calculations, the mass of ice surrounding the southern
pole forms a vast cap, the circumference of which must be, at least, 2,500
miles. But the Nautilus, for fear of running aground, had stopped about
three cable-lengths from a strand over which reared a superb heap of rocks.
The boat was launched; the Captain, two of his men, bearing instruments,
Conseil, and myself were in it. It was ten in the morning. I had not seen
Ned Land. Doubtless the Canadian did not wish to admit the presence of the
South Pole. A few strokes of the oar brought us to the sand, where we ran
ashore. Conseil was going to jump on to the land, when I held him back.
"Sir," said I to Captain Nemo, "to you
belongs the honour of first setting foot on this land."
"Yes, sir," said the Captain, "and if I do
not hesitate to tread this South Pole, it is because, up to this time, no
human being has left a trace there."
Saying this, he jumped lightly on to the
sand. His heart beat with emotion. He climbed a rock, sloping to a little
promontory, and there, with his arms crossed, mute and motionless, and with
an eager look, he seemed to take possession of these southern regions. After
five minutes passed in this ecstasy, he turned to us.
"When you like, sir."
I landed, followed by Conseil, leaving the
two men in the boat. For a long way the soil was composed of a reddish sandy
stone, something like crushed brick, scoriae, streams of lava, and
pumice-stones. One could not mistake its volcanic origin. In some parts,
slight curls of smoke emitted a sulphurous smell, proving that the internal
fires had lost nothing of their expansive powers, though, having climbed a
high acclivity, I could see no volcano for a radius of several miles. We
know that in those Antarctic countries, James Ross found two craters, the
Erebus and Terror, in full activity, on the 167th meridian, latitude 77°
32'. The vegetation of this desolate continent seemed to me much restricted.
Some lichens lay upon the black rocks; some microscopic plants, rudimentary
diatomas, a kind of cells placed between two quartz shells; long purple and
scarlet weed, supported on little swimming bladders, which the breaking of
the waves brought to the shore. These constituted the meagre flora of this
region. The shore was strewn with molluscs, little mussels, and limpets. I
also saw myriads of northern clios, one-and-a-quarter inches long, of which
a whale would swallow a whole world at a mouthful; and some perfect
sea-butterflies, animating the waters on the skirts of the shore.
There appeared on the high bottoms some
coral shrubs, of the kind which, according to James Ross, live in the
Antarctic seas to the depth of more than 1,000 yards. Then there were little
kingfishers and starfish studding the soil. But where life abounded most was
in the air. There thousands of birds fluttered and flew of all kinds,
deafening us with their cries; others crowded the rock, looking at us as we
passed by without fear, and pressing familiarly close by our feet. There
were penguins, so agile in the water, heavy and awkward as they are on the
ground; they were uttering harsh cries, a large assembly, sober in gesture,
but extravagant in clamour. Albatrosses passed in the air, the expanse of
their wings being at least four yards and a half, and justly called the
vultures of the ocean; some gigantic petrels, and some damiers, a kind of
small duck, the underpart of whose body is black and white; then there were
a whole series of petrels, some whitish, with brown-bordered wings, others
blue, peculiar to the Antarctic seas, and so oily, as I told Conseil, that
the inhabitants of the Ferroe Islands had nothing to do before lighting them
but to put a wick in.
"A little more," said Conseil, "and they
would be perfect lamps! After that, we cannot expect Nature to have
previously furnished them with wicks!"
About half a mile farther on the soil was
riddled with ruffs' nests, a sort of laying-ground, out of which many birds
were issuing. Captain Nemo had some hundreds hunted. They uttered a cry like
the braying of an ass, were about the size of a goose, slate-colour on the
body, white beneath, with a yellow line round their throats; they allowed
themselves to be killed with a stone, never trying to escape. But the fog
did not lift, and at eleven the sun had not yet shown itself. Its absence
made me uneasy. Without it no observations were possible. How, then, could
we decide whether we had reached the pole? When I rejoined Captain Nemo, I
found him leaning on a piece of rock, silently watching the sky. He seemed
impatient and vexed. But what was to be done? This rash and powerful man
could not command the sun as he did the sea. Noon arrived without the orb of
day showing itself for an instant. We could not even tell its position
behind the curtain of fog; and soon the fog turned to snow.
"Till to-morrow," said the Captain,
quietly, and we returned to the Nautilus amid these atmospheric
disturbances.
The tempest of snow continued till the next
day. It was impossible to remain on the platform. From the saloon, where I
was taking notes of incidents happening during this excursion to the polar
continent, I could hear the cries of petrels and albatrosses sporting in the
midst of this violent storm. The Nautilus did not remain motionless, but
skirted the coast, advancing ten miles more to the south in the half-light
left by the sun as it skirted the edge of the horizon. The next day, the
20th of March, the snow had ceased. The cold was a little greater, the
thermometer showing 2° below zero. The fog was rising, and I hoped that that
day our observations might be taken. Captain Nemo not having yet appeared,
the boat took Conseil and myself to land. The soil was still of the same
volcanic nature; everywhere were traces of lava, scoriae, and basalt; but
the crater which had vomited them I could not see. Here, as lower down, this
continent was alive with myriads of birds. But their rule was now divided
with large troops of sea-mammals, looking at us with their soft eyes. There
were several kinds of seals, some stretched on the earth, some on flakes of
ice, many going in and out of the sea. They did not flee at our approach,
never having had anything to do with man; and I reckoned that there were
provisions there for hundreds of vessels.
"Sir," said Conseil, "will you tell me the
names of these creatures?"
"They are seals and morses."
It was now eight in the morning. Four hours
remained to us before the sun could be observed with advantage. I directed
our steps towards a vast bay cut in the steep granite shore. There, I can
aver that earth and ice were lost to sight by the numbers of sea-mammals
covering them, and I involuntarily sought for old Proteus, the mythological
shepherd who watched these immense flocks of Neptune. There were more seals
than anything else, forming distinct groups, male and female, the father
watching over his family, the mother suckling her little ones, some already
strong enough to go a few steps. When they wished to change their place,
they took little jumps, made by the contraction of their bodies, and helped
awkwardly enough by their imperfect fin, which, as with the lamantin, their
cousins, forms a perfect forearm. I should say that, in the water, which is
their element—the spine of these creatures is flexible; with smooth and
close skin and webbed feet—they swim admirably. In resting on the earth they
take the most graceful attitudes. Thus the ancients, observing their soft
and expressive looks, which cannot be surpassed by the most beautiful look a
woman can give, their clear voluptuous eyes, their charming positions, and
the poetry of their manners, metamorphosed them, the male into a triton and
the female into a mermaid. I made Conseil notice the considerable
development of the lobes of the brain in these interesting cetaceans. No
mammal, except man, has such a quantity of brain matter; they are also
capable of receiving a certain amount of education, are easily domesticated,
and I think, with other naturalists, that if properly taught they would be
of great service as fishing-dogs. The greater part of them slept on the
rocks or on the sand. Amongst these seals, properly so called, which have no
external ears (in which they differ from the otter, whose ears are
prominent), I noticed several varieties of seals about three yards long,
with a white coat, bulldog heads, armed with teeth in both jaws, four
incisors at the top and four at the bottom, and two large canine teeth in
the shape of a fleur-de-lis. Amongst them glided sea-elephants, a kind of
seal, with short, flexible trunks. The giants of this species measured
twenty feet round and ten yards and a half in length; but they did not move
as we approached.
"These creatures are not dangerous?" asked
Conseil.
"No; not unless you attack them. When they
have to defend their young their rage is terrible, and it is not uncommon
for them to break the fishing-boats to pieces."
"They are quite right," said Conseil.
"I do not say they are not."
Two miles farther on we were stopped by the
promontory which shelters the bay from the southerly winds. Beyond it we
heard loud bellowings such as a troop of ruminants would produce.
"Good!" said Conseil; "a concert of bulls!"
"No; a concert of morses."
"They are fighting!"
"They are either fighting or playing."
We now began to climb the blackish rocks,
amid unforeseen stumbles, and over stones which the ice made slippery. More
than once I rolled over at the expense of my loins. Conseil, more prudent or
more steady, did not stumble, and helped me up, saying:
"If, sir, you would have the kindness to
take wider steps, you would preserve your equilibrium better."
Arrived at the upper ridge of the
promontory, I saw a vast white plain covered with morses. They were playing
amongst themselves, and what we heard were bellowings of pleasure, not of
anger.
As I passed these curious animals I could
examine them leisurely, for they did not move. Their skins were thick and
rugged, of a yellowish tint, approaching to red; their hair was short and
scant. Some of them were four yards and a quarter long. Quieter and less
timid than their cousins of the north, they did not, like them, place
sentinels round the outskirts of their encampment. After examining this city
of morses, I began to think of returning. It was eleven o'clock, and, if
Captain Nemo found the conditions favourable for observations, I wished to
be present at the operation. We followed a narrow pathway running along the
summit of the steep shore. At half-past eleven we had reached the place
where we landed. The boat had run aground, bringing the Captain. I saw him
standing on a block of basalt, his instruments near him, his eyes fixed on
the northern horizon, near which the sun was then describing a lengthened
curve. I took my place beside him, and waited without speaking. Noon
arrived, and, as before, the sun did not appear. It was a fatality.
Observations were still wanting. If not accomplished to-morrow, we must give
up all idea of taking any. We were indeed exactly at the 20th of March.
To-morrow, the 21st, would be the equinox; the sun would disappear behind
the horizon for six months, and with its disappearance the long polar night
would begin. Since the September equinox it had emerged from the northern
horizon, rising by lengthened spirals up to the 21st of December. At this
period, the summer solstice of the northern regions, it had begun to
descend; and to-morrow was to shed its last rays upon them. I communicated
my fears and observations to Captain Nemo.
"You are right, M. Aronnax," said he; "if
to-morrow I cannot take the altitude of the sun, I shall not be able to do
it for six months. But precisely because chance has led me into these seas
on the 21st of March, my bearings will be easy to take, if at twelve we can
see the sun."
"Why, Captain?"
"Because then the orb of day described such
lengthened curves that it is difficult to measure exactly its height above
the horizon, and grave errors may be made with instruments."
"What will you do then?"
"I shall only use my chronometer," replied
Captain Nemo. "If to-morrow, the 21st of March, the disc of the sun,
allowing for refraction, is exactly cut by the northern horizon, it will
show that I am at the South Pole."
"Just so," said I. "But this statement is
not mathematically correct, because the equinox does not necessarily begin
at noon."
"Very likely, sir; but the error will not
be a hundred yards and we do not want more. Till to-morrow, then!"
Captain Nemo returned on board. Conseil and
I remained to survey the shore, observing and studying until five o'clock.
Then I went to bed, not, however, without invoking, like the Indian, the
favour of the radiant orb. The next day, the 21st of March, at five in the
morning, I mounted the platform. I found Captain Nemo there.
"The weather is lightening a little," said
he. "I have some hope. After breakfast we will go on shore and choose a post
for observation."
That point settled, I sought Ned Land. I
wanted to take him with me. But the obstinate Canadian refused, and I saw
that his taciturnity and his bad humour grew day by day. After all, I was
not sorry for his obstinacy under the circumstances. Indeed, there were too
many seals on shore, and we ought not to lay such temptation in this
unreflecting fisherman's way. Breakfast over, we went on shore. The Nautilus
had gone some miles further up in the night. It was a whole league from the
coast, above which reared a sharp peak about five hundred yards high. The
boat took with me Captain Nemo, two men of the crew, and the instruments,
which consisted of a chronometer, a telescope, and a barometer. While
crossing, I saw numerous whales belonging to the three kinds peculiar to the
southern seas; the whale, or the English "right whale," which has no dorsal
fin; the "humpback," with reeved chest and large, whitish fins, which, in
spite of its name, do not form wings; and the fin-back, of a yellowish
brown, the liveliest of all the cetacea. This powerful creature is heard a
long way off when he throws to a great height columns of air and vapour,
which look like whirlwinds of smoke. These different mammals were disporting
themselves in troops in the quiet waters; and I could see that this basin of
the Antarctic Pole serves as a place of refuge to the cetacea too closely
tracked by the hunters. I also noticed large medusae floating between the
reeds.
At nine we landed; the sky was brightening,
the clouds were flying to the south, and the fog seemed to be leaving the
cold surface of the waters. Captain Nemo went towards the peak, which he
doubtless meant to be his observatory. It was a painful ascent over the
sharp lava and the pumice-stones, in an atmosphere often impregnated with a
sulphurous smell from the smoking cracks. For a man unaccustomed to walk on
land, the Captain climbed the steep slopes with an agility I never saw
equalled and which a hunter would have envied. We were two hours getting to
the summit of this peak, which was half porphyry and half basalt. From
thence we looked upon a vast sea which, towards the north, distinctly traced
its boundary line upon the sky. At our feet lay fields of dazzling
whiteness. Over our heads a pale azure, free from fog. To the north the disc
of the sun seemed like a ball of fire, already horned by the cutting of the
horizon. From the bosom of the water rose sheaves of liquid jets by
hundreds. In the distance lay the Nautilus like a cetacean asleep on the
water. Behind us, to the south and east, an immense country and a chaotic
heap of rocks and ice, the limits of which were not visible. On arriving at
the summit Captain Nemo carefully took the mean height of the barometer, for
he would have to consider that in taking his observations. At a quarter to
twelve the sun, then seen only by refraction, looked like a golden disc
shedding its last rays upon this deserted continent and seas which never man
had yet ploughed. Captain Nemo, furnished with a lenticular glass which, by
means of a mirror, corrected the refraction, watched the orb sinking below
the horizon by degrees, following a lengthened diagonal. I held the
chronometer. My heart beat fast. If the disappearance of the half-disc of
the sun coincided with twelve o'clock on the chronometer, we were at the
pole itself.
"Twelve!" I exclaimed.
"The South Pole!" replied Captain Nemo, in
a grave voice, handing me the glass, which showed the orb cut in exactly
equal parts by the horizon.
I looked at the last rays crowning the
peak, and the shadows mounting by degrees up its slopes. At that moment
Captain Nemo, resting with his hand on my shoulder, said:
"I, Captain Nemo, on this 21st day of
March, 1868, have reached the South Pole on the ninetieth degree; and I take
possession of this part of the globe, equal to one-sixth of the known
continents."
"In whose name, Captain?"
"In my own, sir!"
Saying which, Captain Nemo unfurled a black
banner, bearing an "N" in gold quartered on its bunting. Then, turning
towards the orb of day, whose last rays lapped the horizon of the sea, he
exclaimed:
"Adieu, sun! Disappear, thou radiant orb!
rest beneath this open sea, and let a night of six months spread its shadows
over my new domains!"
CHAPTER XV
ACCIDENT OR INCIDENT?
The next day, the 22nd of March, at six in
the morning, preparations for departure were begun. The last gleams of
twilight were melting into night. The cold was great, the constellations
shone with wonderful intensity. In the zenith glittered that wondrous
Southern Cross—the polar bear of Antarctic regions. The thermometer showed
120 below zero, and when the wind freshened it was most biting. Flakes of
ice increased on the open water. The sea seemed everywhere alike. Numerous
blackish patches spread on the surface, showing the formation of fresh ice.
Evidently the southern basin, frozen during the six winter months, was
absolutely inaccessible. What became of the whales in that time? Doubtless
they went beneath the icebergs, seeking more practicable seas. As to the
seals and morses, accustomed to live in a hard climate, they remained on
these icy shores. These creatures have the instinct to break holes in the
ice-field and to keep them open. To these holes they come for breath; when
the birds, driven away by the cold, have emigrated to the north, these sea
mammals remain sole masters of the polar continent. But the reservoirs were
filling with water, and the Nautilus was slowly descending. At 1,000 feet
deep it stopped; its screw beat the waves, and it advanced straight towards
the north at a speed of fifteen miles an hour. Towards night it was already
floating under the immense body of the iceberg. At three in the morning I
was awakened by a violent shock. I sat up in my bed and listened in the
darkness, when I was thrown into the middle of the room. The Nautilus, after
having struck, had rebounded violently. I groped along the partition, and by
the staircase to the saloon, which was lit by the luminous ceiling. The
furniture was upset. Fortunately the windows were firmly set, and had held
fast. The pictures on the starboard side, from being no longer vertical,
were clinging to the paper, whilst those of the port side were hanging at
least a foot from the wall. The Nautilus was lying on its starboard side
perfectly motionless. I heard footsteps, and a confusion of voices; but
Captain Nemo did not appear. As I was leaving the saloon, Ned Land and
Conseil entered.
"What is the matter?" said I, at once.
"I came to ask you, sir," replied Conseil.
"Confound it!" exclaimed the Canadian, "I
know well enough! The Nautilus has struck; and, judging by the way she lies,
I do not think she will right herself as she did the first time in Torres
Straits."
"But," I asked, "has she at least come to
the surface of the sea?"
"We do not know," said Conseil.
"It is easy to decide," I answered. I
consulted the manometer. To my great surprise, it showed a depth of more
than 180 fathoms. "What does that mean?" I exclaimed.
"We must ask Captain Nemo," said Conseil.
"But where shall we find him?" said Ned
Land.
"Follow me," said I, to my companions.
We left the saloon. There was no one in the
library. At the centre staircase, by the berths of the ship's crew, there
was no one. I thought that Captain Nemo must be in the pilot's cage. It was
best to wait. We all returned to the saloon. For twenty minutes we remained
thus, trying to hear the slightest noise which might be made on board the
Nautilus, when Captain Nemo entered. He seemed not to see us; his face,
generally so impassive, showed signs of uneasiness. He watched the compass
silently, then the manometer; and, going to the planisphere, placed his
finger on a spot representing the southern seas. I would not interrupt him;
but, some minutes later, when he turned towards me, I said, using one of his
own expressions in the Torres Straits:
"An incident, Captain?"
"No, sir; an accident this time."
"Serious?"
"Perhaps."
"Is the danger immediate?"
"No."
"The Nautilus has stranded?"
"Yes."
"And this has happened—how?"
"From a caprice of nature, not from the
ignorance of man. Not a mistake has been made in the working. But we cannot
prevent equilibrium from producing its effects. We may brave human laws, but
we cannot resist natural ones."
Captain Nemo had chosen a strange moment
for uttering this philosophical reflection. On the whole, his answer helped
me little.
"May I ask, sir, the cause of this
accident?"
"An enormous block of ice, a whole
mountain, has turned over," he replied. "When icebergs are undermined at
their base by warmer water or reiterated shocks their centre of gravity
rises, and the whole thing turns over. This is what has happened; one of
these blocks, as it fell, struck the Nautilus, then, gliding under its hull,
raised it with irresistible force, bringing it into beds which are not so
thick, where it is lying on its side."
"But can we not get the Nautilus off by
emptying its reservoirs, that it might regain its equilibrium?"
"That, sir, is being done at this moment.
You can hear the pump working. Look at the needle of the manometer; it shows
that the Nautilus is rising, but the block of ice is floating with it; and,
until some obstacle stops its ascending motion, our position cannot be
altered."
Indeed, the Nautilus still held the same
position to starboard; doubtless it would right itself when the block
stopped. But at this moment who knows if we may not be frightfully crushed
between the two glassy surfaces? I reflected on all the consequences of our
position. Captain Nemo never took his eyes off the manometer. Since the fall
of the iceberg, the Nautilus had risen about a hundred and fifty feet, but
it still made the same angle with the perpendicular. Suddenly a slight
movement was felt in the hold. Evidently it was righting a little. Things
hanging in the saloon were sensibly returning to their normal position. The
partitions were nearing the upright. No one spoke. With beating hearts we
watched and felt the straightening. The boards became horizontal under our
feet. Ten minutes passed.
"At last we have righted!" I exclaimed.
"Yes," said Captain Nemo, going to the door
of the saloon.
"But are we floating?" I asked.
"Certainly," he replied; "since the
reservoirs are not empty; and, when empty, the Nautilus must rise to the
surface of the sea."
We were in open sea; but at a distance of
about ten yards, on either side of the Nautilus, rose a dazzling wall of
ice. Above and beneath the same wall. Above, because the lower surface of
the iceberg stretched over us like an immense ceiling. Beneath, because the
overturned block, having slid by degrees, had found a resting-place on the
lateral walls, which kept it in that position. The Nautilus was really
imprisoned in a perfect tunnel of ice more than twenty yards in breadth,
filled with quiet water. It was easy to get out of it by going either
forward or backward, and then make a free passage under the iceberg, some
hundreds of yards deeper. The luminous ceiling had been extinguished, but
the saloon was still resplendent with intense light. It was the powerful
reflection from the glass partition sent violently back to the sheets of the
lantern. I cannot describe the effect of the voltaic rays upon the great
blocks so capriciously cut; upon every angle, every ridge, every facet was
thrown a different light, according to the nature of the veins running
through the ice; a dazzling mine of gems, particularly of sapphires, their
blue rays crossing with the green of the emerald. Here and there were opal
shades of wonderful softness, running through bright spots like diamonds of
fire, the brilliancy of which the eye could not bear. The power of the
lantern seemed increased a hundredfold, like a lamp through the lenticular
plates of a first-class lighthouse.
"How beautiful! how beautiful!" cried
Conseil.
"Yes," I said, "it is a wonderful sight. Is
it not, Ned?"
"Yes, confound it! Yes," answered Ned Land,
"it is superb! I am mad at being obliged to admit it. No one has ever seen
anything like it; but the sight may cost us dear. And, if I must say all, I
think we are seeing here things which God never intended man to see."
Ned was right, it was too beautiful.
Suddenly a cry from Conseil made me turn.
"What is it?" I asked.
"Shut your eyes, sir! Do not look, sir!"
Saying which, Conseil clapped his hands over his eyes.
"But what is the matter, my boy?"
"I am dazzled, blinded."
My eyes turned involuntarily towards the
glass, but I could not stand the fire which seemed to devour them. I
understood what had happened. The Nautilus had put on full speed. All the
quiet lustre of the ice-walls was at once changed into flashes of lightning.
The fire from these myriads of diamonds was blinding. It required some time
to calm our troubled looks. At last the hands were taken down.
"Faith, I should never have believed it,"
said Conseil.
It was then five in the morning; and at
that moment a shock was felt at the bows of the Nautilus. I knew that its
spur had struck a block of ice. It must have been a false manoeuvre, for
this submarine tunnel, obstructed by blocks, was not very easy navigation. I
thought that Captain Nemo, by changing his course, would either turn these
obstacles or else follow the windings of the tunnel. In any case, the road
before us could not be entirely blocked. But, contrary to my expectations,
the Nautilus took a decided retrograde motion.
"We are going backwards?" said Conseil.
"Yes," I replied. "This end of the tunnel
can have no egress."
"And then?"
"Then," said I, "the working is easy. We
must go back again, and go out at the southern opening. That is all."
In speaking thus, I wished to appear more
confident than I really was. But the retrograde motion of the Nautilus was
increasing; and, reversing the screw, it carried us at great speed.
"It will be a hindrance," said Ned.
"What does it matter, some hours more or
less, provided we get out at last?"
"Yes," repeated Ned Land, "provided we do
get out at last!"
For a short time I walked from the saloon
to the library. My companions were silent. I soon threw myself on an
ottoman, and took a book, which my eyes overran mechanically. A quarter of
an hour after, Conseil, approaching me, said, "Is what you are reading very
interesting, sir?"
"Very interesting!" I replied.
"I should think so, sir. It is your own
book you are reading."
"My book?"
And indeed I was holding in my hand the
work on the Great Submarine Depths. I did not even dream of it. I closed the
book and returned to my walk. Ned and Conseil rose to go.
"Stay here, my friends," said I, detaining
them. "Let us remain together until we are out of this block."
"As you please, sir," Conseil replied.
Some hours passed. I often looked at the
instruments hanging from the partition. The manometer showed that the
Nautilus kept at a constant depth of more than three hundred yards; the
compass still pointed to south; the log indicated a speed of twenty miles an
hour, which, in such a cramped space, was very great. But Captain Nemo knew
that he could not hasten too much, and that minutes were worth ages to us.
At twenty-five minutes past eight a second shock took place, this time from
behind. I turned pale. My companions were close by my side. I seized
Conseil's hand. Our looks expressed our feelings better than words. At this
moment the Captain entered the saloon. I went up to him.
"Our course is barred southward?" I asked.
"Yes, sir. The iceberg has shifted and
closed every outlet."
"We are blocked up then?"
"Yes."
CHAPTER XVI
WANT OF AIR
Thus around the Nautilus, above and below,
was an impenetrable wall of ice. We were prisoners to the iceberg. I watched
the Captain. His countenance had resumed its habitual imperturbability.
"Gentlemen," he said calmly, "there are two
ways of dying in the circumstances in which we are placed." (This puzzling
person had the air of a mathematical professor lecturing to his pupils.)
"The first is to be crushed; the second is to die of suffocation. I do not
speak of the possibility of dying of hunger, for the supply of provisions in
the Nautilus will certainly last longer than we shall. Let us, then,
calculate our chances."
"As to suffocation, Captain," I replied,
"that is not to be feared, because our reservoirs are full."
"Just so; but they will only yield two
days' supply of air. Now, for thirty-six hours we have been hidden under the
water, and already the heavy atmosphere of the Nautilus requires renewal. In
forty-eight hours our reserve will be exhausted."
"Well, Captain, can we be delivered before
forty-eight hours?"
"We will attempt it, at least, by piercing
the wall that surrounds us."
"On which side?"
"Sound will tell us. I am going to run the
Nautilus aground on the lower bank, and my men will attack the iceberg on
the side that is least thick."
Captain Nemo went out. Soon I discovered by
a hissing noise that the water was entering the reservoirs. The Nautilus
sank slowly, and rested on the ice at a depth of 350 yards, the depth at
which the lower bank was immersed.
"My friends," I said, "our situation is
serious, but I rely on your courage and energy."
"Sir," replied the Canadian, "I am ready to
do anything for the general safety."
"Good! Ned," and I held out my hand to the
Canadian.
"I will add," he continued, "that, being as
handy with the pickaxe as with the harpoon, if I can be useful to the
Captain, he can command my services."
"He will not refuse your help. Come, Ned!"
I led him to the room where the crew of the
Nautilus were putting on their cork-jackets. I told the Captain of Ned's
proposal, which he accepted. The Canadian put on his sea-costume, and was
ready as soon as his companions. When Ned was dressed, I re-entered the
drawing-room, where the panes of glass were open, and, posted near Conseil,
I examined the ambient beds that supported the Nautilus. Some instants
after, we saw a dozen of the crew set foot on the bank of ice, and among
them Ned Land, easily known by his stature. Captain Nemo was with them.
Before proceeding to dig the walls, he took the soundings, to be sure of
working in the right direction. Long sounding lines were sunk in the side
walls, but after fifteen yards they were again stopped by the thick wall. It
was useless to attack it on the ceiling-like surface, since the iceberg
itself measured more than 400 yards in height. Captain Nemo then sounded the
lower surface. There ten yards of wall separated us from the water, so great
was the thickness of the ice-field. It was necessary, therefore, to cut from
it a piece equal in extent to the waterline of the Nautilus. There were
about 6,000 cubic yards to detach, so as to dig a hole by which we could
descend to the ice-field. The work had begun immediately and carried on with
indefatigable energy. Instead of digging round the Nautilus which would have
involved greater difficulty, Captain Nemo had an immense trench made at
eight yards from the port-quarter. Then the men set to work simultaneously
with their screws on several points of its circumference. Presently the
pickaxe attacked this compact matter vigorously, and large blocks were
detached from the mass. By a curious effect of specific gravity, these
blocks, lighter than water, fled, so to speak, to the vault of the tunnel,
that increased in thickness at the top in proportion as it diminished at the
base. But that mattered little, so long as the lower part grew thinner.
After two hours' hard work, Ned Land came in exhausted. He and his comrades
were replaced by new workers, whom Conseil and I joined. The second
lieutenant of the Nautilus superintended us. The water seemed singularly
cold, but I soon got warm handling the pickaxe. My movements were free
enough, although they were made under a pressure of thirty atmospheres. When
I re-entered, after working two hours, to take some food and rest, I found a
perceptible difference between the pure fluid with which the Rouquayrol
engine supplied me and the atmosphere of the Nautilus, already charged with
carbonic acid. The air had not been renewed for forty-eight hours, and its
vivifying qualities were considerably enfeebled. However, after a lapse of
twelve hours, we had only raised a block of ice one yard thick, on the
marked surface, which was about 600 cubic yards! Reckoning that it took
twelve hours to accomplish this much it would take five nights and four days
to bring this enterprise to a satisfactory conclusion. Five nights and four
days! And we have only air enough for two days in the reservoirs! "Without
taking into account," said Ned, "that, even if we get out of this infernal
prison, we shall also be imprisoned under the iceberg, shut out from all
possible communication with the atmosphere." True enough! Who could then
foresee the minimum of time necessary for our deliverance? We might be
suffocated before the Nautilus could regain the surface of the waves? Was it
destined to perish in this ice-tomb, with all those it enclosed? The
situation was terrible. But everyone had looked the danger in the face, and
each was determined to do his duty to the last.
As I expected, during the night a new block
a yard square was carried away, and still further sank the immense hollow.
But in the morning when, dressed in my cork-jacket, I traversed the slushy
mass at a temperature of six or seven degrees below zero, I remarked that
the side walls were gradually closing in. The beds of water farthest from
the trench, that were not warmed by the men's work, showed a tendency to
solidification. In presence of this new and imminent danger, what would
become of our chances of safety, and how hinder the solidification of this
liquid medium, that would burst the partitions of the Nautilus like glass?
I did not tell my companions of this new
danger. What was the good of damping the energy they displayed in the
painful work of escape? But when I went on board again, I told Captain Nemo
of this grave complication.
"I know it," he said, in that calm tone
which could counteract the most terrible apprehensions. "It is one danger
more; but I see no way of escaping it; the only chance of safety is to go
quicker than solidification. We must be beforehand with it, that is all."
On this day for several hours I used my
pickaxe vigorously. The work kept me up. Besides, to work was to quit the
Nautilus, and breathe directly the pure air drawn from the reservoirs, and
supplied by our apparatus, and to quit the impoverished and vitiated
atmosphere. Towards evening the trench was dug one yard deeper. When I
returned on board, I was nearly suffocated by the carbonic acid with which
the air was filled—ah! if we had only the chemical means to drive away this
deleterious gas. We had plenty of oxygen; all this water contained a
considerable quantity, and by dissolving it with our powerful piles, it
would restore the vivifying fluid. I had thought well over it; but of what
good was that, since the carbonic acid produced by our respiration had
invaded every part of the vessel? To absorb it, it was necessary to fill
some jars with caustic potash, and to shake them incessantly. Now this
substance was wanting on board, and nothing could replace it. On that
evening, Captain Nemo ought to open the taps of his reservoirs, and let some
pure air into the interior of the Nautilus; without this precaution we could
not get rid of the sense of suffocation. The next day, March 26th, I resumed
my miner's work in beginning the fifth yard. The side walls and the lower
surface of the iceberg thickened visibly. It was evident that they would
meet before the Nautilus was able to disengage itself. Despair seized me for
an instant; my pickaxe nearly fell from my hands. What was the good of
digging if I must be suffocated, crushed by the water that was turning into
stone?—a punishment that the ferocity of the savages even would not have
invented! Just then Captain Nemo passed near me. I touched his hand and
showed him the walls of our prison. The wall to port had advanced to at
least four yards from the hull of the Nautilus. The Captain understood me,
and signed me to follow him. We went on board. I took off my cork-jacket and
accompanied him into the drawing-room.
"M. Aronnax, we must attempt some desperate
means, or we shall be sealed up in this solidified water as in cement."
"Yes; but what is to be done?"
"Ah! if my Nautilus were strong enough to
bear this pressure without being crushed!"
"Well?" I asked, not catching the Captain's
idea.
"Do you not understand," he replied, "that
this congelation of water will help us? Do you not see that by its
solidification, it would burst through this field of ice that imprisons us,
as, when it freezes, it bursts the hardest stones? Do you not perceive that
it would be an agent of safety instead of destruction?"
"Yes, Captain, perhaps. But, whatever
resistance to crushing the Nautilus possesses, it could not support this
terrible pressure, and would be flattened like an iron plate."
"I know it, sir. Therefore we must not
reckon on the aid of nature, but on our own exertions. We must stop this
solidification. Not only will the side walls be pressed together; but there
is not ten feet of water before or behind the Nautilus. The congelation
gains on us on all sides."
"How long will the air in the reservoirs
last for us to breathe on board?"
The Captain looked in my face. "After
to-morrow they will be empty!"
A cold sweat came over me. However, ought I
to have been astonished at the answer? On March 22, the Nautilus was in the
open polar seas. We were at 26°. For five days we had lived on the reserve
on board. And what was left of the respirable air must be kept for the
workers. Even now, as I write, my recollection is still so vivid that an
involuntary terror seizes me and my lungs seem to be without air. Meanwhile,
Captain Nemo reflected silently, and evidently an idea had struck him; but
he seemed to reject it. At last, these words escaped his lips:
"Boiling water!" he muttered.
"Boiling water?" I cried.
"Yes, sir. We are enclosed in a space that
is relatively confined. Would not jets of boiling water, constantly injected
by the pumps, raise the temperature in this part and stay the congelation?"
"Let us try it," I said resolutely.
"Let us try it, Professor."
The thermometer then stood at 7° outside.
Captain Nemo took me to the galleys, where the vast distillatory machines
stood that furnished the drinkable water by evaporation. They filled these
with water, and all the electric heat from the piles was thrown through the
worms bathed in the liquid. In a few minutes this water reached 100°. It was
directed towards the pumps, while fresh water replaced it in proportion. The
heat developed by the troughs was such that cold water, drawn up from the
sea after only having gone through the machines, came boiling into the body
of the pump. The injection was begun, and three hours after the thermometer
marked 6° below zero outside. One degree was gained. Two hours later the
thermometer only marked 4°.
"We shall succeed," I said to the Captain,
after having anxiously watched the result of the operation.
"I think," he answered, "that we shall not
be crushed. We have no more suffocation to fear."
During the night the temperature of the
water rose to 1° below zero. The injections could not carry it to a higher
point. But, as the congelation of the sea-water produces at least 2°, I was
at least reassured against the dangers of solidification.
The next day, March 27th, six yards of ice
had been cleared, twelve feet only remaining to be cleared away. There was
yet forty-eight hours' work. The air could not be renewed in the interior of
the Nautilus. And this day would make it worse. An intolerable weight
oppressed me. Towards three o'clock in the evening this feeling rose to a
violent degree. Yawns dislocated my jaws. My lungs panted as they inhaled
this burning fluid, which became rarefied more and more. A moral torpor took
hold of me. I was powerless, almost unconscious. My brave Conseil, though
exhibiting the same symptoms and suffering in the same manner, never left
me. He took my hand and encouraged me, and I heard him murmur, "Oh! if I
could only not breathe, so as to leave more air for my master!"
Tears came into my eyes on hearing him
speak thus. If our situation to all was intolerable in the interior, with
what haste and gladness would we put on our cork-jackets to work in our
turn! Pickaxes sounded on the frozen ice-beds. Our arms ached, the skin was
torn off our hands. But what were these fatigues, what did the wounds
matter? Vital air came to the lungs! We breathed! we breathed!
All this time no one prolonged his
voluntary task beyond the prescribed time. His task accomplished, each one
handed in turn to his panting companions the apparatus that supplied him
with life. Captain Nemo set the example, and submitted first to this severe
discipline. When the time came, he gave up his apparatus to another and
returned to the vitiated air on board, calm, unflinching, unmurmuring.
On that day the ordinary work was
accomplished with unusual vigour. Only two yards remained to be raised from
the surface. Two yards only separated us from the open sea. But the
reservoirs were nearly emptied of air. The little that remained ought to be
kept for the workers; not a particle for the Nautilus. When I went back on
board, I was half suffocated. What a night! I know not how to describe it.
The next day my breathing was oppressed. Dizziness accompanied the pain in
my head and made me like a drunken man. My companions showed the same
symptoms. Some of the crew had rattling in the throat.
On that day, the sixth of our imprisonment,
Captain Nemo, finding the pickaxes work too slowly, resolved to crush the
ice-bed that still separated us from the liquid sheet. This man's coolness
and energy never forsook him. He subdued his physical pains by moral force.
By his orders the vessel was lightened,
that is to say, raised from the ice-bed by a change of specific gravity.
When it floated they towed it so as to bring it above the immense trench
made on the level of the water-line. Then, filling his reservoirs of water,
he descended and shut himself up in the hole.
Just then all the crew came on board, and
the double door of communication was shut. The Nautilus then rested on the
bed of ice, which was not one yard thick, and which the sounding leads had
perforated in a thousand places. The taps of the reservoirs were then
opened, and a hundred cubic yards of water was let in, increasing the weight
of the Nautilus to 1,800 tons. We waited, we listened, forgetting our
sufferings in hope. Our safety depended on this last chance. Notwithstanding
the buzzing in my head, I soon heard the humming sound under the hull of the
Nautilus. The ice cracked with a singular noise, like tearing paper, and the
Nautilus sank.
"We are off!" murmured Conseil in my ear.
I could not answer him. I seized his hand,
and pressed it convulsively. All at once, carried away by its frightful
overcharge, the Nautilus sank like a bullet under the waters, that is to
say, it fell as if it was in a vacuum. Then all the electric force was put
on the pumps, that soon began to let the water out of the reservoirs. After
some minutes, our fall was stopped. Soon, too, the manometer indicated an
ascending movement. The screw, going at full speed, made the iron hull
tremble to its very bolts and drew us towards the north. But if this
floating under the iceberg is to last another day before we reach the open
sea, I shall be dead first.
Half stretched upon a divan in the library,
I was suffocating. My face was purple, my lips blue, my faculties suspended.
I neither saw nor heard. All notion of time had gone from my mind. My
muscles could not contract. I do not know how many hours passed thus, but I
was conscious of the agony that was coming over me. I felt as if I was going
to die. Suddenly I came to. Some breaths of air penetrated my lungs. Had we
risen to the surface of the waves? Were we free of the iceberg? No! Ned and
Conseil, my two brave friends, were sacrificing themselves to save me. Some
particles of air still remained at the bottom of one apparatus. Instead of
using it, they had kept it for me, and, while they were being suffocated,
they gave me life, drop by drop. I wanted to push back the thing; they held
my hands, and for some moments I breathed freely. I looked at the clock; it
was eleven in the morning. It ought to be the 28th of March. The Nautilus
went at a frightful pace, forty miles an hour. It literally tore through the
water. Where was Captain Nemo? Had he succumbed? Were his companions dead
with him? At the moment the manometer indicated that we were not more than
twenty feet from the surface. A mere plate of ice separated us from the
atmosphere. Could we not break it? Perhaps. In any case the Nautilus was
going to attempt it. I felt that it was in an oblique position, lowering the
stern, and raising the bows. The introduction of water had been the means of
disturbing its equilibrium. Then, impelled by its powerful screw, it
attacked the ice-field from beneath like a formidable battering-ram. It
broke it by backing and then rushing forward against the field, which
gradually gave way; and at last, dashing suddenly against it, shot forwards
on the ice-field, that crushed beneath its weight. The panel was opened—one
might say torn off—and the pure air came in in abundance to all parts of the
Nautilus.
CHAPTER XVII
FROM CAPE HORN TO THE
AMAZON
How I got on to the platform, I have no
idea; perhaps the Canadian had carried me there. But I breathed, I inhaled
the vivifying sea-air. My two companions were getting drunk with the fresh
particles. The other unhappy men had been so long without food, that they
could not with impunity indulge in the simplest aliments that were given
them. We, on the contrary, had no end to restrain ourselves; we could draw
this air freely into our lungs, and it was the breeze, the breeze alone,
that filled us with this keen enjoyment.
"Ah!" said Conseil, "how delightful this
oxygen is! Master need not fear to breathe it. There is enough for
everybody."
Ned Land did not speak, but he opened his
jaws wide enough to frighten a shark. Our strength soon returned, and, when
I looked round me, I saw we were alone on the platform. The foreign seamen
in the Nautilus were contented with the air that circulated in the interior;
none of them had come to drink in the open air.
The first words I spoke were words of
gratitude and thankfulness to my two companions. Ned and Conseil had
prolonged my life during the last hours of this long agony. All my gratitude
could not repay such devotion.
"My friends," said I, "we are bound one to
the other for ever, and I am under infinite obligations to you."
"Which I shall take advantage of,"
exclaimed the Canadian.
"What do you mean?" said Conseil.
"I mean that I shall take you with me when
I leave this infernal Nautilus."
"Well," said Conseil, "after all this, are
we going right?"
"Yes," I replied, "for we are going the way
of the sun, and here the sun is in the north."
"No doubt," said Ned Land; "but it remains
to be seen whether he will bring the ship into the Pacific or the Atlantic
Ocean, that is, into frequented or deserted seas."
I could not answer that question, and I
feared that Captain Nemo would rather take us to the vast ocean that touches
the coasts of Asia and America at the same time. He would thus complete the
tour round the submarine world, and return to those waters in which the
Nautilus could sail freely. We ought, before long, to settle this important
point. The Nautilus went at a rapid pace. The polar circle was soon passed,
and the course shaped for Cape Horn. We were off the American point, March
31st, at seven o'clock in the evening. Then all our past sufferings were
forgotten. The remembrance of that imprisonment in the ice was effaced from
our minds. We only thought of the future. Captain Nemo did not appear again
either in the drawing-room or on the platform. The point shown each day on
the planisphere, and, marked by the lieutenant, showed me the exact
direction of the Nautilus. Now, on that evening, it was evident, to, my
great satisfaction, that we were going back to the North by the Atlantic.
The next day, April 1st, when the Nautilus ascended to the surface some
minutes before noon, we sighted land to the west. It was Terra del Fuego,
which the first navigators named thus from seeing the quantity of smoke that
rose from the natives' huts. The coast seemed low to me, but in the distance
rose high mountains. I even thought I had a glimpse of Mount Sarmiento, that
rises 2,070 yards above the level of the sea, with a very pointed summit,
which, according as it is misty or clear, is a sign of fine or of wet
weather. At this moment the peak was clearly defined against the sky. The
Nautilus, diving again under the water, approached the coast, which was only
some few miles off. From the glass windows in the drawing-room, I saw long
seaweeds and gigantic fuci and varech, of which the open polar sea contains
so many specimens, with their sharp polished filaments; they measured about
300 yards in length—real cables, thicker than one's thumb; and, having great
tenacity, they are often used as ropes for vessels. Another weed known as
velp, with leaves four feet long, buried in the coral concretions, hung at
the bottom. It served as nest and food for myriads of crustacea and
molluscs, crabs, and cuttlefish. There seals and otters had splendid
repasts, eating the flesh of fish with sea-vegetables, according to the
English fashion. Over this fertile and luxuriant ground the Nautilus passed
with great rapidity. Towards evening it approached the Falkland group, the
rough summits of which I recognised the following day. The depth of the sea
was moderate. On the shores our nets brought in beautiful specimens of sea
weed, and particularly a certain fucus, the roots of which were filled with
the best mussels in the world. Geese and ducks fell by dozens on the
platform, and soon took their places in the pantry on board.
When the last heights of the Falklands had
disappeared from the horizon, the Nautilus sank to between twenty and
twenty-five yards, and followed the American coast. Captain Nemo did not
show himself. Until the 3rd of April we did not quit the shores of
Patagonia, sometimes under the ocean, sometimes at the surface. The Nautilus
passed beyond the large estuary formed by the Uraguay. Its direction was
northwards, and followed the long windings of the coast of South America. We
had then made 1,600 miles since our embarkation in the seas of Japan. About
eleven o'clock in the morning the Tropic of Capricorn was crossed on the
thirty-seventh meridian, and we passed Cape Frio standing out to sea.
Captain Nemo, to Ned Land's great displeasure, did not like the
neighbourhood of the inhabited coasts of Brazil, for we went at a giddy
speed. Not a fish, not a bird of the swiftest kind could follow us, and the
natural curiosities of these seas escaped all observation.
This speed was kept up for several days,
and in the evening of the 9th of April we sighted the most westerly point of
South America that forms Cape San Roque. But then the Nautilus swerved
again, and sought the lowest depth of a submarine valley which is between
this Cape and Sierra Leone on the African coast. This valley bifurcates to
the parallel of the Antilles, and terminates at the mouth by the enormous
depression of 9,000 yards. In this place, the geological basin of the ocean
forms, as far as the Lesser Antilles, a cliff to three and a half miles
perpendicular in height, and, at the parallel of the Cape Verde Islands, an
other wall not less considerable, that encloses thus all the sunk continent
of the Atlantic. The bottom of this immense valley is dotted with some
mountains, that give to these submarine places a picturesque aspect. I
speak, moreover, from the manuscript charts that were in the library of the
Nautilus—charts evidently due to Captain Nemo's hand, and made after his
personal observations. For two days the desert and deep waters were visited
by means of the inclined planes. The Nautilus was furnished with long
diagonal broadsides which carried it to all elevations. But on the 11th of
April it rose suddenly, and land appeared at the mouth of the Amazon River,
a vast estuary, the embouchure of which is so considerable that it freshens
the sea-water for the distance of several leagues.
The equator was crossed. Twenty miles to
the west were the Guianas, a French territory, on which we could have found
an easy refuge; but a stiff breeze was blowing, and the furious waves would
not have allowed a single boat to face them. Ned Land understood that, no
doubt, for he spoke not a word about it. For my part, I made no allusion to
his schemes of flight, for I would not urge him to make an attempt that must
inevitably fail. I made the time pass pleasantly by interesting studies.
During the days of April 11th and 12th, the Nautilus did not leave the
surface of the sea, and the net brought in a marvellous haul of Zoophytes,
fish and reptiles. Some zoophytes had been fished up by the chain of the
nets; they were for the most part beautiful phyctallines, belonging to the
actinidian family, and among other species the phyctalis protexta, peculiar
to that part of the ocean, with a little cylindrical trunk, ornamented With
vertical lines, speckled with red dots, crowning a marvellous blossoming of
tentacles. As to the molluscs, they consisted of some I had already
observed—turritellas, olive porphyras, with regular lines intercrossed, with
red spots standing out plainly against the flesh; odd pteroceras, like
petrified scorpions; translucid hyaleas, argonauts, cuttle-fish (excellent
eating), and certain species of calmars that naturalists of antiquity have
classed amongst the flying-fish, and that serve principally for bait for
cod-fishing. I had now an opportunity of studying several species of fish on
these shores. Amongst the cartilaginous ones, petromyzons-pricka, a sort of
eel, fifteen inches long, with a greenish head, violet fins, grey-blue back,
brown belly, silvered and sown with bright spots, the pupil of the eye
encircled with gold—a curious animal, that the current of the Amazon had
drawn to the sea, for they inhabit fresh waters—tuberculated streaks, with
pointed snouts, and a long loose tail, armed with a long jagged sting;
little sharks, a yard long, grey and whitish skin, and several rows of
teeth, bent back, that are generally known by the name of pantouffles;
vespertilios, a kind of red isosceles triangle, half a yard long, to which
pectorals are attached by fleshy prolongations that make them look like
bats, but that their horny appendage, situated near the nostrils, has given
them the name of sea-unicorns; lastly, some species of balistae, the
curassavian, whose spots were of a brilliant gold colour, and the capriscus
of clear violet, and with varying shades like a pigeon's throat.
I end here this catalogue, which is
somewhat dry perhaps, but very exact, with a series of bony fish that I
observed in passing belonging to the apteronotes, and whose snout is white
as snow, the body of a beautiful black, marked with a very long loose fleshy
strip; odontognathes, armed with spikes; sardines nine inches long,
glittering with a bright silver light; a species of mackerel provided with
two anal fins; centronotes of a blackish tint, that are fished for with
torches, long fish, two yards in length, with fat flesh, white and firm,
which, when they arc fresh, taste like eel, and when dry, like smoked
salmon; labres, half red, covered with scales only at the bottom of the
dorsal and anal fins; chrysoptera, on which gold and silver blend their
brightness with that of the ruby and topaz; golden-tailed spares, the flesh
of which is extremely delicate, and whose phosphorescent properties betray
them in the midst of the waters; orange-coloured spares with long tongues;
maigres, with gold caudal fins, dark thorn-tails, anableps of Surinam, etc.
Notwithstanding this "et cetera," I must
not omit to mention fish that Conseil will long remember, and with good
reason. One of our nets had hauled up a sort of very flat ray fish, which,
with the tail cut off, formed a perfect disc, and weighed twenty ounces. It
was white underneath, red above, with large round spots of dark blue
encircled with black, very glossy skin, terminating in a bilobed fin. Laid
out on the platform, it struggled, tried to turn itself by convulsive
movements, and made so many efforts, that one last turn had nearly sent it
into the sea. But Conseil, not wishing to let the fish go, rushed to it,
and, before I could prevent him, had seized it with both hands. In a moment
he was overthrown, his legs in the air, and half his body paralysed, crying—
"Oh! master, master! help me!"
It was the first time the poor boy had
spoken to me so familiarly. The Canadian and I took him up, and rubbed his
contracted arms till he became sensible. The unfortunate Conseil had
attacked a cramp-fish of the most dangerous kind, the cumana. This odd
animal, in a medium conductor like water, strikes fish at several yards'
distance, so great is the power of its electric organ, the two principal
surfaces of which do not measure less than twenty-seven square feet. The
next day, April 12th, the Nautilus approached the Dutch coast, near the
mouth of the Maroni. There several groups of sea-cows herded together; they
were manatees, that, like the dugong and the stellera, belong to the skenian
order. These beautiful animals, peaceable and inoffensive, from eighteen to
twenty-one feet in length, weigh at least sixteen hundredweight. I told Ned
Land and Conseil that provident nature had assigned an important role to
these mammalia. Indeed, they, like the seals, are designed to graze on the
submarine prairies, and thus destroy the accumulation of weed that obstructs
the tropical rivers.
"And do you know," I added, "what has been
the result since men have almost entirely annihilated this useful race? That
the putrefied weeds have poisoned the air, and the poisoned air causes the
yellow fever, that desolates these beautiful countries. Enormous vegetations
are multiplied under the torrid seas, and the evil is irresistibly developed
from the mouth of the Rio de la Plata to Florida. If we are to believe
Toussenel, this plague is nothing to what it would be if the seas were
cleaned of whales and seals. Then, infested with poulps, medusae, and
cuttle-fish, they would become immense centres of infection, since their
waves would not possess 'these vast stomachs that God had charged to infest
the surface of the seas.'"
CHAPTER XVIII
THE POULPS
For several days the Nautilus kept off from
the American coast. Evidently it did not wish to risk the tides of the Gulf
of Mexico or of the sea of the Antilles. April 16th, we sighted Martinique
and Guadaloupe from a distance of about thirty miles. I saw their tall peaks
for an instant. The Canadian, who counted on carrying out his projects in
the Gulf, by either landing or hailing one of the numerous boats that coast
from one island to another, was quite disheartened. Flight would have been
quite practicable, if Ned Land had been able to take possession of the boat
without the Captain's knowledge. But in the open sea it could not be thought
of. The Canadian, Conseil, and I had a long conversation on this subject.
For six months we had been prisoners on board the Nautilus. We had travelled
17,000 leagues; and, as Ned Land said, there was no reason why it should
come to an end. We could hope nothing from the Captain of the Nautilus, but
only from ourselves. Besides, for some time past he had become graver, more
retired, less sociable. He seemed to shun me. I met him rarely. Formerly he
was pleased to explain the submarine marvels to me; now he left me to my
studies, and came no more to the saloon. What change had come over him? For
what cause? For my part, I did not wish to bury with me my curious and novel
studies. I had now the power to write the true book of the sea; and this
book, sooner or later, I wished to see daylight. The land nearest us was the
archipelago of the Bahamas. There rose high submarine cliffs covered with
large weeds. It was about eleven o'clock when Ned Land drew my attention to
a formidable pricking, like the sting of an ant, which was produced by means
of large seaweeds.
"Well," I said, "these are proper caverns
for poulps, and I should not be astonished to see some of these monsters."
"What!" said Conseil; "cuttlefish, real
cuttlefish of the cephalopod class?"
"No," I said, "poulps of huge dimensions."
"I will never believe that such animals
exist," said Ned.
"Well," said Conseil, with the most serious
air in the world, "I remember perfectly to have seen a large vessel drawn
under the waves by an octopus's arm."
"You saw that?" said the Canadian.
"Yes, Ned."
"With your own eyes?"
"With my own eyes."
"Where, pray, might that be?"
"At St. Malo," answered Conseil.
"In the port?" said Ned, ironically.
"No; in a church," replied Conseil.
"In a church!" cried the Canadian.
"Yes; friend Ned. In a picture representing
the poulp in question."
"Good!" said Ned Land, bursting out
laughing.
"He is quite right," I said. "I have heard
of this picture; but the subject represented is taken from a legend, and you
know what to think of legends in the matter of natural history. Besides,
when it is a question of monsters, the imagination is apt to run wild. Not
only is it supposed that these poulps can draw down vessels, but a certain
Olaus Magnus speaks of an octopus a mile long that is more like an island
than an animal. It is also said that the Bishop of Nidros was building an
altar on an immense rock. Mass finished, the rock began to walk, and
returned to the sea. The rock was a poulp. Another Bishop, Pontoppidan,
speaks also of a poulp on which a regiment of cavalry could manoeuvre.
Lastly, the ancient naturalists speak of monsters whose mouths were like
gulfs, and which were too large to pass through the Straits of Gibraltar."
"But how much is true of these stories?"
asked Conseil.
"Nothing, my friends; at least of that
which passes the limit of truth to get to fable or legend. Nevertheless,
there must be some ground for the imagination of the story-tellers. One
cannot deny that poulps and cuttlefish exist of a large species, inferior,
however, to the cetaceans. Aristotle has stated the dimensions of a
cuttlefish as five cubits, or nine feet two inches. Our fishermen frequently
see some that are more than four feet long. Some skeletons of poulps are
preserved in the museums of Trieste and Montpelier, that measure two yards
in length. Besides, according to the calculations of some naturalists, one
of these animals only six feet long would have tentacles twenty-seven feet
long. That would suffice to make a formidable monster."
"Do they fish for them in these days?"
asked Ned.
"If they do not fish for them, sailors see
them at least. One of my friends, Captain Paul Bos of Havre, has often
affirmed that he met one of these monsters of colossal dimensions in the
Indian seas. But the most astonishing fact, and which does not permit of the
denial of the existence of these gigantic animals, happened some years ago,
in 1861."
"What is the fact?" asked Ned Land.
"This is it. In 1861, to the north-east of
Teneriffe, very nearly in the same latitude we are in now, the crew of the
despatch-boat Alector perceived a monstrous cuttlefish swimming in the
waters. Captain Bouguer went near to the animal, and attacked it with
harpoon and guns, without much success, for balls and harpoons glided over
the soft flesh. After several fruitless attempts the crew tried to pass a
slip-knot round the body of the mollusc. The noose slipped as far as the
tail fins and there stopped. They tried then to haul it on board, but its
weight was so considerable that the tightness of the cord separated the tail
from the body, and, deprived of this ornament, he disappeared under the
water."
"Indeed! is that a fact?"
"An indisputable fact, my good Ned. They
proposed to name this poulp `Bouguer's cuttlefish.'"
"What length was it?" asked the Canadian.
"Did it not measure about six yards?" said
Conseil, who, posted at the window, was examining again the irregular
windings of the cliff.
"Precisely," I replied.
"Its head," rejoined Conseil, "was it not
crowned with eight tentacles, that beat the water like a nest of serpents?"
"Precisely."
"Had not its eyes, placed at the back of
its head, considerable development?"
"Yes, Conseil."
"And was not its mouth like a parrot's
beak?"
"Exactly, Conseil."
"Very well! no offence to master," he
replied, quietly; "if this is not Bouguer's cuttlefish, it is, at least, one
of its brothers."
I looked at Conseil. Ned Land hurried to
the window.
"What a horrible beast!" he cried.
I looked in my turn, and could not repress
a gesture of disgust. Before my eyes was a horrible monster worthy to figure
in the legends of the marvellous. It was an immense cuttlefish, being eight
yards long. It swam crossways in the direction of the Nautilus with great
speed, watching us with its enormous staring green eyes. Its eight arms, or
rather feet, fixed to its head, that have given the name of cephalopod to
these animals, were twice as long as its body, and were twisted like the
furies' hair. One could see the 250 air holes on the inner side of the
tentacles. The monster's mouth, a horned beak like a parrot's, opened and
shut vertically. Its tongue, a horned substance, furnished with several rows
of pointed teeth, came out quivering from this veritable pair of shears.
What a freak of nature, a bird's beak on a mollusc! Its spindle-like body
formed a fleshy mass that might weigh 4,000 to 5,000 lb.; the, varying
colour changing with great rapidity, according to the irritation of the
animal, passed successively from livid grey to reddish brown. What irritated
this mollusc? No doubt the presence of the Nautilus, more formidable than
itself, and on which its suckers or its jaws had no hold. Yet, what monsters
these poulps are! what vitality the Creator has given them! what vigour in
their movements! and they possess three hearts! Chance had brought us in
presence of this cuttlefish, and I did not wish to lose the opportunity of
carefully studying this specimen of cephalopods. I overcame the horror that
inspired me, and, taking a pencil, began to draw it.
"Perhaps this is the same which the Alector
saw," said Conseil.
"No," replied the Canadian; "for this is
whole, and the other had lost its tail."
"That is no reason," I replied. "The arms
and tails of these animals are re-formed by renewal; and in seven years the
tail of Bouguer's cuttlefish has no doubt had time to grow."
By this time other poulps appeared at the
port light. I counted seven. They formed a procession after the Nautilus,
and I heard their beaks gnashing against the iron hull. I continued my work.
These monsters kept in the water with such precision that they seemed
immovable. Suddenly the Nautilus stopped. A shock made it tremble in every
plate.
"Have we struck anything?" I asked.
"In any case," replied the Canadian, "we
shall be free, for we are floating."
The Nautilus was floating, no doubt, but it
did not move. A minute passed. Captain Nemo, followed by his lieutenant,
entered the drawing-room. I had not seen him for some time. He seemed dull.
Without noticing or speaking to us, he went to the panel, looked at the
poulps, and said something to his lieutenant. The latter went out. Soon the
panels were shut. The ceiling was lighted. I went towards the Captain.
"A curious collection of poulps?" I said.
"Yes, indeed, Mr. Naturalist," he replied;
"and we are going to fight them, man to beast."
I looked at him. I thought I had not heard
aright.
"Man to beast?" I repeated.
"Yes, sir. The screw is stopped. I think
that the horny jaws of one of the cuttlefish is entangled in the blades.
That is what prevents our moving."
"What are you going to do?"
"Rise to the surface, and slaughter this
vermin."
"A difficult enterprise."
"Yes, indeed. The electric bullets are
powerless against the soft flesh, where they do not find resistance enough
to go off. But we shall attack them with the hatchet."
"And the harpoon, sir," said the Canadian,
"if you do not refuse my help."
"I will accept it, Master Land."
"We will follow you," I said, and,
following Captain Nemo, we went towards the central staircase.
There, about ten men with boarding-hatchets
were ready for the attack. Conseil and I took two hatchets; Ned Land seized
a harpoon. The Nautilus had then risen to the surface. One of the sailors,
posted on the top ladderstep, unscrewed the bolts of the panels. But hardly
were the screws loosed, when the panel rose with great violence, evidently
drawn by the suckers of a poulp's arm. Immediately one of these arms slid
like a serpent down the opening and twenty others were above. With one blow
of the axe, Captain Nemo cut this formidable tentacle, that slid wriggling
down the ladder. Just as we were pressing one on the other to reach the
platform, two other arms, lashing the air, came down on the seaman placed
before Captain Nemo, and lifted him up with irresistible power. Captain Nemo
uttered a cry, and rushed out. We hurried after him.
What a scene! The unhappy man, seized by
the tentacle and fixed to the suckers, was balanced in the air at the
caprice of this enormous trunk. He rattled in his throat, he was stifled, he
cried, "Help! help!" These words, spoken in French, startled me! I had a
fellow-countryman on board, perhaps several! That heart-rending cry! I shall
hear it all my life. The unfortunate man was lost. Who could rescue him from
that powerful pressure? However, Captain Nemo had rushed to the poulp, and
with one blow of the axe had cut through one arm. His lieutenant struggled
furiously against other monsters that crept on the flanks of the Nautilus.
The crew fought with their axes. The Canadian, Conseil, and I buried our
weapons in the fleshy masses; a strong smell of musk penetrated the
atmosphere. It was horrible!
For one instant, I thought the unhappy man,
entangled with the poulp, would be torn from its powerful suction. Seven of
the eight arms had been cut off. One only wriggled in the air, brandishing
the victim like a feather. But just as Captain Nemo and his lieutenant threw
themselves on it, the animal ejected a stream of black liquid. We were
blinded with it. When the cloud dispersed, the cuttlefish had disappeared,
and my unfortunate countryman with it. Ten or twelve poulps now invaded the
platform and sides of the Nautilus. We rolled pell-mell into the midst of
this nest of serpents, that wriggled on the platform in the waves of blood
and ink. It seemed as though these slimy tentacles sprang up like the
hydra's heads. Ned Land's harpoon, at each stroke, was plunged into the
staring eyes of the cuttle fish. But my bold companion was suddenly
overturned by the tentacles of a monster he had not been able to avoid.
Ah! how my heart beat with emotion and
horror! The formidable beak of a cuttlefish was open over Ned Land. The
unhappy man would be cut in two. I rushed to his succour. But Captain Nemo
was before me; his axe disappeared between the two enormous jaws, and,
miraculously saved, the Canadian, rising, plunged his harpoon deep into the
triple heart of the poulp.
"I owed myself this revenge!" said the
Captain to the Canadian.
Ned bowed without replying. The combat had
lasted a quarter of an hour. The monsters, vanquished and mutilated, left us
at last, and disappeared under the waves. Captain Nemo, covered with blood,
nearly exhausted, gazed upon the sea that had swallowed up one of his
companions, and great tears gathered in his eyes.
CHAPTER XIX
THE GULF STREAM
This terrible scene of the 20th of April
none of us can ever forget. I have written it under the influence of violent
emotion. Since then I have revised the recital; I have read it to Conseil
and to the Canadian. They found it exact as to facts, but insufficient as to
effect. To paint such pictures, one must have the pen of the most
illustrious of our poets, the author of The Toilers of the Deep.
I have said that Captain Nemo wept while
watching the waves; his grief was great. It was the second companion he had
lost since our arrival on board, and what a death! That friend, crushed,
stifled, bruised by the dreadful arms of a poulp, pounded by his iron jaws,
would not rest with his comrades in the peaceful coral cemetery! In the
midst of the struggle, it was the despairing cry uttered by the unfortunate
man that had torn my heart. The poor Frenchman, forgetting his conventional
language, had taken to his own mother tongue, to utter a last appeal!
Amongst the crew of the Nautilus, associated with the body and soul of the
Captain, recoiling like him from all contact with men, I had a
fellow-countryman. Did he alone represent France in this mysterious
association, evidently composed of individuals of divers nationalities? It
was one of these insoluble problems that rose up unceasingly before my mind!
Captain Nemo entered his room, and I saw
him no more for some time. But that he was sad and irresolute I could see by
the vessel, of which he was the soul, and which received all his
impressions. The Nautilus did not keep on in its settled course; it floated
about like a corpse at the will of the waves. It went at random. He could
not tear himself away from the scene of the last struggle, from this sea
that had devoured one of his men. Ten days passed thus. It was not till the
1st of May that the Nautilus resumed its northerly course, after having
sighted the Bahamas at the mouth of the Bahama Canal. We were then following
the current from the largest river to the sea, that has its banks, its fish,
and its proper temperatures. I mean the Gulf Stream. It is really a river,
that flows freely to the middle of the Atlantic, and whose waters do not mix
with the ocean waters. It is a salt river, salter than the surrounding sea.
Its mean depth is 1,500 fathoms, its mean breadth ten miles. In certain
places the current flows with the speed of two miles and a half an hour. The
body of its waters is more considerable than that of all the rivers in the
globe. It was on this ocean river that the Nautilus then sailed.
I must add that, during the night, the
phosphorescent waters of the Gulf Stream rivalled the electric power of our
watch-light, especially in the stormy weather that threatened us so
frequently. May 8th, we were still crossing Cape Hatteras, at the height of
the North Caroline. The width of the Gulf Stream there is seventy-five
miles, and its depth 210 yards. The Nautilus still went at random; all
supervision seemed abandoned. I thought that, under these circumstances,
escape would be possible. Indeed, the inhabited shores offered anywhere an
easy refuge. The sea was incessantly ploughed by the steamers that ply
between New York or Boston and the Gulf of Mexico, and overrun day and night
by the little schooners coasting about the several parts of the American
coast. We could hope to be picked up. It was a favourable opportunity,
notwithstanding the thirty miles that separated the Nautilus from the coasts
of the Union. One unfortunate circumstance thwarted the Canadian's plans.
The weather was very bad. We were nearing those shores where tempests are so
frequent, that country of waterspouts and cyclones actually engendered by
the current of the Gulf Stream. To tempt the sea in a frail boat was certain
destruction. Ned Land owned this himself. He fretted, seized with nostalgia
that flight only could cure.
"Master," he said that day to me, "this
must come to an end. I must make a clean breast of it. This Nemo is leaving
land and going up to the north. But I declare to you that I have had enough
of the South Pole, and I will not follow him to the North."
"What is to be done, Ned, since flight is
impracticable just now?"
"We must speak to the Captain," said he;
"you said nothing when we were in your native seas. I will speak, now we are
in mine. When I think that before long the Nautilus will be by Nova Scotia,
and that there near New foundland is a large bay, and into that bay the St.
Lawrence empties itself, and that the St. Lawrence is my river, the river by
Quebec, my native town—when I think of this, I feel furious, it makes my
hair stand on end. Sir, I would rather throw myself into the sea! I will not
stay here! I am stifled!"
The Canadian was evidently losing all
patience. His vigorous nature could not stand this prolonged imprisonment.
His face altered daily; his temper became more surly. I knew what he must
suffer, for I was seized with home-sickness myself. Nearly seven months had
passed without our having had any news from land; Captain Nemo's isolation,
his altered spirits, especially since the fight with the poulps, his
taciturnity, all made me view things in a different light.
"Well, sir?" said Ned, seeing I did not
reply.
"Well, Ned, do you wish me to ask Captain
Nemo his intentions concerning us?"
"Yes, sir."
"Although he has already made them known?"
"Yes; I wish it settled finally. Speak for
me, in my name only, if you like."
"But I so seldom meet him. He avoids me."
"That is all the more reason for you to go
to see him."
I went to my room. From thence I meant to
go to Captain Nemo's. It would not do to let this opportunity of meeting him
slip. I knocked at the door. No answer. I knocked again, then turned the
handle. The door opened, I went in. The Captain was there. Bending over his
work-table, he had not heard me. Resolved not to go without having spoken, I
approached him. He raised his head quickly, frowned, and said roughly, "You
here! What do you want?"
"To speak to you, Captain."
"But I am busy, sir; I am working. I leave
you at liberty to shut yourself up; cannot I be allowed the same?"
This reception was not encouraging; but I
was determined to hear and answer everything.
"Sir," I said coldly, "I have to speak to
you on a matter that admits of no delay."
"What is that, sir?" he replied,
ironically. "Have you discovered something that has escaped me, or has the
sea delivered up any new secrets?"
We were at cross-purposes. But, before I
could reply, he showed me an open manuscript on his table, and said, in a
more serious tone, "Here, M. Aronnax, is a manuscript written in several
languages. It contains the sum of my studies of the sea; and, if it please
God, it shall not perish with me. This manuscript, signed with my name,
complete with the history of my life, will be shut up in a little floating
case. The last survivor of all of us on board the Nautilus will throw this
case into the sea, and it will go whither it is borne by the waves."
This man's name! his history written by
himself! His mystery would then be revealed some day.
"Captain," I said, "I can but approve of
the idea that makes you act thus. The result of your studies must not be
lost. But the means you employ seem to me to be primitive. Who knows where
the winds will carry this case, and in whose hands it will fall? Could you
not use some other means? Could not you, or one of yours——"
"Never, sir!" he said, hastily interrupting
me.
"But I and my companions are ready to keep
this manuscript in store; and, if you will put us at liberty——"
"At liberty?" said the Captain, rising.
"Yes, sir; that is the subject on which I
wish to question you. For seven months we have been here on board, and I ask
you to-day, in the name of my companions and in my own, if your intention is
to keep us here always?"
"M. Aronnax, I will answer you to-day as I
did seven months ago: Whoever enters the Nautilus, must never quit it."
"You impose actual slavery upon us!"
"Give it what name you please."
"But everywhere the slave has the right to
regain his liberty."
"Who denies you this right? Have I ever
tried to chain you with an oath?"
He looked at me with his arms crossed.
"Sir," I said, "to return a second time to
this subject will be neither to your nor to my taste; but, as we have
entered upon it, let us go through with it. I repeat, it is not only myself
whom it concerns. Study is to me a relief, a diversion, a passion that could
make me forget everything. Like you, I am willing to live obscure, in the
frail hope of bequeathing one day, to future time, the result of my labours.
But it is otherwise with Ned Land. Every man, worthy of the name, deserves
some consideration. Have you thought that love of liberty, hatred of
slavery, can give rise to schemes of revenge in a nature like the
Canadian's; that he could think, attempt, and try——"
I was silenced; Captain Nemo rose.
"Whatever Ned Land thinks of, attempts, or
tries, what does it matter to me? I did not seek him! It is not for my
pleasure that I keep him on board! As for you, M. Aronnax, you are one of
those who can understand everything, even silence. I have nothing more to
say to you. Let this first time you have come to treat of this subject be
the last, for a second time I will not listen to you."
I retired. Our situation was critical. I
related my conversation to my two companions.
"We know now," said Ned, "that we can
expect nothing from this man. The Nautilus is nearing Long Island. We will
escape, whatever the weather may be."
But the sky became more and more
threatening. Symptoms of a hurricane became manifest. The atmosphere was
becoming white and misty. On the horizon fine streaks of cirrhous clouds
were succeeded by masses of cumuli. Other low clouds passed swiftly by. The
swollen sea rose in huge billows. The birds disappeared with the exception
of the petrels, those friends of the storm. The barometer fell sensibly, and
indicated an extreme extension of the vapours. The mixture of the storm
glass was decomposed under the influence of the electricity that pervaded
the atmosphere. The tempest burst on the 18th of May, just as the Nautilus
was floating off Long Island, some miles from the port of New York. I can
describe this strife of the elements! for, instead of fleeing to the depths
of the sea, Captain Nemo, by an unaccountable caprice, would brave it at the
surface. The wind blew from the south-west at first. Captain Nemo, during
the squalls, had taken his place on the platform. He had made himself fast,
to prevent being washed overboard by the monstrous waves. I had hoisted
myself up, and made myself fast also, dividing my admiration between the
tempest and this extraordinary man who was coping with it. The raging sea
was swept by huge cloud-drifts, which were actually saturated with the
waves. The Nautilus, sometimes lying on its side, sometimes standing up like
a mast, rolled and pitched terribly. About five o'clock a torrent of rain
fell, that lulled neither sea nor wind. The hurri cane blew nearly forty
leagues an hour. It is under these conditions that it overturns houses,
breaks iron gates, displaces twenty-four pounders. However, the Nautilus, in
the midst of the tempest, confirmed the words of a clever engineer, "There
is no well-constructed hull that cannot defy the sea." This was not a
resisting rock; it was a steel spindle, obedient and movable, without
rigging or masts, that braved its fury with impunity. However, I watched
these raging waves attentively. They measured fifteen feet in height, and
150 to 175 yards long, and their speed of propagation was thirty feet per
second. Their bulk and power increased with the depth of the water. Such
waves as these, at the Hebrides, have displaced a mass weighing 8,400 lb.
They are they which, in the tempest of December 23rd, 1864, after destroying
the town of Yeddo, in Japan, broke the same day on the shores of America.
The intensity of the tempest increased with the night. The barometer, as in
1860 at Reunion during a cyclone, fell seven-tenths at the close of day. I
saw a large vessel pass the horizon struggling painfully. She was trying to
lie to under half steam, to keep up above the waves. It was probably one of
the steamers of the line from New York to Liverpool, or Havre. It soon
disappeared in the gloom. At ten o'clock in the evening the sky was on fire.
The atmosphere was streaked with vivid lightning. I could not bear the
brightness of it; while the captain, looking at it, seemed to envy the
spirit of the tempest. A terrible noise filled the air, a complex noise,
made up of the howls of the crushed waves, the roaring of the wind, and the
claps of thunder. The wind veered suddenly to all points of the horizon; and
the cyclone, rising in the east, returned after passing by the north, west,
and south, in the inverse course pursued by the circular storm of the
southern hemisphere. Ah, that Gulf Stream! It deserves its name of the King
of Tempests. It is that which causes those formidable cyclones, by the
difference of temperature between its air and its currents. A shower of fire
had succeeded the rain. The drops of water were changed to sharp spikes. One
would have thought that Captain Nemo was courting a death worthy of himself,
a death by lightning. As the Nautilus, pitching dreadfully, raised its steel
spur in the air, it seemed to act as a conductor, and I saw long sparks
burst from it. Crushed and without strength I crawled to the panel, opened
it, and descended to the saloon. The storm was then at its height. It was
impossible to stand upright in the interior of the Nautilus. Captain Nemo
came down about twelve. I heard the reservoirs filling by degrees, and the
Nautilus sank slowly beneath the waves. Through the open windows in the
saloon I saw large fish terrified, passing like phantoms in the water. Some
were struck before my eyes. The Nautilus was still descending. I thought
that at about eight fathoms deep we should find a calm. But no! the upper
beds were too violently agitated for that. We had to seek repose at more
than twenty-five fathoms in the bowels of the deep. But there, what quiet,
what silence, what peace! Who could have told that such a hurricane had been
let loose on the surface of that ocean?
CHAPTER XX
FROM LATITUDE 47° 24' TO
LONGITUDE 17° 28'
In consequence of the storm, we had been
thrown eastward once more. All hope of escape on the shores of New York or
St. Lawrence had faded away; and poor Ned, in despair, had isolated himself
like Captain Nemo. Conseil and I, however, never left each other. I said
that the Nautilus had gone aside to the east. I should have said (to be more
exact) the north-east. For some days, it wandered first on the surface, and
then beneath it, amid those fogs so dreaded by sailors. What accidents are
due to these thick fogs! What shocks upon these reefs when the wind drowns
the breaking of the waves! What collisions between vessels, in spite of
their warning lights, whistles, and alarm bells! And the bottoms of these
seas look like a field of battle, where still lie all the conquered of the
ocean; some old and already encrusted, others fresh and reflecting from
their iron bands and copper plates the brilliancy of our lantern.
On the 15th of May we were at the extreme
south of the Bank of Newfoundland. This bank consists of alluvia, or large
heaps of organic matter, brought either from the Equator by the Gulf Stream,
or from the North Pole by the counter-current of cold water which skirts the
American coast. There also are heaped up those erratic blocks which are
carried along by the broken ice; and close by, a vast charnel-house of
molluscs, which perish here by millions. The depth of the sea is not great
at Newfoundland—not more than some hundreds of fathoms; but towards the
south is a depression of 1,500 fathoms. There the Gulf Stream widens. It
loses some of its speed and some of its temperature, but it becomes a sea.
It was on the 17th of May, about 500 miles
from Heart's Content, at a depth of more than 1,400 fathoms, that I saw the
electric cable lying on the bottom. Conseil, to whom I had not mentioned it,
thought at first that it was a gigantic sea-serpent. But I undeceived the
worthy fellow, and by way of consolation related several particulars in the
laying of this cable. The first one was laid in the years 1857 and 1858;
but, after transmitting about 400 telegrams, would not act any longer. In
1863 the engineers constructed an other one, measuring 2,000 miles in
length, and weighing 4,500 tons, which was embarked on the Great Eastern.
This attempt also failed.
On the 25th of May the Nautilus, being at a
depth of more than 1,918 fathoms, was on the precise spot where the rupture
occurred which ruined the enterprise. It was within 638 miles of the coast
of Ireland; and at half-past two in the afternoon they discovered that
communication with Europe had ceased. The electricians on board resolved to
cut the cable before fishing it up, and at eleven o'clock at night they had
recovered the damaged part. They made another point and spliced it, and it
was once more submerged. But some days after it broke again, and in the
depths of the ocean could not be recaptured. The Americans, however, were
not discouraged. Cyrus Field, the bold promoter of the enterprise, as he had
sunk all his own fortune, set a new subscription on foot, which was at once
answered, and another cable was constructed on better principles. The
bundles of conducting wires were each enveloped in gutta-percha, and
protected by a wadding of hemp, contained in a metallic covering. The Great
Eastern sailed on the 13th of July, 1866. The operation worked well. But one
incident occurred. Several times in unrolling the cable they observed that
nails had recently been forced into it, evidently with the motive of
destroying it. Captain Anderson, the officers, and engineers consulted
together, and had it posted up that, if the offender was surprised on board,
he would be thrown without further trial into the sea. From that time the
criminal attempt was never repeated.
On the 23rd of July the Great Eastern was
not more than 500 miles from Newfoundland, when they telegraphed from
Ireland the news of the armistice concluded between Prussia and Austria
after Sadowa. On the 27th, in the midst of heavy fogs, they reached the port
of Heart's Content. The enterprise was successfully terminated; and for its
first despatch, young America addressed old Europe in these words of wisdom,
so rarely understood: "Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace,
goodwill towards men."
I did not expect to find the electric cable
in its primitive state, such as it was on leaving the manufactory. The long
serpent, covered with the remains of shells, bristling with foraminiferae,
was encrusted with a strong coating which served as a protection against all
boring molluscs. It lay quietly sheltered from the motions of the sea, and
under a favourable pressure for the transmission of the electric spark which
passes from Europe to America in .32 of a second. Doubtless this cable will
last for a great length of time, for they find that the gutta-percha
covering is improved by the sea-water. Besides, on this level, so well
chosen, the cable is never so deeply submerged as to cause it to break. The
Nautilus followed it to the lowest depth, which was more than 2,212 fathoms,
and there it lay without any anchorage; and then we reached the spot where
the accident had taken place in 1863. The bottom of the ocean then formed a
valley about 100 miles broad, in which Mont Blanc might have been placed
without its summit appearing above the waves. This valley is closed at the
east by a perpendicular wall more than 2,000 yards high. We arrived there on
the 28th of May, and the Nautilus was then not more than 120 miles from
Ireland.
Was Captain Nemo going to land on the
British Isles? No. To my great surprise he made for the south, once more
coming back towards European seas. In rounding the Emerald Isle, for one
instant I caught sight of Cape Clear, and the light which guides the
thousands of vessels leaving Glasgow or Liverpool. An important question
then arose in my mind. Did the Nautilus dare entangle itself in the Manche?
Ned Land, who had re-appeared since we had been nearing land, did not cease
to question me. How could I answer? Captain Nemo remained invisible. After
having shown the Canadian a glimpse of American shores, was he going to show
me the coast of France?
But the Nautilus was still going southward.
On the 30th of May, it passed in sight of Land's End, between the extreme
point of England and the Scilly Isles, which were left to starboard. If we
wished to enter the Manche, he must go straight to the east. He did not do
so.
During the whole of the 31st of May, the
Nautilus described a series of circles on the water, which greatly
interested me. It seemed to be seeking a spot it had some trouble in
finding. At noon, Captain Nemo himself came to work the ship's log. He spoke
no word to me, but seemed gloomier than ever. What could sadden him thus?
Was it his proxim ity to European shores? Had he some recollections of his
abandoned country? If not, what did he feel? Remorse or regret? For a long
while this thought haunted my mind, and I had a kind of presentiment that
before long chance would betray the captain's secrets.
The next day, the 1st of June, the Nautilus
continued the same process. It was evidently seeking some particular spot in
the ocean. Captain Nemo took the sun's altitude as he had done the day
before. The sea was beautiful, the sky clear. About eight miles to the east,
a large steam vessel could be discerned on the horizon. No flag fluttered
from its mast, and I could not discover its nationality. Some minutes before
the sun passed the meridian, Captain Nemo took his sextant, and watched with
great attention. The perfect rest of the water greatly helped the operation.
The Nautilus was motionless; it neither rolled nor pitched.
I was on the platform when the altitude was
taken, and the Captain pronounced these words: "It is here."
He turned and went below. Had he seen the
vessel which was changing its course and seemed to be nearing us? I could
not tell. I returned to the saloon. The panels closed, I heard the hissing
of the water in the reservoirs. The Nautilus began to sink, following a
vertical line, for its screw communicated no motion to it. Some minutes
later it stopped at a depth of more than 420 fathoms, resting on the ground.
The luminous ceiling was darkened, then the panels were opened, and through
the glass I saw the sea brilliantly illuminated by the rays of our lantern
for at least half a mile round us.
I looked to the port side, and saw nothing
but an immensity of quiet waters. But to starboard, on the bottom appeared a
large protuberance, which at once attracted my attention. One would have
thought it a ruin buried under a coating of white shells, much resembling a
covering of snow. Upon examining the mass attentively, I could recognise the
ever-thickening form of a vessel bare of its masts, which must have sunk. It
certainly belonged to past times. This wreck, to be thus encrusted with the
lime of the water, must already be able to count many years passed at the
bottom of the ocean.
What was this vessel? Why did the Nautilus
visit its tomb? Could it have been aught but a shipwreck which had drawn it
under the water? I knew not what to think, when near me in a slow voice I
heard Captain Nemo say:
"At one time this ship was called the
Marseillais. It carried seventy-four guns, and was launched in 1762. In
1778, the 13th of August, commanded by La Poype-Ver trieux, it fought boldly
against the Preston. In 1779, on the 4th of July, it was at the taking of
Grenada, with the squadron of Admiral Estaing. In 1781, on the 5th of
September, it took part in the battle of Comte de Grasse, in Chesapeake Bay.
In 1794, the French Republic changed its name. On the 16th of April, in the
same year, it joined the squadron of Villaret Joyeuse, at Brest, being
entrusted with the escort of a cargo of corn coming from America, under the
command of Admiral Van Stebel. On the 11th and 12th Prairal of the second
year, this squadron fell in with an English vessel. Sir, to-day is the 13th
Prairal, the first of June, 1868. It is now seventy-four years ago, day for
day on this very spot, in latitude 47° 24', longitude 17° 28', that this
vessel, after fighting heroically, losing its three masts, with the water in
its hold, and the third of its crew disabled, preferred sinking with its 356
sailors to surrendering; and, nailing its colours to the poop, disappeared
under the waves to the cry of `Long live the Republic!'"
"The Avenger!" I exclaimed.
"Yes, sir, the Avenger! A good name!"
muttered Captain Nemo, crossing his arms.
CHAPTER XXI
A HECATOMB
The way of describing this unlooked-for
scene, the history of the patriot ship, told at first so coldly, and the
emotion with which this strange man pronounced the last words, the name of
the Avenger, the significance of which could not escape me, all impressed
itself deeply on my mind. My eyes did not leave the Captain, who, with his
hand stretched out to sea, was watching with a glowing eye the glorious
wreck. Perhaps I was never to know who he was, from whence he came, or where
he was going to, but I saw the man move, and apart from the savant. It was
no common misanthropy which had shut Captain Nemo and his companions within
the Nautilus, but a hatred, either monstrous or sublime, which time could
never weaken. Did this hatred still seek for vengeance? The future would
soon teach me that. But the Nautilus was rising slowly to the surface of the
sea, and the form of the Avenger disappeared by degrees from my sight. Soon
a slight rolling told me that we were in the open air. At that moment a dull
boom was heard. I looked at the Captain. He did not move.
"Captain?" said I.
He did not answer. I left him and mounted
the platform. Conseil and the Canadian were already there.
"Where did that sound come from?" I asked.
"It was a gunshot," replied Ned Land.
I looked in the direction of the vessel I
had already seen. It was nearing the Nautilus, and we could see that it was
putting on steam. It was within six miles of us.
"What is that ship, Ned?"
"By its rigging, and the height of its
lower masts," said the Canadian, "I bet she is a ship-of-war. May it reach
us; and, if necessary, sink this cursed Nautilus."
"Friend Ned," replied Conseil, "what harm
can it do to the Nautilus? Can it attack it beneath the waves? Can its
cannonade us at the bottom of the sea?"
"Tell me, Ned," said I, "can you recognise
what country she belongs to?"
The Canadian knitted his eyebrows, dropped
his eyelids, and screwed up the corners of his eyes, and for a few moments
fixed a piercing look upon the vessel.
"No, sir," he replied; "I cannot tell what
nation she belongs to, for she shows no colours. But I can declare she is a
man-of-war, for a long pennant flutters from her main mast."
For a quarter of an hour we watched the
ship which was steaming towards us. I could not, however, believe that she
could see the Nautilus from that distance; and still less that she could
know what this submarine engine was. Soon the Canadian informed me that she
was a large, armoured, two-decker ram. A thick black smoke was pouring from
her two funnels. Her closely-furled sails were stopped to her yards. She
hoisted no flag at her mizzen-peak. The distance prevented us from
distinguishing the colours of her pennant, which floated like a thin ribbon.
She advanced rapidly. If Captain Nemo allowed her to approach, there was a
chance of salvation for us.
"Sir," said Ned Land, "if that vessel
passes within a mile of us I shall throw myself into the sea, and I should
advise you to do the same."
I did not reply to the Canadian's
suggestion, but continued watching the ship. Whether English, French,
American, or Russian, she would be sure to take us in if we could only reach
her. Presently a white smoke burst from the fore part of the vessel; some
seconds after, the water, agitated by the fall of a heavy body, splashed the
stern of the Nautilus, and shortly afterwards a loud explosion struck my
ear.
"What! they are firing at us!" I exclaimed.
"So please you, sir," said Ned, "they have
recognised the unicorn, and they are firing at us."
"But," I exclaimed, "surely they can see
that there are men in the case?"
"It is, perhaps, because of that," replied
Ned Land, looking at me.
A whole flood of light burst upon my mind.
Doubtless they knew now how to believe the stories of the pretended monster.
No doubt, on board the Abraham Lincoln, when the Canadian struck it with the
harpoon, Commander Farragut had recognised in the supposed narwhal a
submarine vessel, more dangerous than a supernatural cetacean. Yes, it must
have been so; and on every sea they were now seeking this engine of
destruction. Terrible indeed! if, as we supposed, Captain Nemo employed the
Nautilus in works of vengeance. On the night when we were imprisoned in that
cell, in the midst of the Indian Ocean, had he not attacked some vessel? The
man buried in the coral cemetery, had he not been a victim to the shock
caused by the Nautilus? Yes, I repeat it, it must be so. One part of the
mysterious existence of Captain Nemo had been unveiled; and, if his identity
had not been recognised, at least, the nations united against him were no
longer hunting a chimerical creature, but a man who had vowed a deadly
hatred against them. All the formidable past rose before me. Instead of
meeting friends on board the approaching ship, we could only expect pitiless
enemies. But the shot rattled about us. Some of them struck the sea and
ricochetted, losing themselves in the distance. But none touched the
Nautilus. The vessel was not more than three miles from us. In spite of the
serious cannonade, Captain Nemo did not appear on the platform; but, if one
of the conical projectiles had struck the shell of the Nautilus, it would
have been fatal. The Canadian then said, "Sir, we must do all we can to get
out of this dilemma. Let us signal them. They will then, perhaps, understand
that we are honest folks."
Ned Land took his handkerchief to wave in
the air; but he had scarcely displayed it, when he was struck down by an
iron hand, and fell, in spite of his great strength, upon the deck.
"Fool!" exclaimed the Captain, "do you wish
to be pierced by the spur of the Nautilus before it is hurled at this
vessel?"
Captain Nemo was terrible to hear; he was
still more terrible to see. His face was deadly pale, with a spasm at his
heart. For an instant it must have ceased to beat. His pupils were fearfully
contracted. He did not speak, he roared, as, with his body thrown forward,
he wrung the Canadian's shoulders. Then, leaving him, and turning to the
ship of war, whose shot was still raining around him, he exclaimed, with a
powerful voice, "Ah, ship of an accursed nation, you know who I am! I do not
want your colours to know you by! Look! and I will show you mine!"
And on the fore part of the platform
Captain Nemo unfurled a black flag, similar to the one he had placed at the
South Pole. At that moment a shot struck the shell of the Nautilus
obliquely, without piercing it; and, rebounding near the Captain, was lost
in the sea. He shrugged his shoulders; and, addressing me, said shortly, "Go
down, you and your companions, go down!"
"Sir," I cried, "are you going to attack
this vessel?"
"Sir, I am going to sink it."
"You will not do that?"
"I shall do it," he replied coldly. "And I
advise you not to judge me, sir. Fate has shown you what you ought not to
have seen. The attack has begun; go down."
"What is this vessel?"
"You do not know? Very well! so much the
better! Its nationality to you, at least, will be a secret. Go down!"
We could but obey. About fifteen of the
sailors surrounded the Captain, looking with implacable hatred at the vessel
nearing them. One could feel that the same desire of vengeance animated
every soul. I went down at the moment another projectile struck the
Nautilus, and I heard the Captain exclaim:
"Strike, mad vessel! Shower your useless
shot! And then, you will not escape the spur of the Nautilus. But it is not
here that you shall perish! I would not have your ruins mingle with those of
the Avenger!"
I reached my room. The Captain and his
second had remained on the platform. The screw was set in motion, and the
Nautilus, moving with speed, was soon beyond the reach of the ship's guns.
But the pursuit continued, and Captain Nemo contented himself with keeping
his distance.
About four in the afternoon, being no
longer able to contain my impatience, I went to the central staircase. The
panel was open, and I ventured on to the platform. The Captain was still
walking up and down with an agitated step. He was looking at the ship, which
was five or six miles to leeward.
He was going round it like a wild beast,
and, drawing it eastward, he allowed them to pursue. But he did not attack.
Perhaps he still hesitated? I wished to mediate once more. But I had
scarcely spoken, when Captain Nemo imposed silence, saying:
"I am the law, and I am the judge! I am the
oppressed, and there is the oppressor! Through him I have lost all that I
loved, cherished, and venerated—country, wife, children, father, and mother.
I saw all perish! All that I hate is there! Say no more!"
I cast a last look at the man-of-war, which
was putting on steam, and rejoined Ned and Conseil.
"We will fly!" I exclaimed.
"Good!" said Ned. "What is this vessel?"
"I do not know; but, whatever it is, it
will be sunk before night. In any case, it is better to perish with it, than
be made accomplices in a retaliation the justice of which we cannot judge."
"That is my opinion too," said Ned Land,
coolly. "Let us wait for night."
Night arrived. Deep silence reigned on
board. The compass showed that the Nautilus had not altered its course. It
was on the surface, rolling slightly. My companions and I resolved to fly
when the vessel should be near enough either to hear us or to see us; for
the moon, which would be full in two or three days, shone brightly. Once on
board the ship, if we could not prevent the blow which threatened it, we
could, at least we would, do all that circumstances would allow. Several
times I thought the Nautilus was preparing for attack; but Captain Nemo
contented himself with allowing his adversary to approach, and then fled
once more before it.
Part of the night passed without any
incident. We watched the opportunity for action. We spoke little, for we
were too much moved. Ned Land would have thrown himself into the sea, but I
forced him to wait. According to my idea, the Nautilus would attack the ship
at her waterline, and then it would not only be possible, but easy to fly.
At three in the morning, full of
uneasiness, I mounted the platform. Captain Nemo had not left it. He was
standing at the fore part near his flag, which a slight breeze displayed
above his head. He did not take his eyes from the vessel. The intensity of
his look seemed to attract, and fascinate, and draw it onward more surely
than if he had been towing it. The moon was then passing the meridian.
Jupiter was rising in the east. Amid this peaceful scene of nature, sky and
ocean rivalled each other in tranquillity, the sea offering to the orbs of
night the finest mirror they could ever have in which to reflect their
image. As I thought of the deep calm of these elements, compared with all
those passions brooding imperceptibly within the Nautilus, I shuddered.
The vessel was within two miles of us. It
was ever nearing that phosphorescent light which showed the presence of the
Nautilus. I could see its green and red lights, and its white lantern
hanging from the large foremast. An indistinct vibration quivered through
its rigging, showing that the furnaces were heated to the uttermost. Sheaves
of sparks and red ashes flew from the funnels, shining in the atmosphere
like stars.
I remained thus until six in the morning,
without Captain Nemo noticing me. The ship stood about a mile and a half
from us, and with the first dawn of day the firing began afresh. The moment
could not be far off when, the Nautilus attacking its adversary, my
companions and myself should for ever leave this man. I was preparing to go
down to remind them, when the second mounted the platform, accompanied by
several sailors. Captain Nemo either did not or would not see them. Some
steps were taken which might be called the signal for action. They were very
simple. The iron balustrade around the platform was lowered, and the lantern
and pilot cages were pushed within the shell until they were flush with the
deck. The long surface of the steel cigar no longer offered a single point
to check its manoeuvres. I returned to the saloon. The Nautilus still
floated; some streaks of light were filtering through the liquid beds. With
the undulations of the waves the windows were brightened by the red streaks
of the rising sun, and this dreadful day of the 2nd of June had dawned.
At five o'clock, the log showed that the
speed of the Nautilus was slackening, and I knew that it was allowing them
to draw nearer. Besides, the reports were heard more distinctly, and the
projectiles, labouring through the ambient water, were extinguished with a
strange hissing noise.
"My friends," said I, "the moment is come.
One grasp of the hand, and may God protect us!"
Ned Land was resolute, Conseil calm, myself
so nervous that I knew not how to contain myself. We all passed into the
library; but the moment I pushed the door opening on to the central
staircase, I heard the upper panel close sharply. The Canadian rushed on to
the stairs, but I stopped him. A well-known hissing noise told me that the
water was running into the reservoirs, and in a few minutes the Nautilus was
some yards beneath the surface of the waves. I understood the manoeuvre. It
was too late to act. The Nautilus did not wish to strike at the impenetrable
cuirass, but below the water-line, where the metallic covering no longer
protected it.
We were again imprisoned, unwilling
witnesses of the dreadful drama that was preparing. We had scarcely time to
reflect; taking refuge in my room, we looked at each other without speaking.
A deep stupor had taken hold of my mind: thought seemed to stand still. I
was in that painful state of expectation preceding a dreadful report. I
waited, I listened, every sense was merged in that of hearing! The speed of
the Nautilus was accelerated. It was preparing to rush. The whole ship
trembled. Suddenly I screamed. I felt the shock, but comparatively light. I
felt the penetrating power of the steel spur. I heard rattlings and
scrapings. But the Nautilus, carried along by its propelling power, passed
through the mass of the vessel like a needle through sailcloth!
I could stand it no longer. Mad, out of my
mind, I rushed from my room into the saloon. Captain Nemo was there, mute,
gloomy, implacable; he was looking through the port panel. A large mass cast
a shadow on the water; and, that it might lose nothing of her agony, the
Nautilus was going down into the abyss with her. Ten yards from me I saw the
open shell, through which the water was rushing with the noise of thunder,
then the double line of guns and the netting. The bridge was covered with
black, agitated shadows.
The water was rising. The poor creatures
were crowding the ratlines, clinging to the masts, struggling under the
water. It was a human ant-heap overtaken by the sea. Paralysed, stiffened
with anguish, my hair standing on end, with eyes wide open, panting, without
breath, and without voice, I too was watching! An irresistible attraction
glued me to the glass! Suddenly an explosion took place. The compressed air
blew up her decks, as if the magazines had caught fire. Then the unfortunate
vessel sank more rapidly. Her topmast, laden with victims, now appeared;
then her spars, bending under the weight of men; and, last of all, the top
of her mainmast. Then the dark mass disappeared, and with it the dead crew,
drawn down by the strong eddy.
I turned to Captain Nemo. That terrible
avenger, a perfect archangel of hatred, was still looking. When all was
over, he turned to his room, opened the door, and entered. I followed him
with my eyes. On the end wall beneath his heroes, I saw the portrait of a
woman, still young, and two little children. Captain Nemo looked at them for
some moments, stretched his arms towards them, and, kneeling down, burst
into deep sobs.
CHAPTER XXII
THE LAST WORDS OF CAPTAIN
NEMO
The panels had closed on this dreadful
vision, but light had not returned to the saloon: all was silence and
darkness within the Nautilus. At wonderful speed, a hundred feet beneath the
water, it was leaving this desolate spot. Whither was it going? To the north
or south? Where was the man flying to after such dreadful retaliation? I had
returned to my room, where Ned and Conseil had remained silent enough. I
felt an insurmountable horror for Captain Nemo. Whatever he had suffered at
the hands of these men, he had no right to punish thus. He had made me, if
not an accomplice, at least a witness of his vengeance. At eleven the
electric light reappeared. I passed into the saloon. It was deserted. I
consulted the different instruments. The Nautilus was flying northward at
the rate of twenty-five miles an hour, now on the surface, and now thirty
feet below it. On taking the bearings by the chart, I saw that we were
passing the mouth of the Manche, and that our course was hurrying us towards
the northern seas at a frightful speed. That night we had crossed two
hundred leagues of the Atlantic. The shadows fell, and the sea was covered
with darkness until the rising of the moon. I went to my room, but could not
sleep. I was troubled with dreadful nightmare. The horrible scene of
destruction was continually before my eyes. From that day, who could tell
into what part of the North Atlantic basin the Nautilus would take us? Still
with unaccountable speed. Still in the midst of these northern fogs. Would
it touch at Spitzbergen, or on the shores of Nova Zembla? Should we explore
those unknown seas, the White Sea, the Sea of Kara, the Gulf of Obi, the
Archipelago of Liarrov, and the unknown coast of Asia? I could not say. I
could no longer judge of the time that was passing. The clocks had been
stopped on board. It seemed, as in polar countries, that night and day no
longer followed their regular course. I felt myself being drawn into that
strange region where the foundered imagination of Edgar Poe roamed at will.
Like the fabulous Gordon Pym, at every moment I expected to see "that veiled
human figure, of larger proportions than those of any inhabitant of the
earth, thrown across the cataract which defends the approach to the pole." I
estimated (though, perhaps, I may be mistaken)—I estimated this adventurous
course of the Nautilus to have lasted fifteen or twenty days. And I know not
how much longer it might have lasted, had it not been for the catastrophe
which ended this voyage. Of Captain Nemo I saw nothing whatever now, nor of
his second. Not a man of the crew was visible for an instant. The Nautilus
was almost incessantly under water. When we came to the surface to renew the
air, the panels opened and shut mechanically. There were no more marks on
the planisphere. I knew not where we were. And the Canadian, too, his
strength and patience at an end, appeared no more. Conseil could not draw a
word from him; and, fearing that, in a dreadful fit of madness, he might
kill himself, watched him with constant devotion. One morning (what date it
was I could not say) I had fallen into a heavy sleep towards the early
hours, a sleep both painful and unhealthy, when I suddenly awoke. Ned Land
was leaning over me, saying, in a low voice, "We are going to fly." I sat
up.
"When shall we go?" I asked.
"To-night. All inspection on board the
Nautilus seems to have ceased. All appear to be stupefied. You will be
ready, sir?"
"Yes; where are we?"
"In sight of land. I took the reckoning
this morning in the fog—twenty miles to the east."
"What country is it?"
"I do not know; but, whatever it is, we
will take refuge there."
"Yes, Ned, yes. We will fly to-night, even
if the sea should swallow us up."
"The sea is bad, the wind violent, but
twenty miles in that light boat of the Nautilus does not frighten me.
Unknown to the crew, I have been able to procure food and some bottles of
water."
"I will follow you."
"But," continued the Canadian, "if I am
surprised, I will defend myself; I will force them to kill me."
"We will die together, friend Ned."
I had made up my mind to all. The Canadian
left me. I reached the platform, on which I could with difficulty support
myself against the shock of the waves. The sky was threatening; but, as land
was in those thick brown shadows, we must fly. I returned to the saloon,
fearing and yet hoping to see Captain Nemo, wishing and yet not wishing to
see him. What could I have said to him? Could I hide the involuntary horror
with which he inspired me? No. It was better that I should not meet him face
to face; better to forget him. And yet—— How long seemed that day, the last
that I should pass in the Nautilus. I remained alone. Ned Land and Conseil
avoided speaking, for fear of betraying themselves. At six I dined, but I
was not hungry; I forced myself to eat in spite of my disgust, that I might
not weaken myself. At half-past six Ned Land came to my room, saying, "We
shall not see each other again before our departure. At ten the moon will
not be risen. We will profit by the darkness. Come to the boat; Conseil and
I will wait for you."
The Canadian went out without giving me
time to answer. Wishing to verify the course of the Nautilus, I went to the
saloon. We were running N.N.E. at frightful speed, and more than fifty yards
deep. I cast a last look on these wonders of nature, on the riches of art
heaped up in this museum, upon the unrivalled collection destined to perish
at the bottom of the sea, with him who had formed it. I wished to fix an
indelible impression of it in my mind. I remained an hour thus, bathed in
the light of that luminous ceiling, and passing in review those treasures
shining under their glasses. Then I returned to my room.
I dressed myself in strong sea clothing. I
collected my notes, placing them carefully about me. My heart beat loudly. I
could not check its pulsations. Certainly my trouble and agitation would
have betrayed me to Captain Nemo's eyes. What was he doing at this moment? I
listened at the door of his room. I heard steps. Captain Nemo was there. He
had not gone to rest. At every moment I expected to see him appear, and ask
me why I wished to fly. I was constantly on the alert. My imagination
magnified everything. The impression became at last so poignant that I asked
myself if it would not be better to go to the Captain's room, see him face
to face, and brave him with look and gesture.
It was the inspiration of a madman;
fortunately I resisted the desire, and stretched myself on my bed to quiet
my bodily agitation. My nerves were somewhat calmer, but in my excited brain
I saw over again all my existence on board the Nautilus; every incident,
either happy or unfortunate, which had happened since my disappearance from
the Abraham Lincoln—the submarine hunt, the Torres Straits, the savages of
Papua, the running ashore, the coral cemetery, the passage of Suez, the
Island of Santorin, the Cretan diver, Vigo Bay, Atlantis, the iceberg, the
South Pole, the imprisonment in the ice, the fight among the poulps, the
storm in the Gulf Stream, the Avenger, and the horrible scene of the vessel
sunk with all her crew. All these events passed before my eyes like scenes
in a drama. Then Captain Nemo seemed to grow enormously, his features to
assume superhuman proportions. He was no longer my equal, but a man of the
waters, the genie of the sea.
It was then half-past nine. I held my head
between my hands to keep it from bursting. I closed my eyes; I would not
think any longer. There was another half-hour to wait, another half-hour of
a nightmare, which might drive me mad.
At that moment I heard the distant strains
of the organ, a sad harmony to an undefinable chant, the wail of a soul
longing to break these earthly bonds. I listened with every sense, scarcely
breathing; plunged, like Captain Nemo, in that musical ecstasy, which was
drawing him in spirit to the end of life.
Then a sudden thought terrified me. Captain
Nemo had left his room. He was in the saloon, which I must cross to fly.
There I should meet him for the last time. He would see me, perhaps speak to
me. A gesture of his might destroy me, a single word chain me on board.
But ten was about to strike. The moment had
come for me to leave my room, and join my companions.
I must not hesitate, even if Captain Nemo
himself should rise before me. I opened my door carefully; and even then, as
it turned on its hinges, it seemed to me to make a dreadful noise. Perhaps
it only existed in my own imagination.
I crept along the dark stairs of the
Nautilus, stopping at each step to check the beating of my heart. I reached
the door of the saloon, and opened it gently. It was plunged in profound
darkness. The strains of the organ sounded faintly. Captain Nemo was there.
He did not see me. In the full light I do not think he would have noticed
me, so entirely was he absorbed in the ecstasy.
I crept along the carpet, avoiding the
slightest sound which might betray my presence. I was at least five minutes
reaching the door, at the opposite side, opening into the library.
I was going to open it, when a sigh from
Captain Nemo nailed me to the spot. I knew that he was rising. I could even
see him, for the light from the library came through to the saloon. He came
towards me silently, with his arms crossed, gliding like a spectre rather
than walking. His breast was swelling with sobs; and I heard him murmur
these words (the last which ever struck my ear):
"Almighty God! enough! enough!"
Was it a confession of remorse which thus
escaped from this man's conscience?
In desperation, I rushed through the
library, mounted the central staircase, and, following the upper flight,
reached the boat. I crept through the opening, which had already admitted my
two companions.
"Let us go! let us go!" I exclaimed.
"Directly!" replied the Canadian.
The orifice in the plates of the Nautilus
was first closed, and fastened down by means of a false key, with which Ned
Land had provided himself; the opening in the boat was also closed. The
Canadian began to loosen the bolts which still held us to the submarine
boat.
Suddenly a noise was heard. Voices were
answering each other loudly. What was the matter? Had they discovered our
flight? I felt Ned Land slipping a dagger into my hand.
"Yes," I murmured, "we know how to die!"
The Canadian had stopped in his work. But
one word many times repeated, a dreadful word, revealed the cause of the
agitation spreading on board the Nautilus. It was not we the crew were
looking after!
"The maelstrom! the maelstrom!" Could a
more dreadful word in a more dreadful situation have sounded in our ears! We
were then upon the dangerous coast of Norway. Was the Nautilus being drawn
into this gulf at the moment our boat was going to leave its sides? We knew
that at the tide the pent-up waters between the islands of Ferroe and
Loffoden rush with irresistible violence, forming a whirlpool from which no
vessel ever escapes. From every point of the horizon enormous waves were
meeting, forming a gulf justly called the "Navel of the Ocean," whose power
of attraction extends to a distance of twelve miles. There, not only
vessels, but whales are sacrificed, as well as white bears from the northern
regions.
It is thither that the Nautilus,
voluntarily or involuntarily, had been run by the Captain.
It was describing a spiral, the
circumference of which was lessening by degrees, and the boat, which was
still fastened to its side, was carried along with giddy speed. I felt that
sickly giddiness which arises from long-continued whirling round.
We were in dread. Our horror was at its
height, circulation had stopped, all nervous influence was annihilated, and
we were covered with cold sweat, like a sweat of agony! And what noise
around our frail bark! What roarings repeated by the echo miles away! What
an uproar was that of the waters broken on the sharp rocks at the bottom,
where the hardest bodies are crushed, and trees worn away, "with all the fur
rubbed off," according to the Norwegian phrase!
What a situation to be in! We rocked
frightfully. The Nautilus defended itself like a human being. Its steel
muscles cracked. Sometimes it seemed to stand upright, and we with it!
"We must hold on," said Ned, "and look
after the bolts. We may still be saved if we stick to the Nautilus."
He had not finished the words, when we
heard a crashing noise, the bolts gave way, and the boat, torn from its
groove, was hurled like a stone from a sling into the midst of the
whirlpool.
My head struck on a piece of iron, and with
the violent shock I lost all consciousness.
CHAPTER XXIII
CONCLUSION
Thus ends the voyage under the seas. What
passed during that night—how the boat escaped from the eddies of the
maelstrom—how Ned Land, Conseil, and myself ever came out of the gulf, I
cannot tell.
But when I returned to consciousness, I was
lying in a fisherman's hut, on the Loffoden Isles. My two companions, safe
and sound, were near me holding my hands. We embraced each other heartily.
At that moment we could not think of
returning to France. The means of communication between the north of Norway
and the south are rare. And I am therefore obliged to wait for the steamboat
running monthly from Cape North.
And, among the worthy people who have so
kindly received us, I revise my record of these adventures once more. Not a
fact has been omitted, not a detail exaggerated. It is a faithful narrative
of this incredible expedition in an element inaccessible to man, but to
which Progress will one day open a road.
Shall I be believed? I do not know. And it
matters little, after all. What I now affirm is, that I have a right to
speak of these seas, under which, in less than ten months, I have crossed
20,000 leagues in that submarine tour of the world, which has revealed so
many wonders.
But what has become of the Nautilus? Did it
resist the pressure of the maelstrom? Does Captain Nemo still live? And does
he still follow under the ocean those frightful retaliations? Or, did he
stop after the last hecatomb?
Will the waves one day carry to him this
manuscript containing the history of his life? Shall I ever know the name of
this man? Will the missing vessel tell us by its nationality that of Captain
Nemo?
I hope so. And I also hope that his
powerful vessel has conquered the sea at its most terrible gulf, and that
the Nautilus has survived where so many other vessels have been lost! If it
be so—if Captain Nemo still inhabits the ocean, his adopted country, may
hatred be appeased in that savage heart! May the contemplation of so many
wonders extinguish for ever the spirit of vengeance! May the judge
disappear, and the philosopher continue the peaceful exploration of the sea!
If his destiny be strange, it is also sublime. Have I not understood it
myself? Have I not lived ten months of this unnatural life? And to the
question asked by Ecclesiastes three thousand years ago, "That which is far
off and exceeding deep, who can find it out?" two men alone of all now
living have the right to give an answer——
CAPTAIN NEMO AND MYSELF.