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The Omnibus
Verne, Jules
J. B. Lippincott Company
Garden City, NY
Published: 1873
English The Omnibus
THE
J. B. Lippincott Company
PRINTED IN THE U.S.A. AT THE
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 thosse 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-boles 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 42o 15' N. lat. and 60o
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 27o 30' lat.
and 72o 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
15o 12' long. and 45o 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.
1. Member of the whale family.
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 bad 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,
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,
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.
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 powerfully 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 fllattened 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?"
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 105o
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 taff rail, 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 31o 15' N. lat. and
136o 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!"
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 re-appeared 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.
(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 overthrown 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.
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.
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 taake 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?"
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 myself,
"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! Theere 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.
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."
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.
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, 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. Some of these
pearls were larger than a pigeon's egg, and were worth millions.
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:
"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."
"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.
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.
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,
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,
"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 32o 40'
N. lat. and 157o 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 gunpowder
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.
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.
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 gunshots
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 dun 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.
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 172o 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 142o 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 neeck. 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."
One day, when I was suggesting this theory to Captain Nemo,
he replied coldly:
"The earth does not want new continents, but new men."
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 15o and 2o
S. lat., and 164o and 168o 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 16o 4' S. lat., and 164o 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?" be
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 -- directeed 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 8o 18'
S. lat., and 156o 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, 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."
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 giltheads,
about one and a half inches long, tasting like dorys; and flying fire-fish
like submarine swallows, which, in dark nights, light alternately the air
and water with their phosphorescent light.
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 southwest 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 indestructible 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.
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. "Coconuts 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.
"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."
"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 canoe
Page 1
JULES VERNE
contains
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
page 7
Around the World in Eighty Days
page 297
The Blockade Runners
page 489
From the Earth to the Moon and a Trip Around it
page 545
Page 3
OMNIBUS
JULES VERNE
Page 4
COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N.Y.
Page 5
UNDER THE SEA
Page 7
Chapter 1.1
A SHIFTING REEF
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Chapter 1.2
PRO AND CON
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Professor in the Museum of Paris,
Fifth Avenue Hotel,
New York.
J.B. HOBSON,
Secretary of Marine.
Chapter 1.3
I FORM MY RESOLUTION
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Chapter 1.4
NED LAND
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Chapter 1.5
AT A VENTURE
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Chapter 1.6
AT FULL STEAM
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Chapter 1.7
AN UNKNOWN SPECIES OF WHALE
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Chapter 1.8
MOBILIS IN MOBILI
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Chapter 1.9
NED LAND'S TEMPERS
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Chapter 1.10
THE MAN OF THE SEAS
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Chapter 1.11
ALL BY ELECTRICITY
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Chapter 1.12
SOME FIGURES
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Chapter 1.13
THE BLACK RIVER
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Chapter 1.14
A NOTE OF INVITATION
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On board the Nautilus.
16th of November, 1867.
Commander of the Nautilus.
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Chapter 1.15
A WALK ON THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA
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Chapter 1.16
A SUBMARINE FOREST
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Chapter 1.17
FOUR THOUSAND LEAGUES UNDER THE PACIFIC
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Chapter 1.18
VANIKORO
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Chapter 1.19
TORRES STRAITS
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Chapter 1.20
A FEW DAYS ON LAND
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Chapter 1.21
CAPTAIN NEMO'S THUNDERBOLT
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