|
|
TWENTY THOUSAND LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA
by Jules Verne
Tor Books
ISBN: 0812550927
 |
CHAPTER I: THE INDIAN OCEAN
We now come to the second part of our journey under the
sea. The first ended with the moving scene in the coral cemetery which left such a deep
impression on my mind. Thus, in the midst of this great sea, Captain Nemo's life was
passing, even to his grave, which he had prepared in one of its deepest abysses. There,
not one of the ocean's monsters could trouble the last sleep of the crew of the Nautilus,
of those friends riveted to each other in death as in life. "Nor any man,
either," had added the Captain. Still the same fierce, implacable defiance towards
human society!
I could no longer content myself with the theory which satisfied Conseil.
That worthy fellow persisted in seeing in the Commander of the Nautilus one of those
unknown servants who return mankind contempt for indifference. For him, he was a
misunderstood genius who, tired of earth's deceptions, had taken refuge in this
inaccessible medium, where he might follow his instincts freely. To my mind, this explains
but one side of Captain Nemo's character. Indeed, the mystery of that last night during
which we had been chained in prison, the sleep, and the precaution so violently taken by
the Captain of snatching from my eyes the glass I had raised to sweep the horizon, the
mortal wound of the man, due to an unaccountable shock of the Nautilus, all put me on a
new track. No; Captain Nemo was not satisfied with shunning man. His formidable apparatus
not only suited his instinct of freedom, but perhaps also the design of some terrible
retaliation.
At this moment nothing is clear to me; I catch but a glimpse of light amidst all the
darkness, and I must confine myself to writing as events shall dictate.
That day, the 24th of January, 1868, at noon, the second officer came to take the altitude
of the sun. I mounted the platform, lit a cigar, and watched the operation. It seemed to
me that the man did not understand French; for several times I made remarks in a loud
voice, which must have drawn from him some involuntary sign of attention, if he had
understood them; but he remained undisturbed and dumb.
As he was taking observations with the sextant, one of the sailors of the Nautilus (the
strong man who had accompanied us on our first submarine excursion to the Island of
Crespo) came to clean the glasses of the lantern. I examined the fittings of the
apparatus, the strength of which was increased a hundredfold by lenticular rings, placed
similar to those in a lighthouse, and which projected their brilliance in a horizontal
plane. The electric lamp was combined in such a way as to give its most powerful light.
Indeed, it was produced in vacuo, which insured both its steadiness and its intensity.
This vacuum economised the graphite points between which the luminous arc was
developed--an important point of economy for Captain Nemo, who could not easily have
replaced them; and under these conditions their waste was imperceptible. When the Nautilus
was ready to continue its submarine journey, I went down to the saloon. The panel was
closed, and the course marked direct west.
We were furrowing the waters of the Indian Ocean, a vast liquid plain, with a surface of
1,200,000,000 of acres, and whose waters are so clear and transparent that any one leaning
over them would turn giddy. The Nautilus usually floated between fifty and a hundred
fathoms deep. We went on so for some days. To anyone but myself, who had a great love for
the sea, the hours would have seemed long and monotonous; but the daily walks on the
platform, when I steeped myself in the reviving air of the ocean, the sight of the rich
waters through the windows of the saloon, the books in the library, the compiling of my
memoirs, took up all my time, and left me not a moment of ennui or weariness.
For some days we saw a great number of aquatic birds, sea-mews or gulls. Some were
cleverly killed and, prepared in a certain way, made very acceptable water-game. Amongst
large-winged birds, carried a long distance from all lands and resting upon the waves from
the fatigue of their flight, I saw some magnificent albatrosses, uttering discordant cries
like the braying of an ass, and birds belonging to the family of the long-wings.
As to the fish, they always provoked our admiration when we surprised the secrets of their
aquatic life through the open panels. I saw many kinds which I never before had a chance
of observing.
From the 21st to the 23rd of January the Nautilus went at the rate of two hundred and
fifty leagues in twenty-four hours, being five hundred and forty miles, or twenty-two
miles an hour. If we recognised so many different varieties of fish, it was because,
attracted by the electric light, they tried to follow us; the greater part, however, were
soon distanced by our speed, though some kept their place in the waters of the Nautilus
for a time. The morning of the 24th, in 12@ 5' S. lat., and 94@ 33' long., we observed
Keeling Island, a coral formation, planted with magnificent cocos, and which had been
visited by Mr. Darwin and Captain Fitzroy. The Nautilus skirted the shores of this desert
island for a little distance. Its nets brought up numerous specimens of polypi and curious
shells of mollusca.
Soon Keeling Island disappeared from the horizon, and our course was directed to the
north-west in the direction of the Indian Peninsula.
From Keeling Island our course was slower and more variable, often taking us into great
depths. Several times they made use of the inclined planes, which certain internal levers
placed obliquely to the waterline. In that way we went about two miles, but without ever
obtaining the greatest depths of the Indian Sea, which soundings of seven thousand fathoms
have never reached. As to the temperature of the lower strata, the thermometer invariably
indicated 4@ above zero. I only observed that in the upper regions the water was always
colder in the high levels than at the surface of the sea.
On the 25th of January the ocean was entirely deserted; the Nautilus passed the day on the
surface, beating the waves with its powerful screw and making them rebound to a great
height. Who under such circumstances would not have taken it for a gigantic cetacean?
Three parts of this day I spent on the platform. I watched the sea. Nothing on the
horizon, till about four o'clock a steamer running west on our counter. Her masts were
visible for an instant, but she could not see the Nautilus, being too low in the water. I
fancied this steamboat belonged to the P.O. Company, which runs from Ceylon to Sydney,
touching at King George's Point and Melbourne.
At five o'clock in the evening, before that fleeting twilight which binds night to day in
tropical zones, Conseil and I were astonished by a curious spectacle.
It was a shoal of argonauts travelling along on the surface of the ocean. We could count
several hundreds. They belonged to the tubercle kind which are peculiar to the Indian
seas.
These graceful molluscs moved backwards by means of their locomotive tube, through which
they propelled the water already drawn in. Of their eight tentacles, six were elongated,
and stretched out floating on the water, whilst the other two, rolled up flat, were spread
to the wing like a light sail. I saw their spiral-shaped and fluted shells, which Cuvier
justly compares to an elegant skiff. A boat indeed! It bears the creature which secretes
it without its adhering to it.
For nearly an hour the Nautilus floated in the midst of this shoal of molluscs. Then I
know not what sudden fright they took. But as if at a signal every sail was furled, the
arms folded, the body drawn in, the shells turned over, changing their centre of gravity,
and the whole fleet disappeared under the waves. Never did the ships of a squadron
manoeuvre with more unity.
At that moment night fell suddenly, and the reeds, scarcely raised by the breeze, lay
peaceably under the sides of the Nautilus.
The next day, 26th of January, we cut the equator at the eighty-second meridian and
entered the northern hemisphere. During the day a formidable troop of sharks accompanied
us, terrible creatures, which multiply in these seas and make them very dangerous. They
were "cestracio philippi" sharks, with brown backs and whitish bellies, armed
with eleven rows of teeth-- eyed sharks--their throat being marked with a large black spot
surrounded with white like an eye. There were also some Isabella sharks, with rounded
snouts marked with dark spots. These powerful creatures often hurled themselves at the
windows of the saloon with such violence as to make us feel very insecure. At such times
Ned Land was no longer master of himself. He wanted to go to the surface and harpoon the
monsters, particularly certain smooth-hound sharks, whose mouth is studded with teeth like
a mosaic; and large tiger-sharks nearly six yards long, the last named of which seemed to
excite him more particularly. But the Nautilus, accelerating her speed, easily left the
most rapid of them behind.
The 27th of January, at the entrance of the vast Bay of Bengal, we met repeatedly a
forbidding spectacle, dead bodies floating on the surface of the water. They were the dead
of the Indian villages, carried by the Ganges to the level of the sea, and which the
vultures, the only undertakers of the country, had not been able to devour. But the sharks
did not fail to help them at their funeral work.
About seven o'clock in the evening, the Nautilus, half-immersed, was sailing in a sea of
milk. At first sight the ocean seemed lactified. Was it the effect of the lunar rays? No;
for the moon, scarcely two days old, was still lying hidden under the horizon in the rays
of the sun. The whole sky, though lit by the sidereal rays, seemed black by contrast with
the whiteness of the waters.
Conseil could not believe his eyes, and questioned me as to the cause of this strange
phenomenon. Happily I was able to answer him.
"It is called a milk sea," I explained. "A large extent of white wavelets
often to be seen on the coasts of Amboyna, and in these parts of the sea."
"But, sir," said Conseil, "can you tell me what causes such an effect? for
I suppose the water is not really turned into milk."
"No, my boy; and the whiteness which surprises you is caused only by the presence of
myriads of infusoria, a sort of luminous little worm, gelatinous and without colour, of
the thickness of a hair, and whose length is not more than seven-thousandths of an inch.
These insects adhere to one another sometimes for several leagues."
"Several leagues!" exclaimed Conseil.
"Yes, my boy; and you need not try to compute the number of these infusoria. You will
not be able, for, if I am not mistaken, ships have floated on these milk seas for more
than forty miles."
Towards midnight the sea suddenly resumed its usual colour; but behind us, even to the
limits of the horizon, the sky reflected the whitened waves, and for a long time seemed
impregnated with the vague glimmerings of an aurora borealis.
Back to top.
CHAPTER II: A NOVEL PROPOSAL OF CAPTAIN NEMO'S
On the 28th of February, when at noon the Nautilus came to the surface of the sea, in 9@
4' N. lat., there was land in sight about eight miles to westward. The first thing I
noticed was a range of mountains about two thousand feet high, the shapes of which were
most capricious. On taking the bearings, I knew that we were nearing the island of Ceylon,
the pearl which hangs from the lobe of the Indian Peninsula.
Captain Nemo and his second appeared at this moment. The Captain glanced at the map. Then
turning to me, said:
"The Island of Ceylon, noted for its pearl-fisheries. Would you like to visit one of
them, M. Aronnax?"
"Certainly, Captain."
"Well, the thing is easy. Though, if we see the fisheries, we shall not see the
fishermen. The annual exportation has not yet begun. Never mind, I will give orders to
make for the Gulf of Manaar, where we shall arrive in the night."
The Captain said something to his second, who immediately went out. Soon the Nautilus
returned to her native element, and the manometer showed that she was about thirty feet
deep.
"Well, sir," said Captain Nemo, "you and your companions shall visit the
Bank of Manaar, and if by chance some fisherman should be there, we shall see him at
work."
"Agreed, Captain!"
"By the bye, M. Aronnax you are not afraid of sharks?"
"Sharks!" exclaimed I.
This question seemed a very hard one.
"Well?" continued Captain Nemo.
"I admit, Captain, that I am not yet very familiar with that kind of fish."
"We are accustomed to them," replied Captain Nemo, "and in time you will be
too. However, we shall be armed, and on the road we may be able to hunt some of the tribe.
It is interesting. So, till to-morrow, sir, and early."
This said in a careless tone, Captain Nemo left the saloon. Now, if you were invited to
hunt the bear in the mountains of Switzerland, what would you say?
"Very well! to-morrow we will go and hunt the bear." If you were asked to hunt
the lion in the plains of Atlas, or the tiger in the Indian jungles, what would you say?
"Ha! ha! it seems we are going to hunt the tiger or the lion!" But when you are
invited to hunt the shark in its natural element, you would perhaps reflect before
accepting the invitation. As for myself, I passed my hand over my forehead, on which stood
large drops of cold perspiration. "Let us reflect," said I, "and take our
time. Hunting otters in submarine forests, as we did in the Island of Crespo, will pass;
but going up and down at the bottom of the sea, where one is almost certain to meet
sharks, is quite another thing! I know well that in certain countries, particularly in the
Andaman Islands, the negroes never hesitate to attack them with a dagger in one hand and a
running noose in the other; but I also know that few who affront those creatures ever
return alive. However, I am not a negro, and if I were I think a little hesitation in this
case would not be ill-timed."
At this moment Conseil and the Canadian entered, quite composed, and even joyous. They
knew not what awaited them.
"Faith, sir," said Ned Land, "your Captain Nemo--the devil take him!-- has
just made us a very pleasant offer."
"Ah!" said I, "you know?"
"If agreeable to you, sir," interrupted Conseil, "the commander of the
Nautilus has invited us to visit the magnificent Ceylon fisheries to-morrow, in your
company; he did it kindly, and behaved like a real gentleman."
"He said nothing more?"
"Nothing more, sir, except that he had already spoken to you of this little
walk."
"Sir," said Conseil, "would you give us some details of the pearl
fishery?"
"As to the fishing itself," I asked, "or the incidents, which?"
"On the fishing," replied the Canadian; "before entering upon the ground,
it is as well to know something about it."
"Very well; sit down, my friends, and I will teach you."
Ned and Conseil seated themselves on an ottoman, and the first thing the Canadian asked
was:
"Sir, what is a pearl?"
"My worthy Ned," I answered, "to the poet, a pearl is a tear of the sea; to
the Orientals, it is a drop of dew solidified; to the ladies, it is a jewel of an oblong
shape, of a brilliancy of mother-of-pearl substance, which they wear on their fingers,
their necks, or their ears; for the chemist it is a mixture of phosphate and carbonate of
lime, with a little gelatine; and lastly, for naturalists, it is simply a morbid secretion
of the organ that produces the mother-of-pearl amongst certain bivalves."
"Branch of molluscs," said Conseil.
"Precisely so, my learned Conseil; and, amongst these testacea the earshell, the
tridacnae, the turbots, in a word, all those which secrete mother-of-pearl, that is, the
blue, bluish, violet, or white substance which lines the interior of their shells, are
capable of producing pearls."
"Mussels too?" asked the Canadian.
"Yes, mussels of certain waters in Scotland, Wales, Ireland, Saxony, Bohemia, and
France."
"Good! For the future I shall pay attention," replied the Canadian.
"But," I continued, "the particular mollusc which secretes the pearl is the
pearl-oyster. The pearl is nothing but a formation deposited in a globular form, either
adhering to the oyster-shell or buried in the folds of the creature. On the shell it is
fast: in the flesh it is loose; but always has for a kernel a small hard substance, maybe
a barren egg, maybe a grain of sand, around which the pearly matter deposits itself year
after year successively, and by thin concentric layers."
"Are many pearls found in the same oyster?" asked Conseil.
"Yes, my boy. Some are a perfect casket. One oyster has been mentioned, though I
allow myself to doubt it, as having contained no less than a hundred and fifty
sharks."
"A hundred and fifty sharks!" exclaimed Ned Land.
"Did I say sharks?" said I hurriedly. "I meant to say a hundred and fifty
pearls. Sharks would not be sense."
"Certainly not," said Conseil; "but will you tell us now by what means they
extract these pearls?"
"They proceed in various ways. When they adhere to the shell, the fishermen often
pull them off with pincers; but the most common way is to lay the oysters on mats of the
seaweed which covers the banks. Thus they die in the open air; and at the end of ten days
they are in a forward state of decomposition. They are then plunged into large reservoirs
of sea-water; then they are opened and washed."
"The price of these pearls varies according to their size?" asked Conseil.
"Not only according to their size," I answered, "but also according to
their shape, their water (that is, their colour), and their lustre: that is, that bright
and diapered sparkle which makes them so charming to the eye. The most beautiful are
called virgin pearls, or paragons. They are formed alone in the tissue of the mollusc, are
white, often opaque, and sometimes have the transparency of an opal; they are generally
round or oval. The round are made into bracelets, the oval into pendants, and, being more
precious, are sold singly. Those adhering to the shell of the oyster are more irregular in
shape, and are sold by weight. Lastly, in a lower order are classed those small pearls
known under the name of seed-pearls; they are sold by measure, and are especially used in
embroidery for church ornaments."
"But," said Conseil, "is this pearl-fishery dangerous?"
"No," I answered, quickly; "particularly if certain precautions are
taken."
"What does one risk in such a calling?" said Ned Land, "the swallowing of
some mouthfuls of sea-water?"
"As you say, Ned. By the bye," said I, trying to take Captain Nemo's careless
tone, "are you afraid of sharks, brave Ned?"
"I!" replied the Canadian; "a harpooner by profession? It is my trade to
make light of them."
"But," said I, "it is not a question of fishing for them with an
iron-swivel, hoisting them into the vessel, cutting off their tails with a blow of a
chopper, ripping them up, and throwing their heart into the sea!"
"Then, it is a question of----"
"Precisely."
"In the water?"
"In the water."
"Faith, with a good harpoon! You know, sir, these sharks are ill-fashioned beasts.
They turn on their bellies to seize you, and in that time----"
Ned Land had a way of saying "seize" which made my blood run cold.
"Well, and you, Conseil, what do you think of sharks?"
"Me!" said Conseil. "I will be frank, sir."
"So much the better," thought I.
"If you, sir, mean to face the sharks, I do not see why your faithful servant should
not face them with you."
Back to top.
CHAPTER III: A PEARL OF TEN MILLIONS
The next morning at four o'clock I was awakened by the steward whom Captain Nemo had
placed at my service. I rose hurriedly, dressed, and went into the saloon. Captain Nemo
was awaiting me.
"M. Aronnax," said he, "are you ready to start?"
"I am ready."
"Then please to follow me."
"And my companions, Captain?"
"They have been told and are waiting."
"Are we not to put on our diver's dresses?" asked I.
"Not yet. I have not allowed the Nautilus to come too near this coast, and we are
some distance from the Manaar Bank; but the boat is ready, and will take us to the exact
point of disembarking, which will save us a long way. It carries our diving apparatus,
which we will put on when we begin our submarine journey."
Captain Nemo conducted me to the central staircase, which led on the platform. Ned and
Conseil were already there, delighted at the idea of the "pleasure party" which
was preparing. Five sailors from the Nautilus, with their oars, waited in the boat, which
had been made fast against the side.
The night was still dark. Layers of clouds covered the sky, allowing but few stars to be
seen. I looked on the side where the land lay, and saw nothing but a dark line enclosing
three parts of the horizon, from south-west to north west. The Nautilus, having returned
during the night up the western coast of Ceylon, was now west of the bay, or rather gulf,
formed by the mainland and the Island of Manaar. There, under the dark waters, stretched
the pintadine bank, an inexhaustible field of pearls, the length of which is more than
twenty miles.
Captain Nemo, Ned Land, Conseil, and I took our places in the stern of the boat. The
master went to the tiller; his four companions leaned on their oars, the painter was cast
off, and we sheered off.
The boat went towards the south; the oarsmen did not hurry. I noticed that their strokes,
strong in the water, only followed each other every ten seconds, according to the method
generally adopted in the navy. Whilst the craft was running by its own velocity, the
liquid drops struck the dark depths of the waves crisply like spats of melted lead. A
little billow, spreading wide, gave a slight roll to the boat, and some samphire reeds
flapped before it.
We were silent. What was Captain Nemo thinking of? Perhaps of the land he was approaching,
and which he found too near to him, contrary to the Canadian's opinion, who thought it too
far off. As to Conseil, he was merely there from curiosity.
About half-past five the first tints on the horizon showed the upper line of coast more
distinctly. Flat enough in the east, it rose a little to the south. Five miles still lay
between us, and it was indistinct owing to the mist on the water. At six o'clock it became
suddenly daylight, with that rapidity peculiar to tropical regions, which know neither
dawn nor twilight. The solar rays pierced the curtain of clouds, piled up on the eastern
horizon, and the radiant orb rose rapidly. I saw land distinctly, with a few trees
scattered here and there. The boat neared Manaar Island, which was rounded to the south.
Captain Nemo rose from his seat and watched the sea. At a sign from him the anchor was
dropped, but the chain scarcely ran, for it was little more than a yard deep, and this
spot was one of the highest points of the bank of pintadines.
"Here we are, M. Aronnax," said Captain Nemo. "You see that enclosed bay?
Here, in a month will be assembled the numerous fishing boats of the exporters, and these
are the waters their divers will ransack so boldly. Happily, this bay is well situated for
that kind of fishing. It is sheltered from the strongest winds; the sea is never very
rough here, which makes it favourable for the diver's work. We will now put on our
dresses, and begin our walk."
I did not answer, and, while watching the suspected waves, began with the help of the
sailors to put on my heavy sea-dress. Captain Nemo and my companions were also dressing.
None of the Nautilus men were to accompany us on this new excursion.
Soon we were enveloped to the throat in india-rubber clothing; the air apparatus fixed to
our backs by braces. As to the Ruhmkorff apparatus, there was no necessity for it. Before
putting my head into the copper cap, I had asked the question of the Captain.
"They would be useless," he replied. "We are going to no great depth, and
the solar rays will be enough to light our walk. Besides, it would not be prudent to carry
the electric light in these waters; its brilliancy might attract some of the dangerous
inhabitants of the coast most inopportunely."
As Captain Nemo pronounced these words, I turned to Conseil and Ned Land. But my two
friends had already encased their heads in the metal cap, and they could neither hear nor
answer. One last question remained to ask of Captain Nemo.
"And our arms?" asked I; "our guns?"
"Guns! What for? Do not mountaineers attack the bear with a dagger in their hand, and
is not steel surer than lead? Here is a strong blade; put it in your belt, and we
start."
I looked at my companions; they were armed like us, and, more than that, Ned Land was
brandishing an enormous harpoon, which he had placed in the boat before leaving the
Nautilus.
Then, following the Captain's example, I allowed myself to be dressed in the heavy copper
helmet, and our reservoirs of air were at once in activity. An instant after we were
landed, one after the other, in about two yards of water upon an even sand. Captain Nemo
made a sign with his hand, and we followed him by a gentle declivity till we disappeared
under the waves.
At about seven o'clock we found ourselves at last surveying the oyster-banks on which the
pearl-oysters are reproduced by millions. Captain Nemo pointed with his hand to the
enormous heap of oysters; and I could well understand that this mine was inexhaustible,
for Nature's creative power is far beyond man's instinct of destruction. Ned Land,
faithful to his instinct, hastened to fill a net which he carried by his side with some of
the finest specimens. But we could not stop. We must follow the Captain, who seemed to
guide him self by paths known only to himself. The ground was sensibly rising, and
sometimes, on holding up my arm, it was above the surface of the sea. Then the level of
the bank would sink capriciously. Often we rounded high rocks scarped into pyramids. In
their dark fractures huge crustacea, perched upon their high claws like some war-machine,
watched us with fixed eyes, and under our feet crawled various kinds of annelides.
At this moment there opened before us a large grotto dug in a picturesque heap of rocks
and carpeted with all the thick warp of the submarine flora. At first it seemed very dark
to me. The solar rays seemed to be extinguished by successive gradations, until its vague
transparency became nothing more than drowned light. Captain Nemo entered; we followed. My
eyes soon accustomed themselves to this relative state of darkness. I could distinguish
the arches springing capriciously from natural pillars, standing broad upon their granite
base, like the heavy columns of Tuscan architecture. Why had our incomprehensible guide
led us to the bottom of this submarine crypt? I was soon to know. After descending a
rather sharp declivity, our feet trod the bottom of a kind of circular pit. There Captain
Nemo stopped, and with his hand indicated an object I had not yet perceived. It was an
oyster of extraordinary dimensions, a gigantic tridacne, a goblet which could have
contained a whole lake of holy-water, a basin the breadth of which was more than two yards
and a half, and consequently larger than that ornamenting the saloon of the Nautilus. I
approached this extraordinary mollusc. It adhered by its filaments to a table of granite,
and there, isolated, it developed itself in the calm waters of the grotto. I estimated the
weight of this tridacne at 600 lb. Such an oyster would contain 30 lb. of meat; and one
must have the stomach of a Gargantua to demolish some dozens of them.
Captain Nemo was evidently acquainted with the existence of this bivalve, and seemed to
have a particular motive in verifying the actual state of this tridacne. The shells were a
little open; the Captain came near and put his dagger between to prevent them from
closing; then with his hand he raised the membrane with its fringed edges, which formed a
cloak for the creature. There, between the folded plaits, I saw a loose pearl, whose size
equalled that of a coco-nut. Its globular shape, perfect clearness, and admirable lustre
made it altogether a jewel of inestimable value. Carried away by my curiosity, I stretched
out my hand to seize it, weigh it, and touch it; but the Captain stopped me, made a sign
of refusal, and quickly withdrew his dagger, and the two shells closed suddenly. I then
understood Captain Nemo's intention. In leaving this pearl hidden in the mantle of the
tridacne he was allowing it to grow slowly. Each year the secretions of the mollusc would
add new concentric circles. I estimated its value at L500,000 at least.
After ten minutes Captain Nemo stopped suddenly. I thought he had halted previously to
returning. No; by a gesture he bade us crouch beside him in a deep fracture of the rock,
his hand pointed to one part of the liquid mass, which I watched attentively. About five
yards from me a shadow appeared, and sank to the ground. The disquieting idea of sharks
shot through my mind, but I was mistaken; and once again it was not a monster of the ocean
that we had anything to do with.
It was a man, a living man, an Indian, a fisherman, a poor devil who, I suppose, had come
to glean before the harvest. I could see the bottom of his canoe anchored some feet above
his head. He dived and went up successively. A stone held between his feet, cut in the
shape of a sugar loaf, whilst a rope fastened him to his boat, helped him to descend more
rapidly. This was all his apparatus. Reaching the bottom, about five yards deep, he went
on his knees and filled his bag with oysters picked up at random. Then he went up, emptied
it, pulled up his stone, and began the operation once more, which lasted thirty seconds.
The diver did not see us. The shadow of the rock hid us from sight. And how should this
poor Indian ever dream that men, beings like himself, should be there under the water
watching his movements and losing no detail of the fishing? Several times he went up in
this way, and dived again. He did not carry away more than ten at each plunge, for he was
obliged to pull them from the bank to which they adhered by means of their strong byssus.
And how many of those oysters for which he risked his life had no pearl in them! I watched
him closely; his manoeuvres were regular; and for the space of half an hour no danger
appeared to threaten him.
I was beginning to accustom myself to the sight of this interesting fishing, when
suddenly, as the Indian was on the ground, I saw him make a gesture of terror, rise, and
make a spring to return to the surface of the sea.
I understood his dread. A gigantic shadow appeared just above the unfortunate diver. It
was a shark of enormous size advancing diagonally, his eyes on fire, and his jaws open. I
was mute with horror and unable to move. The voracious creature shot towards the Indian,
who threw himself on one side to avoid the shark's fins; but not its tail, for it struck
his chest and stretched him on the ground.
This scene lasted but a few seconds: the shark returned, and, turning on his back,
prepared himself for cutting the Indian in two, when I saw Captain Nemo rise suddenly, and
then, dagger in hand, walk straight to the monster, ready to fight face to face with him.
The very moment the shark was going to snap the unhappy fisherman in two, he perceived his
new adversary, and, turning over, made straight towards him.
I can still see Captain Nemo's position. Holding himself well together, he waited for the
shark with admirable coolness; and, when it rushed at him, threw himself on one side with
wonderful quickness, avoiding the shock, and burying his dagger deep into its side. But it
was not all over. A terrible combat ensued.
The shark had seemed to roar, if I might say so. The blood rushed in torrents from its
wound. The sea was dyed red, and through the opaque liquid I could distinguish nothing
more. Nothing more until the moment when, like lightning, I saw the undaunted Captain
hanging on to one of the creature's fins, struggling, as it were, hand to hand with the
monster, and dealing successive blows at his enemy, yet still unable to give a decisive
one.
The shark's struggles agitated the water with such fury that the rocking threatened to
upset me. I wanted to go to the Captain's assistance, but, nailed to the spot with horror,
I could not stir.
I saw the haggard eye; I saw the different phases of the fight. The Captain fell to the
earth, upset by the enormous mass which leant upon him. The shark's jaws opened wide, like
a pair of factory shears, and it would have been all over with the Captain; but, quick as
thought, harpoon in hand, Ned Land rushed towards the shark and struck it with its sharp
point.
The waves were impregnated with a mass of blood. They rocked under the shark's movements,
which beat them with indescribable fury. Ned Land had not missed his aim. It was the
monster's death-rattle. Struck to the heart, it struggled in dreadful convulsions, the
shock of which overthrew Conseil.
But Ned Land had disentangled the Captain, who, getting up without any wound, went
straight to the Indian, quickly cut the cord which held him to his stone, took him in his
arms, and, with a sharp blow of his heel, mounted to the surface. We all three followed in
a few seconds, saved by a miracle, and reached the fisherman's boat.
Captain Nemo's first care was to recall the unfortunate man to life again. I did not think
he could succeed. I hoped so, for the poor creature's immersion was not long; but the blow
from the shark's tail might have been his death-blow.
Happily, with the Captain's and Conseil's sharp friction, I saw consciousness return by
degrees. He opened his eyes. What was his surprise, his terror even, at seeing four great
copper heads leaning over him! And, above all, what must he have thought when Captain
Nemo, drawing from the pocket of his dress a bag of pearls, placed it in his hand! This
munificent charity from the man of the waters to the poor Cingalese was accepted with a
trembling hand. His wondering eyes showed that he knew not to what super-human beings he
owed both fortune and life.
At a sign from the Captain we regained the bank, and, following the road already
traversed, came in about half an hour to the anchor which held the canoe of the Nautilus
to the earth. Once on board, we each, with the help of the sailors, got rid of the heavy
copper helmet. Captain Nemo's first word was to the Canadian.
"Thank you, Master Land," said he.
"It was in revenge, Captain," replied Ned Land. "I owed you that."
A ghastly smile passed across the Captain's lips, and that was all. "To the
Nautilus," said he.
The boat flew over the waves. Some minutes after we met the shark's dead body floating. By
the black marking of the extremity of its fins, I recognised the terrible melanopteron of
the Indian Seas, of the species of shark so properly called. It was more than twenty-five
feet long; its enormous mouth occupied one-third of its body. It was an adult, as was
known by its six rows of teeth placed in an isosceles triangle in the upper jaw.
Whilst I was contemplating this inert mass, a dozen of these voracious beasts appeared
round the boat; and, without noticing us, threw themselves upon the dead body and fought
with one another for the pieces.
At half-past eight we were again on board the Nautilus. There I reflected on the incidents
which had taken place in our excursion to the Manaar Bank. Two conclusions I must
inevitably draw from it--one bearing upon the unparalleled courage of Captain Nemo, the
other upon his devotion to a human being, a representative of that race from which he fled
beneath the sea. Whatever he might say, this strange man had not yet succeeded in entirely
crushing his heart.
When I made this observation to him, he answered in a slightly moved tone: "That
Indian, sir, is an inhabitant of an oppressed country; and I am still, and shall be, to my
last breath, one of them!"
Back to top.
CHAPTER IV: THE RED SEA
In the course of the day of the 29th of January, the island of Ceylon disappeared under
the horizon, and the Nautilus, at a speed of twenty miles an hour, slid into the labyrinth
of canals which separate the Maldives from the Laccadives. It coasted even the Island of
Kiltan, a land originally coraline, discovered by Vasco da Gama in 1499, and one of the
nineteen principal islands of the Laccadive Archipelago, situated between 10@ and 14@ 30'
N. lat., and 69@ 50' 72" E. long. We had made 16,220 miles, or 7,500 (French) leagues
from our starting-point in the Japanese Seas.
The next day (30th January), when the Nautilus went to the surface of the ocean there was
no land in sight. Its course was N.N.E., in the direction of the Sea of Oman, between
Arabia and the Indian Peninsula, which serves as an outlet to the Persian Gulf. It was
evidently a block without any possible egress. Where was Captain Nemo taking us to? I
could not say. This, however, did not satisfy the Canadian, who that day came to me asking
where we were going.
"We are going where our Captain's fancy takes us, Master Ned."
"His fancy cannot take us far, then," said the Canadian. "The Persian Gulf
has no outlet: and, if we do go in, it will not be long before we are out again."
"Very well, then, we will come out again, Master Land; and if, after the Persian
Gulf, the Nautilus would like to visit the Red Sea, the Straits of Bab-el-mandeb are there
to give us entrance."
"I need not tell you, sir," said Ned Land, "that the Red Sea is as much
closed as the Gulf, as the Isthmus of Suez is not yet cut; and, if it was, a boat as
mysterious as ours would not risk itself in a canal cut with sluices. And again, the Red
Sea is not the road to take us back to Europe."
"But I never said we were going back to Europe."
"What do you suppose, then?"
"I suppose that, after visiting the curious coasts of Arabia and Egypt, the Nautilus
will go down the Indian Ocean again, perhaps cross the Channel of Mozambique, perhaps off
the Mascarenhas, so as to gain the Cape of Good Hope."
"And once at the Cape of Good Hope?" asked the Canadian, with peculiar emphasis.
"Well, we shall penetrate into that Atlantic which we do not yet know. Ah! friend
Ned, you are getting tired of this journey under the sea; you are surfeited with the
incessantly varying spectacle of submarine wonders. For my part, I shall be sorry to see
the end of a voyage which it is given to so few men to make."
For four days, till the 3rd of February, the Nautilus scoured the Sea of Oman, at various
speeds and at various depths. It seemed to go at random, as if hesitating as to which road
it should follow, but we never passed the Tropic of Cancer.
In quitting this sea we sighted Muscat for an instant, one of the most important towns of
the country of Oman. I admired its strange aspect, surrounded by black rocks upon which
its white houses and forts stood in relief. I saw the rounded domes of its mosques, the
elegant points of its minarets, its fresh and verdant terraces. But it was only a vision!
The Nautilus soon sank under the waves of that part of the sea.
We passed along the Arabian coast of Mahrah and Hadramaut, for a distance of six miles,
its undulating line of mountains being occasionally relieved by some ancient ruin. The 5th
of February we at last entered the Gulf of Aden, a perfect funnel introduced into the neck
of Bab-el-mandeb, through which the Indian waters entered the Red Sea.
The 6th of February, the Nautilus floated in sight of Aden, perched upon a promontory
which a narrow isthmus joins to the mainland, a kind of inaccessible Gibraltar, the
fortifications of which were rebuilt by the English after taking possession in 1839. I
caught a glimpse of the octagon minarets of this town, which was at one time the richest
commercial magazine on the coast. I certainly thought that Captain Nemo, arrived at this
point, would back out again; but I was mistaken, for he did no such thing, much to my
surprise.
The next day, the 7th of February, we entered the Straits of Bab-el-mandeb, the name of
which, in the Arab tongue, means The Gate of Tears. To twenty miles in breadth, it is only
thirty-two in length. And for the Nautilus, starting at full speed, the crossing was
scarcely the work of an hour. But I saw nothing, not even the Island of Perim, with which
the British Government has fortified the position of Aden. There were too many English or
French steamers of the line of Suez to Bombay, Calcutta to Melbourne, and from Bourbon to
the Mauritius, furrowing this narrow passage, for the Nautilus to venture to show itself.
So it remained prudently below. At last about noon, we were in the waters of the Red Sea.
I would not even seek to understand the caprice which had decided Captain Nemo upon
entering the gulf. But I quite approved of the Nautilus entering it. Its speed was
lessened: sometimes it kept on the surface, sometimes it dived to avoid a vessel, and thus
I was able to observe the upper and lower parts of this curious sea.
The 8th of February, from the first dawn of day, Mocha came in sight, now a ruined town,
whose walls would fall at a gunshot, yet which shelters here and there some verdant
date-trees; once an important city, containing six public markets, and twenty-six mosques,
and whose walls, defended by fourteen forts, formed a girdle of two miles in
circumference.
The Nautilus then approached the African shore, where the depth of the sea was greater.
There, between two waters clear as crystal, through the open panels we were allowed to
contemplate the beautiful bushes of brilliant coral and large blocks of rock clothed with
a splendid fur of green variety of sites and landscapes along these sandbanks and algae
and fuci. What an indescribable spectacle, and what variety of sites and landscapes along
these sandbanks and volcanic islands which bound the Libyan coast! But where these shrubs
appeared in all their beauty was on the eastern coast, which the Nautilus soon gained. It
was on the coast of Tehama, for there not only did this display of zoophytes flourish
beneath the level of the sea, but they also formed picturesque interlacings which unfolded
themselves about sixty feet above the surface, more capricious but less highly coloured
than those whose freshness was kept up by the vital power of the waters.
What charming hours I passed thus at the window of the saloon! What new specimens of
submarine flora and fauna did I admire under the brightness of our electric lantern!
The 9th of February the Nautilus floated in the broadest part of the Red Sea, which is
comprised between Souakin, on the west coast, and Komfidah, on the east coast, with a
diameter of ninety miles.
That day at noon, after the bearings were taken, Captain Nemo mounted the platform, where
I happened to be, and I was determined not to let him go down again without at least
pressing him regarding his ulterior projects. As soon as he saw me he approached and
graciously offered me a cigar.
"Well, sir, does this Red Sea please you? Have you sufficiently observed the wonders
it covers, its fishes, its zoophytes, its parterres of sponges, and its forests of coral?
Did you catch a glimpse of the towns on its borders?"
"Yes, Captain Nemo," I replied; "and the Nautilus is wonderfully fitted for
such a study. Ah! it is an intelligent boat!"
"Yes, sir, intelligent and invulnerable. It fears neither the terrible tempests of
the Red Sea, nor its currents, nor its sandbanks."
"Certainly," said I, "this sea is quoted as one of the worst, and in the
time of the ancients, if I am not mistaken, its reputation was detestable."
"Detestable, M. Aronnax. The Greek and Latin historians do not speak favourably of
it, and Strabo says it is very dangerous during the Etesian winds and in the rainy season.
The Arabian Edrisi portrays it under the name of the Gulf of Colzoum, and relates that
vessels perished there in great numbers on the sandbanks and that no one would risk
sailing in the night. It is, he pretends, a sea subject to fearful hurricanes, strewn with
inhospitable islands, and `which offers nothing good either on its surface or in its
depths.'"
"One may see," I replied, "that these historians never sailed on board the
Nautilus."
"Just so," replied the Captain, smiling; "and in that respect moderns are
not more advanced than the ancients. It required many ages to find out the mechanical
power of steam. Who knows if, in another hundred years, we may not see a second Nautilus?
Progress is slow, M. Aronnax."
"It is true," I answered; "your boat is at least a century before its time,
perhaps an era. What a misfortune that the secret of such an invention should die with its
inventor!"
Captain Nemo did not reply. After some minutes' silence he continued: "You were
speaking of the opinions of ancient historians upon the dangerous navigation of the Red
Sea."
"It is true," said I; "but were not their fears exaggerated?"
"Yes and no, M. Aronnax," replied Captain Nemo, who seemed to know the Red Sea
by heart. "That which is no longer dangerous for a modern vessel, well rigged,
strongly built, and master of its own course, thanks to obedient steam, offered all sorts
of perils to the ships of the ancients. Picture to yourself those first navigators
venturing in ships made of planks sewn with the cords of the palmtree, saturated with the
grease of the seadog, and covered with powdered resin! They had not even instruments
wherewith to take their bearings, and they went by guess amongst currents of which they
scarcely knew anything. Under such conditions shipwrecks were, and must have been,
numerous. But in our time, steamers running between Suez and the South Seas have nothing
more to fear from the fury of this gulf, in spite of contrary trade-winds. The captain and
passengers do not prepare for their departure by offering propitiatory sacrifices; and, on
their return, they no longer go ornamented with wreaths and gilt fillets to thank the gods
in the neighbouring temple."
"I agree with you," said I; "and steam seems to have killed all gratitude
in the hearts of sailors. But, Captain, since you seem to have especially studied this
sea, can you tell me the origin of its name?"
"There exist several explanations on the subject, M. Aronnax. Would you like to know
the opinion of a chronicler of the fourteenth century?"
"Willingly."
"This fanciful writer pretends that its name was given to it after the passage of the
Israelites, when Pharaoh perished in the waves which closed at the voice of Moses."
"A poet's explanation, Captain Nemo," I replied; "but I cannot content
myself with that. I ask you for your personal opinion."
"Here it is, M. Aronnax. According to my idea, we must see in this appellation of the
Red Sea a translation of the Hebrew word `Edom'; and if the ancients gave it that name, it
was on account of the particular colour of its waters."
"But up to this time I have seen nothing but transparent waves and without any
particular colour."
"Very likely; but as we advance to the bottom of the gulf, you will see this singular
appearance. I remember seeing the Bay of Tor entirely red, like a sea of blood."
"And you attribute this colour to the presence of a microscopic seaweed?"
"Yes."
"So, Captain Nemo, it is not the first time you have overrun the Red Sea on board the
Nautilus?"
"No, sir."
"As you spoke a while ago of the passage of the Israelites and of the catastrophe to
the Egyptians, I will ask whether you have met with the traces under the water of this
great historical fact?"
"No, sir; and for a good reason."
"What is it?"
"It is that the spot where Moses and his people passed is now so blocked up with sand
that the camels can barely bathe their legs there. You can well understand that there
would not be water enough for my Nautilus."
"And the spot?" I asked.
"The spot is situated a little above the Isthmus of Suez, in the arm which formerly
made a deep estuary, when the Red Sea extended to the Salt Lakes. Now, whether this
passage were miraculous or not, the Israelites, nevertheless, crossed there to reach the
Promised Land, and Pharaoh's army perished precisely on that spot; and I think that
excavations made in the middle of the sand would bring to light a large number of arms and
instruments of Egyptian origin."
"That is evident," I replied; "and for the sake of archaeologists let us
hope that these excavations will be made sooner or later, when new towns are established
on the isthmus, after the construction of the Suez Canal; a canal, however, very useless
to a vessel like the Nautilus."
"Very likely; but useful to the whole world," said Captain Nemo. "The
ancients well understood the utility of a communication between the Red Sea and the
Mediterranean for their commercial affairs: but they did not think of digging a canal
direct, and took the Nile as an intermediate. Very probably the canal which united the
Nile to the Red Sea was begun by Sesostris, if we may believe tradition. One thing is
certain, that in the year 615 before Jesus Christ, Necos undertook the works of an
alimentary canal to the waters of the Nile across the plain of Egypt, looking towards
Arabia. It took four days to go up this canal, and it was so wide that two triremes could
go abreast. It was carried on by Darius, the son of Hystaspes, and probably finished by
Ptolemy II. Strabo saw it navigated: but its decline from the point of departure, near
Bubastes, to the Red Sea was so slight that it was only navigable for a few months in the
year. This canal answered all commercial purposes to the age of Antonius, when it was
abandoned and blocked up with sand. Restored by order of the Caliph Omar, it was
definitely destroyed in 761 or 762 by Caliph Al-Mansor, who wished to prevent the arrival
of provisions to Mohammed-ben-Abdallah, who had revolted against him. During the
expedition into Egypt, your General Bonaparte discovered traces of the works in the Desert
of Suez; and, surprised by the tide, he nearly perished before regaining Hadjaroth, at the
very place where Moses had encamped three thousand years before him."
"Well, Captain, what the ancients dared not undertake, this junction between the two
seas, which will shorten the road from Cadiz to India, M. Lesseps has succeeded in doing;
and before long he will have changed Africa into an immense island."
"Yes, M. Aronnax; you have the right to be proud of your countryman. Such a man
brings more honour to a nation than great captains. He began, like so many others, with
disgust and rebuffs; but he has triumphed, for he has the genius of will. And it is sad to
think that a work like that, which ought to have been an international work and which
would have sufficed to make a reign illustrious, should have succeeded by the energy of
one man. All honour to M. Lesseps!"
"Yes! honour to the great citizen," I replied, surprised by the manner in which
Captain Nemo had just spoken.
"Unfortunately," he continued, "I cannot take you through the Suez Canal;
but you will be able to see the long jetty of Port Said after to-morrow, when we shall be
in the Mediterranean."
"The Mediterranean!" I exclaimed.
"Yes, sir; does that astonish you?"
"What astonishes me is to think that we shall be there the day after to-morrow."
"Indeed?"
"Yes, Captain, although by this time I ought to have accustomed myself to be
surprised at nothing since I have been on board your boat."
"But the cause of this surprise?"
"Well! it is the fearful speed you will have to put on the Nautilus, if the day after
to-morrow she is to be in the Mediterranean, having made the round of Africa, and doubled
the Cape of Good Hope!"
"Who told you that she would make the round of Africa and double the Cape of Good
Hope, sir?"
"Well, unless the Nautilus sails on dry land, and passes above the isthmus----"
"Or beneath it, M. Aronnax."
"Beneath it?"
"Certainly," replied Captain Nemo quietly. "A long time ago Nature made
under this tongue of land what man has this day made on its surface."
"What! such a passage exists?"
"Yes; a subterranean passage, which I have named the Arabian Tunnel. It takes us
beneath Suez and opens into the Gulf of Pelusium."
"But this isthmus is composed of nothing but quick sands?"
"To a certain depth. But at fifty-five yards only there is a solid layer of
rock."
"Did you discover this passage by chance?" I asked more and more surprised.
"Chance and reasoning, sir; and by reasoning even more than by chance. Not only does
this passage exist, but I have profited by it several times. Without that I should not
have ventured this day into the impassable Red Sea. I noticed that in the Red Sea and in
the Mediterranean there existed a certain number of fishes of a kind perfectly identical.
Certain of the fact, I asked myself was it possible that there was no communication
between the two seas? If there was, the subterranean current must necessarily run from the
Red Sea to the Mediterranean, from the sole cause of difference of level. I caught a large
number of fishes in the neighbourhood of Suez. I passed a copper ring through their tails,
and threw them back into the sea. Some months later, on the coast of Syria, I caught some
of my fish ornamented with the ring. Thus the communication between the two was proved. I
then sought for it with my Nautilus; I discovered it, ventured into it, and before long,
sir, you too will have passed through my Arabian tunnel!"
Back to top.
CHAPTER V: THE ARABIAN TUNNEL
That same evening, in 21@ 30' N. lat., the Nautilus floated on the surface of the sea,
approaching the Arabian coast. I saw Djeddah, the most important counting-house of Egypt,
Syria, Turkey, and India. I distinguished clearly enough its buildings, the vessels
anchored at the quays, and those whose draught of water obliged them to anchor in the
roads. The sun, rather low on the horizon, struck full on the houses of the town, bringing
out their whiteness. Outside, some wooden cabins, and some made of reeds, showed the
quarter inhabited by the Bedouins. Soon Djeddah was shut out from view by the shadows of
night, and the Nautilus found herself under water slightly phosphorescent.
The next day, the 10th of February, we sighted several ships running to windward. The
Nautilus returned to its submarine navigation; but at noon, when her bearings were taken,
the sea being deserted, she rose again to her waterline.
Accompanied by Ned and Conseil, I seated myself on the platform. The coast on the eastern
side looked like a mass faintly printed upon a damp fog. We were leaning on the sides of
the pinnace, talking of one thing and another, when Ned Land, stretching out his hand
towards a spot on the sea, said: "Do you see anything there, sir?"
"No, Ned," I replied; "but I have not your eyes, you know."
"Look well," said Ned, "there, on the starboard beam, about the height of
the lantern! Do you not see a mass which seems to move?"
"Certainly," said I, after close attention; "I see something like a long
black body on the top of the water."
And certainly before long the black object was not more than a mile from us. It looked
like a great sandbank deposited in the open sea. It was a gigantic dugong!
Ned Land looked eagerly. His eyes shone with covetousness at the sight of the animal. His
hand seemed ready to harpoon it. One would have thought he was awaiting the moment to
throw himself into the sea and attack it in its element. At this instant Captain Nemo
appeared on the platform. He saw the dugong, understood the Canadian's attitude, and,
addressing him, said: "If you held a harpoon just now, Master Land, would it not burn
your hand?"
"Just so, sir."
"And you would not be sorry to go back, for one day, to your trade of a fisherman and
to add this cetacean to the list of those you have already killed?"
"I should not, sir."
"Well, you can try."
"Thank you, sir," said Ned Land, his eyes flaming.
"Only," continued the Captain, "I advise you for your own sake not to miss
the creature."
"Is the dugong dangerous to attack?" I asked, in spite of the Canadian's shrug
of the shoulders.
"Yes," replied the Captain; "sometimes the animal turns upon its assailants
and overturns their boat. But for Master Land this danger is not to be feared. His eye is
prompt, his arm sure."
At this moment seven men of the crew, mute and immovable as ever, mounted the platform.
One carried a harpoon and a line similar to those employed in catching whales. The pinnace
was lifted from the bridge, pulled from its socket, and let down into the sea. Six oarsmen
took their seats, and the coxswain went to the tiller. Ned, Conseil, and I went to the
back of the boat.
"You are not coming, Captain?" I asked.
"No, sir; but I wish you good sport."
The boat put off, and, lifted by the six rowers, drew rapidly towards the dugong, which
floated about two miles from the Nautilus.
Arrived some cables-length from the cetacean, the speed slackened, and the oars dipped
noiselessly into the quiet waters. Ned Land, harpoon in hand, stood in the fore part of
the boat. The harpoon used for striking the whale is generally attached to a very long
cord which runs out rapidly as the wounded creature draws it after him. But here the cord
was not more than ten fathoms long, and the extremity was attached to a small barrel
which, by floating, was to show the course the dugong took under the water.
I stood and carefully watched the Canadian's adversary. This dugong, which also bears the
name of the halicore, closely resembles the manatee; its oblong body terminated in a
lengthened tail, and its lateral fins in perfect fingers. Its difference from the manatee
consisted in its upper jaw, which was armed with two long and pointed teeth which formed
on each side diverging tusks.
This dugong which Ned Land was preparing to attack was of colossal dimensions; it was more
than seven yards long. It did not move, and seemed to be sleeping on the waves, which
circumstance made it easier to capture. The boat approached within six yards of the
animal. The oars rested on the rowlocks. I half rose. Ned Land, his body thrown a little
back, brandished the harpoon in his experienced hand.
Suddenly a hissing noise was heard, and the dugong disappeared. The harpoon, although
thrown with great force; had apparently only struck the water.
"Curse it!" exclaimed the Canadian furiously; "I have missed it!"
"No," said I; "the creature is wounded--look at the blood; but your weapon
has not stuck in his body."
"My harpoon! my harpoon!" cried Ned Land.
The sailors rowed on, and the coxswain made for the floating barrel. The harpoon regained,
we followed in pursuit of the animal. The latter came now and then to the surface to
breathe. Its wound had not weakened it, for it shot onwards with great rapidity. The boat,
rowed by strong arms, flew on its track. Several times it approached within some few
yards, and the Canadian was ready to strike, but the dugong made off with a sudden plunge,
and it was impossible to reach it.
Imagine the passion which excited impatient Ned Land! He hurled at the unfortunate
creature the most energetic expletives in the English tongue. For my part, I was only
vexed to see the dugong escape all our attacks.
We pursued it without relaxation for an hour, and I began to think it would prove
difficult to capture, when the animal, possessed with the perverse idea of vengeance of
which he had cause to repent, turned upon the pinnace and assailed us in its turn. This
manoeuvre did not escape the Canadian.
"Look out!" he cried.
The coxswain said some words in his outlandish tongue, doubtless warning the men to keep
on their guard. The dugong came within twenty feet of the boat, stopped, sniffed the air
briskly with its large nostrils (not pierced at the extremity, but in the upper part of
its muzzle). Then, taking a spring, he threw himself upon us.
The pinnace could not avoid the shock, and half upset, shipped at least two tons of water,
which had to be emptied; but, thanks to the coxswain, we caught it sideways, not full
front, so we were not quite overturned. While Ned Land, clinging to the bows, belaboured
the gigantic animal with blows from his harpoon, the creature's teeth were buried in the
gunwale, and it lifted the whole thing out of the water, as a lion does a roebuck. We were
upset over one another, and I know not how the adventure would have ended, if the
Canadian, still enraged with the beast, had not struck it to the heart.
I heard its teeth grind on the iron plate, and the dugong disappeared, carrying the
harpoon with him. But the barrel soon returned to the surface, and shortly after the body
of the animal, turned on its back. The boat came up with it, took it in tow, and made
straight for the Nautilus. It required tackle of enormous strength to hoist the dugong on
to the platform. It weighed 10,000 lb.
The next day, 11th February, the larder of the Nautilus was enriched by some more delicate
game. A flight of sea-swallows rested on the Nautilus. It was a species of the Sterna
nilotica, peculiar to Egypt; its beak is black, head grey and pointed, the eye surrounded
by white spots, the back, wings, and tail of a greyish colour, the belly and throat white,
and claws red. They also took some dozen of Nile ducks, a wild bird of high flavour, its
throat and upper part of the head white with black spots.
About five o'clock in the evening we sighted to the north the Cape of Ras-Mohammed. This
cape forms the extremity of Arabia Petraea, comprised between the Gulf of Suez and the
Gulf of Acabah. The Nautilus penetrated into the Straits of Jubal, which leads to the Gulf
of Suez. I distinctly saw a high mountain, towering between the two gulfs of Ras-Mohammed.
It was Mount Horeb, that Sinai at the top of which Moses saw God face to face.
At six o'clock the Nautilus, sometimes floating, sometimes immersed, passed some distance
from Tor, situated at the end of the bay, the waters of which seemed tinted with red, an
observation already made by Captain Nemo. Then night fell in the midst of a heavy silence,
sometimes broken by the cries of the pelican and other night-birds, and the noise of the
waves breaking upon the shore, chafing against the rocks, or the panting of some far-off
steamer beating the waters of the Gulf with its noisy paddles.
From eight to nine o'clock the Nautilus remained some fathoms under the water. According
to my calculation we must have been very near Suez. Through the panel of the saloon I saw
the bottom of the rocks brilliantly lit up by our electric lamp. We seemed to be leaving
the Straits behind us more and more.
At a quarter-past nine, the vessel having returned to the surface, I mounted the platform.
Most impatient to pass through Captain Nemo's tunnel, I could not stay in one place, so
came to breathe the fresh night air.
Soon in the shadow I saw a pale light, half discoloured by the fog, shining about a mile
from us.
"A floating lighthouse!" said someone near me.
I turned, and saw the Captain.
"It is the floating light of Suez," he continued. "It will not be long
before we gain the entrance of the tunnel."
"The entrance cannot be easy?"
"No, sir; for that reason I am accustomed to go into the steersman's cage and myself
direct our course. And now, if you will go down, M. Aronnax, the Nautilus is going under
the waves, and will not return to the surface until we have passed through the Arabian
Tunnel."
Captain Nemo led me towards the central staircase; half way down he opened a door,
traversed the upper deck, and landed in the pilot's cage, which it may be remembered rose
at the extremity of the platform. It was a cabin measuring six feet square, very much like
that occupied by the pilot on the steamboats of the Mississippi or Hudson. In the midst
worked a wheel, placed vertically, and caught to the tiller-rope, which ran to the back of
the Nautilus. Four light-ports with lenticular glasses, let in a groove in the partition
of the cabin, allowed the man at the wheel to see in all directions.
This cabin was dark; but soon my eyes accustomed themselves to the obscurity, and I
perceived the pilot, a strong man, with his hands resting on the spokes of the wheel.
Outside, the sea appeared vividly lit up by the lantern, which shed its rays from the back
of the cabin to the other extremity of the platform.
"Now," said Captain Nemo, "let us try to make our passage."
Electric wires connected the pilot's cage with the machinery room, and from there the
Captain could communicate simultaneously to his Nautilus the direction and the speed. He
pressed a metal knob, and at once the speed of the screw diminished.I looked in silence at
the high straight wall we were running by at this moment, the immovable base of a massive
sandy coast. We followed it thus for an hour only some few yards off. Captain Nemo did not
take his eye from the knob, suspended by its two concentric circles in the cabin. At a
simple gesture, the pilot modified the course of the Nautilus every instant.
I had placed myself at the port-scuttle, and saw some magnificent substructures of coral,
zoophytes, seaweed, and fucus, agitating their enormous claws, which stretched out from
the fissures of the rock.
At a quarter-past ten, the Captain himself took the helm. A large gallery, black and deep,
opened before us. The Nautilus went boldly into it. A strange roaring was heard round its
sides. It was the waters of the Red Sea, which the incline of the tunnel precipitated
violently towards the Mediterranean. The Nautilus went with the torrent, rapid as an
arrow, in spite of the efforts of the machinery, which, in order to offer more effective
resistance, beat the waves with reversed screw.
On the walls of the narrow passage I could see nothing but brilliant rays, straight lines,
furrows of fire, traced by the great speed, under the brilliant electric light. My heart
beat fast.
At thirty-five minutes past ten, Captain Nemo quitted the helm, and, turning to me, said:
"The Mediterranean!"
In less than twenty minutes, the Nautilus, carried along by the torrent, had passed
through the Isthmus of Suez.
Back to top.
CHAPTER VI: THE GRECIAN ARCHIPELAGO
The next day, the 12th of February, at the dawn of day, the Nautilus rose to the surface.
I hastened on to the platform. Three miles to the south the dim outline of Pelusium was to
be seen. A torrent had carried us from one sea to another. About seven o'clock Ned and
Conseil joined me.
"Well, Sir Naturalist," said the Canadian, in a slightly jovial tone, "and
the Mediterranean?"
"We are floating on its surface, friend Ned."
"What!" said Conseil, "this very night."
"Yes, this very night; in a few minutes we have passed this impassable isthmus."
"I do not believe it," replied the Canadian.
"Then you are wrong, Master Land," I continued; "this low coast which
rounds off to the south is the Egyptian coast. And you who have such good eyes, Ned, you
can see the jetty of Port Said stretching into the sea."
The Canadian looked attentively.
"Certainly you are right, sir, and your Captain is a first-rate man. We are in the
Mediterranean. Good! Now, if you please, let us talk of our own little affair, but so that
no one hears us."
I saw what the Canadian wanted, and, in any case, I thought it better to let him talk, as
he wished it; so we all three went and sat down near the lantern, where we were less
exposed to the spray of the blades.
"Now, Ned, we listen; what have you to tell us?"
"What I have to tell you is very simple. We are in Europe; and before Captain Nemo's
caprices drag us once more to the bottom of the Polar Seas, or lead us into Oceania, I ask
to leave the Nautilus."
I wished in no way to shackle the liberty of my companions, but I certainly felt no desire
to leave Captain Nemo. Thanks to him, and thanks to his apparatus, I was each day nearer
the completion of my submarine studies; and I was rewriting my book of submarine depths in
its very element. Should I ever again have such an opportunity of observing the wonders of
the ocean? No, certainly not! And I could not bring myself to the idea of abandoning the
Nautilus before the cycle of investigation was accomplished.
"Friend Ned, answer me frankly, are you tired of being on board? Are you sorry that
destiny has thrown us into Captain Nemo's hands?"
The Canadian remained some moments without answering. Then, crossing his arms, he said:
"Frankly, I do not regret this journey under the seas. I shall be glad to have made
it; but, now that it is made, let us have done with it. That is my idea."
"It will come to an end, Ned."
"Where and when?"
"Where I do not know--when I cannot say; or, rather, I suppose it will end when these
seas have nothing more to teach us."
"Then what do you hope for?" demanded the Canadian.
"That circumstances may occur as well six months hence as now by which we may and
ought to profit."
"Oh!" said Ned Land, "and where shall we be in six months, if you please,
Sir Naturalist?"
"Perhaps in China; you know the Nautilus is a rapid traveller. It goes through water
as swallows through the air, or as an express on the land. It does not fear frequented
seas; who can say that it may not beat the coasts of France, England, or America, on which
flight may be attempted as advantageously as here."
"M. Aronnax," replied the Canadian, "your arguments are rotten at the
foundation. You speak in the future, `We shall be there! we shall be here!' I speak in the
present, `We are here, and we must profit by it.'"
Ned Land's logic pressed me hard, and I felt myself beaten on that ground. I knew not what
argument would now tell in my favour.
"Sir," continued Ned, "let us suppose an impossibility: if Captain Nemo
should this day offer you your liberty; would you accept it?"
"I do not know," I answered.
"And if," he added, "the offer made you this day was never to be renewed,
would you accept it?"
"Friend Ned, this is my answer. Your reasoning is against me. We must not rely on
Captain Nemo's good-will. Common prudence forbids him to set us at liberty. On the other
side, prudence bids us profit by the first opportunity to leave the Nautilus."
"Well, M. Aronnax, that is wisely said."
"Only one observation--just one. The occasion must be serious, and our first attempt
must succeed; if it fails, we shall never find another, and Captain Nemo will never
forgive us."
"All that is true," replied the Canadian. "But your observation applies
equally to all attempts at flight, whether in two years' time, or in two days'. But the
question is still this: If a favourable opportunity presents itself, it must be
seized."
"Agreed! And now, Ned, will you tell me what you mean by a favourable
opportunity?"
"It will be that which, on a dark night, will bring the Nautilus a short distance
from some European coast."
"And you will try and save yourself by swimming?"
"Yes, if we were near enough to the bank, and if the vessel was floating at the time.
Not if the bank was far away, and the boat was under the water."
"And in that case?"
"In that case, I should seek to make myself master of the pinnace. I know how it is
worked. We must get inside, and the bolts once drawn, we shall come to the surface of the
water, without even the pilot, who is in the bows, perceiving our flight."
"Well, Ned, watch for the opportunity; but do not forget that a hitch will ruin
us."
"I will not forget, sir."
"And now, Ned, would you like to know what I think of your project?"
"Certainly, M. Aronnax."
"Well, I think--I do not say I hope--I think that this favourable opportunity will
never present itself."
"Why not?"
"Because Captain Nemo cannot hide from himself that we have not given up all hope of
regaining our liberty, and he will be on his guard, above all, in the seas and in the
sight of European coasts."
"We shall see," replied Ned Land, shaking his head determinedly.
"And now, Ned Land," I added, "let us stop here. Not another word on the
subject. The day that you are ready, come and let us know, and we will follow you. I rely
entirely upon you."
Thus ended a conversation which, at no very distant time, led to such grave results. I
must say here that facts seemed to confirm my foresight, to the Canadian's great despair.
Did Captain Nemo distrust us in these frequented seas? or did he only wish to hide himself
from the numerous vessels, of all nations, which ploughed the Mediterranean? I could not
tell; but we were oftener between waters and far from the coast. Or, if the Nautilus did
emerge, nothing was to be seen but the pilot's cage; and sometimes it went to great
depths, for, between the Grecian Archipelago and Asia Minor we could not touch the bottom
by more than a thousand fathoms.
Thus I only knew we were near the Island of Carpathos, one of the Sporades, by Captain
Nemo reciting these lines from Virgil: "Est Carpathio Neptuni gurgite vates,
Caeruleus Proteus," as he pointed to a spot on the planisphere.
It was indeed the ancient abode of Proteus, the old shepherd of Neptune's flocks, now the
Island of Scarpanto, situated between Rhodes and Crete. I saw nothing but the granite base
through the glass panels of the saloon.
The next day, the 14th of February, I resolved to employ some hours in studying the fishes
of the Archipelago; but for some reason or other the panels remained hermetically sealed.
Upon taking the course of the Nautilus, I found that we were going towards Candia, the
ancient Isle of Crete. At the time I embarked on the Abraham Lincoln, the whole of this
island had risen in insurrection against the despotism of the Turks. But how the
insurgents had fared since that time I was absolutely ignorant, and it was not Captain
Nemo, deprived of all land communications, who could tell me.
I made no allusion to this event when that night I found myself alone with him in the
saloon. Besides, he seemed to be taciturn and preoccupied. Then, contrary to his custom,
he ordered both panels to be opened, and, going from one to the other, observed the mass
of waters attentively. To what end I could not guess; so, on my side, I employed my time
in studying the fish passing before my eyes.
In the midst of the waters a man appeared, a diver, carrying at his belt a leathern purse.
It was not a body abandoned to the waves; it was a living man, swimming with a strong
hand, disappearing occasionally to take breath at the surface.
I turned towards Captain Nemo, and in an agitated voice exclaimed: "A man
shipwrecked! He must be saved at any price!"
The Captain did not answer me, but came and leaned against the panel. The man had
approached, and, with his face flattened against the glass, was looking at us. To my great
amazement, Captain Nemo signed to him. The diver answered with his hand, mounted
immediately to the surface of the water, and did not appear again.
"Do not be uncomfortable," said Captain Nemo. "It is Nicholas of Cape
Matapan, surnamed Pesca. He is well known in all the Cyclades. A bold diver! water is his
element, and he lives more in it than on land, going continually from one island to
another, even as far as Crete."
"You know him, Captain?"
"Why not, M. Aronnax?"
Saying which, Captain Nemo went towards a piece of furniture standing near the left panel
of the saloon. Near this piece of furniture, I saw a chest bound with iron, on the cover
of which was a copper plate, bearing the cypher of the Nautilus with its device.
At that moment, the Captain, without noticing my presence, opened the piece of furniture,
a sort of strong box, which held a great many ingots. They were ingots of gold. From
whence came this precious metal, which represented an enormous sum? Where did the Captain
gather this gold from? and what was he going to do with it?
I did not say one word. I looked. Captain Nemo took the ingots one by one, and arranged
them methodically in the chest, which he filled entirely. I estimated the contents at more
than 4,000 lb. weight of gold, that is to say, nearly L200,000.
The chest was securely fastened, and the Captain wrote an address on the lid, in
characters which must have belonged to Modern Greece. This done, Captain Nemo pressed a
knob, the wire of which communicated with the quarters of the crew. Four men appeared,
and, not without some trouble, pushed the chest out of the saloon. Then I heard them
hoisting it up the iron staircase by means of pulleys.
At that moment, Captain Nemo turned to me.
"And you were saying, sir?" said he.
"I was saying nothing, Captain."
"Then, sir, if you will allow me, I will wish you good night."
Whereupon he turned and left the saloon.
I returned to my room much troubled, as one may believe. I vainly tried to sleep--I sought
the connecting link between the apparition of the diver and the chest filled with gold.
Soon, I felt by certain movements of pitching and tossing that the Nautilus was leaving
the depths and returning to the surface. Then I heard steps upon the platform; and I knew
they were unfastening the pinnace and launching it upon the waves. For one instant it
struck the side of the Nautilus, then all noise ceased.
Two hours after, the same noise, the same going and coming was renewed; the boat was
hoisted on board, replaced in its socket, and the Nautilus again plunged under the waves.
So these millions had been transported to their address. To what point of the continent?
Who was Captain Nemo's correspondent?
The next day I related to Conseil and the Canadian the events of the night, which had
excited my curiosity to the highest degree. My companions were not less surprised than
myself.
"But where does he take his millions to?" asked Ned Land.
To that there was no possible answer. I returned to the saloon after having breakfast and
set to work. Till five o'clock in the evening I employed myself in arranging my notes. At
that moment--(ought I to attribute it to some peculiar idiosyncrasy)-- I felt so great a
heat that I was obliged to take off my coat. It was strange, for we were under low
latitudes; and even then the Nautilus, submerged as it was, ought to experience no change
of temperature. I looked at the manometer; it showed a depth of sixty feet, to which
atmospheric heat could never attain. I continued my work, but the temperature rose to such
a pitch as to be intolerable.
"Could there be fire on board?" I asked myself.
I was leaving the saloon, when Captain Nemo entered; he approached the thermometer,
consulted it, and, turning to me, said:
"Forty-two degrees."
"I have noticed it, Captain," I replied; "and if it gets much hotter we
cannot bear it."
"Oh, sir, it will not get better if we do not wish it."
"You can reduce it as you please, then?"
"No; but I can go farther from the stove which produces it."
"It is outward, then!"
"Certainly; we are floating in a current of boiling water."
"Is it possible!" I exclaimed.
"Look."
The panels opened, and I saw the sea entirely white all round. A sulphurous smoke was
curling amid the waves, which boiled like water in a copper. I placed my hand on one of
the panes of glass, but the heat was so great that I quickly took it off again.
"Where are we?" I asked.
"Near the Island of Santorin, sir," replied the Captain. "I wished to give
you a sight of the curious spectacle of a submarine eruption."
"I thought," said I, "that the formation of these new islands was
ended."
"Nothing is ever ended in the volcanic parts of the sea," replied Captain Nemo;
"and the globe is always being worked by subterranean fires. Already, in the
nineteenth year of our era, according to Cassiodorus and Pliny, a new island, Theia (the
divine), appeared in the very place where these islets have recently been formed. Then
they sank under the waves, to rise again in the year 69, when they again subsided. Since
that time to our days the Plutonian work has been suspended. But on the 3rd of February,
1866, a new island, which they named George Island, emerged from the midst of the
sulphurous vapour near Nea Kamenni, and settled again the 6th of the same month. Seven
days after, the 13th of February, the Island of Aphroessa appeared, leaving between Nea
Kamenni and itself a canal ten yards broad. I was in these seas when the phenomenon
occurred, and I was able therefore to observe all the different phases. The Island of
Aphroessa, of round form, measured 300 feet in diameter, and 30 feet in height. It was
composed of black and vitreous lava, mixed with fragments of felspar. And lastly, on the
10th of March, a smaller island, called Reka, showed itself near Nea Kamenni, and since
then these three have joined together, forming but one and the same island."
"And the canal in which we are at this moment?" I asked.
"Here it is," replied Captain Nemo, showing me a map of the Archipelago.
"You see, I have marked the new islands."
I returned to the glass. The Nautilus was no longer moving, the heat was becoming
unbearable. The sea, which till now had been white, was red, owing to the presence of
salts of iron. In spite of the ship's being hermetically sealed, an insupportable smell of
sulphur filled the saloon, and the brilliancy of the electricity was entirely extinguished
by bright scarlet flames. I was in a bath, I was choking, I was broiled.
"We can remain no longer in this boiling water," said I to the Captain.
"It would not be prudent," replied the impassive Captain Nemo.
An order was given; the Nautilus tacked about and left the furnace it could not brave with
impunity. A quarter of an hour after we were breathing fresh air on the surface. The
thought then struck me that, if Ned Land had chosen this part of the sea for our flight,
we should never have come alive out of this sea of fire.
The next day, the 16th of February, we left the basin which, between Rhodes and
Alexandria, is reckoned about 1,500 fathoms in depth, and the Nautilus, passing some
distance from Cerigo, quitted the Grecian Archipelago after having doubled Cape Matapan.
Back to top.
CHAPTER VII: THE MEDITERRANEAN IN FORTY-EIGHT HOURS
The Mediterranean, the blue sea par excellence, "the great sea" of the Hebrews,
"the sea" of the Greeks, the "mare nostrum" of the Romans, bordered by
orange-trees, aloes, cacti, and sea-pines; embalmed with the perfume of the myrtle,
surrounded by rude mountains, saturated with pure and transparent air, but incessantly
worked by underground fires; a perfect battlefield in which Neptune and Pluto still
dispute the empire of the world!
It is upon these banks, and on these waters, says Michelet, that man is renewed in one of
the most powerful climates of the globe. But, beautiful as it was, I could only take a
rapid glance at the basin whose superficial area is two million of square yards. Even
Captain Nemo's knowledge was lost to me, for this puzzling person did not appear once
during our passage at full speed. I estimated the course which the Nautilus took under the
waves of the sea at about six hundred leagues, and it was accomplished in forty-eight
hours. Starting on the morning of the 16th of February from the shores of Greece, we had
crossed the Straits of Gibraltar by sunrise on the 18th.
It was plain to me that this Mediterranean, enclosed in the midst of those countries which
he wished to avoid, was distasteful to Captain Nemo. Those waves and those breezes brought
back too many remembrances, if not too many regrets. Here he had no longer that
independence and that liberty of gait which he had when in the open seas, and his Nautilus
felt itself cramped between the close shores of Africa and Europe.
Our speed was now twenty-five miles an hour. It may be well understood that Ned Land, to
his great disgust, was obliged to renounce his intended flight. He could not launch the
pinnace, going at the rate of twelve or thirteen yards every second. To quit the Nautilus
under such conditions would be as bad as jumping from a train going at full speed--an
imprudent thing, to say the least of it. Besides, our vessel only mounted to the surface
of the waves at night to renew its stock of air; it was steered entirely by the compass
and the log.
I saw no more of the interior of this Mediterranean than a traveller by express train
perceives of the landscape which flies before his eyes; that is to say, the distant
horizon, and not the nearer objects which pass like a flash of lightning.
We were then passing between Sicily and the coast of Tunis. In the narrow space between
Cape Bon and the Straits of Messina the bottom of the sea rose almost suddenly. There was
a perfect bank, on which there was not more than nine fathoms of water, whilst on either
side the depth was ninety fathoms.
The Nautilus had to manoeuvre very carefully so as not to strike against this submarine
barrier. I showed Conseil, on the map of the Mediterranean, the spot occupied by this
reef.
"But if you please, sir," observed Conseil, "it is like a real isthmus
joining Europe to Africa."
"Yes, my boy, it forms a perfect bar to the Straits of Lybia, and the soundings of
Smith have proved that in former times the continents between Cape Boco and Cape Furina
were joined."
"I can well believe it," said Conseil.
"I will add," I continued, "that a similar barrier exists between Gibraltar
and Ceuta, which in geological times formed the entire Mediterranean."
"What if some volcanic burst should one day raise these two barriers above the
waves?"
"It is not probable, Conseil."
"Well, but allow me to finish, please, sir; if this phenomenon should take place, it
will be troublesome for M. Lesseps, who has taken so much pains to pierce the
isthmus."
"I agree with you; but I repeat, Conseil, this phenomenon will never happen. The
violence of subterranean force is ever diminishing. Volcanoes, so plentiful in the first
days of the world, are being extinguished by degrees; the internal heat is weakened, the
temperature of the lower strata of the globe is lowered by a perceptible quantity every
century to the detriment of our globe, for its heat is its life."
"But the sun?"
"The sun is not sufficient, Conseil. Can it give heat to a dead body?"
"Not that I know of."
"Well, my friend, this earth will one day be that cold corpse; it will become
uninhabitable and uninhabited like the moon, which has long since lost all its vital
heat."
"In how many centuries?"
"In some hundreds of thousands of years, my boy."
"Then," said Conseil, "we shall have time to finish our journey-- that is,
if Ned Land does not interfere with it."
And Conseil, reassured, returned to the study of the bank, which the Nautilus was skirting
at a moderate speed.
During the night of the 16th and 17th February we had entered the second Mediterranean
basin, the greatest depth of which was 1,450 fathoms. The Nautilus, by the action of its
crew, slid down the inclined planes and buried itself in the lowest depths of the sea.
On the 18th of February, about three o'clock in the morning, we were at the entrance of
the Straits of Gibraltar. There once existed two currents: an upper one, long since
recognised, which conveys the waters of the ocean into the basin of the Mediterranean; and
a lower counter-current, which reasoning has now shown to exist. Indeed, the volume of
water in the Mediterranean, incessantly added to by the waves of the Atlantic and by
rivers falling into it, would each year raise the level of this sea, for its evaporation
is not sufficient to restore the equilibrium. As it is not so, we must necessarily admit
the existence of an under-current, which empties into the basin of the Atlantic through
the Straits of Gibraltar the surplus waters of the Mediterranean. A fact indeed; and it
was this counter-current by which the Nautilus profited. It advanced rapidly by the narrow
pass. For one instant I caught a glimpse of the beautiful ruins of the temple of Hercules,
buried in the ground, according to Pliny, and with the low island which supports it; and a
few minutes later we were floating on the Atlantic.
Back to top.
CHAPTER VIII: VIGO BAY
The Atlantic! a vast sheet of water whose superficial area covers twenty-five millions of
square miles, the length of which is nine thousand miles, with a mean breadth of two
thousand seven hundred-- an ocean whose parallel winding shores embrace an immense
circumference, watered by the largest rivers of the world, the St. Lawrence, the
Mississippi, the Amazon, the Plata, the Orinoco, the Niger, the Senegal, the Elbe, the
Loire, and the Rhine, which carry water from the most civilised, as well as from the most
savage, countries! Magnificent field of water, incessantly ploughed by vessels of every
nation, sheltered by the flags of every nation, and which terminates in those two terrible
points so dreaded by mariners, Cape Horn and the Cape of Tempests.
The Nautilus was piercing the water with its sharp spur, after having accomplished nearly
ten thousand leagues in three months and a half, a distance greater than the great circle
of the earth. Where were we going now, and what was reserved for the future? The Nautilus,
leaving the Straits of Gibraltar, had gone far out. It returned to the surface of the
waves, and our daily walks on the platform were restored to us.
I mounted at once, accompanied by Ned Land and Conseil. At a distance of about twelve
miles, Cape St. Vincent was dimly to be seen, forming the south-western point of the
Spanish peninsula. A strong southerly gale was blowing. The sea was swollen and billowy;
it made the Nautilus rock violently. It was almost impossible to keep one's foot on the
platform, which the heavy rolls of the sea beat over every instant. So we descended after
inhaling some mouthfuls of fresh air.
I returned to my room, Conseil to his cabin; but the Canadian, with a preoccupied air,
followed me. Our rapid passage across the Mediterranean had not allowed him to put his
project into execution, and he could not help showing his disappointment. When the door of
my room was shut, he sat down and looked at me silently.
"Friend Ned," said I, "I understand you; but you cannot reproach yourself.
To have attempted to leave the Nautilus under the circumstances would have been
folly."
Ned Land did not answer; his compressed lips and frowning brow showed with him the violent
possession this fixed idea had taken of his mind.
"Let us see," I continued; "we need not despair yet. We are going up the
coast of Portugal again; France and England are not far off, where we can easily find
refuge. Now if the Nautilus, on leaving the Straits of Gibraltar, had gone to the south,
if it had carried us towards regions where there were no continents, I should share your
uneasiness. But we know now that Captain Nemo does not fly from civilised seas, and in
some days I think you can act with security."
Ned Land still looked at me fixedly; at length his fixed lips parted, and he said,
"It is for to-night."
I drew myself up suddenly. I was, I admit, little prepared for this communication. I
wanted to answer the Canadian, but words would not come.
"We agreed to wait for an opportunity," continued Ned Land, "and the
opportunity has arrived. This night we shall be but a few miles from the Spanish coast. It
is cloudy. The wind blows freely. I have your word, M. Aronnax, and I rely upon you."
As I was silent, the Canadian approached me.
"To-night, at nine o'clock," said he. "I have warned Conseil. At that
moment Captain Nemo will be shut up in his room, probably in bed. Neither the engineers
nor the ship's crew can see us. Conseil and I will gain the central staircase, and you, M.
Aronnax, will remain in the library, two steps from us, waiting my signal. The oars, the
mast, and the sail are in the canoe. I have even succeeded in getting some provisions. I
have procured an English wrench, to unfasten the bolts which attach it to the shell of the
Nautilus. So all is ready, till to-night."
"The sea is bad."
"That I allow," replied the Canadian; "but we must risk that. Liberty is
worth paying for; besides, the boat is strong, and a few miles with a fair wind to carry
us is no great thing. Who knows but by to-morrow we may be a hundred leagues away? Let
circumstances only favour us, and by ten or eleven o'clock we shall have landed on some
spot of terra firma, alive or dead. But adieu now till to-night."
With these words the Canadian withdrew, leaving me almost dumb. I had imagined that, the
chance gone, I should have time to reflect and discuss the matter. My obstinate companion
had given me no time; and, after all, what could I have said to him? Ned Land was
perfectly right. There was almost the opportunity to profit by. Could I retract my word,
and take upon myself the responsibility of compromising the future of my companions?
To-morrow Captain Nemo might take us far from all land.
At that moment a rather loud hissing noise told me that the reservoirs were filling, and
that the Nautilus was sinking under the waves of the Atlantic.
A sad day I passed, between the desire of regaining my liberty of action and of abandoning
the wonderful Nautilus, and leaving my submarine studies incomplete. What dreadful hours I
passed thus! Sometimes seeing myself and companions safely landed, sometimes wishing, in
spite of my reason, that some unforeseen circumstance, would prevent the realisation of
Ned Land's project.
Twice I went to the saloon. I wished to consult the compass. I wished to see if the
direction the Nautilus was taking was bringing us nearer or taking us farther from the
coast. But no; the Nautilus kept in Portuguese waters. I must therefore take my part and
prepare for flight. My luggage was not heavy; my notes, nothing more.
As to Captain Nemo, I asked myself what he would think of our escape; what trouble, what
wrong it might cause him and what he might do in case of its discovery or failure.
Certainly I had no cause to complain of him; on the contrary, never was hospitality freer
than his. In leaving him I could not be taxed with ingratitude. No oath bound us to him.
It was on the strength of circumstances he relied, and not upon our word, to fix us for
ever.
I had not seen the Captain since our visit to the Island of Santorin. Would chance bring
me to his presence before our departure? I wished it, and I feared it at the same time. I
listened if I could hear him walking the room contiguous to mine. No sound reached my ear.
I felt an unbearable uneasiness. This day of waiting seemed eternal. Hours struck too
slowly to keep pace with my impatience.
My dinner was served in my room as usual. I ate but little; I was too preoccupied. I left
the table at seven o'clock. A hundred and twenty minutes (I counted them) still separated
me from the moment in which I was to join Ned Land. My agitation redoubled. My pulse beat
violently. I could not remain quiet. I went and came, hoping to calm my troubled spirit by
constant movement. The idea of failure in our bold enterprise was the least painful of my
anxieties; but the thought of seeing our project discovered before leaving the Nautilus,
of being brought before Captain Nemo, irritated, or (what was worse) saddened, at my
desertion, made my heart beat.
I wanted to see the saloon for the last time. I descended the stairs and arrived in the
museum, where I had passed so many useful and agreeable hours. I looked at all its riches,
all its treasures, like a man on the eve of an eternal exile, who was leaving never to
return.
These wonders of Nature, these masterpieces of art, amongst which for so many days my life
had been concentrated, I was going to abandon them for ever! I should like to have taken a
last look through the windows of the saloon into the waters of the Atlantic: but the
panels were hermetically closed, and a cloak of steel separated me from that ocean which I
had not yet explored.
In passing through the saloon, I came near the door let into the angle which opened into
the Captain's room. To my great surprise, this door was ajar. I drew back involuntarily.
If Captain Nemo should be in his room, he could see me. But, hearing no sound, I drew
nearer. The room was deserted. I pushed open the door and took some steps forward. Still
the same monklike severity of aspect.
Suddenly the clock struck eight. The first beat of the hammer on the bell awoke me from my
dreams. I trembled as if an invisible eye had plunged into my most secret thoughts, and I
hurried from the room.
There my eye fell upon the compass. Our course was still north. The log indicated moderate
speed, the manometer a depth of about sixty feet.
I returned to my room, clothed myself warmly--sea boots, an otterskin cap, a great coat of
byssus, lined with sealskin; I was ready, I was waiting. The vibration of the screw alone
broke the deep silence which reigned on board. I listened attentively. Would no loud voice
suddenly inform me that Ned Land had been surprised in his projected flight. A mortal
dread hung over me, and I vainly tried to regain my accustomed coolness.
At a few minutes to nine, I put my ear to the Captain's door. No noise. I left my room and
returned to the saloon, which was half in obscurity, but deserted.
I opened the door communicating with the library. The same insufficient light, the same
solitude. I placed myself near the door leading to the central staircase, and there waited
for Ned Land's signal.
At that moment the trembling of the screw sensibly diminished, then it stopped entirely.
The silence was now only disturbed by the beatings of my own heart. Suddenly a slight
shock was felt; and I knew that the Nautilus had stopped at the bottom of the ocean. My
uneasiness increased. The Canadian's signal did not come. I felt inclined to join Ned Land
and beg of him to put off his attempt. I felt that we were not sailing under our usual
conditions.
At this moment the door of the large saloon opened, and Captain Nemo appeared. He saw me,
and without further preamble began in an amiable tone of voice:
"Ah, sir! I have been looking for you. Do you know the history of Spain?"
Now, one might know the history of one's own country by heart; but in the condition I was
at the time, with troubled mind and head quite lost, I could not have said a word of it.
"Well," continued Captain Nemo, "you heard my question! Do you know the
history of Spain?"
"Very slightly," I answered.
"Well, here are learned men having to learn," said the Captain. "Come, sit
down, and I will tell you a curious episode in this history. Sir, listen well," said
he; "this history will interest you on one side, for it will answer a question which
doubtless you have not been able to solve."
"I listen, Captain," said I, not knowing what my interlocutor was driving at,
and asking myself if this incident was bearing on our projected flight.
"Sir, if you have no objection, we will go back to 1702. You cannot be ignorant that
your king, Louis XIV, thinking that the gesture of a potentate was sufficient to bring the
Pyrenees under his yoke, had imposed the Duke of Anjou, his grandson, on the Spaniards.
This prince reigned more or less badly under the name of Philip V, and had a strong party
against him abroad. Indeed, the preceding year, the royal houses of Holland, Austria, and
England had concluded a treaty of alliance at the Hague, with the intention of plucking
the crown of Spain from the head of Philip V, and placing it on that of an archduke to
whom they prematurely gave the title of Charles III.
"Spain must resist this coalition; but she was almost entirely unprovided with either
soldiers or sailors. However, money would not fail them, provided that their galleons,
laden with gold and silver from America, once entered their ports. And about the end of
1702 they expected a rich convoy which France was escorting with a fleet of twenty-three
vessels, commanded by Admiral Chateau-Renaud, for the ships of the coalition were already
beating the Atlantic. This convoy was to go to Cadiz, but the Admiral, hearing that an
English fleet was cruising in those waters, resolved to make for a French port.
"The Spanish commanders of the convoy objected to this decision. They wanted to be
taken to a Spanish port, and, if not to Cadiz, into Vigo Bay, situated on the northwest
coast of Spain, and which was not blocked.
"Admiral Chateau-Renaud had the rashness to obey this injunction, and the galleons
entered Vigo Bay.
"Unfortunately, it formed an open road which could not be defended in any way. They
must therefore hasten to unload the galleons before the arrival of the combined fleet; and
time would not have failed them had not a miserable question of rivalry suddenly arisen.
"You are following the chain of events?" asked Captain Nemo.
"Perfectly," said I, not knowing the end proposed by this historical lesson.
"I will continue. This is what passed. The merchants of Cadiz had a privilege by
which they had the right of receiving all merchandise coming from the West Indies. Now, to
disembark these ingots at the port of Vigo was depriving them of their rights. They
complained at Madrid, and obtained the consent of the weak-minded Philip that the convoy,
without discharging its cargo, should remain sequestered in the roads of Vigo until the
enemy had disappeared.
"But whilst coming to this decision, on the 22nd of October, 1702, the English
vessels arrived in Vigo Bay, when Admiral Chateau-Renaud, in spite of inferior forces,
fought bravely. But, seeing that the treasure must fall into the enemy's hands, he burnt
and scuttled every galleon, which went to the bottom with their immense riches."
Captain Nemo stopped. I admit I could not see yet why this history should interest me.
"Well?" I asked.
"Well, M. Aronnax," replied Captain Nemo, "we are in that Vigo Bay; and it
rests with yourself whether you will penetrate its mysteries."
The Captain rose, telling me to follow him. I had had time to recover. I obeyed. The
saloon was dark, but through the transparent glass the waves were sparkling. I looked.
For half a mile around the Nautilus, the waters seemed bathed in electric light. The sandy
bottom was clean and bright. Some of the ship's crew in their diving-dresses were clearing
away half-rotten barrels and empty cases from the midst of the blackened wrecks. From
these cases and from these barrels escaped ingots of gold and silver, cascades of piastres
and jewels. The sand was heaped up with them. Laden with their precious booty, the men
returned to the Nautilus, disposed of their burden, and went back to this inexhaustible
fishery of gold and silver.
I understood now. This was the scene of the battle of the 22nd of October, 1702. Here on
this very spot the galleons laden for the Spanish Government had sunk. Here Captain Nemo
came, according to his wants, to pack up those millions with which he burdened the
Nautilus. It was for him and him alone America had given up her precious metals. He was
heir direct, without anyone to share, in those treasures torn from the Incas and from the
conquered of Ferdinand Cortez.
"Did you know, sir," he asked, smiling, "that the sea contained such
riches?"
"I knew," I answered, "that they value money held in suspension in these
waters at two millions."
"Doubtless; but to extract this money the expense would be greater than the profit.
Here, on the contrary, I have but to pick up what man has lost--and not only in Vigo Bay,
but in a thousand other ports where shipwrecks have happened, and which are marked on my
submarine map. Can you understand now the source of the millions I am worth?"
"I understand, Captain. But allow me to tell you that in exploring Vigo Bay you have
only been beforehand with a rival society."
"And which?"
"A society which has received from the Spanish Government the privilege of seeking
those buried galleons. The shareholders are led on by the allurement of an enormous
bounty, for they value these rich shipwrecks at five hundred millions."
"Five hundred millions they were," answered Captain Nemo, "but they are so
no longer."
"Just so," said I; "and a warning to those shareholders would be an act of
charity. But who knows if it would be well received? What gamblers usually regret above
all is less the loss of their money than of their foolish hopes. After all, I pity them
less than the thousands of unfortunates to whom so much riches well-distributed would have
been profitable, whilst for them they will be for ever barren."
I had no sooner expressed this regret than I felt that it must have wounded Captain Nemo.
"Barren!" he exclaimed, with animation. "Do you think then, sir, that these
riches are lost because I gather them? Is it for myself alone, according to your idea,
that I take the trouble to collect these treasures? Who told you that I did not make a
good use of it? Do you think I am ignorant that there are suffering beings and oppressed
races on this earth, miserable creatures to console, victims to avenge? Do you not
understand?"
Captain Nemo stopped at these last words, regretting perhaps that he had spoken so much.
But I had guessed that, whatever the motive which had forced him to seek independence
under the sea, it had left him still a man, that his heart still beat for the sufferings
of humanity, and that his immense charity was for oppressed races as well as individuals.
And I then understood for whom those millions were destined which were forwarded by
Captain Nemo when the Nautilus was cruising in the waters of Crete.
Back to top.
CHAPTER IX: A VANISHED CONTINENT
The next morning, the 19th of February, I saw the Canadian enter my room. I expected this
visit. He looked very disappointed.
"Well, sir?" said he.
"Well, Ned, fortune was against us yesterday."
"Yes; that Captain must needs stop exactly at the hour we intended leaving his
vessel."
"Yes, Ned, he had business at his bankers."
"His bankers!"
"Or rather his banking-house; by that I mean the ocean, where his riches are safer
than in the chests of the State."
I then related to the Canadian the incidents of the preceding night, hoping to bring him
back to the idea of not abandoning the Captain; but my recital had no other result than an
energetically expressed regret from Ned that he had not been able to take a walk on the
battlefield of Vigo on his own account.
"However," said he, "all is not ended. It is only a blow of the harpoon
lost. Another time we must succeed; and to-night, if necessary----"
"In what direction is the Nautilus going?" I asked.
"I do not know," replied Ned.
"Well, at noon we shall see the point."
The Canadian returned to Conseil. As soon as I was dressed, I went into the saloon. The
compass was not reassuring. The course of the Nautilus was S.S.W. We were turning our
backs on Europe. I waited with some impatience till the ship's place was pricked on the
chart. At about half-past eleven the reservoirs were emptied, and our vessel rose to the
surface of the ocean. I rushed towards the platform. Ned Land had preceded me. No more
land in sight. Nothing but an immense sea. Some sails on the horizon, doubtless those
going to San Roque in search of favourable winds for doubling the Cape of Good Hope. The
weather was cloudy. A gale of wind was preparing. Ned raved, and tried to pierce the
cloudy horizon. He still hoped that behind all that fog stretched the land he so longed
for.
At noon the sun showed itself for an instant. The second profited by this brightness to
take its height. Then, the sea becoming more billowy, we descended, and the panel closed.
An hour after, upon consulting the chart, I saw the position of the Nautilus was marked at
16@ 17' long., and 33@ 22' lat., at 150 leagues from the nearest coast. There was no means
of flight, and I leave you to imagine the rage of the Canadian when I informed him of our
situation. For myself, I was not particularly sorry. I felt lightened of the load which
had oppressed me, and was able to return with some degree of calmness to my accustomed
work.
That night, about eleven o'clock, I received a most unexpected visit from Captain Nemo. He
asked me very graciously if I felt fatigued from my watch of the preceding night. I
answered in the negative.
"Then, M. Aronnax, I propose a curious excursion."
"Propose, Captain?"
"You have hitherto only visited the submarine depths by daylight, under the
brightness of the sun. Would it suit you to see them in the darkness of the night?"
"Most willingly."
"I warn you, the way will be tiring. We shall have far to walk, and must climb a
mountain. The roads are not well kept."
"What you say, Captain, only heightens my curiosity; I am ready to follow you."
"Come then, sir, we will put on our diving-dresses."
Arrived at the robing-room, I saw that neither of my companions nor any of the ship's crew
were to follow us on this excursion. Captain Nemo had not even proposed my taking with me
either Ned or Conseil. In a few moments we had put on our diving-dresses; they placed on
our backs the reservoirs, abundantly filled with air, but no electric lamps were prepared.
I called the Captain's attention to the fact.
"They will be useless," he replied.
I thought I had not heard aright, but I could not repeat my observation, for the Captain's
head had already disappeared in its metal case. I finished harnessing myself. I felt them
put an iron-pointed stick into my hand, and some minutes later, after going through the
usual form, we set foot on the bottom of the Atlantic at a depth of 150 fathoms. Midnight
was near. The waters were profoundly dark, but Captain Nemo pointed out in the distance a
reddish spot, a sort of large light shining brilliantly about two miles from the Nautilus.
What this fire might be, what could feed it, why and how it lit up the liquid mass, I
could not say. In any case, it did light our way, vaguely, it is true, but I soon
accustomed myself to the peculiar darkness, and I understood, under such circumstances,
the uselessness of the Ruhmkorff apparatus.
As we advanced, I heard a kind of pattering above my head. The noise redoubling, sometimes
producing a continual shower, I soon understood the cause. It was rain falling violently,
and crisping the surface of the waves. Instinctively the thought flashed across my mind
that I should be wet through! By the water! in the midst of the water! I could not help
laughing at the odd idea. But, indeed, in the thick diving-dress, the liquid element is no
longer felt, and one only seems to be in an atmosphere somewhat denser than the
terrestrial atmosphere. Nothing more.
After half an hour's walk the soil became stony. Medusae, microscopic crustacea, and
pennatules lit it slightly with their phosphorescent gleam. I caught a glimpse of pieces
of stone covered with millions of zoophytes and masses of sea weed. My feet often slipped
upon this sticky carpet of sea weed, and without my iron-tipped stick I should have fallen
more than once. In turning round, I could still see the whitish lantern of the Nautilus
beginning to pale in the distance.
But the rosy light which guided us increased and lit up the horizon. The presence of this
fire under water puzzled me in the highest degree. Was I going towards a natural
phenomenon as yet unknown to the savants of the earth? Or even (for this thought crossed
my brain) had the hand of man aught to do with this conflagration? Had he fanned this
flame? Was I to meet in these depths companions and friends of Captain Nemo whom he was
going to visit, and who, like him, led this strange existence? Should I find down there a
whole colony of exiles who, weary of the miseries of this earth, had sought and found
independence in the deep ocean? All these foolish and unreasonable ideas pursued me. And
in this condition of mind, over-excited by the succession of wonders continually passing
before my eyes, I should not have been surprised to meet at the bottom of the sea one of
those submarine towns of which Captain Nemo dreamed.
Our road grew lighter and lighter. The white glimmer came in rays from the summit of a
mountain about 800 feet high. But what I saw was simply a reflection, developed by the
clearness of the waters. The source of this inexplicable light was a fire on the opposite
side of the mountain.
In the midst of this stony maze furrowing the bottom of the Atlantic, Captain Nemo
advanced without hesitation. He knew this dreary road. Doubtless he had often travelled
over it, and could not lose himself. I followed him with unshaken confidence. He seemed to
me like a genie of the sea; and, as he walked before me, I could not help admiring his
stature, which was outlined in black on the luminous horizon.
It was one in the morning when we arrived at the first slopes of the mountain; but to gain
access to them we must venture through the difficult paths of a vast copse. Yes; a copse
of dead trees, without leaves, without sap, trees petrified by the action of the water and
here and there overtopped by gigantic pines. It was like a coal-pit still standing,
holding by the roots to the broken soil, and whose branches, like fine black paper
cuttings, showed distinctly on the watery ceiling. Picture to yourself a forest in the
Hartz hanging on to the sides of the mountain, but a forest swallowed up. The paths were
encumbered with seaweed and fucus, between which grovelled a whole world of crustacea. I
went along, climbing the rocks, striding over extended trunks, breaking the sea bind-weed
which hung from one tree to the other; and frightening the fishes, which flew from branch
to branch. Pressing onward, I felt no fatigue. I followed my guide, who was never tired.
What a spectacle! How can I express it? how paint the aspect of those woods and rocks in
this medium--their under parts dark and wild, the upper coloured with red tints, by that
light which the reflecting powers of the waters doubled? We climbed rocks which fell
directly after with gigantic bounds and the low growling of an avalanche. To right and
left ran long, dark galleries, where sight was lost. Here opened vast glades which the
hand of man seemed to have worked; and I sometimes asked myself if some inhabitant of
these submarine regions would not suddenly appear to me.
But Captain Nemo was still mounting. I could not stay behind. I followed boldly. My stick
gave me good help. A false step would have been dangerous on the narrow passes sloping
down to the sides of the gulfs; but I walked with firm step, without feeling any
giddiness. Now I jumped a crevice, the depth of which would have made me hesitate had it
been among the glaciers on the land; now I ventured on the unsteady trunk of a tree thrown
across from one abyss to the other, without looking under my feet, having only eyes to
admire the wild sites of this region.
There, monumental rocks, leaning on their regularly-cut bases, seemed to defy all laws of
equilibrium. From between their stony knees trees sprang, like a jet under heavy pressure,
and upheld others which upheld them. Natural towers, large scarps, cut perpendicularly,
like a "curtain," inclined at an angle which the laws of gravitation could never
have tolerated in terrestrial regions.
Two hours after quitting the Nautilus we had crossed the line of trees, and a hundred feet
above our heads rose the top of the mountain, which cast a shadow on the brilliant
irradiation of the opposite slope. Some petrified shrubs ran fantastically here and there.
Fishes got up under our feet like birds in the long grass. The massive rocks were rent
with impenetrable fractures, deep grottos, and unfathomable holes, at the bottom of which
formidable creatures might be heard moving. My blood curdled when I saw enormous antennae
blocking my road, or some frightful claw closing with a noise in the shadow of some
cavity. Millions of luminous spots shone brightly in the midst of the darkness. They were
the eyes of giant crustacea crouched in their holes; giant lobsters setting themselves up
like halberdiers, and moving their claws with the clicking sound of pincers; titanic
crabs, pointed like a gun on its carriage; and frightful-looking poulps, interweaving
their tentacles like a living nest of serpents.
We had now arrived on the first platform, where other surprises awaited me. Before us lay
some picturesque ruins, which betrayed the hand of man and not that of the Creator. There
were vast heaps of stone, amongst which might be traced the vague and shadowy forms of
castles and temples, clothed with a world of blossoming zoophytes, and over which, instead
of ivy, sea-weed and fucus threw a thick vegetable mantle. But what was this portion of
the globe which had been swallowed by cataclysms? Who had placed those rocks and stones
like cromlechs of prehistoric times? Where was I? Whither had Captain Nemo's fancy hurried
me?
I would fain have asked him; not being able to, I stopped him-- I seized his arm. But,
shaking his head, and pointing to the highest point of the mountain, he seemed to say:
"Come, come along; come higher!"
I followed, and in a few minutes I had climbed to the top, which for a circle of ten yards
commanded the whole mass of rock. I looked down the side we had just climbed. The mountain
did not rise more than seven or eight hundred feet above the level of the plain; but on
the opposite side it commanded from twice that height the depths of this part of the
Atlantic. My eyes ranged far over a large space lit by a violent fulguration. In fact, the
mountain was a volcano.
At fifty feet above the peak, in the midst of a rain of stones and scoriae, a large crater
was vomiting forth torrents of lava which fell in a cascade of fire into the bosom of the
liquid mass. Thus situated, this volcano lit the lower plain like an immense torch, even
to the extreme limits of the horizon. I said that the submarine crater threw up lava, but
no flames. Flames require the oxygen of the air to feed upon and cannot be developed under
water; but streams of lava, having in themselves the principles of their incandescence,
can attain a white heat, fight vigorously against the liquid element, and turn it to
vapour by contact.
Rapid currents bearing all these gases in diffusion and torrents of lava slid to the
bottom of the mountain like an eruption of Vesuvius on another Terra del Greco.
There indeed under my eyes, ruined, destroyed, lay a town-- its roofs open to the sky, its
temples fallen, its arches dislocated, its columns lying on the ground, from which one
would still recognise the massive character of Tuscan architecture. Further on, some
remains of a gigantic aqueduct; here the high base of an Acropolis, with the floating
outline of a Parthenon; there traces of a quay, as if an ancient port had formerly abutted
on the borders of the ocean, and disappeared with its merchant vessels and its
war-galleys. Farther on again, long lines of sunken walls and broad, deserted streets-- a
perfect Pompeii escaped beneath the waters. Such was the sight that Captain Nemo brought
before my eyes!
Where was I? Where was I? I must know at any cost. I tried to speak, but Captain Nemo
stopped me by a gesture, and, picking up a piece of chalk-stone, advanced to a rock of
black basalt, and traced the one word: ATLANTIS
What a light shot through my mind! Atlantis! the Atlantis of Plato, that continent denied
by Origen and Humbolt, who placed its disappearance amongst the legendary tales. I had it
there now before my eyes, bearing upon it the unexceptionable testimony of its
catastrophe. The region thus engulfed was beyond Europe, Asia, and Lybia, beyond the
columns of Hercules, where those powerful people, the Atlantides, lived, against whom the
first wars of ancient Greeks were waged.
Thus, led by the strangest destiny, I was treading under foot the mountains of this
continent, touching with my hand those ruins a thousand generations old and contemporary
with the geological epochs. I was walking on the very spot where the contemporaries of the
first man had walked.
Whilst I was trying to fix in my mind every detail of this grand landscape, Captain Nemo
remained motionless, as if petrified in mute ecstasy, leaning on a mossy stone. Was he
dreaming of those generations long since disappeared? Was he asking them the secret of
human destiny? Was it here this strange man came to steep himself in historical
recollections, and live again this ancient life--he who wanted no modern one? What would I
not have given to know his thoughts, to share them, to understand them! We remained for an
hour at this place, contemplating the vast plains under the brightness of the lava, which
was some times wonderfully intense. Rapid tremblings ran along the mountain caused by
internal bubblings, deep noise, distinctly transmitted through the liquid medium were
echoed with majestic grandeur. At this moment the moon appeared through the mass of waters
and threw her pale rays on the buried continent. It was but a gleam, but what an
indescribable effect! The Captain rose, cast one last look on the immense plain, and then
bade me follow him.
We descended the mountain rapidly, and, the mineral forest once passed, I saw the lantern
of the Nautilus shining like a star. The Captain walked straight to it, and we got on
board as the first rays of light whitened the surface of the ocean.
Back to top.
CHAPTER X: THE SUBMARINE COAL-MINES
The next day, the 20th of February, I awoke very late: the fatigues of the previous night
had prolonged my sleep until eleven o'clock. I dressed quickly, and hastened to find the
course the Nautilus was taking. The instruments showed it to be still toward the south,
with a speed of twenty miles an hour and a depth of fifty fathoms.
The species of fishes here did not differ much from those already noticed. There were rays
of giant size, five yards long, and endowed with great muscular strength, which enabled
them to shoot above the waves; sharks of many kinds; amongst others, one fifteen feet
long, with triangular sharp teeth, and whose transparency rendered it almost invisible in
the water. Amongst bony fish Conseil noticed some about three yards long, armed at the
upper jaw with a piercing sword; other bright-coloured creatures, known in the time of
Aristotle by the name of the sea-dragon, which are dangerous to capture on account of the
spikes on their back.
About four o'clock, the soil, generally composed of a thick mud mixed with petrified wood,
changed by degrees, and it became more stony, and seemed strewn with conglomerate and
pieces of basalt, with a sprinkling of lava. I thought that a mountainous region was
succeeding the long plains; and accordingly, after a few evolutions of the Nautilus, I saw
the southerly horizon blocked by a high wall which seemed to close all exit. Its summit
evidently passed the level of the ocean. It must be a continent, or at least an
island--one of the Canaries, or of the Cape Verde Islands. The bearings not being yet
taken, perhaps designedly, I was ignorant of our exact position. In any case, such a wall
seemed to me to mark the limits of that Atlantis, of which we had in reality passed over
only the smallest part.
Much longer should I have remained at the window admiring the beauties of sea and sky, but
the panels closed. At this moment the Nautilus arrived at the side of this high,
perpendicular wall. What it would do, I could not guess. I returned to my room; it no
longer moved. I laid myself down with the full intention of waking after a few hours'
sleep; but it was eight o'clock the next day when I entered the saloon. I looked at the
manometer. It told me that the Nautilus was floating on the surface of the ocean. Besides,
I heard steps on the platform. I went to the panel. It was open; but, instead of broad
daylight, as I expected, I was surrounded by profound darkness. Where were we? Was I
mistaken? Was it still night? No; not a star was shining and night has not that utter
darkness.
I knew not what to think, when a voice near me said:
"Is that you, Professor?"
"Ah! Captain," I answered, "where are we?"
"Underground, sir."
"Underground!" I exclaimed. "And the Nautilus floating still?"
"It always floats."
"But I do not understand."
"Wait a few minutes, our lantern will be lit, and, if you like light places, you will
be satisfied."
I stood on the platform and waited. The darkness was so complete that I could not even see
Captain Nemo; but, looking to the zenith, exactly above my head, I seemed to catch an
undecided gleam, a kind of twilight filling a circular hole. At this instant the lantern
was lit, and its vividness dispelled the faint light. I closed my dazzled eyes for an
instant, and then looked again. The Nautilus was stationary, floating near a mountain
which formed a sort of quay. The lake, then, supporting it was a lake imprisoned by a
circle of walls, measuring two miles in diameter and six in circumference. Its level (the
manometer showed) could only be the same as the outside level, for there must necessarily
be a communication between the lake and the sea. The high partitions, leaning forward on
their base, grew into a vaulted roof bearing the shape of an immense funnel turned upside
down, the height being about five or six hundred yards. At the summit was a circular
orifice, by which I had caught the slight gleam of light, evidently daylight.
"Where are we?" I asked.
"In the very heart of an extinct volcano, the interior of which has been invaded by
the sea, after some great convulsion of the earth. Whilst you were sleeping, Professor,
the Nautilus penetrated to this lagoon by a natural canal, which opens about ten yards
beneath the surface of the ocean. This is its harbour of refuge, a sure, commodious, and
mysterious one, sheltered from all gales. Show me, if you can, on the coasts of any of
your continents or islands, a road which can give such perfect refuge from all
storms."
"Certainly," I replied, "you are in safety here, Captain Nemo. Who could
reach you in the heart of a volcano? But did I not see an opening at its summit?"
"Yes; its crater, formerly filled with lava, vapour, and flames, and which now gives
entrance to the life-giving air we breathe."
"But what is this volcanic mountain?"
"It belongs to one of the numerous islands with which this sea is strewn--to vessels
a simple sandbank--to us an immense cavern. Chance led me to discover it, and chance
served me well."
"But of what use is this refuge, Captain? The Nautilus wants no port."
"No, sir; but it wants electricity to make it move, and the wherewithal to make the
electricity--sodium to feed the elements, coal from which to get the sodium, and a
coal-mine to supply the coal. And exactly on this spot the sea covers entire forests
embedded during the geological periods, now mineralised and transformed into coal; for me
they are an inexhaustible mine."
"Your men follow the trade of miners here, then, Captain?"
"Exactly so. These mines extend under the waves like the mines of Newcastle. Here, in
their diving-dresses, pick axe and shovel in hand, my men extract the coal, which I do not
even ask from the mines of the earth. When I burn this combustible for the manufacture of
sodium, the smoke, escaping from the crater of the mountain, gives it the appearance of a
still-active volcano."
"And we shall see your companions at work?"
"No; not this time at least; for I am in a hurry to continue our submarine tour of
the earth. So I shall content myself with drawing from the reserve of sodium I already
possess. The time for loading is one day only, and we continue our voyage. So, if you wish
to go over the cavern and make the round of the lagoon, you must take advantage of to-day,
M. Aronnax."
I thanked the Captain and went to look for my companions, who had not yet left their
cabin. I invited them to follow me without saying where we were. They mounted the
platform. Conseil, who was astonished at nothing, seemed to look upon it as quite natural
that he should wake under a mountain, after having fallen asleep under the waves. But Ned
Land thought of nothing but finding whether the cavern had any exit. After breakfast,
about ten o'clock, we went down on to the mountain.
"Here we are, once more on land," said Conseil.
"I do not call this land," said the Canadian. "And besides, we are not on
it, but beneath it."
Between the walls of the mountains and the waters of the lake lay a sandy shore which, at
its greatest breadth, measured five hundred feet. On this soil one might easily make the
tour of the lake. But the base of the high partitions was stony ground, with volcanic
locks and enormous pumice-stones lying in picturesque heaps. All these detached masses,
covered with enamel, polished by the action of the subterraneous fires, shone resplendent
by the light of our electric lantern. The mica dust from the shore, rising under our feet,
flew like a cloud of sparks. The bottom now rose sensibly, and we soon arrived at long
circuitous slopes, or inclined planes, which took us higher by degrees; but we were
obliged to walk carefully among these conglomerates, bound by no cement, the feet slipping
on the glassy crystal, felspar, and quartz. The volcanic nature of this enormous
excavation was confirmed on all sides, and I pointed it out to my companions.
"Picture to yourselves," said I, "what this crater must have been when
filled with boiling lava, and when the level of the incandescent liquid rose to the
orifice of the mountain, as though melted on the top of a hot plate."
"I can picture it perfectly," said Conseil. "But, sir, will you tell me why
the Great Architect has suspended operations, and how it is that the furnace is replaced
by the quiet waters of the lake?"
"Most probably, Conseil, because some convulsion beneath the ocean produced that very
opening which has served as a passage for the Nautilus. Then the waters of the Atlantic
rushed into the interior of the mountain. There must have been a terrible struggle between
the two elements, a struggle which ended in the victory of Neptune. But many ages have run
out since then, and the submerged volcano is now a peaceable grotto."
"Very well," replied Ned Land; "I accept the explanation, sir; but, in our
own interests, I regret that the opening of which you speak was not made above the level
of the sea."
"But, friend Ned," said Conseil, "if the passage had not been under the
sea, the Nautilus could not have gone through it."
We continued ascending. The steps became more and more perpendicular and narrow. Deep
excavations, which we were obliged to cross, cut them here and there; sloping masses had
to be turned. We slid upon our knees and crawled along. But Conseil's dexterity and the
Canadian's strength surmounted all obstacles. At a height of about 31 feet the nature of
the ground changed without becoming more practicable. To the conglomerate and trachyte
succeeded black basalt, the first dispread in layers full of bubbles, the latter forming
regular prisms, placed like a colonnade supporting the spring of the immense vault, an
admirable specimen of natural architecture. Between the blocks of basalt wound long
streams of lava, long since grown cold, encrusted with bituminous rays; and in some places
there were spread large carpets of sulphur. A more powerful light shone through the upper
crater, shedding a vague glimmer over these volcanic depressions for ever buried in the
bosom of this extinguished mountain. But our upward march was soon stopped at a height of
about two hundred and fifty feet by impassable obstacles. There was a complete vaulted
arch overhanging us, and our ascent was changed to a circular walk. At the last change
vegetable life began to struggle with the mineral. Some shrubs, and even some trees, grew
from the fractures of the walls. I recognised some euphorbias, with the caustic sugar
coming from them; heliotropes, quite incapable of justifying their name, sadly drooped
their clusters of flowers, both their colour and perfume half gone. Here and there some
chrysanthemums grew timidly at the foot of an aloe with long, sickly-looking leaves. But
between the streams of lava, I saw some little violets still slightly perfumed, and I
admit that I smelt them with delight. Perfume is the soul of the flower, and sea-flowers
have no soul.
We had arrived at the foot of some sturdy dragon-trees, which had pushed aside the rocks
with their strong roots, when Ned Land exclaimed:
"Ah! sir, a hive! a hive!"
"A hive!" I replied, with a gesture of incredulity.
"Yes, a hive," repeated the Canadian, "and bees humming round it."
I approached, and was bound to believe my own eyes. There at a hole bored in one of the
dragon-trees were some thousands of these ingenious insects, so common in all the
Canaries, and whose produce is so much esteemed. Naturally enough, the Canadian wished to
gather the honey, and I could not well oppose his wish. A quantity of dry leaves, mixed
with sulphur, he lit with a spark from his flint, and he began to smoke out the bees. The
humming ceased by degrees, and the hive eventually yielded several pounds of the sweetest
honey, with which Ned Land filled his haversack.
"When I have mixed this honey with the paste of the bread-fruit," said he,
"I shall be able to offer you a succulent cake."
"'Pon my word," said Conseil, "it will be gingerbread."
"Never mind the gingerbread," said I; "let us continue our interesting
walk."
At every turn of the path we were following, the lake appeared in all its length and
breadth. The lantern lit up the whole of its peaceable surface, which knew neither ripple
nor wave. The Nautilus remained perfectly immovable. On the platform, and on the mountain,
the ship's crew were working like black shadows clearly carved against the luminous
atmosphere. We were now going round the highest crest of the first layers of rock which
upheld the roof. I then saw that bees were not the only representatives of the animal
kingdom in the interior of this volcano. Birds of prey hovered here and there in the
shadows, or fled from their nests on the top of the rocks. There were sparrow hawks, with
white breasts, and kestrels, and down the slopes scampered, with their long legs, several
fine fat bustards. I leave anyone to imagine the covetousness of the Canadian at the sight
of this savoury game, and whether he did not regret having no gun. But he did his best to
replace the lead by stones, and, after several fruitless attempts, he succeeded in
wounding a magnificent bird. To say that he risked his life twenty times before reaching
it is but the truth; but he managed so well that the creature joined the honey-cakes in
his bag. We were now obliged to descend toward the shore, the crest becoming
impracticable. Above us the crater seemed to gape like the mouth of a well. From this
place the sky could be clearly seen, and clouds, dissipated by the west wind, leaving
behind them, even on the summit of the mountain, their misty remnants--certain proof that
they were only moderately high, for the volcano did not rise more than eight hundred feet
above the level of the ocean. Half an hour after the Canadian's last exploit we had
regained the inner shore. Here the flora was represented by large carpets of marine
crystal, a little umbelliferous plant very good to pickle, which also bears the name of
pierce-stone and sea-fennel. Conseil gathered some bundles of it. As to the fauna, it
might be counted by thousands of crustacea of all sorts, lobsters, crabs, spider-crabs,
chameleon shrimps, and a large number of shells, rockfish, and limpets. Three-quarters of
an hour later we had finished our circuitous walk and were on board. The crew had just
finished loading the sodium, and the Nautilus could have left that instant. But Captain
Nemo gave no order. Did he wish to wait until night, and leave the submarine passage
secretly? Perhaps so. Whatever it might be, the next day, the Nautilus, having left its
port, steered clear of all land at a few yards beneath the waves of the Atlantic.
Back to top.
CHAPTER XI: THE SARGASSO SEA
That day the Nautilus crossed a singular part of the Atlantic Ocean. No one can be
ignorant of the existence of a current of warm water known by the name of the Gulf Stream.
After leaving the Gulf of Florida, we went in the direction of Spitzbergen. But before
entering the Gulf of Mexico, about 45@ of N. lat., this current divides into two arms, the
principal one going towards the coast of Ireland and Norway, whilst the second bends to
the south about the height of the Azores; then, touching the African shore, and describing
a lengthened oval, returns to the Antilles. This second arm--it is rather a collar than an
arm--surrounds with its circles of warm water that portion of the cold, quiet, immovable
ocean called the Sargasso Sea, a perfect lake in the open Atlantic: it takes no less than
three years for the great current to pass round it. Such was the region the Nautilus was
now visiting, a perfect meadow, a close carpet of seaweed, fucus, and tropical berries, so
thick and so compact that the stem of a vessel could hardly tear its way through it. And
Captain Nemo, not wishing to entangle his screw in this herbaceous mass, kept some yards
beneath the surface of the waves. The name Sargasso comes from the Spanish word
"sargazzo" which signifies kelp. This kelp, or berry-plant, is the principal
formation of this immense bank. And this is the reason why these plants unite in the
peaceful basin of the Atlantic. The only explanation which can be given, he says, seems to
me to result from the experience known to all the world. Place in a vase some fragments of
cork or other floating body, and give to the water in the vase a circular movement, the
scattered fragments will unite in a group in the centre of the liquid surface, that is to
say, in the part least agitated. In the phenomenon we are considering, the Atlantic is the
vase, the Gulf Stream the circular current, and the Sargasso Sea the central point at
which the floating bodies unite.
I share Maury's opinion, and I was able to study the phenomenon in the very midst, where
vessels rarely penetrate. Above us floated products of all kinds, heaped up among these
brownish plants; trunks of trees torn from the Andes or the Rocky Mountains, and floated
by the Amazon or the Mississippi; numerous wrecks, remains of keels, or ships' bottoms,
side-planks stove in, and so weighted with shells and barnacles that they could not again
rise to the surface. And time will one day justify Maury's other opinion, that these
substances thus accumulated for ages will become petrified by the action of the water and
will then form inexhaustible coal-mines-- a precious reserve prepared by far-seeing Nature
for the moment when men shall have exhausted the mines of continents.
In the midst of this inextricable mass of plants and sea weed, I noticed some charming
pink halcyons and actiniae, with their long tentacles trailing after them, and medusae,
green, red, and blue.
All the day of the 22nd of February we passed in the Sargasso Sea, where such fish as are
partial to marine plants find abundant nourishment. The next, the ocean had returned to
its accustomed aspect. From this time for nineteen days, from the 23rd of February to the
12th of March, the Nautilus kept in the middle of the Atlantic, carrying us at a constant
speed of a hundred leagues in twenty-four hours. Captain Nemo evidently intended
accomplishing his submarine programme, and I imagined that he intended, after doubling
Cape Horn, to return to the Australian seas of the Pacific. Ned Land had cause for fear.
In these large seas, void of islands, we could not attempt to leave the boat. Nor had we
any means of opposing Captain Nemo's will. Our only course was to submit; but what we
could neither gain by force nor cunning, I liked to think might be obtained by persuasion.
This voyage ended, would he not consent to restore our liberty, under an oath never to
reveal his existence?--an oath of honour which we should have religiously kept. But we
must consider that delicate question with the Captain. But was I free to claim this
liberty? Had he not himself said from the beginning, in the firmest manner, that the
secret of his life exacted from him our lasting imprisonment on board the Nautilus? And
would not my four months' silence appear to him a tacit acceptance of our situation? And
would not a return to the subject result in raising suspicions which might be hurtful to
our projects, if at some future time a favourable opportunity offered to return to them?
During the nineteen days mentioned above, no incident of any kind happened to signalise
our voyage. I saw little of the Captain; he was at work. In the library I often found his
books left open, especially those on natural history. My work on submarine depths, conned
over by him, was covered with marginal notes, often contradicting my theories and systems;
but the Captain contented himself with thus purging my work; it was very rare for him to
discuss it with me. Sometimes I heard the melancholy tones of his organ; but only at
night, in the midst of the deepest obscurity, when the Nautilus slept upon the deserted
ocean. During this part of our voyage we sailed whole days on the surface of the waves.
The sea seemed abandoned. A few sailing-vessels, on the road to India, were making for the
Cape of Good Hope. One day we were followed by the boats of a whaler, who, no doubt, took
us for some enormous whale of great price; but Captain Nemo did not wish the worthy
fellows to lose their time and trouble, so ended the chase by plunging under the water.
Our navigation continued until the 13th of March; that day the Nautilus was employed in
taking soundings, which greatly interested me. We had then made about 13,000 leagues since
our departure from the high seas of the Pacific. The bearings gave us 45@ 37' S. lat., and
37@ 53' W. long. It was the same water in which Captain Denham of the Herald sounded 7,000
fathoms without finding the bottom. There, too, Lieutenant Parker, of the American frigate
Congress, could not touch the bottom with 15,140 fathoms. Captain Nemo intended seeking
the bottom of the ocean by a diagonal sufficiently lengthened by means of lateral planes
placed at an angle of 45@ with the water-line of the Nautilus. Then the screw set to work
at its maximum speed, its four blades beating the waves with in describable force. Under
this powerful pressure, the hull of the Nautilus quivered like a sonorous chord and sank
regularly under the water.
At 7,000 fathoms I saw some blackish tops rising from the midst of the waters; but these
summits might belong to high mountains like the Himalayas or Mont Blanc, even higher; and
the depth of the abyss remained incalculable. The Nautilus descended still lower, in spite
of the great pressure. I felt the steel plates tremble at the fastenings of the bolts; its
bars bent, its partitions groaned; the windows of the saloon seemed to curve under the
pressure of the waters. And this firm structure would doubtless have yielded, if, as its
Captain had said, it had not been capable of resistance like a solid block. We had
attained a depth of 16,000 yards (four leagues), and the sides of the Nautilus then bore a
pressure of 1,600 atmospheres, that is to say, 3,200 lb. to each square two-fifths of an
inch of its surface.
"What a situation to be in!" I exclaimed. "To overrun these deep regions
where man has never trod! Look, Captain, look at these magnificent rocks, these
uninhabited grottoes, these lowest receptacles of the globe, where life is no longer
possible! What unknown sights are here! Why should we be unable to preserve a remembrance
of them?"
"Would you like to carry away more than the remembrance?" said Captain Nemo.
"What do you mean by those words?"
"I mean to say that nothing is easier than to make a photographic view of this
submarine region."
I had not time to express my surprise at this new proposition, when, at Captain Nemo's
call, an objective was brought into the saloon. Through the widely-opened panel, the
liquid mass was bright with electricity, which was distributed with such uniformity that
not a shadow, not a gradation, was to be seen in our manufactured light. The Nautilus
remained motionless, the force of its screw subdued by the inclination of its planes: the
instrument was propped on the bottom of the oceanic site, and in a few seconds we had
obtained a perfect negative.
But, the operation being over, Captain Nemo said, "Let us go up; we must not abuse
our position, nor expose the Nautilus too long to such great pressure."
"Go up again!" I exclaimed.
"Hold well on."
I had not time to understand why the Captain cautioned me thus, when I was thrown forward
on to the carpet. At a signal from the Captain, its screw was shipped, and its blades
raised vertically; the Nautilus shot into the air like a balloon, rising with stunning
rapidity, and cutting the mass of waters with a sonorous agitation. Nothing was visible;
and in four minutes it had shot through the four leagues which separated it from the
ocean, and, after emerging like a flying-fish, fell, making the waves rebound to an
enormous height.
Back to top.
CHAPTER XII: CACHALOTS AND WHALES
During the nights of the 13th and 14th of March, the Nautilus returned to its southerly
course. I fancied that, when on a level with Cape Horn, he would turn the helm westward,
in order to beat the Pacific seas, and so complete the tour of the world. He did nothing
of the kind, but continued on his way to the southern regions. Where was he going to? To
the pole? It was madness! I began to think that the Captain's temerity justified Ned
Land's fears. For some time past the Canadian had not spoken to me of his projects of
flight; he was less communicative, almost silent. I could see that this lengthened
imprisonment was weighing upon him, and I felt that rage was burning within him. When he
met the Captain, his eyes lit up with suppressed anger; and I feared that his natural
violence would lead him into some extreme. That day, the 14th of March, Conseil and he
came to me in my room. I inquired the cause of their visit.
"A simple question to ask you, sir," replied the Canadian.
"Speak, Ned."
"How many men are there on board the Nautilus, do you think?"
"I cannot tell, my friend."
"I should say that its working does not require a large crew."
"Certainly, under existing conditions, ten men, at the most, ought to be
enough."
"Well, why should there be any more?"
"Why?" I replied, looking fixedly at Ned Land, whose meaning was easy to guess.
"Because," I added, "if my surmises are correct, and if I have well
understood the Captain's existence, the Nautilus is not only a vessel: it is also a place
of refuge for those who, like its commander, have broken every tie upon earth."
"Perhaps so," said Conseil; "but, in any case, the Nautilus can only
contain a certain number of men. Could not you, sir, estimate their maximum?"
"How, Conseil?"
"By calculation; given the size of the vessel, which you know, sir, and consequently
the quantity of air it contains, knowing also how much each man expends at a breath, and
comparing these results with the fact that the Nautilus is obliged to go to the surface
every twenty-four hours."
Conseil had not finished the sentence before I saw what he was driving at.
"I understand," said I; "but that calculation, though simple enough, can
give but a very uncertain result."
"Never mind," said Ned Land urgently.
"Here it is, then," said I. "In one hour each man consumes the oxygen
contained in twenty gallons of air; and in twenty-four, that contained in 480 gallons. We
must, therefore find how many times 480 gallons of air the Nautilus contains."
"Just so," said Conseil.
"Or," I continued, "the size of the Nautilus being 1,500 tons; and one ton
holding 200 gallons, it contains 300,000 gallons of air, which, divided by 480, gives a
quotient of 625. Which means to say, strictly speaking, that the air contained in the
Nautilus would suffice for 625 men for twenty-four hours."
"Six hundred and twenty-five!" repeated Ned.
"But remember that all of us, passengers, sailors, and officers included, would not
form a tenth part of that number."
"Still too many for three men," murmured Conseil.
The Canadian shook his head, passed his hand across his forehead, and left the room
without answering.
"Will you allow me to make one observation, sir?" said Conseil. "Poor Ned
is longing for everything that he can not have. His past life is always present to him;
everything that we are forbidden he regrets. His head is full of old recollections. And we
must understand him. What has he to do here? Nothing; he is not learned like you, sir; and
has not the same taste for the beauties of the sea that we have. He would risk everything
to be able to go once more into a tavern in his own country."
Certainly the monotony on board must seem intolerable to the Canadian, accustomed as he
was to a life of liberty and activity. Events were rare which could rouse him to any show
of spirit; but that day an event did happen which recalled the bright days of the
harpooner. About eleven in the morning, being on the surface of the ocean, the Nautilus
fell in with a troop of whales--an encounter which did not astonish me, knowing that these
creatures, hunted to death, had taken refuge in high latitudes.
We were seated on the platform, with a quiet sea. The month of October in those latitudes
gave us some lovely autumnal days. It was the Canadian-- he could not be mistaken--who
signalled a whale on the eastern horizon. Looking attentively, one might see its black
back rise and fall with the waves five miles from the Nautilus.
"Ah!" exclaimed Ned Land, "if I was on board a whaler, now such a meeting
would give me pleasure. It is one of large size. See with what strength its blow-holes
throw up columns of air an steam! Confound it, why am I bound to these steel plates?"
"What, Ned," said I, "you have not forgotten your old ideas of
fishing?"
"Can a whale-fisher ever forget his old trade, sir? Can he ever tire of the emotions
caused by such a chase?"
"You have never fished in these seas, Ned?"
"Never, sir; in the northern only, and as much in Behring as in Davis Straits."
"Then the southern whale is still unknown to you. It is the Greenland whale you have
hunted up to this time, and that would not risk passing through the warm waters of the
equator. Whales are localised, according to their kinds, in certain seas which they never
leave. And if one of these creatures went from Behring to Davis Straits, it must be simply
because there is a passage from one sea to the other, either on the American or the
Asiatic side."
"In that case, as I have never fished in these seas, I do not know the kind of whale
frequenting them!"
"I have told you, Ned."
"A greater reason for making their acquaintance," said Conseil.
"Look! look!" exclaimed the Canadian, "they approach: they aggravate me;
they know that I cannot get at them!"
Ned stamped his feet. His hand trembled, as he grasped an imaginary harpoon.
"Are these cetaceans as large as those of the northern seas?" asked he.
"Very nearly, Ned."
"Because I have seen large whales, sir, whales measuring a hundred feet. I have even
been told that those of Hullamoch and Umgallick, of the Aleutian Islands, are sometimes a
hundred and fifty feet long."
"That seems to me exaggeration. These creatures are generally much smaller than the
Greenland whale."
"Ah!" exclaimed the Canadian, whose eyes had never left the ocean, "they
are coming nearer; they are in the same water as the Nautilus."
Then, returning to the conversation, he said:
"You spoke of the cachalot as a small creature. I have heard of gigantic ones. They
are intelligent cetacea. It is said of some that they cover themselves with seaweed and
fucus, and then are taken for islands. People encamp upon them, and settle there; lights a
fire----"
"And build houses," said Conseil.
"Yes, joker," said Ned Land. "And one fine day the creature plunges,
carrying with it all the inhabitants to the bottom of the sea."
"Something like the travels of Sinbad the Sailor," I replied, laughing.
"Ah!" suddenly exclaimed Ned Land, "it is not one whale; there are
ten--there are twenty--it is a whole troop! And I not able to do anything! hands and feet
tied!"
"But, friend Ned," said Conseil, "why do you not ask Captain Nemo's
permission to chase them?"
Conseil had not finished his sentence when Ned Land had lowered himself through the panel
to seek the Captain. A few minutes afterwards the two appeared together on the platform.
Captain Nemo watched the troop of cetacea playing on the waters about a mile from the
Nautilus.
"They are southern whales," said he; "there goes the fortune of a whole
fleet of whalers."
"Well, sir," asked the Canadian, "can I not chase them, if only to remind
me of my old trade of harpooner?"
"And to what purpose?" replied Captain Nemo; "only to destroy! We have
nothing to do with the whale-oil on board."
"But, sir," continued the Canadian, "in the Red Sea you allowed us to
follow the dugong."
"Then it was to procure fresh meat for my crew. Here it would be killing for
killing's sake. I know that is a privilege reserved for man, but I do not approve of such
murderous pastime. In destroying the southern whale (like the Greenland whale, an
inoffensive creature), your traders do a culpable action, Master Land. They have already
depopulated the whole of Baffin's Bay, and are annihilating a class of useful animals.
Leave the unfortunate cetacea alone. They have plenty of natural enemies--cachalots,
swordfish, and sawfish-- without you troubling them."
The Captain was right. The barbarous and inconsiderate greed of these fishermen will one
day cause the disappearance of the last whale in the ocean. Ned Land whistled
"Yankee-doodle" between his teeth, thrust his hands into his pockets, and turned
his back upon us. But Captain Nemo watched the troop of cetacea, and, addressing me, said:
"I was right in saying that whales had natural enemies enough, without counting man.
These will have plenty to do before long. Do you see, M. Aronnax, about eight miles to
leeward, those blackish moving points?"
"Yes, Captain," I replied.
"Those are cachalots--terrible animals, which I have met in troops of two or three
hundred. As to those, they are cruel, mischievous creatures; they would be right in
exterminating them."
The Canadian turned quickly at the last words.
"Well, Captain," said he, "it is still time, in the interest of the
whales."
"It is useless to expose one's self, Professor. The Nautilus will disperse them. It
is armed with a steel spur as good as Master Land's harpoon, I imagine."
The Canadian did not put himself out enough to shrug his shoulders. Attack cetacea with
blows of a spur! Who had ever heard of such a thing?
"Wait, M. Aronnax," said Captain Nemo. "We will show you something you have
never yet seen. We have no pity for these ferocious creatures. They are nothing but mouth
and teeth."
Mouth and teeth! No one could better describe the macrocephalous cachalot, which is
sometimes more than seventy-five feet long. Its enormous head occupies one-third of its
entire body. Better armed than the whale, whose upper jaw is furnished only with
whalebone, it is supplied with twenty-five large tusks, about eight inches long,
cylindrical and conical at the top, each weighing two pounds. It is in the upper part of
this enormous head, in great cavities divided by cartilages, that is to be found from six
to eight hundred pounds of that precious oil called spermaceti. The cachalot is a
disagreeable creature, more tadpole than fish, according to Fredol's description. It is
badly formed, the whole of its left side being (if we may say it), a "failure,"
and being only able to see with its right eye. But the formidable troop was nearing us.
They had seen the whales and were preparing to attack them. One could judge beforehand
that the cachalots would be victorious, not only because they were better built for attack
than their inoffensive adversaries, but also because they could remain longer under water
without coming to the surface. There was only just time to go to the help of the whales.
The Nautilus went under water. Conseil, Ned Land, and I took our places before the window
in the saloon, and Captain Nemo joined the pilot in his cage to work his apparatus as an
engine of destruction. Soon I felt the beatings of the screw quicken, and our speed
increased. The battle between the cachalots and the whales had already begun when the
Nautilus arrived. They did not at first show any fear at the sight of this new monster
joining in the conflict. But they soon had to guard against its blows. What a battle! The
Nautilus was nothing but a formidable harpoon, brandished by the hand of its Captain. It
hurled itself against the fleshy mass, passing through from one part to the other, leaving
behind it two quivering halves of the animal. It could not feel the formidable blows from
their tails upon its sides, nor the shock which it produced itself, much more. One
cachalot killed, it ran at the next, tacked on the spot that it might not miss its prey,
going forwards and backwards, answering to its helm, plunging when the cetacean dived into
the deep waters, coming up with it when it returned to the surface, striking it front or
sideways, cutting or tearing in all directions and at any pace, piercing it with its
terrible spur. What carnage! What a noise on the surface of the waves! What sharp hissing,
and what snorting peculiar to these enraged animals! In the midst of these waters,
generally so peaceful, their tails made perfect billows. For one hour this wholesale
massacre continued, from which the cachalots could not escape. Several times ten or twelve
united tried to crush the Nautilus by their weight. From the window we could see their
enormous mouths, studded with tusks, and their formidable eyes. Ned Land could not contain
himself; he threatened and swore at them. We could feel them clinging to our vessel like
dogs worrying a wild boar in a copse. But the Nautilus, working its screw, carried them
here and there, or to the upper levels of the ocean, without caring for their enormous
weight, nor the powerful strain on the vessel. At length the mass of cachalots broke up,
the waves became quiet, and I felt that we were rising to the surface. The panel opened,
and we hurried on to the platform. The sea was covered with mutilated bodies. A formidable
explosion could not have divided and torn this fleshy mass with more violence. We were
floating amid gigantic bodies, bluish on the back and white underneath, covered with
enormous protuberances. Some terrified cachalots were flying towards the horizon. The
waves were dyed red for several miles, and the Nautilus floated in a sea of blood: Captain
Nemo joined us.
"Well, Master Land?" said he.
"Well, sir," replied the Canadian, whose enthusiasm had somewhat calmed;
"it is a terrible spectacle, certainly. But I am not a butcher. I am a hunter, and I
call this a butchery."
"It is a massacre of mischievous creatures," replied the Captain; "and the
Nautilus is not a butcher's knife."
"I like my harpoon better," said the Canadian.
"Every one to his own," answered the Captain, looking fixedly at Ned Land.
I feared he would commit some act of violence, which would end in sad consequences. But
his anger was turned by the sight of a whale which the Nautilus had just come up with. The
creature had not quite escaped from the cachalot's teeth. I recognised the southern whale
by its flat head, which is entirely black. Anatomically, it is distinguished from the
white whale and the North Cape whale by the seven cervical vertebrae, and it has two more
ribs than its congeners. The unfortunate cetacean was lying on its side, riddled with
holes from the bites, and quite dead. From its mutilated fin still hung a young whale
which it could not save from the massacre. Its open mouth let the water flow in and out,
murmuring like the waves breaking on the shore. Captain Nemo steered close to the corpse
of the creature. Two of his men mounted its side, and I saw, not without surprise, that
they were drawing from its breasts all the milk which they contained, that is to say,
about two or three tons. The Captain offered me a cup of the milk, which was still warm. I
could not help showing my repugnance to the drink; but he assured me that it was
excellent, and not to be distinguished from cow's milk. I tasted it, and was of his
opinion. It was a useful reserve to us, for in the shape of salt butter or cheese it would
form an agreeable variety from our ordinary food. From that day I noticed with uneasiness
that Ned Land's ill-will towards Captain Nemo increased, and I resolved to watch the
Canadian's gestures closely.
Chapter Thirteen.
|