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By
Jules Verne
CHAPTER 1 A
Runaway Reef
CHAPTER 2 The
Pros and Cons
CHAPTER 3 As
Master Wishes
CHAPTER 4 Ned
Land
CHAPTER 5 At
Random!
CHAPTER 6 At Full
Steam
CHAPTER 7 A Whale
of Unknown Species
CHAPTER 8
"Mobilis in Mobili"
CHAPTER 9 The
Tantrums of Ned Land
CHAPTER 10 The
Man of the Waters
CHAPTER 11 The
Nautilus
CHAPTER 12
Everything through Electricity
CHAPTER 13 Some
Figures
CHAPTER 14 The
Black Current
CHAPTER 15 An
Invitation in Writing
CHAPTER 16
Strolling the Plains
CHAPTER 17 An
Underwater Forest
CHAPTER 18 Four
Thousand Leagues Under the Pacific
CHAPTER 19
Vanikoro
CHAPTER 20 The
Torres Strait
CHAPTER 21 Some
Days Ashore
CHAPTER 22 The
Lightning Bolts of Captain Nemo
CHAPTER 23
"Aegri Somnia"*
CHAPTER 24 The
Coral Realm
CHAPTER 1 The
Indian Ocean
CHAPTER 2 A New
Proposition from Captain Nemo
CHAPTER 3 A Pearl
Worth Ten Million
CHAPTER 4 The Red
Sea
CHAPTER 5 Arabian
Tunnel
CHAPTER 6 The
Greek Islands
CHAPTER 7 The
Mediterranean in Forty-Eight Hours
CHAPTER 8 The Bay
of Vigo
CHAPTER 9 A Lost
Continent
CHAPTER 10 The
Underwater Coalfields
CHAPTER 11 The
Sargasso Sea
CHAPTER 12 Sperm
Whales and Baleen Whales
CHAPTER 13 The
Ice Bank
CHAPTER 14 The
South Pole
CHAPTER 15
Accident or Incident?
CHAPTER 16
Shortage of Air
CHAPTER 17 From
Cape Horn to the Amazon
CHAPTER 18 The
Devilfish
CHAPTER 19 The
Gulf Stream
CHAPTER 20 In
Latitude 47 degrees 24' and Longitude 17 degrees 28'
CHAPTER 21 A Mass
Execution
CHAPTER 22 The
Last Words of Captain Nemo
CHAPTER 23
Conclusion
THE YEAR 1866 was marked by a
bizarre development, an unexplained and downright inexplicable phenomenon that
surely no one has forgotten. Without getting into those rumors that upset
civilians in the seaports and deranged the public mind even far inland, it must
be said that professional seamen were especially alarmed. Traders, shipowners,
captains of vessels, skippers, and master mariners from Europe and America, naval
officers from every country, and at their heels the various national
governments on these two continents, were all extremely disturbed by the
business.
In essence, over a period of time
several ships had encountered "an enormous thing" at sea, a long spindle-shaped
object, sometimes giving off a phosphorescent glow, infinitely bigger and
faster than any whale.
The relevant data on this
apparition, as recorded in various logbooks, agreed pretty closely as to the
structure of the object or creature in question, its unprecedented speed of
movement, its startling locomotive power, and the unique vitality with which it
seemed to be gifted. If it was a cetacean, it exceeded in bulk any whale
previously classified by science. No naturalist, neither Cuvier nor Lacépède,
neither Professor Dumeril nor Professor de Quatrefages, would have accepted the
existence of such a monster sight unseen-- specifically, unseen by their own
scientific eyes.
Striking an average of
observations taken at different times-- rejecting those timid estimates that
gave the object a length of 200 feet, and ignoring those exaggerated views that
saw it as a mile wide and three long--you could still assert that this
phenomenal creature greatly exceeded the dimensions of anything then known to
ichthyologists, if it existed at all.
Now then, it did exist, this was
an undeniable fact; and since the human mind dotes on objects of wonder, you
can understand the worldwide excitement caused by this unearthly apparition. As
for relegating it to the realm of fiction, that charge had to be dropped.
In essence, on July 20, 1866, the
steamer Governor Higginson, from the Calcutta & Burnach Steam Navigation
Co., encountered this moving mass five miles off the eastern shores of Australia.
Captain Baker at first thought he
was in the presence of an unknown reef; he was even about to fix its exact
position when two waterspouts shot out of this inexplicable object and sprang
hissing into the air some 150 feet. So, unless this reef was subject to the
intermittent eruptions of a geyser, the Governor Higginson had fair and honest
dealings with some aquatic mammal, until then unknown, that could spurt from
its blowholes waterspouts mixed with air and steam.
Similar events were likewise observed
in Pacific seas, on July 23 of the same year, by the Christopher Columbus from
the West India & Pacific Steam Navigation Co. Consequently, this
extraordinary cetacean could transfer itself from one locality to another with
startling swiftness, since within an interval of just three days, the Governor
Higginson and the Christopher Columbus had observed it at two positions on the
charts separated by a distance of more than 700 nautical leagues.
Fifteen days later and 2,000
leagues farther, the Helvetia from the Compagnie Nationale and the Shannon from
the Royal Mail line, running on opposite tacks in that part of the Atlantic
lying between the United States and Europe, respectively signaled each other
that the monster had been sighted in latitude 42 degrees 15' north and
longitude 60 degrees 35' west of the meridian of Greenwich. From their
simultaneous observations, they were able to estimate the mammal's minimum
length at more than 350 English feet;* this was because both the Shannon and
the Helvetia were of smaller dimensions, although each measured 100 meters stem
to stern. Now then, the biggest whales, those rorqual whales that frequent the
waterways of the Aleutian Islands, have never exceeded a length of 56
meters--if they reach even that.
*Author's Note: About 106 meters.
An English foot is only 30.4 centimeters.
One after another, reports
arrived that would profoundly affect public opinion: new observations taken by
the transatlantic liner Pereire, the Inman line's Etna running afoul of the monster,
an official report drawn up by officers on the French frigate Normandy,
dead-earnest reckonings obtained by the general staff of Commodore Fitz-James
aboard the Lord Clyde. In lighthearted countries, people joked about this
phenomenon, but such serious, practical countries as England, America, and
Germany were deeply concerned.
In every big city the monster was
the latest rage; they sang about it in the coffee houses, they ridiculed it in
the newspapers, they dramatized it in the theaters. The tabloids found it a
fine opportunity for hatching all sorts of hoaxes. In those newspapers short of
copy, you saw the reappearance of every gigantic imaginary creature, from
"Moby Dick," that dreadful white whale from the High Arctic regions,
to the stupendous kraken whose tentacles could entwine a 500-ton craft and drag
it into the ocean depths. They even reprinted reports from ancient times: the
views of Aristotle and Pliny accepting the existence of such monsters, then the
Norwegian stories of Bishop Pontoppidan, the narratives of Paul Egede, and
finally the reports of Captain Harrington-- whose good faith is above
suspicion--in which he claims he saw, while aboard the Castilian in 1857, one
of those enormous serpents that, until then, had frequented only the seas of
France's old extremist newspaper, The Constitutionalist.
An interminable debate then broke
out between believers and skeptics in the scholarly societies and scientific
journals. The "monster question" inflamed all minds. During this
memorable campaign, journalists making a profession of science battled with
those making a profession of wit, spilling waves of ink and some of them even
two or three drops of blood, since they went from sea serpents to the most
offensive personal remarks.
For six months the war seesawed.
With inexhaustible zest, the popular press took potshots at feature articles
from the Geographic Institute of Brazil, the Royal Academy of Science in
Berlin, the British Association, the Smithsonian Institution in Washington,
D.C., at discussions in The Indian Archipelago, in Cosmos published by Father
Moigno, in Petermann's Mittheilungen,* and at scientific chronicles in the
great French and foreign newspapers. When the monster's detractors cited a
saying by the botanist Linnaeus that "nature doesn't make leaps,"
witty writers in the popular periodicals parodied it, maintaining in essence
that "nature doesn't make lunatics," and ordering their
contemporaries never to give the lie to nature by believing in krakens, sea serpents,
"Moby Dicks," and other all-out efforts from drunken seamen. Finally,
in a much-feared satirical journal, an article by its most popular columnist
finished off the monster for good, spurning it in the style of Hippolytus
repulsing the amorous advances of his stepmother Phaedra, and giving the
creature its quietus amid a universal burst of laughter. Wit had defeated
science.
*German: "Bulletin."
Ed.
During the first months of the
year 1867, the question seemed to be buried, and it didn't seem due for
resurrection, when new facts were brought to the public's attention. But now it
was no longer an issue of a scientific problem to be solved, but a quite real
and serious danger to be avoided. The question took an entirely new turn. The
monster again became an islet, rock, or reef, but a runaway reef, unfixed and
elusive.
On March 5, 1867, the Moravian
from the Montreal Ocean Co., lying during the night in latitude 27 degrees 30'
and longitude 72 degrees 15', ran its starboard quarter afoul of a rock marked
on no charts of these waterways. Under the combined efforts of wind and
400-horsepower steam, it was traveling at a speed of thirteen knots. Without
the high quality of its hull, the Moravian would surely have split open from
this collision and gone down together with those 237 passengers it was bringing
back from Canada.
This accident happened around
five o'clock in the morning, just as day was beginning to break. The officers
on watch rushed to the craft's stern. They examined the ocean with the most
scrupulous care. They saw nothing except a strong eddy breaking three cable
lengths out, as if those sheets of water had been violently churned. The site's
exact bearings were taken, and the Moravian continued on course apparently
undamaged. Had it run afoul of an underwater rock or the wreckage of some
enormous derelict ship? They were unable to say. But when they examined its
undersides in the service yard, they discovered that part of its keel had been
smashed.
This occurrence, extremely
serious in itself, might perhaps have been forgotten like so many others, if
three weeks later it hadn't been reenacted under identical conditions. Only,
thanks to the nationality of the ship victimized by this new ramming, and
thanks to the reputation of the company to which this ship belonged, the event
caused an immense uproar.
No one is unaware of the name of
that famous English shipowner, Cunard. In 1840 this shrewd industrialist
founded a postal service between Liverpool and Halifax, featuring three wooden
ships with 400-horsepower paddle wheels and a burden of 1,162 metric tons.
Eight years later, the company's assets were increased by four 650-horsepower
ships at 1,820 metric tons, and in two more years, by two other vessels of
still greater power and tonnage. In 1853 the Cunard Co., whose mail-carrying
charter had just been renewed, successively added to its assets the Arabia, the
Persia, the China, the Scotia, the Java, and the Russia, all ships of top speed
and, after the Great Eastern, the biggest ever to plow the seas. So in 1867
this company owned twelve ships, eight with paddle wheels and four with
propellers.
If I give these highly condensed
details, it is so everyone can fully understand the importance of this maritime
transportation company, known the world over for its shrewd management. No
transoceanic navigational undertaking has been conducted with more ability, no
business dealings have been crowned with greater success. In twenty-six years
Cunard ships have made 2,000 Atlantic crossings without so much as a voyage canceled,
a delay recorded, a man, a craft, or even a letter lost. Accordingly, despite
strong competition from France, passengers still choose the Cunard line in
preference to all others, as can be seen in a recent survey of official
documents. Given this, no one will be astonished at the uproar provoked by this
accident involving one of its finest steamers.
On April 13, 1867, with a smooth
sea and a moderate breeze, the Scotia lay in longitude 15 degrees 12' and
latitude 45 degrees 37'. It was traveling at a speed of 13.43 knots under the
thrust of its 1,000-horsepower engines. Its paddle wheels were churning the sea
with perfect steadiness. It was then drawing 6.7 meters of water and displacing
6,624 cubic meters.
At 4:17 in the afternoon, during
a high tea for passengers gathered in the main lounge, a collision occurred,
scarcely noticeable on the whole, affecting the Scotia's hull in that quarter a
little astern of its port paddle wheel.
The Scotia hadn't run afoul of
something, it had been fouled, and by a cutting or perforating instrument
rather than a blunt one. This encounter seemed so minor that nobody on board
would have been disturbed by it, had it not been for the shouts of crewmen in
the hold, who climbed on deck yelling:
"We're sinking! We're
sinking!"
At first the passengers were
quite frightened, but Captain Anderson hastened to reassure them. In fact,
there could be no immediate danger. Divided into seven compartments by
watertight bulkheads, the Scotia could brave any leak with impunity.
Captain Anderson immediately made
his way into the hold. He discovered that the fifth compartment had been
invaded by the sea, and the speed of this invasion proved that the leak was
considerable. Fortunately this compartment didn't contain the boilers, because
their furnaces would have been abruptly extinguished.
Captain Anderson called an
immediate halt, and one of his sailors dived down to assess the damage. Within
moments they had located a hole two meters in width on the steamer's underside.
Such a leak could not be patched, and with its paddle wheels half swamped, the
Scotia had no choice but to continue its voyage. By then it lay 300 miles from
Cape Clear, and after three days of delay that filled Liverpool with acute
anxiety, it entered the company docks.
The engineers then proceeded to
inspect the Scotia, which had been put in dry dock. They couldn't believe their
eyes. Two and a half meters below its waterline, there gaped a symmetrical gash
in the shape of an isosceles triangle. This breach in the sheet iron was so
perfectly formed, no punch could have done a cleaner job of it. Consequently,
it must have been produced by a perforating tool of uncommon toughness-- plus,
after being launched with prodigious power and then piercing four centimeters of
sheet iron, this tool had needed to withdraw itself by a backward motion truly
inexplicable.
This was the last straw, and it
resulted in arousing public passions all over again. Indeed, from this moment
on, any maritime casualty without an established cause was charged to the
monster's account. This outrageous animal had to shoulder responsibility for
all derelict vessels, whose numbers are unfortunately considerable, since out
of those 3,000 ships whose losses are recorded annually at the marine insurance
bureau, the figure for steam or sailing ships supposedly lost with all hands,
in the absence of any news, amounts to at least 200!
Now then, justly or unjustly, it
was the "monster" who stood accused of their disappearance; and
since, thanks to it, travel between the various continents had become more and
more dangerous, the public spoke up and demanded straight out that, at all
cost, the seas be purged of this fearsome cetacean.
DURING THE PERIOD in which these developments
were occurring, I had returned from a scientific undertaking organized to
explore the Nebraska badlands in the United States. In my capacity as Assistant
Professor at the Paris Museum of Natural History, I had been attached to this
expedition by the French government. After spending six months in Nebraska, I
arrived in New York laden with valuable collections near the end of March. My
departure for France was set for early May. In the meantime, then, I was busy
classifying my mineralogical, botanical, and zoological treasures when that
incident took place with the Scotia.
I was perfectly abreast of this
question, which was the big news of the day, and how could I not have been? I
had read and reread every American and European newspaper without being any
farther along. This mystery puzzled me. Finding it impossible to form any
views, I drifted from one extreme to the other. Something was out there, that
much was certain, and any doubting Thomas was invited to place his finger on
the Scotia's wound.
When I arrived in New York, the
question was at the boiling point. The hypothesis of a drifting islet or an
elusive reef, put forward by people not quite in their right minds, was
completely eliminated. And indeed, unless this reef had an engine in its belly,
how could it move about with such prodigious speed?
Also discredited was the idea of
a floating hull or some other enormous wreckage, and again because of this
speed of movement.
So only two possible solutions to
the question were left, creating two very distinct groups of supporters: on one
side, those favoring a monster of colossal strength; on the other, those
favoring an "underwater boat" of tremendous motor power.
Now then, although the latter
hypothesis was completely admissible, it couldn't stand up to inquiries
conducted in both the New World and the Old. That a private individual had such
a mechanism at his disposal was less than probable. Where and when had he built
it, and how could he have built it in secret?
Only some government could own
such an engine of destruction, and in these disaster-filled times, when men tax
their ingenuity to build increasingly powerful aggressive weapons, it was
possible that, unknown to the rest of the world, some nation could have been
testing such a fearsome machine. The Chassepot rifle led to the torpedo, and
the torpedo has led to this underwater battering ram, which in turn will lead
to the world putting its foot down. At least I hope it will.
But this hypothesis of a war
machine collapsed in the face of formal denials from the various governments.
Since the public interest was at stake and transoceanic travel was suffering,
the sincerity of these governments could not be doubted. Besides, how could the
assembly of this underwater boat have escaped public notice? Keeping a secret
under such circumstances would be difficult enough for an individual, and
certainly impossible for a nation whose every move is under constant
surveillance by rival powers.
So, after inquiries conducted in
England, France, Russia, Prussia, Spain, Italy, America, and even Turkey, the
hypothesis of an underwater Monitor was ultimately rejected.
And so the monster surfaced
again, despite the endless witticisms heaped on it by the popular press, and
the human imagination soon got caught up in the most ridiculous ichthyological
fantasies.
After I arrived in New York,
several people did me the honor of consulting me on the phenomenon in question.
In France I had published a two-volume work, in quarto, entitled The Mysteries
of the Great Ocean Depths. Well received in scholarly circles, this book had
established me as a specialist in this pretty obscure field of natural history.
My views were in demand. As long as I could deny the reality of the business, I
confined myself to a flat "no comment." But soon, pinned to the wall,
I had to explain myself straight out. And in this vein, "the honorable
Pierre Aronnax, Professor at the Paris Museum," was summoned by The New
York Herald to formulate his views no matter what.
I complied. Since I could no
longer hold my tongue, I let it wag. I discussed the question in its every
aspect, both political and scientific, and this is an excerpt from the
well-padded article I published in the issue of April 30.
"Therefore," I wrote,
"after examining these different hypotheses one by one, we are forced,
every other supposition having been refuted, to accept the existence of an
extremely powerful marine animal.
"The deepest parts of the
ocean are totally unknown to us. No soundings have been able to reach them.
What goes on in those distant depths? What creatures inhabit, or could inhabit,
those regions twelve or fifteen miles beneath the surface of the water? What is
the constitution of these animals? It's almost beyond conjecture.
"However, the solution to
this problem submitted to me can take the form of a choice between two
alternatives.
"Either we know every
variety of creature populating our planet, or we do not.
"If we do not know every one
of them, if nature still keeps ichthyological secrets from us, nothing is more
admissible than to accept the existence of fish or cetaceans of new species or
even new genera, animals with a basically 'cast-iron' constitution that inhabit
strata beyond the reach of our soundings, and which some development or other,
an urge or a whim if you prefer, can bring to the upper level of the ocean for
long intervals.
"If, on the other hand, we
do know every living species, we must look for the animal in question among
those marine creatures already cataloged, and in this event I would be inclined
to accept the existence of a giant narwhale.
"The common narwhale, or sea
unicorn, often reaches a length of sixty feet. Increase its dimensions fivefold
or even tenfold, then give this cetacean a strength in proportion to its size
while enlarging its offensive weapons, and you have the animal we're looking
for. It would have the proportions determined by the officers of the Shannon,
the instrument needed to perforate the Scotia, and the power to pierce a
steamer's hull.
"In essence, the narwhale is
armed with a sort of ivory sword, or lance, as certain naturalists have
expressed it. It's a king-sized tooth as hard as steel. Some of these teeth
have been found buried in the bodies of baleen whales, which the narwhale
attacks with invariable success. Others have been wrenched, not without
difficulty, from the undersides of vessels that narwhales have pierced clean
through, as a gimlet pierces a wine barrel. The museum at the Faculty of
Medicine in Paris owns one of these tusks with a length of 2.25 meters and a
width at its base of forty-eight centimeters!
"All right then! Imagine
this weapon to be ten times stronger and the animal ten times more powerful,
launch it at a speed of twenty miles per hour, multiply its mass times its
velocity, and you get just the collision we need to cause the specified
catastrophe.
"So, until information
becomes more abundant, I plump for a sea unicorn of colossal dimensions, no
longer armed with a mere lance but with an actual spur, like ironclad frigates
or those warships called 'rams,' whose mass and motor power it would possess
simultaneously.
"This inexplicable
phenomenon is thus explained away--unless it's something else entirely, which,
despite everything that has been sighted, studied, explored and experienced, is
still possible!"
These last words were cowardly of
me; but as far as I could, I wanted to protect my professorial dignity and not
lay myself open to laughter from the Americans, who when they do laugh, laugh
raucously. I had left myself a loophole. Yet deep down, I had accepted the
existence of "the monster."
My article was hotly debated,
causing a fine old uproar. It rallied a number of supporters. Moreover, the
solution it proposed allowed for free play of the imagination. The human mind
enjoys impressive visions of unearthly creatures. Now then, the sea is
precisely their best medium, the only setting suitable for the breeding and
growing of such giants--next to which such land animals as elephants or
rhinoceroses are mere dwarves. The liquid masses support the largest known
species of mammals and perhaps conceal mollusks of incomparable size or
crustaceans too frightful to contemplate, such as 100-meter lobsters or crabs
weighing 200 metric tons! Why not? Formerly, in prehistoric days, land animals
(quadrupeds, apes, reptiles, birds) were built on a gigantic scale. Our Creator
cast them using a colossal mold that time has gradually made smaller. With its
untold depths, couldn't the sea keep alive such huge specimens of life from
another age, this sea that never changes while the land masses undergo almost
continuous alteration? Couldn't the heart of the ocean hide the last-remaining
varieties of these titanic species, for whom years are centuries and centuries
millennia?
But I mustn't let these fantasies
run away with me! Enough of these fairy tales that time has changed for me into
harsh realities. I repeat: opinion had crystallized as to the nature of this
phenomenon, and the public accepted without argument the existence of a prodigious
creature that had nothing in common with the fabled sea serpent.
Yet if some saw it purely as a
scientific problem to be solved, more practical people, especially in America
and England, were determined to purge the ocean of this daunting monster, to
insure the safety of transoceanic travel. The industrial and commercial
newspapers dealt with the question chiefly from this viewpoint. The Shipping
& Mercantile Gazette, the Lloyd's List, France's Packetboat and Maritime
& Colonial Review, all the rags devoted to insurance companies--who
threatened to raise their premium rates-- were unanimous on this point.
Public opinion being pronounced,
the States of the Union were the first in the field. In New York preparations
were under way for an expedition designed to chase this narwhale. A high-speed
frigate, the Abraham Lincoln, was fitted out for putting to sea as soon as
possible. The naval arsenals were unlocked for Commander Farragut, who pressed
energetically forward with the arming of his frigate.
But, as it always happens, just
when a decision had been made to chase the monster, the monster put in no
further appearances. For two months nobody heard a word about it. Not a single ship
encountered it. Apparently the unicorn had gotten wise to these plots being
woven around it. People were constantly babbling about the creature, even via
the Atlantic Cable! Accordingly, the wags claimed that this slippery rascal had
waylaid some passing telegram and was making the most of it.
So the frigate was equipped for a
far-off voyage and armed with fearsome fishing gear, but nobody knew where to
steer it. And impatience grew until, on June 2, word came that the Tampico, a
steamer on the San Francisco line sailing from California to Shanghai, had
sighted the animal again, three weeks before in the northerly seas of the
Pacific.
This news caused intense
excitement. Not even a 24-hour breather was granted to Commander Farragut. His
provisions were loaded on board. His coal bunkers were overflowing. Not a
crewman was missing from his post. To cast off, he needed only to fire and
stoke his furnaces! Half a day's delay would have been unforgivable! But
Commander Farragut wanted nothing more than to go forth.
I received a letter three hours
before the Abraham Lincoln left its Brooklyn pier;* the letter read as follows:
*Author's Note: A pier is a type
of wharf expressly set aside for an individual vessel.
Pierre Aronnax
Professor at the Paris Museum
Fifth Avenue Hotel
New York
Sir:
If you would like to join the
expedition on the Abraham Lincoln, the government of the Union will be pleased
to regard you as France's representative in this undertaking. Commander
Farragut has a cabin at your disposal.
Very cordially yours,
J. B. HOBSON,
Secretary of the Navy.
THREE SECONDS before the arrival
of J. B. Hobson's letter, I no more dreamed of chasing the unicorn than of
trying for the Northwest Passage. Three seconds after reading this letter from
the honorable Secretary of the Navy, I understood at last that my true
vocation, my sole purpose in life, was to hunt down this disturbing monster and
rid the world of it.
Even so, I had just returned from
an arduous journey, exhausted and badly needing a rest. I wanted nothing more
than to see my country again, my friends, my modest quarters by the Botanical
Gardens, my dearly beloved collections! But now nothing could hold me back. I
forgot everything else, and without another thought of exhaustion, friends, or
collections, I accepted the American government's offer.
"Besides," I mused,
"all roads lead home to Europe, and our unicorn may be gracious enough to
take me toward the coast of France! That fine animal may even let itself be
captured in European seas--as a personal favor to me--and I'll bring back to
the Museum of Natural History at least half a meter of its ivory lance!"
But in the meantime I would have
to look for this narwhale in the northern Pacific Ocean; which meant returning
to France by way of the Antipodes.
"Conseil!" I called in
an impatient voice.
Conseil was my manservant. A
devoted lad who went with me on all my journeys; a gallant Flemish boy whom I
genuinely liked and who returned the compliment; a born stoic, punctilious on
principle, habitually hardworking, rarely startled by life's surprises, very
skillful with his hands, efficient in his every duty, and despite his having a
name that means "counsel," never giving advice-- not even the unsolicited
kind!
From rubbing shoulders with
scientists in our little universe by the Botanical Gardens, the boy had come to
know a thing or two. In Conseil I had a seasoned specialist in biological
classification, an enthusiast who could run with acrobatic agility up and down
the whole ladder of branches, groups, classes, subclasses, orders, families,
genera, subgenera, species, and varieties. But there his science came to a
halt. Classifying was everything to him, so he knew nothing else. Well versed
in the theory of classification, he was poorly versed in its practical
application, and I doubt that he could tell a sperm whale from a baleen whale!
And yet, what a fine, gallant lad!
For the past ten years, Conseil
had gone with me wherever science beckoned. Not once did he comment on the
length or the hardships of a journey. Never did he object to buckling up his
suitcase for any country whatever, China or the Congo, no matter how far off it
was. He went here, there, and everywhere in perfect contentment. Moreover, he
enjoyed excellent health that defied all ailments, owned solid muscles, but
hadn't a nerve in him, not a sign of nerves-- the mental type, I mean.
The lad was thirty years old, and
his age to that of his employer was as fifteen is to twenty. Please forgive me
for this underhanded way of admitting I had turned forty.
But Conseil had one flaw. He was
a fanatic on formality, and he only addressed me in the third person--to the
point where it got tiresome.
"Conseil!" I repeated,
while feverishly beginning my preparations for departure.
To be sure, I had confidence in
this devoted lad. Ordinarily, I never asked whether or not it suited him to go
with me on my journeys; but this time an expedition was at issue that could
drag on indefinitely, a hazardous undertaking whose purpose was to hunt an
animal that could sink a frigate as easily as a walnut shell! There was good
reason to stop and think, even for the world's most emotionless man. What would
Conseil say?
"Conseil!" I called a
third time.
Conseil appeared.
"Did master summon me?"
he said, entering.
"Yes, my boy. Get my things
ready, get yours ready. We're departing in two hours."
"As master wishes,"
Conseil replied serenely.
"We haven't a moment to
lose. Pack as much into my trunk as you can, my traveling kit, my suits,
shirts, and socks, don't bother counting, just squeeze it all in--and
hurry!"
"What about master's
collections?" Conseil ventured to observe.
"We'll deal with them
later."
"What! The archaeotherium,
hyracotherium, oreodonts, cheiropotamus, and master's other fossil
skeletons?"
"The hotel will keep them
for us."
"What about master's live
babirusa?"
"They'll feed it during our
absence. Anyhow, we'll leave instructions to ship the whole menagerie to
France."
"Then we aren't returning to
Paris?" Conseil asked.
"Yes, we are . . . certainly
. . . ," I replied evasively, "but after we make a detour."
"Whatever detour master
wishes."
"Oh, it's nothing really! A
route slightly less direct, that's all. We're leaving on the Abraham
Lincoln."
"As master thinks
best," Conseil replied placidly.
"You see, my friend, it's an
issue of the monster, the notorious narwhale. We're going to rid the seas of
it! The author of a two-volume work, in quarto, on The Mysteries of the Great
Ocean Depths has no excuse for not setting sail with Commander Farragut. It's a
glorious mission but also a dangerous one! We don't know where it will take us!
These beasts can be quite unpredictable! But we're going just the same! We have
a commander who's game for anything!"
"What master does, I'll
do," Conseil replied.
"But think it over, because
I don't want to hide anything from you. This is one of those voyages from which
people don't always come back!"
"As master wishes."
A quarter of an hour later, our
trunks were ready. Conseil did them in a flash, and I was sure the lad hadn't
missed a thing, because he classified shirts and suits as expertly as birds and
mammals.
The hotel elevator dropped us off
in the main vestibule on the mezzanine. I went down a short stair leading to
the ground floor. I settled my bill at that huge counter that was always under
siege by a considerable crowd. I left instructions for shipping my containers
of stuffed animals and dried plants to Paris, France. I opened a line of credit
sufficient to cover the babirusa and, Conseil at my heels, I jumped into a
carriage.
For a fare of twenty francs, the
vehicle went down Broadway to Union Square, took Fourth Ave. to its junction
with Bowery St., turned into Katrin St. and halted at Pier 34. There the Katrin
ferry transferred men, horses, and carriage to Brooklyn, that great New York
annex located on the left bank of the East River, and in a few minutes we
arrived at the wharf next to which the Abraham Lincoln was vomiting torrents of
black smoke from its two funnels.
Our baggage was immediately
carried to the deck of the frigate. I rushed aboard. I asked for Commander
Farragut. One of the sailors led me to the afterdeck, where I stood in the
presence of a smart-looking officer who extended his hand to me.
"Professor Pierre
Aronnax?" he said to me.
"The same," I replied.
"Commander Farragut?"
"In person. Welcome aboard,
professor. Your cabin is waiting for you."
I bowed, and letting the
commander attend to getting under way, I was taken to the cabin that had been
set aside for me.
The Abraham Lincoln had been
perfectly chosen and fitted out for its new assignment. It was a high-speed
frigate furnished with superheating equipment that allowed the tension of its
steam to build to seven atmospheres. Under this pressure the Abraham Lincoln
reached an average speed of 18.3 miles per hour, a considerable speed but still
not enough to cope with our gigantic cetacean.
The frigate's interior accommodations
complemented its nautical virtues. I was well satisfied with my cabin, which
was located in the stern and opened into the officers' mess.
"We'll be quite comfortable
here," I told Conseil.
"With all due respect to
master," Conseil replied, "as comfortable as a hermit crab inside the
shell of a whelk."
I left Conseil to the proper
stowing of our luggage and climbed on deck to watch the preparations for
getting under way.
Just then Commander Farragut was
giving orders to cast off the last moorings holding the Abraham Lincoln to its
Brooklyn pier. And so if I'd been delayed by a quarter of an hour or even less,
the frigate would have gone without me, and I would have missed out on this
unearthly, extraordinary, and inconceivable expedition, whose true story might
well meet with some skepticism.
But Commander Farragut didn't
want to waste a single day, or even a single hour, in making for those seas
where the animal had just been sighted. He summoned his engineer.
"Are we up to
pressure?" he asked the man.
"Aye, sir," the
engineer replied.
"Go ahead, then!"
Commander Farragut called.
At this order, which was relayed
to the engine by means of a compressed-air device, the mechanics activated the
start-up wheel. Steam rushed whistling into the gaping valves. Long horizontal
pistons groaned and pushed the tie rods of the drive shaft. The blades of the
propeller churned the waves with increasing speed, and the Abraham Lincoln
moved out majestically amid a spectator-laden escort of some 100 ferries and
tenders.*
*Author's Note: Tenders are small
steamboats that assist the big liners.
The wharves of Brooklyn, and
every part of New York bordering the East River, were crowded with curiosity
seekers. Departing from 500,000 throats, three cheers burst forth in
succession. Thousands of handkerchiefs were waving above these tightly packed
masses, hailing the Abraham
Lincoln until it reached the
waters of the Hudson River, at the tip of the long peninsula that forms New
York City.
The frigate then went along the
New Jersey coast--the wonderful right bank of this river, all loaded down with
country homes-- and passed by the forts to salutes from their biggest cannons.
The Abraham Lincoln replied by three times lowering and hoisting the American
flag, whose thirty-nine stars gleamed from the gaff of the mizzen sail; then,
changing speed to take the buoy-marked channel that curved into the inner bay
formed by the spit of Sandy Hook, it hugged this sand-covered strip of land
where thousands of spectators acclaimed us one more time.
The escort of boats and tenders
still followed the frigate and only left us when we came abreast of the
lightship, whose two signal lights mark the entrance of the narrows to Upper
New York Bay.
Three o'clock then sounded. The
harbor pilot went down into his dinghy and rejoined a little schooner waiting
for him to leeward. The furnaces were stoked; the propeller churned the waves
more swiftly; the frigate skirted the flat, yellow coast of Long Island; and at
eight o'clock in the evening, after the lights of Fire Island had vanished into
the northwest, we ran at full steam onto the dark waters of the Atlantic.
COMMANDER FARRAGUT was a good
seaman, worthy of the frigate he commanded. His ship and he were one. He was
its very soul. On the cetacean question no doubts arose in his mind, and he
didn't allow the animal's existence to be disputed aboard his vessel. He
believed in it as certain pious women believe in the leviathan from the Book of
Job--out of faith, not reason. The monster existed, and he had vowed to rid the
seas of it. The man was a sort of Knight of Rhodes, a latter-day Sir Dieudonné
of Gozo, on his way to fight an encounter with the dragon devastating the
island. Either Commander Farragut would slay the narwhale, or the narwhale
would slay Commander Farragut. No middle of the road for these two.
The ship's officers shared the
views of their leader. They could be heard chatting, discussing, arguing,
calculating the different chances of an encounter, and observing the vast
expanse of the ocean. Voluntary watches from the crosstrees of the topgallant
sail were self-imposed by more than one who would have cursed such toil under
any other circumstances. As often as the sun swept over its daily arc, the masts
were populated with sailors whose feet itched and couldn't hold still on the
planking of the deck below! And the Abraham Lincoln's stempost hadn't even cut
the suspected waters of the Pacific.
As for the crew, they only wanted
to encounter the unicorn, harpoon it, haul it on board, and carve it up. They
surveyed the sea with scrupulous care. Besides, Commander Farragut had
mentioned that a certain sum of $2,000.00 was waiting for the man who first
sighted the animal, be he cabin boy or sailor, mate or officer. I'll let the
reader decide whether eyes got proper exercise aboard the Abraham Lincoln.
As for me, I didn't lag behind
the others and I yielded to no one my share in these daily observations. Our
frigate would have had fivescore good reasons for renaming itself the Argus,
after that mythological beast with 100 eyes! The lone rebel among us was
Conseil, who seemed utterly uninterested in the question exciting us and was
out of step with the general enthusiasm on board.
As I said, Commander Farragut had
carefully equipped his ship with all the gear needed to fish for a gigantic
cetacean. No whaling vessel could have been better armed. We had every known
mechanism, from the hand-hurled harpoon, to the blunderbuss firing barbed
arrows, to the duck gun with exploding bullets. On the forecastle was mounted
the latest model breech-loading cannon, very heavy of barrel and narrow of
bore, a weapon that would figure in the Universal Exhibition of 1867. Made in
America, this valuable instrument could fire a four-kilogram conical projectile
an average distance of sixteen kilometers without the least bother.
So the Abraham Lincoln wasn't
lacking in means of destruction. But it had better still. It had Ned Land, the
King of Harpooners.
Gifted with uncommon manual ability,
Ned Land was a Canadian who had no equal in his dangerous trade. Dexterity,
coolness, bravery, and cunning were virtues he possessed to a high degree, and
it took a truly crafty baleen whale or an exceptionally astute sperm whale to
elude the thrusts of his harpoon.
Ned Land was about forty years
old. A man of great height--over six English feet--he was powerfully built,
serious in manner, not very sociable, sometimes headstrong, and quite
ill-tempered when crossed. His looks caught the attention, and above all the
strength of his gaze, which gave a unique emphasis to his facial appearance.
Commander Farragut, to my
thinking, had made a wise move in hiring on this man. With his eye and his
throwing arm, he was worth the whole crew all by himself. I can do no better
than to compare him with a powerful telescope that could double as a cannon
always ready to fire.
To say Canadian is to say French,
and as unsociable as Ned Land was, I must admit he took a definite liking to
me. No doubt it was my nationality that attracted him. It was an opportunity
for him to speak, and for me to hear, that old Rabelaisian dialect still used
in some Canadian provinces. The harpooner's family originated in Quebec, and
they were already a line of bold fishermen back in the days when this town
still belonged to France.
Little by little Ned developed a
taste for chatting, and I loved hearing the tales of his adventures in the
polar seas. He described his fishing trips and his battles with great natural
lyricism. His tales took on the form of an epic poem, and I felt I was hearing
some Canadian Homer reciting his Iliad of the High Arctic regions.
I'm writing of this bold
companion as I currently know him. Because we've become old friends, united in that
permanent comradeship born and cemented during only the most frightful crises!
Ah, my gallant Ned! I ask only to live 100 years more, the longer to remember
you!
And now, what were Ned Land's
views on this question of a marine monster? I must admit that he flatly didn't
believe in the unicorn, and alone on board, he didn't share the general
conviction. He avoided even dealing with the subject, for which one day I felt
compelled to take him to task.
During the magnificent evening of
June 25--in other words, three weeks after our departure--the frigate lay
abreast of Cabo Blanco, thirty miles to leeward of the coast of Patagonia. We
had crossed the Tropic of Capricorn, and the Strait of Magellan opened less
than 700 miles to the south. Before eight days were out, the Abraham Lincoln
would plow the waves of the Pacific.
Seated on the afterdeck, Ned Land
and I chatted about one thing and another, staring at that mysterious sea whose
depths to this day are beyond the reach of human eyes. Quite naturally, I led
our conversation around to the giant unicorn, and I weighed our expedition's
various chances for success or failure. Then, seeing that Ned just let me talk
without saying much himself, I pressed him more closely.
"Ned," I asked him,
"how can you still doubt the reality of this cetacean we're after? Do you
have any particular reasons for being so skeptical?"
The harpooner stared at me awhile
before replying, slapped his broad forehead in one of his standard gestures,
closed his eyes as if to collect himself, and finally said:
"Just maybe, Professor
Aronnax."
"But Ned, you're a
professional whaler, a man familiar with all the great marine mammals--your
mind should easily accept this hypothesis of an enormous cetacean, and you
ought to be the last one to doubt it under these circumstances!"
"That's just where you're
mistaken, professor," Ned replied. "The common man may still believe
in fabulous comets crossing outer space, or in prehistoric monsters living at
the earth's core, but astronomers and geologists don't swallow such fairy
tales. It's the same with whalers. I've chased plenty of cetaceans, I've
harpooned a good number, I've killed several. But no matter how powerful and
well armed they were, neither their tails or their tusks could puncture the
sheet-iron plates of a steamer."
"Even so, Ned, people
mention vessels that narwhale tusks have run clean through."
"Wooden ships maybe,"
the Canadian replied. "But I've never seen the like. So till I have proof
to the contrary, I'll deny that baleen whales, sperm whales, or unicorns can do
any such thing."
"Listen to me, Ned--"
"No, no, professor. I'll go
along with anything you want except that. Some gigantic devilfish maybe . . .
?"
"Even less likely, Ned. The
devilfish is merely a mollusk, and even this name hints at its semiliquid
flesh, because it's Latin meaning soft one. The devilfish doesn't belong to the
vertebrate branch, and even if it were 500 feet long, it would still be utterly
harmless to ships like the Scotia or the Abraham Lincoln. Consequently, the
feats of krakens or other monsters of that ilk must be relegated to the realm
of fiction."
"So, Mr. Naturalist,"
Ned Land continued in a bantering tone, "you'll just keep on believing in
the existence of some enormous cetacean . . . ?"
"Yes, Ned, I repeat it with
a conviction backed by factual logic. I believe in the existence of a mammal
with a powerful constitution, belonging to the vertebrate branch like baleen
whales, sperm whales, or dolphins, and armed with a tusk made of horn that has
tremendous penetrating power."
"Humph!" the harpooner
put in, shaking his head with the attitude of a man who doesn't want to be
convinced.
"Note well, my fine
Canadian," I went on, "if such an animal exists, if it lives deep in
the ocean, if it frequents the liquid strata located miles beneath the surface
of the water, it needs to have a constitution so solid, it defies all
comparison."
"And why this powerful
constitution?" Ned asked.
"Because it takes
incalculable strength just to live in those deep strata and withstand their
pressure."
"Oh really?" Ned said,
tipping me a wink.
"Oh really, and I can prove
it to you with a few simple figures."
"Bosh!" Ned replied.
"You can make figures do anything you want!"
"In business, Ned, but not
in mathematics. Listen to me. Let's accept that the pressure of one atmosphere
is represented by the pressure of a column of water thirty-two feet high. In
reality, such a column of water wouldn't be quite so high because here we're
dealing with salt water, which is denser than fresh water. Well then, when you
dive under the waves, Ned, for every thirty-two feet of water above you, your
body is tolerating the pressure of one more atmosphere, in other words, one
more kilogram per each square centimeter on your body's surface. So it follows
that at 320 feet down, this pressure is equal to ten atmospheres, to 100
atmospheres at 3,200 feet, and to 1,000 atmospheres at 32,000 feet, that is, at
about two and a half vertical leagues down. Which is tantamount to saying that
if you could reach such a depth in the ocean, each square centimeter on your
body's surface would be experiencing 1,000 kilograms of pressure. Now, my
gallant Ned, do you know how many square centimeters you have on your bodily
surface?"
"I haven't the foggiest
notion, Professor Aronnax."
"About 17,000."
"As many as that?"
"Yes, and since the
atmosphere's pressure actually weighs slightly more than one kilogram per
square centimeter, your 17,000 square centimeters are tolerating 17,568
kilograms at this very moment."
"Without my noticing
it?"
"Without your noticing it.
And if you aren't crushed by so much pressure, it's because the air penetrates
the interior of your body with equal pressure. When the inside and outside pressures
are in perfect balance, they neutralize each other and allow you to tolerate
them without discomfort. But in the water it's another story."
"Yes, I see," Ned
replied, growing more interested. "Because the water surrounds me but
doesn't penetrate me."
"Precisely, Ned. So at
thirty-two feet beneath the surface of the sea, you'll undergo a pressure of
17,568 kilograms; at 320 feet, or ten times greater pressure, it's 175,680
kilograms; at 3,200 feet, or 100 times greater pressure, it's 1,756,800 kilograms;
finally, at 32,000 feet, or 1,000 times greater pressure, it's 17,568,000
kilograms; in other words, you'd be squashed as flat as if you'd just been
yanked from between the plates of a hydraulic press!"
"Fire and brimstone!"
Ned put in.
"All right then, my fine
harpooner, if vertebrates several hundred meters long and proportionate in bulk
live at such depths, their surface areas make up millions of square
centimeters, and the pressure they undergo must be assessed in billions of
kilograms. Calculate, then, how much resistance of bone structure and strength
of constitution they'd need in order to withstand such pressures!"
"They'd need to be
manufactured," Ned Land replied, "from sheet-iron plates eight inches
thick, like ironclad frigates."
"Right, Ned, and then
picture the damage such a mass could inflict if it were launched with the speed
of an express train against a ship's hull."
"Yes . . . indeed . . .
maybe," the Canadian replied, staggered by these figures but still not
willing to give in.
"Well, have I convinced
you?"
"You've convinced me of one
thing, Mr. Naturalist. That deep in the sea, such animals would need to be just
as strong as you say-- if they exist."
"But if they don't exist, my
stubborn harpooner, how do you explain the accident that happened to the
Scotia?"
"It's maybe . . . ,"
Ned said, hesitating.
"Go on!"
"Because . . . it just
couldn't be true!" the Canadian replied, unconsciously echoing a famous
catchphrase of the scientist Arago.
But this reply proved nothing, other
than how bullheaded the harpooner could be. That day I pressed him no further.
The Scotia's accident was undeniable. Its hole was real enough that it had to
be plugged up, and I don't think a hole's existence can be more emphatically
proven. Now then, this hole didn't make itself, and since it hadn't resulted
from underwater rocks or underwater machines, it must have been caused by the
perforating tool of some animal.
Now, for all the reasons put
forward to this point, I believed that this animal was a member of the branch
Vertebrata, class Mammalia, group Pisciforma, and finally, order Cetacea. As
for the family in which it would be placed (baleen whale, sperm whale, or
dolphin), the genus to which it belonged, and the species in which it would find
its proper home, these questions had to be left for later. To answer them
called for dissecting this unknown monster; to dissect it called for catching
it; to catch it called for harpooning it-- which was Ned Land's business; to
harpoon it called for sighting it-- which was the crew's business; and to sight
it called for encountering it-- which was a chancy business.
FOR SOME WHILE the voyage of the
Abraham Lincoln was marked by no incident. But one circumstance arose that
displayed Ned Land's marvelous skills and showed just how much confidence we
could place in him.
Off the Falkland Islands on June
30, the frigate came in contact with a fleet of American whalers, and we
learned that they hadn't seen the narwhale. But one of them, the captain of the
Monroe, knew that Ned Land had shipped aboard the Abraham Lincoln and asked his
help in hunting a baleen whale that was in sight. Anxious to see Ned Land at
work, Commander Farragut authorized him to make his way aboard the Monroe. And
the Canadian had such good luck that with a right-and-left shot, he harpooned
not one whale but two, striking the first straight to the heart and catching
the other after a few minutes' chase!
Assuredly, if the monster ever
had to deal with Ned Land's harpoon, I wouldn't bet on the monster.
The frigate sailed along the east
coast of South America with prodigious speed. By July 3 we were at the entrance
to the Strait of Magellan, abreast of Cabo de las Virgenes. But Commander
Farragut was unwilling to attempt this tortuous passageway and maneuvered
instead to double Cape Horn.
The crew sided with him
unanimously. Indeed, were we likely to encounter the narwhale in such a cramped
strait? Many of our sailors swore that the monster couldn't negotiate this
passageway simply because "he's too big for it!"
Near three o'clock in the
afternoon on July 6, fifteen miles south of shore, the Abraham Lincoln doubled
that solitary islet at the tip of the South American continent, that stray rock
Dutch seamen had named Cape Horn after their hometown of Hoorn. Our course was
set for the northwest, and the next day our frigate's propeller finally churned
the waters of the Pacific.
"Open your eyes! Open your
eyes!" repeated the sailors of the Abraham Lincoln.
And they opened amazingly wide.
Eyes and spyglasses (a bit dazzled, it is true, by the vista of $2,000.00)
didn't remain at rest for an instant. Day and night we observed the surface of
the ocean, and those with nyctalopic eyes, whose ability to see in the dark
increased their chances by fifty percent, had an excellent shot at winning the
prize.
As for me, I was hardly drawn by
the lure of money and yet was far from the least attentive on board. Snatching
only a few minutes for meals and a few hours for sleep, come rain or come
shine, I no longer left the ship's deck. Sometimes bending over the forecastle
railings, sometimes leaning against the sternrail, I eagerly scoured that
cotton-colored wake that whitened the ocean as far as the eye could see! And
how many times I shared the excitement of general staff and crew when some
unpredictable whale lifted its blackish back above the waves. In an instant the
frigate's deck would become densely populated. The cowls over the companionways
would vomit a torrent of sailors and officers. With panting chests and anxious
eyes, we each would observe the cetacean's movements. I stared; I stared until
I nearly went blind from a worn-out retina, while Conseil, as stoic as ever,
kept repeating to me in a calm tone:
"If master's eyes would kindly
stop bulging, master will see farther!"
But what a waste of energy! The
Abraham Lincoln would change course and race after the animal sighted, only to
find an ordinary baleen whale or a common sperm whale that soon disappeared
amid a chorus of curses!
However, the weather held good.
Our voyage was proceeding under the most favorable conditions. By then it was
the bad season in these southernmost regions, because July in this zone corresponds
to our January in Europe; but the sea remained smooth and easily visible over a
vast perimeter.
Ned Land still kept up the most
tenacious skepticism; beyond his spells on watch, he pretended that he never
even looked at the surface of the waves, at least while no whales were in
sight. And yet the marvelous power of his vision could have performed yeoman
service. But this stubborn Canadian spent eight hours out of every twelve
reading or sleeping in his cabin. A hundred times I chided him for his
unconcern.
"Bah!" he replied.
"Nothing's out there, Professor Aronnax, and if there is some animal, what
chance would we have of spotting it? Can't you see we're just wandering around
at random? People say they've sighted this slippery beast again in the Pacific
high seas-- I'm truly willing to believe it, but two months have already gone
by since then, and judging by your narwhale's personality, it hates growing
moldy from hanging out too long in the same waterways! It's blessed with a
terrific gift for getting around. Now, professor, you know even better than I
that nature doesn't violate good sense, and she wouldn't give some naturally
slow animal the ability to move swiftly if it hadn't a need to use that talent.
So if the beast does exist, it's already long gone!"
I had no reply to this. Obviously
we were just groping blindly. But how else could we go about it? All the same,
our chances were automatically pretty limited. Yet everyone still felt
confident of success, and not a sailor on board would have bet against the
narwhale appearing, and soon.
On July 20 we cut the Tropic of
Capricorn at longitude 105 degrees, and by the 27th of the same month, we had
cleared the equator on the 110th meridian. These bearings determined, the
frigate took a more decisive westward heading and tackled the seas of the
central Pacific. Commander Farragut felt, and with good reason, that it was
best to stay in deep waters and keep his distance from continents or islands,
whose neighborhoods the animal always seemed to avoid--"No doubt,"
our bosun said, "because there isn't enough water for him!" So the
frigate kept well out when passing the Tuamotu, Marquesas, and Hawaiian
Islands, then cut the Tropic of Cancer at longitude 132 degrees and headed for
the seas of China.
We were finally in the area of
the monster's latest antics! And in all honesty, shipboard conditions became
life-threatening. Hearts were pounding hideously, gearing up for futures full
of incurable aneurysms. The entire crew suffered from a nervous excitement that
it's beyond me to describe. Nobody ate, nobody slept. Twenty times a day some
error in perception, or the optical illusions of some sailor perched in the
crosstrees, would cause intolerable anguish, and this emotion, repeated twenty
times over, kept us in a state of irritability so intense that a reaction was
bound to follow.
And this reaction wasn't long in
coming. For three months, during which each day seemed like a century, the
Abraham Lincoln plowed all the northerly seas of the Pacific, racing after
whales sighted, abruptly veering off course, swerving sharply from one tack to
another, stopping suddenly, putting on steam and reversing engines in quick
succession, at the risk of stripping its gears, and it didn't leave a single
point unexplored from the beaches of Japan to the coasts of America. And we
found nothing! Nothing except an immenseness of deserted waves! Nothing
remotely resembling a gigantic narwhale, or an underwater islet, or a derelict
shipwreck, or a runaway reef, or anything the least bit unearthly!
So the reaction set in. At first,
discouragement took hold of people's minds, opening the door to disbelief. A
new feeling appeared on board, made up of three-tenths shame and seven-tenths
fury. The crew called themselves "out-and-out fools" for being
hoodwinked by a fairy tale, then grew steadily more furious! The mountains of
arguments amassed over a year collapsed all at once, and each man now wanted
only to catch up on his eating and sleeping, to make up for the time he had so
stupidly sacrificed.
With typical human fickleness,
they jumped from one extreme to the other. Inevitably, the most enthusiastic
supporters of the undertaking became its most energetic opponents. This
reaction mounted upward from the bowels of the ship, from the quarters of the
bunker hands to the messroom of the general staff; and for certain, if it
hadn't been for Commander Farragut's characteristic stubbornness, the frigate
would ultimately have put back to that cape in the south.
But this futile search couldn't
drag on much longer. The Abraham Lincoln had done everything it could to
succeed and had no reason to blame itself. Never had the crew of an American
naval craft shown more patience and zeal; they weren't responsible for this
failure; there was nothing to do but go home.
A request to this effect was
presented to the commander. The commander stood his ground. His sailors
couldn't hide their discontent, and their work suffered because of it. I'm
unwilling to say that there was mutiny on board, but after a reasonable period
of intransigence, Commander Farragut, like Christopher Columbus before him,
asked for a grace period of just three days more. After this three-day delay,
if the monster hadn't appeared, our helmsman would give three turns of the wheel,
and the Abraham Lincoln would chart a course toward European seas.
This promise was given on
November 2. It had the immediate effect of reviving the crew's failing spirits.
The ocean was observed with renewed care. Each man wanted one last look with which
to sum up his experience. Spyglasses functioned with feverish energy. A supreme
challenge had been issued to the giant narwhale, and the latter had no
acceptable excuse for ignoring this Summons to Appear!
Two days passed. The Abraham
Lincoln stayed at half steam. On the offchance that the animal might be found
in these waterways, a thousand methods were used to spark its interest or rouse
it from its apathy. Enormous sides of bacon were trailed in our wake, to the
great satisfaction, I must say, of assorted sharks. While the Abraham Lincoln
heaved to, its longboats radiated in every direction around it and didn't leave
a single point of the sea unexplored. But the evening of November 4 arrived
with this underwater mystery still unsolved.
At noon the next day, November 5,
the agreed-upon delay expired. After a position fix, true to his promise,
Commander Farragut would have to set his course for the southeast and leave the
northerly regions of the Pacific decisively behind.
By then the frigate lay in
latitude 31 degrees 15' north and longitude 136 degrees 42' east. The shores of
Japan were less than 200 miles to our leeward. Night was coming on. Eight
o'clock had just struck. Huge clouds covered the moon's disk, then in its first
quarter. The sea undulated placidly beneath the frigate's stempost.
Just then I was in the bow,
leaning over the starboard rail. Conseil, stationed beside me, stared straight
ahead. Roosting in the shrouds, the crew examined the horizon, which shrank and
darkened little by little. Officers were probing the increasing gloom with
their night glasses. Sometimes the murky ocean sparkled beneath moonbeams that
darted between the fringes of two clouds. Then all traces of light vanished
into the darkness.
Observing Conseil, I discovered
that, just barely, the gallant lad had fallen under the general influence. At
least so I thought. Perhaps his nerves were twitching with curiosity for the
first time in history.
"Come on, Conseil!" I
told him. "Here's your last chance to pocket that $2,000.00!"
"If master will permit my
saying so," Conseil replied, "I never expected to win that prize, and
the Union government could have promised $100,000.00 and been none the
poorer."
"You're right, Conseil, it
turned out to be a foolish business after all, and we jumped into it too
hastily. What a waste of time, what a futile expense of emotion! Six months ago
we could have been back in France--"
"In master's little
apartment," Conseil answered. "In master's museum! And by now I would
have classified master's fossils. And master's babirusa would be ensconced in
its cage at the zoo in the Botanical Gardens, and it would have attracted every
curiosity seeker in town!"
"Quite so, Conseil, and
what's more, I imagine that people will soon be poking fun at us!"
"To be sure," Conseil
replied serenely, "I do think they'll have fun at master's expense. And
must it be said . . . ?"
"It must be said,
Conseil."
"Well then, it will serve
master right!"
"How true!"
"When one has the honor of
being an expert as master is, one mustn't lay himself open to--"
Conseil didn't have time to
complete the compliment. In the midst of the general silence, a voice became
audible. It was Ned Land's voice, and it shouted:
"Ahoy! There's the thing in
question, abreast of us to leeward!"
AT THIS SHOUT the entire crew
rushed toward the harpooner-- commander, officers, mates,
sailors, cabin boys, down to
engineers leaving their machinery and stokers neglecting their furnaces. The order
was given to stop, and the frigate merely coasted.
By then the darkness was
profound, and as good as the Canadian's eyes were, I still wondered how he
could see--and what he had seen. My heart was pounding fit to burst.
But Ned Land was not mistaken,
and we all spotted the object his hand was indicating.
Two cable lengths off the Abraham
Lincoln's starboard quarter, the sea seemed to be lit up from underneath. This
was no mere phosphorescent phenomenon, that much was unmistakable. Submerged
some fathoms below the surface of the water, the monster gave off that very
intense but inexplicable glow that several captains had mentioned in their
reports. This magnificent radiance had to come from some force with a great
illuminating capacity. The edge of its light swept over the sea in an immense,
highly elongated oval, condensing at the center into a blazing core whose
unbearable glow diminished by degrees outward.
"It's only a cluster of
phosphorescent particles!" exclaimed one of the officers.
"No, sir," I answered
with conviction. "Not even angel-wing clams or salps have ever given off
such a powerful light. That glow is basically electric in nature. Besides . . .
look, look! It's shifting! It's moving back and forth! It's darting at us!"
A universal shout went up from
the frigate.
"Quiet!" Commander
Farragut said. "Helm hard to leeward! Reverse engines!"
Sailors rushed to the helm,
engineers to their machinery. Under reverse steam immediately, the Abraham
Lincoln beat to port, sweeping in a semicircle.
"Right your helm! Engines
forward!" Commander Farragut called.
These orders were executed, and
the frigate swiftly retreated from this core of light.
My mistake. It wanted to retreat,
but the unearthly animal came at us with a speed double our own.
We gasped. More stunned than
afraid, we stood mute and motionless. The animal caught up with us, played with
us. It made a full circle around the frigate--then doing fourteen knots--and
wrapped us in sheets of electricity that were like luminous dust. Then it
retreated two or three miles, leaving a phosphorescent trail comparable to
those swirls of steam that shoot behind the locomotive of an express train.
Suddenly, all the way from the dark horizon where it had gone to gather
momentum, the monster abruptly dashed toward the Abraham Lincoln with
frightening speed, stopped sharply twenty feet from our side plates, and died
out-- not by diving under the water, since its glow did not recede gradually--
but all at once, as if the source of this brilliant emanation had suddenly
dried up. Then it reappeared on the other side of the ship, either by circling
around us or by gliding under our hull. At any instant a collision could have
occurred that would have been fatal to us.
Meanwhile I was astonished at the
frigate's maneuvers. It was fleeing, not fighting. Built to pursue, it was
being pursued, and I commented on this to Commander Farragut. His face,
ordinarily so emotionless, was stamped with indescribable astonishment.
"Professor Aronnax," he
answered me, "I don't know what kind of fearsome creature I'm up against,
and I don't want my frigate running foolish risks in all this darkness.
Besides, how should we attack this unknown creature, how should we defend
ourselves against it? Let's wait for daylight, and then we'll play a different
role."
"You've no further doubts,
commander, as to the nature of this animal?"
"No, sir, it's apparently a
gigantic narwhale, and an electric one to boot."
"Maybe," I added,
"it's no more approachable than an electric eel or an electric ray!"
"Right," the commander
replied. "And if it has their power to electrocute, it's surely the most
dreadful animal ever conceived by our Creator. That's why I'll keep on my
guard, sir."
The whole crew stayed on their
feet all night long. No one even thought of sleeping. Unable to compete with
the monster's speed, the Abraham Lincoln slowed down and stayed at half steam.
For its part, the narwhale mimicked the frigate, simply rode with the waves,
and seemed determined not to forsake the field of battle.
However, near midnight it
disappeared, or to use a more appropriate expression, "it went out,"
like a huge glowworm. Had it fled from us? We were duty bound to fear so rather
than hope so. But at 12:53 in the morning, a deafening hiss became audible,
resembling the sound made by a waterspout expelled with tremendous intensity.
By then Commander Farragut, Ned
Land, and I were on the afterdeck, peering eagerly into the profound gloom.
"Ned Land," the
commander asked, "you've often heard whales bellowing?"
"Often, sir, but never a
whale like this, whose sighting earned me $2,000.00."
"Correct, the prize is
rightfully yours. But tell me, isn't that the noise cetaceans make when they
spurt water from their blowholes?"
"The very noise, sir, but this
one's way louder. So there can be no mistake. There's definitely a whale
lurking in our waters. With your permission, sir," the harpooner added,
"tomorrow at daybreak we'll have words with it."
"If it's in a mood to listen
to you, Mr. Land," I replied in a tone far from convinced.
"Let me get within four
harpoon lengths of it," the Canadian shot back, "and it had better
listen!"
"But to get near it,"
the commander went on, "I'd have to put a whaleboat at your
disposal?"
"Certainly, sir."
"That would be gambling with
the lives of my men."
"And with my own!" the
harpooner replied simply.
Near two o'clock in the morning,
the core of light reappeared, no less intense, five miles to windward of the
Abraham Lincoln. Despite the distance, despite the noise of wind and sea, we
could distinctly hear the fearsome thrashings of the animal's tail, and even
its panting breath. Seemingly, the moment this enormous narwhale came up to
breathe at the surface of the ocean, air was sucked into its lungs like steam
into the huge cylinders of a 2,000-horsepower engine.
"Hmm!" I said to
myself. "A cetacean as powerful as a whole cavalry regiment--now that's a
whale of a whale!"
We stayed on the alert until
daylight, getting ready for action. Whaling gear was set up along the railings.
Our chief officer loaded the blunderbusses, which can launch harpoons as far as
a mile, and long duck guns with exploding bullets that can mortally wound even
the most powerful animals. Ned Land was content to sharpen his harpoon, a
dreadful weapon in his hands.
At six o'clock day began to
break, and with the dawn's early light, the narwhale's electric glow
disappeared. At seven o'clock the day was well along, but a very dense morning
mist shrank the horizon, and our best spyglasses were unable to pierce it. The
outcome: disappointment and anger.
I hoisted myself up to the
crosstrees of the mizzen sail. Some officers were already perched on the
mastheads.
At eight o'clock the mist rolled
ponderously over the waves, and its huge curls were lifting little by little.
The horizon grew wider and clearer all at once.
Suddenly, just as on the previous
evening, Ned Land's voice was audible.
"There's the thing in
question, astern to port!" the harpooner shouted.
Every eye looked toward the point
indicated.
There, a mile and a half from the
frigate, a long blackish body emerged a meter above the waves. Quivering
violently, its tail was creating a considerable eddy. Never had caudal
equipment thrashed the sea with such power. An immense wake of glowing
whiteness marked the animal's track, sweeping in a long curve.
Our frigate drew nearer to the
cetacean. I examined it with a completely open mind. Those reports from the
Shannon and the Helvetia had slightly exaggerated its dimensions, and I put its
length at only 250 feet. Its girth was more difficult to judge, but all in all,
the animal seemed to be wonderfully proportioned in all three dimensions.
While I was observing this
phenomenal creature, two jets of steam and water sprang from its blowholes and
rose to an altitude of forty meters, which settled for me its mode of
breathing. From this I finally concluded that it belonged to the branch
Vertebrata, class Mammalia, subclass Monodelphia, group Pisciforma, order
Cetacea, family . . . but here I couldn't make up my mind. The order Cetacea
consists of three families, baleen whales, sperm whales, dolphins, and it's in
this last group that narwhales are placed. Each of these families is divided
into several genera, each genus into species, each species into varieties. So I
was still missing variety, species, genus, and family, but no doubt I would
complete my classifying with the aid of Heaven and Commander Farragut.
The crew were waiting impatiently
for orders from their leader. The latter, after carefully observing the animal,
called for his engineer. The engineer raced over.
"Sir," the commander
said, "are you up to pressure?"
"Aye, sir," the
engineer replied.
"Fine. Stoke your furnaces
and clap on full steam!"
Three cheers greeted this order.
The hour of battle had sounded. A few moments later, the frigate's two funnels
vomited torrents of black smoke, and its deck quaked from the trembling of its
boilers.
Driven forward by its powerful
propeller, the Abraham Lincoln headed straight for the animal. Unconcerned, the
latter let us come within half a cable length; then, not bothering to dive, it
got up a little speed, retreated, and was content to keep its distance.
This chase dragged on for about
three-quarters of an hour without the frigate gaining two fathoms on the
cetacean. At this rate, it was obvious that we would never catch up with it.
Infuriated, Commander Farragut
kept twisting the thick tuft of hair that flourished below his chin.
"Ned Land!" he called.
The Canadian reported at once.
"Well, Mr. Land," the
commander asked, "do you still advise putting my longboats to sea?"
"No, sir," Ned Land
replied, "because that beast won't be caught against its will."
"Then what should we
do?"
"Stoke up more steam, sir, if
you can. As for me, with your permission I'll go perch on the bobstays under
the bowsprit, and if we can get within a harpoon length, I'll harpoon the
brute."
"Go to it, Ned,"
Commander Farragut replied. "Engineer," he called, "keep the
pressure mounting!"
Ned Land made his way to his
post. The furnaces were urged into greater activity; our propeller did
forty-three revolutions per minute, and steam shot from the valves. Heaving the
log, we verified that the Abraham Lincoln was going at the rate of 18.5 miles
per hour.
But that damned animal also did a
speed of 18.5.
For the next hour our frigate
kept up this pace without gaining a fathom! This was humiliating for one of the
fastest racers in the American navy. The crew were working up into a blind rage.
Sailor after sailor heaved insults at the monster, which couldn't be bothered
with answering back. Commander Farragut was no longer content simply to twist
his goatee; he chewed on it.
The engineer was summoned once
again.
"You're up to maximum pressure?"
the commander asked him.
"Aye, sir," the
engineer replied.
"And your valves are charged
to . . . ?"
"To six and a half
atmospheres."
"Charge them to ten
atmospheres."
A typical American order if I
ever heard one. It would have sounded just fine during some Mississippi
paddle-wheeler race, to "outstrip the competition!"
"Conseil," I said to my
gallant servant, now at my side, "you realize that we'll probably blow
ourselves skyhigh?"
"As master wishes!"
Conseil replied.
All right, I admit it: I did wish
to run this risk!
The valves were charged. More
coal was swallowed by the furnaces. Ventilators shot torrents of air over the
braziers. The Abraham Lincoln's speed increased. Its masts trembled down to
their blocks, and swirls of smoke could barely squeeze through the narrow
funnels.
We heaved the log a second time.
"Well, helmsman?"
Commander Farragut asked.
"19.3 miles per hour,
sir."
"Keep stoking the
furnaces."
The engineer did so. The pressure
gauge marked ten atmospheres. But no doubt the cetacean itself had "warmed
up," because without the least trouble, it also did 19.3.
What a chase! No, I can't
describe the excitement that shook my very being. Ned Land stayed at his post,
harpoon in hand. Several times the animal let us approach.
"We're overhauling it!"
the Canadian would shout.
Then, just as he was about to
strike, the cetacean would steal off with a swiftness I could estimate at no
less than thirty miles per hour. And even at our maximum speed, it took the
liberty of thumbing its nose at the frigate by running a full circle around us!
A howl of fury burst from every throat!
By noon we were no farther along
than at eight o'clock in the morning.
Commander Farragut then decided
to use more direct methods.
"Bah!" he said.
"So that animal is faster than the Abraham Lincoln. All right, we'll see
if it can outrun our conical shells! Mate, man the gun in the bow!"
Our forecastle cannon was
immediately loaded and leveled. The cannoneer fired a shot, but his shell passed
some feet above the cetacean, which stayed half a mile off.
"Over to somebody with
better aim!" the commander shouted. "And $500.00 to the man who can
pierce that infernal beast!"
Calm of eye, cool of feature, an
old gray-bearded gunner-- I can see him to this day--approached the cannon, put
it in position, and took aim for a good while. There was a mighty explosion,
mingled with cheers from the crew.
The shell reached its target; it
hit the animal, but not in the usual fashion--it bounced off that rounded
surface and vanished into the sea two miles out.
"Oh drat!" said the old
gunner in his anger. "That rascal must be covered with six-inch armor
plate!"
"Curse the beast!"
Commander Farragut shouted.
The hunt was on again, and
Commander Farragut leaned over to me, saying:
"I'll chase that animal till
my frigate explodes!"
"Yes," I replied,
"and nobody would blame you!"
We could still hope that the
animal would tire out and not be as insensitive to exhaustion as our steam
engines. But no such luck. Hour after hour went by without it showing the least
sign of weariness.
However, to the Abraham Lincoln's
credit, it must be said that we struggled on with tireless persistence. I
estimate that we covered a distance of at least 500 kilometers during this
ill-fated day of November 6. But night fell and wrapped the surging ocean in
its shadows.
By then I thought our expedition
had come to an end, that we would never see this fantastic animal again. I was
mistaken.
At 10:50 in the evening, that
electric light reappeared three miles to windward of the frigate, just as clear
and intense as the night before.
The narwhale seemed motionless.
Was it asleep perhaps, weary from its workday, just riding with the waves? This
was our chance, and Commander Farragut was determined to take full advantage of
it.
He gave his orders. The Abraham
Lincoln stayed at half steam, advancing cautiously so as not to awaken its
adversary. In midocean it's not unusual to encounter whales so sound asleep
they can successfully be attacked, and Ned Land had harpooned more than one in
its slumber. The Canadian went to resume his post on the bobstays under the
bowsprit.
The frigate approached without
making a sound, stopped two cable lengths from the animal and coasted. Not a
soul breathed on board. A profound silence reigned over the deck. We were not
100 feet from the blazing core of light, whose glow grew stronger and dazzled
the eyes.
Just then, leaning over the
forecastle railing, I saw Ned Land below me, one hand grasping the martingale,
the other brandishing his dreadful harpoon. Barely twenty feet separated him
from the motionless animal.
All at once his arm shot forward
and the harpoon was launched. I heard the weapon collide resonantly, as if it
had hit some hard substance.
The electric light suddenly went
out, and two enormous waterspouts crashed onto the deck of the frigate, racing
like a torrent from stem to stern, toppling crewmen, breaking spare masts and
yardarms from their lashings.
A hideous collision occurred, and
thrown over the rail with no time to catch hold of it, I was hurled into the
sea.
ALTHOUGH I WAS startled by this
unexpected descent, I at least have a very clear recollection of my sensations
during it.
At first I was dragged about
twenty feet under. I'm a good swimmer, without claiming to equal such other
authors as Byron and Edgar Allan Poe, who were master divers, and I didn't lose
my head on the way down. With two vigorous kicks of the heel, I came back to
the surface of the sea.
My first concern was to look for
the frigate. Had the crew seen me go overboard? Was the Abraham Lincoln tacking
about? Would Commander Farragut put a longboat to sea? Could I hope to be
rescued?
The gloom was profound. I
glimpsed a black mass disappearing eastward, where its running lights were
fading out in the distance. It was the frigate. I felt I was done for.
"Help! Help!" I
shouted, swimming desperately toward the Abraham Lincoln.
My clothes were weighing me down.
The water glued them to my body, they were paralyzing my movements. I was
sinking! I was suffocating . . . !
"Help!"
This was the last shout I gave.
My mouth was filling with water. I struggled against being dragged into the
depths. . . .
Suddenly my clothes were seized
by energetic hands, I felt myself pulled abruptly back to the surface of the
sea, and yes, I heard these words pronounced in my ear:
"If master would oblige me
by leaning on my shoulder, master will swim with much greater ease."
With one hand I seized the arm of
my loyal Conseil.
"You!" I said.
"You!"
"Myself," Conseil
replied, "and at master's command."
"That collision threw you
overboard along with me?"
"Not at all. But being in
master's employ, I followed master."
The fine lad thought this only
natural!
"What about the
frigate?" I asked.
"The frigate?" Conseil
replied, rolling over on his back. "I think master had best not depend on
it to any great extent!"
"What are you saying?"
"I'm saying that just as I
jumped overboard, I heard the men at the helm shout, 'Our propeller and rudder
are smashed!' "
"Smashed?"
"Yes, smashed by the
monster's tusk! I believe it's the sole injury the Abraham Lincoln has
sustained. But most inconveniently for us, the ship can no longer steer."
"Then we're done for!"
"Perhaps," Conseil
replied serenely. "However, we still have a few hours before us, and in a
few hours one can do a great many things!"
Conseil's unflappable composure
cheered me up. I swam more vigorously, but hampered by clothes that were as
restricting as a cloak made of lead, I was managing with only the greatest
difficulty. Conseil noticed as much.
"Master will allow me to
make an incision," he said.
And he slipped an open clasp
knife under my clothes, slitting them from top to bottom with one swift stroke.
Then he briskly undressed me while I swam for us both.
I then did Conseil the same
favor, and we continued to "navigate" side by side.
But our circumstances were no
less dreadful. Perhaps they hadn't seen us go overboard; and even if they had,
the frigate-- being undone by its rudder--couldn't return to leeward after us.
So we could count only on its longboats.
Conseil had coolly reasoned out
this hypothesis and laid his plans accordingly. An amazing character, this boy;
in midocean, this stoic lad seemed right at home!
So, having concluded that our
sole chance for salvation lay in being picked up by the Abraham Lincoln's
longboats, we had to take steps to wait for them as long as possible.
Consequently, I decided to divide our energies so we wouldn't both be worn out
at the same time, and this was the arrangement: while one of us lay on his
back, staying motionless with arms crossed and legs outstretched, the other
would swim and propel his partner forward. This towing role was to last no
longer than ten minutes, and by relieving each other in this way, we could stay
afloat for hours, perhaps even until daybreak.
Slim chance, but hope springs
eternal in the human breast! Besides, there were two of us. Lastly, I can
vouch--as improbable as it seems--that even if I had wanted to destroy all my
illusions, even if I had been willing to "give in to despair," I
could not have done so!
The cetacean had rammed our
frigate at about eleven o'clock in the evening. I therefore calculated on eight
hours of swimming until sunrise. A strenuous task, but feasible, thanks to our
relieving each other. The sea was pretty smooth and barely tired us. Sometimes
I tried to peer through the dense gloom, which was broken only by the phosphorescent
flickers coming from our movements. I stared at the luminous ripples breaking
over my hands, shimmering sheets spattered with blotches of bluish gray. It
seemed as if we'd plunged into a pool of quicksilver.
Near one o'clock in the morning, I
was overcome with tremendous exhaustion. My limbs stiffened in the grip of
intense cramps. Conseil had to keep me going, and attending to our
self-preservation became his sole responsibility. I soon heard the poor lad
gasping; his breathing became shallow and quick. I didn't think he could stand
such exertions for much longer.
"Go on! Go on!" I told
him.
"Leave master behind?"
he replied. "Never! I'll drown before he does!"
Just then, past the fringes of a large
cloud that the wind was driving eastward, the moon appeared. The surface of the
sea glistened under its rays. That kindly light rekindled our strength. I held
up my head again. My eyes darted to every point of the horizon. I spotted the
frigate. It was five miles from us and formed no more than a dark, barely
perceptible mass. But as for longboats, not a one in sight!
I tried to call out. What was the
use at such a distance! My swollen lips wouldn't let a single sound through.
Conseil could still articulate a few words, and I heard him repeat at
intervals:
"Help! Help!"
Ceasing all movement for an
instant, we listened. And it may have been a ringing in my ear, from this organ
filling with impeded blood, but it seemed to me that Conseil's shout had received
an answer back.
"Did you hear that?" I
muttered.
"Yes, yes!"
And Conseil hurled another
desperate plea into space.
This time there could be no
mistake! A human voice had answered us! Was it the voice of some poor devil
left behind in midocean, some other victim of that collision suffered by our
ship? Or was it one of the frigate's longboats, hailing us out of the gloom?
Conseil made one final effort,
and bracing his hands on my shoulders, while I offered resistance with one
supreme exertion, he raised himself half out of the water, then fell back
exhausted.
"What did you see?"
"I saw . . . ," he
muttered, "I saw . . . but we mustn't talk . . . save our strength . . .
!"
What had he seen? Then, lord
knows why, the thought of the monster came into my head for the first time . .
. ! But even so, that voice . . . ? Gone are the days when Jonahs took refuge
in the bellies of whales!
Nevertheless, Conseil kept towing
me. Sometimes he looked up, stared straight ahead, and shouted a request for
directions, which was answered by a voice that was getting closer and closer. I
could barely hear it. I was at the end of my strength; my fingers gave out; my
hands were no help to me; my mouth opened convulsively, filling with brine; its
coldness ran through me; I raised my head one last time, then I collapsed. . .
.
Just then something hard banged
against me. I clung to it. Then I felt myself being pulled upward, back to the
surface of the water; my chest caved in, and I fainted. . . .
For certain, I came to quickly,
because someone was massaging me so vigorously it left furrows in my flesh. I
half opened my eyes. . . .
"Conseil!" I muttered.
"Did master ring for
me?" Conseil replied.
Just then, in the last light of a
moon settling on the horizon, I spotted a face that wasn't Conseil's but which
I recognized at once.
"Ned!" I exclaimed.
"In person, sir, and still
after his prize!" the Canadian replied.
"You were thrown overboard
after the frigate's collision?"
"Yes, professor, but I was
luckier than you, and right away I was able to set foot on this floating
islet."
"Islet?"
"Or in other words, on our
gigantic narwhale."
"Explain yourself,
Ned."
"It's just that I soon
realized why my harpoon got blunted and couldn't puncture its hide."
"Why, Ned, why?"
"Because, professor, this
beast is made of boilerplate steel!"
At this point in my story, I need
to get a grip on myself, reconstruct exactly what I experienced, and make
doubly sure of everything I write.
The Canadian's last words caused a
sudden upheaval in my brain. I swiftly hoisted myself to the summit of this
half-submerged creature or object that was serving as our refuge. I tested it
with my foot. Obviously it was some hard, impenetrable substance, not the soft
matter that makes up the bodies of our big marine mammals.
But this hard substance could
have been a bony carapace, like those that covered some prehistoric animals,
and I might have left it at that and classified this monster among such
amphibious reptiles as turtles or alligators.
Well, no. The blackish back
supporting me was smooth and polished with no overlapping scales. On impact, it
gave off a metallic sonority, and as incredible as this sounds, it seemed, I
swear, to be made of riveted plates.
No doubts were possible! This
animal, this monster, this natural phenomenon that had puzzled the whole
scientific world, that had muddled and misled the minds of seamen in both
hemispheres, was, there could be no escaping it, an even more astonishing
phenomenon-- a phenomenon made by the hand of man.
Even if I had discovered that
some fabulous, mythological creature really existed, it wouldn't have given me
such a terrific mental jolt. It's easy enough to accept that prodigious things
can come from our Creator. But to find, all at once, right before your eyes,
that the impossible had been mysteriously achieved by man himself: this
staggers the mind!
But there was no question now. We
were stretched out on the back of some kind of underwater boat that, as far as
I could judge, boasted the shape of an immense steel fish. Ned Land had clear
views on the issue. Conseil and I could only line up behind him.
"But then," I said,
"does this contraption contain some sort of locomotive mechanism, and a
crew to run it?"
"Apparently," the harpooner
replied. "And yet for the three hours I've lived on this floating island,
it hasn't shown a sign of life."
"This boat hasn't moved at
all?"
"No, Professor Aronnax. It
just rides with the waves, but otherwise it hasn't stirred."
"But we know that it's
certainly gifted with great speed. Now then, since an engine is needed to
generate that speed, and a mechanic to run that engine, I conclude: we're
saved."
"Humph!" Ned Land put
in, his tone denoting reservations.
Just then, as if to take my side
in the argument, a bubbling began astern of this strange submersible--whose
drive mechanism was obviously a propeller--and the boat started to move. We
barely had time to hang on to its topside, which emerged about eighty
centimeters above water. Fortunately its speed was not excessive.
"So long as it navigates
horizontally," Ned Land muttered, "I've no complaints. But if it gets
the urge to dive, I wouldn't give $2.00 for my hide!"
The Canadian might have quoted a
much lower price. So it was imperative to make contact with whatever beings
were confined inside the plating of this machine. I searched its surface for an
opening or a hatch, a "manhole," to use the official term; but the
lines of rivets had been firmly driven into the sheet-iron joins and were straight
and uniform.
Moreover, the moon then
disappeared and left us in profound darkness. We had to wait for daylight to
find some way of getting inside this underwater boat.
So our salvation lay totally in
the hands of the mysterious helmsmen steering this submersible, and if it made
a dive, we were done for! But aside from this occurring, I didn't doubt the
possibility of our making contact with them. In fact, if they didn't produce
their own air, they inevitably had to make periodic visits to the surface of
the ocean to replenish their oxygen supply. Hence the need for some opening
that put the boat's interior in contact with the atmosphere.
As for any hope of being rescued
by Commander Farragut, that had to be renounced completely. We were being swept
westward, and I estimate that our comparatively moderate speed reached twelve
miles per hour. The propeller churned the waves with mathematical regularity,
sometimes emerging above the surface and throwing phosphorescent spray to great
heights.
Near four o'clock in the morning,
the submersible picked up speed. We could barely cope with this dizzying rush,
and the waves battered us at close range. Fortunately Ned's hands came across a
big mooring ring fastened to the topside of this sheet-iron back, and we all
held on for dear life.
Finally this long night was over.
My imperfect memories won't let me recall my every impression of it. A single
detail comes back to me. Several times, during various lulls of wind and sea, I
thought I heard indistinct sounds, a sort of elusive harmony produced by
distant musical chords. What was the secret behind this underwater navigating,
whose explanation the whole world had sought in vain? What beings lived inside
this strange boat? What mechanical force allowed it to move about with such
prodigious speed?
Daylight appeared. The morning
mists surrounded us, but they soon broke up. I was about to proceed with a
careful examination of the hull, whose topside formed a sort of horizontal
platform, when I felt it sinking little by little.
"Oh, damnation!" Ned
Land shouted, stamping his foot on the resonant sheet iron. "Open up
there, you antisocial navigators!"
But it was difficult to make
yourself heard above the deafening beats of the propeller. Fortunately this
submerging movement stopped.
From inside the boat, there
suddenly came noises of iron fastenings pushed roughly aside. One of the steel
plates flew up, a man appeared, gave a bizarre yell, and instantly disappeared.
A few moments later, eight
strapping fellows appeared silently, their faces like masks, and dragged us
down into their fearsome machine.
THIS BRUTALLY EXECUTED capture
was carried out with lightning speed. My companions and I had no time to
collect ourselves. I don't know how they felt about being shoved inside this
aquatic prison, but as for me, I was shivering all over. With whom were we
dealing? Surely with some new breed of pirates, exploiting the sea after their
own fashion.
The narrow hatch had barely
closed over me when I was surrounded by profound darkness. Saturated with the
outside light, my eyes couldn't make out a thing. I felt my naked feet clinging
to the steps of an iron ladder. Forcibly seized, Ned Land and Conseil were
behind me. At the foot of the ladder, a door opened and instantly closed behind
us with a loud clang.
We were alone. Where? I couldn't
say, could barely even imagine. All was darkness, but such utter darkness that
after several minutes, my eyes were still unable to catch a single one of those
hazy gleams that drift through even the blackest nights.
Meanwhile, furious at these
goings on, Ned Land gave free rein to his indignation.
"Damnation!" he
exclaimed. "These people are about as hospitable as the savages of New
Caledonia! All that's lacking is for them to be cannibals! I wouldn't be
surprised if they were, but believe you me, they won't eat me without my
kicking up a protest!"
"Calm yourself, Ned my
friend," Conseil replied serenely. "Don't flare up so quickly! We
aren't in a kettle yet!"
"In a kettle, no," the
Canadian shot back, "but in an oven for sure. It's dark enough for one.
Luckily my Bowie knife hasn't left me, and I can still see well enough to put
it to use.* The first one of these bandits who lays a hand on me--"
*Author's Note: A Bowie knife is
a wide-bladed dagger that Americans are forever carrying around.
"Don't be so irritable,
Ned," I then told the harpooner, "and don't ruin things for us with
pointless violence. Who knows whether they might be listening to us? Instead,
let's try to find out where we are!"
I started moving, groping my way.
After five steps I encountered an iron wall made of riveted boilerplate. Then,
turning around, I bumped into a wooden table next to which several stools had
been set. The floor of this prison lay hidden beneath thick, hempen matting
that deadened the sound of footsteps. Its naked walls didn't reveal any trace
of a door or window. Going around the opposite way, Conseil met up with me, and
we returned to the middle of this cabin, which had to be twenty feet long by
ten wide. As for its height, not even Ned Land, with his great stature, was
able to determine it.
Half an hour had already gone by
without our situation changing, when our eyes were suddenly spirited from utter
darkness into blinding light. Our prison lit up all at once; in other words, it
filled with luminescent matter so intense that at first I couldn't stand the
brightness of it. From its glare and whiteness, I recognized the electric glow
that had played around this underwater boat like some magnificent
phosphorescent phenomenon. After involuntarily closing my eyes, I reopened them
and saw that this luminous force came from a frosted half globe curving out of
the cabin's ceiling.
"Finally! It's light enough
to see!" Ned Land exclaimed, knife in hand, staying on the defensive.
"Yes," I replied, then
ventured the opposite view. "But as for our situation, we're still in the
dark."
"Master must learn
patience," said the emotionless Conseil.
This sudden illumination of our
cabin enabled me to examine its tiniest details. It contained only a table and
five stools. Its invisible door must have been hermetically sealed. Not a sound
reached our ears. Everything seemed dead inside this boat. Was it in motion, or
stationary on the surface of the ocean, or sinking into the depths? I couldn't
tell.
But this luminous globe hadn't
been turned on without good reason. Consequently, I hoped that some crewmen
would soon make an appearance. If you want to consign people to oblivion, you
don't light up their dungeons.
I was not mistaken. Unlocking
noises became audible, a door opened, and two men appeared.
One was short and stocky,
powerfully muscled, broad shouldered, robust of limbs, the head squat, the hair
black and luxuriant, the mustache heavy, the eyes bright and penetrating, and
his whole personality stamped with that southern-blooded zest that, in France,
typifies the people of Provence. The philosopher Diderot has very aptly claimed
that a man's bearing is the clue to his character, and this stocky little man
was certainly a living proof of this claim. You could sense that his everyday
conversation must have been packed with such vivid figures of speech as
personification, symbolism, and misplaced modifiers. But I was never in a position
to verify this because, around me, he used only an odd and utterly
incomprehensible dialect.
The second stranger deserves a
more detailed description. A disciple of such character-judging anatomists as
Gratiolet or Engel could have read this man's features like an open book.
Without hesitation, I identified his dominant qualities-- self-confidence,
since his head reared like a nobleman's above the arc formed by the lines of
his shoulders, and his black eyes gazed with icy assurance; calmness, since his
skin, pale rather than ruddy, indicated tranquility of blood; energy, shown by
the swiftly knitting muscles of his brow; and finally courage, since his deep
breathing denoted tremendous reserves of vitality.
I might add that this was a man
of great pride, that his calm, firm gaze seemed to reflect thinking on an
elevated plane, and that the harmony of his facial expressions and bodily
movements resulted in an overall effect of unquestionable candor-- according to
the findings of physiognomists, those analysts of facial character.
I felt "involuntarily
reassured" in his presence, and this boded well for our interview.
Whether this individual was
thirty-five or fifty years of age, I could not precisely state. He was tall,
his forehead broad, his nose straight, his mouth clearly etched, his teeth
magnificent, his hands refined, tapered, and to use a word from palmistry,
highly "psychic," in other words, worthy of serving a lofty and
passionate spirit. This man was certainly the most wonderful physical specimen
I had ever encountered. One unusual detail: his eyes were spaced a little far
from each other and could instantly take in nearly a quarter of the horizon.
This ability-- as I later verified--was strengthened by a range of vision even
greater than Ned Land's. When this stranger focused his gaze on an object, his
eyebrow lines gathered into a frown, his heavy eyelids closed around his pupils
to contract his huge field of vision, and he looked! What a look--as if he
could magnify objects shrinking into the distance; as if he could probe your
very soul; as if he could pierce those sheets of water so opaque to our eyes
and scan the deepest seas . . . !
Wearing caps made of sea-otter
fur, and shod in sealskin fishing boots, these two strangers were dressed in clothing
made from some unique fabric that flattered the figure and allowed great
freedom of movement.
The taller of the two--apparently
the leader on board--examined us with the greatest care but without pronouncing
a word. Then, turning to his companion, he conversed with him in a language I
didn't recognize. It was a sonorous, harmonious, flexible dialect whose vowels
seemed to undergo a highly varied accentuation.
The other replied with a shake of
the head and added two or three utterly incomprehensible words. Then he seemed
to question me directly with a long stare.
I replied in clear French that I
wasn't familiar with his language; but he didn't seem to understand me, and the
situation grew rather baffling.
"Still, master should tell
our story," Conseil said to me. "Perhaps these gentlemen will grasp a
few words of it!"
I tried again, telling the tale
of our adventures, clearly articulating my every syllable, and not leaving out
a single detail. I stated our names and titles; then, in order, I introduced
Professor Aronnax, his manservant Conseil, and Mr. Ned Land, harpooner.
The man with calm, gentle eyes
listened to me serenely, even courteously, and paid remarkable attention. But
nothing in his facial expression indicated that he understood my story. When I
finished, he didn't pronounce a single word.
One resource still left was to
speak English. Perhaps they would be familiar with this nearly universal
language. But I only knew it, as I did the German language, well enough to read
it fluently, not well enough to speak it correctly. Here, however, our
overriding need was to make ourselves understood.
"Come on, it's your
turn," I told the harpooner. "Over to you, Mr. Land. Pull out of your
bag of tricks the best English ever spoken by an Anglo-Saxon, and try for a
more favorable result than mine."
Ned needed no persuading and
started our story all over again, most of which I could follow. Its content was
the same, but the form differed. Carried away by his volatile temperament, the Canadian
put great animation into it. He complained vehemently about being imprisoned in
defiance of his civil rights, asked by virtue of which law he was hereby
detained, invoked writs of habeas corpus, threatened to press charges against
anyone holding him in illegal custody, ranted, gesticulated, shouted, and
finally conveyed by an expressive gesture that we were dying of hunger.
This was perfectly true, but we
had nearly forgotten the fact.
Much to his amazement, the
harpooner seemed no more intelligible than I had been. Our visitors didn't bat
an eye. Apparently they were engineers who understood the languages of neither
the French physicist Arago nor the English physicist Faraday.
Thoroughly baffled after vainly
exhausting our philological resources, I no longer knew what tactic to pursue,
when Conseil told me:
"If master will authorize
me, I'll tell the whole business in German."
"What! You know
German?" I exclaimed.
"Like most Flemish people,
with all due respect to master."
"On the contrary, my respect
is due you. Go to it, my boy."
And Conseil, in his serene voice,
described for the third time the various vicissitudes of our story. But despite
our narrator's fine accent and stylish turns of phrase, the German language met
with no success.
Finally, as a last resort, I
hauled out everything I could remember from my early schooldays, and I tried to
narrate our adventures in Latin. Cicero would have plugged his ears and sent me
to the scullery, but somehow I managed to pull through. With the same negative
result.
This last attempt ultimately
misfiring, the two strangers exchanged a few words in their incomprehensible
language and withdrew, not even favoring us with one of those encouraging
gestures that are used in every country in the world. The door closed again.
"This is outrageous!"
Ned Land shouted, exploding for the twentieth time. "I ask you! We speak
French, English, German, and Latin to these rogues, and neither of them has the
decency to even answer back!"
"Calm down, Ned," I
told the seething harpooner. "Anger won't get us anywhere."
"But professor," our
irascible companion went on, "can't you see that we could die of hunger in
this iron cage?"
"Bah!" Conseil put in
philosophically. "We can hold out a good while yet!"
"My friends," I said,
"we mustn't despair. We've gotten out of tighter spots. So please do me
the favor of waiting a bit before you form your views on the commander and crew
of this boat."
"My views are fully
formed," Ned Land shot back. "They're rogues!"
"Oh good! And from what
country?"
"Roguedom!"
"My gallant Ned, as yet that
country isn't clearly marked on maps of the world, but I admit that the
nationality of these two strangers is hard to make out! Neither English,
French, nor German, that's all we can say. But I'm tempted to think that the
commander and his chief officer were born in the low latitudes. There must be
southern blood in them. But as to whether they're Spaniards, Turks, Arabs, or
East Indians, their physical characteristics don't give me enough to go on. And
as for their speech, it's utterly incomprehensible."
"That's the nuisance in not
knowing every language," Conseil replied, "or the drawback in not
having one universal language!"
"Which would all go out the
window!" Ned Land replied. "Don't you see, these people have a
language all to themselves, a language they've invented just to cause despair
in decent people who ask for a little dinner! Why, in every country on earth,
when you open your mouth, snap your jaws, smack your lips and teeth, isn't that
the world's most understandable message? From Quebec to the Tuamotu Islands,
from Paris to the Antipodes, doesn't it mean: I'm hungry, give me a bite to
eat!"
"Oh," Conseil put in,
"there are some people so unintelligent by nature . . ."
As he was saying these words, the
door opened. A steward entered.* He brought us some clothes, jackets and
sailor's pants, made out of a fabric whose nature I didn't recognize. I hurried
to change into them, and my companions followed suit.
*Author's Note: A steward is a
waiter on board a steamer.
Meanwhile our silent steward,
perhaps a deaf-mute, set the table and laid three place settings.
"There's something serious
afoot," Conseil said, "and it bodes well."
"Bah!" replied the
rancorous harpooner. "What the devil do you suppose they eat around here?
Turtle livers, loin of shark, dogfish steaks?"
"We'll soon find out!"
Conseil said.
Overlaid with silver dish covers,
various platters had been neatly positioned on the table cloth, and we sat down
to eat. Assuredly, we were dealing with civilized people, and if it hadn't been
for this electric light flooding over us, I would have thought we were in the
dining room of the Hotel Adelphi in Liverpool, or the Grand Hotel in Paris.
However, I feel compelled to mention that bread and wine were totally absent.
The water was fresh and clear, but it was still water--which wasn't what Ned
Land had in mind. Among the foods we were served, I was able to identify
various daintily dressed fish; but I couldn't make up my mind about certain
otherwise excellent dishes, and I couldn't even tell whether their contents
belonged to the vegetable or the animal kingdom. As for the tableware, it was
elegant and in perfect taste. Each utensil, spoon, fork, knife, and plate, bore
on its reverse a letter encircled by a Latin motto, and here is its exact
duplicate:
MOBILIS IN MOBILI
N
Moving within the moving element!
It was a highly appropriate motto for this underwater machine, so long as the
preposition in is translated as within and not upon. The letter N was no doubt
the initial of the name of that mystifying individual in command beneath the
seas!
Ned and Conseil had no time for
such musings. They were wolfing down their food, and without further ado I did
the same. By now I felt reassured about our fate, and it seemed obvious that
our hosts didn't intend to let us die of starvation.
But all earthly things come to an
end, all things must pass, even the hunger of people who haven't eaten for
fifteen hours. Our appetites appeased, we felt an urgent need for sleep. A
natural reaction after that interminable night of fighting for our lives.
"Ye gods, I'll sleep
soundly," Conseil said.
"Me, I'm out like a
light!" Ned Land replied.
My two companions lay down on the
cabin's carpeting and were soon deep in slumber.
As for me, I gave in less readily
to this intense need for sleep. Too many thoughts had piled up in my mind, too
many insoluble questions had arisen, too many images were keeping my eyelids
open! Where were we? What strange power was carrying us along? I felt--or at
least I thought I did--the submersible sinking toward the sea's lower strata.
Intense nightmares besieged me. In these mysterious marine sanctuaries, I
envisioned hosts of unknown animals, and this underwater boat seemed to be a
blood relation of theirs: living, breathing, just as fearsome . . . ! Then my
mind grew calmer, my imagination melted into hazy drowsiness, and I soon fell
into an uneasy slumber.
I HAVE NO IDEA how long this
slumber lasted; but it must have been a good while, since we were
completely over our exhaustion. I
was the first one to wake up. My companions weren't yet stirring and still lay
in their corners like inanimate objects.
I had barely gotten up from my
passably hard mattress when I felt my mind clear, my brain go on the alert. So
I began a careful reexamination of our cell.
Nothing had changed in its
interior arrangements. The prison was still a prison and its prisoners still
prisoners. But, taking advantage of our slumber, the steward had cleared the
table. Consequently, nothing indicated any forthcoming improvement in our
situation, and I seriously wondered if we were doomed to spend the rest of our
lives in this cage.
This prospect seemed increasingly
painful to me because, even though my brain was clear of its obsessions from
the night before, I was feeling an odd short-windedness in my chest. It was
becoming hard for me to breathe. The heavy air was no longer sufficient for the
full play of my lungs. Although our cell was large, we obviously had used up
most of the oxygen it contained. In essence, over an hour's time a single human
being consumes all the oxygen found in 100 liters of air, at which point that
air has become charged with a nearly equal amount of carbon dioxide and is no
longer fit for breathing.
So it was now urgent to renew the
air in our prison, and no doubt the air in this whole underwater boat as well.
Here a question popped into my
head. How did the commander of this aquatic residence go about it? Did he
obtain air using chemical methods, releasing the oxygen contained in potassium
chlorate by heating it, meanwhile absorbing the carbon dioxide with potassium
hydroxide? If so, he would have to keep up some kind of relationship with the
shore, to come by the materials needed for such an operation. Did he simply
limit himself to storing the air in high-pressure tanks and then dispense it
according to his crew's needs? Perhaps. Or, proceeding in a more convenient,
more economical, and consequently more probable fashion, was he satisfied with
merely returning to breathe at the surface of the water like a cetacean,
renewing his oxygen supply every twenty-four hours? In any event, whatever his
method was, it seemed prudent to me that he use this method without delay.
In fact, I had already resorted
to speeding up my inhalations in order to extract from the cell what little
oxygen it contained, when suddenly I was refreshed by a current of clean air,
scented with a salty aroma. It had to be a sea breeze, life-giving and charged
with iodine! I opened my mouth wide, and my lungs glutted themselves on the
fresh particles. At the same time, I felt a swaying, a rolling of moderate
magnitude but definitely noticeable. This boat, this sheet-iron monster, had
obviously just risen to the surface of the ocean, there to breathe in good
whale fashion. So the ship's mode of ventilation was finally established.
When I had absorbed a chestful of
this clean air, I looked for the conduit--the "air carrier," if you
prefer--that allowed this beneficial influx to reach us, and I soon found it.
Above the door opened an air vent that let in a fresh current of oxygen,
renewing the thin air in our cell.
I had gotten to this point in my
observations when Ned and Conseil woke up almost simultaneously, under the
influence of this reviving air purification. They rubbed their eyes, stretched
their arms, and sprang to their feet.
"Did master sleep
well?" Conseil asked me with his perennial good manners.
"Extremely well, my gallant
lad," I replied. "And how about you, Mr. Ned Land?"
"Like a log, professor. But
I must be imagining things, because it seems like I'm breathing a sea
breeze!"
A seaman couldn't be wrong on
this topic, and I told the Canadian what had gone on while he slept.
"Good!" he said.
"That explains perfectly all that bellowing we heard, when our so-called
narwhale lay in sight of the Abraham Lincoln."
"Perfectly, Mr. Land. It was
catching its breath!"
"Only I've no idea what time
it is, Professor Aronnax, unless maybe it's dinnertime?"
"Dinnertime, my fine
harpooner? I'd say at least breakfast time, because we've certainly woken up to
a new day."
"Which indicates,"
Conseil replied, "that we've spent twenty-four hours in slumber."
"That's my assessment,"
I replied.
"I won't argue with
you," Ned Land answered. "But dinner or breakfast, that steward will
be plenty welcome whether he brings the one or the other."
"The one and the
other," Conseil said.
"Well put," the
Canadian replied. "We deserve two meals, and speaking for myself, I'll do
justice to them both."
"All right, Ned, let's wait
and see!" I replied. "It's clear that these strangers don't intend to
let us die of hunger, otherwise last evening's dinner wouldn't make any sense."
"Unless they're fattening us
up!" Ned shot back.
"I object," I replied.
"We have not fallen into the hands of cannibals."
"Just because they don't
make a habit of it," the Canadian replied in all seriousness,
"doesn't mean they don't indulge from time to time. Who knows? Maybe these
people have gone without fresh meat for a long while, and in that case three
healthy, well-built specimens like the professor, his manservant, and me
---"
"Get rid of those ideas, Mr.
Land," I answered the harpooner. "And above all, don't let them lead
you to flare up against our hosts, which would only make our situation
worse."
"Anyhow," the harpooner
said, "I'm as hungry as all Hades, and dinner or breakfast, not one puny
meal has arrived!"
"Mr. Land," I answered,
"we have to adapt to the schedule on board, and I imagine our stomachs are
running ahead of the chief cook's dinner bell."
"Well then, we'll adjust our
stomachs to the chef's timetable!" Conseil replied serenely.
"There you go again, Conseil
my friend!" the impatient Canadian shot back. "You never allow
yourself any displays of bile or attacks of nerves! You're everlastingly calm!
You'd say your after-meal grace even if you didn't get any food for your
before-meal blessing-- and you'd starve to death rather than complain!"
"What good would it
do?" Conseil asked.
"Complaining doesn't have to
do good, it just feels good! And if these pirates--I say pirates out of
consideration for the professor's feelings, since he doesn't want us to call
them cannibals-- if these pirates think they're going to smother me in this
cage without hearing what cusswords spice up my outbursts, they've got another
think coming! Look here, Professor Aronnax, speak frankly. How long do you
figure they'll keep us in this iron box?"
"To tell the truth, friend
Land, I know little more about it than you do."
"But in a nutshell, what do
you suppose is going on?"
"My supposition is that
sheer chance has made us privy to an important secret. Now then, if the crew of
this underwater boat have a personal interest in keeping that secret, and if
their personal interest is more important than the lives of three men, I
believe that our very existence is in jeopardy. If such is not the case, then
at the first available opportunity, this monster that has swallowed us will
return us to the world inhabited by our own kind."
"Unless they recruit us to
serve on the crew," Conseil said, "and keep us here--"
"Till the moment," Ned
Land answered, "when some frigate that's faster or smarter than the Abraham
Lincoln captures this den of buccaneers, then hangs all of us by the neck from
the tip of a mainmast yardarm!"
"Well thought out, Mr.
Land," I replied. "But as yet, I don't believe we've been tendered
any enlistment offers. Consequently, it's pointless to argue about what tactics
we should pursue in such a case. I repeat: let's wait, let's be guided by
events, and let's do nothing, since right now there's nothing we can do."
"On the contrary,
professor," the harpooner replied, not wanting to give in. "There is
something we can do."
"Oh? And what, Mr.
Land?"
"Break out of here!"
"Breaking out of a prison on
shore is difficult enough, but with an underwater prison, it strikes me as
completely unworkable."
"Come now, Ned my
friend," Conseil asked, "how would you answer master's objection? I
refuse to believe that an American is at the end of his tether."
Visibly baffled, the harpooner
said nothing. Under the conditions in which fate had left us, it was absolutely
impossible to escape. But a Canadian's wit is half French, and Mr. Ned Land
made this clear in his reply.
"So, Professor
Aronnax," he went on after thinking for a few moments, "you haven't
figured out what people do when they can't escape from their prison?"
"No, my friend."
"Easy. They fix things so
they stay there."
"Of course!" Conseil
put in. "Since we're deep in the ocean, being inside this boat is vastly
preferable to being above it or below it!"
"But we fix things by
kicking out all the jailers, guards, and wardens," Ned Land added.
"What's this, Ned?" I
asked. "You'd seriously consider taking over this craft?"
"Very seriously," the
Canadian replied.
"It's impossible."
"And why is that, sir? Some
promising opportunity might come up, and I don't see what could stop us from
taking advantage of it. If there are only about twenty men on board this
machine, I don't think they can stave off two Frenchmen and a Canadian!"
It seemed wiser to accept the
harpooner's proposition than to debate it. Accordingly, I was content to reply:
"Let such circumstances
come, Mr. Land, and we'll see. But until then, I beg you to control your
impatience. We need to act shrewdly, and your flare-ups won't give rise to any
promising opportunities. So swear to me that you'll accept our situation
without throwing a tantrum over it."
"I give you my word,
professor," Ned Land replied in an unenthusiastic tone. "No vehement
phrases will leave my mouth, no vicious gestures will give my feelings away,
not even when they don't feed us on time."
"I have your word,
Ned," I answered the Canadian.
Then our conversation petered
out, and each of us withdrew into his own thoughts. For my part, despite the
harpooner's confident talk, I admit that I entertained no illusions. I had no
faith in those promising opportunities that Ned Land mentioned. To operate with
such efficiency, this underwater boat had to have a sizeable crew, so if it
came to a physical contest, we would be facing an overwhelming opponent.
Besides, before we could do anything, we had to be free, and that we definitely
were not. I didn't see any way out of this sheet-iron, hermetically sealed
cell. And if the strange commander of this boat did have a secret to keep--
which seemed rather likely--he would never give us freedom of movement aboard
his vessel. Now then, would he resort to violence in order to be rid of us, or
would he drop us off one day on some remote coast? There lay the unknown. All
these hypotheses seemed extremely plausible to me, and to hope for freedom
through use of force, you had to be a harpooner.
I realized, moreover, that Ned
Land's brooding was getting him madder by the minute. Little by little, I heard
those aforesaid cusswords welling up in the depths of his gullet, and I saw his
movements turn threatening again. He stood up, pacing in circles like a wild
beast in a cage, striking the walls with his foot and fist. Meanwhile the hours
passed, our hunger nagged unmercifully, and this time the steward did not
appear. Which amounted to forgetting our castaway status for much too long, if
they really had good intentions toward us.
Tortured by the growling of his
well-built stomach, Ned Land was getting more and more riled, and despite his
word of honor, I was in real dread of an explosion when he stood in the
presence of one of the men on board.
For two more hours Ned Land's
rage increased. The Canadian shouted and pleaded, but to no avail. The
sheet-iron walls were deaf. I didn't hear a single sound inside this
dead-seeming boat. The vessel hadn't stirred, because I obviously would have
felt its hull vibrating under the influence of the propeller. It had
undoubtedly sunk into the watery deep and no longer belonged to the outside
world. All this dismal silence was terrifying.
As for our neglect, our isolation
in the depths of this cell, I was afraid to guess at how long it might last.
Little by little, hopes I had entertained after our interview with the ship's
commander were fading away. The gentleness of the man's gaze, the generosity
expressed in his facial features, the nobility of his bearing, all vanished
from my memory. I saw this mystifying individual anew for what he inevitably
must be: cruel and merciless. I viewed him as outside humanity, beyond all
feelings of compassion, the implacable foe of his fellow man, toward whom he
must have sworn an undying hate!
But even so, was the man going to
let us die of starvation, locked up in this cramped prison, exposed to those
horrible temptations to which people are driven by extreme hunger? This grim
possibility took on a dreadful intensity in my mind, and fired by my
imagination, I felt an unreasoning terror run through me. Conseil stayed calm.
Ned Land bellowed.
Just then a noise was audible
outside. Footsteps rang on the metal tiling. The locks were turned, the door
opened, the steward appeared.
Before I could make a single
movement to prevent him, the Canadian rushed at the poor man, threw him down,
held him by the throat. The steward was choking in the grip of those powerful
hands.
Conseil was already trying to
loosen the harpooner's hands from his half-suffocated victim, and I had gone to
join in the rescue, when I was abruptly nailed to the spot by these words
pronounced in French:
"Calm down, Mr. Land! And
you, professor, kindly listen to me!"
IT WAS THE ship's commander who
had just spoken.
At these words Ned Land stood up
quickly. Nearly strangled, the steward staggered out at a signal from his
superior; but such was the commander's authority aboard his vessel, not one
gesture gave away the resentment that this man must have felt toward the
Canadian. In silence we waited for the outcome of this scene; Conseil, in spite
of himself, seemed almost fascinated, I was stunned.
Arms crossed, leaning against a
corner of the table, the commander studied us with great care. Was he reluctant
to speak further? Did he regret those words he had just pronounced in French?
You would have thought so.
After a few moments of silence,
which none of us would have dreamed of interrupting:
"Gentlemen," he said in
a calm, penetrating voice, "I speak French, English, German, and Latin
with equal fluency. Hence I could have answered you as early as our initial
interview, but first I wanted to make your acquaintance and then think things
over. Your four versions of the same narrative, perfectly consistent by and
large, established your personal identities for me. I now know that sheer
chance has placed in my presence Professor Pierre Aronnax, specialist in
natural history at the Paris Museum and entrusted with a scientific mission
abroad, his manservant Conseil, and Ned Land, a harpooner of Canadian origin
aboard the Abraham Lincoln, a frigate in the national navy of the United States
of America."
I bowed in agreement. The
commander hadn't put a question to me. So no answer was called for. This man
expressed himself with perfect ease and without a trace of an accent. His
phrasing was clear, his words well chosen, his facility in elocution
remarkable. And yet, to me, he didn't have "the feel" of a fellow
countryman.
He went on with the conversation
as follows:
"No doubt, sir, you've felt
that I waited rather too long before paying you this second visit. After
discovering your identities, I wanted to weigh carefully what policy to pursue
toward you. I had great difficulty deciding. Some extremely inconvenient
circumstances have brought you into the presence of a man who has cut himself
off from humanity. Your coming has disrupted my whole existence."
"Unintentionally," I
said.
"Unintentionally?" the
stranger replied, raising his voice a little. "Was it unintentionally that
the Abraham Lincoln hunted me on every sea? Was it unintentionally that you
traveled aboard that frigate? Was it unintentionally that your shells bounced
off my ship's hull? Was it unintentionally that Mr. Ned Land hit me with his
harpoon?"
I detected a controlled
irritation in these words. But there was a perfectly natural reply to these
charges, and I made it.
"Sir," I said,
"you're surely unaware of the discussions that have taken place in Europe
and America with yourself as the subject. You don't realize that various
accidents, caused by collisions with your underwater machine, have aroused
public passions on those two continents. I'll spare you the innumerable
hypotheses with which we've tried to explain this inexplicable phenomenon,
whose secret is yours alone. But please understand that the Abraham Lincoln
chased you over the Pacific high seas in the belief it was hunting some
powerful marine monster, which had to be purged from the ocean at all
cost."
A half smile curled the
commander's lips; then, in a calmer tone:
"Professor Aronnax," he
replied, "do you dare claim that your frigate wouldn't have chased and
cannonaded an underwater boat as readily as a monster?"
This question baffled me, since
Commander Farragut would certainly have shown no such hesitation. He would have
seen it as his sworn duty to destroy a contrivance of this kind just as
promptly as a gigantic narwhale.
"So you understand,
sir," the stranger went on, "that I have a right to treat you as my
enemy."
I kept quiet, with good reason.
What was the use of debating such a proposition, when superior force can wipe
out the best arguments?
"It took me a good while to
decide," the commander went on. "Nothing obliged me to grant you
hospitality. If I were to part company with you, I'd have no personal interest
in ever seeing you again. I could put you back on the platform of this ship
that has served as your refuge. I could sink under the sea, and I could forget
you ever existed. Wouldn't that be my right?"
"Perhaps it would be the
right of a savage," I replied. "But not that of a civilized
man."
"Professor," the
commander replied swiftly, "I'm not what you term a civilized man! I've
severed all ties with society, for reasons that I alone have the right to
appreciate. Therefore I obey none of its regulations, and I insist that you
never invoke them in front of me!"
This was plain speaking. A flash
of anger and scorn lit up the stranger's eyes, and I glimpsed a fearsome past
in this man's life. Not only had he placed himself beyond human laws, he had
rendered himself independent, out of all reach, free in the strictest sense of
the word! For who would dare chase him to the depths of the sea when he
thwarted all attacks on the surface? What ship could withstand a collision with
his underwater Monitor? What armor plate, no matter how heavy, could bear the
thrusts of his spur? No man among men could call him to account for his
actions. God, if he believed in Him, his conscience if he had one-- these were
the only judges to whom he was answerable.
These thoughts swiftly crossed my
mind while this strange individual fell silent, like someone completely
self-absorbed. I regarded him with a mixture of fear and fascination, in the
same way, no doubt, that Oedipus regarded the Sphinx.
After a fairly long silence, the
commander went on with our conversation.
"So I had difficulty
deciding," he said. "But I concluded that my personal interests could
be reconciled with that natural compassion to which every human being has a
right. Since fate has brought you here, you'll stay aboard my vessel. You'll be
free here, and in exchange for that freedom, moreover totally related to it,
I'll lay on you just one condition. Your word that you'll submit to it will be
sufficient."
"Go on, sir," I
replied. "I assume this condition is one an honest man can accept?"
"Yes, sir. Just this. It's
possible that certain unforeseen events may force me to confine you to your
cabins for some hours, or even for some days as the case may be. Since I prefer
never to use violence, I expect from you in such a case, even more than in any
other, your unquestioning obedience. By acting in this way, I shield you from
complicity, I absolve you of all responsibility, since I myself make it
impossible for you to see what you aren't meant to see. Do you accept this
condition?"
So things happened on board that
were quite odd to say the least, things never to be seen by people not placing
themselves beyond society's laws! Among all the surprises the future had in
store for me, this would not be the mildest.
"We accept," I replied.
"Only, I'll ask your permission, sir, to address a question to you, just
one."
"Go ahead, sir."
"You said we'd be free
aboard your vessel?"
"Completely."
"Then I would ask what you
mean by this freedom."
"Why, the freedom to come,
go, see, and even closely observe everything happening here--except under
certain rare circumstances-- in short, the freedom we ourselves enjoy, my
companions and I."
It was obvious that we did not
understand each other.
"Pardon me, sir," I
went on, "but that's merely the freedom that every prisoner has, the
freedom to pace his cell! That's not enough for us."
"Nevertheless, it will have
to do!"
"What! We must give up
seeing our homeland, friends, and relatives ever again?"
"Yes, sir. But giving up
that intolerable earthly yoke that some men call freedom is perhaps less
painful than you think!"
"By thunder!" Ned Land
shouted. "I'll never promise I won't try getting out of here!"
"I didn't ask for such a
promise, Mr. Land," the commander replied coldly.
"Sir," I replied,
flaring up in spite of myself, "you're taking unfair advantage of us! This
is sheer cruelty!"
"No, sir, it's an act of
mercy! You're my prisoners of war! I've cared for you when, with a single word,
I could plunge you back into the ocean depths! You attacked me! You've just
stumbled on a secret no living man must probe, the secret of my entire
existence! Do you think I'll send you back to a world that must know nothing
more of me? Never! By keeping you on board, it isn't you whom I care for, it's
me!"
These words indicated that the
commander pursued a policy impervious to arguments.
"Then, sir," I went on,
"you give us, quite simply, a choice between life and death?"
"Quite simply."
"My friends," I said,
"to a question couched in these terms, our answer can be taken for
granted. But no solemn promises bind us to the commander of this vessel."
"None, sir," the
stranger replied.
Then, in a gentler voice, he went
on:
"Now, allow me to finish
what I have to tell you. I've heard of you, Professor Aronnax. You, if not your
companions, won't perhaps complain too much about the stroke of fate that has
brought us together. Among the books that make up my favorite reading, you'll
find the work you've published on the great ocean depths. I've pored over it.
You've taken your studies as far as terrestrial science can go. But you don't
know everything because you haven't seen everything. Let me tell you,
professor, you won't regret the time you spend aboard my vessel. You're going
to voyage through a land of wonders. Stunned amazement will probably be your
habitual state of mind. It will be a long while before you tire of the sights
constantly before your eyes. I'm going to make another underwater tour of the
world-- perhaps my last, who knows?--and I'll review everything I've studied in
the depths of these seas that I've crossed so often, and you can be my fellow
student. Starting this very day, you'll enter a new element, you'll see what no
human being has ever seen before-- since my men and I no longer count--and
thanks to me, you're going to learn the ultimate secrets of our planet."
I can't deny it; the commander's
words had a tremendous effect on me. He had caught me on my weak side, and I
momentarily forgot that not even this sublime experience was worth the loss of
my freedom. Besides, I counted on the future to resolve this important
question. So I was content to reply:
"Sir, even though you've cut
yourself off from humanity, I can see that you haven't disowned all human
feeling. We're castaways whom you've charitably taken aboard, we'll never
forget that. Speaking for myself, I don't rule out that the interests of
science could override even the need for freedom, which promises me that, in
exchange, our encounter will provide great rewards."
I thought the commander would
offer me his hand, to seal our agreement. He did nothing of the sort. I
regretted that.
"One last question," I
said, just as this inexplicable being seemed ready to withdraw.
"Ask it, professor."
"By what name am I to call
you?"
"Sir," the commander
replied, "to you, I'm simply Captain Nemo;* to me, you and your companions
are simply passengers on the Nautilus."
*Latin: nemo means "no
one." Ed.
Captain Nemo called out. A
steward appeared. The captain gave him his orders in that strange language I
couldn't even identify. Then, turning to the Canadian and Conseil:
"A meal is waiting for you
in your cabin," he told them. "Kindly follow this man."
"That's an offer I can't
refuse!" the harpooner replied.
After being confined for over
thirty hours, he and Conseil were finally out of this cell.
"And now, Professor Aronnax,
our own breakfast is ready. Allow me to lead the way."
"Yours to command,
captain."
I followed Captain Nemo, and as
soon as I passed through the doorway, I went down a kind of electrically lit
passageway that resembled a gangway on a ship. After a stretch of some ten meters,
a second door opened before me.
I then entered a dining room,
decorated and furnished in austere good taste. Inlaid with ebony trim, tall
oaken sideboards stood at both ends of this room, and sparkling on their
shelves were staggered rows of earthenware, porcelain, and glass of
incalculable value. There silver-plated dinnerware gleamed under rays pouring
from light fixtures in the ceiling, whose glare was softened and tempered by
delicately painted designs.
In the center of this room stood
a table, richly spread. Captain Nemo indicated the place I was to occupy.
"Be seated," he told
me, "and eat like the famished man you must be."
Our breakfast consisted of
several dishes whose contents were all supplied by the sea, and some foods
whose nature and derivation were unknown to me. They were good, I admit, but
with a peculiar flavor to which I would soon grow accustomed. These various
food items seemed to be rich in phosphorous, and I thought that they, too, must
have been of marine origin.
Captain Nemo stared at me. I had
asked him nothing, but he read my thoughts, and on his own he answered the
questions I was itching to address him.
"Most of these dishes are
new to you," he told me. "But you can consume them without fear.
They're healthy and nourishing. I renounced terrestrial foods long ago, and I'm
none the worse for it. My crew are strong and full of energy, and they eat what
I eat."
"So," I said, "all
these foods are products of the sea?"
"Yes, professor, the sea
supplies all my needs. Sometimes I cast my nets in our wake, and I pull them up
ready to burst. Sometimes I go hunting right in the midst of this element that
has long seemed so far out of man's reach, and I corner the game that dwells in
my underwater forests. Like the flocks of old Proteus, King Neptune's shepherd,
my herds graze without fear on the ocean's immense prairies. There I own vast
properties that I harvest myself, and which are forever sown by the hand of the
Creator of All Things."
I stared at Captain Nemo in
definite astonishment, and I answered him:
"Sir, I understand perfectly
how your nets can furnish excellent fish for your table; I understand less how
you can chase aquatic game in your underwater forests; but how a piece of red
meat, no matter how small, can figure in your menu, that I don't understand at
all."
"Nor I, sir," Captain
Nemo answered me. "I never touch the flesh of land animals."
"Nevertheless, this . . .
," I went on, pointing to a dish where some slices of loin were still
left.
"What you believe to be red
meat, professor, is nothing other than loin of sea turtle. Similarly, here are
some dolphin livers you might mistake for stewed pork. My chef is a skillful
food processor who excels at pickling and preserving these various exhibits
from the ocean. Feel free to sample all of these foods. Here are some preserves
of sea cucumber that a Malaysian would declare to be unrivaled in the entire
world, here's cream from milk furnished by the udders of cetaceans, and sugar
from the huge fucus plants in the North Sea; and finally, allow me to offer you
some marmalade of sea anemone, equal to that from the tastiest fruits."
So I sampled away, more as a
curiosity seeker than an epicure, while Captain Nemo delighted me with his
incredible anecdotes.
"But this sea, Professor
Aronnax," he told me, "this prodigious, inexhaustible wet nurse of a
sea not only feeds me, she dresses me as well. That fabric covering you was
woven from the masses of filaments that anchor certain seashells; as the
ancients were wont to do, it was dyed with purple ink from the murex snail and
shaded with violet tints that I extract from a marine slug, the Mediterranean
sea hare. The perfumes you'll find on the washstand in your cabin were produced
from the oozings of marine plants. Your mattress was made from the ocean's
softest eelgrass. Your quill pen will be whalebone, your ink a juice secreted
by cuttlefish or squid. Everything comes to me from the sea, just as someday
everything will return to it!"
"You love the sea,
captain."
"Yes, I love it! The sea is
the be all and end all! It covers seven-tenths of the planet earth. Its breath
is clean and healthy. It's an immense wilderness where a man is never lonely,
because he feels life astir on every side. The sea is simply the vehicle for a
prodigious, unearthly mode of existence; it's simply movement and love; it's
living infinity, as one of your poets put it. And in essence, professor, nature
is here made manifest by all three of her kingdoms, mineral, vegetable, and
animal. The last of these is amply represented by the four zoophyte groups,
three classes of articulates, five classes of mollusks, and three vertebrate
classes: mammals, reptiles, and those countless legions of fish, an infinite
order of animals totaling more than 13,000 species, of which only one-tenth
belong to fresh water. The sea is a vast pool of nature. Our globe began with
the sea, so to speak, and who can say we won't end with it! Here lies supreme
tranquility. The sea doesn't belong to tyrants. On its surface they can still
exercise their iniquitous claims, battle each other, devour each other, haul
every earthly horror. But thirty feet below sea level, their dominion ceases,
their influence fades, their power vanishes! Ah, sir, live! Live in the heart
of the seas! Here alone lies independence! Here I recognize no superiors! Here
I'm free!"
Captain Nemo suddenly fell silent
in the midst of this enthusiastic outpouring. Had he let himself get carried
away, past the bounds of his habitual reserve? Had he said too much? For a few
moments he strolled up and down, all aquiver. Then his nerves grew calmer, his
facial features recovered their usual icy composure, and turning to me:
"Now, professor," he
said, "if you'd like to inspect the Nautilus, I'm yours to command."
CAPTAIN NEMO stood up. I followed
him. Contrived at the rear of the dining room, a double door opened, and I
entered a room whose dimensions equaled the one I had just left.
It was a library. Tall,
black-rosewood bookcases, inlaid with copperwork, held on their wide shelves a
large number of uniformly bound books. These furnishings followed the contours
of the room, their lower parts leading to huge couches upholstered in maroon
leather and curved for maximum comfort. Light, movable reading stands, which
could be pushed away or pulled near as desired, allowed books to be positioned
on them for easy study. In the center stood a huge table covered with
pamphlets, among which some newspapers, long out of date, were visible.
Electric light flooded this whole harmonious totality, falling from four
frosted half globes set in the scrollwork of the ceiling. I stared in genuine
wonderment at this room so ingeniously laid out, and I couldn't believe my
eyes.
"Captain Nemo," I told
my host, who had just stretched out on a couch, "this is a library that
would do credit to more than one continental palace, and I truly marvel to
think it can go with you into the deepest seas."
"Where could one find
greater silence or solitude, professor?" Captain Nemo replied. "Did
your study at the museum afford you such a perfect retreat?"
"No, sir, and I might add
that it's quite a humble one next to yours. You own 6,000 or 7,000 volumes here
. . ."
"12,000, Professor Aronnax.
They're my sole remaining ties with dry land. But I was done with the shore the
day my Nautilus submerged for the first time under the waters. That day I
purchased my last volumes, my last pamphlets, my last newspapers, and ever
since I've chosen to believe that humanity no longer thinks or writes. In any
event, professor, these books are at your disposal, and you may use them
freely."
I thanked Captain Nemo and
approached the shelves of this library. Written in every language, books on science,
ethics, and literature were there in abundance, but I didn't see a single work
on economics-- they seemed to be strictly banned on board. One odd detail: all
these books were shelved indiscriminately without regard to the language in
which they were written, and this jumble proved that the Nautilus's captain
could read fluently whatever volumes he chanced to pick up.
Among these books I noted
masterpieces by the greats of ancient and modern times, in other words, all of
humanity's finest achievements in history, poetry, fiction, and science, from
Homer to Victor Hugo, from Xenophon to Michelet, from Rabelais to Madame George
Sand. But science, in particular, represented the major investment of this
library: books on mechanics, ballistics, hydrography, meteorology, geography,
geology, etc., held a place there no less important than works on natural
history, and I realized that they made up the captain's chief reading. There I
saw the complete works of Humboldt, the complete Arago, as well as works by
Foucault, Henri Sainte-Claire Deville, Chasles, Milne-Edwards, Quatrefages,
John Tyndall, Faraday, Berthelot, Father Secchi, Petermann, Commander Maury,
Louis Agassiz, etc., plus the transactions of France's Academy of Sciences,
bulletins from the various geographical societies, etc., and in a prime
location, those two volumes on the great ocean depths that had perhaps earned
me this comparatively charitable welcome from Captain Nemo. Among the works of
Joseph Bertrand, his book entitled The Founders of Astronomy even gave me a
definite date; and since I knew it had appeared in the course of 1865, I
concluded that the fitting out of the Nautilus hadn't taken place before then.
Accordingly, three years ago at the most, Captain Nemo had begun his underwater
existence. Moreover, I hoped some books even more recent would permit me to
pinpoint the date precisely; but I had plenty of time to look for them, and I
didn't want to put off any longer our stroll through the wonders of the
Nautilus.
"Sir," I told the captain,
"thank you for placing this library at my disposal. There are scientific
treasures here, and I'll take advantage of them."
"This room isn't only a
library," Captain Nemo said, "it's also a smoking room."
"A smoking room?" I
exclaimed. "Then one may smoke on board?"
"Surely."
"In that case, sir, I'm
forced to believe that you've kept up relations with Havana."
"None whatever," the
captain replied. "Try this cigar, Professor Aronnax, and even though it
doesn't come from Havana, it will satisfy you if you're a connoisseur."
I took the cigar offered me,
whose shape recalled those from Cuba; but it seemed to be made of gold leaf. I
lit it at a small brazier supported by an elegant bronze stand, and I inhaled
my first whiffs with the relish of a smoker who hasn't had a puff in days.
"It's excellent," I
said, "but it's not from the tobacco plant."
"Right," the captain
replied, "this tobacco comes from neither Havana nor the Orient. It's a
kind of nicotine-rich seaweed that the ocean supplies me, albeit sparingly. Do
you still miss your Cubans, sir?"
"Captain, I scorn them from
this day forward."
"Then smoke these cigars
whenever you like, without debating their origin. They bear no government seal
of approval, but I imagine they're none the worse for it."
"On the contrary."
Just then Captain Nemo opened a
door facing the one by which I had entered the library, and I passed into an
immense, splendidly lit lounge.
It was a huge quadrilateral with
canted corners, ten meters long, six wide, five high. A luminous ceiling,
decorated with delicate arabesques, distributed a soft, clear daylight over all
the wonders gathered in this museum. For a museum it truly was, in which clever
hands had spared no expense to amass every natural and artistic treasure, displaying
them with the helter-skelter picturesqueness that distinguishes a painter's
studio.
Some thirty pictures by the
masters, uniformly framed and separated by gleaming panoplies of arms, adorned
walls on which were stretched tapestries of austere design. There I saw
canvases of the highest value, the likes of which I had marveled at in private
European collections and art exhibitions. The various schools of the old
masters were represented by a Raphael Madonna, a Virgin by Leonardo da Vinci, a
nymph by Correggio, a woman by Titian, an adoration of the Magi by Veronese, an
assumption of the Virgin by Murillo, a Holbein portrait, a monk by Velazquez, a
martyr by Ribera, a village fair by Rubens, two Flemish landscapes by Teniers,
three little genre paintings by Gerard Dow, Metsu, and Paul Potter, two
canvases by Gericault and Prud'hon, plus seascapes by Backhuysen and Vernet.
Among the works of modern art were pictures signed by Delacroix, Ingres,
Decamps, Troyon, Meissonier, Daubigny, etc., and some wonderful miniature
statues in marble or bronze, modeled after antiquity's finest originals, stood
on their pedestals in the corners of this magnificent museum. As the Nautilus's
commander had predicted, my mind was already starting to fall into that promised
state of stunned amazement.
"Professor," this
strange man then said, "you must excuse the informality with which I
receive you, and the disorder reigning in this lounge."
"Sir," I replied,
"without prying into who you are, might I venture to identify you as an
artist?"
"A collector, sir, nothing
more. Formerly I loved acquiring these beautiful works created by the hand of
man. I sought them greedily, ferreted them out tirelessly, and I've been able
to gather some objects of great value. They're my last mementos of those shores
that are now dead for me. In my eyes, your modern artists are already as old as
the ancients. They've existed for 2,000 or 3,000 years, and I mix them up in my
mind. The masters are ageless."
"What about these
composers?" I said, pointing to sheet music by Weber, Rossini, Mozart,
Beethoven, Haydn, Meyerbeer, Hérold, Wagner, Auber, Gounod, Victor Massé, and a
number of others scattered over a full size piano-organ, which occupied one of
the wall panels in this lounge.
"These composers,"
Captain Nemo answered me, "are the contemporaries of Orpheus, because in
the annals of the dead, all chronological differences fade; and I'm dead,
professor, quite as dead as those friends of yours sleeping six feet
under!"
Captain Nemo fell silent and
seemed lost in reverie. I regarded him with intense excitement, silently
analyzing his strange facial expression. Leaning his elbow on the corner of a
valuable mosaic table, he no longer saw me, he had forgotten my very presence.
I didn't disturb his meditations
but continued to pass in review the curiosities that enriched this lounge.
After the works of art, natural
rarities predominated. They consisted chiefly of plants, shells, and other
exhibits from the ocean that must have been Captain Nemo's own personal finds.
In the middle of the lounge, a jet of water, electrically lit, fell back into a
basin made from a single giant clam. The delicately festooned rim of this
shell, supplied by the biggest mollusk in the class Acephala, measured about
six meters in circumference; so it was even bigger than those fine giant clams
given to King François I by the Republic of Venice, and which the Church of
Saint-Sulpice in Paris has made into two gigantic holy-water fonts.
Around this basin, inside elegant
glass cases fastened with copper bands, there were classified and labeled the
most valuable marine exhibits ever put before the eyes of a naturalist. My
professorial glee may easily be imagined.
The zoophyte branch offered some
very unusual specimens from its two groups, the polyps and the echinoderms. In
the first group: organ-pipe coral, gorgonian coral arranged into fan shapes,
soft sponges from Syria, isis coral from the Molucca Islands, sea-pen coral,
wonderful coral of the genus Virgularia from the waters of Norway, various
coral of the genus Umbellularia, alcyonarian coral, then a whole series of
those madrepores that my mentor Professor Milne-Edwards has so shrewdly
classified into divisions and among which I noted the wonderful genus
Flabellina as well as the genus Oculina from Réunion Island, plus a
"Neptune's chariot" from the Caribbean Sea--every superb variety of
coral, and in short, every species of these unusual polyparies that congregate
to form entire islands that will one day turn into continents. Among the
echinoderms, notable for being covered with spines: starfish, feather stars,
sea lilies, free-swimming crinoids, brittle stars, sea urchins, sea cucumbers,
etc., represented a complete collection of the individuals in this group.
An excitable conchologist would
surely have fainted dead away before other, more numerous glass cases in which
were classified specimens from the mollusk branch. There I saw a collection of
incalculable value that I haven't time to describe completely. Among these exhibits
I'll mention, just for the record: an elegant royal hammer shell from the
Indian Ocean, whose evenly spaced white spots stood out sharply against a base
of red and brown; an imperial spiny oyster, brightly colored, bristling with
thorns, a specimen rare to European museums, whose value I estimated at 20,000
francs; a common hammer shell from the seas near Queensland, very hard to come
by; exotic cockles from Senegal, fragile white bivalve shells that a single
breath could pop like a soap bubble; several varieties of watering-pot shell
from Java, a sort of limestone tube fringed with leafy folds and much fought
over by collectors; a whole series of top-shell snails--greenish yellow ones
fished up from American seas, others colored reddish brown that patronize the
waters off Queensland, the former coming from the Gulf of Mexico and notable
for their overlapping shells, the latter some sun-carrier shells found in the
southernmost seas, finally and rarest of all, the magnificent spurred-star
shell from New Zealand; then some wonderful peppery-furrow shells; several
valuable species of cythera clams and venus clams; the trellis wentletrap snail
from Tranquebar on India's eastern shore; a marbled turban snail gleaming with
mother-of-pearl; green parrot shells from the seas of China; the virtually
unknown cone snail from the genus Coenodullus; every variety of cowry used as
money in India and Africa; a "glory-of-the-seas," the most valuable
shell in the East Indies; finally, common periwinkles, delphinula snails,
turret snails, violet snails, European cowries, volute snails, olive shells,
miter shells, helmet shells, murex snails, whelks, harp shells, spiky
periwinkles, triton snails, horn shells, spindle shells, conch shells, spider
conchs, limpets, glass snails, sea butterflies-- every kind of delicate,
fragile seashell that science has baptized with its most delightful names.
Aside and in special
compartments, strings of supremely beautiful pearls were spread out, the
electric light flecking them with little fiery sparks: pink pearls pulled from
saltwater fan shells in the Red Sea; green pearls from the rainbow abalone;
yellow, blue, and black pearls, the unusual handiwork of various mollusks from
every ocean and of certain mussels from rivers up north; in short, several
specimens of incalculable worth that had been oozed by the rarest of shellfish.
Some of these pearls were bigger than a pigeon egg; they more than equaled the
one that the explorer Tavernier sold the Shah of Persia for 3,000,000 francs,
and they surpassed that other pearl owned by the Imam of Muscat, which I had
believed to be unrivaled in the entire world.
Consequently, to calculate the
value of this collection was, I should say, impossible. Captain Nemo must have spent
millions in acquiring these different specimens, and I was wondering what
financial resources he tapped to satisfy his collector's fancies, when these
words interrupted me:
"You're examining my shells,
professor? They're indeed able to fascinate a naturalist; but for me they have
an added charm, since I've collected every one of them with my own two hands,
and not a sea on the globe has escaped my investigations."
"I understand, captain, I
understand your delight at strolling in the midst of this wealth. You're a man
who gathers his treasure in person. No museum in Europe owns such a collection
of exhibits from the ocean. But if I exhaust all my wonderment on them, I'll
have nothing left for the ship that carries them! I have absolutely no wish to probe
those secrets of yours! But I confess that my curiosity is aroused to the limit
by this Nautilus, the motor power it contains, the equipment enabling it to
operate, the ultra powerful force that brings it to life. I see some
instruments hanging on the walls of this lounge whose purposes are unknown to
me. May I learn--"
"Professor Aronnax,"
Captain Nemo answered me, "I've said you'd be free aboard my vessel, so no
part of the Nautilus is off-limits to you. You may inspect it in detail, and
I'll be delighted to act as your guide."
"I don't know how to thank
you, sir, but I won't abuse your good nature. I would only ask you about the
uses intended for these instruments of physical measure--"
"Professor, these same
instruments are found in my stateroom, where I'll have the pleasure of
explaining their functions to you. But beforehand, come inspect the cabin set
aside for you. You need to learn how you'll be lodged aboard the
Nautilus."
I followed Captain Nemo, who, via
one of the doors cut into the lounge's canted corners, led me back down the
ship's gangways. He took me to the bow, and there I found not just a cabin but
an elegant stateroom with a bed, a washstand, and various other furnishings.
I could only thank my host.
"Your stateroom adjoins
mine," he told me, opening a door, "and mine leads into that lounge
we've just left."
I entered the captain's
stateroom. It had an austere, almost monastic appearance. An iron bedstead, a
worktable, some washstand fixtures. Subdued lighting. No luxuries. Just the
bare necessities.
Captain Nemo showed me to a
bench.
"Kindly be seated," he
told me.
I sat, and he began speaking as
follows:
"SIR," CAPTAIN NEMO
SAID, showing me the instruments hanging on the walls of his stateroom,
"these are the devices
needed to navigate the Nautilus. Here, as in the lounge, I always have them
before my eyes, and they indicate my position and exact heading in the midst of
the ocean. You're familiar with some of them, such as the thermometer, which
gives the temperature inside the Nautilus; the barometer, which measures the
heaviness of the outside air and forecasts changes in the weather; the
humidistat, which indicates the degree of dryness in the atmosphere; the storm
glass, whose mixture decomposes to foretell the arrival of tempests; the
compass, which steers my course; the sextant, which takes the sun's altitude
and tells me my latitude; chronometers, which allow me to calculate my
longitude; and finally, spyglasses for both day and night, enabling me to
scrutinize every point of the horizon once the Nautilus has risen to the
surface of the waves."
"These are the normal
navigational instruments," I replied, "and I'm familiar with their
uses. But no doubt these others answer pressing needs unique to the Nautilus.
That dial I see there, with the needle moving across it--isn't it a pressure
gauge?"
"It is indeed a pressure
gauge. It's placed in contact with the water, and it indicates the outside
pressure on our hull, which in turn gives me the depth at which my submersible
is sitting."
"And these are some new
breed of sounding line?"
"They're thermometric
sounding lines that report water temperatures in the different strata."
"And these other
instruments, whose functions I can't even guess?"
"Here, professor, I need to
give you some background information," Captain Nemo said. "So kindly
hear me out."
He fell silent for some moments,
then he said:
"There's a powerful,
obedient, swift, and effortless force that can be bent to any use and which
reigns supreme aboard my vessel. It does everything. It lights me, it warms me,
it's the soul of my mechanical equipment. This force is electricity."
"Electricity!" I
exclaimed in some surprise.
"Yes, sir."
"But, captain, you have a
tremendous speed of movement that doesn't square with the strength of
electricity. Until now, its dynamic potential has remained quite limited,
capable of producing only small amounts of power!"
"Professor," Captain
Nemo replied, "my electricity isn't the run-of-the-mill variety, and with
your permission, I'll leave it at that."
"I won't insist, sir, and
I'll rest content with simply being flabbergasted at your results. I would ask
one question, however, which you needn't answer if it's indiscreet. The electric
cells you use to generate this marvelous force must be depleted very quickly.
Their zinc component, for example: how do you replace it, since you no longer
stay in contact with the shore?"
"That question deserves an
answer," Captain Nemo replied. "First off, I'll mention that at the
bottom of the sea there exist veins of zinc, iron, silver, and gold whose
mining would quite certainly be feasible. But I've tapped none of these
land-based metals, and I wanted to make demands only on the sea itself for the
sources of my electricity."
"The sea itself?"
"Yes, professor, and there
was no shortage of such sources. In fact, by establishing a circuit between two
wires immersed to different depths, I'd be able to obtain electricity through
the diverging temperatures they experience; but I preferred to use a more
practical procedure."
"And that is?"
"You're familiar with the
composition of salt water. In 1,000 grams one finds 96.5% water and about 2.66%
sodium chloride; then small quantities of magnesium chloride, potassium
chloride, magnesium bromide, sulfate of magnesia, calcium sulfate, and calcium
carbonate. Hence you observe that sodium chloride is encountered there in
significant proportions. Now then, it's this sodium that I extract from salt
water and with which I compose my electric cells."
"Sodium?"
"Yes, sir. Mixed with
mercury, it forms an amalgam that takes the place of zinc in Bunsen cells. The
mercury is never depleted. Only the sodium is consumed, and the sea itself
gives me that. Beyond this, I'll mention that sodium batteries have been found
to generate the greater energy, and their electro-motor strength is twice that
of zinc batteries."
"Captain, I fully understand
the excellence of sodium under the conditions in which you're placed. The sea
contains it. Fine. But it still has to be produced, in short, extracted. And
how do you accomplish this? Obviously your batteries could do the extracting;
but if I'm not mistaken, the consumption of sodium needed by your electric
equipment would be greater than the quantity you'd extract. It would come
about, then, that in the process of producing your sodium, you'd use up more
than you'd make!"
"Accordingly, professor, I
don't extract it with batteries; quite simply, I utilize the heat of coal from the
earth."
"From the earth?" I
said, my voice going up on the word.
"We'll say coal from the
seafloor, if you prefer," Captain Nemo replied.
"And you can mine these
veins of underwater coal?"
"You'll watch me work them,
Professor Aronnax. I ask only a little patience of you, since you'll have ample
time to be patient. Just remember one thing: I owe everything to the ocean; it
generates electricity, and electricity gives the Nautilus heat, light, motion,
and, in a word, life itself."
"But not the air you
breathe?"
"Oh, I could produce the air
needed on board, but it would be pointless, since I can rise to the surface of
the sea whenever I like. However, even though electricity doesn't supply me
with breathable air, it at least operates the powerful pumps that store it
under pressure in special tanks; which, if need be, allows me to extend my stay
in the lower strata for as long as I want."
"Captain," I replied,
"I'll rest content with marveling. You've obviously found what all mankind
will surely find one day, the true dynamic power of electricity."
"I'm not so certain they'll
find it," Captain Nemo replied icily. "But be that as it may, you're
already familiar with the first use I've found for this valuable force. It
lights us, and with a uniformity and continuity not even possessed by sunlight.
Now, look at that clock: it's electric, it runs with an accuracy rivaling the
finest chronometers. I've had it divided into twenty-four hours like Italian
clocks, since neither day nor night, sun nor moon, exist for me, but only this
artificial light that I import into the depths of the seas! See, right now it's
ten o'clock in the morning."
"That's perfect."
"Another use for
electricity: that dial hanging before our eyes indicates how fast the Nautilus
is going. An electric wire puts it in contact with the patent log; this needle
shows me the actual speed of my submersible. And . . . hold on . . . just now
we're proceeding at the moderate pace of fifteen miles per hour."
"It's marvelous," I
replied, "and I truly see, captain, how right you are to use this force;
it's sure to take the place of wind, water, and steam."
"But that's not all,
Professor Aronnax," Captain Nemo said, standing up. "And if you'd
care to follow me, we'll inspect the Nautilus's stern."
In essence, I was already
familiar with the whole forward part of this underwater boat, and here are its
exact subdivisions going from amidships to its spur: the dining room, 5 meters
long and separated from the library by a watertight bulkhead, in other words,
it couldn't be penetrated by the sea; the library, 5 meters long; the main
lounge, 10 meters long, separated from the captain's stateroom by a second
watertight bulkhead; the aforesaid stateroom, 5 meters long; mine, 2.5 meters
long; and finally, air tanks 7.5 meters long and extending to the stempost.
Total: a length of 35 meters. Doors were cut into the watertight bulkheads and
were shut hermetically by means of india-rubber seals, which insured complete
safety aboard the Nautilus in the event of a leak in any one section.
I followed Captain Nemo down
gangways located for easy transit, and I arrived amidships. There I found a
sort of shaft heading upward between two watertight bulkheads. An iron ladder,
clamped to the wall, led to the shaft's upper end. I asked the captain what
this ladder was for.
"It goes to the skiff,"
he replied.
"What! You have a
skiff?" I replied in some astonishment.
"Surely. An excellent
longboat, light and unsinkable, which is used for excursions and fishing
trips."
"But when you want to set
out, don't you have to return to the surface of the sea?"
"By no means. The skiff is
attached to the topside of the Nautilus's hull and is set in a cavity expressly
designed to receive it. It's completely decked over, absolutely watertight, and
held solidly in place by bolts. This ladder leads to a manhole cut into the
Nautilus's hull and corresponding to a comparable hole cut into the side of the
skiff. I insert myself through this double opening into the longboat. My crew
close up the hole belonging to the Nautilus; I close up the one belonging to
the skiff, simply by screwing it into place. I undo the bolts holding the skiff
to the submersible, and the longboat rises with prodigious speed to the surface
of the sea. I then open the deck paneling, carefully closed until that point; I
up mast and hoist sail--or I take out my oars--and I go for a spin."
"But how do you return to
the ship?"
"I don't, Professor Aronnax;
the Nautilus returns to me."
"At your command?"
"At my command. An electric
wire connects me to the ship. I fire off a telegram, and that's that."
"Right," I said, tipsy
from all these wonders, "nothing to it!"
After passing the well of the
companionway that led to the platform, I saw a cabin 2 meters long in which
Conseil and Ned Land, enraptured with their meal, were busy devouring it to the
last crumb. Then a door opened into the galley, 3 meters long and located
between the vessel's huge storage lockers.
There, even more powerful and
obedient than gas, electricity did most of the cooking. Arriving under the
stoves, wires transmitted to platinum griddles a heat that was distributed and
sustained with perfect consistency. It also heated a distilling mechanism that,
via evaporation, supplied excellent drinking water. Next to this galley was a
bathroom, conveniently laid out, with faucets supplying hot or cold water at
will.
After the galley came the crew's
quarters, 5 meters long. But the door was closed and I couldn't see its
accommodations, which might have told me the number of men it took to operate
the Nautilus.
At the far end stood a fourth
watertight bulkhead, separating the crew's quarters from the engine room. A
door opened, and I stood in the compartment where Captain Nemo, indisputably a
world-class engineer, had set up his locomotive equipment.
Brightly lit, the engine room
measured at least 20 meters in length. It was divided, by function, into two
parts: the first contained the cells for generating electricity, the second
that mechanism transmitting movement to the propeller.
Right off, I detected an odor
permeating the compartment that was sui generis.* Captain Nemo noticed the
negative impression it made on me.
*Latin: "in a class by
itself." Ed.
"That," he told me,
"is a gaseous discharge caused by our use of sodium, but it's only a mild
inconvenience. In any event, every morning we sanitize the ship by ventilating
it in the open air."
Meanwhile I examined the
Nautilus's engine with a fascination easy to imagine.
"You observe," Captain
Nemo told me, "that I use Bunsen cells, not Ruhmkorff cells. The latter
would be ineffectual. One uses fewer Bunsen cells, but they're big and strong,
and experience has proven their superiority. The electricity generated here
makes its way to the stern, where electromagnets of huge size activate a
special system of levers and gears that transmit movement to the propeller's
shaft. The latter has a diameter of 6 meters, a pitch of 7.5 meters, and can do
up to 120 revolutions per minute."
"And that gives you?"
"A speed of fifty miles per
hour."
There lay a mystery, but I didn't
insist on exploring it. How could electricity work with such power? Where did
this nearly unlimited energy originate? Was it in the extraordinary voltage
obtained from some new kind of induction coil? Could its transmission have been
immeasurably increased by some unknown system of levers?** This was the point I
couldn't grasp.
**Author's Note: And sure enough,
there's now talk of such a discovery, in which a new set of levers generates
considerable power. Did its inventor meet up with Captain Nemo?
"Captain Nemo," I said,
"I'll vouch for the results and not try to explain them. I've seen the
Nautilus at work out in front of the Abraham Lincoln, and I know where I stand
on its speed. But it isn't enough just to move, we have to see where we're
going! We must be able to steer right or left, up or down! How do you reach the
lower depths, where you meet an increasing resistance that's assessed in
hundreds of atmospheres? How do you rise back to the surface of the ocean?
Finally, how do you keep your ship at whatever level suits you? Am I indiscreet
in asking you all these things?"
"Not at all,
professor," the captain answered me after a slight hesitation, "since
you'll never leave this underwater boat. Come into the lounge. It's actually
our work room, and there you'll learn the full story about the Nautilus!"
A MOMENT LATER we were seated on
a couch in the lounge, cigars between our lips. The
captain placed before my eyes a
working drawing that gave the ground plan, cross section, and side view of the
Nautilus. Then he began his description as follows:
"Here, Professor Aronnax,
are the different dimensions of this boat now transporting you. It's a very
long cylinder with conical ends. It noticeably takes the shape of a cigar, a
shape already adopted in London for several projects of the same kind. The
length of this cylinder from end to end is exactly seventy meters, and its
maximum breadth of beam is eight meters. So it isn't quite built on the
ten-to-one ratio of your high-speed steamers; but its lines are sufficiently
long, and their tapering gradual enough, so that the displaced water easily
slips past and poses no obstacle to the ship's movements.
"These two dimensions allow
you to obtain, via a simple calculation, the surface area and volume of the
Nautilus. Its surface area totals 1,011.45 square meters, its volume 1,507.2
cubic meters-- which is tantamount to saying that when it's completely submerged,
it displaces 1,500 cubic meters of water, or weighs 1,500 metric tons.
"In drawing up plans for a
ship meant to navigate underwater, I wanted it, when floating on the waves, to
lie nine-tenths below the surface and to emerge only one-tenth. Consequently,
under these conditions it needed to displace only nine-tenths of its volume,
hence 1,356.48 cubic meters; in other words, it was to weigh only that same
number of metric tons. So I was obliged not to exceed this weight while
building it to the aforesaid dimensions.
"The Nautilus is made up of
two hulls, one inside the other; between them, joining them together, are iron
T-bars that give this ship the utmost rigidity. In fact, thanks to this
cellular arrangement, it has the resistance of a stone block, as if it were
completely solid. Its plating can't give way; it's self-adhering and not
dependent on the tightness of its rivets; and due to the perfect union of its
materials, the solidarity of its construction allows it to defy the most
violent seas.
"The two hulls are
manufactured from boilerplate steel, whose relative density is 7.8 times that
of water. The first hull has a thickness of no less than five centimeters and
weighs 394.96 metric tons. My second hull, the outer cover, includes a keel
fifty centimeters high by twenty-five wide, which by itself weighs 62 metric
tons; this hull, the engine, the ballast, the various accessories and
accommodations, plus the bulkheads and interior braces, have a combined weight
of 961.52 metric tons, which when added to 394.96 metric tons, gives us the
desired total of 1,356.48 metric tons. Clear?"
"Clear," I replied.
"So," the captain went
on, "when the Nautilus lies on the waves under these conditions, one-tenth
of it does emerge above water. Now then, if I provide some ballast tanks equal
in capacity to that one-tenth, hence able to hold 150.72 metric tons, and if I
fill them with water, the boat then displaces 1,507.2 metric tons-- or it
weighs that much--and it would be completely submerged. That's what comes
about, professor. These ballast tanks exist within easy access in the lower
reaches of the Nautilus. I open some stopcocks, the tanks fill, the boat sinks,
and it's exactly flush with the surface of the water."
"Fine, captain, but now we
come to a genuine difficulty. You're able to lie flush with the surface of the
ocean, that I understand. But lower down, while diving beneath that surface,
isn't your submersible going to encounter a pressure, and consequently undergo
an upward thrust, that must be assessed at one atmosphere per every thirty feet
of water, hence at about one kilogram per each square centimeter?"
"Precisely, sir."
"Then unless you fill up the
whole Nautilus, I don't see how you can force it down into the heart of these
liquid masses."
"Professor," Captain
Nemo replied, "static objects mustn't be confused with dynamic ones, or
we'll be open to serious error. Comparatively little effort is spent in
reaching the ocean's lower regions, because all objects have a tendency to
become 'sinkers.' Follow my logic here."
"I'm all ears,
captain."
"When I wanted to determine
what increase in weight the Nautilus needed to be given in order to submerge, I
had only to take note of the proportionate reduction in volume that salt water
experiences in deeper and deeper strata."
"That's obvious," I
replied.
"Now then, if water isn't
absolutely incompressible, at least it compresses very little. In fact,
according to the most recent calculations, this reduction is only .0000436 per
atmosphere, or per every thirty feet of depth. For instance, to go 1,000 meters
down, I must take into account the reduction in volume that occurs under a
pressure equivalent to that from a 1,000-meter column of water, in other words,
under a pressure of 100 atmospheres. In this instance the reduction would be
.00436. Consequently, I'd have to increase my weight from 1,507.2 metric tons
to 1,513.77. So the added weight would only be 6.57 metric tons."
"That's all?"
"That's all, Professor
Aronnax, and the calculation is easy to check. Now then, I have supplementary
ballast tanks capable of shipping 100 metric tons of water. So I can descend to
considerable depths. When I want to rise again and lie flush with the surface,
all I have to do is expel that water; and if I desire that the Nautilus emerge
above the waves to one-tenth of its total capacity, I empty all the ballast
tanks completely."
This logic, backed up by figures,
left me without a single objection.
"I accept your calculations,
captain," I replied, "and I'd be ill-mannered to dispute them, since
your daily experience bears them out. But at this juncture, I have a hunch that
we're still left with one real difficulty."
"What's that, sir?"
"When you're at a depth of
1,000 meters, the Nautilus's plating bears a pressure of 100 atmospheres. If at
this point you want to empty the supplementary ballast tanks in order to
lighten your boat and rise to the surface, your pumps must overcome that
pressure of 100 atmospheres, which is 100 kilograms per each square centimeter.
This demands a strength--"
"That electricity alone can
give me," Captain Nemo said swiftly. "Sir, I repeat: the dynamic
power of my engines is nearly infinite. The Nautilus's pumps have prodigious
strength, as you must have noticed when their waterspouts swept like a torrent
over the Abraham Lincoln. Besides, I use my supplementary ballast tanks only to
reach an average depth of 1,500 to 2,000 meters, and that with a view to
conserving my machinery. Accordingly, when I have a mind to visit the ocean
depths two or three vertical leagues beneath the surface, I use maneuvers that
are more time-consuming but no less infallible."
"What are they,
captain?" I asked.
"Here I'm naturally led into
telling you how the Nautilus is maneuvered."
"I can't wait to find
out."
"In order to steer this boat
to port or starboard, in short, to make turns on a horizontal plane, I use an
ordinary, wide-bladed rudder that's fastened to the rear of the sternpost and
worked by a wheel and tackle. But I can also move the Nautilus upward and
downward on a vertical plane by the simple method of slanting its two fins,
which are attached to its sides at its center of flotation; these fins are
flexible, able to assume any position, and can be operated from inside by means
of powerful levers. If these fins stay parallel with the boat, the latter moves
horizontally. If they slant, the Nautilus follows the angle of that slant and,
under its propeller's thrust, either sinks on a diagonal as steep as it suits
me, or rises on that diagonal. And similarly, if I want to return more swiftly
to the surface, I throw the propeller in gear, and the water's pressure makes
the Nautilus rise vertically, as an air balloon inflated with hydrogen lifts
swiftly into the skies."
"Bravo, captain!" I
exclaimed. "But in the midst of the waters, how can your helmsman follow
the course you've given him?"
"My helmsman is stationed
behind the windows of a pilothouse, which protrudes from the topside of the
Nautilus's hull and is fitted with biconvex glass."
"Is glass capable of
resisting such pressures?"
"Perfectly capable. Though
fragile on impact, crystal can still offer considerable resistance. In 1864,
during experiments on fishing by electric light in the middle of the North Sea,
glass panes less than seven millimeters thick were seen to resist a pressure of
sixteen atmospheres, all the while letting through strong, heat-generating rays
whose warmth was unevenly distributed. Now then, I use glass windows measuring
no less than twenty-one centimeters at their centers; in other words, they've
thirty times the thickness."
"Fair enough, captain, but
if we're going to see, we need light to drive away the dark, and in the midst
of the murky waters, I wonder how your helmsman can--"
"Set astern of the
pilothouse is a powerful electric reflector whose rays light up the sea for a
distance of half a mile."
"Oh, bravo! Bravo three
times over, captain! That explains the phosphorescent glow from this so-called
narwhale that so puzzled us scientists! Pertinent to this, I'll ask you if the
Nautilus's running afoul of the Scotia, which caused such a great uproar, was
the result of an accidental encounter?"
"Entirely accidental, sir. I
was navigating two meters beneath the surface of the water when the collision occurred.
However, I could see that it had no dire consequences."
"None, sir. But as for your
encounter with the Abraham Lincoln . . . ?"
"Professor, that troubled
me, because it's one of the best ships in the gallant American navy, but they
attacked me and I had to defend myself! All the same, I was content simply to
put the frigate in a condition where it could do me no harm; it won't have any
difficulty getting repairs at the nearest port."
"Ah, commander," I
exclaimed with conviction, "your Nautilus is truly a marvelous boat!"
"Yes, professor,"
Captain Nemo replied with genuine excitement, "and I love it as if it were
my own flesh and blood! Aboard a conventional ship, facing the ocean's perils,
danger lurks everywhere; on the surface of the sea, your chief sensation is the
constant feeling of an underlying chasm, as the Dutchman Jansen so aptly put
it; but below the waves aboard the Nautilus, your heart never fails you! There
are no structural deformities to worry about, because the double hull of this
boat has the rigidity of iron; no rigging to be worn out by rolling and
pitching on the waves; no sails for the wind to carry off; no boilers for steam
to burst open; no fires to fear, because this submersible is made of sheet iron
not wood; no coal to run out of, since electricity is its mechanical force; no
collisions to fear, because it navigates the watery deep all by itself; no
storms to brave, because just a few meters beneath the waves, it finds absolute
tranquility! There, sir. There's the ideal ship! And if it's true that the
engineer has more confidence in a craft than the builder, and the builder more
than the captain himself, you can understand the utter abandon with which I
place my trust in this Nautilus, since I'm its captain, builder, and engineer
all in one!"
Captain Nemo spoke with winning
eloquence. The fire in his eyes and the passion in his gestures transfigured
him. Yes, he loved his ship the same way a father loves his child!
But one question, perhaps
indiscreet, naturally popped up, and I couldn't resist asking it.
"You're an engineer, then,
Captain Nemo?"
"Yes, professor," he
answered me. "I studied in London, Paris, and New York back in the days
when I was a resident of the earth's continents."
"But how were you able to
build this wonderful Nautilus in secret?"
"Each part of it, Professor
Aronnax, came from a different spot on the globe and reached me at a cover
address. Its keel was forged by Creusot in France, its propeller shaft by Pen
& Co. in London, the sheet-iron plates for its hull by Laird's in
Liverpool, its propeller by Scott's in Glasgow. Its tanks were manufactured by
Cail & Co. in Paris, its engine by Krupp in Prussia, its spur by the Motala
workshops in Sweden, its precision instruments by Hart Bros. in New York, etc.;
and each of these suppliers received my specifications under a different
name."
"But," I went on,
"once these parts were manufactured, didn't they have to be mounted and
adjusted?"
"Professor, I set up my
workshops on a deserted islet in midocean. There our Nautilus was completed by
me and my workmen, in other words, by my gallant companions whom I've molded
and educated. Then, when the operation was over, we burned every trace of our
stay on that islet, which if I could have, I'd have blown up."
"From all this, may I assume
that such a boat costs a fortune?"
"An iron ship, Professor
Aronnax, runs 1,125 francs per metric ton. Now then, the Nautilus has a burden
of 1,500 metric tons. Consequently, it cost 1,687,000 francs, hence 2,000,000
francs including its accommodations, and 4,000,000 or 5,000,000 with all the
collections and works of art it contains."
"One last question, Captain
Nemo."
"Ask, professor."
"You're rich, then?"
"Infinitely rich, sir, and
without any trouble, I could pay off the ten-billion-franc French national
debt!"
I gaped at the bizarre individual
who had just spoken these words. Was he playing on my credulity? Time would
tell.
THE PART OF THE planet earth that
the seas occupy has been assessed at 3,832,558 square myriameters, hence more
than 38,000,000,000 hectares. This liquid mass totals 2,250,000,000 cubic miles
and could form a sphere with a diameter of sixty leagues, whose weight would be
three quintillion metric tons. To appreciate such a number, we should remember
that a quintillion is to a billion what a billion is to one, in other words,
there are as many billions in a quintillion as ones in a billion! Now then,
this liquid mass nearly equals the total amount of water that has poured through
all the earth's rivers for the past 40,000 years!
During prehistoric times, an era
of fire was followed by an era of water. At first there was ocean everywhere.
Then, during the Silurian period, the tops of mountains gradually appeared
above the waves, islands emerged, disappeared beneath temporary floods, rose
again, were fused to form continents, and finally the earth's geography settled
into what we have today. Solid matter had wrested from liquid matter some
37,657,000 square miles, hence 12,916,000,000 hectares.
The outlines of the continents
allow the seas to be divided into five major parts: the frozen Arctic and
Antarctic oceans, the Indian Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean, and the Pacific Ocean.
The Pacific Ocean extends north
to south between the two polar circles and east to west between America and
Asia over an expanse of 145 degrees of longitude. It's the most tranquil of the
seas; its currents are wide and slow-moving, its tides moderate, its rainfall
abundant. And this was the ocean that I was first destined to cross under these
strangest of auspices.
"If you don't mind,
professor," Captain Nemo told me, "we'll determine our exact position
and fix the starting point of our voyage. It's fifteen minutes before noon. I'm
going to rise to the surface of the water."
The captain pressed an electric
bell three times. The pumps began to expel water from the ballast tanks; on the
pressure gauge, a needle marked the decreasing pressures that indicated the
Nautilus's upward progress; then the needle stopped.
"Here we are," the
captain said.
I made my way to the central
companionway, which led to the platform. I climbed its metal steps, passed
through the open hatches, and arrived topside on the Nautilus.
The platform emerged only eighty centimeters
above the waves. The Nautilus's bow and stern boasted that spindle-shaped
outline that had caused the ship to be compared appropriately to a long cigar.
I noted the slight overlap of its sheet-iron plates, which resembled the scales
covering the bodies of our big land reptiles. So I had a perfectly natural
explanation for why, despite the best spyglasses, this boat had always been
mistaken for a marine animal.
Near the middle of the platform,
the skiff was half set in the ship's hull, making a slight bulge. Fore and aft
stood two cupolas of moderate height, their sides slanting and partly inset
with heavy biconvex glass, one reserved for the helmsman steering the Nautilus,
the other for the brilliance of the powerful electric beacon lighting his way.
The sea was magnificent, the
skies clear. This long aquatic vehicle could barely feel the broad undulations
of the ocean. A mild breeze out of the east rippled the surface of the water.
Free of all mist, the horizon was ideal for taking sights.
There was nothing to be seen. Not
a reef, not an islet. No more Abraham Lincoln. A deserted immenseness.
Raising his sextant, Captain Nemo
took the altitude of the sun, which would give him his latitude. He waited for
a few minutes until the orb touched the rim of the horizon. While he was taking
his sights, he didn't move a muscle, and the instrument couldn't have been
steadier in hands made out of marble.
"Noon," he said.
"Professor, whenever you're ready. . . ."
I took one last look at the sea,
a little yellowish near the landing places of Japan, and I went below again to
the main lounge.
There the captain fixed his
position and used a chronometer to calculate his longitude, which he
double-checked against his previous observations of hour angles. Then he told
me:
"Professor Aronnax, we're in
longitude 137 degrees 15' west--"
"West of which
meridian?" I asked quickly, hoping the captain's reply might give me a
clue to his nationality.
"Sir," he answered me,
"I have chronometers variously set to the meridians of Paris, Greenwich,
and Washington, D.C. But in your honor, I'll use the one for Paris."
This reply told me nothing. I
bowed, and the commander went on:
"We're in longitude 137
degrees 15' west of the meridian of Paris, and latitude 30 degrees 7' north, in
other words, about 300 miles from the shores of Japan. At noon on this day of
November 8, we hereby begin our voyage of exploration under the waters."
"May God be with us!" I
replied.
"And now, professor,"
the captain added, "I'll leave you to your intellectual pursuits. I've set
our course east-northeast at a depth of fifty meters. Here are some large-scale
charts on which you'll be able to follow that course. The lounge is at your
disposal, and with your permission, I'll take my leave."
Captain Nemo bowed. I was left to
myself, lost in my thoughts. They all centered on the Nautilus's commander.
Would I ever learn the nationality of this eccentric man who had boasted of
having none? His sworn hate for humanity, a hate that perhaps was bent on some
dreadful revenge--what had provoked it? Was he one of those unappreciated
scholars, one of those geniuses "embittered by the world," as Conseil
expressed it, a latter-day Galileo, or maybe one of those men of science, like
America's Commander Maury, whose careers were ruined by political revolutions?
I couldn't say yet. As for me, whom fate had just brought aboard his vessel,
whose life he had held in the balance: he had received me coolly but
hospitably. Only, he never took the hand I extended to him. He never extended
his own.
For an entire hour I was deep in
these musings, trying to probe this mystery that fascinated me so. Then my eyes
focused on a huge world map displayed on the table, and I put my finger on the
very spot where our just-determined longitude and latitude intersected.
Like the continents, the sea has
its rivers. These are exclusive currents that can be identified by their
temperature and color, the most remarkable being the one called the Gulf
Stream. Science has defined the global paths of five chief currents: one in the
north Atlantic, a second in the south Atlantic, a third in the north Pacific, a
fourth in the south Pacific, and a fifth in the southern Indian Ocean. Also
it's likely that a sixth current used to exist in the northern Indian Ocean,
when the Caspian and Aral Seas joined up with certain large Asian lakes to form
a single uniform expanse of water.
Now then, at the spot indicated
on the world map, one of these seagoing rivers was rolling by, the Kuroshio of
the Japanese, the Black Current: heated by perpendicular rays from the tropical
sun, it leaves the Bay of Bengal, crosses the Strait of Malacca, goes up the
shores of Asia, and curves into the north Pacific as far as the Aleutian
Islands, carrying along trunks of camphor trees and other local items, the pure
indigo of its warm waters sharply contrasting with the ocean's waves. It was
this current the Nautilus was about to cross. I watched it on the map with my
eyes, I saw it lose itself in the immenseness of the Pacific, and I felt myself
swept along with it, when Ned Land and Conseil appeared in the lounge doorway.
My two gallant companions stood
petrified at the sight of the wonders on display.
"Where are we?" the
Canadian exclaimed. "In the Quebec Museum?"
"Begging master's
pardon," Conseil answered, "but this seems more like the Sommerard
artifacts exhibition!"
"My friends," I
replied, signaling them to enter, "you're in neither Canada nor France,
but securely aboard the Nautilus, fifty meters below sea level."
"If master says so, then so
be it," Conseil answered. "But in all honesty, this lounge is enough
to astonish even someone Flemish like myself."
"Indulge your astonishment,
my friend, and have a look, because there's plenty of work here for a
classifier of your talents."
Conseil needed no encouraging.
Bending over the glass cases, the gallant lad was already muttering choice
words from the naturalist's vocabulary: class Gastropoda, family Buccinoidea,
genus cowry, species Cypraea madagascariensis, etc.
Meanwhile Ned Land, less
dedicated to conchology, questioned me about my interview with Captain Nemo.
Had I discovered who he was, where he came from, where he was heading, how deep
he was taking us? In short, a thousand questions I had no time to answer.
I told him everything I knew--or,
rather, everything I didn't know-- and I asked him what he had seen or heard on
his part.
"Haven't seen or heard a
thing!" the Canadian replied. "I haven't even spotted the crew of this
boat. By any chance, could they be electric too?"
"Electric?"
"Oh ye gods, I'm half
tempted to believe it! But back to you, Professor Aronnax," Ned Land said,
still hanging on to his ideas. "Can't you tell me how many men are on
board? Ten, twenty, fifty, a hundred?"
"I'm unable to answer you,
Mr. Land. And trust me on this: for the time being, get rid of these notions of
taking over the Nautilus or escaping from it. This boat is a masterpiece of
modern technology, and I'd be sorry to have missed it! Many people would
welcome the circumstances that have been handed us, just to walk in the midst
of these wonders. So keep calm, and let's see what's happening around us."
"See!" the harpooner
exclaimed. "There's nothing to see, nothing we'll ever see from this
sheet-iron prison! We're simply running around blindfolded--"
Ned Land was just pronouncing
these last words when we were suddenly plunged into darkness, utter darkness.
The ceiling lights went out so quickly, my eyes literally ached, just as if we
had experienced the opposite sensation of going from the deepest gloom to the
brightest sunlight.
We stood stock-still, not knowing
what surprise was waiting for us, whether pleasant or unpleasant. But a sliding
sound became audible. You could tell that some panels were shifting over the
Nautilus's sides.
"It's the beginning of the
end!" Ned Land said.
". . . order
Hydromedusa," Conseil muttered.
Suddenly, through two oblong
openings, daylight appeared on both sides of the lounge. The liquid masses came
into view, brightly lit by the ship's electric outpourings. We were separated
from the sea by two panes of glass. Initially I shuddered at the thought that
these fragile partitions could break; but strong copper bands secured them,
giving them nearly infinite resistance.
The sea was clearly visible for a
one-mile radius around the Nautilus. What a sight! What pen could describe it?
Who could portray the effects of this light through these translucent sheets of
water, the subtlety of its progressive shadings into the ocean's upper and
lower strata?
The transparency of salt water
has long been recognized. Its clarity is believed to exceed that of spring
water. The mineral and organic substances it holds in suspension actually
increase its translucency. In certain parts of the Caribbean Sea, you can see
the sandy bottom with startling distinctness as deep as 145 meters down, and
the penetrating power of the sun's rays seems to give out only at a depth of
300 meters. But in this fluid setting traveled by the Nautilus, our electric
glow was being generated in the very heart of the waves. It was no longer
illuminated water, it was liquid light.
If we accept the hypotheses of
the microbiologist Ehrenberg-- who believes that these underwater depths are
lit up by phosphorescent organisms--nature has certainly saved one of her most
prodigious sights for residents of the sea, and I could judge for myself from
the thousandfold play of the light. On both sides I had windows opening over
these unexplored depths. The darkness in the lounge enhanced the brightness
outside, and we stared as if this clear glass were the window of an immense
aquarium.
The Nautilus seemed to be
standing still. This was due to the lack of landmarks. But streaks of water,
parted by the ship's spur, sometimes threaded before our eyes with
extraordinary speed.
In wonderment, we leaned on our
elbows before these show windows, and our stunned silence remained unbroken
until Conseil said:
"You wanted to see
something, Ned my friend; well, now you have something to see!"
"How unusual!" the
Canadian put in, setting aside his tantrums and getaway schemes while
submitting to this irresistible allure. "A man would go an even greater
distance just to stare at such a sight!"
"Ah!" I exclaimed.
"I see our captain's way of life! He's found himself a separate world that
saves its most astonishing wonders just for him!"
"But where are the
fish?" the Canadian ventured to observe. "I don't see any fish!"
"Why would you care, Ned my
friend?" Conseil replied. "Since you have no knowledge of them."
"Me? A fisherman!" Ned
Land exclaimed.
And on this subject a dispute
arose between the two friends, since both were knowledgeable about fish, but
from totally different standpoints.
Everyone knows that fish make up
the fourth and last class in the vertebrate branch. They have been quite aptly
defined as: "cold-blooded vertebrates with a double circulatory system,
breathing through gills, and designed to live in water." They consist of
two distinct series: the series of bony fish, in other words, those whose
spines have vertebrae made of bone; and cartilaginous fish, in other words,
those whose spines have vertebrae made of cartilage.
Possibly the Canadian was
familiar with this distinction, but Conseil knew far more about it; and since
he and Ned were now fast friends, he just had to show off. So he told the
harpooner:
"Ned my friend, you're a
slayer of fish, a highly skilled fisherman. You've caught a large number of
these fascinating animals. But I'll bet you don't know how they're
classified."
"Sure I do," the
harpooner replied in all seriousness. "They're classified into fish we eat
and fish we don't eat!"
"Spoken like a true
glutton," Conseil replied. "But tell me, are you familiar with the
differences between bony fish and cartilaginous fish?"
"Just maybe, Conseil."
"And how about the
subdivisions of these two large classes?"
"I haven't the foggiest
notion," the Canadian replied.
"All right, listen and learn,
Ned my friend! Bony fish are subdivided into six orders. Primo, the
acanthopterygians, whose upper jaw is fully formed and free-moving, and whose
gills take the shape of a comb. This order consists of fifteen families, in
other words, three-quarters of all known fish. Example: the common perch."
"Pretty fair eating,"
Ned Land replied.
"Secundo," Conseil went
on, "the abdominals, whose pelvic fins hang under the abdomen to the rear
of the pectorals but aren't attached to the shoulder bone, an order that's
divided into five families and makes up the great majority of freshwater fish.
Examples: carp, pike."
"Ugh!" the Canadian put
in with distinct scorn. "You can keep the freshwater fish!"
"Tertio," Conseil said,
"the subbrachians, whose pelvic fins are attached under the pectorals and
hang directly from the shoulder bone. This order contains four families.
Examples: flatfish such as sole, turbot, dab, plaice, brill, etc."
"Excellent, really
excellent!" the harpooner exclaimed, interested in fish only from an
edible viewpoint.
"Quarto," Conseil went
on, unabashed, "the apods, with long bodies that lack pelvic fins and are
covered by a heavy, often glutinous skin, an order consisting of only one
family. Examples: common eels and electric eels."
"So-so, just so-so!"
Ned Land replied.
"Quinto," Conseil said,
"the lophobranchians, which have fully formed, free-moving jaws but whose
gills consist of little tufts arranged in pairs along their gill arches. This
order includes only one family. Examples: seahorses and dragonfish."
"Bad, very bad!" the
harpooner replied.
"Sexto and last,"
Conseil said, "the plectognaths, whose maxillary bone is firmly attached
to the side of the intermaxillary that forms the jaw, and whose palate arch is
locked to the skull by sutures that render the jaw immovable, an order lacking
true pelvic fins and which consists of two families. Examples: puffers and
moonfish."
"They're an insult to a
frying pan!" the Canadian exclaimed.
"Are you grasping all this,
Ned my friend?" asked the scholarly Conseil.
"Not a lick of it, Conseil
my friend," the harpooner replied. "But keep going, because you fill
me with fascination."
"As for cartilaginous
fish," Conseil went on unflappably, "they consist of only three
orders."
"Good news," Ned put
in.
"Primo, the cyclostomes,
whose jaws are fused into a flexible ring and whose gill openings are simply a
large number of holes, an order consisting of only one family. Example: the
lamprey."
"An acquired taste,"
Ned Land replied.
"Secundo, the selacians,
with gills resembling those of the cyclostomes but whose lower jaw is
free-moving. This order, which is the most important in the class, consists of
two families. Examples: the ray and the shark."
"What!" Ned Land
exclaimed. "Rays and man-eaters in the same order? Well, Conseil my
friend, on behalf of the rays, I wouldn't advise you to put them in the same
fish tank!"
"Tertio," Conseil
replied, "The sturionians, whose gill opening is the usual single slit
adorned with a gill cover, an order consisting of four genera. Example: the
sturgeon."
"Ah, Conseil my friend, you
saved the best for last, in my opinion anyhow! And that's all of 'em?"
"Yes, my gallant Ned,"
Conseil replied. "And note well, even when one has grasped all this, one
still knows next to nothing, because these families are subdivided into genera,
subgenera, species, varieties--"
"All right, Conseil my
friend," the harpooner said, leaning toward the glass panel, "here
come a couple of your varieties now!"
"Yes! Fish!" Conseil
exclaimed. "One would think he was in front of an aquarium!"
"No," I replied,
"because an aquarium is nothing more than a cage, and these fish are as
free as birds in the air!"
"Well, Conseil my friend,
identify them! Start naming them!" Ned Land exclaimed.
"Me?" Conseil replied.
"I'm unable to! That's my employer's bailiwick!"
And in truth, although the fine
lad was a classifying maniac, he was no naturalist, and I doubt that he could tell
a bonito from a tuna. In short, he was the exact opposite of the Canadian, who
knew nothing about classification but could instantly put a name to any fish.
"A triggerfish," I
said.
"It's a Chinese
triggerfish," Ned Land replied.
"Genus Balistes, family
Scleroderma, order Plectognatha," Conseil muttered.
Assuredly, Ned and Conseil in
combination added up to one outstanding naturalist.
The Canadian was not mistaken.
Cavorting around the Nautilus was a school of triggerfish with flat bodies,
grainy skins, armed with stings on their dorsal fins, and with four prickly
rows of quills quivering on both sides of their tails. Nothing could have been
more wonderful than the skin covering them: white underneath, gray above, with
spots of gold sparkling in the dark eddies of the waves. Around them, rays were
undulating like sheets flapping in the wind, and among these I spotted, much to
my glee, a Chinese ray, yellowish on its topside, a dainty pink on its belly,
and armed with three stings behind its eyes; a rare species whose very
existence was still doubted in Lacépède's day, since that pioneering classifier
of fish had seen one only in a portfolio of Japanese drawings.
For two hours a whole aquatic
army escorted the Nautilus. In the midst of their leaping and cavorting, while
they competed with each other in beauty, radiance, and speed, I could
distinguish some green wrasse, bewhiskered mullet marked with pairs of black
lines, white gobies from the genus Eleotris with curved caudal fins and violet
spots on the back, wonderful Japanese mackerel from the genus Scomber with blue
bodies and silver heads, glittering azure goldfish whose name by itself gives
their full description, several varieties of porgy or gilthead (some banded
gilthead with fins variously blue and yellow, some with horizontal heraldic
bars and enhanced by a black strip around their caudal area, some with color
zones and elegantly corseted in their six waistbands), trumpetfish with
flutelike beaks that looked like genuine seafaring woodcocks and were sometimes
a meter long, Japanese salamanders, serpentine moray eels from the genus
Echidna that were six feet long with sharp little eyes and a huge mouth
bristling with teeth; etc.
Our wonderment stayed at an
all-time fever pitch. Our exclamations were endless. Ned identified the fish,
Conseil classified them, and as for me, I was in ecstasy over the verve of
their movements and the beauty of their forms. Never before had I been given
the chance to glimpse these animals alive and at large in their native element.
Given such a complete collection
from the seas of Japan and China, I won't mention every variety that passed
before our dazzled eyes. More numerous than birds in the air, these fish raced
right up to us, no doubt attracted by the brilliant glow of our electric
beacon.
Suddenly daylight appeared in the
lounge. The sheet-iron panels slid shut. The magical vision disappeared. But
for a good while I kept dreaming away, until the moment my eyes focused on the
instruments hanging on the wall. The compass still showed our heading as
east-northeast, the pressure gauge indicated a pressure of five atmospheres
(corresponding to a depth of fifty meters), and the electric log gave our speed
as fifteen miles per hour.
I waited for Captain Nemo. But he
didn't appear. The clock marked the hour of five.
Ned Land and Conseil returned to
their cabin. As for me, I repaired to my stateroom. There I found dinner ready
for me. It consisted of turtle soup made from the daintiest hawksbill, a red
mullet with white, slightly flaky flesh, whose liver, when separately prepared,
makes delicious eating, plus loin of imperial angelfish, whose flavor struck me
as even better than salmon.
I spent the evening in reading,
writing, and thinking. Then drowsiness overtook me, I stretched out on my
eelgrass mattress, and I fell into a deep slumber, while the Nautilus glided
through the swiftly flowing Black Current.
THE NEXT DAY, November 9, I woke
up only after a long, twelve-hour slumber. Conseil, a creature of habit, came
to ask "how master's night went," and to offer his services. He had
left his Canadian friend sleeping like a man who had never done anything else.
I let the gallant lad babble as
he pleased, without giving him much in the way of a reply. I was concerned
about Captain Nemo's absence during our session the previous afternoon, and I
hoped to see him again today.
Soon I had put on my clothes,
which were woven from strands of seashell tissue. More than once their
composition provoked comments from Conseil. I informed him that they were made
from the smooth, silken filaments with which the fan mussel, a type of seashell
quite abundant along Mediterranean beaches, attaches itself to rocks. In olden
times, fine fabrics, stockings, and gloves were made from such filaments,
because they were both very soft and very warm. So the Nautilus's crew could
dress themselves at little cost, without needing a thing from cotton growers,
sheep, or silkworms on shore.
As soon as I was dressed, I made
my way to the main lounge. It was deserted.
I dove into studying the
conchological treasures amassed inside the glass cases. I also investigated the
huge plant albums that were filled with the rarest marine herbs, which,
although they were pressed and dried, still kept their wonderful colors. Among
these valuable water plants, I noted various seaweed: some Cladostephus
verticillatus, peacock's tails, fig-leafed caulerpa, grain-bearing beauty
bushes, delicate rosetangle tinted scarlet, sea colander arranged into fan
shapes, mermaid's cups that looked like the caps of squat mushrooms and for
years had been classified among the zoophytes; in short, a complete series of
algae.
The entire day passed without my
being honored by a visit from Captain Nemo. The panels in the lounge didn't
open. Perhaps they didn't want us to get tired of these beautiful things.
The Nautilus kept to an
east-northeasterly heading, a speed of twelve miles per hour, and a depth
between fifty and sixty meters.
Next day, November 10: the same
neglect, the same solitude. I didn't see a soul from the crew. Ned and Conseil
spent the better part of the day with me. They were astonished at the captain's
inexplicable absence. Was this eccentric man ill? Did he want to change his
plans concerning us?
But after all, as Conseil noted,
we enjoyed complete freedom, we were daintily and abundantly fed. Our host had
kept to the terms of his agreement. We couldn't complain, and moreover the very
uniqueness of our situation had such generous rewards in store for us, we had
no grounds for criticism.
That day I started my diary of
these adventures, which has enabled me to narrate them with the most scrupulous
accuracy; and one odd detail: I wrote it on paper manufactured from marine
eelgrass.
Early in the morning on November
11, fresh air poured through the Nautilus's interior, informing me that we had
returned to the surface of the ocean to renew our oxygen supply. I headed for
the central companionway and climbed onto the platform.
It was six o'clock. I found the
weather overcast, the sea gray but calm. Hardly a billow. I hoped to encounter
Captain Nemo there--would he come? I saw only the helmsman imprisoned in his
glass-windowed pilothouse. Seated on the ledge furnished by the hull of the skiff,
I inhaled the sea's salty aroma with great pleasure.
Little by little, the mists were
dispersed under the action of the sun's rays. The radiant orb cleared the
eastern horizon. Under its gaze, the sea caught on fire like a trail of
gunpowder. Scattered on high, the clouds were colored in bright, wonderfully
shaded hues, and numerous "ladyfingers" warned of daylong winds.*
*Author's Note:
"Ladyfingers" are small, thin, white clouds with ragged edges.
But what were mere winds to this Nautilus,
which no storms could intimidate!
So I was marveling at this
delightful sunrise, so life-giving and cheerful, when I heard someone climbing
onto the platform.
I was prepared to greet Captain
Nemo, but it was his chief officer who appeared--whom I had already met during
our first visit with the captain. He advanced over the platform, not seeming to
notice my presence. A powerful spyglass to his eye, he scrutinized every point
of the horizon with the utmost care. Then, his examination over, he approached
the hatch and pronounced a phrase whose exact wording follows below. I remember
it because, every morning, it was repeated under the same circumstances. It ran
like this:
"Nautron respoc lorni
virch."
What it meant I was unable to
say.
These words pronounced, the chief
officer went below again. I thought the Nautilus was about to resume its
underwater navigating. So I went down the hatch and back through the gangways
to my stateroom.
Five days passed in this way with
no change in our situation. Every morning I climbed onto the platform. The same
phrase was pronounced by the same individual. Captain Nemo did not appear.
I was pursuing the policy that we
had seen the last of him, when on November 16, while reentering my stateroom
with Ned and Conseil, I found a note addressed to me on the table.
I opened it impatiently. It was
written in a script that was clear and neat but a bit "Old English"
in style, its characters reminding me of German calligraphy.
The note was worded as follows:
Professor Aronnax
Aboard the Nautilus
November 16, 1867
Captain Nemo invites Professor
Aronnax on a hunting trip that will take place tomorrow morning in his Crespo
Island forests. He hopes nothing will prevent the professor from attending, and
he looks forward with pleasure to the professor's companions joining him.
CAPTAIN NEMO,
Commander of the Nautilus.
"A hunting trip!" Ned
exclaimed.
"And in his forests on
Crespo Island!" Conseil added.
"But does this mean the old
boy goes ashore?" Ned Land went on.
"That seems to be the gist
of it," I said, rereading the letter.
"Well, we've got to
accept!" the Canadian answered. "Once we're on solid ground, we'll
figure out a course of action. Besides, it wouldn't pain me to eat a couple
slices of fresh venison!"
Without trying to reconcile the
contradictions between Captain Nemo's professed horror of continents or islands
and his invitation to go hunting in a forest, I was content to reply:
"First let's look into this
Crespo Island."
I consulted the world map; and in
latitude 32 degrees 40' north and longitude 167 degrees 50' west, I found an
islet that had been discovered in 1801 by Captain Crespo, which old Spanish
charts called Rocca de la Plata, in other words, "Silver Rock." So we
were about 1,800 miles from our starting point, and by a slight change of
heading, the Nautilus was bringing us back toward the southeast.
I showed my companions this
small, stray rock in the middle of the north Pacific.
"If Captain Nemo does
sometimes go ashore," I told them, "at least he only picks desert
islands!"
Ned Land shook his head without
replying; then he and Conseil left me. After supper was served me by the mute
and emotionless steward, I fell asleep; but not without some anxieties.
When I woke up the next day,
November 17, I sensed that the Nautilus was completely motionless. I dressed
hurriedly and entered the main lounge.
Captain Nemo was there waiting
for me. He stood up, bowed, and asked if it suited me to come along.
Since he made no allusion to his absence
the past eight days, I also refrained from mentioning it, and I simply answered
that my companions and I were ready to go with him.
"Only, sir," I added,
"I'll take the liberty of addressing a question to you."
"Address away, Professor
Aronnax, and if I'm able to answer, I will."
"Well then, captain, how is
it that you've severed all ties with the shore, yet you own forests on Crespo
Island?"
"Professor," the
captain answered me, "these forests of mine don't bask in the heat and
light of the sun. They aren't frequented by lions, tigers, panthers, or other
quadrupeds. They're known only to me. They grow only for me. These forests
aren't on land, they're actual underwater forests."
"Underwater forests!" I
exclaimed.
"Yes, professor."
"And you're offering to take
me to them?"
"Precisely."
"On foot?"
"Without getting your feet
wet."
"While hunting?"
"While hunting."
"Rifles in hand?"
"Rifles in hand."
I stared at the Nautilus's
commander with an air anything but flattering to the man.
"Assuredly," I said to
myself, "he's contracted some mental illness. He's had a fit that's lasted
eight days and isn't over even yet. What a shame! I liked him better eccentric
than insane!"
These thoughts were clearly
readable on my face; but Captain Nemo remained content with inviting me to
follow him, and I did so like a man resigned to the worst.
We arrived at the dining room,
where we found breakfast served.
"Professor Aronnax,"
the captain told me, "I beg you to share my breakfast without formality.
We can chat while we eat. Because, although I promised you a stroll in my
forests, I made no pledge to arrange for your encountering a restaurant there.
Accordingly, eat your breakfast like a man who'll probably eat dinner only when
it's extremely late."
I did justice to this meal. It
was made up of various fish and some slices of sea cucumber, that praiseworthy
zoophyte, all garnished with such highly appetizing seaweed as the Porphyra
laciniata and the Laurencia primafetida. Our beverage consisted of clear water
to which, following the captain's example, I added some drops of a fermented
liquor extracted by the Kamchatka process from the seaweed known by name as
Rhodymenia palmata.
At first Captain Nemo ate without
pronouncing a single word. Then he told me:
"Professor, when I proposed
that you go hunting in my Crespo forests, you thought I was contradicting
myself. When I informed you that it was an issue of underwater forests, you
thought I'd gone insane. Professor, you must never make snap judgments about
your fellow man."
"But, captain, believe
me--"
"Kindly listen to me, and
you'll see if you have grounds for accusing me of insanity or
self-contradiction."
"I'm all attention."
"Professor, you know as well
as I do that a man can live underwater so long as he carries with him his own
supply of breathable air. For underwater work projects, the workman wears a
waterproof suit with his head imprisoned in a metal capsule, while he receives
air from above by means of force pumps and flow regulators."
"That's the standard
equipment for a diving suit," I said.
"Correct, but under such
conditions the man has no freedom. He's attached to a pump that sends him air
through an india-rubber hose; it's an actual chain that fetters him to the
shore, and if we were to be bound in this way to the Nautilus, we couldn't go
far either."
"Then how do you break
free?" I asked.
"We use the
Rouquayrol-Denayrouze device, invented by two of your fellow countrymen but refined
by me for my own special uses, thereby enabling you to risk these new
physiological conditions without suffering any organic disorders. It consists
of a tank built from heavy sheet iron in which I store air under a pressure of
fifty atmospheres. This tank is fastened to the back by means of straps, like a
soldier's knapsack. Its top part forms a box where the air is regulated by a
bellows mechanism and can be released only at its proper tension. In the
Rouquayrol device that has been in general use, two india-rubber hoses leave
this box and feed to a kind of tent that imprisons the operator's nose and
mouth; one hose is for the entrance of air to be inhaled, the other for the
exit of air to be exhaled, and the tongue closes off the former or the latter
depending on the breather's needs. But in my case, since I face considerable
pressures at the bottom of the sea, I needed to enclose my head in a copper
sphere, like those found on standard diving suits, and the two hoses for
inhalation and exhalation now feed to that sphere."
"That's perfect, Captain
Nemo, but the air you carry must be quickly depleted; and once it contains no
more than 15% oxygen, it becomes unfit for breathing."
"Surely, but as I told you,
Professor Aronnax, the Nautilus's pumps enable me to store air under
considerable pressure, and given this circumstance, the tank on my diving
equipment can supply breathable air for nine or ten hours."
"I've no more objections to
raise," I replied. "I'll only ask you, captain: how can you light your
way at the bottom of the ocean?"
"With the Ruhmkorff device,
Professor Aronnax. If the first is carried on the back, the second is fastened
to the belt. It consists of a Bunsen battery that I activate not with potassium
dichromate but with sodium. An induction coil gathers the electricity generated
and directs it to a specially designed lantern. In this lantern one finds a
glass spiral that contains only a residue of carbon dioxide gas. When the
device is operating, this gas becomes luminous and gives off a continuous
whitish light. Thus provided for, I breathe and I see."
"Captain Nemo, to my every
objection you give such crushing answers, I'm afraid to entertain a single
doubt. However, though I have no choice but to accept both the Rouquayrol and
Ruhmkorff devices, I'd like to register some reservations about the rifle with
which you'll equip me."
"But it isn't a rifle that
uses gunpowder," the captain replied.
"Then it's an air gun?"
"Surely. How can I make
gunpowder on my ship when I have no saltpeter, sulfur, or charcoal?"
"Even so," I replied,
"to fire underwater in a medium that's 855 times denser than air, you'd
have to overcome considerable resistance."
"That doesn't necessarily
follow. There are certain Fulton-style guns perfected by the Englishmen
Philippe-Coles and Burley, the Frenchman Furcy, and the Italian Landi; they're
equipped with a special system of airtight fastenings and can fire in
underwater conditions. But I repeat: having no gunpowder, I've replaced it with
air at high pressure, which is abundantly supplied me by the Nautilus's
pumps."
"But this air must be
swiftly depleted."
"Well, in a pinch can't my
Rouquayrol tank supply me with more? All I have to do is draw it from an ad hoc
spigot.* Besides, Professor Aronnax, you'll see for yourself that during these
underwater hunting trips, we make no great expenditure of either air or
bullets."
*Latin: a spigot "just for
that purpose." Ed.
"But it seems to me that in
this semidarkness, amid this liquid that's so dense in comparison to the
atmosphere, a gunshot couldn't carry far and would prove fatal only with
difficulty!"
"On the contrary, sir, with
this rifle every shot is fatal; and as soon as the animal is hit, no matter how
lightly, it falls as if struck by lightning."
"Why?"
"Because this rifle doesn't
shoot ordinary bullets but little glass capsules invented by the Austrian
chemist Leniebroek, and I have a considerable supply of them. These glass
capsules are covered with a strip of steel and weighted with a lead base; they're
genuine little Leyden jars charged with high-voltage electricity. They go off
at the slightest impact, and the animal, no matter how strong, drops dead. I
might add that these capsules are no bigger than number 4 shot, and the chamber
of any ordinary rifle could hold ten of them."
"I'll quit debating," I
replied, getting up from the table. "And all that's left is for me to
shoulder my rifle. So where you go, I'll go."
Captain Nemo led me to the
Nautilus's stern, and passing by Ned and Conseil's cabin, I summoned my two
companions, who instantly followed us.
Then we arrived at a cell located
within easy access of the engine room; in this cell we were to get dressed for
our stroll.
THIS CELL, properly speaking, was
the Nautilus's arsenal and wardrobe. Hanging from its walls, a dozen diving
outfits were waiting for anybody who wanted to take a stroll.
After seeing these, Ned Land
exhibited an obvious distaste for the idea of putting one on.
"But my gallant Ned," I
told him, "the forests of Crespo Island are simply underwater
forests!"
"Oh great!" put in the
disappointed harpooner, watching his dreams of fresh meat fade away. "And
you, Professor Aronnax, are you going to stick yourself inside these
clothes?"
"It has to be, Mr.
Ned."
"Have it your way,
sir," the harpooner replied, shrugging his shoulders. "But speaking
for myself, I'll never get into those things unless they force me!"
"No one will force you, Mr.
Land," Captain Nemo said.
"And is Conseil going to risk
it?" Ned asked.
"Where master goes, I
go," Conseil replied.
At the captain's summons, two
crewmen came to help us put on these heavy, waterproof clothes, made from
seamless india rubber and expressly designed to bear considerable pressures.
They were like suits of armor that were both yielding and resistant, you might
say. These clothes consisted of jacket and pants. The pants ended in bulky
footwear adorned with heavy lead soles. The fabric of the jacket was reinforced
with copper mail that shielded the chest, protected it from the water's
pressure, and allowed the lungs to function freely; the sleeves ended in supple
gloves that didn't impede hand movements.
These perfected diving suits, it
was easy to see, were a far cry from such misshapen costumes as the cork
breastplates, leather jumpers, seagoing tunics, barrel helmets, etc., invented
and acclaimed in the 18th century.
Conseil and I were soon dressed
in these diving suits, as were Captain Nemo and one of his companions--a
herculean type who must have been prodigiously strong. All that remained was to
encase one's head in its metal sphere. But before proceeding with this
operation, I asked the captain for permission to examine the rifles set aside
for us.
One of the Nautilus's men
presented me with a streamlined rifle whose butt was boilerplate steel, hollow
inside, and of fairly large dimensions. This served as a tank for the
compressed air, which a trigger-operated valve could release into the metal
chamber. In a groove where the butt was heaviest, a cartridge clip held some
twenty electric bullets that, by means of a spring, automatically took their
places in the barrel of the rifle. As soon as one shot had been fired, another
was ready to go off.
"Captain Nemo," I said,
"this is an ideal, easy-to-use weapon. I ask only to put it to the test.
But how will we reach the bottom of the sea?"
"Right now, professor, the
Nautilus is aground in ten meters of water, and we've only to depart."
"But how will we set
out?"
"You'll see."
Captain Nemo inserted his cranium
into its spherical headgear. Conseil and I did the same, but not without
hearing the Canadian toss us a sarcastic "happy hunting." On top, the
suit ended in a collar of threaded copper onto which the metal helmet was
screwed. Three holes, protected by heavy glass, allowed us to see in any
direction with simply a turn of the head inside the sphere. Placed on our
backs, the Rouquayrol device went into operation as soon as it was in position,
and for my part, I could breathe with ease.
The Ruhmkorff lamp hanging from
my belt, my rifle in hand, I was ready to go forth. But in all honesty, while
imprisoned in these heavy clothes and nailed to the deck by my lead soles, it
was impossible for me to take a single step.
But this circumstance had been
foreseen, because I felt myself propelled into a little room adjoining the
wardrobe. Towed in the same way, my companions went with me. I heard a door
with watertight seals close after us, and we were surrounded by profound
darkness.
After some minutes a sharp
hissing reached my ears. I felt a distinct sensation of cold rising from my
feet to my chest. Apparently a stopcock inside the boat was letting in water
from outside, which overran us and soon filled up the room. Contrived in the
Nautilus's side, a second door then opened. We were lit by a subdued light. An
instant later our feet were treading the bottom of the sea.
And now, how can I convey the
impressions left on me by this stroll under the waters. Words are powerless to
describe such wonders! When even the painter's brush can't depict the effects
unique to the liquid element, how can the writer's pen hope to reproduce them?
Captain Nemo walked in front, and
his companion followed us a few steps to the rear. Conseil and I stayed next to
each other, as if daydreaming that through our metal carapaces, a little polite
conversation might still be possible! Already I no longer felt the bulkiness of
my clothes, footwear, and air tank, nor the weight of the heavy sphere inside
which my head was rattling like an almond in its shell. Once immersed in water,
all these objects lost a part of their weight equal to the weight of the liquid
they displaced, and thanks to this law of physics discovered by Archimedes, I
did just fine. I was no longer an inert mass, and I had, comparatively
speaking, great freedom of movement.
Lighting up the seafloor even
thirty feet beneath the surface of the ocean, the sun astonished me with its
power. The solar rays easily crossed this aqueous mass and dispersed its dark
colors. I could easily distinguish objects 100 meters away. Farther on, the
bottom was tinted with fine shades of ultramarine; then, off in the distance,
it turned blue and faded in the midst of a hazy darkness. Truly, this water
surrounding me was just a kind of air, denser than the atmosphere on land but
almost as transparent. Above me I could see the calm surface of the ocean.
We were walking on sand that was
fine-grained and smooth, not wrinkled like beach sand, which preserves the
impressions left by the waves. This dazzling carpet was a real mirror, throwing
back the sun's rays with startling intensity. The outcome: an immense vista of
reflections that penetrated every liquid molecule. Will anyone believe me if I
assert that at this thirty-foot depth, I could see as if it was broad daylight?
For a quarter of an hour, I trod
this blazing sand, which was strewn with tiny crumbs of seashell. Looming like
a long reef, the Nautilus's hull disappeared little by little, but when night
fell in the midst of the waters, the ship's beacon would surely facilitate our
return on board, since its rays carried with perfect distinctness. This effect
is difficult to understand for anyone who has never seen light beams so sharply
defined on shore. There the dust that saturates the air gives such rays the
appearance of a luminous fog; but above water as well as underwater, shafts of
electric light are transmitted with incomparable clarity.
Meanwhile we went ever onward,
and these vast plains of sand seemed endless. My hands parted liquid curtains
that closed again behind me, and my footprints faded swiftly under the water's
pressure.
Soon, scarcely blurred by their
distance from us, the forms of some objects took shape before my eyes. I
recognized the lower slopes of some magnificent rocks carpeted by the finest
zoophyte specimens, and right off, I was struck by an effect unique to this
medium.
By then it was ten o'clock in the
morning. The sun's rays hit the surface of the waves at a fairly oblique angle,
decomposing by refraction as though passing through a prism; and when this
light came in contact with flowers, rocks, buds, seashells, and polyps, the
edges of these objects were shaded with all seven hues of the solar spectrum.
This riot of rainbow tints was a wonder, a feast for the eyes: a genuine
kaleidoscope of red, green, yellow, orange, violet, indigo, and blue; in short,
the whole palette of a color-happy painter! If only I had been able to share
with Conseil the intense sensations rising in my brain, competing with him in
exclamations of wonderment! If only I had known, like Captain Nemo and his
companion, how to exchange thoughts by means of prearranged signals! So, for
lack of anything better, I talked to myself: I declaimed inside this copper box
that topped my head, spending more air on empty words than was perhaps
advisable.
Conseil, like me, had stopped
before this splendid sight. Obviously, in the presence of these zoophyte and
mollusk specimens, the fine lad was classifying his head off. Polyps and
echinoderms abounded on the seafloor: various isis coral, cornularian coral
living in isolation, tufts of virginal genus Oculina formerly known by the name
"white coral," prickly fungus coral in the shape of mushrooms, sea
anemone holding on by their muscular disks, providing a literal flowerbed
adorned by jellyfish from the genus Porpita wearing collars of azure tentacles,
and starfish that spangled the sand, including veinlike feather stars from the
genus Asterophyton that were like fine lace embroidered by the hands of water
nymphs, their festoons swaying to the faint undulations caused by our walking.
It filled me with real chagrin to crush underfoot the gleaming mollusk samples
that littered the seafloor by the thousands: concentric comb shells, hammer
shells, coquina (seashells that actually hop around), top-shell snails, red
helmet shells, angel-wing conchs, sea hares, and so many other exhibits from
this inexhaustible ocean. But we had to keep walking, and we went forward while
overhead there scudded schools of Portuguese men-of-war that let their
ultramarine tentacles drift in their wakes, medusas whose milky white or dainty
pink parasols were festooned with azure tassels and shaded us from the sun's
rays, plus jellyfish of the species Pelagia panopyra that, in the dark, would
have strewn our path with phosphorescent glimmers!
All these wonders I glimpsed in
the space of a quarter of a mile, barely pausing, following Captain Nemo whose
gestures kept beckoning me onward. Soon the nature of the seafloor changed. The
plains of sand were followed by a bed of that viscous slime Americans call
"ooze," which is composed exclusively of seashells rich in limestone
or silica. Then we crossed a prairie of algae, open-sea plants that the waters
hadn't yet torn loose, whose vegetation grew in wild profusion. Soft to the
foot, these densely textured lawns would have rivaled the most luxuriant
carpets woven by the hand of man. But while this greenery was sprawling under
our steps, it didn't neglect us overhead. The surface of the water was
crisscrossed by a floating arbor of marine plants belonging to that
superabundant algae family that numbers more than 2,000 known species. I saw
long ribbons of fucus drifting above me, some globular, others tubular:
Laurencia, Cladostephus with the slenderest foliage, Rhodymenia palmata
resembling the fan shapes of cactus. I observed that green-colored plants kept
closer to the surface of the sea, while reds occupied a medium depth, which
left blacks and browns in charge of designing gardens and flowerbeds in the
ocean's lower strata.
These algae are a genuine prodigy
of creation, one of the wonders of world flora. This family produces both the
biggest and smallest vegetables in the world. Because, just as 40,000
near-invisible buds have been counted in one five-square-millimeter space, so
also have fucus plants been gathered that were over 500 meters long!
We had been gone from the
Nautilus for about an hour and a half. It was almost noon. I spotted this fact
in the perpendicularity of the sun's rays, which were no longer refracted. The
magic of these solar colors disappeared little by little, with emerald and
sapphire shades vanishing from our surroundings altogether. We walked with
steady steps that rang on the seafloor with astonishing intensity. The tiniest
sounds were transmitted with a speed to which the ear is unaccustomed on shore.
In fact, water is a better conductor of sound than air, and under the waves
noises carry four times as fast.
Just then the seafloor began to
slope sharply downward. The light took on a uniform hue. We reached a depth of
100 meters, by which point we were undergoing a pressure of ten atmospheres.
But my diving clothes were built along such lines that I never suffered from
this pressure. I felt only a certain tightness in the joints of my fingers, and
even this discomfort soon disappeared. As for the exhaustion bound to accompany
a two-hour stroll in such unfamiliar trappings--it was nil. Helped by the
water, my movements were executed with startling ease.
Arriving at this 300-foot depth,
I still detected the sun's rays, but just barely. Their intense brilliance had
been followed by a reddish twilight, a midpoint between day and night. But we
could see well enough to find our way, and it still wasn't necessary to
activate the Ruhmkorff device.
Just then Captain Nemo stopped.
He waited until I joined him, then he pointed a finger at some dark masses
outlined in the shadows a short distance away.
"It's the forest of Crespo
Island," I thought; and I was not mistaken.
WE HAD FINALLY arrived on the
outskirts of this forest, surely one of the finest in Captain Nemo's immense
domains. He regarded it as his own and had laid the same claim to it that, in
the first days of the world, the first men had to their forests on land.
Besides, who else could dispute his ownership of this underwater property? What
other, bolder pioneer would come, ax in hand, to clear away its dark
underbrush?
This forest was made up of big
treelike plants, and when we entered beneath their huge arches, my eyes were
instantly struck by the unique arrangement of their branches--an arrangement
that I had never before encountered.
None of the weeds carpeting the
seafloor, none of the branches bristling from the shrubbery, crept, or leaned,
or stretched on a horizontal plane. They all rose right up toward the surface
of the ocean. Every filament or ribbon, no matter how thin, stood ramrod
straight. Fucus plants and creepers were growing in stiff perpendicular lines,
governed by the density of the element that generated them. After I parted them
with my hands, these otherwise motionless plants would shoot right back to
their original positions. It was the regime of verticality.
I soon grew accustomed to this
bizarre arrangement, likewise to the comparative darkness surrounding us. The
seafloor in this forest was strewn with sharp chunks of stone that were hard to
avoid. Here the range of underwater flora seemed pretty comprehensive to me, as
well as more abundant than it might have been in the arctic or tropical zones,
where such exhibits are less common. But for a few minutes I kept accidentally
confusing the two kingdoms, mistaking zoophytes for water plants, animals for
vegetables. And who hasn't made the same blunder? Flora and fauna are so
closely associated in the underwater world!
I observed that all these
exhibits from the vegetable kingdom were attached to the seafloor by only the
most makeshift methods. They had no roots and didn't care which solid objects
secured them, sand, shells, husks, or pebbles; they didn't ask their hosts for
sustenance, just a point of purchase. These plants are entirely
self-propagating, and the principle of their existence lies in the water that
sustains and nourishes them. In place of leaves, most of them sprouted blades
of unpredictable shape, which were confined to a narrow gamut of colors
consisting only of pink, crimson, green, olive, tan, and brown. There I saw
again, but not yet pressed and dried like the Nautilus's specimens, some
peacock's tails spread open like fans to stir up a cooling breeze, scarlet
rosetangle, sea tangle stretching out their young and edible shoots, twisting
strings of kelp from the genus Nereocystis that bloomed to a height of fifteen
meters, bouquets of mermaid's cups whose stems grew wider at the top, and a
number of other open-sea plants, all without flowers. "It's an odd anomaly
in this bizarre element!" as one witty naturalist puts it. "The
animal kingdom blossoms, and the vegetable kingdom doesn't!"
These various types of shrubbery
were as big as trees in the temperate zones; in the damp shade between them,
there were clustered actual bushes of moving flowers, hedges of zoophytes in
which there grew stony coral striped with twisting furrows, yellowish sea
anemone from the genus Caryophylia with translucent tentacles, plus anemone
with grassy tufts from the genus Zoantharia; and to complete the illusion,
minnows flitted from branch to branch like a swarm of hummingbirds, while there
rose underfoot, like a covey of snipe, yellow fish from the genus Lepisocanthus
with bristling jaws and sharp scales, flying gurnards, and pinecone fish.
Near one o'clock, Captain Nemo
gave the signal to halt. Speaking for myself, I was glad to oblige, and we
stretched out beneath an arbor of winged kelp, whose long thin tendrils stood
up like arrows.
This short break was a delight.
It lacked only the charm of conversation. But it was impossible to speak,
impossible to reply. I simply nudged my big copper headpiece against Conseil's
headpiece. I saw a happy gleam in the gallant lad's eyes, and to communicate
his pleasure, he jiggled around inside his carapace in the world's silliest
way.
After four hours of strolling, I
was quite astonished not to feel any intense hunger. What kept my stomach in
such a good mood I'm unable to say. But, in exchange, I experienced that
irresistible desire for sleep that comes over every diver. Accordingly, my eyes
soon closed behind their heavy glass windows and I fell into an uncontrollable
doze, which until then I had been able to fight off only through the movements
of our walking. Captain Nemo and his muscular companion were already stretched
out in this clear crystal, setting us a fine naptime example.
How long I was sunk in this
torpor I cannot estimate; but when I awoke, it seemed as if the sun were
settling toward the horizon. Captain Nemo was already up, and I had started to
stretch my limbs, when an unexpected apparition brought me sharply to my feet.
A few paces away, a monstrous,
meter-high sea spider was staring at me with beady eyes, poised to spring at
me. Although my diving suit was heavy enough to protect me from this animal's
bites, I couldn't keep back a shudder of horror. Just then Conseil woke up,
together with the Nautilus's sailor. Captain Nemo alerted his companion to this
hideous crustacean, which a swing of the rifle butt quickly brought down, and I
watched the monster's horrible legs writhing in dreadful convulsions.
This encounter reminded me that
other, more daunting animals must be lurking in these dark reaches, and my
diving suit might not be adequate protection against their attacks. Such
thoughts hadn't previously crossed my mind, and I was determined to keep on my
guard. Meanwhile I had assumed this rest period would be the turning point in
our stroll, but I was mistaken; and instead of heading back to the Nautilus,
Captain Nemo continued his daring excursion.
The seafloor kept sinking, and
its significantly steeper slope took us to greater depths. It must have been
nearly three o'clock when we reached a narrow valley gouged between high,
vertical walls and located 150 meters down. Thanks to the perfection of our
equipment, we had thus gone ninety meters below the limit that nature had,
until then, set on man's underwater excursions.
I say 150 meters, although I had
no instruments for estimating this distance. But I knew that the sun's rays,
even in the clearest seas, could reach no deeper. So at precisely this point
the darkness became profound. Not a single object was visible past ten paces.
Consequently, I had begun to grope my way when suddenly I saw the glow of an
intense white light. Captain Nemo had just activated his electric device. His
companion did likewise. Conseil and I followed suit. By turning a switch, I
established contact between the induction coil and the glass spiral, and the
sea, lit up by our four lanterns, was illuminated for a radius of twenty-five
meters.
Captain Nemo continued to plummet
into the dark depths of this forest, whose shrubbery grew ever more sparse. I
observed that vegetable life was disappearing more quickly than animal life.
The open-sea plants had already left behind the increasingly arid seafloor,
where a prodigious number of animals were still swarming: zoophytes, articulates,
mollusks, and fish.
While we were walking, I thought
the lights of our Ruhmkorff devices would automatically attract some
inhabitants of these dark strata. But if they did approach us, at least they
kept at a distance regrettable from the hunter's standpoint. Several times I
saw Captain Nemo stop and take aim with his rifle; then, after sighting down
its barrel for a few seconds, he would straighten up and resume his walk.
Finally, at around four o'clock,
this marvelous excursion came to an end. A wall of superb rocks stood before
us, imposing in its sheer mass: a pile of gigantic stone blocks, an enormous
granite cliffside pitted with dark caves but not offering a single gradient we
could climb up. This was the underpinning of Crespo Island. This was land.
The captain stopped suddenly. A
gesture from him brought us to a halt, and however much I wanted to clear this
wall, I had to stop. Here ended the domains of Captain Nemo. He had no desire
to pass beyond them. Farther on lay a part of the globe he would no longer
tread underfoot.
Our return journey began. Captain
Nemo resumed the lead in our little band, always heading forward without
hesitation. I noted that we didn't follow the same path in returning to the
Nautilus. This new route, very steep and hence very arduous, quickly took us
close to the surface of the sea. But this return to the upper strata wasn't so
sudden that decompression took place too quickly, which could have led to
serious organic disorders and given us those internal injuries so fatal to
divers. With great promptness, the light reappeared and grew stronger; and the
refraction of the sun, already low on the horizon, again ringed the edges of
various objects with the entire color spectrum.
At a depth of ten meters, we
walked amid a swarm of small fish from every species, more numerous than birds
in the air, more agile too; but no aquatic game worthy of a gunshot had yet
been offered to our eyes.
Just then I saw the captain's
weapon spring to his shoulder and track a moving object through the bushes. A
shot went off, I heard a faint hissing, and an animal dropped a few paces away,
literally struck by lightning.
It was a magnificent sea otter
from the genus Enhydra, the only exclusively marine quadruped. One and a half
meters long, this otter had to be worth a good high price. Its coat, chestnut
brown above and silver below, would have made one of those wonderful fur pieces
so much in demand in the Russian and Chinese markets; the fineness and luster
of its pelt guaranteed that it would go for at least 2,000 francs. I was full
of wonderment at this unusual mammal, with its circular head adorned by short
ears, its round eyes, its white whiskers like those on a cat, its webbed and
clawed feet, its bushy tail. Hunted and trapped by fishermen, this valuable
carnivore has become extremely rare, and it takes refuge chiefly in the
northernmost parts of the Pacific, where in all likelihood its species will
soon be facing extinction.
Captain Nemo's companion picked
up the animal, loaded it on his shoulder, and we took to the trail again.
For an hour plains of sand
unrolled before our steps. Often the seafloor rose to within two meters of the
surface of the water. I could then see our images clearly mirrored on the
underside of the waves, but reflected upside down: above us there appeared an
identical band that duplicated our every movement and gesture; in short, a
perfect likeness of the quartet near which it walked, but with heads down and
feet in the air.
Another unusual effect. Heavy clouds
passed above us, forming and fading swiftly. But after thinking it over, I
realized that these so-called clouds were caused simply by the changing
densities of the long ground swells, and I even spotted the foaming "white
caps" that their breaking crests were proliferating over the surface of
the water. Lastly, I couldn't help seeing the actual shadows of large birds
passing over our heads, swiftly skimming the surface of the sea.
On this occasion I witnessed one
of the finest gunshots ever to thrill the marrow of a hunter. A large bird with
a wide wingspan, quite clearly visible, approached and hovered over us. When it
was just a few meters above the waves, Captain Nemo's companion took aim and
fired. The animal dropped, electrocuted, and its descent brought it within
reach of our adroit hunter, who promptly took possession of it. It was an
albatross of the finest species, a wonderful specimen of these open-sea fowl.
This incident did not interrupt
our walk. For two hours we were sometimes led over plains of sand, sometimes
over prairies of seaweed that were quite arduous to cross. In all honesty, I
was dead tired by the time I spotted a hazy glow half a mile away, cutting
through the darkness of the waters. It was the Nautilus's beacon. Within twenty
minutes we would be on board, and there I could breathe easy again--because my
tank's current air supply seemed to be quite low in oxygen. But I was reckoning
without an encounter that slightly delayed our arrival.
I was lagging behind some twenty
paces when I saw Captain Nemo suddenly come back toward me. With his powerful
hands he sent me buckling to the ground, while his companion did the same to
Conseil. At first I didn't know what to make of this sudden assault, but I was
reassured to observe the captain lying motionless beside me.
I was stretched out on the
seafloor directly beneath some bushes of algae, when I raised my head and spied
two enormous masses hurtling by, throwing off phosphorescent glimmers.
My blood turned cold in my veins!
I saw that we were under threat from a fearsome pair of sharks. They were blue
sharks, dreadful man-eaters with enormous tails, dull, glassy stares, and
phosphorescent matter oozing from holes around their snouts. They were like
monstrous fireflies that could thoroughly pulverize a man in their iron jaws! I
don't know if Conseil was busy with their classification, but as for me, I
looked at their silver bellies, their fearsome mouths bristling with teeth,
from a viewpoint less than scientific-- more as a victim than as a professor of
natural history.
Luckily these voracious animals
have poor eyesight. They went by without noticing us, grazing us with their
brownish fins; and miraculously, we escaped a danger greater than encountering
a tiger deep in the jungle.
Half an hour later, guided by its
electric trail, we reached the Nautilus. The outside door had been left open,
and Captain Nemo closed it after we reentered the first cell. Then he pressed a
button. I heard pumps operating within the ship, I felt the water lowering
around me, and in a few moments the cell was completely empty. The inside door
opened, and we passed into the wardrobe.
There our diving suits were
removed, not without difficulty; and utterly exhausted, faint from lack of food
and rest, I repaired to my stateroom, full of wonder at this startling
excursion on the bottom of the sea.
BY THE NEXT MORNING, November 18,
I was fully recovered from my exhaustion of the day before, and I climbed onto
the platform just as the Nautilus's chief officer was pronouncing his daily
phrase. It then occurred to me that these words either referred to the state of
the sea, or that they meant: "There's nothing in sight."
And in truth, the ocean was
deserted. Not a sail on the horizon. The tips of Crespo Island had disappeared
during the night. The sea, absorbing every color of the prism except its blue
rays, reflected the latter in every direction and sported a wonderful indigo
tint. The undulating waves regularly took on the appearance of watered silk
with wide stripes.
I was marveling at this
magnificent ocean view when Captain Nemo appeared. He didn't seem to notice my
presence and began a series of astronomical observations. Then, his operations
finished, he went and leaned his elbows on the beacon housing, his eyes
straying over the surface of the ocean.
Meanwhile some twenty of the
Nautilus's sailors--all energetic, well-built fellows--climbed onto the
platform. They had come to pull up the nets left in our wake during the night.
These seamen obviously belonged to different nationalities, although
indications of European physical traits could be seen in them all. If I'm not
mistaken, I recognized some Irishmen, some Frenchmen, a few Slavs, and a native
of either Greece or Crete. Even so, these men were frugal of speech and used
among themselves only that bizarre dialect whose origin I couldn't even guess.
So I had to give up any notions of questioning them.
The nets were hauled on board.
They were a breed of trawl resembling those used off the Normandy coast, huge
pouches held half open by a floating pole and a chain laced through the lower
meshes. Trailing in this way from these iron glove makers, the resulting
receptacles scoured the ocean floor and collected every marine exhibit in their
path. That day they gathered up some unusual specimens from these fish-filled
waterways: anglerfish whose comical movements qualify them for the epithet
"clowns," black Commerson anglers equipped with their antennas,
undulating triggerfish encircled by little red bands, bloated puffers whose
venom is extremely insidious, some olive-hued lampreys, snipefish covered with
silver scales, cutlass fish whose electrocuting power equals that of the
electric eel and the electric ray, scaly featherbacks with brown crosswise
bands, greenish codfish, several varieties of goby, etc.; finally, some fish of
larger proportions: a one-meter jack with a prominent head, several fine bonito
from the genus Scomber decked out in the colors blue and silver, and three
magnificent tuna whose high speeds couldn't save them from our trawl.
I estimate that this cast of the
net brought in more than 1,000 pounds of fish. It was a fine catch but not
surprising. In essence, these nets stayed in our wake for several hours,
incarcerating an entire aquatic world in prisons made of thread. So we were
never lacking in provisions of the highest quality, which the Nautilus's speed
and the allure of its electric light could continually replenish.
These various exhibits from the
sea were immediately lowered down the hatch in the direction of the storage
lockers, some to be eaten fresh, others to be preserved.
After its fishing was finished
and its air supply renewed, I thought the Nautilus would resume its underwater
excursion, and I was getting ready to return to my stateroom, when Captain Nemo
turned to me and said without further preamble:
"Look at this ocean,
professor! Doesn't it have the actual gift of life? Doesn't it experience both
anger and affection? Last evening it went to sleep just as we did, and there it
is, waking up after a peaceful night!"
No hellos or good mornings for
this gent! You would have thought this eccentric individual was simply
continuing a conversation we'd already started!
"See!" he went on.
"It's waking up under the sun's caresses! It's going to relive its daily
existence! What a fascinating field of study lies in watching the play of its
organism. It owns a pulse and arteries, it has spasms, and I side with the
scholarly Commander Maury, who discovered that it has a circulation as real as
the circulation of blood in animals."
I'm sure that Captain Nemo
expected no replies from me, and it seemed pointless to pitch in with "Ah
yes," "Exactly," or "How right you are!" Rather, he
was simply talking to himself, with long pauses between sentences. He was
meditating out loud.
"Yes," he said,
"the ocean owns a genuine circulation, and to start it going, the Creator
of All Things has only to increase its heat, salt, and microscopic animal life.
In essence, heat creates the different densities that lead to currents and
countercurrents. Evaporation, which is nil in the High Arctic regions and very
active in equatorial zones, brings about a constant interchange of tropical and
polar waters. What's more, I've detected those falling and rising currents that
make up the ocean's true breathing. I've seen a molecule of salt water heat up
at the surface, sink into the depths, reach maximum density at -2 degrees
centigrade, then cool off, grow lighter, and rise again. At the poles you'll
see the consequences of this phenomenon, and through this law of farseeing
nature, you'll understand why water can freeze only at the surface!"
As the captain was finishing his
sentence, I said to myself: "The pole! Is this brazen individual claiming
he'll take us even to that location?"
Meanwhile the captain fell silent
and stared at the element he had studied so thoroughly and unceasingly. Then,
going on:
"Salts," he said,
"fill the sea in considerable quantities, professor, and if you removed
all its dissolved saline content, you'd create a mass measuring 4,500,000 cubic
leagues, which if it were spread all over the globe, would form a layer more
than ten meters high. And don't think that the presence of these salts is due
merely to some whim of nature. No. They make ocean water less open to
evaporation and prevent winds from carrying off excessive amounts of steam,
which, when condensing, would submerge the temperate zones. Salts play a
leading role, the role of stabilizer for the general ecology of the
globe!"
Captain Nemo stopped,
straightened up, took a few steps along the platform, and returned to me:
"As for those billions of
tiny animals," he went on, "those infusoria that live by the millions
in one droplet of water, 800,000 of which are needed to weigh one milligram,
their role is no less important. They absorb the marine salts, they assimilate
the solid elements in the water, and since they create coral and madrepores,
they're the true builders of limestone continents! And so, after they've
finished depriving our water drop of its mineral nutrients, the droplet gets
lighter, rises to the surface, there absorbs more salts left behind through
evaporation, gets heavier, sinks again, and brings those tiny animals new
elements to absorb. The outcome: a double current, rising and falling, constant
movement, constant life! More intense than on land, more abundant, more
infinite, such life blooms in every part of this ocean, an element fatal to
man, they say, but vital to myriads of animals--and to me!"
When Captain Nemo spoke in this
way, he was transfigured, and he filled me with extraordinary excitement.
"There," he added,
"out there lies true existence! And I can imagine the founding of nautical
towns, clusters of underwater households that, like the Nautilus, would return
to the surface of the sea to breathe each morning, free towns if ever there
were, independent cities! Then again, who knows whether some tyrant . . ."
Captain Nemo finished his
sentence with a vehement gesture. Then, addressing me directly, as if to drive
away an ugly thought:
"Professor Aronnax," he
asked me, "do you know the depth of the ocean floor?"
"At least, captain, I know
what the major soundings tell us."
"Could you quote them to me,
so I can double-check them as the need arises?"
"Here," I replied,
"are a few of them that stick in my memory. If I'm not mistaken, an
average depth of 8,200 meters was found in the north Atlantic, and 2,500 meters
in the Mediterranean. The most remarkable soundings were taken in the south
Atlantic near the 35th parallel, and they gave 12,000 meters, 14,091 meters,
and 15,149 meters. All in all, it's estimated that if the sea bottom were made
level, its average depth would be about seven kilometers."
"Well, professor,"
Captain Nemo replied, "we'll show you better than that, I hope. As for the
average depth of this part of the Pacific, I'll inform you that it's a mere
4,000 meters."
This said, Captain Nemo headed to
the hatch and disappeared down the ladder. I followed him and went back to the
main lounge. The propeller was instantly set in motion, and the log gave our
speed as twenty miles per hour.
Over the ensuing days and weeks,
Captain Nemo was very frugal with his visits. I saw him only at rare intervals.
His chief officer regularly fixed the positions I found reported on the chart,
and in such a way that I could exactly plot the Nautilus's course.
Conseil and Land spent the long
hours with me. Conseil had told his friend about the wonders of our undersea
stroll, and the Canadian was sorry he hadn't gone along. But I hoped an
opportunity would arise for a visit to the forests of Oceania.
Almost every day the panels in
the lounge were open for some hours, and our eyes never tired of probing the
mysteries of the underwater world.
The Nautilus's general heading
was southeast, and it stayed at a depth between 100 and 150 meters. However,
from lord-knows-what whim, one day it did a diagonal dive by means of its
slanting fins, reaching strata located 2,000 meters underwater. The thermometer
indicated a temperature of 4.25 degrees centigrade, which at this depth seemed
to be a temperature common to all latitudes.
On November 26, at three o'clock
in the morning, the Nautilus cleared the Tropic of Cancer at longitude 172
degrees. On the 27th it passed in sight of the Hawaiian Islands, where the
famous Captain Cook met his death on February 14, 1779. By then we had fared
4,860 leagues from our starting point. When I arrived on the platform that
morning, I saw the Island of Hawaii two miles to leeward, the largest of the
seven islands making up this group. I could clearly distinguish the tilled soil
on its outskirts, the various mountain chains running parallel with its
coastline, and its volcanoes, crowned by Mauna Kea, whose elevation is 5,000
meters above sea level. Among other specimens from these waterways, our nets
brought up some peacock-tailed flabellarian coral, polyps flattened into
stylish shapes and unique to this part of the ocean.
The Nautilus kept to its
southeasterly heading. On December 1 it cut the equator at longitude 142
degrees, and on the 4th of the same month, after a quick crossing marked by no
incident, we raised the Marquesas Islands. Three miles off, in latitude 8 degrees
57' south and longitude 139 degrees 32' west, I spotted Martin Point on Nuku
Hiva, chief member of this island group that belongs to France. I could make
out only its wooded mountains on the horizon, because Captain Nemo hated to hug
shore. There our nets brought up some fine fish samples: dolphinfish with azure
fins, gold tails, and flesh that's unrivaled in the entire world, wrasse from
the genus Hologymnosus that were nearly denuded of scales but exquisite in
flavor, knifejaws with bony beaks, yellowish albacore that were as tasty as
bonito, all fish worth classifying in the ship's pantry.
After leaving these delightful
islands to the protection of the French flag, the Nautilus covered about 2,000
miles from December 4 to the 11th. Its navigating was marked by an encounter
with an immense school of squid, unusual mollusks that are near neighbors of
the cuttlefish. French fishermen give them the name "cuckoldfish,"
and they belong to the class Cephalopoda, family Dibranchiata, consisting of themselves
together with cuttlefish and argonauts. The naturalists of antiquity made a
special study of them, and these animals furnished many ribald figures of
speech for soapbox orators in the Greek marketplace, as well as excellent
dishes for the tables of rich citizens, if we're to believe Athenaeus, a Greek
physician predating Galen.
It was during the night of
December 9-10 that the Nautilus encountered this army of distinctly nocturnal
mollusks. They numbered in the millions. They were migrating from the temperate
zones toward zones still warmer, following the itineraries of herring and
sardines. We stared at them through our thick glass windows: they swam backward
with tremendous speed, moving by means of their locomotive tubes, chasing fish
and mollusks, eating the little ones, eaten by the big ones, and tossing in
indescribable confusion the ten feet that nature has rooted in their heads like
a hairpiece of pneumatic snakes. Despite its speed, the Nautilus navigated for
several hours in the midst of this school of animals, and its nets brought up
an incalculable number, among which I recognized all nine species that
Professor Orbigny has classified as native to the Pacific Ocean.
During this crossing, the sea
continually lavished us with the most marvelous sights. Its variety was
infinite. It changed its setting and decor for the mere pleasure of our eyes,
and we were called upon not simply to contemplate the works of our Creator in
the midst of the liquid element, but also to probe the ocean's most daunting mysteries.
During the day of December 11, I
was busy reading in the main lounge. Ned Land and Conseil were observing the
luminous waters through the gaping panels. The Nautilus was motionless. Its
ballast tanks full, it was sitting at a depth of 1,000 meters in a
comparatively unpopulated region of the ocean where only larger fish put in
occasional appearances.
Just then I was studying a
delightful book by Jean Macé, The Servants of the Stomach, and savoring its
ingenious teachings, when Conseil interrupted my reading.
"Would master kindly come
here for an instant?" he said to me in an odd voice.
"What is it, Conseil?"
"It's something that master
should see."
I stood up, went, leaned on my
elbows before the window, and I saw it.
In the broad electric daylight,
an enormous black mass, quite motionless, hung suspended in the midst of the
waters. I observed it carefully, trying to find out the nature of this gigantic
cetacean. Then a sudden thought crossed my mind.
"A ship!" I exclaimed.
"Yes," the Canadian
replied, "a disabled craft that's sinking straight down!"
Ned Land was not mistaken. We
were in the presence of a ship whose severed shrouds still hung from their
clasps. Its hull looked in good condition, and it must have gone under only a
few hours before. The stumps of three masts, chopped off two feet above the
deck, indicated a flooding ship that had been forced to sacrifice its masting.
But it had heeled sideways, filling completely, and it was listing to port even
yet. A sorry sight, this carcass lost under the waves, but sorrier still was
the sight on its deck, where, lashed with ropes to prevent their being washed
overboard, some human corpses still lay! I counted four of them--four men, one
still standing at the helm-- then a woman, halfway out of a skylight on the
afterdeck, holding a child in her arms. This woman was young. Under the
brilliant lighting of the Nautilus's rays, I could make out her features, which
the water hadn't yet decomposed. With a supreme effort, she had lifted her
child above her head, and the poor little creature's arms were still twined
around its mother's neck! The postures of the four seamen seemed ghastly to me,
twisted from convulsive movements, as if making a last effort to break loose
from the ropes that bound them to their ship. And the helmsman, standing alone,
calmer, his face smooth and serious, his grizzled hair plastered to his brow,
his hands clutching the wheel, seemed even yet to be guiding his wrecked
three-master through the ocean depths!
What a scene! We stood
dumbstruck, hearts pounding, before this shipwreck caught in the act, as if it
had been photographed in its final moments, so to speak! And already I could
see enormous sharks moving in, eyes ablaze, drawn by the lure of human flesh!
Meanwhile, turning, the Nautilus
made a circle around the sinking ship, and for an instant I could read the
board on its stern:
The Florida
Sunderland, England
THIS DREADFUL SIGHT was the first
of a whole series of maritime catastrophes that the Nautilus would encounter on
its run. When it plied more heavily traveled seas, we often saw wrecked hulls
rotting in midwater, and farther down, cannons, shells, anchors, chains, and a
thousand other iron objects rusting away.
Meanwhile, continuously swept
along by the Nautilus, where we lived in near isolation, we raised the Tuamotu
Islands on December 11, that old "dangerous group" associated with
the French global navigator Commander Bougainville; it stretches from Ducie
Island to Lazareff Island over an area of 500 leagues from the east-southeast
to the west-northwest, between latitude 13 degrees 30' and 23 degrees 50'
south, and between longitude 125 degrees 30' and 151 degrees 30' west. This
island group covers a surface area of 370 square leagues, and it's made up of
some sixty subgroups, among which we noted the Gambier group, which is a French
protectorate. These islands are coral formations. Thanks to the work of polyps,
a slow but steady upheaval will someday connect these islands to each other.
Later on, this new island will be fused to its neighboring island groups, and a
fifth continent will stretch from New Zealand and New Caledonia as far as the
Marquesas Islands.
The day I expounded this theory
to Captain Nemo, he answered me coldly:
"The earth doesn't need new
continents, but new men!"
Sailors' luck led the Nautilus
straight to Reao Island, one of the most unusual in this group, which was
discovered in 1822 by Captain Bell aboard the Minerva. So I was able to study
the madreporic process that has created the islands in this ocean.
Madrepores, which one must guard
against confusing with precious coral, clothe their tissue in a limestone
crust, and their variations in structure have led my famous mentor Professor
Milne-Edwards to classify them into five divisions. The tiny microscopic
animals that secrete this polypary live by the billions in the depths of their
cells. Their limestone deposits build up into rocks, reefs, islets, islands. In
some places, they form atolls, a circular ring surrounding a lagoon or small
inner lake that gaps place in contact with the sea. Elsewhere, they take the
shape of barrier reefs, such as those that exist along the coasts of New
Caledonia and several of the Tuamotu Islands. In still other localities, such
as Réunion Island and the island of Mauritius, they build fringing reefs, high,
straight walls next to which the ocean's depth is considerable.
While cruising along only a few
cable lengths from the underpinning of Reao Island, I marveled at the gigantic
piece of work accomplished by these microscopic laborers. These walls were the
express achievements of madrepores known by the names fire coral, finger coral,
star coral, and stony coral. These polyps grow exclusively in the agitated
strata at the surface of the sea, and so it's in the upper reaches that they
begin these substructures, which sink little by little together with the
secreted rubble binding them. This, at least, is the theory of Mr. Charles
Darwin, who thus explains the formation of atolls--a theory superior, in my
view, to the one that says these madreporic edifices sit on the summits of
mountains or volcanoes submerged a few feet below sea level.
I could observe these strange
walls quite closely: our sounding lines indicated that they dropped
perpendicularly for more than 300 meters, and our electric beams made the
bright limestone positively sparkle.
In reply to a question Conseil
asked me about the growth rate of these colossal barriers, I thoroughly amazed
him by saying that scientists put it at an eighth of an inch per biennium.
"Therefore," he said to
me, "to build these walls, it took . . . ?"
"192,000 years, my gallant
Conseil, which significantly extends the biblical Days of Creation. What's
more, the formation of coal-- in other words, the petrification of forests
swallowed by floods-- and the cooling of basaltic rocks likewise call for a
much longer period of time. I might add that those 'days' in the Bible must
represent whole epochs and not literally the lapse of time between two
sunrises, because according to the Bible itself, the sun doesn't date from the
first day of Creation."
When the Nautilus returned to the
surface of the ocean, I could take in Reao Island over its whole flat, wooded
expanse. Obviously its madreporic rocks had been made fertile by tornadoes and
thunderstorms. One day, carried off by a hurricane from neighboring shores,
some seed fell onto these limestone beds, mixing with decomposed particles of
fish and marine plants to form vegetable humus. Propelled by the waves, a
coconut arrived on this new coast. Its germ took root. Its tree grew tall,
catching steam off the water. A brook was born. Little by little, vegetation
spread. Tiny animals--worms, insects--rode ashore on tree trunks snatched from
islands to windward. Turtles came to lay their eggs. Birds nested in the young
trees. In this way animal life developed, and drawn by the greenery and fertile
soil, man appeared. And that's how these islands were formed, the immense
achievement of microscopic animals.
Near evening Reao Island melted
into the distance, and the Nautilus noticeably changed course. After touching
the Tropic of Capricorn at longitude 135 degrees, it headed west-northwest,
going back up the whole intertropical zone. Although the summer sun lavished
its rays on us, we never suffered from the heat, because thirty or forty meters
underwater, the temperature didn't go over 10 degrees to 12 degrees centigrade.
By December 15 we had left the
alluring Society Islands in the west, likewise elegant Tahiti, queen of the
Pacific. In the morning I spotted this island's lofty summits a few miles to
leeward. Its waters supplied excellent fish for the tables on board: mackerel,
bonito, albacore, and a few varieties of that sea serpent named the moray eel.
The Nautilus had cleared 8,100
miles. We logged 9,720 miles when we passed between the Tonga Islands, where
crews from the Argo, Port-au-Prince, and Duke of Portland had perished, and the
island group of Samoa, scene of the slaying of Captain de Langle, friend of
that long-lost navigator, the Count de La Pérouse. Then we raised the Fiji
Islands, where savages slaughtered sailors from the Union, as well as Captain
Bureau, commander of the Darling Josephine out of Nantes, France.
Extending over an expanse of 100
leagues north to south, and over 90 leagues east to west, this island group
lies between latitude 2 degrees and 6 degrees south, and between longitude 174
degrees and 179 degrees west. It consists of a number of islands, islets, and
reefs, among which we noted the islands of Viti Levu, Vanua Levu, and Kadavu.
It was the Dutch navigator Tasman
who discovered this group in 1643, the same year the Italian physicist
Torricelli invented the barometer and King Louis XIV ascended the French
throne. I'll let the reader decide which of these deeds was more beneficial to
humanity. Coming later, Captain Cook in 1774, Rear Admiral d'Entrecasteaux in
1793, and finally Captain Dumont d'Urville in 1827, untangled the whole chaotic
geography of this island group. The Nautilus drew near Wailea Bay, an unlucky
place for England's Captain Dillon, who was the first to shed light on the
longstanding mystery surrounding the disappearance of ships under the Count de
La Pérouse.
This bay, repeatedly dredged,
furnished a huge supply of excellent oysters. As the Roman playwright Seneca
recommended, we opened them right at our table, then stuffed ourselves. These
mollusks belonged to the species known by name as Ostrea lamellosa, whose
members are quite common off Corsica. This Wailea oysterbank must have been
extensive, and for certain, if they hadn't been controlled by numerous natural
checks, these clusters of shellfish would have ended up jam-packing the bay,
since as many as 2,000,000 eggs have been counted in a single individual.
And if Mr. Ned Land did not
repent of his gluttony at our oyster fest, it's because oysters are the only
dish that never causes indigestion. In fact, it takes no less than sixteen
dozen of these headless mollusks to supply the 315 grams that satisfy one man's
minimum daily requirement for nitrogen.
On December 25 the Nautilus
navigated amid the island group of the New Hebrides, which the Portuguese
seafarer Queirós discovered in 1606, which Commander Bougainville explored in
1768, and to which Captain Cook gave its current name in 1773. This group is
chiefly made up of nine large islands and forms a 120-league strip from the
north-northwest to the south-southeast, lying between latitude 2 degrees and 15
degrees south, and between longitude 164 degrees and 168 degrees. At the moment
of our noon sights, we passed fairly close to the island of Aurou, which looked
to me like a mass of green woods crowned by a peak of great height.
That day it was yuletide, and it
struck me that Ned Land badly missed celebrating "Christmas," that
genuine family holiday where Protestants are such zealots.
I hadn't seen Captain Nemo for
over a week, when, on the morning of the 27th, he entered the main lounge, as
usual acting as if he'd been gone for just five minutes. I was busy tracing the
Nautilus's course on the world map. The captain approached, placed a finger
over a position on the chart, and pronounced just one word:
"Vanikoro."
This name was magic! It was the
name of those islets where vessels under the Count de La Pérouse had
miscarried. I straightened suddenly.
"The Nautilus is bringing us
to Vanikoro?" I asked.
"Yes, professor," the
captain replied.
"And I'll be able to visit
those famous islands where the Compass and the Astrolabe came to grief?"
"If you like,
professor."
"When will we reach
Vanikoro?"
"We already have,
professor."
Followed by Captain Nemo, I
climbed onto the platform, and from there my eyes eagerly scanned the horizon.
In the northeast there emerged
two volcanic islands of unequal size, surrounded by a coral reef whose circuit
measured forty miles. We were facing the island of Vanikoro proper, to which
Captain Dumont d'Urville had given the name "Island of the Search";
we lay right in front of the little harbor of Vana, located in latitude 16
degrees 4' south and longitude 164 degrees 32' east. Its shores seemed covered
with greenery from its beaches to its summits inland, crowned by Mt. Kapogo,
which is 476 fathoms high.
After clearing the outer belt of
rocks via a narrow passageway, the Nautilus lay inside the breakers where the
sea had a depth of thirty to forty fathoms. Under the green shade of some
tropical evergreens, I spotted a few savages who looked extremely startled at
our approach. In this long, blackish object advancing flush with the water,
didn't they see some fearsome cetacean that they were obliged to view with
distrust?
Just then Captain Nemo asked me
what I knew about the shipwreck of the Count de La Pérouse.
"What everybody knows,
captain," I answered him.
"And could you kindly tell
me what everybody knows?" he asked me in a gently ironic tone.
"Very easily."
I related to him what the final
deeds of Captain Dumont d'Urville had brought to light, deeds described here in
this heavily condensed summary of the whole matter.
In 1785 the Count de La Pérouse
and his subordinate, Captain de Langle, were sent by King Louis XVI of France
on a voyage to circumnavigate the globe. They boarded two sloops of war, the
Compass and the Astrolabe, which were never seen again.
In 1791, justly concerned about
the fate of these two sloops of war, the French government fitted out two large
cargo boats, the Search and the Hope, which left Brest on September 28 under
orders from Rear Admiral Bruni d'Entrecasteaux. Two months later, testimony
from a certain Commander Bowen, aboard the Albemarle, alleged that rubble from
shipwrecked vessels had been seen on the coast of New Georgia. But
d'Entrecasteaux was unaware of this news--which seemed a bit dubious
anyhow--and headed toward the Admiralty Islands, which had been named in a
report by one Captain Hunter as the site of the Count de La Pérouse's
shipwreck.
They looked in vain. The Hope and
the Search passed right by Vanikoro without stopping there; and overall, this
voyage was plagued by misfortune, ultimately costing the lives of Rear Admiral
d'Entrecasteaux, two of his subordinate officers, and several seamen from his
crew.
It was an old hand at the
Pacific, the English adventurer Captain Peter Dillon, who was the first to pick
up the trail left by castaways from the wrecked vessels. On May 15, 1824, his
ship, the St. Patrick, passed by Tikopia Island, one of the New Hebrides. There
a native boatman pulled alongside in a dugout canoe and sold Dillon a silver
sword hilt bearing the imprint of characters engraved with a cutting tool known
as a burin. Furthermore, this native boatman claimed that during a stay in
Vanikoro six years earlier, he had seen two Europeans belonging to ships that
had run aground on the island's reefs many years before.
Dillon guessed that the ships at
issue were those under the Count de La Pérouse, ships whose disappearance had
shaken the entire world. He tried to reach Vanikoro, where, according to the
native boatman, a good deal of rubble from the shipwreck could still be found,
but winds and currents prevented his doing so.
Dillon returned to Calcutta.
There he was able to interest the Asiatic Society and the East India Company in
his discovery. A ship named after the Search was placed at his disposal, and he
departed on January 23, 1827, accompanied by a French deputy.
This new Search, after putting in
at several stops over the Pacific, dropped anchor before Vanikoro on July 7,
1827, in the same harbor of Vana where the Nautilus was currently floating.
There Dillon collected many
relics of the shipwreck: iron utensils, anchors, eyelets from pulleys, swivel
guns, an eighteen-pound shell, the remains of some astronomical instruments, a
piece of sternrail, and a bronze bell bearing the inscription "Made by Bazin,"
the foundry mark at Brest Arsenal around 1785. There could no longer be any
doubt.
Finishing his investigations,
Dillon stayed at the site of the casualty until the month of October. Then he
left Vanikoro, headed toward New Zealand, dropped anchor at Calcutta on April
7, 1828, and returned to France, where he received a very cordial welcome from
King Charles X.
But just then the renowned French
explorer Captain Dumont d'Urville, unaware of Dillon's activities, had already
set sail to search elsewhere for the site of the shipwreck. In essence, a
whaling vessel had reported that some medals and a Cross of St. Louis had been
found in the hands of savages in the Louisiade Islands and New Caledonia.
So Captain Dumont d'Urville had
put to sea in command of a vessel named after the Astrolabe, and just two
months after Dillon had left Vanikoro, Dumont d'Urville dropped anchor before
Hobart. There he heard about Dillon's findings, and he further learned that a
certain James Hobbs, chief officer on the Union out of Calcutta, had put to
shore on an island located in latitude 8 degrees 18' south and longitude 156
degrees 30' east, and had noted the natives of those waterways making use of
iron bars and red fabrics.
Pretty perplexed, Dumont
d'Urville didn't know if he should give credence to these reports, which had
been carried in some of the less reliable newspapers; nevertheless, he decided
to start on Dillon's trail.
On February 10, 1828, the new
Astrolabe hove before Tikopia Island, took on a guide and interpreter in the
person of a deserter who had settled there, plied a course toward Vanikoro,
raised it on February 12, sailed along its reefs until the 14th, and only on
the 20th dropped anchor inside its barrier in the harbor of Vana.
On the 23rd, several officers
circled the island and brought back some rubble of little importance. The
natives, adopting a system of denial and evasion, refused to guide them to the
site of the casualty. This rather shady conduct aroused the suspicion that the
natives had mistreated the castaways; and in truth, the natives seemed afraid
that Dumont d'Urville had come to avenge the Count de La Pérouse and his
unfortunate companions.
But on the 26th, appeased with
gifts and seeing that they didn't need to fear any reprisals, the natives led
the chief officer, Mr. Jacquinot, to the site of the shipwreck.
At this location, in three or
four fathoms of water between the Paeu and Vana reefs, there lay some anchors, cannons,
and ingots of iron and lead, all caked with limestone concretions. A launch and
whaleboat from the new Astrolabe were steered to this locality, and after going
to exhausting lengths, their crews managed to dredge up an anchor weighing
1,800 pounds, a cast-iron eight-pounder cannon, a lead ingot, and two copper
swivel guns.
Questioning the natives, Captain
Dumont d'Urville also learned that after La Pérouse's two ships had miscarried
on the island's reefs, the count had built a smaller craft, only to go off and
miscarry a second time. Where? Nobody knew.
The commander of the new
Astrolabe then had a monument erected under a tuft of mangrove, in memory of
the famous navigator and his companions. It was a simple quadrangular pyramid,
set on a coral base, with no ironwork to tempt the natives' avarice.
Then Dumont d'Urville tried to
depart; but his crews were run down from the fevers raging on these unsanitary
shores, and quite ill himself, he was unable to weigh anchor until March 17.
Meanwhile, fearing that Dumont
d'Urville wasn't abreast of Dillon's activities, the French government sent a
sloop of war to Vanikoro, the Bayonnaise under Commander Legoarant de Tromelin,
who had been stationed on the American west coast. Dropping anchor before Vanikoro
a few months after the new Astrolabe's departure, the Bayonnaise didn't find
any additional evidence but verified that the savages hadn't disturbed the
memorial honoring the Count de La Pérouse.
This is the substance of the
account I gave Captain Nemo.
"So," he said to me,
"the castaways built a third ship on Vanikoro Island, and to this day,
nobody knows where it went and perished?"
"Nobody knows."
Captain Nemo didn't reply but
signaled me to follow him to the main lounge. The Nautilus sank a few meters
beneath the waves, and the panels opened.
I rushed to the window and saw
crusts of coral: fungus coral, siphonula coral, alcyon coral, sea anemone from
the genus Caryophylia, plus myriads of charming fish including greenfish,
damselfish, sweepers, snappers, and squirrelfish; underneath this coral
covering I detected some rubble the old dredges hadn't been able to tear free--
iron stirrups, anchors, cannons, shells, tackle from a capstan, a stempost, all
objects hailing from the wrecked ships and now carpeted in moving flowers.
And as I stared at this desolate
wreckage, Captain Nemo told me in a solemn voice:
"Commander La Pérouse set
out on December 7, 1785, with his ships, the Compass and the Astrolabe. He
dropped anchor first at Botany Bay, visited the Tonga Islands and New
Caledonia, headed toward the Santa Cruz Islands, and put in at Nomuka, one of
the islands in the Ha'apai group. Then his ships arrived at the unknown reefs
of Vanikoro. Traveling in the lead, the Compass ran afoul of breakers on the
southerly coast. The Astrolabe went to its rescue and also ran aground. The
first ship was destroyed almost immediately. The second, stranded to leeward,
held up for some days. The natives gave the castaways a fair enough welcome.
The latter took up residence on the island and built a smaller craft with
rubble from the two large ones. A few seamen stayed voluntarily in Vanikoro.
The others, weak and ailing, set sail with the Count de La Pérouse. They headed
to the Solomon Islands, and they perished with all hands on the westerly coast
of the chief island in that group, between Cape Deception and Cape
Satisfaction!"
"And how do you know all
this?" I exclaimed.
"Here's what I found at the
very site of that final shipwreck!"
Captain Nemo showed me a tin box,
stamped with the coat of arms of France and all corroded by salt water. He
opened it and I saw a bundle of papers, yellowed but still legible.
They were the actual military
orders given by France's Minister of the Navy to Commander La Pérouse, with notes
along the margin in the handwriting of King Louis XVI!
"Ah, what a splendid death
for a seaman!" Captain Nemo then said. "A coral grave is a tranquil
grave, and may Heaven grant that my companions and I rest in no other!"
DURING THE NIGHT of December
27-28, the Nautilus left the waterways of Vanikoro behind with extraordinary
speed. Its heading was southwesterly, and in three days it had cleared the 750
leagues that separated La Pérouse's islands from the southeastern tip of Papua.
On January 1, 1868, bright and
early, Conseil joined me on the platform.
"Will master," the
gallant lad said to me, "allow me to wish him a happy new year?"
"Good heavens, Conseil, it's
just like old times in my office at the Botanical Gardens in Paris! I accept
your kind wishes and I thank you for them. Only, I'd like to know what you mean
by a 'happy year' under the circumstances in which we're placed. Is it a year
that will bring our imprisonment to an end, or a year that will see this strange
voyage continue?"
"Ye gods," Conseil
replied, "I hardly know what to tell master. We're certainly seeing some
unusual things, and for two months we've had no time for boredom. The latest
wonder is always the most astonishing, and if this progression keeps up, I
can't imagine what its climax will be. In my opinion, we'll never again have
such an opportunity."
"Never, Conseil."
"Besides, Mr. Nemo really
lives up to his Latin name, since he couldn't be less in the way if he didn't
exist."
"True enough, Conseil."
"Therefore, with all due
respect to master, I think a 'happy year' would be a year that lets us see
everything--"
"Everything, Conseil? No
year could be that long. But what does Ned Land think about all this?"
"Ned Land's thoughts are exactly
the opposite of mine," Conseil replied. "He has a practical mind and
a demanding stomach. He's tired of staring at fish and eating them day in and
day out. This shortage of wine, bread, and meat isn't suitable for an
upstanding Anglo-Saxon, a man accustomed to beefsteak and unfazed by regular
doses of brandy or gin!"
"For my part, Conseil, that
doesn't bother me in the least, and I've adjusted very nicely to the diet on
board."
"So have I," Conseil
replied. "Accordingly, I think as much about staying as Mr. Land about
making his escape. Thus, if this new year isn't a happy one for me, it will be
for him, and vice versa. No matter what happens, one of us will be pleased. So,
in conclusion, I wish master to have whatever his heart desires."
"Thank you, Conseil. Only I
must ask you to postpone the question of new year's gifts, and temporarily
accept a hearty handshake in their place. That's all I have on me."
"Master has never been more
generous," Conseil replied.
And with that, the gallant lad
went away.
By January 2 we had fared 11,340
miles, hence 5,250 leagues, from our starting point in the seas of Japan.
Before the Nautilus's spur there stretched the dangerous waterways of the Coral
Sea, off the northeast coast of Australia. Our boat cruised along a few miles
away from that daunting shoal where Captain Cook's ships wellnigh miscarried on
June 10, 1770. The craft that Cook was aboard charged into some coral rock, and
if his vessel didn't go down, it was thanks to the circumstance that a piece of
coral broke off in the collision and plugged the very hole it had made in the
hull.
I would have been deeply
interested in visiting this long, 360-league reef, against which the
ever-surging sea broke with the fearsome intensity of thunderclaps. But just
then the Nautilus's slanting fins took us to great depths, and I could see
nothing of those high coral walls. I had to rest content with the various
specimens of fish brought up by our nets. Among others I noted some long-finned
albacore, a species in the genus Scomber, as big as tuna, bluish on the flanks,
and streaked with crosswise stripes that disappear when the animal dies. These
fish followed us in schools and supplied our table with very dainty flesh. We
also caught a large number of yellow-green gilthead, half a decimeter long and
tasting like dorado, plus some flying gurnards, authentic underwater swallows
that, on dark nights, alternately streak air and water with their
phosphorescent glimmers. Among mollusks and zoophytes, I found in our trawl's meshes
various species of alcyonarian coral, sea urchins, hammer shells, spurred-star
shells, wentletrap snails, horn shells, glass snails. The local flora was
represented by fine floating algae: sea tangle, and kelp from the genus
Macrocystis, saturated with the mucilage their pores perspire, from which I
selected a wonderful Nemastoma geliniaroidea, classifying it with the natural
curiosities in the museum.
On January 4, two days after
crossing the Coral Sea, we raised the coast of Papua. On this occasion Captain
Nemo told me that he intended to reach the Indian Ocean via the Torres Strait.
This was the extent of his remarks. Ned saw with pleasure that this course
would bring us, once again, closer to European seas.
The Torres Strait is regarded as
no less dangerous for its bristling reefs than for the savage inhabitants of
its coasts. It separates Queensland from the huge island of Papua, also called
New Guinea.
Papua is 400 leagues long by 130
leagues wide, with a surface area of 40,000 geographic leagues. It's located
between latitude 0 degrees 19' and 10 degrees 2' south, and between longitude
128 degrees 23' and 146 degrees 15'. At noon, while the chief officer was
taking the sun's altitude, I spotted the summits of the Arfak Mountains, rising
in terraces and ending in sharp peaks.
Discovered in 1511 by the
Portuguese Francisco Serrano, these shores were successively visited by Don
Jorge de Meneses in 1526, by Juan de Grijalva in 1527, by the Spanish general
Alvaro de Saavedra in 1528, by Inigo Ortiz in 1545, by the Dutchman Schouten in
1616, by Nicolas Sruick in 1753, by Tasman, Dampier, Fumel, Carteret, Edwards,
Bougainville, Cook, McClure, and Thomas Forrest, by Rear Admiral
d'Entrecasteaux in 1792, by Louis-Isidore Duperrey in 1823, and by Captain
Dumont d'Urville in 1827. "It's the heartland of the blacks who occupy all
Malaysia," Mr. de Rienzi has said; and I hadn't the foggiest inkling that
sailors' luck was about to bring me face to face with these daunting Andaman
aborigines.
So the Nautilus hove before the
entrance to the world's most dangerous strait, a passageway that even the
boldest navigators hesitated to clear: the strait that Luis Vaez de Torres
faced on returning from the South Seas in Melanesia, the strait in which sloops
of war under Captain Dumont d'Urville ran aground in 1840 and nearly miscarried
with all hands. And even the Nautilus, rising superior to every danger in the
sea, was about to become intimate with its coral reefs.
The Torres Strait is about
thirty-four leagues wide, but it's obstructed by an incalculable number of
islands, islets, breakers, and rocks that make it nearly impossible to
navigate. Consequently, Captain Nemo took every desired precaution in crossing
it. Floating flush with the water, the Nautilus moved ahead at a moderate pace.
Like a cetacean's tail, its propeller churned the waves slowly.
Taking advantage of this
situation, my two companions and I found seats on the ever-deserted platform.
In front of us stood the pilothouse, and unless I'm extremely mistaken, Captain
Nemo must have been inside, steering his Nautilus himself.
Under my eyes I had the excellent
charts of the Torres Strait that had been surveyed and drawn up by the
hydrographic engineer Vincendon Dumoulin and Sublieutenant (now Admiral) Coupvent-Desbois,
who were part of Dumont d'Urville's general staff during his final voyage to
circumnavigate the globe. These, along with the efforts of Captain King, are
the best charts for untangling the snarl of this narrow passageway, and I
consulted them with scrupulous care.
Around the Nautilus the sea was
boiling furiously. A stream of waves, bearing from southeast to northwest at a
speed of two and a half miles per hour, broke over heads of coral emerging here
and there.
"That's one rough sea!"
Ned Land told me.
"Abominable indeed," I
replied, "and hardly suitable for a craft like the Nautilus."
"That damned captain,"
the Canadian went on, "must really be sure of his course, because if these
clumps of coral so much as brush us, they'll rip our hull into a thousand
pieces!"
The situation was indeed
dangerous, but as if by magic, the Nautilus seemed to glide right down the
middle of these rampaging reefs. It didn't follow the exact course of the
Zealous and the new Astrolabe, which had proved so ill-fated for Captain Dumont
d'Urville. It went more to the north, hugged the Murray Islands, and returned
to the southwest near Cumberland Passage. I thought it was about to charge
wholeheartedly into this opening, but it went up to the northwest, through a large
number of little-known islands and islets, and steered toward Tound Island and
the Bad Channel.
I was already wondering if
Captain Nemo, rash to the point of sheer insanity, wanted his ship to tackle
the narrows where Dumont d'Urville's two sloops of war had gone aground, when
he changed direction a second time and cut straight to the west, heading toward
Gueboroa Island.
By then it was three o'clock in
the afternoon. The current was slacking off, it was almost full tide. The
Nautilus drew near this island, which I can see to this day with its remarkable
fringe of screw pines. We hugged it from less than two miles out.
A sudden jolt threw me down. The
Nautilus had just struck a reef, and it remained motionless, listing slightly
to port.
When I stood up, I saw Captain
Nemo and his chief officer on the platform. They were examining the ship's
circumstances, exchanging a few words in their incomprehensible dialect.
Here is what those circumstances
entailed. Two miles to starboard lay Gueboroa Island, its coastline curving
north to west like an immense arm. To the south and east, heads of coral were
already on display, left uncovered by the ebbing waters. We had run aground at
full tide and in one of those seas whose tides are moderate, an inconvenient state
of affairs for floating the Nautilus off. However, the ship hadn't suffered in
any way, so solidly joined was its hull. But although it could neither sink nor
split open, it was in serious danger of being permanently attached to these
reefs, and that would have been the finish of Captain Nemo's submersible.
I was mulling this over when the
captain approached, cool and calm, forever in control of himself, looking
neither alarmed nor annoyed.
"An accident?" I said
to him.
"No, an incident," he
answered me.
"But an incident," I
replied, "that may oblige you to become a resident again of these shores
you avoid!"
Captain Nemo gave me an odd look
and gestured no. Which told me pretty clearly that nothing would ever force him
to set foot on a land mass again. Then he said:
"No, Professor Aronnax, the
Nautilus isn't consigned to perdition. It will still carry you through the
midst of the ocean's wonders. Our voyage is just beginning, and I've no desire
to deprive myself so soon of the pleasure of your company."
"Even so, Captain
Nemo," I went on, ignoring his ironic turn of phrase, "the Nautilus
has run aground at a moment when the sea is full. Now then, the tides aren't
strong in the Pacific, and if you can't unballast the Nautilus, which seems
impossible to me, I don't see how it will float off."
"You're right, professor,
the Pacific tides aren't strong," Captain Nemo replied. "But in the
Torres Strait, one still finds a meter-and-a-half difference in level between
high and low seas. Today is January 4, and in five days the moon will be full.
Now then, I'll be quite astonished if that good-natured satellite doesn't
sufficiently raise these masses of water and do me a favor for which I'll be
forever grateful."
This said, Captain Nemo went
below again to the Nautilus's interior, followed by his chief officer. As for
our craft, it no longer stirred, staying as motionless as if these coral polyps
had already walled it in with their indestructible cement.
"Well, sir?" Ned Land
said to me, coming up after the captain's departure.
"Well, Ned my friend, we'll
serenely wait for the tide on the 9th, because it seems the moon will have the
good nature to float us away!"
"As simple as that?"
"As simple as that."
"So our captain isn't going
to drop his anchors, put his engines on the chains, and do anything to haul us
off?"
"Since the tide will be
sufficient," Conseil replied simply.
The Canadian stared at Conseil,
then he shrugged his shoulders. The seaman in him was talking now.
"Sir," he answered,
"you can trust me when I say this hunk of iron will never navigate again,
on the seas or under them. It's only fit to be sold for its weight. So I think
it's time we gave Captain Nemo the slip."
"Ned my friend," I
replied, "unlike you, I haven't given up on our valiant Nautilus, and in
four days we'll know where we stand on these Pacific tides. Besides, an escape
attempt might be timely if we were in sight of the coasts of England or
Provence, but in the waterways of Papua it's another story. And we'll always
have that as a last resort if the Nautilus doesn't right itself, which I'd
regard as a real calamity."
"But couldn't we at least
get the lay of the land?" Ned went on. "Here's an island. On this
island there are trees. Under those trees land animals loaded with cutlets and
roast beef, which I'd be happy to sink my teeth into."
"In this instance our friend
Ned is right," Conseil said, "and I side with his views. Couldn't
master persuade his friend Captain Nemo to send the three of us ashore, if only
so our feet don't lose the knack of treading on the solid parts of our
planet?"
"I can ask him," I
replied, "but he'll refuse."
"Let master take the
risk," Conseil said, "and we'll know where we stand on the captain's
affability."
Much to my surprise, Captain Nemo
gave me the permission I asked for, and he did so with grace and alacrity, not
even exacting my promise to return on board. But fleeing across the New Guinea
territories would be extremely dangerous, and I wouldn't have advised Ned Land
to try it. Better to be prisoners aboard the Nautilus than to fall into the
hands of Papuan natives.
The skiff was put at our disposal
for the next morning. I hardly needed to ask whether Captain Nemo would be
coming along. I likewise assumed that no crewmen would be assigned to us, that
Ned Land would be in sole charge of piloting the longboat. Besides, the shore
lay no more than two miles off, and it would be child's play for the Canadian
to guide that nimble skiff through those rows of reefs so ill-fated for big
ships.
The next day, January 5, after
its deck paneling was opened, the skiff was wrenched from its socket and
launched to sea from the top of the platform. Two men were sufficient for this
operation. The oars were inside the longboat and we had only to take our seats.
At eight o'clock, armed with
rifles and axes, we pulled clear of the Nautilus. The sea was fairly calm. A
mild breeze blew from shore. In place by the oars, Conseil and I rowed
vigorously, and Ned steered us into the narrow lanes between the breakers. The
skiff handled easily and sped swiftly.
Ned Land couldn't conceal his
glee. He was a prisoner escaping from prison and never dreaming he would need
to reenter it.
"Meat!" he kept
repeating. "Now we'll eat red meat! Actual game! A real mess call, by
thunder! I'm not saying fish aren't good for you, but we mustn't overdo 'em,
and a slice of fresh venison grilled over live coals will be a nice change from
our standard fare."
"You glutton," Conseil
replied, "you're making my mouth water!"
"It remains to be
seen," I said, "whether these forests do contain game, and if the
types of game aren't of such size that they can hunt the hunter."
"Fine, Professor
Aronnax!" replied the Canadian, whose teeth seemed to be as honed as the
edge of an ax. "But if there's no other quadruped on this island, I'll eat
tiger--tiger sirloin."
"Our friend Ned grows
disturbing," Conseil replied.
"Whatever it is," Ned
Land went on, "any animal having four feet without feathers, or two feet with
feathers, will be greeted by my very own one-gun salute."
"Oh good!" I replied.
"The reckless Mr. Land is at it again!"
"Don't worry, Professor
Aronnax, just keep rowing!" the Canadian replied. "I only need
twenty-five minutes to serve you one of my own special creations."
By 8:30 the Nautilus's skiff had
just run gently aground on a sandy strand, after successfully clearing the ring
of coral that surrounds Gueboroa Island.
STEPPING ASHORE had an
exhilarating effect on me. Ned Land tested the soil with his foot, as if he
were laying claim to it. Yet it had been only two months since we had become,
as Captain Nemo expressed it, "passengers on the Nautilus," in other
words, the literal prisoners of its commander.
In a few minutes we were a
gunshot away from the coast. The soil was almost entirely madreporic, but
certain dry stream beds were strewn with granite rubble, proving that this
island was of primordial origin. The entire horizon was hidden behind a curtain
of wonderful forests. Enormous trees, sometimes as high as 200 feet, were
linked to each other by garlands of tropical creepers, genuine natural hammocks
that swayed in a mild breeze. There were mimosas, banyan trees, beefwood,
teakwood, hibiscus, screw pines, palm trees, all mingling in wild profusion;
and beneath the shade of their green canopies, at the feet of their gigantic
trunks, there grew orchids, leguminous plants, and ferns.
Meanwhile, ignoring all these
fine specimens of Papuan flora, the Canadian passed up the decorative in favor
of the functional. He spotted a coconut palm, beat down some of its fruit,
broke them open, and we drank their milk and ate their meat with a pleasure
that was a protest against our standard fare on the Nautilus.
"Excellent!" Ned Land
said.
"Exquisite!" Conseil
replied.
"And I don't think,"
the Canadian said, "that your Nemo would object to us stashing a cargo of
coconuts aboard his vessel?"
"I imagine not," I
replied, "but he won't want to sample them."
"Too bad for him!" Conseil
said.
"And plenty good for
us!" Ned Land shot back. "There'll be more left over!"
"A word of caution, Mr.
Land," I told the harpooner, who was about to ravage another coconut palm.
"Coconuts are admirable things, but before we stuff the skiff with them,
it would be wise to find out whether this island offers other substances just
as useful. Some fresh vegetables would be well received in the Nautilus's
pantry."
"Master is right,"
Conseil replied, "and I propose that we set aside three places in our
longboat: one for fruit, another for vegetables, and a third for venison, of
which I still haven't glimpsed the tiniest specimen."
"Don't give up so easily,
Conseil," the Canadian replied.
"So let's continue our
excursion," I went on, "but keep a sharp lookout. This island seems
uninhabited, but it still might harbor certain individuals who aren't so
finicky about the sort of game they eat!"
"Hee hee!" Ned put in,
with a meaningful movement of his jaws.
"Ned! Oh horrors!"
Conseil exclaimed.
"Ye gods," the Canadian
shot back, "I'm starting to appreciate the charms of cannibalism!"
"Ned, Ned! Don't say
that!" Conseil answered. "You a cannibal? Why, I'll no longer be safe
next to you, I who share your cabin! Does this mean I'll wake up half devoured
one fine day?"
"I'm awfully fond of you,
Conseil my friend, but not enough to eat you when there's better food
around."
"Then I daren't delay,"
Conseil replied. "The hunt is on! We absolutely must bag some game to
placate this man-eater, or one of these mornings master won't find enough
pieces of his manservant to serve him."
While exchanging this chitchat,
we entered beneath the dark canopies of the forest, and for two hours we
explored it in every direction.
We couldn't have been luckier in
our search for edible vegetation, and some of the most useful produce in the
tropical zones supplied us with a valuable foodstuff missing on board.
I mean the breadfruit tree, which
is quite abundant on Gueboroa Island, and there I chiefly noted the seedless
variety that in Malaysia is called "rima."
This tree is distinguished from
other trees by a straight trunk forty feet high. To the naturalist's eye, its
gracefully rounded crown, formed of big multilobed leaves, was enough to denote
the artocarpus that has been so successfully transplanted to the Mascarene
Islands east of
Madagascar. From its mass of
greenery, huge globular fruit stood out, a decimeter wide and furnished on the
outside with creases that assumed a hexangular pattern. It's a handy plant that
nature gives to regions lacking in wheat; without needing to be cultivated, it
bears fruit eight months out of the year.
Ned Land was on familiar terms
with this fruit. He had already eaten it on his many voyages and knew how to
cook its edible substance. So the very sight of it aroused his appetite, and he
couldn't control himself.
"Sir," he told me,
"I'll die if I don't sample a little breadfruit pasta!"
"Sample some, Ned my friend,
sample all you like. We're here to conduct experiments, let's conduct them."
"It won't take a
minute," the Canadian replied.
Equipped with a magnifying glass,
he lit a fire of deadwood that was soon crackling merrily. Meanwhile Conseil
and I selected the finest artocarpus fruit. Some still weren't ripe enough, and
their thick skins covered white, slightly fibrous pulps. But a great many
others were yellowish and gelatinous, just begging to be picked.
This fruit contained no pits.
Conseil brought a dozen of them to Ned Land, who cut them into thick slices and
placed them over a fire of live coals, all the while repeating:
"You'll see, sir, how tasty
this bread is!"
"Especially since we've gone
without baked goods for so long," Conseil said.
"It's more than just
bread," the Canadian added. "It's a dainty pastry. You've never eaten
any, sir?"
"No, Ned."
"All right, get ready for
something downright delectable! If you don't come back for seconds, I'm no
longer the King of Harpooners!"
After a few minutes, the parts of
the fruit exposed to the fire were completely toasted. On the inside there
appeared some white pasta, a sort of soft bread center whose flavor reminded me
of artichoke.
This bread was excellent, I must
admit, and I ate it with great pleasure.
"Unfortunately," I
said, "this pasta won't stay fresh, so it seems pointless to make a supply
for on board."
"By thunder, sir!" Ned
Land exclaimed. "There you go, talking like a naturalist, but meantime
I'll be acting like a baker! Conseil, harvest some of this fruit to take with
us when we go back."
"And how will you prepare
it?" I asked the Canadian.
"I'll make a fermented
batter from its pulp that'll keep indefinitely without spoiling. When I want
some, I'll just cook it in the galley on board--it'll have a slightly tart
flavor, but you'll find it excellent."
"So, Mr. Ned, I see that
this bread is all we need--"
"Not quite, professor,"
the Canadian replied. "We need some fruit to go with it, or at least some
vegetables."
"Then let's look for fruit
and vegetables."
When our breadfruit harvesting
was done, we took to the trail to complete this "dry-land dinner."
We didn't search in vain, and
near noontime we had an ample supply of bananas. This delicious produce from
the Torrid Zones ripens all year round, and Malaysians, who give them the name
"pisang," eat them without bothering to cook them. In addition to
bananas, we gathered some enormous jackfruit with a very tangy flavor, some
tasty mangoes, and some pineapples of unbelievable size. But this foraging took
up a good deal of our time, which, even so, we had no cause to regret.
Conseil kept Ned under
observation. The harpooner walked in the lead, and during his stroll through
this forest, he gathered with sure hands some excellent fruit that should have
completed his provisions.
"So," Conseil asked,
"you have everything you need, Ned my friend?"
"Humph!" the Canadian
put in.
"What! You're
complaining?"
"All this vegetation doesn't
make a meal," Ned replied. "Just side dishes, dessert. But where's
the soup course? Where's the roast?"
"Right," I said.
"Ned promised us cutlets, which seems highly questionable to me."
"Sir," the Canadian
replied, "our hunting not only isn't over, it hasn't even started.
Patience! We're sure to end up bumping into some animal with either feathers or
fur, if not in this locality, then in another."
"And if not today, then
tomorrow, because we mustn't wander too far off," Conseil added.
"That's why I propose that we return to the skiff."
"What! Already!" Ned
exclaimed.
"We ought to be back before
nightfall," I said.
"But what hour is it,
then?" the Canadian asked.
"Two o'clock at least,"
Conseil replied.
"How time flies on solid
ground!" exclaimed Mr. Ned Land with a sigh of regret.
"Off we go!" Conseil
replied.
So we returned through the
forest, and we completed our harvest by making a clean sweep of some palm
cabbages that had to be picked from the crowns of their trees, some small beans
that I recognized as the "abrou" of the Malaysians, and some
high-quality yams.
We were overloaded when we arrived
at the skiff. However, Ned Land still found these provisions inadequate. But
fortune smiled on him. Just as we were boarding, he spotted several trees
twenty-five to thirty feet high, belonging to the palm species. As valuable as
the artocarpus, these trees are justly ranked among the most useful produce in
Malaysia.
They were sago palms, vegetation
that grows without being cultivated; like mulberry trees, they reproduce by
means of shoots and seeds.
Ned Land knew how to handle these
trees. Taking his ax and wielding it with great vigor, he soon stretched out on
the ground two or three sago palms, whose maturity was revealed by the white
dust sprinkled over their palm fronds.
I watched him more as a
naturalist than as a man in hunger. He began by removing from each trunk an
inch-thick strip of bark that covered a network of long, hopelessly tangled
fibers that were puttied with a sort of gummy flour. This flour was the
starch-like sago, an edible substance chiefly consumed by the Melanesian
peoples.
For the time being, Ned Land was
content to chop these trunks into pieces, as if he were making firewood; later
he would extract the flour by sifting it through cloth to separate it from its
fibrous ligaments, let it dry out in the sun, and leave it to harden inside
molds.
Finally, at five o'clock in the
afternoon, laden with all our treasures, we left the island beach and half an
hour later pulled alongside the Nautilus. Nobody appeared on our arrival. The
enormous sheet-iron cylinder seemed deserted. Our provisions loaded on board, I
went below to my stateroom. There I found my supper ready. I ate and then fell
asleep.
The next day, January 6: nothing
new on board. Not a sound inside, not a sign of life. The skiff stayed
alongside in the same place we had left it. We decided to return to Gueboroa
Island. Ned Land hoped for better luck in his hunting than on the day before,
and he wanted to visit a different part of the forest.
By sunrise we were off. Carried
by an inbound current, the longboat reached the island in a matter of moments.
We disembarked, and thinking it
best to abide by the Canadian's instincts, we followed Ned Land, whose long
legs threatened to outpace us.
Ned Land went westward up the
coast; then, fording some stream beds, he reached open plains that were
bordered by wonderful forests. Some kingfishers lurked along the watercourses,
but they didn't let us approach. Their cautious behavior proved to me that
these winged creatures knew where they stood on bipeds of our species, and I concluded
that if this island wasn't inhabited, at least human beings paid it frequent
visits.
After crossing a pretty lush
prairie, we arrived on the outskirts of a small wood, enlivened by the singing
and soaring of a large number of birds.
"Still, they're merely
birds," Conseil said.
"But some are edible,"
the harpooner replied.
"Wrong, Ned my friend,"
Conseil answered, "because I see only ordinary parrots here."
"Conseil my friend,"
Ned replied in all seriousness, "parrots are like pheasant to people with
nothing else on their plates."
"And I might add," I
said, "that when these birds are properly cooked, they're at least worth a
stab of the fork."
Indeed, under the dense foliage
of this wood, a whole host of parrots fluttered from branch to branch, needing
only the proper upbringing to speak human dialects. At present they were
cackling in chorus with parakeets of every color, with solemn cockatoos that
seemed to be pondering some philosophical problem, while bright red lories
passed by like pieces of bunting borne on the breeze, in the midst of kalao
parrots raucously on the wing, Papuan lories painted the subtlest shades of
azure, and a whole variety of delightful winged creatures, none terribly
edible.
However, one bird unique to these
shores, which never passes beyond the boundaries of the Aru and Papuan Islands,
was missing from this collection. But I was given a chance to marvel at it soon
enough.
After crossing through a
moderately dense thicket, we again found some plains obstructed by bushes.
There I saw some magnificent birds soaring aloft, the arrangement of their long
feathers causing them to head into the wind. Their undulating flight, the grace
of their aerial curves, and the play of their colors allured and delighted the
eye. I had no trouble identifying them.
"Birds of paradise!" I
exclaimed.
"Order Passeriforma,
division Clystomora," Conseil replied.
"Partridge family?" Ned
Land asked.
"I doubt it, Mr. Land.
Nevertheless, I'm counting on your dexterity to catch me one of these delightful
representatives of tropical nature!"
"I'll give it a try,
professor, though I'm handier with a harpoon than a rifle."
Malaysians, who do a booming
business in these birds with the Chinese, have various methods for catching
them that we couldn't use. Sometimes they set snares on the tops of the tall
trees that the bird of paradise prefers to inhabit. At other times they capture
it with a tenacious glue that paralyzes its movements. They will even go so far
as to poison the springs where these fowl habitually drink. But in our case,
all we could do was fire at them on the wing, which left us little chance of
getting one. And in truth, we used up a good part of our ammunition in vain.
Near eleven o'clock in the
morning, we cleared the lower slopes of the mountains that form the island's
center, and we still hadn't bagged a thing. Hunger spurred us on. The hunters
had counted on consuming the proceeds of their hunting, and they had
miscalculated. Luckily, and much to his surprise, Conseil pulled off a
right-and-left shot and insured our breakfast. He brought down a white pigeon
and a ringdove, which were briskly plucked, hung from a spit, and roasted over
a blazing fire of deadwood. While these fascinating animals were cooking, Ned
prepared some bread from the artocarpus. Then the pigeon and ringdove were
devoured to the bones and declared excellent. Nutmeg, on which these birds
habitually gorge themselves, sweetens their flesh and makes it delicious
eating.
"They taste like chicken
stuffed with truffles," Conseil said.
"All right, Ned," I
asked the Canadian, "now what do you need?"
"Game with four paws,
Professor Aronnax," Ned Land replied. "All these pigeons are only
appetizers, snacks. So till I've bagged an animal with cutlets, I won't be
happy!"
"Nor I, Ned, until I've
caught a bird of paradise."
"Then let's keep
hunting," Conseil replied, "but while heading back to the sea. We've
arrived at the foothills of these mountains, and I think we'll do better if we
return to the forest regions."
It was good advice and we took
it. After an hour's walk we reached a genuine sago palm forest. A few harmless
snakes fled underfoot. Birds of paradise stole off at our approach, and I was
in real despair of catching one when Conseil, walking in the lead, stooped
suddenly, gave a triumphant shout, and came back to me, carrying a magnificent
bird of paradise.
"Oh bravo, Conseil!" I
exclaimed.
"Master is too kind,"
Conseil replied.
"Not at all, my boy. That
was a stroke of genius, catching one of these live birds with your bare
hands!"
"If master will examine it
closely, he'll see that I deserve no great praise."
"And why not, Conseil?"
"Because this bird is as
drunk as a lord."
"Drunk?"
"Yes, master, drunk from the
nutmegs it was devouring under that nutmeg tree where I caught it. See, Ned my
friend, see the monstrous results of intemperance!"
"Damnation!" the
Canadian shot back. "Considering the amount of gin I've had these past two
months, you've got nothing to complain about!"
Meanwhile I was examining this
unusual bird. Conseil was not mistaken. Tipsy from that potent juice, our bird
of paradise had been reduced to helplessness. It was unable to fly. It was
barely able to walk. But this didn't alarm me, and I just let it sleep off its
nutmeg.
This bird belonged to the finest
of the eight species credited to Papua and its neighboring islands. It was a
"great emerald," one of the rarest birds of paradise. It measured
three decimeters long. Its head was comparatively small, and its eyes, placed
near the opening of its beak, were also small. But it offered a wonderful
mixture of hues: a yellow beak, brown feet and claws, hazel wings with purple
tips, pale yellow head and scruff of the neck, emerald throat, the belly and
chest maroon to brown. Two strands, made of a horn substance covered with down,
rose over its tail, which was lengthened by long, very light feathers of
wonderful fineness, and they completed the costume of this marvelous bird that
the islanders have poetically named "the sun bird."
How I wished I could take this
superb bird of paradise back to Paris, to make a gift of it to the zoo at the
Botanical Gardens, which doesn't own a single live specimen.
"So it must be a rarity or
something?" the Canadian asked, in the tone of a hunter who, from the
viewpoint of his art, gives the game a pretty low rating.
"A great rarity, my gallant
comrade, and above all very hard to capture alive. And even after they're dead,
there's still a major market for these birds. So the natives have figured out
how to create fake ones, like people create fake pearls or diamonds."
"What!" Conseil
exclaimed. "They make counterfeit birds of paradise?"
"Yes, Conseil."
"And is master familiar with
how the islanders go about it?"
"Perfectly familiar. During the
easterly monsoon season, birds of paradise lose the magnificent feathers around
their tails that naturalists call 'below-the-wing' feathers. These feathers are
gathered by the fowl forgers and skillfully fitted onto some poor previously
mutilated parakeet. Then they paint over the suture, varnish the bird, and ship
the fruits of their unique labors to museums and collectors in Europe."
"Good enough!" Ned Land
put in. "If it isn't the right bird, it's still the right feathers, and so
long as the merchandise isn't meant to be eaten, I see no great harm!"
But if my desires were fulfilled
by the capture of this bird of paradise, those of our Canadian huntsman
remained unsatisfied. Luckily, near two o'clock Ned Land brought down a
magnificent wild pig of the type the natives call "bari-outang." This
animal came in the nick of time for us to bag some real quadruped meat, and it
was warmly welcomed. Ned Land proved himself quite gloriously with his gunshot.
Hit by an electric bullet, the pig dropped dead on the spot.
The Canadian properly skinned and
cleaned it, after removing half a dozen cutlets destined to serve as the
grilled meat course of our evening meal. Then the hunt was on again, and once
more would be marked by the exploits of Ned and Conseil.
In essence, beating the bushes,
the two friends flushed a herd of kangaroos that fled by bounding away on their
elastic paws. But these animals didn't flee so swiftly that our electric
capsules couldn't catch up with them.
"Oh, professor!"
shouted Ned Land, whose hunting fever had gone to his brain. "What
excellent game, especially in a stew! What a supply for the Nautilus! Two,
three, five down! And just think how we'll devour all this meat ourselves,
while those numbskulls on board won't get a shred!"
In his uncontrollable glee, I
think the Canadian might have slaughtered the whole horde, if he hadn't been so
busy talking! But he was content with a dozen of these fascinating marsupials,
which make up the first order of aplacental mammals, as Conseil just had to
tell us.
These animals were small in
stature. They were a species of those "rabbit kangaroos" that usually
dwell in the hollows of trees and are tremendously fast; but although of
moderate dimensions, they at least furnish a meat that's highly prized.
We were thoroughly satisfied with
the results of our hunting. A gleeful Ned proposed that we return the next day
to this magic island, which he planned to depopulate of its every edible
quadruped. But he was reckoning without events.
By six o'clock in the evening, we
were back on the beach. The skiff was aground in its usual place. The Nautilus,
looking like a long reef, emerged from the waves two miles offshore.
Without further ado, Ned Land got
down to the important business of dinner. He came wonderfully to terms with its
entire cooking. Grilling over the coals, those cutlets from the
"bari-outang" soon gave off a succulent aroma that perfumed the air.
But I catch myself following in
the Canadian's footsteps. Look at me--in ecstasy over freshly grilled pork!
Please grant me a pardon as I've already granted one to Mr. Land, and on the
same grounds!
In short, dinner was excellent.
Two ringdoves rounded out this extraordinary menu. Sago pasta, bread from the
artocarpus, mangoes, half a dozen pineapples, and the fermented liquor from
certain coconuts heightened our glee. I suspect that my two fine companions
weren't quite as clearheaded as one could wish.
"What if we don't return to
the Nautilus this evening?" Conseil said.
"What if we never return to
it?" Ned Land added.
Just then a stone whizzed toward
us, landed at our feet, and cut short the harpooner's proposition.
WITHOUT STANDING UP, we stared in
the direction of the forest, my hand stopping halfway to my mouth, Ned Land's
completing its assignment.
"Stones don't fall from the
sky," Conseil said, "or else they deserve to be called
meteorites."
A second well-polished stone
removed a tasty ringdove leg from Conseil's hand, giving still greater relevance
to his observation.
We all three stood up, rifles to
our shoulders, ready to answer any attack.
"Apes maybe?" Ned Land
exclaimed.
"Nearly," Conseil
replied. "Savages."
"Head for the skiff!" I
said, moving toward the sea.
Indeed, it was essential to beat
a retreat because some twenty natives, armed with bows and slings, appeared
barely a hundred paces off, on the outskirts of a thicket that masked the
horizon to our right.
The skiff was aground ten fathoms
away from us.
The savages approached without
running, but they favored us with a show of the greatest hostility. It was
raining stones and arrows.
Ned Land was unwilling to leave
his provisions behind, and despite the impending danger, he clutched his pig on
one side, his kangaroos on the other, and scampered off with respectable speed.
In two minutes we were on the
strand. Loading provisions and weapons into the skiff, pushing it to sea, and
positioning its two oars were the work of an instant. We hadn't gone two cable lengths
when a hundred savages, howling and gesticulating, entered the water up to
their waists. I looked to see if their appearance might draw some of the
Nautilus's men onto the platform. But no. Lying well out, that enormous machine
still seemed completely deserted.
Twenty minutes later we boarded
ship. The hatches were open. After mooring the skiff, we reentered the
Nautilus's interior.
I went below to the lounge, from
which some chords were wafting. Captain Nemo was there, leaning over the organ,
deep in a musical trance.
"Captain!" I said to
him.
He didn't hear me.
"Captain!" I went on,
touching him with my hand.
He trembled, and turning around:
"Ah, it's you,
professor!" he said to me. "Well, did you have a happy hunt? Was your
herb gathering a success?"
"Yes, captain," I
replied, "but unfortunately we've brought back a horde of bipeds whose
proximity worries me."
"What sort of bipeds?"
"Savages."
"Savages!" Captain Nemo
replied in an ironic tone. "You set foot on one of the shores of this globe,
professor, and you're surprised to find savages there? Where aren't there
savages? And besides, are they any worse than men elsewhere, these people you
call savages?"
"But captain--"
"Speaking for myself, sir,
I've encountered them everywhere."
"Well then," I replied,
"if you don't want to welcome them aboard the Nautilus, you'd better take
some precautions!"
"Easy, professor, no cause
for alarm."
"But there are a large
number of these natives."
"What's your count?"
"At least a hundred."
"Professor Aronnax,"
replied Captain Nemo, whose fingers took their places again on the organ keys,
"if every islander in Papua were to gather on that beach, the Nautilus
would still have nothing to fear from their attacks!"
The captain's fingers then ran
over the instrument's keyboard, and I noticed that he touched only its black
keys, which gave his melodies a basically Scottish color. Soon he had forgotten
my presence and was lost in a reverie that I no longer tried to dispel.
I climbed onto the platform. Night
had already fallen, because in this low latitude the sun sets quickly, without
any twilight. I could see Gueboroa Island only dimly. But numerous fires had
been kindled on the beach, attesting that the natives had no thoughts of
leaving it.
For several hours I was left to
myself, sometimes musing on the islanders-- but no longer fearing them because
the captain's unflappable confidence had won me over--and sometimes forgetting
them to marvel at the splendors of this tropical night. My memories took wing
toward France, in the wake of those zodiacal stars due to twinkle over it in a
few hours. The moon shone in the midst of the constellations at their zenith. I
then remembered that this loyal, good-natured satellite would return to this
same place the day after tomorrow, to raise the tide and tear the Nautilus from
its coral bed. Near midnight, seeing that all was quiet over the darkened waves
as well as under the waterside trees, I repaired to my cabin and fell into a
peaceful sleep.
The night passed without mishap.
No doubt the Papuans had been frightened off by the mere sight of this monster
aground in the bay, because our hatches stayed open, offering easy access to
the Nautilus's interior.
At six o'clock in the morning,
January 8, I climbed onto the platform. The morning shadows were lifting. The
island was soon on view through the dissolving mists, first its beaches, then
its summits.
The islanders were still there,
in greater numbers than on the day before, perhaps 500 or 600 of them. Taking
advantage of the low tide, some of them had moved forward over the heads of
coral to within two cable lengths of the Nautilus. I could easily distinguish
them. They obviously were true Papuans, men of fine stock, athletic in build,
forehead high and broad, nose large but not flat, teeth white. Their woolly,
red-tinted hair was in sharp contrast to their bodies, which were black and
glistening like those of Nubians. Beneath their pierced, distended earlobes
there dangled strings of beads made from bone. Generally these savages were
naked. I noted some women among them, dressed from hip to knee in grass skirts
held up by belts made of vegetation. Some of the chieftains adorned their necks
with crescents and with necklaces made from beads of red and white glass. Armed
with bows, arrows, and shields, nearly all of them carried from their shoulders
a sort of net, which held those polished stones their slings hurl with such
dexterity.
One of these chieftains came
fairly close to the Nautilus, examining it with care. He must have been a
"mado" of high rank, because he paraded in a mat of banana leaves
that had ragged edges and was accented with bright colors.
I could easily have picked off
this islander, he stood at such close range; but I thought it best to wait for
an actual show of hostility. Between Europeans and savages, it's acceptable for
Europeans to shoot back but not to attack first.
During this whole time of low
tide, the islanders lurked near the Nautilus, but they weren't boisterous. I
often heard them repeat the word "assai," and from their gestures I
understood they were inviting me to go ashore, an invitation I felt obliged to
decline.
So the skiff didn't leave
shipside that day, much to the displeasure of Mr. Land who couldn't complete his
provisions. The adroit Canadian spent his time preparing the meat and flour
products he had brought from Gueboroa Island. As for the savages, they went
back to shore near eleven o'clock in the morning, when the heads of coral began
to disappear under the waves of the rising tide. But I saw their numbers swell
considerably on the beach. It was likely that they had come from neighboring
islands or from the mainland of Papua proper. However, I didn't see one local
dugout canoe.
Having nothing better to do, I
decided to dredge these beautiful, clear waters, which exhibited a profusion of
shells, zoophytes, and open-sea plants. Besides, it was the last day the
Nautilus would spend in these waterways, if, tomorrow, it still floated off to
the open sea as Captain Nemo had promised.
So I summoned Conseil, who
brought me a small, light dragnet similar to those used in oyster fishing.
"What about these
savages?" Conseil asked me. "With all due respect to master, they
don't strike me as very wicked!"
"They're cannibals even so,
my boy."
"A person can be both a
cannibal and a decent man," Conseil replied, "just as a person can be
both gluttonous and honorable. The one doesn't exclude the other."
"Fine, Conseil! And I agree
that there are honorable cannibals who decently devour their prisoners.
However, I'm opposed to being devoured, even in all decency, so I'll keep on my
guard, especially since the Nautilus's commander seems to be taking no
precautions. And now let's get to work!"
For two hours our fishing proceeded
energetically but without bringing up any rarities. Our dragnet was filled with
Midas abalone, harp shells, obelisk snails, and especially the finest hammer
shells I had seen to that day. We also gathered in a few sea cucumbers, some
pearl oysters, and a dozen small turtles that we saved for the ship's pantry.
But just when I least expected
it, I laid my hands on a wonder, a natural deformity I'd have to call it,
something very seldom encountered. Conseil had just made a cast of the dragnet,
and his gear had come back up loaded with a variety of fairly ordinary
seashells, when suddenly he saw me plunge my arms swiftly into the net, pull
out a shelled animal, and give a conchological yell, in other words, the most
piercing yell a human throat can produce.
"Eh? What happened to
master?" Conseil asked, very startled. "Did master get bitten?"
"No, my boy, but I'd gladly
have sacrificed a finger for such a find!"
"What find?"
"This shell," I said,
displaying the subject of my triumph.
"But that's simply an olive
shell of the 'tent olive' species, genus Oliva, order Pectinibranchia, class
Gastropoda, branch Mollusca--"
"Yes, yes, Conseil! But
instead of coiling from right to left, this olive shell rolls from left to
right!"
"It can't be!" Conseil
exclaimed.
"Yes, my boy, it's a
left-handed shell!"
"A left-handed shell!"
Conseil repeated, his heart pounding.
"Look at its spiral!"
"Oh, master can trust me on
this," Conseil said, taking the valuable shell in trembling hands,
"but never have I felt such excitement!"
And there was good reason to be
excited! In fact, as naturalists have ventured to observe,
"dextrality" is a well-known law of nature. In their rotational and
orbital movements, stars and their satellites go from right to left. Man uses
his right hand more often than his left, and consequently his various
instruments and equipment (staircases, locks, watch springs, etc.) are designed
to be used in a right-to-left manner. Now then, nature has generally obeyed
this law in coiling her shells. They're right-handed with only rare exceptions,
and when by chance a shell's spiral is left-handed, collectors will pay its
weight in gold for it.
So Conseil and I were deep in the
contemplation of our treasure, and I was solemnly promising myself to enrich
the Paris Museum with it, when an ill-timed stone, hurled by one of the
islanders, whizzed over and shattered the valuable object in Conseil's hands.
I gave a yell of despair! Conseil
pounced on his rifle and aimed at a savage swinging a sling just ten meters
away from him. I tried to stop him, but his shot went off and shattered a
bracelet of amulets dangling from the islander's arm.
"Conseil!" I shouted.
"Conseil!"
"Eh? What? Didn't master see
that this man-eater initiated the attack?"
"A shell isn't worth a human
life!" I told him.
"Oh, the rascal!"
Conseil exclaimed. "I'd rather he cracked my shoulder!"
Conseil was in dead earnest, but
I didn't subscribe to his views. However, the situation had changed in only a
short time and we hadn't noticed. Now some twenty dugout canoes were
surrounding the Nautilus. Hollowed from tree trunks, these dugouts were long,
narrow, and well designed for speed, keeping their balance by means of two
bamboo poles that floated on the surface of the water. They were maneuvered by
skillful, half-naked paddlers, and I viewed their advance with definite alarm.
It was obvious these Papuans had
already entered into relations with Europeans and knew their ships. But this
long, iron cylinder lying in the bay, with no masts or funnels--what were they
to make of it? Nothing good, because at first they kept it at a respectful
distance. However, seeing that it stayed motionless, they regained confidence
little by little and tried to become more familiar with it. Now then, it was precisely
this familiarity that we needed to prevent. Since our weapons made no sound
when they went off, they would have only a moderate effect on these islanders,
who reputedly respect nothing but noisy mechanisms. Without thunderclaps,
lightning bolts would be much less frightening, although the danger lies in the
flash, not the noise.
Just then the dugout canoes drew
nearer to the Nautilus, and a cloud of arrows burst over us.
"Fire and brimstone, it's
hailing!" Conseil said. "And poisoned hail perhaps!"
"We've got to alert Captain
Nemo," I said, reentering the hatch.
I went below to the lounge. I
found no one there. I ventured a knock at the door opening into the captain's
stateroom.
The word "Enter!"
answered me. I did so and found Captain Nemo busy with calculations in which
there was no shortage of X and other algebraic signs.
"Am I disturbing you?"
I said out of politeness.
"Correct, Professor
Aronnax," the captain answered me. "But I imagine you have pressing
reasons for looking me up?"
"Very pressing. Native
dugout canoes are surrounding us, and in a few minutes we're sure to be
assaulted by several hundred savages."
"Ah!" Captain Nemo put
in serenely. "They've come in their dugouts?"
"Yes, sir."
"Well, sir, closing the
hatches should do the trick."
"Precisely, and that's what
I came to tell you--"
"Nothing easier,"
Captain Nemo said.
And he pressed an electric
button, transmitting an order to the crew's quarters.
"There, sir, all under
control!" he told me after a few moments. "The skiff is in place and
the hatches are closed. I don't imagine you're worried that these gentlemen
will stave in walls that shells from your frigate couldn't breach?"
"No, captain, but one danger
still remains."
"What's that, sir?"
"Tomorrow at about this time,
we'll need to reopen the hatches to renew the Nautilus's air."
"No argument, sir, since our
craft breathes in the manner favored by cetaceans."
"But if these Papuans are
occupying the platform at that moment, I don't see how you can prevent them
from entering."
"Then, sir, you assume
they'll board the ship?"
"I'm certain of it."
"Well, sir, let them come
aboard. I see no reason to prevent them. Deep down they're just poor devils,
these Papuans, and I don't want my visit to Gueboroa Island to cost the life of
a single one of these unfortunate people!"
On this note I was about to
withdraw; but Captain Nemo detained me and invited me to take a seat next to
him. He questioned me with interest on our excursions ashore and on our
hunting, but seemed not to understand the Canadian's passionate craving for red
meat. Then our conversation skimmed various subjects, and without being more
forthcoming, Captain Nemo proved more affable.
Among other things, we came to
talk of the Nautilus's circumstances, aground in the same strait where Captain
Dumont d'Urville had nearly miscarried. Then, pertinent to this:
"He was one of your great
seamen," the captain told me, "one of your shrewdest navigators, that
d'Urville! He was the Frenchman's Captain Cook. A man wise but unlucky! Braving
the ice banks of the South Pole, the coral of Oceania, the cannibals of the
Pacific, only to perish wretchedly in a train wreck! If that energetic man was
able to think about his life in its last seconds, imagine what his final thoughts
must have been!"
As he spoke, Captain Nemo seemed
deeply moved, an emotion I felt was to his credit.
Then, chart in hand, we returned
to the deeds of the French navigator: his voyages to circumnavigate the globe,
his double attempt at the South Pole, which led to his discovery of the Adélie
Coast and the Louis-Philippe Peninsula, finally his hydrographic surveys of the
chief islands in Oceania.
"What your d'Urville did on
the surface of the sea," Captain Nemo told me, "I've done in the
ocean's interior, but more easily, more completely than he. Constantly tossed
about by hurricanes, the Zealous and the new Astrolabe couldn't compare with
the Nautilus, a quiet work room truly at rest in the midst of the waters!"
"Even so, captain," I
said, "there is one major similarity between Dumont d'Urville's sloops of
war and the Nautilus."
"What's that, sir?"
"Like them, the Nautilus has
run aground!"
"The Nautilus is not
aground, sir," Captain Nemo replied icily. "The Nautilus was built to
rest on the ocean floor, and I don't need to undertake the arduous labors, the
maneuvers d'Urville had to attempt in order to float off his sloops of war. The
Zealous and the new Astrolabe wellnigh perished, but my Nautilus is in no
danger. Tomorrow, on the day stated and at the hour stated, the tide will
peacefully lift it off, and it will resume its navigating through the
seas."
"Captain," I said,
"I don't doubt--"
"Tomorrow," Captain
Nemo added, standing up, "tomorrow at 2:40 in the afternoon, the Nautilus
will float off and exit the Torres Strait undamaged."
Pronouncing these words in an
extremely sharp tone, Captain Nemo gave me a curt bow. This was my dismissal,
and I reentered my stateroom.
There I found Conseil, who wanted
to know the upshot of my interview with the captain.
"My boy," I replied,
"when I expressed the belief that these Papuan natives were a threat to
his Nautilus, the captain answered me with great irony. So I've just one thing
to say to you: have faith in him and sleep in peace."
"Master has no need for my
services?"
"No, my friend. What's Ned
Land up to?"
"Begging master's
indulgence," Conseil replied, "but our friend Ned is concocting a
kangaroo pie that will be the eighth wonder!"
I was left to myself; I went to
bed but slept pretty poorly. I kept hearing noises from the savages, who were
stamping on the platform and letting out deafening yells. The night passed in
this way, without the crew ever emerging from their usual inertia. They were no
more disturbed by the presence of these man-eaters than soldiers in an armored
fortress are troubled by ants running over the armor plate.
I got up at six o'clock in the
morning. The hatches weren't open. So the air inside hadn't been renewed; but
the air tanks were kept full for any eventuality and would function
appropriately to shoot a few cubic meters of oxygen into the Nautilus's thin
atmosphere.
I worked in my stateroom until
noon without seeing Captain Nemo even for an instant. Nobody on board seemed to
be making any preparations for departure.
I still waited for a while, then
I made my way to the main lounge. Its timepiece marked 2:30. In ten minutes the
tide would reach its maximum elevation, and if Captain Nemo hadn't made a rash
promise, the Nautilus would immediately break free. If not, many months might
pass before it could leave its coral bed.
But some preliminary vibrations
could soon be felt over the boat's hull. I heard its plating grind against the
limestone roughness of that coral base.
At 2:35 Captain Nemo appeared in
the lounge.
"We're about to
depart," he said.
"Ah!" I put in.
"I've given orders to open
the hatches."
"What about the
Papuans?"
"What about them?"
Captain Nemo replied, with a light shrug of his shoulders.
"Won't they come inside the
Nautilus?"
"How will they manage
that?"
"By jumping down the hatches
you're about to open."
"Professor Aronnax,"
Captain Nemo replied serenely, "the Nautilus's hatches aren't to be
entered in that fashion even when they're open."
I gaped at the captain.
"You don't understand?"
he said to me.
"Not in the least."
"Well, come along and you'll
see!"
I headed to the central
companionway. There, very puzzled, Ned Land and Conseil watched the crewmen
opening the hatches, while a frightful clamor and furious shouts resounded outside.
The hatch lids fell back onto the
outer plating. Twenty horrible faces appeared. But when the first islander laid
hands on the companionway railing, he was flung backward by some invisible
power, lord knows what! He ran off, howling in terror and wildly prancing
around.
Ten of his companions followed
him. All ten met the same fate.
Conseil was in ecstasy. Carried
away by his violent instincts, Ned Land leaped up the companionway. But as soon
as his hands seized the railing, he was thrown backward in his turn.
"Damnation!" he
exclaimed. "I've been struck by a lightning bolt!"
These words explained everything
to me. It wasn't just a railing that led to the platform, it was a metal cable
fully charged with the ship's electricity. Anyone who touched it got a fearsome
shock-- and such a shock would have been fatal if Captain Nemo had thrown the
full current from his equipment into this conducting cable! It could honestly
be said that he had stretched between himself and his assailants a network of electricity
no one could clear with impunity.
Meanwhile, crazed with terror,
the unhinged Papuans beat a retreat. As for us, half laughing, we massaged and
comforted poor Ned Land, who was swearing like one possessed.
But just then, lifted off by the
tide's final undulations, the Nautilus left its coral bed at exactly that
fortieth minute pinpointed by the captain. Its propeller churned the waves with
lazy majesty. Gathering speed little by little, the ship navigated on the
surface of the ocean, and safe and sound, it left behind the dangerous narrows
of the Torres Strait.
*Latin: "troubled
dreams." Ed.
THE FOLLOWING DAY, January 10,
the Nautilus resumed its travels in midwater but at a remarkable speed that I
estimated to be at least thirty-five miles per hour. The propeller was going so
fast I could neither follow nor count its revolutions.
I thought about how this
marvelous electric force not only gave motion, heat, and light to the Nautilus
but even protected it against outside attack, transforming it into a sacred ark
no profane hand could touch without being blasted; my wonderment was boundless,
and it went from the submersible itself to the engineer who had created it.
We were traveling due west and on
January 11 we doubled Cape Wessel, located in longitude 135 degrees and
latitude 10 degrees north, the western tip of the Gulf of Carpentaria. Reefs
were still numerous but more widely scattered and were fixed on the chart with
the greatest accuracy. The Nautilus easily avoided the Money breakers to port
and the Victoria reefs to starboard, positioned at longitude 130 degrees on the
tenth parallel, which we went along rigorously.
On January 13, arriving in the
Timor Sea, Captain Nemo raised the island of that name at longitude 122
degrees. This island, whose surface area measures 1,625 square leagues, is
governed by rajahs. These aristocrats deem themselves the sons of crocodiles,
in other words, descendants with the most exalted origins to which a human
being can lay claim. Accordingly, their scaly ancestors infest the island's
rivers and are the subjects of special veneration. They are sheltered,
nurtured, flattered, pampered, and offered a ritual diet of nubile maidens; and
woe to the foreigner who lifts a finger against these sacred saurians.
But the Nautilus wanted nothing
to do with these nasty animals. Timor Island was visible for barely an instant
at noon while the chief officer determined his position. I also caught only a
glimpse of little Roti Island, part of this same group, whose women have a
well-established reputation for beauty in the Malaysian marketplace.
After our position fix, the
Nautilus's latitude bearings were modulated to the southwest. Our prow pointed
to the Indian Ocean. Where would Captain Nemo's fancies take us? Would he head
up to the shores of Asia? Would he pull nearer to the beaches of Europe?
Unlikely choices for a man who avoided populated areas! So would he go down
south? Would he double the Cape of Good Hope, then Cape Horn, and push on to the
Antarctic pole? Finally, would he return to the seas of the Pacific, where his
Nautilus could navigate freely and easily? Time would tell.
After cruising along the Cartier,
Hibernia, Seringapatam, and Scott reefs, the solid element's last exertions against
the liquid element, we were beyond all sight of shore by January 14. The
Nautilus slowed down in an odd manner, and very unpredictable in its ways, it
sometimes swam in the midst of the waters, sometimes drifted on their surface.
During this phase of our voyage,
Captain Nemo conducted interesting experiments on the different temperatures in
various strata of the sea. Under ordinary conditions, such readings are
obtained using some pretty complicated instruments whose findings are dubious
to say the least, whether they're thermometric sounding lines, whose glass
often shatters under the water's pressure, or those devices based on the
varying resistance of metals to electric currents. The results so obtained
can't be adequately double-checked. By contrast, Captain Nemo would seek the
sea's temperature by going himself into its depths, and when he placed his
thermometer in contact with the various layers of liquid, he found the
sought-for degree immediately and with certainty.
And so, by loading up its ballast
tanks, or by sinking obliquely with its slanting fins, the Nautilus
successively reached depths of 3,000, 4,000, 5,000, 7,000, 9,000, and 10,000
meters, and the ultimate conclusion from these experiments was that, in all
latitudes, the sea had a permanent temperature of 4.5 degrees centigrade at a
depth of 1,000 meters.
I watched these experiments with
the most intense fascination. Captain Nemo brought a real passion to them. I
often wondered why he took these observations. Were they for the benefit of his
fellow man? It was unlikely, because sooner or later his work would perish with
him in some unknown sea! Unless he intended the results of his experiments for
me. But that meant this strange voyage of mine would come to an end, and no
such end was in sight.
Be that as it may, Captain Nemo
also introduced me to the different data he had obtained on the relative
densities of the water in our globe's chief seas. From this news I derived some
personal enlightenment having nothing to do with science.
It happened the morning of
January 15. The captain, with whom I was strolling on the platform, asked me if
I knew how salt water differs in density from sea to sea. I said no, adding
that there was a lack of rigorous scientific observations on this subject.
"I've taken such
observations," he told me, "and I can vouch for their
reliability."
"Fine," I replied,
"but the Nautilus lives in a separate world, and the secrets of its
scientists don't make their way ashore."
"You're right,
professor," he told me after a few moments of silence. "This is a
separate world. It's as alien to the earth as the planets accompanying our
globe around the sun, and we'll never become familiar with the work of
scientists on Saturn or Jupiter. But since fate has linked our two lives, I can
reveal the results of my observations to you."
"I'm all attention,
captain."
"You're aware, professor,
that salt water is denser than fresh water, but this density isn't uniform. In essence,
if I represent the density of fresh water by 1.000, then I find 1.028 for the
waters of the Atlantic, 1.026 for the waters of the Pacific, 1.030 for the
waters of the Mediterranean--"
Aha, I thought, so he ventures
into the Mediterranean?
"--1.018 for the waters of
the Ionian Sea, and 1.029 for the waters of the Adriatic."
Assuredly, the Nautilus didn't
avoid the heavily traveled seas of Europe, and from this insight I concluded
that the ship would take us back--perhaps very soon--to more civilized shores.
I expected Ned Land to greet this news with unfeigned satisfaction.
For several days our work hours
were spent in all sorts of experiments, on the degree of salinity in waters of
different depths, or on their electric properties, coloration, and
transparency, and in every instance Captain Nemo displayed an ingenuity equaled
only by his graciousness toward me. Then I saw no more of him for some days and
again lived on board in seclusion.
On January 16 the Nautilus seemed
to have fallen asleep just a few meters beneath the surface of the water. Its
electric equipment had been turned off, and the motionless propeller let it
ride with the waves. I assumed that the crew were busy with interior repairs,
required by the engine's strenuous mechanical action.
My companions and I then
witnessed an unusual sight. The panels in the lounge were open, and since the
Nautilus's beacon was off, a hazy darkness reigned in the midst of the waters.
Covered with heavy clouds, the stormy sky gave only the faintest light to the
ocean's upper strata.
I was observing the state of the
sea under these conditions, and even the largest fish were nothing more than
ill-defined shadows, when the Nautilus was suddenly transferred into broad
daylight. At first I thought the beacon had gone back on and was casting its
electric light into the liquid mass. I was mistaken, and after a hasty
examination I discovered my error.
The Nautilus had drifted into the
midst of some phosphorescent strata, which, in this darkness, came off as positively
dazzling. This effect was caused by myriads of tiny, luminous animals whose
brightness increased when they glided over the metal hull of our submersible.
In the midst of these luminous sheets of water, I then glimpsed flashes of
light, like those seen inside a blazing furnace from streams of molten lead or
from masses of metal brought to a white heat--flashes so intense that certain
areas of the light became shadows by comparison, in a fiery setting from which
every shadow should seemingly have been banished. No, this was no longer the
calm emission of our usual lighting! This light throbbed with unprecedented
vigor and activity! You sensed that it was alive!
In essence, it was a cluster of
countless open-sea infusoria, of noctiluca an eighth of an inch wide, actual
globules of transparent jelly equipped with a threadlike tentacle, up to 25,000
of which have been counted in thirty cubic centimeters of water. And the power
of their light was increased by those glimmers unique to medusas, starfish, common
jellyfish, angel-wing clams, and other phosphorescent zoophytes, which were
saturated with grease from organic matter decomposed by the sea, and perhaps
with mucus secreted by fish.
For several hours the Nautilus
drifted in this brilliant tide, and our wonderment grew when we saw huge marine
animals cavorting in it, like the fire-dwelling salamanders of myth. In the
midst of these flames that didn't burn, I could see swift, elegant porpoises,
the tireless pranksters of the seas, and sailfish three meters long, those
shrewd heralds of hurricanes, whose fearsome broadswords sometimes banged
against the lounge window. Then smaller fish appeared: miscellaneous
triggerfish, leather jacks, unicornfish, and a hundred others that left stripes
on this luminous atmosphere in their course.
Some magic lay behind this
dazzling sight! Perhaps some atmospheric condition had intensified this
phenomenon? Perhaps a storm had been unleashed on the surface of the waves? But
only a few meters down, the Nautilus felt no tempest's fury, and the ship
rocked peacefully in the midst of the calm waters.
And so it went, some new wonder
constantly delighting us. Conseil observed and classified his zoophytes,
articulates, mollusks, and fish. The days passed quickly, and I no longer kept
track of them. Ned, as usual, kept looking for changes of pace from our
standard fare. Like actual snails, we were at home in our shell, and I can
vouch that it's easy to turn into a full-fledged snail.
So this way of living began to
seem simple and natural to us, and we no longer envisioned a different
lifestyle on the surface of the planet earth, when something happened to remind
us of our strange circumstances.
On January 18 the Nautilus lay in
longitude 105 degrees and latitude 15 degrees south. The weather was
threatening, the sea rough and billowy. The wind was blowing a strong gust from
the east. The barometer, which had been falling for some days, forecast an
approaching struggle of the elements.
I had climbed onto the platform
just as the chief officer was taking his readings of hour angles. Out of habit
I waited for him to pronounce his daily phrase. But that day it was replaced by
a different phrase, just as incomprehensible. Almost at once I saw Captain Nemo
appear, lift his spyglass, and inspect the horizon.
For some minutes the captain
stood motionless, rooted to the spot contained within the field of his lens.
Then he lowered his spyglass and exchanged about ten words with his chief
officer. The latter seemed to be in the grip of an excitement he tried in vain
to control. More in command of himself, Captain Nemo remained cool.
Furthermore, he seemed to be raising certain objections that his chief officer
kept answering with flat assurances. At least that's what I gathered from their
differences in tone and gesture.
As for me, I stared industriously
in the direction under observation but without spotting a thing. Sky and water
merged into a perfectly clean horizon line.
Meanwhile Captain Nemo strolled
from one end of the platform to the other, not glancing at me, perhaps not even
seeing me. His step was firm but less regular than usual. Sometimes he would
stop, cross his arms over his chest, and observe the sea. What could he be
looking for over that immense expanse? By then the Nautilus lay hundreds of
miles from the nearest coast!
The chief officer kept lifting
his spyglass and stubbornly examining the horizon, walking up and down,
stamping his foot, in his nervous agitation a sharp contrast to his superior.
But this mystery would inevitably
be cleared up, and soon, because Captain Nemo gave orders to increase speed; at
once the engine stepped up its drive power, setting the propeller in swifter
rotation.
Just then the chief officer drew
the captain's attention anew. The latter interrupted his strolling and aimed
his spyglass at the point indicated. He observed it a good while. As for me,
deeply puzzled, I went below to the lounge and brought back an excellent
long-range telescope I habitually used. Leaning my elbows on the beacon housing,
which jutted from the stern of the platform, I got set to scour that whole
stretch of sky and sea.
But no sooner had I peered into
the eyepiece than the instrument was snatched from my hands.
I spun around. Captain Nemo was
standing before me, but I almost didn't recognize him. His facial features were
transfigured. Gleaming with dark fire, his eyes had shrunk beneath his frowning
brow. His teeth were half bared. His rigid body, clenched fists, and head drawn
between his shoulders, all attested to a fierce hate breathing from every pore.
He didn't move. My spyglass fell from his hand and rolled at his feet.
Had I accidentally caused these
symptoms of anger? Did this incomprehensible individual think I had detected
some secret forbidden to guests on the Nautilus?
No! I wasn't the subject of his
hate because he wasn't even looking at me; his eyes stayed stubbornly focused
on that inscrutable point of the horizon.
Finally Captain Nemo regained his
self-control. His facial appearance, so profoundly changed, now resumed its
usual calm. He addressed a few words to his chief officer in their strange
language, then he turned to me:
"Professor Aronnax," he
told me in a tone of some urgency, "I ask that you now honor one of the
binding agreements between us."
"Which one, captain?"
"You and your companions
must be placed in confinement until I see fit to set you free."
"You're in command," I
answered, gaping at him. "But may I address a question to you?"
"You may not, sir."
After that, I stopped objecting
and started obeying, since resistance was useless.
I went below to the cabin
occupied by Ned Land and Conseil, and I informed them of the captain's
decision. I'll let the reader decide how this news was received by the Canadian.
In any case, there was no time for explanations. Four crewmen were waiting at
the door, and they led us to the cell where we had spent our first night aboard
the Nautilus.
Ned Land tried to lodge a
complaint, but the only answer he got was a door shut in his face.
"Will master tell me what
this means?" Conseil asked me.
I told my companions what had
happened. They were as astonished as I was, but no wiser.
Then I sank into deep
speculation, and Captain Nemo's strange facial seizure kept haunting me. I was
incapable of connecting two ideas in logical order, and I had strayed into the
most absurd hypotheses, when I was snapped out of my mental struggles by these
words from Ned Land:
"Well, look here! Lunch is
served!"
Indeed, the table had been laid.
Apparently Captain Nemo had given this order at the same time he commanded the
Nautilus to pick up speed.
"Will master allow me to
make him a recommendation?" Conseil asked me.
"Yes, my boy," I
replied.
"Well, master needs to eat
his lunch! It's prudent, because we have no idea what the future holds."
"You're right,
Conseil."
"Unfortunately," Ned
Land said, "they've only given us the standard menu."
"Ned my friend,"
Conseil answered, "what would you say if they'd given us no lunch at
all?"
This dose of sanity cut the
harpooner's complaints clean off.
We sat down at the table. Our
meal proceeded pretty much in silence. I ate very little. Conseil,
everlastingly prudent, "force-fed" himself; and despite the menu, Ned
Land didn't waste a bite. Then, lunch over, each of us propped himself in a
corner.
Just then the luminous globe
lighting our cell went out, leaving us in profound darkness. Ned Land soon
dozed off, and to my astonishment, Conseil also fell into a heavy slumber. I
was wondering what could have caused this urgent need for sleep, when I felt a
dense torpor saturate my brain. I tried to keep my eyes open, but they closed
in spite of me. I was in the grip of anguished hallucinations. Obviously some
sleep-inducing substance had been laced into the food we'd just eaten! So
imprisonment wasn't enough to conceal Captain Nemo's plans from us-- sleep was
needed as well!
Then I heard the hatches close.
The sea's undulations, which had been creating a gentle rocking motion, now
ceased. Had the Nautilus left the surface of the ocean? Was it reentering the
motionless strata deep in the sea?
I tried to fight off this
drowsiness. It was impossible. My breathing grew weaker. I felt a mortal chill
freeze my dull, nearly paralyzed limbs. Like little domes of lead, my lids fell
over my eyes. I couldn't raise them. A morbid sleep, full of hallucinations,
seized my whole being. Then the visions disappeared and left me in utter
oblivion.
THE NEXT DAY I woke up with my
head unusually clear. Much to my surprise, I was in my stateroom. No doubt my
companions had been put back in their cabin without noticing it any more than I
had. Like me, they would have no idea what took place during the night, and to
unravel this mystery I could count only on some future happenstance.
I then considered leaving my
stateroom. Was I free or still a prisoner? Perfectly free. I opened my door,
headed down the gangways, and climbed the central companionway. Hatches that
had been closed the day before were now open. I arrived on the platform.
Ned Land and Conseil were there
waiting for me. I questioned them. They knew nothing. Lost in a heavy sleep of
which they had no memory, they were quite startled to be back in their cabin.
As for the Nautilus, it seemed as
tranquil and mysterious as ever. It was cruising on the surface of the waves at
a moderate speed. Nothing seemed to have changed on board.
Ned Land observed the sea with
his penetrating eyes. It was deserted. The Canadian sighted nothing new on the
horizon, neither sail nor shore. A breeze was blowing noisily from the west,
and disheveled by the wind, long billows made the submersible roll very
noticeably.
After renewing its air, the Nautilus
stayed at an average depth of fifteen meters, enabling it to return quickly to
the surface of the waves. And, contrary to custom, it executed such a maneuver
several times during that day of January 19. The chief officer would then climb
onto the platform, and his usual phrase would ring through the ship's interior.
As for Captain Nemo, he didn't
appear. Of the other men on board, I saw only my emotionless steward, who
served me with his usual mute efficiency.
Near two o'clock I was busy
organizing my notes in the lounge, when the captain opened the door and
appeared. I bowed to him. He gave me an almost imperceptible bow in return,
without saying a word to me. I resumed my work, hoping he might give me some
explanation of the previous afternoon's events. He did nothing of the sort. I
stared at him. His face looked exhausted; his reddened eyes hadn't been
refreshed by sleep; his facial features expressed profound sadness, real
chagrin. He walked up and down, sat and stood, picked up a book at random,
discarded it immediately, consulted his instruments without taking his
customary notes, and seemed unable to rest easy for an instant.
Finally he came over to me and
said:
"Are you a physician,
Professor Aronnax?"
This inquiry was so unexpected
that I stared at him a good while without replying.
"Are you a physician?"
he repeated. "Several of your scientific colleagues took their degrees in
medicine, such as Gratiolet, Moquin-Tandon, and others."
"That's right," I said,
"I am a doctor, I used to be on call at the hospitals. I was in practice
for several years before joining the museum."
"Excellent, sir."
My reply obviously pleased
Captain Nemo. But not knowing what he was driving at, I waited for further
questions, ready to reply as circumstances dictated.
"Professor Aronnax,"
the captain said to me, "would you consent to give your medical attentions
to one of my men?"
"Someone is sick?"
"Yes."
"I'm ready to go with
you."
"Come."
I admit that my heart was
pounding. Lord knows why, but I saw a definite connection between this sick
crewman and yesterday's happenings, and the mystery of those events concerned
me at least as much as the man's sickness.
Captain Nemo led me to the
Nautilus's stern and invited me into a cabin located next to the sailors'
quarters.
On a bed there lay a man some
forty years old, with strongly molded features, the very image of an
Anglo-Saxon.
I bent over him. Not only was he
sick, he was wounded. Swathed in blood-soaked linen, his head was resting on a
folded pillow. I undid the linen bandages, while the wounded man gazed with
great staring eyes and let me proceed without making a single complaint.
It was a horrible wound. The
cranium had been smashed open by some blunt instrument, leaving the naked
brains exposed, and the cerebral matter had suffered deep abrasions. Blood
clots had formed in this dissolving mass, taking on the color of wine dregs.
Both contusion and concussion of the brain had occurred. The sick man's
breathing was labored, and muscle spasms quivered in his face. Cerebral
inflammation was complete and had brought on a paralysis of movement and
sensation.
I took the wounded man's pulse.
It was intermittent. The body's extremities were already growing cold, and I
saw that death was approaching without any possibility of my holding it in
check. After dressing the poor man's wound, I redid the linen bandages around
his head, and I turned to Captain Nemo.
"How did he get this
wound?" I asked him.
"That's not important,"
the captain replied evasively. "The Nautilus suffered a collision that
cracked one of the engine levers, and it struck this man. My chief officer was
standing beside him. This man leaped forward to intercept the blow. A brother
lays down his life for his brother, a friend for his friend, what could be
simpler? That's the law for everyone on board the Nautilus. But what's your
diagnosis of his condition?"
I hesitated to speak my mind.
"You may talk freely,"
the captain told me. "This man doesn't understand French."
I took a last look at the wounded
man, then I replied:
"This man will be dead in
two hours."
"Nothing can save him?"
"Nothing."
Captain Nemo clenched his fists,
and tears slid from his eyes, which I had thought incapable of weeping.
For a few moments more I observed
the dying man, whose life was ebbing little by little. He grew still more pale
under the electric light that bathed his deathbed. I looked at his intelligent
head, furrowed with premature wrinkles that misfortune, perhaps misery, had
etched long before. I was hoping to detect the secret of his life in the last
words that might escape from his lips!
"You may go, Professor
Aronnax," Captain Nemo told me.
I left the captain in the dying
man's cabin and I repaired to my stateroom, very moved by this scene. All day
long I was aquiver with gruesome forebodings. That night I slept poorly, and
between my fitful dreams, I thought I heard a distant moaning, like a funeral
dirge. Was it a prayer for the dead, murmured in that language I couldn't
understand?
The next morning I climbed on
deck. Captain Nemo was already there. As soon as he saw me, he came over.
"Professor," he said to
me, "would it be convenient for you to make an underwater excursion
today?"
"With my companions?" I
asked.
"If they're agreeable."
"We're yours to command,
captain."
"Then kindly put on your
diving suits."
As for the dead or dying man, he
hadn't come into the picture. I rejoined Ned Land and Conseil. I informed them
of Captain Nemo's proposition. Conseil was eager to accept, and this time the
Canadian proved perfectly amenable to going with us.
It was eight o'clock in the
morning. By 8:30 we were suited up for this new stroll and equipped with our
two devices for lighting and breathing. The double door opened, and accompanied
by Captain Nemo with a dozen crewmen following, we set foot on the firm
seafloor where the Nautilus was resting, ten meters down.
A gentle slope gravitated to an
uneven bottom whose depth was about fifteen fathoms. This bottom was completely
different from the one I had visited during my first excursion under the waters
of the Pacific Ocean. Here I saw no fine-grained sand, no underwater prairies,
not one open-sea forest. I immediately recognized the wondrous region in which
Captain Nemo did the honors that day. It was the coral realm.
In the zoophyte branch, class
Alcyonaria, one finds the order Gorgonaria, which contains three groups: sea
fans, isidian polyps, and coral polyps. It's in this last that precious coral
belongs, an unusual substance that, at different times, has been classified in
the mineral, vegetable, and animal kingdoms. Medicine to the ancients, jewelry
to the moderns, it wasn't decisively placed in the animal kingdom until 1694,
by Peysonnel of Marseilles.
A coral is a unit of tiny animals
assembled over a polypary that's brittle and stony in nature. These polyps have
a unique generating mechanism that reproduces them via the budding process, and
they have an individual existence while also participating in a communal life.
Hence they embody a sort of natural socialism. I was familiar with the latest
research on this bizarre zoophyte-- which turns to stone while taking on a tree
form, as some naturalists have very aptly observed--and nothing could have been
more fascinating to me than to visit one of these petrified forests that nature
has planted on the bottom of the sea.
We turned on our Ruhmkorff
devices and went along a coral shoal in the process of forming, which, given
time, will someday close off this whole part of the Indian Ocean. Our path was
bordered by hopelessly tangled bushes, formed from snarls of shrubs all covered
with little star-shaped, white-streaked flowers. Only, contrary to plants on
shore, these tree forms become attached to rocks on the seafloor by heading
from top to bottom.
Our lights produced a thousand
delightful effects while playing over these brightly colored boughs. I fancied
I saw these cylindrical, membrane-filled tubes trembling beneath the water's
undulations. I was tempted to gather their fresh petals, which were adorned
with delicate tentacles, some newly in bloom, others barely opened, while
nimble fish with fluttering fins brushed past them like flocks of birds. But if
my hands came near the moving flowers of these sensitive, lively creatures, an
alarm would instantly sound throughout the colony. The white petals retracted
into their red sheaths, the flowers vanished before my eyes, and the bush
changed into a chunk of stony nipples.
Sheer chance had placed me in the
presence of the most valuable specimens of this zoophyte. This coral was the
equal of those fished up from the Mediterranean off the Barbary Coast or the
shores of France and Italy. With its bright colors, it lived up to those poetic
names of blood flower and blood foam that the industry confers on its finest
exhibits. Coral sells for as much as 500 francs per kilogram, and in this
locality the liquid strata hid enough to make the fortunes of a whole host of
coral fishermen. This valuable substance often merges with other polyparies,
forming compact, hopelessly tangled units known as "macciota," and I
noted some wonderful pink samples of this coral.
But as the bushes shrank, the
tree forms magnified. Actual petrified thickets and long alcoves from some
fantastic school of architecture kept opening up before our steps. Captain Nemo
entered beneath a dark gallery whose gentle slope took us to a depth of 100
meters. The light from our glass coils produced magical effects at times,
lingering on the wrinkled roughness of some natural arch, or some overhang
suspended like a chandelier, which our lamps flecked with fiery sparks. Amid
these shrubs of precious coral, I observed other polyps no less unusual: melita
coral, rainbow coral with jointed outgrowths, then a few tufts of genus
Corallina, some green and others red, actually a type of seaweed encrusted with
limestone salts, which, after long disputes, naturalists have finally placed in
the vegetable kingdom. But as one intellectual has remarked, "Here,
perhaps, is the actual point where life rises humbly out of slumbering stone,
but without breaking away from its crude starting point."
Finally, after two hours of
walking, we reached a depth of about 300 meters, in other words, the lowermost
limit at which coral can begin to form. But here it was no longer some isolated
bush or a modest grove of low timber. It was an immense forest, huge mineral
vegetation, enormous petrified trees linked by garlands of elegant hydras from
the genus Plumularia, those tropical creepers of the sea, all decked out in
shades and gleams. We passed freely under their lofty boughs, lost up in the
shadows of the waves, while at our feet organ-pipe coral, stony coral, star
coral, fungus coral, and sea anemone from the genus Caryophylia formed a carpet
of flowers all strewn with dazzling gems.
What an indescribable sight! Oh,
if only we could share our feelings! Why were we imprisoned behind these masks
of metal and glass! Why were we forbidden to talk with each other! At least let
us lead the lives of the fish that populate this liquid element, or better yet,
the lives of amphibians, which can spend long hours either at sea or on shore,
traveling through their double domain as their whims dictate!
Meanwhile Captain Nemo had called
a halt. My companions and I stopped walking, and turning around, I saw the
crewmen form a semicircle around their leader. Looking with greater care, I
observed that four of them were carrying on their shoulders an object that was
oblong in shape.
At this locality we stood in the
center of a huge clearing surrounded by the tall tree forms of this underwater
forest. Our lamps cast a sort of brilliant twilight over the area, making
inordinately long shadows on the seafloor. Past the boundaries of the clearing,
the darkness deepened again, relieved only by little sparkles given off by the
sharp crests of coral.
Ned Land and Conseil stood next
to me. We stared, and it dawned on me that I was about to witness a strange
scene. Observing the seafloor, I saw that it swelled at certain points from low
bulges that were encrusted with limestone deposits and arranged with a symmetry
that betrayed the hand of man.
In the middle of the clearing, on
a pedestal of roughly piled rocks, there stood a cross of coral, extending long
arms you would have thought were made of petrified blood.
At a signal from Captain Nemo,
one of his men stepped forward and, a few feet from this cross, detached a
mattock from his belt and began to dig a hole.
I finally understood! This
clearing was a cemetery, this hole a grave, that oblong object the body of the
man who must have died during the night! Captain Nemo and his men had come to
bury their companion in this communal resting place on the inaccessible ocean
floor!
No! My mind was reeling as never
before! Never had ideas of such impact raced through my brain! I didn't want to
see what my eyes saw!
Meanwhile the grave digging went
slowly. Fish fled here and there as their retreat was disturbed. I heard the
pick ringing on the limestone soil, its iron tip sometimes giving off sparks
when it hit a stray piece of flint on the sea bottom. The hole grew longer,
wider, and soon was deep enough to receive the body.
Then the pallbearers approached.
Wrapped in white fabric made from filaments of the fan mussel, the body was lowered
into its watery grave. Captain Nemo, arms crossed over his chest, knelt in a
posture of prayer, as did all the friends of him who had loved them. . . . My
two companions and I bowed reverently.
The grave was then covered over
with the rubble dug from the seafloor, and it formed a low mound.
When this was done, Captain Nemo
and his men stood up; then they all approached the grave, sank again on bended
knee, and extended their hands in a sign of final farewell. . . .
Then the funeral party went back
up the path to the Nautilus, returning beneath the arches of the forest,
through the thickets, along the coral bushes, going steadily higher.
Finally the ship's rays appeared.
Their luminous trail guided us to the Nautilus. By one o'clock we had returned.
After changing clothes, I climbed
onto the platform, and in the grip of dreadfully obsessive thoughts, I sat next
to the beacon.
Captain Nemo rejoined me. I stood
up and said to him:
"So, as I predicted, that
man died during the night?"
"Yes, Professor
Aronnax," Captain Nemo replied.
"And now he rests beside his
companions in that coral cemetery?"
"Yes, forgotten by the world
but not by us! We dig the graves, then entrust the polyps with sealing away our
dead for eternity!"
And with a sudden gesture, the
captain hid his face in his clenched fists, vainly trying to hold back a sob.
Then he added:
"There lies our peaceful
cemetery, hundreds of feet beneath the surface of the waves!"
"At least, captain, your
dead can sleep serenely there, out of the reach of sharks!"
"Yes, sir," Captain
Nemo replied solemnly, "of sharks and men!"
END OF THE FIRST PART
*Author's Note: About 106 meters.
An English foot is only 30.4 centimeters. *German: "Bulletin." Ed.
*Author's Note: A pier is a type of wharf expressly set aside for an individual
vessel. *Author's Note: Tenders are small steamboats that assist the big
liners. *Author's Note: A Bowie knife is a wide-bladed dagger that Americans
are forever carrying around. *Author's Note: A steward is a waiter on board a
steamer. *Latin: nemo means "no one." Ed. *Latin: "in a class by
itself." Ed. **Author's Note: And sure enough, there's now talk of such a
discovery, in which a new set of levers generates considerable power. Did its
inventor meet up with Captain Nemo? *Author's Note: "Ladyfingers" are
small, thin, white clouds with ragged edges. *Latin: a spigot "just for
that purpose." Ed. *Latin: "troubled dreams." Ed. 2 · Twenty
Thousand Leagues Under the Seas
8 · Twenty Thousand Leagues Under
the Seas
A Runaway Reef · 9
A Runaway Reef · 11
16 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
The Pros and Cons · 17
18 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
As Master Wishes · 19
22 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
As Master Wishes · 23
28 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
Ned Land · 27
30 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
At Random! · 29
· Twenty Thousand Leagues Under
the Seas
At Random! · 31
32 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
At Random! · 35
At Random! · 37
42 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
At Full Steam · 43
46 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
At Full Steam · 47
52 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
A Whale of Unknown Species · 53
54 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
"Mobilis in Mobili" ·
54
"Mobilis in Mobili" ·
53
54 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
60 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
"Mobilis in Mobili" ·
61
62 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
The Tantrums of Ned Land · 62
The Tantrums of Ned Land · 61
64 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
70 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
The Tantrums of Ned Land · 69
76 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
The Man of the Waters · 77
78 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
80 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
86 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
The Nautilus · 87
94 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
Everything through Electricity ·
93
96 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
Some Figures · 96
Some Figures · 95
102 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
Some Figures · 101
Some Figures · 103
112 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
The Black Current · 111
The Black Current ·
114 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
An Invitation in Writing · 113
Strolling the Plains · 121
122 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
Strolling the Plains · 123
124 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
Strolling the Plains · 124
Strolling the Plains · 125
126 · Twenty Thousand Leagues Under
the Seas
130 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
An Underwater Forest · 129
94 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas 94 · Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas
131 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
140 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
Four Thousand Leagues Under the
Pacific · 139
148 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
Vanikoro · 147
· Twenty Thousand Leagues Under
the Seas
The Torres Strait ·
The Torres Strait · 149
156 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
The Torres Strait · 155
158 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
Some Days Ashore · 158
Some Days Ashore · 157
168 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
Some Days Ashore · 167
170 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
The Lightning Bolts of Captain
Nemo · 170
The Lightning Bolts of Captain
Nemo · 169
180 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
The Lightning Bolts of Captain
Nemo · 179
182 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
184 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
"Aegri Somnia" · 131
186 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
190 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
"Aegri Somnia" · 189
192 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
The Coral Realm · 193
194 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
198 · Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Seas
The Coral Realm · 197
SECOND PART
______________________________________________________________
NOW WE BEGIN the second part of this
voyage under the seas. The first ended in that moving scene at the coral
cemetery, which left a profound impression on my mind. And so Captain Nemo
would live out his life entirely in the heart of this immense sea, and even his
grave lay ready in its impenetrable depths. There the last sleep of the
Nautilus's occupants, friends bound together in death as in life, would be
disturbed by no monster of the deep! "No man either!" the captain had
added.
Always that same fierce,
implacable defiance of human society!
As for me, I was no longer
content with the hypotheses that satisfied Conseil. That fine lad persisted in
seeing the Nautilus's commander as merely one of those unappreciated scientists
who repay humanity's indifference with contempt. For Conseil, the captain was
still a misunderstood genius who, tired of the world's deceptions, had been
driven to take refuge in this inaccessible environment where he was free to
follow his instincts. But to my mind, this hypothesis explained only one side
of Captain Nemo.
In fact, the mystery of that last
afternoon when we were locked in prison and put to sleep, the captain's violent
precaution of snatching from my grasp a spyglass poised to scour the horizon,
and the fatal wound given that man during some unexplained collision suffered
by the Nautilus, all led me down a plain trail. No! Captain Nemo wasn't content
simply to avoid humanity! His fearsome submersible served not only his quest
for freedom, but also, perhaps, it was used in lord-knows-what schemes of dreadful
revenge.
Right now, nothing is clear to
me, I still glimpse only glimmers in the dark, and I must limit my pen, as it
were, to taking dictation from events.
But nothing binds us to Captain
Nemo. He believes that escaping from the Nautilus is impossible. We are not
even constrained by our word of honor. No promises fetter us. We're simply
captives, prisoners masquerading under the name "guests" for the sake
of everyday courtesy. Even so, Ned Land hasn't given up all hope of recovering
his freedom. He's sure to take advantage of the first chance that comes his
way. No doubt I will do likewise. And yet I will feel some regret at making off
with the Nautilus's secrets, so generously unveiled for us by Captain Nemo!
Because, ultimately, should we detest or admire this man? Is he the persecutor
or the persecuted? And in all honesty, before I leave him forever, I want to
finish this underwater tour of the world, whose first stages have been so
magnificent. I want to observe the full series of these wonders gathered under
the seas of our globe. I want to see what no man has seen yet, even if I must
pay for this insatiable curiosity with my life! What are my discoveries to
date? Nothing, relatively speaking-- since so far we've covered only 6,000
leagues across the Pacific!
Nevertheless, I'm well aware that
the Nautilus is drawing near to populated shores, and if some chance for
salvation becomes available to us, it would be sheer cruelty to sacrifice my
companions to my passion for the unknown. I must go with them, perhaps even
guide them. But will this opportunity ever arise? The human being, robbed of
his free will, craves such an opportunity; but the scientist, forever
inquisitive, dreads it.
That day, January 21, 1868, the
chief officer went at noon to take the sun's altitude. I climbed onto the
platform, lit a cigar, and watched him at work. It seemed obvious to me that
this man didn't understand French, because I made several remarks in a loud
voice that were bound to provoke him to some involuntary show of interest had
he understood them; but he remained mute and emotionless.
While he took his sights with his
sextant, one of the Nautilus's sailors-- that muscular man who had gone with us
to Crespo Island during our first underwater excursion--came up to clean the
glass panes of the beacon. I then examined the fittings of this mechanism,
whose power was increased a hundredfold by biconvex lenses that were designed
like those in a lighthouse and kept its rays productively focused. This
electric lamp was so constructed as to yield its maximum illuminating power. In
essence, its light was generated in a vacuum, insuring both its steadiness and
intensity. Such a vacuum also reduced wear on the graphite points between which
the luminous arc expanded. This was an important savings for Captain Nemo, who
couldn't easily renew them. But under these conditions, wear and tear were
almost nonexistent.
When the Nautilus was ready to
resume its underwater travels, I went below again to the lounge. The hatches
closed once more, and our course was set due west.
We then plowed the waves of the
Indian Ocean, vast liquid plains with an area of 550,000,000 hectares, whose
waters are so transparent it makes you dizzy to lean over their surface. There
the Nautilus generally drifted at a depth between 100 and 200 meters. It
behaved in this way for some days. To anyone without my grand passion for the
sea, these hours would surely have seemed long and monotonous; but my daily
strolls on the platform where I was revived by the life-giving ocean air, the
sights in the rich waters beyond the lounge windows, the books to be read in
the library, and the composition of my memoirs, took up all my time and left me
without a moment of weariness or boredom.
All in all, we enjoyed a highly satisfactory
state of health. The diet on board agreed with us perfectly, and for my part, I
could easily have gone without those changes of pace that Ned Land, in a spirit
of protest, kept taxing his ingenuity to supply us. What's more, in this
constant temperature we didn't even have to worry about catching colds.
Besides, the ship had a good stock of the madrepore Dendrophylia, known in
Provence by the name sea fennel, and a poultice made from the dissolved flesh
of its polyps will furnish an excellent cough medicine.
For some days we saw a large
number of aquatic birds with webbed feet, known as gulls or sea mews. Some were
skillfully slain, and when cooked in a certain fashion, they make a very
acceptable platter of water game. Among the great wind riders--carried over
long distances from every shore and resting on the waves from their exhausting
flights-- I spotted some magnificent albatross, birds belonging to the
Longipennes (long-winged) family, whose discordant calls sound like the braying
of an ass. The Totipalmes (fully webbed) family was represented by swift
frigate birds, nimbly catching fish at the surface, and by numerous tropic
birds of the genus Phaeton, among others the red-tailed tropic bird, the size
of a pigeon, its white plumage shaded with pink tints that contrasted with its
dark-hued wings.
The Nautilus's nets hauled up
several types of sea turtle from the hawksbill genus with arching backs whose
scales are highly prized. Diving easily, these reptiles can remain a good while
underwater by closing the fleshy valves located at the external openings of
their nasal passages. When they were captured, some hawksbills were still
asleep inside their carapaces, a refuge from other marine animals. The flesh of
these turtles was nothing memorable, but their eggs made an excellent feast.
As for fish, they always filled
us with wonderment when, staring through the open panels, we could unveil the
secrets of their aquatic lives. I noted several species I hadn't previously
been able to observe.
I'll mention chiefly some
trunkfish unique to the Red Sea, the sea of the East Indies, and that part of
the ocean washing the coasts of equinoctial America. Like turtles, armadillos,
sea urchins, and crustaceans, these fish are protected by armor plate that's neither
chalky nor stony but actual bone. Sometimes this armor takes the shape of a
solid triangle, sometimes that of a solid quadrangle. Among the triangular
type, I noticed some half a decimeter long, with brown tails, yellow fins, and
wholesome, exquisitely tasty flesh; I even recommend that they be acclimatized
to fresh water, a change, incidentally, that a number of saltwater fish can
make with ease. I'll also mention some quadrangular trunkfish topped by four
large protuberances along the back; trunkfish sprinkled with white spots on the
underside of the body, which make good house pets like certain birds; boxfish
armed with stings formed by extensions of their bony crusts, and whose odd
grunting has earned them the nickname "sea pigs"; then some trunkfish
known as dromedaries, with tough, leathery flesh and big conical humps.
From the daily notes kept by Mr.
Conseil, I also retrieve certain fish from the genus Tetradon unique to these
seas: southern puffers with red backs and white chests distinguished by three
lengthwise rows of filaments, and jugfish, seven inches long, decked out in the
brightest colors. Then, as specimens of other genera, blowfish resembling a
dark brown egg, furrowed with white bands, and lacking tails; globefish,
genuine porcupines of the sea, armed with stings and able to inflate themselves
until they look like a pin cushion bristling with needles; seahorses common to
every ocean; flying dragonfish with long snouts and highly distended pectoral
fins shaped like wings, which enable them, if not to fly, at least to spring
into the air; spatula-shaped paddlefish whose tails are covered with many scaly
rings; snipefish with long jaws, excellent animals twenty-five centimeters long
and gleaming with the most cheerful colors; bluish gray dragonets with wrinkled
heads; myriads of leaping blennies with black stripes and long pectoral fins,
gliding over the surface of the water with prodigious speed; delicious sailfish
that can hoist their fins in a favorable current like so many unfurled sails;
splendid nurseryfish on which nature has lavished yellow, azure, silver, and
gold; yellow mackerel with wings made of filaments; bullheads forever spattered
with mud, which make distinct hissing sounds; sea robins whose livers are
thought to be poisonous; ladyfish that can flutter their eyelids; finally,
archerfish with long, tubular snouts, real oceangoing flycatchers, armed with a
rifle unforeseen by either Remington or Chassepot: it slays insects by shooting
them with a simple drop of water.
From the eighty-ninth fish genus
in Lacépède's system of classification, belonging to his second subclass of
bony fish (characterized by gill covers and a bronchial membrane), I noted some
scorpionfish whose heads are adorned with stings and which have only one dorsal
fin; these animals are covered with small scales, or have none at all,
depending on the subgenus to which they belong. The second subgenus gave us
some Didactylus specimens three to four decimeters long, streaked with yellow,
their heads having a phantasmagoric appearance. As for the first subgenus, it
furnished several specimens of that bizarre fish aptly nicknamed
"toadfish," whose big head is sometimes gouged with deep cavities,
sometimes swollen with protuberances; bristling with stings and strewn with
nodules, it sports hideously irregular horns; its body and tail are adorned
with callosities; its stings can inflict dangerous injuries; it's repulsive and
horrible.
From January 21 to the 23rd, the
Nautilus traveled at the rate of 250 leagues in twenty-four hours, hence 540
miles at twenty-two miles per hour. If, during our trip, we were able to
identify these different varieties of fish, it's because they were attracted by
our electric light and tried to follow alongside; but most of them were outdistanced
by our speed and soon fell behind; temporarily, however, a few managed to keep
pace in the Nautilus's waters.
On the morning of the 24th, in
latitude 12 degrees 5' south and longitude 94 degrees 33', we raised Keeling
Island, a madreporic upheaving planted with magnificent coconut trees, which
had been visited by Mr. Darwin and Captain Fitzroy. The Nautilus cruised along
a short distance off the shore of this desert island. Our dragnets brought up
many specimens of polyps and echinoderms plus some unusual shells from the
branch Mollusca. Captain Nemo's treasures were enhanced by some valuable
exhibits from the delphinula snail species, to which I joined some pointed star
coral, a sort of parasitic polypary that often attaches itself to seashells.
Soon Keeling Island disappeared
below the horizon, and our course was set to the northwest, toward the tip of
the Indian peninsula.
"Civilization!" Ned
Land told me that day. "Much better than those Papuan Islands where we ran
into more savages than venison! On this Indian shore, professor, there are
roads and railways, English, French, and Hindu villages. We wouldn't go five
miles without bumping into a fellow countryman. Come on now, isn't it time for
our sudden departure from Captain Nemo?"
"No, no, Ned," I
replied in a very firm tone. "Let's ride it out, as you seafaring fellows
say. The Nautilus is approaching populated areas. It's going back toward
Europe, let it take us there. After we arrive in home waters, we can do as we
see fit. Besides, I don't imagine Captain Nemo will let us go hunting on the
coasts of Malabar or Coromandel as he did in the forests of New Guinea."
"Well, sir, can't we manage
without his permission?"
I didn't answer the Canadian. I
wanted no arguments. Deep down, I was determined to fully exploit the good
fortune that had put me on board the Nautilus.
After leaving Keeling Island, our
pace got generally slower. It also got more unpredictable, often taking us to
great depths. Several times we used our slanting fins, which internal levers
could set at an oblique angle to our waterline. Thus we went as deep as two or
three kilometers down but without ever verifying the lowest depths of this sea
near India, which soundings of 13,000 meters have been unable to reach. As for
the temperature in these lower strata, the thermometer always and invariably
indicated 4 degrees centigrade. I merely observed that in the upper layers, the
water was always colder over shallows than in the open sea.
On January 25, the ocean being
completely deserted, the Nautilus spent the day on the surface, churning the
waves with its powerful propeller and making them spurt to great heights. Under
these conditions, who wouldn't have mistaken it for a gigantic cetacean? I
spent three-quarters of the day on the platform. I stared at the sea. Nothing
on the horizon, except near four o'clock in the afternoon a long steamer to the
west, running on our opposite tack. Its masting was visible for an instant, but
it couldn't have seen the Nautilus because we were lying too low in the water.
I imagine that steamboat belonged to the Peninsular & Oriental line, which
provides service from the island of Ceylon to Sidney, also calling at King
George Sound and Melbourne.
At five o'clock in the afternoon,
just before that brief twilight that links day with night in tropical zones,
Conseil and I marveled at an unusual sight.
It was a delightful animal whose
discovery, according to the ancients, is a sign of good luck. Aristotle, Athenaeus,
Pliny, and Oppian studied its habits and lavished on its behalf all the
scientific poetry of Greece and Italy. They called it "nautilus" and
"pompilius." But modern science has not endorsed these designations,
and this mollusk is now known by the name argonaut.
Anyone consulting Conseil would
soon learn from the gallant lad that the branch Mollusca is divided into five
classes; that the first class features the Cephalopoda (whose members are
sometimes naked, sometimes covered with a shell), which consists of two
families, the Dibranchiata and the Tetrabranchiata, which are distinguished by
their number of gills; that the family Dibranchiata includes three genera, the
argonaut, the squid, and the cuttlefish, and that the family Tetrabranchiata contains
only one genus, the nautilus. After this catalog, if some recalcitrant listener
confuses the argonaut, which is acetabuliferous (in other words, a bearer of
suction tubes), with the nautilus, which is tentaculiferous (a bearer of
tentacles), it will be simply unforgivable.
Now, it was a school of argonauts
then voyaging on the surface of the ocean. We could count several hundred of
them. They belonged to that species of argonaut covered with protuberances and
exclusive to the seas near India.
These graceful mollusks were
swimming backward by means of their locomotive tubes, sucking water into these
tubes and then expelling it. Six of their eight tentacles were long, thin, and
floated on the water, while the other two were rounded into palms and spread to
the wind like light sails. I could see perfectly their undulating,
spiral-shaped shells, which Cuvier aptly compared to an elegant cockleboat.
It's an actual boat indeed. It transports the animal that secretes it without
the animal sticking to it.
"The argonaut is free to
leave its shell," I told Conseil, "but it never does."
"Not unlike Captain
Nemo," Conseil replied sagely. "Which is why he should have
christened his ship the Argonaut."
For about an hour the Nautilus
cruised in the midst of this school of mollusks. Then, lord knows why, they
were gripped with a sudden fear. As if at a signal, every sail was abruptly
lowered; arms folded, bodies contracted, shells turned over by changing their
center of gravity, and the whole flotilla disappeared under the waves. It was
instantaneous, and no squadron of ships ever maneuvered with greater
togetherness.
Just then night fell suddenly,
and the waves barely surged in the breeze, spreading placidly around the
Nautilus's side plates.
The next day, January 26, we cut
the equator on the 82nd meridian and we reentered the northern hemisphere.
During that day a fearsome school
of sharks provided us with an escort. Dreadful animals that teem in these seas
and make them extremely dangerous. There were Port Jackson sharks with a brown
back, a whitish belly, and eleven rows of teeth, bigeye sharks with necks
marked by a large black spot encircled in white and resembling an eye, and
Isabella sharks whose rounded snouts were strewn with dark speckles. Often
these powerful animals rushed at the lounge window with a violence less than
comforting. By this point Ned Land had lost all self-control. He wanted to rise
to the surface of the waves and harpoon the monsters, especially certain
smooth-hound sharks whose mouths were paved with teeth arranged like a mosaic,
and some big five-meter tiger sharks that insisted on personally provoking him.
But the Nautilus soon picked up speed and easily left astern the fastest of
these man-eaters.
On January 27, at the entrance to
the huge Bay of Bengal, we repeatedly encountered a gruesome sight: human
corpses floating on the surface of the waves! Carried by the Ganges to the high
seas, these were deceased Indian villagers who hadn't been fully devoured by
vultures, the only morticians in these parts. But there was no shortage of
sharks to assist them with their undertaking chores.
Near seven o'clock in the
evening, the Nautilus lay half submerged, navigating in the midst of milky
white waves. As far as the eye could see, the ocean seemed lactified. Was it an
effect of the moon's rays? No, because the new moon was barely two days old and
was still lost below the horizon in the sun's rays. The entire sky, although
lit up by stellar radiation, seemed pitch-black in comparison with the whiteness
of these waters.
Conseil couldn't believe his
eyes, and he questioned me about the causes of this odd phenomenon. Luckily I
was in a position to answer him.
"That's called a milk
sea," I told him, "a vast expanse of white waves often seen along the
coasts of Amboina and in these waterways."
"But," Conseil asked,
"could master tell me the cause of this effect, because I presume this
water hasn't really changed into milk!"
"No, my boy, and this
whiteness that amazes you is merely due to the presence of myriads of tiny
creatures called infusoria, a sort of diminutive glowworm that's colorless and
gelatinous in appearance, as thick as a strand of hair, and no longer than
one-fifth of a millimeter. Some of these tiny creatures stick together over an area
of several leagues."
"Several leagues!"
Conseil exclaimed.
"Yes, my boy, and don't even
try to compute the number of these infusoria. You won't pull it off, because if
I'm not mistaken, certain navigators have cruised through milk seas for more
than forty miles."
I'm not sure that Conseil heeded
my recommendation, because he seemed to be deep in thought, no doubt trying to
calculate how many one-fifths of a millimeter are found in forty square miles.
As for me, I continued to observe this phenomenon. For several hours the
Nautilus's spur sliced through these whitish waves, and I watched it glide
noiselessly over this soapy water, as if it were cruising through those foaming
eddies that a bay's currents and countercurrents sometimes leave between each
other.
Near midnight the sea suddenly
resumed its usual hue, but behind us all the way to the horizon, the skies kept
mirroring the whiteness of those waves and for a good while seemed imbued with
the hazy glow of an aurora borealis.
ON JANUARY 28, in latitude 9
degrees 4' north, when the Nautilus returned at noon to the surface of the sea,
it lay in sight of land some eight miles to the west. Right off, I observed a
cluster of mountains about 2,000 feet high, whose shapes were very whimsically
sculpted. After our position fix, I reentered the lounge, and when our bearings
were reported on the chart, I saw that we were off the island of Ceylon, that
pearl dangling from the lower lobe of the Indian peninsula.
I went looking in the library for
a book about this island, one of the most fertile in the world. Sure enough, I
found a volume entitled Ceylon and the Singhalese by H. C. Sirr, Esq.
Reentering the lounge, I first noted the bearings of Ceylon, on which antiquity
lavished so many different names. It was located between latitude 5 degrees 55'
and 9 degrees 49' north, and between longitude 79 degrees 42' and 82 degrees 4'
east of the meridian of Greenwich; its length is 275 miles; its maximum width,
150 miles; its circumference, 900 miles; its surface area, 24,448 square miles,
in other words, a little smaller than that of Ireland.
Just then Captain Nemo and his
chief officer appeared.
The captain glanced at the chart.
Then, turning to me:
"The island of Ceylon,"
he said, "is famous for its pearl fisheries. Would you be interested,
Professor Aronnax, in visiting one of those fisheries?"
"Certainly, captain."
"Fine. It's easily done.
Only, when we see the fisheries, we'll see no fishermen. The annual harvest
hasn't yet begun. No matter. I'll give orders to make for the Gulf of Mannar,
and we'll arrive there late tonight."
The captain said a few words to
his chief officer who went out immediately. Soon the Nautilus reentered its liquid
element, and the pressure gauge indicated that it was staying at a depth of
thirty feet.
With the chart under my eyes, I
looked for the Gulf of Mannar. I found it by the 9th parallel off the
northwestern shores of Ceylon. It was formed by the long curve of little Mannar
Island. To reach it we had to go all the way up Ceylon's west coast.
"Professor," Captain
Nemo then told me, "there are pearl fisheries in the Bay of Bengal, the
seas of the East Indies, the seas of China and Japan, plus those seas south of
the United States, the Gulf of Panama and the Gulf of California; but it's off
Ceylon that such fishing reaps its richest rewards. No doubt we'll be arriving
a little early. Fishermen gather in the Gulf of Mannar only during the month of
March, and for thirty days some 300 boats concentrate on the lucrative harvest
of these treasures from the sea. Each boat is manned by ten oarsmen and ten
fishermen. The latter divide into two groups, dive in rotation, and descend to
a depth of twelve meters with the help of a heavy stone clutched between their
feet and attached by a rope to their boat."
"You mean," I said,
"that such primitive methods are still all that they use?"
"All," Captain Nemo
answered me, "although these fisheries belong to the most industrialized
people in the world, the English, to whom the Treaty of Amiens granted them in
1802."
"Yet it strikes me that
diving suits like yours could perform yeoman service in such work."
"Yes, since those poor
fishermen can't stay long underwater. On his voyage to Ceylon, the Englishman
Percival made much of a Kaffir who stayed under five minutes without coming up
to the surface, but I find that hard to believe. I know that some divers can
last up to fifty-seven seconds, and highly skillful ones to eighty-seven; but
such men are rare, and when the poor fellows climb back on board, the water
coming out of their noses and ears is tinted with blood. I believe the average
time underwater that these fishermen can tolerate is thirty seconds, during
which they hastily stuff their little nets with all the pearl oysters they can
tear loose. But these fishermen generally don't live to advanced age: their
vision weakens, ulcers break out on their eyes, sores form on their bodies, and
some are even stricken with apoplexy on the ocean floor."
"Yes," I said,
"it's a sad occupation, and one that exists only to gratify the whims of
fashion. But tell me, captain, how many oysters can a boat fish up in a
workday?"
"About 40,000 to 50,000.
It's even said that in 1814, when the English government went fishing on its
own behalf, its divers worked just twenty days and brought up 76,000,000
oysters."
"At least," I asked,
"the fishermen are well paid, aren't they?"
"Hardly, professor. In
Panama they make just $1.00 per week. In most places they earn only a penny for
each oyster that has a pearl, and they bring up so many that have none!"
"Only one penny to those
poor people who make their employers rich! That's atrocious!"
"On that note,
professor," Captain Nemo told me, "you and your companions will visit
the Mannar oysterbank, and if by chance some eager fisherman arrives early,
well, we can watch him at work."
"That suits me,
captain."
"By the way, Professor
Aronnax, you aren't afraid of sharks, are you?"
"Sharks?" I exclaimed.
This struck me as a pretty
needless question, to say the least.
"Well?" Captain Nemo
went on.
"I admit, captain, I'm not
yet on very familiar terms with that genus of fish."
"We're used to them, the
rest of us," Captain Nemo answered. "And in time you will be too.
Anyhow, we'll be armed, and on our way we might hunt a man-eater or two. It's a
fascinating sport. So, professor, I'll see you tomorrow, bright and
early."
This said in a carefree tone,
Captain Nemo left the lounge.
If you're invited to hunt bears
in the Swiss mountains, you might say: "Oh good, I get to go bear hunting
tomorrow!" If you're invited to hunt lions on the Atlas plains or tigers
in the jungles of India, you might say: "Ha! Now's my chance to hunt lions
and tigers!" But if you're invited to hunt sharks in their native element,
you might want to think it over before accepting.
As for me, I passed a hand over
my brow, where beads of cold sweat were busy forming.
"Let's think this
over," I said to myself, "and let's take our time. Hunting otters in
underwater forests, as we did in the forests of Crespo Island, is an acceptable
activity. But to roam the bottom of the sea when you're almost certain to meet
man-eaters in the neighborhood, that's another story! I know that in certain
countries, particularly the Andaman Islands, Negroes don't hesitate to attack
sharks, dagger in one hand and noose in the other; but I also know that many
who face those fearsome animals don't come back alive. Besides, I'm not a
Negro, and even if I were a Negro, in this instance I don't think a little
hesitation on my part would be out of place."
And there I was, fantasizing
about sharks, envisioning huge jaws armed with multiple rows of teeth and
capable of cutting a man in half. I could already feel a definite pain around
my pelvic girdle. And how I resented the offhand manner in which the captain
had extended his deplorable invitation! You would have thought it was an issue
of going into the woods on some harmless fox hunt!
"Thank heavens!" I said
to myself. "Conseil will never want to come along, and that'll be my
excuse for not going with the captain."
As for Ned Land, I admit I felt
less confident of his wisdom. Danger, however great, held a perennial
attraction for his aggressive nature.
I went back to reading Sirr's
book, but I leafed through it mechanically. Between the lines I kept seeing
fearsome, wide-open jaws.
Just then Conseil and the
Canadian entered with a calm, even gleeful air. Little did they know what was
waiting for them.
"Ye gods, sir!" Ned
Land told me. "Your Captain Nemo--the devil take him--has just made us a
very pleasant proposition!"
"Oh!" I said "You
know about--"
"With all due respect to
master," Conseil replied, "the Nautilus's commander has invited us,
together with master, for a visit tomorrow to Ceylon's magnificent pearl
fisheries. He did so in the most cordial terms and conducted himself like a
true gentleman."
"He didn't tell you anything
else?"
"Nothing, sir," the
Canadian replied. "He said you'd already discussed this little
stroll."
"Indeed," I said.
"But didn't he give you any details on--"
"Not a one, Mr. Naturalist.
You will be going with us, right?"
"Me? Why yes, certainly, of
course! I can see that you like the idea, Mr. Land."
"Yes! It will be a really
unusual experience!"
"And possibly
dangerous!" I added in an insinuating tone.
"Dangerous?" Ned Land
replied. "A simple trip to an oysterbank?"
Assuredly, Captain Nemo hadn't
seen fit to plant the idea of sharks in the minds of my companions. For my
part, I stared at them with anxious eyes, as if they were already missing a
limb or two. Should I alert them? Yes, surely, but I hardly knew how to go
about it.
"Would master," Conseil
said to me, "give us some background on pearl fishing?"
"On the fishing
itself?" I asked. "Or on the occupational hazards that--"
"On the fishing," the
Canadian replied. "Before we tackle the terrain, it helps to be familiar
with it."
"All right, sit down, my
friends, and I'll teach you everything I myself have just been taught by the
Englishman H. C. Sirr!"
Ned and Conseil took seats on a
couch, and right off the Canadian said to me:
"Sir, just what is a pearl
exactly?"
"My gallant Ned," I
replied, "for poets a pearl is a tear from the sea; for Orientals it's a drop
of solidified dew; for the ladies it's a jewel they can wear on their fingers,
necks, and ears that's oblong in shape, glassy in luster, and formed from
mother-of-pearl; for chemists it's a mixture of calcium phosphate and calcium
carbonate with a little gelatin protein; and finally, for naturalists it's a
simple festering secretion from the organ that produces mother-of-pearl in
certain bivalves."
"Branch Mollusca,"
Conseil said, "class Acephala, order Testacea."
"Correct, my scholarly
Conseil. Now then, those Testacea capable of producing pearls include rainbow
abalone, turbo snails, giant clams, and saltwater scallops--briefly, all those
that secrete mother-of-pearl, in other words, that blue, azure, violet, or
white substance lining the insides of their valves."
"Are mussels included
too?" the Canadian asked.
"Yes! The mussels of certain
streams in Scotland, Wales, Ireland, Saxony, Bohemia, and France."
"Good!" the Canadian
replied. "From now on we'll pay closer attention to 'em."
"But," I went on,
"for secreting pearls, the ideal mollusk is the pearl oyster Meleagrina
margaritifera, that valuable shellfish. Pearls result simply from
mother-of-pearl solidifying into a globular shape. Either they stick to the
oyster's shell, or they become embedded in the creature's folds. On the valves
a pearl sticks fast; on the flesh it lies loose. But its nucleus is always some
small, hard object, say a sterile egg or a grain of sand, around which the
mother-of-pearl is deposited in thin, concentric layers over several years in
succession."
"Can one find several pearls
in the same oyster?" Conseil asked.
"Yes, my boy. There are some
shellfish that turn into real jewel coffers. They even mention one oyster,
about which I remain dubious, that supposedly contained at least 150
sharks."
"150 sharks!" Ned Land
yelped.
"Did I say sharks?" I
exclaimed hastily. "I meant 150 pearls. Sharks wouldn't make sense."
"Indeed," Conseil said.
"But will master now tell us how one goes about extracting these
pearls?"
"One proceeds in several
ways, and often when pearls stick to the valves, fishermen even pull them loose
with pliers. But usually the shellfish are spread out on mats made from the
esparto grass that covers the beaches. Thus they die in the open air, and by
the end of ten days they've rotted sufficiently. Next they're immersed in huge
tanks of salt water, then they're opened up and washed. At this point the
sorters begin their twofold task. First they remove the layers of
mother-of-pearl, which are known in the industry by the names legitimate
silver, bastard white, or bastard black, and these are shipped out in cases
weighing 125 to 150 kilograms. Then they remove the oyster's meaty tissue, boil
it, and finally strain it, in order to extract even the smallest pearls."
"Do the prices of these
pearls differ depending on their size?" Conseil asked.
"Not only on their
size," I replied, "but also according to their shape, their water--in
other words, their color--and their orient-- in other words, that dappled, shimmering
glow that makes them so delightful to the eye. The finest pearls are called
virgin pearls, or paragons; they form in isolation within the mollusk's tissue.
They're white, often opaque but sometimes of opalescent transparency, and
usually spherical or pear-shaped. The spherical ones are made into bracelets;
the pear-shaped ones into earrings, and since they're the most valuable,
they're priced individually. The other pearls that stick to the oyster's shell
are more erratically shaped and are priced by weight. Finally, classed in the
lowest order, the smallest pearls are known by the name seed pearls; they're
priced by the measuring cup and are used mainly in the creation of embroidery
for church vestments."
"But it must be a long, hard
job, sorting out these pearls by size," the Canadian said.
"No, my friend. That task is
performed with eleven strainers, or sieves, that are pierced with different
numbers of holes. Those pearls staying in the strainers with twenty to eighty
holes are in the first order. Those not slipping through the sieves pierced
with 100 to 800 holes are in the second order. Finally, those pearls for which
one uses strainers pierced with 900 to 1,000 holes make up the seed
pearls."
"How ingenious,"
Conseil said, "to reduce dividing and classifying pearls to a mechanical
operation. And could master tell us the profits brought in by harvesting these
banks of pearl oysters?"
"According to Sirr's
book," I replied, "these Ceylon fisheries are farmed annually for a
total profit of 3,000,000 man-eaters."
"Francs!" Conseil
rebuked.
"Yes, francs! 3,000,000
francs!" I went on. "But I don't think these fisheries bring in the
returns they once did. Similarly, the Central American fisheries used to make
an annual profit of 4,000,000 francs during the reign of King Charles V, but
now they bring in only two-thirds of that amount. All in all, it's estimated
that 9,000,000 francs is the current yearly return for the whole
pearl-harvesting industry."
"But," Conseil asked,
"haven't certain famous pearls been quoted at extremely high prices?"
"Yes, my boy. They say
Julius Caesar gave Servilia a pearl worth 120,000 francs in our currency."
"I've even heard
stories," the Canadian said, "about some lady in ancient times who
drank pearls in vinegar."
"Cleopatra," Conseil
shot back.
"It must have tasted pretty
bad," Ned Land added.
"Abominable, Ned my
friend," Conseil replied. "But when a little glass of vinegar is
worth 1,500,000 francs, its taste is a small price to pay."
"I'm sorry I didn't marry
the gal," the Canadian said, throwing up his hands with an air of
discouragement.
"Ned Land married to
Cleopatra?" Conseil exclaimed.
"But I was all set to tie
the knot, Conseil," the Canadian replied in all seriousness, "and it
wasn't my fault the whole business fell through. I even bought a pearl necklace
for my fiancée, Kate Tender, but she married somebody else instead. Well, that
necklace cost me only $1.50, but you can absolutely trust me on this,
professor, its pearls were so big, they wouldn't have gone through that
strainer with twenty holes."
"My gallant Ned," I
replied, laughing, "those were artificial pearls, ordinary glass beads
whose insides were coated with Essence of Orient."
"Wow!" the Canadian
replied. "That Essence of Orient must sell for quite a large sum."
"As little as zero! It comes
from the scales of a European carp, it's nothing more than a silver substance
that collects in the water and is preserved in ammonia. It's worthless."
"Maybe that's why Kate
Tender married somebody else," replied Mr. Land philosophically.
"But," I said,
"getting back to pearls of great value, I don't think any sovereign ever
possessed one superior to the pearl owned by Captain Nemo."
"This one?" Conseil
said, pointing to a magnificent jewel in its glass case.
"Exactly. And I'm certainly
not far off when I estimate its value at 2,000,000 . . . uh . . ."
"Francs!" Conseil said
quickly.
"Yes," I said,
"2,000,000 francs, and no doubt all it cost our captain was the effort to
pick it up."
"Ha!" Ned Land
exclaimed. "During our stroll tomorrow, who says we won't run into one
just like it?"
"Bah!" Conseil put in.
"And why not?"
"What good would a pearl
worth millions do us here on the Nautilus?"
"Here, no," Ned Land
said. "But elsewhere. . . ."
"Oh! Elsewhere!"
Conseil put in, shaking his head.
"In fact," I said,
"Mr. Land is right. And if we ever brought back to Europe or America a
pearl worth millions, it would make the story of our adventures more
authentic--and much more rewarding."
"That's how I see it,"
the Canadian said.
"But," said Conseil,
who perpetually returned to the didactic side of things, "is this pearl
fishing ever dangerous?"
"No," I replied
quickly, "especially if one takes certain precautions."
"What risks would you run in
a job like that?" Ned Land said. "Swallowing a few gulps of salt
water?"
"Whatever you say,
Ned." Then, trying to imitate Captain Nemo's carefree tone, I asked,
"By the way, gallant Ned, are you afraid of sharks?"
"Me?" the Canadian
replied. "I'm a professional harpooner! It's my job to make a mockery of
them!"
"It isn't an issue," I
said, "of fishing for them with a swivel hook, hoisting them onto the deck
of a ship, chopping off the tail with a sweep of the ax, opening the belly,
ripping out the heart, and tossing it into the sea."
"So it's an issue of . . .
?"
"Yes, precisely."
"In the water?"
"In the water."
"Ye gods, just give me a
good harpoon! You see, sir, these sharks are badly designed. They have to roll
their bellies over to snap you up, and in the meantime . . ."
Ned Land had a way of pronouncing
the word "snap" that sent chills down the spine.
"Well, how about you,
Conseil? What are your feelings about these man-eaters?"
"Me?" Conseil said.
"I'm afraid I must be frank with master."
Good for you, I thought.
"If master faces these
sharks," Conseil said, "I think his loyal manservant should face them
with him!"
NIGHT FELL. I went to bed. I
slept pretty poorly. Man-eaters played a major role in my dreams. And I found
it more or less appropriate that the French word for shark, requin, has its
linguistic roots in the word requiem.
The next day at four o'clock in
the morning, I was awakened by the steward whom Captain Nemo had placed
expressly at my service. I got up quickly, dressed, and went into the lounge.
Captain Nemo was waiting for me.
"Professor Aronnax," he
said to me, "are you ready to start?"
"I'm ready."
"Kindly follow me."
"What about my companions,
captain?"
"They've been alerted and are
waiting for us."
"Aren't we going to put on
our diving suits?" I asked.
"Not yet. I haven't let the
Nautilus pull too near the coast, and we're fairly well out from the Mannar
oysterbank. But I have the skiff ready, and it will take us to the exact spot
where we'll disembark, which will save us a pretty long trek. It's carrying our
diving equipment, and we'll suit up just before we begin our underwater
exploring."
Captain Nemo took me to the
central companionway whose steps led to the platform. Ned and Conseil were
there, enraptured with the "pleasure trip" getting under way. Oars in
position, five of the Nautilus's sailors were waiting for us aboard the skiff,
which was moored alongside. The night was still dark. Layers of clouds cloaked the
sky and left only a few stars in view. My eyes flew to the side where land lay,
but I saw only a blurred line covering three-quarters of the horizon from
southwest to northwest. Going up Ceylon's west coast during the night, the
Nautilus lay west of the bay, or rather that gulf formed by the mainland and
Mannar Island. Under these dark waters there stretched the bank of shellfish,
an inexhaustible field of pearls more than twenty miles long.
Captain Nemo, Conseil, Ned Land,
and I found seats in the stern of the skiff. The longboat's coxswain took the
tiller; his four companions leaned into their oars; the moorings were cast off
and we pulled clear.
The skiff headed southward. The
oarsmen took their time. I watched their strokes vigorously catch the water,
and they always waited ten seconds before rowing again, following the practice
used in most navies. While the longboat coasted, drops of liquid flicked from
the oars and hit the dark troughs of the waves, pitter-pattering like splashes
of molten lead. Coming from well out, a mild swell made the skiff roll gently,
and a few cresting billows lapped at its bow.
We were silent. What was Captain
Nemo thinking? Perhaps that this approaching shore was too close for comfort,
contrary to the Canadian's views in which it still seemed too far away. As for
Conseil, he had come along out of simple curiosity.
Near 5:30 the first glimmers of
light on the horizon defined the upper lines of the coast with greater
distinctness. Fairly flat to the east, it swelled a little toward the south.
Five miles still separated it from us, and its beach merged with the misty
waters. Between us and the shore, the sea was deserted. Not a boat, not a
diver. Profound solitude reigned over this gathering place of pearl fishermen.
As Captain Nemo had commented, we were arriving in these waterways a month too
soon.
At six o'clock the day broke
suddenly, with that speed unique to tropical regions, which experience no real
dawn or dusk. The sun's rays pierced the cloud curtain gathered on the easterly
horizon, and the radiant orb rose swiftly.
I could clearly see the shore,
which featured a few sparse trees here and there.
The skiff advanced toward Mannar
Island, which curved to the south. Captain Nemo stood up from his thwart and
studied the sea.
At his signal the anchor was
lowered, but its chain barely ran because the bottom lay no more than a meter
down, and this locality was one of the shallowest spots near the bank of
shellfish. Instantly the skiff wheeled around under the ebb tide's outbound thrust.
"Here we are, Professor
Aronnax," Captain Nemo then said. "You observe this confined bay? A
month from now in this very place, the numerous fishing boats of the harvesters
will gather, and these are the waters their divers will ransack so daringly. This
bay is felicitously laid out for their type of fishing. It's sheltered from the
strongest winds, and the sea is never very turbulent here, highly favorable
conditions for diving work. Now let's put on our underwater suits, and we'll
begin our stroll."
I didn't reply, and while staring
at these suspicious waves, I began to put on my heavy aquatic clothes, helped
by the longboat's sailors. Captain Nemo and my two companions suited up as
well. None of the Nautilus's men were to go with us on this new excursion.
Soon we were imprisoned up to the
neck in india-rubber clothing, and straps fastened the air devices onto our
backs. As for the Ruhmkorff device, it didn't seem to be in the picture. Before
inserting my head into its copper capsule, I commented on this to the captain.
"Our lighting equipment
would be useless to us," the captain answered me. "We won't be going
very deep, and the sun's rays will be sufficient to light our way. Besides,
it's unwise to carry electric lanterns under these waves. Their brightness
might unexpectedly attract certain dangerous occupants of these
waterways."
As Captain Nemo pronounced these
words, I turned to Conseil and Ned Land. But my two friends had already encased
their craniums in their metal headgear, and they could neither hear nor reply.
I had one question left to
address to Captain Nemo.
"What about our
weapons?" I asked him. "Our rifles?"
"Rifles! What for? Don't
your mountaineers attack bears dagger in hand? And isn't steel surer than lead?
Here's a sturdy blade. Slip it under your belt and let's be off."
I stared at my companions. They
were armed in the same fashion, and Ned Land was also brandishing an enormous
harpoon he had stowed in the skiff before leaving the Nautilus.
Then, following the captain's
example, I let myself be crowned with my heavy copper sphere, and our air tanks
immediately went into action.
An instant later, the longboat's
sailors helped us overboard one after the other, and we set foot on level sand
in a meter and a half of water. Captain Nemo gave us a hand signal. We followed
him down a gentle slope and disappeared under the waves.
There the obsessive fears in my
brain left me. I became surprisingly calm again. The ease with which I could
move increased my confidence, and the many strange sights captivated my
imagination.
The sun was already sending
sufficient light under these waves. The tiniest objects remained visible. After
ten minutes of walking, we were in five meters of water, and the terrain had
become almost flat.
Like a covey of snipe over a
marsh, there rose underfoot schools of unusual fish from the genus Monopterus,
whose members have no fin but their tail. I recognized the Javanese eel, a
genuine eight-decimeter serpent with a bluish gray belly, which, without the
gold lines over its flanks, could easily be confused with the conger eel. From
the butterfish genus, whose oval bodies are very flat, I observed several
adorned in brilliant colors and sporting a dorsal fin like a sickle, edible
fish that, when dried and marinated, make an excellent dish known by the name
"karawade"; then some sea poachers, fish belonging to the genus
Aspidophoroides, whose bodies are covered with scaly armor divided into eight
lengthwise sections.
Meanwhile, as the sun got progressively
higher, it lit up the watery mass more and more. The seafloor changed little by
little. Its fine-grained sand was followed by a genuine causeway of smooth
crags covered by a carpet of mollusks and zoophytes. Among other specimens in
these two branches, I noted some windowpane oysters with thin valves of unequal
size, a type of ostracod unique to the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean, then
orange-hued lucina with circular shells, awl-shaped auger shells, some of those
Persian murex snails that supply the Nautilus with such wonderful dye, spiky
periwinkles fifteen centimeters long that rose under the waves like hands ready
to grab you, turban snails with shells made of horn and bristling all over with
spines, lamp shells, edible duck clams that feed the Hindu marketplace, subtly
luminous jellyfish of the species Pelagia panopyra, and finally some wonderful
Oculina flabelliforma, magnificent sea fans that fashion one of the most
luxuriant tree forms in this ocean.
In the midst of this moving
vegetation, under arbors of water plants, there raced legions of clumsy
articulates, in particular some fanged frog crabs whose carapaces form a
slightly rounded triangle, robber crabs exclusive to these waterways, and
horrible parthenope crabs whose appearance was repulsive to the eye. One animal
no less hideous, which I encountered several times, was the enormous crab that
Mr. Darwin observed, to which nature has given the instinct and requisite
strength to eat coconuts; it scrambles up trees on the beach and sends the
coconuts tumbling; they fracture in their fall and are opened by its powerful
pincers. Here, under these clear waves, this crab raced around with matchless
agility, while green turtles from the species frequenting the Malabar coast
moved sluggishly among the crumbling rocks.
Near seven o'clock we finally
surveyed the bank of shellfish, where pearl oysters reproduce by the millions.
These valuable mollusks stick to rocks, where they're strongly attached by a
mass of brown filaments that forbids their moving about. In this respect
oysters are inferior even to mussels, to whom nature has not denied all talent
for locomotion.
The shellfish Meleagrina, that
womb for pearls whose valves are nearly equal in size, has the shape of a round
shell with thick walls and a very rough exterior. Some of these shells were
furrowed with flaky, greenish bands that radiated down from the top. These were
the young oysters. The others had rugged black surfaces, measured up to fifteen
centimeters in width, and were ten or more years old.
Captain Nemo pointed to this
prodigious heap of shellfish, and I saw that these mines were genuinely
inexhaustible, since nature's creative powers are greater than man's
destructive instincts. True to those instincts, Ned Land greedily stuffed the
finest of these mollusks into a net he carried at his side.
But we couldn't stop. We had to
follow the captain, who headed down trails seemingly known only to himself. The
seafloor rose noticeably, and when I lifted my arms, sometimes they would pass
above the surface of the sea. Then the level of the oysterbank would lower
unpredictably. Often we went around tall, pointed rocks rising like pyramids.
In their dark crevices huge crustaceans, aiming their long legs like heavy
artillery, watched us with unblinking eyes, while underfoot there crept
millipedes, bloodworms, aricia worms, and annelid worms, whose antennas and
tubular tentacles were incredibly long.
Just then a huge cave opened up
in our path, hollowed from a picturesque pile of rocks whose smooth heights
were completely hung with underwater flora. At first this cave looked
pitch-black to me. Inside, the sun's rays seemed to diminish by degrees. Their
hazy transparency was nothing more than drowned light.
Captain Nemo went in. We followed
him. My eyes soon grew accustomed to this comparative gloom. I distinguished
the unpredictably contoured springings of a vault, supported by natural pillars
firmly based on a granite foundation, like the weighty columns of Tuscan
architecture. Why had our incomprehensible guide taken us into the depths of
this underwater crypt? I would soon find out.
After going down a fairly steep
slope, our feet trod the floor of a sort of circular pit. There Captain Nemo
stopped, and his hand indicated an object that I hadn't yet noticed.
It was an oyster of extraordinary
dimensions, a titanic giant clam, a holy-water font that could have held a
whole lake, a basin more than two meters wide, hence even bigger than the one
adorning the Nautilus's lounge.
I approached this phenomenal
mollusk. Its mass of filaments attached it to a table of granite, and there it
grew by itself in the midst of the cave's calm waters. I estimated the weight
of this giant clam at 300 kilograms. Hence such an oyster held fifteen kilos of
meat, and you'd need the stomach of King Gargantua to eat a couple dozen.
Captain Nemo was obviously
familiar with this bivalve's existence. This wasn't the first time he'd paid it
a visit, and I thought his sole reason for leading us to this locality was to
show us a natural curiosity. I was mistaken. Captain Nemo had an explicit
personal interest in checking on the current condition of this giant clam.
The mollusk's two valves were
partly open. The captain approached and stuck his dagger vertically between the
shells to discourage any ideas about closing; then with his hands he raised the
fringed, membrane-filled tunic that made up the animal's mantle.
There, between its leaflike
folds, I saw a loose pearl as big as a coconut. Its globular shape, perfect
clarity, and wonderful orient made it a jewel of incalculable value. Carried
away by curiosity, I stretched out my hand to take it, weigh it, fondle it! But
the captain stopped me, signaled no, removed his dagger in one swift motion,
and let the two valves snap shut.
I then understood Captain Nemo's
intent. By leaving the pearl buried beneath the giant clam's mantle, he allowed
it to grow imperceptibly. With each passing year the mollusk's secretions added
new concentric layers. The captain alone was familiar with the cave where this
wonderful fruit of nature was "ripening"; he alone reared it, so to
speak, in order to transfer it one day to his dearly beloved museum. Perhaps,
following the examples of oyster farmers in China and India, he had even predetermined
the creation of this pearl by sticking under the mollusk's folds some piece of
glass or metal that was gradually covered with mother-of-pearl. In any case,
comparing this pearl to others I already knew about, and to those shimmering in
the captain's collection, I estimated that it was worth at least 10,000,000
francs. It was a superb natural curiosity rather than a luxurious piece of
jewelry, because I don't know of any female ear that could handle it.
Our visit to this opulent giant
clam came to an end. Captain Nemo left the cave, and we climbed back up the
bank of shellfish in the midst of these clear waters not yet disturbed by
divers at work.
We walked by ourselves, genuine
loiterers stopping or straying as our fancies dictated. For my part, I was no
longer worried about those dangers my imagination had so ridiculously
exaggerated. The shallows drew noticeably closer to the surface of the sea, and
soon, walking in only a meter of water, my head passed well above the level of
the ocean. Conseil rejoined me, and gluing his huge copper capsule to mine, his
eyes gave me a friendly greeting. But this lofty plateau measured only a few
fathoms, and soon we reentered Our Element. I think I've now earned the right
to dub it that.
Ten minutes later, Captain Nemo
stopped suddenly. I thought he'd called a halt so that we could turn and start
back. No. With a gesture he ordered us to crouch beside him at the foot of a
wide crevice. His hand motioned toward a spot within the liquid mass, and I
looked carefully.
Five meters away a shadow
appeared and dropped to the seafloor. The alarming idea of sharks crossed my
mind. But I was mistaken, and once again we didn't have to deal with monsters
of the deep.
It was a man, a living man, a
black Indian fisherman, a poor devil who no doubt had come to gather what he
could before harvest time. I saw the bottom of his dinghy, moored a few feet
above his head. He would dive and go back up in quick succession. A stone cut
in the shape of a sugar loaf, which he gripped between his feet while a rope
connected it to his boat, served to lower him more quickly to the ocean floor.
This was the extent of his equipment. Arriving on the seafloor at a depth of
about five meters, he fell to his knees and stuffed his sack with shellfish gathered
at random. Then he went back up, emptied his sack, pulled up his stone, and
started all over again, the whole process lasting only thirty seconds.
This diver didn't see us. A
shadow cast by our crag hid us from his view. And besides, how could this poor
Indian ever have guessed that human beings, creatures like himself, were near
him under the waters, eavesdropping on his movements, not missing a single
detail of his fishing!
So he went up and down several
times. He gathered only about ten shellfish per dive, because he had to tear
them from the banks where each clung with its tough mass of filaments. And how
many of these oysters for which he risked his life would have no pearl in them!
I observed him with great care.
His movements were systematically executed, and for half an hour no danger
seemed to threaten him. So I had gotten used to the sight of this fascinating
fishing when all at once, just as the Indian was kneeling on the seafloor, I
saw him make a frightened gesture, stand, and gather himself to spring back to
the surface of the waves.
I understood his fear. A gigantic
shadow appeared above the poor diver. It was a shark of huge size, moving in
diagonally, eyes ablaze, jaws wide open!
I was speechless with horror,
unable to make a single movement.
With one vigorous stroke of its
fins, the voracious animal shot toward the Indian, who jumped aside and avoided
the shark's bite but not the thrashing of its tail, because that tail struck
him across the chest and stretched him out on the seafloor.
This scene lasted barely a few
seconds. The shark returned, rolled over on its back, and was getting ready to
cut the Indian in half, when Captain Nemo, who was stationed beside me,
suddenly stood up. Then he strode right toward the monster, dagger in hand,
ready to fight it at close quarters.
Just as it was about to snap up
the poor fisherman, the man-eater saw its new adversary, repositioned itself on
its belly, and headed swiftly toward him.
I can see Captain Nemo's bearing
to this day. Bracing himself, he waited for the fearsome man-eater with
wonderful composure, and when the latter rushed at him, the captain leaped
aside with prodigious quickness, avoided a collision, and sank his dagger into
its belly. But that wasn't the end of the story. A dreadful battle was joined.
The shark bellowed, so to speak.
Blood was pouring into the waves from its wounds. The sea was dyed red, and
through this opaque liquid I could see nothing else.
Nothing else until the moment when,
through a rift in the clouds, I saw the daring captain clinging to one of the
animal's fins, fighting the monster at close quarters, belaboring his enemy's
belly with stabs of the dagger yet unable to deliver the deciding thrust, in
other words, a direct hit to the heart. In its struggles the man-eater churned
the watery mass so furiously, its eddies threatened to knock me over.
I wanted to run to the captain's
rescue. But I was transfixed with horror, unable to move.
I stared, wild-eyed. I saw the fight
enter a new phase. The captain fell to the seafloor, toppled by the enormous
mass weighing him down. Then the shark's jaws opened astoundingly wide, like a
pair of industrial shears, and that would have been the finish of Captain Nemo
had not Ned Land, quick as thought, rushed forward with his harpoon and driven
its dreadful point into the shark's underside.
The waves were saturated with
masses of blood. The waters shook with the movements of the man-eater, which
thrashed about with indescribable fury. Ned Land hadn't missed his target. This
was the monster's death rattle. Pierced to the heart, it was struggling with
dreadful spasms whose aftershocks knocked Conseil off his feet.
Meanwhile Ned Land pulled the
captain clear. Uninjured, the latter stood up, went right to the Indian,
quickly cut the rope binding the man to his stone, took the fellow in his arms,
and with a vigorous kick of the heel, rose to the surface of the sea.
The three of us followed him, and
a few moments later, miraculously safe, we reached the fisherman's longboat.
Captain Nemo's first concern was
to revive this unfortunate man. I wasn't sure he would succeed. I hoped so,
since the poor devil hadn't been under very long. But that stroke from the
shark's tail could have been his deathblow.
Fortunately, after vigorous
massaging by Conseil and the captain, I saw the nearly drowned man regain
consciousness little by little. He opened his eyes. How startled he must have
felt, how frightened even, at seeing four huge, copper craniums leaning over
him!
And above all, what must he have
thought when Captain Nemo pulled a bag of pearls from a pocket in his diving
suit and placed it in the fisherman's hands? This magnificent benefaction from
the Man of the Waters to the poor Indian from Ceylon was accepted by the latter
with trembling hands. His bewildered eyes indicated that he didn't know to what
superhuman creatures he owed both his life and his fortune.
At the captain's signal we
returned to the bank of shellfish, and retracing our steps, we walked for half
an hour until we encountered the anchor connecting the seafloor with the
Nautilus's skiff.
Back on board, the sailors helped
divest us of our heavy copper carapaces.
Captain Nemo's first words were
spoken to the Canadian.
"Thank you, Mr. Land,"
he told him.
"Tit for tat, captain,"
Ned Land replied. "I owed it to you."
The ghost of a smile glided
across the captain's lips, and that was all.
"To the Nautilus," he
said.
The longboat flew over the waves.
A few minutes later we encountered the shark's corpse again, floating.
From the black markings on the
tips of its fins, I recognized the dreadful Squalus melanopterus from the seas
of the East Indies, a variety in the species of sharks proper. It was more than
twenty-five feet long; its enormous mouth occupied a third of its body. It was
an adult, as could be seen from the six rows of teeth forming an isosceles
triangle in its upper jaw.
Conseil looked at it with purely
scientific fascination, and I'm sure he placed it, not without good reason, in
the class of cartilaginous fish, order Chondropterygia with fixed gills, family
Selacia, genus Squalus.
While I was contemplating this
inert mass, suddenly a dozen of these voracious melanoptera appeared around our
longboat; but, paying no attention to us, they pounced on the corpse and
quarreled over every scrap of it.
By 8:30 we were back on board the
Nautilus.
There I fell to thinking about
the incidents that marked our excursion over the Mannar oysterbank. Two
impressions inevitably stood out. One concerned Captain Nemo's matchless
bravery, the other his devotion to a human being, a representative of that race
from which he had fled beneath the seas. In spite of everything, this strange
man hadn't yet succeeded in completely stifling his heart.
When I shared these impressions
with him, he answered me in a tone touched with emotion:
"That Indian, professor,
lives in the land of the oppressed, and I am to this day, and will be until my
last breath, a native of that same land!"
DURING THE DAY of January 29, the
island of Ceylon disappeared below the horizon, and at a speed of twenty miles
per hour, the Nautilus glided into the labyrinthine channels that separate the
Maldive and Laccadive Islands. It likewise hugged Kiltan Island, a shore of
madreporic origin discovered by Vasco da Gama in 1499 and one of nineteen chief
islands in the island group of the Laccadives, located between latitude 10
degrees and 14 degrees 30' north, and between longitude 50 degrees 72' and 69
degrees east.
By then we had fared 16,220
miles, or 7,500 leagues, from our starting point in the seas of Japan.
The next day, January 30, when
the Nautilus rose to the surface of the ocean, there was no more land in sight.
Setting its course to the north-northwest, the ship headed toward the Gulf of
Oman, carved out between Arabia and the Indian peninsula and providing access
to the Persian Gulf.
This was obviously a blind alley
with no possible outlet. So where was Captain Nemo taking us? I was unable to
say. Which didn't satisfy the Canadian, who that day asked me where we were
going.
"We're going, Mr. Ned, where
the captain's fancy takes us."
"His fancy," the
Canadian replied, "won't take us very far. The Persian Gulf has no outlet,
and if we enter those waters, it won't be long before we return in our
tracks."
"All right, we'll return,
Mr. Land, and after the Persian Gulf, if the Nautilus wants to visit the Red
Sea, the Strait of Bab el Mandeb is still there to let us in!"
"I don't have to tell you,
sir," Ned Land replied, "that the Red Sea is just as landlocked as
the gulf, since the Isthmus of Suez hasn't been cut all the way through yet;
and even if it was, a boat as secretive as ours wouldn't risk a canal intersected
with locks. So the Red Sea won't be our way back to Europe either."
"But I didn't say we'd
return to Europe."
"What do you figure,
then?"
"I figure that after
visiting these unusual waterways of Arabia and Egypt, the Nautilus will go back
down to the Indian Ocean, perhaps through Mozambique Channel, perhaps off the
Mascarene Islands, and then make for the Cape of Good Hope."
"And once we're at the Cape
of Good Hope?" the Canadian asked with typical persistence.
"Well then, we'll enter that
Atlantic Ocean with which we aren't yet familiar. What's wrong, Ned my friend?
Are you tired of this voyage under the seas? Are you bored with the constantly
changing sight of these underwater wonders? Speaking for myself, I'll be
extremely distressed to see the end of a voyage so few men will ever have a
chance to make."
"But don't you realize,
Professor Aronnax," the Canadian replied, "that soon we'll have been
imprisoned for three whole months aboard this Nautilus?"
"No, Ned, I didn't realize
it, I don't want to realize it, and I don't keep track of every day and every
hour."
"But when will it be
over?"
"In its appointed time.
Meanwhile there's nothing we can do about it, and our discussions are futile.
My gallant Ned, if you come and tell me, 'A chance to escape is available to
us,' then I'll discuss it with you. But that isn't the case, and in all
honesty, I don't think Captain Nemo ever ventures into European seas."
This short dialogue reveals that
in my mania for the Nautilus, I was turning into the spitting image of its
commander.
As for Ned Land, he ended our
talk in his best speechifying style: "That's all fine and dandy. But in my
humble opinion, a life in jail is a life without joy."
For four days until February 3,
the Nautilus inspected the Gulf of Oman at various speeds and depths. It seemed
to be traveling at random, as if hesitating over which course to follow, but it
never crossed the Tropic of Cancer.
After leaving this gulf we raised
Muscat for an instant, the most important town in the country of Oman. I
marveled at its strange appearance in the midst of the black rocks surrounding
it, against which the white of its houses and forts stood out sharply. I
spotted the rounded domes of its mosques, the elegant tips of its minarets, and
its fresh, leafy terraces. But it was only a fleeting vision, and the Nautilus
soon sank beneath the dark waves of these waterways.
Then our ship went along at a
distance of six miles from the Arabic coasts of Mahra and Hadhramaut, their
undulating lines of mountains relieved by a few ancient ruins. On February 5 we
finally put into the Gulf of Aden, a genuine funnel stuck into the neck of Bab
el Mandeb and bottling these Indian waters in the Red Sea.
On February 6 the Nautilus
cruised in sight of the city of Aden, perched on a promontory connected to the
continent by a narrow isthmus, a sort of inaccessible Gibraltar whose
fortifications the English rebuilt after capturing it in 1839. I glimpsed the
octagonal minarets of this town, which used to be one of the wealthiest,
busiest commercial centers along this coast, as the Arab historian Idrisi tells
it.
I was convinced that when Captain
Nemo reached this point, he would back out again; but I was mistaken, and much
to my surprise, he did nothing of the sort.
The next day, February 7, we
entered the Strait of Bab el Mandeb, whose name means "Gate of Tears"
in the Arabic language. Twenty miles wide, it's only fifty-two kilometers long,
and with the Nautilus launched at full speed, clearing it was the work of
barely an hour. But I didn't see a thing, not even Perim Island where the
British government built fortifications to strengthen Aden's position. There
were many English and French steamers plowing this narrow passageway, liners
going from Suez to Bombay, Calcutta, Melbourne, Réunion Island, and Mauritius;
far too much traffic for the Nautilus to make an appearance on the surface. So
it wisely stayed in midwater.
Finally, at noon, we were plowing
the waves of the Red Sea.
The Red Sea: that great lake so
famous in biblical traditions, seldom replenished by rains, fed by no important
rivers, continually drained by a high rate of evaporation, its water level
dropping a meter and a half every year! If it were fully landlocked like a
lake, this odd gulf might dry up completely; on this score it's inferior to its
neighbors, the Caspian Sea and the Dead Sea, whose levels lower only to the
point where their evaporation exactly equals the amounts of water they take to
their hearts.
This Red Sea is 2,600 kilometers
long with an average width of 240. In the days of the
Ptolemies and the Roman emperors,
it was a great commercial artery for the world, and when its isthmus has been
cut through, it will completely regain that bygone importance that the Suez
railways have already brought back in part.
I would not even attempt to
understand the whim that induced Captain Nemo to take us into this gulf. But I
wholeheartedly approved of the Nautilus's entering it. It adopted a medium
pace, sometimes staying on the surface, sometimes diving to avoid some ship,
and so I could observe both the inside and topside of this highly unusual sea.
On February 8, as early as the
first hours of daylight, Mocha appeared before us: a town now in ruins, whose
walls would collapse at the mere sound of a cannon, and which shelters a few
leafy date trees here and there. This once-important city used to contain six
public marketplaces plus twenty-six mosques, and its walls, protected by
fourteen forts, fashioned a three-kilometer girdle around it.
Then the Nautilus drew near the
beaches of Africa, where the sea is considerably deeper. There, through the
open panels and in a midwater of crystal clarity, our ship enabled us to study
wonderful bushes of shining coral and huge chunks of rock wrapped in splendid
green furs of algae and fucus. What an indescribable sight, and what a variety
of settings and scenery where these reefs and volcanic islands leveled off by
the Libyan coast! But soon the Nautilus hugged the eastern shore where these
tree forms appeared in all their glory. This was off the coast of Tihama, and
there such zoophyte displays not only flourished below sea level but they also
fashioned picturesque networks that unreeled as high as ten fathoms above it;
the latter were more whimsical but less colorful than the former, which kept
their bloom thanks to the moist vitality of the waters.
How many delightful hours I spent
in this way at the lounge window! How many new specimens of underwater flora
and fauna I marveled at beneath the light of our electric beacon!
Mushroom-shaped fungus coral, some slate-colored sea anemone including the
species Thalassianthus aster among others, organ-pipe coral arranged like
flutes and just begging for a puff from the god Pan, shells unique to this sea
that dwell in madreporic cavities and whose bases are twisted into squat
spirals, and finally a thousand samples of a polypary I hadn't observed until
then: the common sponge.
First division in the polyp
group, the class Spongiaria has been created by scientists precisely for this
unusual exhibit whose usefulness is beyond dispute. The sponge is definitely
not a plant, as some naturalists still believe, but an animal of the lowest
order, a polypary inferior even to coral. Its animal nature isn't in doubt, and
we can't accept even the views of the ancients, who regarded it as halfway
between plant and animal. But I must say that naturalists are not in agreement
on the structural mode of sponges. For some it's a polypary, and for others,
such as Professor Milne-Edwards, it's a single, solitary individual.
The class Spongiaria contains
about 300 species that are encountered in a large number of seas and even in
certain streams, where they've been given the name freshwater sponges. But
their waters of choice are the Red Sea and the Mediterranean near the Greek
Islands or the coast of Syria. These waters witness the reproduction and growth
of soft, delicate bath sponges whose prices run as high as 150 francs apiece:
the yellow sponge from Syria, the horn sponge from Barbary, etc. But since I
had no hope of studying these zoophytes in the seaports of the Levant, from
which we were separated by the insuperable Isthmus of Suez, I had to be content
with observing them in the waters of the Red Sea.
So I called Conseil to my side,
while at an average depth of eight to nine meters, the Nautilus slowly skimmed
every beautiful rock on the easterly coast.
There sponges grew in every
shape, globular, stalklike, leaflike, fingerlike. With reasonable accuracy,
they lived up to their nicknames of basket sponges, chalice sponges, distaff
sponges, elkhorn sponges, lion's paws, peacock's tails, and Neptune's gloves--
designations bestowed on them by fishermen, more poetically inclined than
scientists. A gelatinous, semifluid substance coated the fibrous tissue of
these sponges, and from this tissue there escaped a steady trickle of water
that, after carrying sustenance to each cell, was being expelled by a
contracting movement. This jellylike substance disappears when the polyp dies,
emitting ammonia as it rots. Finally nothing remains but the fibers, either
gelatinous or made of horn, that constitute your household sponge, which takes
on a russet hue and is used for various tasks depending on its degree of
elasticity, permeability, or resistance to saturation.
These polyparies were sticking to
rocks, shells of mollusks, and even the stalks of water plants. They adorned
the smallest crevices, some sprawling, others standing or hanging like coral
outgrowths. I told Conseil that sponges are fished up in two ways, either by
dragnet or by hand. The latter method calls for the services of a diver, but
it's preferable because it spares the polypary's tissue, leaving it with a much
higher market value.
Other zoophytes swarming near the
sponges consisted chiefly of a very elegant species of jellyfish; mollusks were
represented by varieties of squid that, according to Professor Orbigny, are
unique to the Red Sea; and reptiles by virgata turtles belonging to the genus
Chelonia, which furnished our table with a dainty but wholesome dish.
As for fish, they were numerous
and often remarkable. Here are the ones that the Nautilus's nets most
frequently hauled on board: rays, including spotted rays that were oval in
shape and brick red in color, their bodies strewn with erratic blue speckles
and identifiable by their jagged double stings, silver-backed skates, common
stingrays with stippled tails, butterfly rays that looked like huge two-meter
cloaks flapping at middepth, toothless guitarfish that were a type of
cartilaginous fish closer to the shark, trunkfish known as dromedaries that
were one and a half feet long and had humps ending in backward-curving stings,
serpentine moray eels with silver tails and bluish backs plus brown pectorals
trimmed in gray piping, a species of butterfish called the fiatola decked out
in thin gold stripes and the three colors of the French flag, Montague blennies
four decimeters long, superb jacks handsomely embellished by seven black
crosswise streaks with blue and yellow fins plus gold and silver scales,
snooks, standard mullet with yellow heads, parrotfish, wrasse, triggerfish,
gobies, etc., plus a thousand other fish common to the oceans we had already
crossed.
On February 9 the Nautilus
cruised in the widest part of the Red Sea, measuring 190 miles straight across
from Suakin on the west coast to Qunfidha on the east coast.
At noon that day after our
position fix, Captain Nemo climbed onto the platform, where I happened to be. I
vowed not to let him go below again without at least sounding him out on his
future plans. As soon as he saw me, he came over, graciously offered me a
cigar, and said to me:
"Well, professor, are you
pleased with this Red Sea? Have you seen enough of its hidden wonders, its fish
and zoophytes, its gardens of sponges and forests of coral? Have you glimpsed
the towns built on its shores?"
"Yes, Captain Nemo," I
replied, "and the Nautilus is wonderfully suited to this whole survey. Ah,
it's a clever boat!"
"Yes, sir, clever, daring,
and invulnerable! It fears neither the Red Sea's dreadful storms nor its
currents and reefs."
"Indeed," I said,
"this sea is mentioned as one of the worst, and in the days of the
ancients, if I'm not mistaken, it had an abominable reputation."
"Thoroughly abominable, Professor
Aronnax. The Greek and Latin historians can find nothing to say in its favor,
and the Greek geographer Strabo adds that it's especially rough during the
rainy season and the period of summer prevailing winds. The Arab Idrisi,
referring to it by the name Gulf of Colzoum, relates that ships perished in
large numbers on its sandbanks and that no one risked navigating it by night.
This, he claims, is a sea subject to fearful hurricanes, strewn with
inhospitable islands, and 'with nothing good to offer,' either on its surface
or in its depths. As a matter of fact, the same views can also be found in
Arrian, Agatharchides, and Artemidorus."
"One can easily see," I
answered, "that those historians didn't navigate aboard the
Nautilus."
"Indeed," the captain
replied with a smile, "and in this respect, the moderns aren't much
farther along than the ancients. It took many centuries to discover the
mechanical power of steam! Who knows whether we'll see a second Nautilus within
the next 100 years! Progress is slow, Professor Aronnax."
"It's true," I replied.
"Your ship is a century ahead of its time, perhaps several centuries. It
would be most unfortunate if such a secret were to die with its inventor!"
Captain Nemo did not reply. After
some minutes of silence:
"We were discussing,"
he said, "the views of ancient historians on the dangers of navigating
this Red Sea?"
"True," I replied.
"But weren't their fears exaggerated?"
"Yes and no, Professor
Aronnax," answered Captain Nemo, who seemed to know "his Red Sea"
by heart. "To a modern ship, well rigged, solidly constructed, and in
control of its course thanks to obedient steam, some conditions are no longer
hazardous that offered all sorts of dangers to the vessels of the ancients.
Picture those early navigators venturing forth in sailboats built from planks
lashed together with palm-tree ropes, caulked with powdered resin, and coated
with dogfish grease. They didn't even have instruments for taking their
bearings, they went by guesswork in the midst of currents they barely knew.
Under such conditions, shipwrecks had to be numerous. But nowadays steamers
providing service between Suez and the South Seas have nothing to fear from the
fury of this gulf, despite the contrary winds of its monsoons. Their captains and
passengers no longer prepare for departure with sacrifices to placate the gods,
and after returning, they don't traipse in wreaths and gold ribbons to say
thanks at the local temple."
"Agreed," I said.
"And steam seems to have killed off all gratitude in seamen's hearts. But
since you seem to have made a special study of this sea, captain, can you tell
me how it got its name?"
"Many explanations exist on
the subject, Professor Aronnax. Would you like to hear the views of one
chronicler in the 14th century?"
"Gladly."
"This fanciful fellow claims
the sea was given its name after the crossing of the Israelites, when the
Pharaoh perished in those waves that came together again at Moses' command:
To mark that miraculous sequel,
the sea turned a red without equal.
Thus no other course would do but
to name it for its hue."
"An artistic explanation,
Captain Nemo," I replied, "but I'm unable to rest content with it. So
I'll ask you for your own personal views."
"Here they come. To my thinking,
Professor Aronnax, this 'Red Sea' designation must be regarded as a translation
of the Hebrew word 'Edrom,' and if the ancients gave it that name, it was
because of the unique color of its waters."
"Until now, however, I've
seen only clear waves, without any unique hue."
"Surely, but as we move
ahead to the far end of this gulf, you'll note its odd appearance. I recall
seeing the bay of El Tur completely red, like a lake of blood."
"And you attribute this
color to the presence of microscopic algae?"
"Yes. It's a purplish,
mucilaginous substance produced by those tiny buds known by the name
trichodesmia, 40,000 of which are needed to occupy the space of one square
millimeter. Perhaps you'll encounter them when we reach El Tur."
"Hence, Captain Nemo, this
isn't the first time you've gone through the Red Sea aboard the Nautilus?"
"No, sir."
"Then, since you've already
mentioned the crossing of the Israelites and the catastrophe that befell the
Egyptians, I would ask if you've ever discovered any traces under the waters of
that great historic event?"
"No, professor, and for an
excellent reason."
"What's that?"
"It's because that same
locality where Moses crossed with all his people is now so clogged with sand,
camels can barely get their legs wet. You can understand that my Nautilus
wouldn't have enough water for itself."
"And that locality is . . .
?" I asked.
"That locality lies a little
above Suez in a sound that used to form a deep estuary when the Red Sea
stretched as far as the Bitter Lakes. Now, whether or not their crossing was
literally miraculous, the Israelites did cross there in returning to the
Promised Land, and the Pharaoh's army did perish at precisely that locality. So
I think that excavating those sands would bring to light a great many weapons
and tools of Egyptian origin."
"Obviously," I replied.
"And for the sake of archaeology, let's hope that sooner or later such
excavations do take place, once new towns are settled on the isthmus after the
Suez Canal has been cut through-- a canal, by the way, of little use to a ship
such as the Nautilus!"
"Surely, but of great use to
the world at large," Captain Nemo said. "The ancients well understood
the usefulness to commerce of connecting the Red Sea with the Mediterranean,
but they never dreamed of cutting a canal between the two, and instead they
picked the Nile as their link. If we can trust tradition, it was probably
Egypt's King Sesostris who started digging the canal needed to join the Nile
with the Red Sea. What's certain is that in 615 B.C. King Necho II was hard at
work on a canal that was fed by Nile water and ran through the Egyptian plains
opposite Arabia. This canal could be traveled in four days, and it was so wide,
two triple-tiered galleys could pass through it abreast. Its construction was
continued by Darius the Great, son of Hystaspes, and probably completed by King
Ptolemy II. Strabo saw it used for shipping; but the weakness of its slope
between its starting point, near Bubastis, and the Red Sea left it navigable only
a few months out of the year. This canal served commerce until the century of
Rome's Antonine emperors; it was then abandoned and covered with sand,
subsequently reinstated by Arabia's Caliph Omar I, and finally filled in for
good in 761 or 762 A.D. by Caliph Al-Mansur, in an effort to prevent supplies
from reaching Mohammed ibn Abdullah, who had rebelled against him. During his
Egyptian campaign, your General Napoleon Bonaparte discovered traces of this
old canal in the Suez desert, and when the tide caught him by surprise, he
wellnigh perished just a few hours before rejoining his regiment at Hadjaroth,
the very place where Moses had pitched camp 3,300 years before him."
"Well, captain, what the
ancients hesitated to undertake, Mr. de Lesseps is now finishing up; his
joining of these two seas will shorten the route from Cadiz to the East Indies
by 9,000 kilometers, and he'll soon change Africa into an immense island."
"Yes, Professor Aronnax, and
you have every right to be proud of your fellow countryman. Such a man brings a
nation more honor than the greatest commanders! Like so many others, he began
with difficulties and setbacks, but he triumphed because he has the volunteer
spirit. And it's sad to think that this deed, which should have been an international
deed, which would have insured that any administration went down in history,
will succeed only through the efforts of one man. So all hail to Mr. de
Lesseps!"
"Yes, all hail to that great
French citizen," I replied, quite startled by how emphatically Captain
Nemo had just spoken.
"Unfortunately," he
went on, "I can't take you through that Suez Canal, but the day after
tomorrow, you'll be able to see the long jetties of Port Said when we're in the
Mediterranean."
"In the Mediterranean!"
I exclaimed.
"Yes, professor. Does that
amaze you?"
"What amazes me is thinking
we'll be there the day after tomorrow."
"Oh really?"
"Yes, captain, although
since I've been aboard your vessel, I should have formed the habit of not being
amazed by anything!"
"But what is it that
startles you?"
"The thought of how
hideously fast the Nautilus will need to go, if it's to double the Cape of Good
Hope, circle around Africa, and lie in the open Mediterranean by the day after
tomorrow."
"And who says it will circle
Africa, professor? What's this talk about doubling the Cape of Good Hope?"
"But unless the Nautilus
navigates on dry land and crosses over the isthmus--"
"Or under it, Professor
Aronnax."
"Under it?"
"Surely," Captain Nemo
replied serenely. "Under that tongue of land, nature long ago made what
man today is making on its surface."
"What! There's a
passageway?"
"Yes, an underground
passageway that I've named the Arabian Tunnel. It starts below Suez and leads
to the Bay of Pelusium."
"But isn't that isthmus only
composed of quicksand?"
"To a certain depth. But at
merely fifty meters, one encounters a firm foundation of rock."
"And it's by luck that you
discovered this passageway?" I asked, more and more startled.
"Luck plus logic, professor,
and logic even more than luck."
"Captain, I hear you, but I
can't believe my ears."
"Oh, sir! The old saying
still holds good: Aures habent et non audient!* Not only does this passageway
exist, but I've taken advantage of it on several occasions. Without it, I
wouldn't have ventured today into such a blind alley as the Red Sea."
*Latin: "They have ears but
hear not." Ed.
"Is it indiscreet to ask how
you discovered this tunnel?"
"Sir," the captain
answered me, "there can be no secrets between men who will never leave
each other."
I ignored this innuendo and
waited for Captain Nemo's explanation.
"Professor," he told
me, "the simple logic of the naturalist led me to discover this
passageway, and I alone am familiar with it. I'd noted that in the Red Sea and
the Mediterranean there exist a number of absolutely identical species of fish:
eels, butterfish, greenfish, bass, jewelfish, flying fish. Certain of this
fact, I wondered if there weren't a connection between the two seas. If there
were, its underground current had to go from the Red Sea to the Mediterranean
simply because of their difference in level. So I caught a large number of fish
in the vicinity of Suez. I slipped copper rings around their tails and tossed
them back into the sea. A few months later off the coast of Syria, I recaptured
a few specimens of my fish, adorned with their telltale rings. So this proved
to me that some connection existed between the two seas. I searched for it with
my Nautilus, I discovered it, I ventured into it; and soon, professor, you also
will have cleared my Arabic tunnel!"
THE SAME DAY, I reported to
Conseil and Ned Land that part of the foregoing conversation directly
concerning them. When I told them we would be lying in Mediterranean waters
within two days, Conseil clapped his hands, but the Canadian shrugged his
shoulders.
"An underwater tunnel!"
he exclaimed. "A connection between two seas! Who ever heard of such
malarkey!"
"Ned my friend,"
Conseil replied, "had you ever heard of the Nautilus? No, yet here it is!
So don't shrug your shoulders so blithely, and don't discount something with
the feeble excuse that you've never heard of it."
"We'll soon see!" Ned
Land shot back, shaking his head. "After all, I'd like nothing better than
to believe in your captain's little passageway, and may Heaven grant it really
does take us to the Mediterranean."
The same evening, at latitude 21
degrees 30' north, the Nautilus was afloat on the surface of the sea and
drawing nearer to the Arab coast. I spotted Jidda, an important financial
center for Egypt, Syria, Turkey, and the East Indies. I could distinguish with
reasonable clarity the overall effect of its buildings, the ships made fast
along its wharves, and those bigger vessels whose draft of water required them
to drop anchor at the port's offshore mooring. The sun, fairly low on the
horizon, struck full force on the houses in this town, accenting their
whiteness. Outside the city limits, some wood or reed huts indicated the
quarter where the bedouins lived.
Soon Jidda faded into the shadows
of evening, and the Nautilus went back beneath the mildly phosphorescent
waters.
The next day, February 10,
several ships appeared, running on our opposite tack. The Nautilus resumed its
underwater navigating; but at the moment of our noon sights, the sea was
deserted and the ship rose again to its waterline.
With Ned and Conseil, I went to
sit on the platform. The coast to the east looked like a slightly blurred mass
in a damp fog.
Leaning against the sides of the
skiff, we were chatting of one thing and another, when Ned Land stretched his
hand toward a point in the water, saying to me:
"See anything out there,
professor?"
"No, Ned," I replied,
"but you know I don't have your eyes."
"Take a good look," Ned
went on. "There, ahead to starboard, almost level with the beacon! Don't
you see a mass that seems to be moving around?"
"Right," I said after
observing carefully, "I can make out something like a long, blackish
object on the surface of the water."
"A second Nautilus?"
Conseil said.
"No," the Canadian
replied, "unless I'm badly mistaken, that's some marine animal."
"Are there whales in the Red
Sea?" Conseil asked.
"Yes, my boy," I
replied, "they're sometimes found here."
"That's no whale,"
continued Ned Land, whose eyes never strayed from the object they had sighted.
"We're old chums, whales and I, and I couldn't mistake their little
ways."
"Let's wait and see,"
Conseil said. "The Nautilus is heading that direction, and we'll soon know
what we're in for."
In fact, that blackish object was
soon only a mile away from us. It looked like a huge reef stranded in midocean.
What was it? I still couldn't make up my mind.
"Oh, it's moving off! It's
diving!" Ned Land exclaimed. "Damnation! What can that animal be? It
doesn't have a forked tail like baleen whales or sperm whales, and its fins
look like sawed-off limbs."
"But in that case--" I
put in.
"Good lord," the
Canadian went on, "it's rolled over on its back, and it's raising its
breasts in the air!"
"It's a siren!" Conseil
exclaimed. "With all due respect to master, it's an actual mermaid!"
That word "siren" put
me back on track, and I realized that the animal belonged to the order Sirenia:
marine creatures that legends have turned into mermaids, half woman, half fish.
"No," I told Conseil,
"that's no mermaid, it's an unusual creature of which only a few specimens
are left in the Red Sea. That's a dugong."
"Order Sirenia, group
Pisciforma, subclass Monodelphia, class Mammalia, branch Vertebrata,"
Conseil replied.
And when Conseil has spoken,
there's nothing else to be said.
Meanwhile Ned Land kept staring.
His eyes were gleaming with desire at the sight of that animal. His hands were
ready to hurl a harpoon. You would have thought he was waiting for the right
moment to jump overboard and attack the creature in its own element.
"Oh, sir," he told me
in a voice trembling with excitement, "I've never killed anything like
that!"
His whole being was concentrated
in this last word.
Just then Captain Nemo appeared
on the platform. He spotted the dugong. He understood the Canadian's frame of
mind and addressed him directly:
"If you held a harpoon, Mr.
Land, wouldn't your hands be itching to put it to work?"
"Positively, sir."
"And just for one day, would
it displease you to return to your fisherman's trade and add this cetacean to
the list of those you've already hunted down?"
"It wouldn't displease me
one bit."
"All right, you can try your
luck!"
"Thank you, sir," Ned
Land replied, his eyes ablaze.
"Only," the captain
went on, "I urge you to aim carefully at this animal, in your own personal
interest."
"Is the dugong dangerous to
attack?" I asked, despite the Canadian's shrug of the shoulders.
"Yes, sometimes," the
captain replied. "These animals have been known to turn on their
assailants and capsize their longboats. But with Mr. Land that danger isn't to
be feared. His eye is sharp, his arm is sure. If I recommend that he aim
carefully at this dugong, it's because the animal is justly regarded as fine
game, and I know Mr. Land doesn't despise a choice morsel."
"Aha!" the Canadian put
in. "This beast offers the added luxury of being good to eat?"
"Yes, Mr. Land. Its flesh is
actual red meat, highly prized, and set aside throughout Malaysia for the
tables of aristocrats. Accordingly, this excellent animal has been hunted so
bloodthirstily that, like its manatee relatives, it has become more and more
scarce."
"In that case,
captain," Conseil said in all seriousness, "on the offchance that
this creature might be the last of its line, wouldn't it be advisable to spare
its life, in the interests of science?"
"Maybe," the Canadian
answered, "it would be better to hunt it down, in the interests of
mealtime."
"Then proceed, Mr.
Land," Captain Nemo replied.
Just then, as mute and
emotionless as ever, seven crewmen climbed onto the platform. One carried a
harpoon and line similar to those used in whale fishing. Its deck paneling
opened, the skiff was wrenched from its socket and launched to sea. Six rowers
sat on the thwarts, and the coxswain took the tiller. Ned, Conseil, and I found
seats in the stern.
"Aren't you coming,
captain?" I asked.
"No, sir, but I wish you
happy hunting."
The skiff pulled clear, and
carried off by its six oars, it headed swiftly toward the dugong, which by then
was floating two miles from the Nautilus.
Arriving within a few cable
lengths of the cetacean, our longboat slowed down, and the sculls dipped
noiselessly into the tranquil waters. Harpoon in hand, Ned Land went to take
his stand in the skiff's bow. Harpoons used for hunting whales are usually
attached to a very long rope that pays out quickly when the wounded animal
drags it with him. But this rope measured no more than about ten fathoms, and
its end had simply been fastened to a small barrel that, while floating, would
indicate the dugong's movements beneath the waters.
I stood up and could clearly
observe the Canadian's adversary. This dugong--which also boasts the name
halicore--closely resembled a manatee. Its oblong body ended in a very long
caudal fin and its lateral fins in actual fingers. It differs from the manatee
in that its upper jaw is armed with two long, pointed teeth that form diverging
tusks on either side.
This dugong that Ned Land was preparing
to attack was of colossal dimensions, easily exceeding seven meters in length.
It didn't stir and seemed to be sleeping on the surface of the waves, a
circumstance that should have made it easier to capture.
The skiff approached cautiously
to within three fathoms of the animal. The oars hung suspended above their
rowlocks. I was crouching. His body leaning slightly back, Ned Land brandished
his harpoon with expert hands.
Suddenly a hissing sound was
audible, and the dugong disappeared. Although the harpoon had been forcefully
hurled, it apparently had hit only water.
"Damnation!" exclaimed
the furious Canadian. "I missed it!"
"No," I said, "the
animal's wounded, there's its blood; but your weapon didn't stick in its
body."
"My harpoon! Get my harpoon!"
Ned Land exclaimed.
The sailors went back to their
sculling, and the coxswain steered the longboat toward the floating barrel. We
fished up the harpoon, and the skiff started off in pursuit of the animal.
The latter returned from time to
time to breathe at the surface of the sea. Its wound hadn't weakened it because
it went with tremendous speed. Driven by energetic arms, the longboat flew on
its trail. Several times we got within a few fathoms of it, and the Canadian
hovered in readiness to strike; but then the dugong would steal away with a
sudden dive, and it proved impossible to overtake the beast.
I'll let you assess the degree of
anger consuming our impatient Ned Land. He hurled at the hapless animal the
most potent swearwords in the English language. For my part, I was simply
distressed to see this dugong outwit our every scheme.
We chased it unflaggingly for a
full hour, and I'd begun to think it would prove too difficult to capture, when
the animal got the untimely idea of taking revenge on us, a notion it would
soon have cause to regret. It wheeled on the skiff, to assault us in its turn.
This maneuver did not escape the
Canadian.
"Watch out!" he said.
The coxswain pronounced a few
words in his bizarre language, and no doubt he alerted his men to keep on their
guard.
Arriving within twenty feet of
the skiff, the dugong stopped, sharply sniffing the air with its huge nostrils,
pierced not at the tip of its muzzle but on its topside. Then it gathered
itself and sprang at us.
The skiff couldn't avoid the
collision. Half overturned, it shipped a ton or two of water that we had to
bail out. But thanks to our skillful coxswain, we were fouled on the bias
rather than broadside, so we didn't capsize. Clinging to the stempost, Ned Land
thrust his harpoon again and again into the gigantic animal, which imbedded its
teeth in our gunwale and lifted the longboat out of the water as a lion would
lift a deer. We were thrown on top of each other, and I have no idea how the
venture would have ended had not the Canadian, still thirsting for the beast's
blood, finally pierced it to the heart.
I heard its teeth grind on sheet
iron, and the dugong disappeared, taking our harpoon along with it. But the
barrel soon popped up on the surface, and a few moments later the animal's body
appeared and rolled over on its back. Our skiff rejoined it, took it in tow,
and headed to the Nautilus.
It took pulleys of great strength
to hoist this dugong onto the platform. The beast weighed 5,000 kilograms. It
was carved up in sight of the Canadian, who remained to watch every detail of
the operation. At dinner the same day, my steward served me some slices of this
flesh, skillfully dressed by the ship's cook. I found it excellent, even better
than veal if not beef.
The next morning, February 11,
the Nautilus's pantry was enriched by more dainty game. A covey of terns
alighted on the Nautilus. They were a species of Sterna nilotica unique to
Egypt: beak black, head gray and stippled, eyes surrounded by white dots, back,
wings, and tail grayish, belly and throat white, feet red. Also caught were a
couple dozen Nile duck, superior-tasting wildfowl whose neck and crown of the
head are white speckled with black.
By then the Nautilus had reduced
speed. It moved ahead at a saunter, so to speak. I observed that the Red Sea's
water was becoming less salty the closer we got to Suez.
Near five o'clock in the
afternoon, we sighted Cape Ras Mohammed to the north. This cape forms the tip
of Arabia Petraea, which lies between the Gulf of Suez and the Gulf of Aqaba.
The Nautilus entered the Strait
of Jubal, which leads to the Gulf of Suez. I could clearly make out a high
mountain crowning Ras Mohammed between the two gulfs. It was Mt. Horeb, that
biblical Mt. Sinai on whose summit Moses met God face to face, that summit the
mind's eye always pictures as wreathed in lightning.
At six o'clock, sometimes afloat
and sometimes submerged, the Nautilus passed well out from El Tur, which sat at
the far end of a bay whose waters seemed to be dyed red, as Captain Nemo had
already mentioned. Then night fell in the midst of a heavy silence occasionally
broken by the calls of pelicans and nocturnal birds, by the sound of surf
chafing against rocks, or by the distant moan of a steamer churning the waves
of the gulf with noisy blades.
From eight to nine o'clock, the
Nautilus stayed a few meters beneath the waters. According to my calculations,
we had to be quite close to Suez. Through the panels in the lounge, I spotted
rocky bottoms brightly lit by our electric rays. It seemed to me that the
strait was getting narrower and narrower.
At 9:15 when our boat returned to
the surface, I climbed onto the platform. I was quite impatient to clear
Captain Nemo's tunnel, couldn't sit still, and wanted to breathe the fresh
night air.
Soon, in the shadows, I spotted a
pale signal light glimmering a mile away, half discolored by mist.
"A floating
lighthouse," said someone next to me.
I turned and discovered the
captain.
"That's the floating signal
light of Suez," he went on. "It won't be long before we reach the
entrance to the tunnel."
"It can't be very easy to
enter it."
"No, sir. Accordingly, I'm
in the habit of staying in the pilothouse and directing maneuvers myself. And
now if you'll kindly go below, Professor Aronnax, the Nautilus is about to sink
beneath the waves, and it will only return to the surface after we've cleared
the Arabian Tunnel."
I followed Captain Nemo. The
hatch closed, the ballast tanks filled with water, and the submersible sank some
ten meters down.
Just as I was about to repair to
my stateroom, the captain stopped me.
"Professor," he said to
me, "would you like to go with me to the wheelhouse?"
"I was afraid to ask,"
I replied.
"Come along, then. This way,
you'll learn the full story about this combination underwater and underground
navigating."
Captain Nemo led me to the
central companionway. In midstair he opened a door, went along the upper
gangways, and arrived at the wheelhouse, which, as you know, stands at one end
of the platform.
It was a cabin measuring six feet
square and closely resembling those occupied by the helmsmen of steamboats on
the Mississippi or Hudson rivers. In the center stood an upright wheel geared
to rudder cables running to the Nautilus's stern. Set in the cabin's walls were
four deadlights, windows of biconvex glass that enabled the man at the helm to
see in every direction.
The cabin was dark; but my eyes
soon grew accustomed to its darkness and I saw the pilot, a muscular man whose
hands rested on the pegs of the wheel. Outside, the sea was brightly lit by the
beacon shining behind the cabin at the other end of the platform.
"Now," Captain Nemo
said, "let's look for our passageway."
Electric wires linked the
pilothouse with the engine room, and from this cabin the captain could
simultaneously signal heading and speed to his Nautilus. He pressed a metal
button and at once the propeller slowed down significantly.
I stared in silence at the high,
sheer wall we were skirting just then, the firm base of the sandy mountains on
the coast. For an hour we went along it in this fashion, staying only a few
meters away. Captain Nemo never took his eyes off the two concentric circles of
the compass hanging in the cabin. At a mere gesture from him, the helmsman
would instantly change the Nautilus's heading.
Standing by the port deadlight, I
spotted magnificent coral substructures, zoophytes, algae, and crustaceans with
enormous quivering claws that stretched forth from crevices in the rock.
At 10:15 Captain Nemo himself
took the helm. Dark and deep, a wide gallery opened ahead of us. The Nautilus
was brazenly swallowed up. Strange rumblings were audible along our sides. It
was the water of the Red Sea, hurled toward the Mediterranean by the tunnel's
slope. Our engines tried to offer resistance by churning the waves with
propeller in reverse, but the Nautilus went with the torrent, as swift as an
arrow.
Along the narrow walls of this
passageway, I saw only brilliant streaks, hard lines, fiery furrows, all scrawled
by our speeding electric light. With my hand I tried to curb the pounding of my
heart.
At 10:35 Captain Nemo left the
steering wheel and turned to me:
"The Mediterranean," he
told me.
In less than twenty minutes, swept
along by the torrent, the Nautilus had just cleared the Isthmus of Suez.
AT SUNRISE the next morning,
February 12, the Nautilus rose to the surface of the waves.
I rushed onto the platform. The
hazy silhouette of Pelusium was outlined three miles to the south. A torrent
had carried us from one sea to the other. But although that tunnel was easy to
descend, going back up must have been impossible.
Near seven o'clock Ned and
Conseil joined me. Those two inseparable companions had slept serenely, utterly
unaware of the Nautilus's feat.
"Well, Mr. Naturalist,"
the Canadian asked in a gently mocking tone, "and how about that
Mediterranean?"
"We're floating on its
surface, Ned my friend."
"What!" Conseil put in.
"Last night . . . ?"
"Yes, last night, in a
matter of minutes, we cleared that insuperable isthmus."
"I don't believe a word of
it," the Canadian replied.
"And you're in the wrong,
Mr. Land," I went on. "That flat coastline curving southward is the
coast of Egypt."
"Tell it to the marines,
sir," answered the stubborn Canadian.
"But if master says
so," Conseil told him, "then so be it."
"What's more, Ned," I
said, "Captain Nemo himself did the honors in his tunnel, and I stood
beside him in the pilothouse while he steered the Nautilus through that narrow
passageway."
"You hear, Ned?"
Conseil said.
"And you, Ned, who have such
good eyes," I added, "you can spot the jetties of Port Said
stretching out to sea."
The Canadian looked carefully.
"Correct," he said.
"You're right, professor, and your captain's a superman. We're in the
Mediterranean. Fine. So now let's have a chat about our little doings, if you
please, but in such a way that nobody overhears."
I could easily see what the
Canadian was driving at. In any event, I thought it best to let him have his
chat, and we all three went to sit next to the beacon, where we were less
exposed to the damp spray from the billows.
"Now, Ned, we're all
ears," I said. "What have you to tell us?"
"What I've got to tell you
is very simple," the Canadian replied. "We're in Europe, and before
Captain Nemo's whims take us deep into the polar seas or back to Oceania, I say
we should leave this Nautilus."
I confess that such discussions
with the Canadian always baffled me. I didn't want to restrict my companions'
freedom in any way, and yet I had no desire to leave Captain Nemo. Thanks to
him and his submersible, I was finishing my undersea research by the day, and I
was rewriting my book on the great ocean depths in the midst of its very
element. Would I ever again have such an opportunity to observe the ocean's
wonders? Absolutely not! So I couldn't entertain this idea of leaving the
Nautilus before completing our course of inquiry.
"Ned my friend," I
said, "answer me honestly. Are you bored with this ship? Are you sorry
that fate has cast you into Captain Nemo's hands?"
The Canadian paused for a short
while before replying. Then, crossing his arms:
"Honestly," he said,
"I'm not sorry about this voyage under the seas. I'll be glad to have done
it, but in order to have done it, it has to finish. That's my feeling."
"It will finish, Ned."
"Where and when?"
"Where? I don't know. When?
I can't say. Or, rather, I suppose it will be over when these seas have nothing
more to teach us. Everything that begins in this world must inevitably come to
an end."
"I think as master
does," Conseil replied, "and it's extremely possible that after
crossing every sea on the globe, Captain Nemo will bid the three of us a fond
farewell."
"Bid us a fond
farewell?" the Canadian exclaimed. "You mean beat us to a
fare-thee-well!"
"Let's not exaggerate, Mr.
Land," I went on. "We have nothing to fear from the captain, but
neither do I share Conseil's views. We're privy to the Nautilus's secrets, and
I don't expect that its commander, just to set us free, will meekly stand by
while we spread those secrets all over the world."
"But in that case what do
you expect?" the Canadian asked.
"That we'll encounter
advantageous conditions for escaping just as readily in six months as
now."
"Great Scott!" Ned Land
put in. "And where, if you please, will we be in six months, Mr.
Naturalist?"
"Perhaps here, perhaps in
China. You know how quickly the Nautilus moves. It crosses oceans like swallows
cross the air or express trains continents. It doesn't fear heavily traveled
seas. Who can say it won't hug the coasts of France, England, or America, where
an escape attempt could be carried out just as effectively as here."
"Professor Aronnax,"
the Canadian replied, "your arguments are rotten to the core. You talk way
off in the future: 'We'll be here, we'll be there!' Me, I'm talking about right
now: we are here, and we must take advantage of it!"
I was hard pressed by Ned Land's
common sense, and I felt myself losing ground. I no longer knew what arguments
to put forward on my behalf.
"Sir," Ned went on,
"let's suppose that by some impossibility, Captain Nemo offered your
freedom to you this very day. Would you accept?"
"I don't know," I
replied.
"And suppose he adds that
this offer he's making you today won't ever be repeated, then would you
accept?"
I did not reply.
"And what thinks our friend
Conseil?" Ned Land asked.
"Your friend Conseil,"
the fine lad replied serenely, "has nothing to say for himself. He's a
completely disinterested party on this question. Like his master, like his
comrade Ned, he's a bachelor. Neither wife, parents, nor children are waiting
for him back home. He's in master's employ, he thinks like master, he speaks
like master, and much to his regret, he can't be counted on to form a majority.
Only two persons face each other here: master on one side, Ned Land on the
other. That said, your friend Conseil is listening, and he's ready to keep
score."
I couldn't help smiling as
Conseil wiped himself out of existence. Deep down, the Canadian must have been
overjoyed at not having to contend with him.
"Then, sir," Ned Land
said, "since Conseil is no more, we'll have this discussion between just
the two of us. I've talked, you've listened. What's your reply?"
It was obvious that the matter
had to be settled, and evasions were distasteful to me.
"Ned my friend," I
said, "here's my reply. You have right on your side and my arguments can't
stand up to yours. It will never do to count on Captain Nemo's benevolence. The
most ordinary good sense would forbid him to set us free. On the other hand,
good sense decrees that we take advantage of our first opportunity to leave the
Nautilus."
"Fine, Professor Aronnax,
that's wisely said."
"But one proviso," I
said, "just one. The opportunity must be the real thing. Our first attempt
to escape must succeed, because if it misfires, we won't get a second chance,
and Captain Nemo will never forgive us."
"That's also well put,"
the Canadian replied. "But your proviso applies to any escape attempt,
whether it happens in two years or two days. So this is still the question: if
a promising opportunity comes up, we have to grab it."
"Agreed. And now, Ned, will
you tell me what you mean by a promising opportunity?"
"One that leads the Nautilus
on a cloudy night within a short distance of some European coast."
"And you'll try to get away
by swimming?"
"Yes, if we're close enough
to shore and the ship's afloat on the surface. No, if we're well out and the
ship's navigating under the waters."
"And in that event?"
"In that event I'll try to
get hold of the skiff. I know how to handle it. We'll stick ourselves inside,
undo the bolts, and rise to the surface, without the helmsman in the bow seeing
a thing."
"Fine, Ned. Stay on the
lookout for such an opportunity, but don't forget, one slipup will finish
us."
"I won't forget, sir."
"And now, Ned, would you
like to know my overall thinking on your plan?"
"Gladly, Professor
Aronnax."
"Well then, I think--and I don't
mean 'I hope'--that your promising opportunity won't ever arise."
"Why not?"
"Because Captain Nemo
recognizes that we haven't given up all hope of recovering our freedom, and
he'll keep on his guard, above all in seas within sight of the coasts of Europe."
"I'm of master's
opinion," Conseil said.
"We'll soon see," Ned
Land replied, shaking his head with a determined expression.
"And now, Ned Land," I
added, "let's leave it at that. Not another word on any of this. The day
you're ready, alert us and we're with you. I turn it all over to you."
That's how we ended this
conversation, which later was to have such serious consequences. At first, I
must say, events seemed to confirm my forecasts, much to the Canadian's
despair. Did Captain Nemo view us with distrust in these heavily traveled seas,
or did he simply want to hide from the sight of those ships of every nation
that plowed the Mediterranean? I have no idea, but usually he stayed in
midwater and well out from any coast. Either the Nautilus surfaced only enough
to let its pilothouse emerge, or it slipped away to the lower depths, although,
between the Greek Islands and Asia Minor, we didn't find bottom even at 2,000
meters down.
Accordingly, I became aware of
the isle of Karpathos, one of the Sporades Islands, only when Captain Nemo
placed his finger over a spot on the world map and quoted me this verse from
Virgil:
Est in Carpathio Neptuni gurgite
vates
Caeruleus Proteus . . .*
*Latin: "There in King
Neptune's domain by Karpathos, his spokesman / is azure-hued Proteus . . .
" Ed.
It was indeed that bygone abode
of Proteus, the old shepherd of King Neptune's flocks: an island located
between Rhodes and Crete, which Greeks now call Karpathos, Italians Scarpanto.
Through the lounge window I could see only its granite bedrock.
The next day, February 14, I
decided to spend a few hours studying the fish of this island group; but for
whatever reason, the panels remained hermetically sealed. After determining the
Nautilus's heading, I noted that it was proceeding toward the ancient island of
Crete, also called Candia. At the time I had shipped aboard the Abraham
Lincoln, this whole island was in rebellion against its tyrannical rulers, the
Ottoman Empire of Turkey. But since then I had absolutely no idea what happened
to this revolution, and Captain Nemo, deprived of all contact with the shore,
was hardly the man to keep me informed.
So I didn't allude to this event
when, that evening, I chanced to be alone with the captain in the lounge.
Besides, he seemed silent and preoccupied. Then, contrary to custom, he ordered
that both panels in the lounge be opened, and going from the one to the other,
he carefully observed the watery mass. For what purpose? I hadn't a guess, and
for my part, I spent my time studying the fish that passed before my eyes.
Among others I noted that sand
goby mentioned by Aristotle and commonly known by the name sea loach, which is
encountered exclusively in the salty waters next to the Nile Delta. Near them
some semiphosphorescent red porgy rolled by, a variety of gilthead that the
Egyptians ranked among their sacred animals, lauding them in religious
ceremonies when their arrival in the river's waters announced the fertile flood
season. I also noticed some wrasse known as the tapiro, three decimeters long,
bony fish with transparent scales whose bluish gray color is mixed with red
spots; they're enthusiastic eaters of marine vegetables, which gives them an
exquisite flavor; hence these tapiro were much in demand by the epicures of
ancient Rome, and their entrails were dressed with brains of peacock, tongue of
flamingo, and testes of moray to make that divine platter that so enraptured
the Roman emperor Vitellius.
Another resident of these seas
caught my attention and revived all my memories of antiquity. This was the
remora, which travels attached to the bellies of sharks; as the ancients tell
it, when these little fish cling to the undersides of a ship, they can bring it
to a halt, and by so impeding
Mark Antony's vessel during the
Battle of Actium, one of them facilitated the victory of Augustus Caesar. From
such slender threads hang the destinies of nations! I also observed some
wonderful snappers belonging to the order Lutianida, sacred fish for the
Greeks, who claimed they could drive off sea monsters from the waters they
frequent; their Greek name anthias means "flower," and they live up
to it in the play of their colors and in those fleeting reflections that turn
their dorsal fins into watered silk; their hues are confined to a gamut of
reds, from the pallor of pink to the glow of ruby. I couldn't take my eyes off
these marine wonders, when I was suddenly jolted by an unexpected apparition.
In the midst of the waters, a man
appeared, a diver carrying a little leather bag at his belt. It was no corpse
lost in the waves. It was a living man, swimming vigorously, sometimes
disappearing to breathe at the surface, then instantly diving again.
I turned to Captain Nemo, and in
an agitated voice:
"A man! A castaway!" I
exclaimed. "We must rescue him at all cost!"
The captain didn't reply but went
to lean against the window.
The man drew near, and gluing his
face to the panel, he stared at us.
To my deep astonishment, Captain
Nemo gave him a signal. The diver answered with his hand, immediately swam up
to the surface of the sea, and didn't reappear.
"Don't be alarmed," the
captain told me. "That's Nicolas from Cape Matapan, nicknamed 'Il Pesce.'*
He's well known throughout the Cyclades Islands. A bold diver! Water is his
true element, and he lives in the sea more than on shore, going constantly from
one island to another, even to Crete."
*Italian: "The Fish."
Ed.
"You know him,
captain?"
"Why not, Professor
Aronnax?"
This said, Captain Nemo went to a
cabinet standing near the lounge's left panel. Next to this cabinet I saw a
chest bound with hoops of iron, its lid bearing a copper plaque that displayed
the Nautilus's monogram with its motto Mobilis in Mobili.
Just then, ignoring my presence,
the captain opened this cabinet, a sort of safe that contained a large number
of ingots.
They were gold ingots. And they
represented an enormous sum of money. Where had this precious metal come from?
How had the captain amassed this gold, and what was he about to do with it?
I didn't pronounce a word. I
gaped. Captain Nemo took out the ingots one by one and arranged them
methodically inside the chest, filling it to the top. At which point I estimate
that it held more than 1,000 kilograms of gold, in other words, close to
5,000,000 francs.
After securely fastening the
chest, Captain Nemo wrote an address on its lid in characters that must have
been modern Greek.
This done, the captain pressed a
button whose wiring was in communication with the crew's quarters. Four men
appeared and, not without difficulty, pushed the chest out of the lounge. Then
I heard them hoist it up the iron companionway by means of pulleys.
Just then Captain Nemo turned to
me:
"You were saying,
professor?" he asked me.
"I wasn't saying a thing,
captain."
"Then, sir, with your
permission, I'll bid you good evening."
And with that, Captain Nemo left
the lounge.
I reentered my stateroom, very
puzzled, as you can imagine. I tried in vain to fall asleep. I kept searching
for a relationship between the appearance of the diver and that chest filled
with gold. Soon, from certain rolling and pitching movements, I sensed that the
Nautilus had left the lower strata and was back on the surface of the water.
Then I heard the sound of
footsteps on the platform. I realized that the skiff was being detached and
launched to sea. For an instant it bumped the Nautilus's side, then all sounds
ceased.
Two hours later, the same noises,
the same comings and goings, were repeated. Hoisted on board, the longboat was
readjusted into its socket, and the Nautilus plunged back beneath the waves.
So those millions had been
delivered to their address. At what spot on the continent? Who was the
recipient of Captain Nemo's gold?
The next day I related the
night's events to Conseil and the Canadian, events that had aroused my
curiosity to a fever pitch. My companions were as startled as I was.
"But where does he get those
millions?" Ned Land asked.
To this no reply was possible.
After breakfast I made my way to the lounge and went about my work. I wrote up
my notes until five o'clock in the afternoon. Just then--was it due to some
personal indisposition?--I felt extremely hot and had to take off my jacket
made of fan mussel fabric. A perplexing circumstance because we weren't in the
low latitudes, and besides, once the Nautilus was submerged, it shouldn't be
subject to any rise in temperature. I looked at the pressure gauge. It marked a
depth of sixty feet, a depth beyond the reach of atmospheric heat.
I kept on working, but the
temperature rose to the point of becoming unbearable.
"Could there be a fire on
board?" I wondered.
I was about to leave the lounge
when Captain Nemo entered. He approached the thermometer, consulted it, and
turned to me:
"42 degrees centigrade,"
he said.
"I've detected as much,
captain," I replied, "and if it gets even slightly hotter, we won't
be able to stand it."
"Oh, professor, it won't get
any hotter unless we want it to!"
"You mean you can control
this heat?"
"No, but I can back away
from the fireplace producing it."
"So it's outside?"
"Surely. We're cruising in a
current of boiling water."
"It can't be!" I
exclaimed.
"Look."
The panels had opened, and I could
see a completely white sea around the Nautilus. Steaming sulfurous fumes
uncoiled in the midst of waves bubbling like water in a boiler. I leaned my
hand against one of the windows, but the heat was so great, I had to snatch it
back.
"Where are we?" I
asked.
"Near the island of
Santorini, professor," the captain answered me, "and right in the
channel that separates the volcanic islets of Nea Kameni and Palea Kameni. I
wanted to offer you the unusual sight of an underwater eruption."
"I thought," I said,
"that the formation of such new islands had come to an end."
"Nothing ever comes to an
end in these volcanic waterways," Captain Nemo replied, "and thanks
to its underground fires, our globe is continuously under construction in these
regions. According to the Latin historians Cassiodorus and Pliny, by the year
19 of the Christian era, a new island, the divine Thera, had already appeared
in the very place these islets have more recently formed. Then Thera sank under
the waves, only to rise and sink once more in the year 69 A.D. From that day to
this, such plutonic construction work has been in abeyance. But on February 3,
1866, a new islet named George Island emerged in the midst of sulfurous steam
near Nea Kameni and was fused to it on the 6th of the same month. Seven days
later, on February 13, the islet of Aphroessa appeared, leaving a ten-meter
channel between itself and Nea Kameni. I was in these seas when that phenomenon
occurred and I was able to observe its every phase. The islet of Aphroessa was
circular in shape, measuring 300 feet in diameter and thirty feet in height. It
was made of black, glassy lava mixed with bits of feldspar. Finally, on March
10, a smaller islet called Reka appeared next to Nea Kameni, and since then,
these three islets have fused to form one single, selfsame island."
"What about this channel
we're in right now?" I asked.
"Here it is," Captain
Nemo replied, showing me a chart of the Greek Islands. "You observe that
I've entered the new islets in their place."
"But will this channel fill
up one day?"
"Very likely, Professor
Aronnax, because since 1866 eight little lava islets have surged up in front of
the port of St. Nicolas on Palea Kameni. So it's obvious that Nea and Palea
will join in days to come. In the middle of the Pacific, tiny infusoria build
continents, but here they're built by volcanic phenomena. Look, sir! Look at
the construction work going on under these waves."
I returned to the window. The
Nautilus was no longer moving. The heat had become unbearable. From the white
it had recently been, the sea was turning red, a coloration caused by the
presence of iron salts. Although the lounge was hermetically sealed, it was
filling with an intolerable stink of sulfur, and I could see scarlet flames of
such brightness, they overpowered our electric light.
I was swimming in perspiration, I
was stifling, I was about to be cooked. Yes, I felt myself cooking in actual
fact!
"We can't stay any longer in
this boiling water," I told the captain.
"No, it wouldn't be advisable,"
replied Nemo the Emotionless.
He gave an order. The Nautilus
tacked about and retreated from this furnace it couldn't brave with impunity. A
quarter of an hour later, we were breathing fresh air on the surface of the
waves.
It then occurred to me that if
Ned had chosen these waterways for our escape attempt, we wouldn't have come
out alive from this sea of fire.
The next day, February 16, we
left this basin, which tallies depths of 3,000 meters between Rhodes and
Alexandria, and passing well out from Cerigo Island after doubling Cape
Matapan, the Nautilus left the Greek Islands behind.
THE MEDITERRANEAN, your ideal
blue sea: to Greeks simply "the sea," to Hebrews "the great
sea," to Romans mare nostrum.* Bordered by orange trees, aloes, cactus,
and maritime pine trees, perfumed with the scent of myrtle, framed by rugged
mountains, saturated with clean, transparent air but continuously under
construction by fires in the earth, this sea is a genuine battlefield where
Neptune and Pluto still struggle for world domination. Here on these beaches
and waters, says the French historian Michelet, a man is revived by one of the
most invigorating climates in the world.
*Latin: "our sea." Ed.
But as beautiful as it was, I
could get only a quick look at this basin whose surface area comprises
2,000,000 square kilometers. Even Captain Nemo's personal insights were denied
me, because that mystifying individual didn't appear one single time during our
high-speed crossing. I estimate that the Nautilus covered a track of some 600
leagues under the waves of this sea, and this voyage was accomplished in just
twenty-four hours times two. Departing from the waterways of Greece on the
morning of February 16, we cleared the Strait of Gibraltar by sunrise on the
18th.
It was obvious to me that this
Mediterranean, pinned in the middle of those shores he wanted to avoid, gave
Captain Nemo no pleasure. Its waves and breezes brought back too many memories,
if not too many regrets. Here he no longer had the ease of movement and freedom
of maneuver that the oceans allowed him, and his Nautilus felt cramped so close
to the coasts of both Africa and Europe.
Accordingly, our speed was
twenty-five miles (that is, twelve four-kilometer leagues) per hour. Needless
to say, Ned Land had to give up his escape plans, much to his distress. Swept
along at the rate of twelve to thirteen meters per second, he could hardly make
use of the skiff. Leaving the Nautilus under these conditions would have been
like jumping off a train racing at this speed, a rash move if there ever was
one. Moreover, to renew our air supply, the submersible rose to the surface of
the waves only at night, and relying solely on compass and log, it steered by
dead reckoning.
Inside the Mediterranean, then, I
could catch no more of its fast-passing scenery than a traveler might see from
an express train; in other words, I could view only the distant horizons
because the foregrounds flashed by like lightning. But Conseil and I were able
to observe those Mediterranean fish whose powerful fins kept pace for a while
in the Nautilus's waters. We stayed on watch before the lounge windows, and our
notes enable me to reconstruct, in a few words, the ichthyology of this sea.
Among the various fish inhabiting
it, some I viewed, others I glimpsed, and the rest I missed completely because
of the Nautilus's speed. Kindly allow me to sort them out using this whimsical
system of classification. It will at least convey the quickness of my
observations.
In the midst of the watery mass,
brightly lit by our electric beams, there snaked past those one-meter lampreys
that are common to nearly every clime. A type of ray from the genus
Oxyrhynchus, five feet wide, had a white belly with a spotted, ash-gray back
and was carried along by the currents like a huge, wide-open shawl. Other rays
passed by so quickly I couldn't tell if they deserved that name "eagle
ray" coined by the ancient Greeks, or those designations of "rat ray,"
"bat ray," and "toad ray" that modern fishermen have
inflicted on them. Dogfish known as topes, twelve feet long and especially
feared by divers, were racing with each other. Looking like big bluish shadows,
thresher sharks went by, eight feet long and gifted with an extremely acute
sense of smell. Dorados from the genus Sparus, some measuring up to thirteen
decimeters, appeared in silver and azure costumes encircled with ribbons, which
contrasted with the dark color of their fins; fish sacred to the goddess Venus,
their eyes set in brows of gold; a valuable species that patronizes all waters
fresh or salt, equally at home in rivers, lakes, and oceans, living in every
clime, tolerating any temperature, their line dating back to prehistoric times
on this earth yet preserving all its beauty from those far-off days.
Magnificent sturgeons, nine to ten meters long and extremely fast, banged their
powerful tails against the glass of our panels, showing bluish backs with small
brown spots; they resemble sharks, without equaling their strength, and are
encountered in every sea; in the spring they delight in swimming up the great
rivers, fighting the currents of the Volga, Danube, Po, Rhine, Loire, and Oder,
while feeding on herring, mackerel, salmon, and codfish; although they belong to
the class of cartilaginous fish, they rate as a delicacy; they're eaten fresh,
dried, marinated, or salt-preserved, and in olden times they were borne in
triumph to the table of the Roman epicure Lucullus.
But whenever the Nautilus drew
near the surface, those denizens of the Mediterranean I could observe most
productively belonged to the sixty-third genus of bony fish. These were tuna
from the genus Scomber, blue-black on top, silver on the belly armor, their
dorsal stripes giving off a golden gleam. They are said to follow ships in
search of refreshing shade from the hot tropical sun, and they did just that
with the Nautilus, as they had once done with the vessels of the Count de La
Pérouse. For long hours they competed in speed with our submersible. I couldn't
stop marveling at these animals so perfectly cut out for racing, their heads
small, their bodies sleek, spindle-shaped, and in some cases over three meters
long, their pectoral fins gifted with remarkable strength, their caudal fins
forked. Like certain flocks of birds, whose speed they equal, these tuna swim
in triangle formation, which prompted the ancients to say they'd boned up on
geometry and military strategy. And yet they can't escape the Provençal
fishermen, who prize them as highly as did the ancient inhabitants of Turkey
and Italy; and these valuable animals, as oblivious as if they were deaf and
blind, leap right into the Marseilles tuna nets and perish by the thousands.
Just for the record, I'll mention
those Mediterranean fish that Conseil and I barely glimpsed. There were whitish
eels of the species Gymnotus fasciatus that passed like elusive wisps of steam,
conger eels three to four meters long that were tricked out in green, blue, and
yellow, three-foot hake with a liver that makes a dainty morsel, wormfish
drifting like thin seaweed, sea robins that poets call lyrefish and seamen
pipers and whose snouts have two jagged triangular plates shaped like old
Homer's lyre, swallowfish swimming as fast as the bird they're named after,
redheaded groupers whose dorsal fins are trimmed with filaments, some shad
(spotted with black, gray, brown, blue, yellow, and green) that actually
respond to tinkling handbells, splendid diamond-shaped turbot that were like aquatic
pheasants with yellowish fins stippled in brown and the left topside mostly
marbled in brown and yellow, finally schools of wonderful red mullet, real
oceanic birds of paradise that ancient Romans bought for as much as 10,000
sesterces apiece, and which they killed at the table, so they could heartlessly
watch it change color from cinnabar red when alive to pallid white when dead.
And as for other fish common to
the Atlantic and Mediterranean, I was unable to observe miralets, triggerfish,
puffers, seahorses, jewelfish, trumpetfish, blennies, gray mullet, wrasse,
smelt, flying fish, anchovies, sea bream, porgies, garfish, or any of the chief
representatives of the order Pleuronecta, such as sole, flounder, plaice, dab,
and brill, simply because of the dizzying speed with which the Nautilus hustled
through these opulent waters.
As for marine mammals, on passing
by the mouth of the Adriatic Sea, I thought I recognized two or three sperm
whales equipped with the single dorsal fin denoting the genus Physeter, some
pilot whales from the genus Globicephalus exclusive to the Mediterranean, the
forepart of the head striped with small distinct lines, and also a dozen seals
with white bellies and black coats, known by the name monk seals and just as
solemn as if they were three-meter Dominicans.
For his part, Conseil thought he
spotted a turtle six feet wide and adorned with three protruding ridges that
ran lengthwise. I was sorry to miss this reptile, because from Conseil's
description, I believe I recognized the leatherback turtle, a pretty rare
species. For my part, I noted only some loggerhead turtles with long carapaces.
As for zoophytes, for a few
moments I was able to marvel at a wonderful, orange-hued hydra from the genus
Galeolaria that clung to the glass of our port panel; it consisted of a long,
lean filament that spread out into countless branches and ended in the most
delicate lace ever spun by the followers of Arachne. Unfortunately I couldn't
fish up this wonderful specimen, and surely no other Mediterranean zoophytes
would have been offered to my gaze, if, on the evening of the 16th, the
Nautilus hadn't slowed down in an odd fashion. This was the situation.
By then we were passing between
Sicily and the coast of Tunisia. In the cramped space between Cape Bon and the
Strait of Messina, the sea bottom rises almost all at once. It forms an actual
ridge with only seventeen meters of water remaining above it, while the depth
on either side is 170 meters. Consequently, the Nautilus had to maneuver with caution
so as not to bump into this underwater barrier.
I showed Conseil the position of
this long reef on our chart of the Mediterranean.
"But with all due respect to
master," Conseil ventured to observe, "it's like an actual isthmus
connecting Europe to Africa."
"Yes, my boy," I
replied, "it cuts across the whole Strait of Sicily, and Smith's soundings
prove that in the past, these two continents were genuinely connected between
Cape Boeo and Cape Farina."
"I can easily believe
it," Conseil said.
"I might add," I went
on, "that there's a similar barrier between Gibraltar and Ceuta, and in
prehistoric times it closed off the Mediterranean completely."
"Gracious!" Conseil put
in. "Suppose one day some volcanic upheaval raises these two barriers back
above the waves!"
"That's most unlikely,
Conseil."
"If master will allow me to
finish, I mean that if this phenomenon occurs, it might prove distressing to
Mr. de Lesseps, who has gone to such pains to cut through his isthmus!"
"Agreed, but I repeat,
Conseil: such a phenomenon won't occur. The intensity of these underground
forces continues to diminish. Volcanoes were quite numerous in the world's
early days, but they're going extinct one by one; the heat inside the earth is
growing weaker, the temperature in the globe's lower strata is cooling
appreciably every century, and to our globe's detriment, because its heat is
its life."
"But the sun--"
"The sun isn't enough,
Conseil. Can it restore heat to a corpse?"
"Not that I've heard."
"Well, my friend, someday
the earth will be just such a cold corpse. Like the moon, which long ago lost
its vital heat, our globe will become lifeless and unlivable."
"In how many
centuries?" Conseil asked.
"In hundreds of thousands of
years, my boy."
"Then we have ample time to
finish our voyage," Conseil replied, "if Ned Land doesn't mess things
up!"
Thus reassured, Conseil went back
to studying the shallows that the Nautilus was skimming at moderate speed.
On the rocky, volcanic seafloor,
there bloomed quite a collection of moving flora: sponges, sea cucumbers,
jellyfish called sea gooseberries that were adorned with reddish tendrils and
gave off a subtle phosphorescence, members of the genus Beroe that are commonly
known by the name melon jellyfish and are bathed in the shimmer of the whole
solar spectrum, free-swimming crinoids one meter wide that reddened the waters
with their crimson hue, treelike basket stars of the greatest beauty, sea fans
from the genus Pavonacea with long stems, numerous edible sea urchins of various
species, plus green sea anemones with a grayish trunk and a brown disk lost
beneath the olive-colored tresses of their tentacles.
Conseil kept especially busy
observing mollusks and articulates, and although his catalog is a little dry, I
wouldn't want to wrong the gallant lad by leaving out his personal
observations.
From the branch Mollusca, he
mentions numerous comb-shaped scallops, hooflike spiny oysters piled on top of
each other, triangular coquina, three-pronged glass snails with yellow fins and
transparent shells, orange snails from the genus Pleurobranchus that looked
like eggs spotted or speckled with greenish dots, members of the genus Aplysia
also known by the name sea hares, other sea hares from the genus Dolabella,
plump paper-bubble shells, umbrella shells exclusive to the Mediterranean,
abalone whose shell produces a mother-of-pearl much in demand, pilgrim
scallops, saddle shells that diners in the French province of Languedoc are
said to like better than oysters, some of those cockleshells so dear to the
citizens of Marseilles, fat white venus shells that are among the clams so
abundant off the coasts of North America and eaten in such quantities by New
Yorkers, variously colored comb shells with gill covers, burrowing date mussels
with a peppery flavor I relish, furrowed heart cockles whose shells have
riblike ridges on their arching summits, triton shells pocked with scarlet
bumps, carniaira snails with backward-curving tips that make them resemble
flimsy gondolas, crowned ferola snails, atlanta snails with spiral shells, gray
nudibranchs from the genus Tethys that were spotted with white and covered by
fringed mantles, nudibranchs from the suborder Eolidea that looked like small
slugs, sea butterflies crawling on their backs, seashells from the genus
Auricula including the oval-shaped Auricula myosotis, tan wentletrap snails,
common periwinkles, violet snails, cineraira snails, rock borers, ear shells,
cabochon snails, pandora shells, etc.
As for the articulates, in his
notes Conseil has very appropriately divided them into six classes, three of
which belong to the marine world. These classes are the Crustacea, Cirripedia,
and Annelida.
Crustaceans are subdivided into
nine orders, and the first of these consists of the decapods, in other words,
animals whose head and thorax are usually fused, whose cheek-and-mouth
mechanism is made up of several pairs of appendages, and whose thorax has four,
five, or six pairs of walking legs. Conseil used the methods of our mentor
Professor Milne-Edwards, who puts the decapods in three divisions: Brachyura,
Macrura, and Anomura. These names may look a tad fierce, but they're accurate
and appropriate. Among the Brachyura, Conseil mentions some amanthia crabs
whose fronts were armed with two big diverging tips, those inachus scorpions
that-- lord knows why--symbolized wisdom to the ancient Greeks, spider crabs of
the massena and spinimane varieties that had probably gone astray in these
shallows because they usually live in the lower depths, xanthid crabs, pilumna
crabs, rhomboid crabs, granular box crabs (easy on the digestion, as Conseil
ventured to observe), toothless masked crabs, ebalia crabs, cymopolia crabs,
woolly-handed crabs, etc. Among the Macrura (which are subdivided into five
families: hardshells, burrowers, crayfish, prawns, and ghost crabs) Conseil
mentions some common spiny lobsters whose females supply a meat highly prized,
slipper lobsters or common shrimp, waterside gebia shrimp, and all sorts of
edible species, but he says nothing of the crayfish subdivision that includes
the true lobster, because spiny lobsters are the only type in the
Mediterranean. Finally, among the Anomura, he saw common drocina crabs dwelling
inside whatever abandoned seashells they could take over, homola crabs with
spiny fronts, hermit crabs, hairy porcelain crabs, etc.
There Conseil's work came to a
halt. He didn't have time to finish off the class Crustacea through an
examination of its stomatopods, amphipods, homopods, isopods, trilobites,
branchiopods, ostracods, and entomostraceans. And in order to complete his
study of marine articulates, he needed to mention the class Cirripedia, which
contains water fleas and carp lice, plus the class Annelida, which he would
have divided without fail into tubifex worms and dorsibranchian worms. But
having gone past the shallows of the Strait of Sicily, the Nautilus resumed its
usual deep-water speed. From then on, no more mollusks, no more zoophytes, no
more articulates. Just a few large fish sweeping by like shadows.
During the night of February
16-17, we entered the second Mediterranean basin, whose maximum depth we found
at 3,000 meters. The Nautilus, driven downward by its propeller and slanting
fins, descended to the lowest strata of this sea.
There, in place of natural
wonders, the watery mass offered some thrilling and dreadful scenes to my eyes.
In essence, we were then crossing that part of the whole Mediterranean so
fertile in casualties. From the coast of Algiers to the beaches of Provence,
how many ships have wrecked, how many vessels have vanished! Compared to the
vast liquid plains of the Pacific, the Mediterranean is a mere lake, but it's
an unpredictable lake with fickle waves, today kindly and affectionate to those
frail single-masters drifting between a double ultramarine of sky and water,
tomorrow bad-tempered and turbulent, agitated by the winds, demolishing the
strongest ships beneath sudden waves that smash down with a headlong wallop.
So, in our swift cruise through
these deep strata, how many vessels I saw lying on the seafloor, some already
caked with coral, others clad only in a layer of rust, plus anchors, cannons,
shells, iron fittings, propeller blades, parts of engines, cracked cylinders,
staved-in boilers, then hulls floating in midwater, here upright, there
overturned.
Some of these wrecked ships had
perished in collisions, others from hitting granite reefs. I saw a few that had
sunk straight down, their masting still upright, their rigging stiffened by the
water. They looked like they were at anchor by some immense, open, offshore
mooring where they were waiting for their departure time. When the Nautilus
passed between them, covering them with sheets of electricity, they seemed
ready to salute us with their colors and send us their serial numbers! But no,
nothing but silence and death filled this field of catastrophes!
I observed that these
Mediterranean depths became more and more cluttered with such gruesome wreckage
as the Nautilus drew nearer to the Strait of Gibraltar. By then the shores of
Africa and Europe were converging, and in this narrow space collisions were
commonplace. There I saw numerous iron undersides, the phantasmagoric ruins of
steamers, some lying down, others rearing up like fearsome animals. One of
these boats made a dreadful first impression: sides torn open, funnel bent,
paddle wheels stripped to the mountings, rudder separated from the sternpost
and still hanging from an iron chain, the board on its stern eaten away by
marine salts! How many lives were dashed in this shipwreck! How many victims
were swept under the waves! Had some sailor on board lived to tell the story of
this dreadful disaster, or do the waves still keep this casualty a secret? It
occurred to me, lord knows why, that this boat buried under the sea might have
been the Atlas, lost with all hands some twenty years ago and never heard from
again! Oh, what a gruesome tale these Mediterranean depths could tell, this
huge boneyard where so much wealth has been lost, where so many victims have
met their deaths!
Meanwhile, briskly unconcerned,
the Nautilus ran at full propeller through the midst of these ruins. On
February 18, near three o'clock in the morning, it hove before the entrance to
the Strait of Gibraltar.
There are two currents here: an
upper current, long known to exist, that carries the ocean's waters into the
Mediterranean basin; then a lower countercurrent, the only present-day proof of
its existence being logic. In essence, the Mediterranean receives a continual
influx of water not only from the Atlantic but from rivers emptying into it;
since local evaporation isn't enough to restore the balance, the total amount
of added water should make this sea's level higher every year. Yet this isn't
the case, and we're naturally forced to believe in the existence of some lower
current that carries the Mediterranean's surplus through the Strait of
Gibraltar and into the Atlantic basin.
And so it turned out. The
Nautilus took full advantage of this countercurrent. It advanced swiftly
through this narrow passageway. For an instant I could glimpse the wonderful
ruins of the Temple of Hercules, buried undersea, as Pliny and Avianus have
mentioned, together with the flat island they stand on; and a few minutes
later, we were floating on the waves of the Atlantic.
THE ATLANTIC! A vast expanse of
water whose surface area is 25,000,000 square miles, with a length of 9,000
miles and an average width of 2,700. A major sea nearly unknown to the
ancients, except perhaps the Carthaginians, those Dutchmen of antiquity who
went along the west coasts of Europe and Africa on their commercial junkets! An
ocean whose parallel winding shores form an immense perimeter fed by the
world's greatest rivers: the St. Lawrence, Mississippi, Amazon, Plata, Orinoco,
Niger, Senegal, Elbe, Loire, and Rhine, which bring it waters from the most
civilized countries as well as the most undeveloped areas! A magnificent plain
of waves plowed continuously by ships of every nation, shaded by every flag in
the world, and ending in those two dreadful headlands so feared by navigators,
Cape Horn and the Cape of Tempests!
The Nautilus broke these waters
with the edge of its spur after doing nearly 10,000 leagues in three and a half
months, a track longer than a great circle of the earth. Where were we heading
now, and what did the future have in store for us?
Emerging from the Strait of
Gibraltar, the Nautilus took to the high seas. It returned to the surface of
the waves, so our daily strolls on the platform were restored to us.
I climbed onto it instantly, Ned
Land and Conseil along with me. Twelve miles away, Cape St. Vincent was hazily
visible, the southwestern tip of the Hispanic peninsula. The wind was blowing a
pretty strong gust from the south. The sea was swelling and surging. Its waves
made the Nautilus roll and jerk violently. It was nearly impossible to stand up
on the platform, which was continuously buffeted by this enormously heavy sea.
After inhaling a few breaths of air, we went below once more.
I repaired to my stateroom.
Conseil returned to his cabin; but the Canadian, looking rather worried,
followed me. Our quick trip through the Mediterranean hadn't allowed him to put
his plans into execution, and he could barely conceal his disappointment.
After the door to my stateroom
was closed, he sat and stared at me silently.
"Ned my friend," I told
him, "I know how you feel, but you mustn't blame yourself. Given the way
the Nautilus was navigating, it would have been sheer insanity to think of
escaping!"
Ned Land didn't reply. His pursed
lips and frowning brow indicated that he was in the grip of his monomania.
"Look here," I went on,
"as yet there's no cause for despair. We're going up the coast of
Portugal. France and England aren't far off, and there we'll easily find
refuge. Oh, I grant you, if the Nautilus had emerged from the Strait of
Gibraltar and made for that cape in the south, if it were taking us toward
those regions that have no continents, then I'd share your alarm. But we now
know that Captain Nemo doesn't avoid the seas of civilization, and in a few
days I think we can safely take action."
Ned Land stared at me still more
intently and finally unpursed his lips:
"We'll do it this
evening," he said.
I straightened suddenly. I admit
that I was less than ready for this announcement. I wanted to reply to the
Canadian, but words failed me.
"We agreed to wait for the
right circumstances," Ned Land went on. "Now we've got those
circumstances. This evening we'll be just a few miles off the coast of Spain.
It'll be cloudy tonight. The wind's blowing toward shore. You gave me your
promise, Professor Aronnax, and I'm counting on you."
Since I didn't say anything, the
Canadian stood up and approached me:
"We'll do it this evening at
nine o'clock," he said. "I've alerted Conseil. By that time Captain
Nemo will be locked in his room and probably in bed. Neither the mechanics or
the crewmen will be able to see us. Conseil and I will go to the central
companionway. As for you, Professor Aronnax, you'll stay in the library two
steps away and wait for my signal. The oars, mast, and sail are in the skiff.
I've even managed to stow some provisions inside. I've gotten hold of a monkey
wrench to unscrew the nuts bolting the skiff to the Nautilus's hull. So
everything's ready. I'll see you this evening."
"The sea is rough," I
said.
"Admitted," the
Canadian replied, "but we've got to risk it. Freedom is worth paying for.
Besides, the longboat's solidly built, and a few miles with the wind behind us
is no big deal. By tomorrow, who knows if this ship won't be 100 leagues out to
sea? If circumstances are in our favor, between ten and eleven this evening
we'll be landing on some piece of solid ground, or we'll be dead. So we're in
God's hands, and I'll see you this evening!"
This said, the Canadian withdrew,
leaving me close to dumbfounded. I had imagined that if it came to this, I
would have time to think about it, to talk it over. My stubborn companion
hadn't granted me this courtesy. But after all, what would I have said to him?
Ned Land was right a hundred times over. These were near-ideal circumstances,
and he was taking full advantage of them. In my selfish personal interests,
could I go back on my word and be responsible for ruining the future lives of
my companions? Tomorrow, might not Captain Nemo take us far away from any
shore?
Just then a fairly loud hissing
told me that the ballast tanks were filling, and the Nautilus sank beneath the
waves of the Atlantic.
I stayed in my stateroom. I wanted
to avoid the captain, to hide from his eyes the agitation overwhelming me. What
an agonizing day I spent, torn between my desire to regain my free will and my
regret at abandoning this marvelous Nautilus, leaving my underwater research
incomplete! How could I relinquish this ocean--"my own Atlantic," as
I liked to call it--without observing its lower strata, without wresting from
it the kinds of secrets that had been revealed to me by the seas of the East
Indies and the Pacific! I was putting down my novel half read, I was waking up
as my dream neared its climax! How painfully the hours passed, as I sometimes
envisioned myself safe on shore with my companions, or, despite my better
judgment, as I sometimes wished that some unforeseen circumstances would
prevent Ned Land from carrying out his plans.
Twice I went to the lounge. I
wanted to consult the compass. I wanted to see if the Nautilus's heading was
actually taking us closer to the coast or spiriting us farther away. But no.
The Nautilus was still in Portuguese waters. Heading north, it was cruising
along the ocean's beaches.
So I had to resign myself to my
fate and get ready to escape. My baggage wasn't heavy. My notes, nothing more.
As for Captain Nemo, I wondered
what he would make of our escaping, what concern or perhaps what distress it
might cause him, and what he would do in the twofold event of our attempt
either failing or being found out! Certainly I had no complaints to register
with him, on the contrary. Never was hospitality more wholehearted than his.
Yet in leaving him I couldn't be accused of ingratitude. No solemn promises
bound us to him. In order to keep us captive, he had counted only on the force
of circumstances and not on our word of honor. But his avowed intention to
imprison us forever on his ship justified our every effort.
I hadn't seen the captain since
our visit to the island of Santorini. Would fate bring me into his presence
before our departure? I both desired and dreaded it. I listened for footsteps
in the stateroom adjoining mine. Not a sound reached my ear. His stateroom had
to be deserted.
Then I began to wonder if this
eccentric individual was even on board. Since that night when the skiff had
left the Nautilus on some mysterious mission, my ideas about him had subtly
changed. In spite of everything, I thought that Captain Nemo must have kept up
some type of relationship with the shore. Did he himself never leave the
Nautilus? Whole weeks had often gone by without my encountering him. What was
he doing all the while? During all those times I'd thought he was convalescing
in the grip of some misanthropic fit, was he instead far away from the ship,
involved in some secret activity whose nature still eluded me?
All these ideas and a thousand
others assaulted me at the same time. In these strange circumstances the scope
for conjecture was unlimited. I felt an unbearable queasiness. This day of
waiting seemed endless. The hours struck too slowly to keep up with my
impatience.
As usual, dinner was served me in
my stateroom. Full of anxiety, I ate little. I left the table at seven o'clock.
120 minutes-- I was keeping track of them--still separated me from the moment I
was to rejoin Ned Land. My agitation increased. My pulse was throbbing
violently. I couldn't stand still. I walked up and down, hoping to calm my
troubled mind with movement. The possibility of perishing in our reckless
undertaking was the least of my worries; my heart was pounding at the thought
that our plans might be discovered before we had left the Nautilus, at the
thought of being hauled in front of Captain Nemo and finding him angered, or
worse, saddened by my deserting him.
I wanted to see the lounge one
last time. I went down the gangways and arrived at the museum where I had spent
so many pleasant and productive hours. I stared at all its wealth, all its
treasures, like a man on the eve of his eternal exile, a man departing to
return no more. For so many days now, these natural wonders and artistic
masterworks had been central to my life, and I was about to leave them behind
forever. I wanted to plunge my eyes through the lounge window and into these
Atlantic waters; but the panels were hermetically sealed, and a mantle of sheet
iron separated me from this ocean with which I was still unfamiliar.
Crossing through the lounge, I
arrived at the door, contrived in one of the canted corners, that opened into
the captain's stateroom. Much to my astonishment, this door was ajar. I
instinctively recoiled. If Captain Nemo was in his stateroom, he might see me.
But, not hearing any sounds, I approached. The stateroom was deserted. I pushed
the door open. I took a few steps inside. Still the same austere, monastic
appearance.
Just then my eye was caught by
some etchings hanging on the wall, which I hadn't noticed during my first
visit. They were portraits of great men of history who had spent their lives in
perpetual devotion to a great human ideal: Thaddeus Kosciusko, the hero whose
dying words had been Finis Poloniae;* Markos Botzaris, for modern Greece the reincarnation
of Sparta's King Leonidas; Daniel O'Connell, Ireland's defender; George
Washington, founder of the American Union; Daniele Manin, the Italian patriot;
Abraham Lincoln, dead from the bullet of a believer in slavery; and finally,
that martyr for the redemption of the black race, John Brown, hanging from his
gallows as Victor Hugo's pencil has so terrifyingly depicted.
*Latin: "Save Poland's
borders." Ed.
What was the bond between these
heroic souls and the soul of Captain Nemo? From this collection of portraits
could I finally unravel the mystery of his existence? Was he a fighter for
oppressed peoples, a liberator of enslaved races? Had he figured in the recent
political or social upheavals of this century? Was he a hero of that dreadful
civil war in America, a war lamentable yet forever glorious . . . ?
Suddenly the clock struck eight.
The first stroke of its hammer on the chime snapped me out of my musings. I
shuddered as if some invisible eye had plunged into my innermost thoughts, and
I rushed outside the stateroom.
There my eyes fell on the
compass. Our heading was still northerly. The log indicated a moderate speed,
the pressure gauge a depth of about sixty feet. So circumstances were in favor
of the Canadian's plans.
I stayed in my stateroom. I
dressed warmly: fishing boots, otter cap, coat of fan-mussel fabric lined with
sealskin. I was ready. I was waiting. Only the propeller's vibrations disturbed
the deep silence reigning on board. I cocked an ear and listened. Would a
sudden outburst of voices tell me that Ned Land's escape plans had just been
detected? A ghastly uneasiness stole through me. I tried in vain to recover my
composure.
A few minutes before nine
o'clock, I glued my ear to the captain's door. Not a sound. I left my stateroom
and returned to the lounge, which was deserted and plunged in near darkness.
I opened the door leading to the
library. The same inadequate light, the same solitude. I went to man my post
near the door opening into the well of the central companionway. I waited for
Ned Land's signal.
At this point the propeller's
vibrations slowed down appreciably, then they died out altogether. Why was the
Nautilus stopping? Whether this layover would help or hinder Ned Land's schemes
I couldn't have said.
The silence was further disturbed
only by the pounding of my heart.
Suddenly I felt a mild jolt. I
realized the Nautilus had come to rest on the ocean floor. My alarm increased.
The Canadian's signal hadn't reached me. I longed to rejoin Ned Land and urge
him to postpone his attempt. I sensed that we were no longer navigating under
normal conditions.
Just then the door to the main
lounge opened and Captain Nemo appeared. He saw me, and without further
preamble:
"Ah, professor," he
said in an affable tone, "I've been looking for you. Do you know your
Spanish history?"
Even if he knew it by heart, a
man in my disturbed, befuddled condition couldn't have quoted a syllable of his
own country's history.
"Well?" Captain Nemo
went on. "Did you hear my question? Do you know the history of
Spain?"
"Very little of it," I
replied.
"The most learned men,"
the captain said, "still have much to learn. Have a seat," he added,
"and I'll tell you about an unusual episode in this body of history."
The captain stretched out on a couch,
and I mechanically took a seat near him, but half in the shadows.
"Professor," he said,
"listen carefully. This piece of history concerns you in one definite
respect, because it will answer a question you've no doubt been unable to
resolve."
"I'm listening,
captain," I said, not knowing what my partner in this dialogue was driving
at, and wondering if this incident related to our escape plans.
"Professor," Captain
Nemo went on, "if you're amenable, we'll go back in time to 1702. You're
aware of the fact that in those days your King Louis XIV thought an imperial
gesture would suffice to humble the Pyrenees in the dust, so he inflicted his
grandson, the Duke of Anjou, on the Spaniards. Reigning more or less poorly
under the name King Philip V, this aristocrat had to deal with mighty opponents
abroad.
"In essence, the year
before, the royal houses of Holland, Austria, and England had signed a treaty
of alliance at The Hague, aiming to wrest the Spanish crown from King Philip V
and to place it on the head of an archduke whom they prematurely dubbed King
Charles III.
"Spain had to withstand
these allies. But the country had practically no army or navy. Yet it wasn't
short of money, provided that its galleons, laden with gold and silver from
America, could enter its ports. Now then, late in 1702 Spain was expecting a
rich convoy, which France ventured to escort with a fleet of twenty-three
vessels under the command of Admiral de Chateau-Renault, because by that time
the allied navies were roving the Atlantic.
"This convoy was supposed to
put into Cadiz, but after learning that the English fleet lay across those
waterways, the admiral decided to make for a French port.
"The Spanish commanders in
the convoy objected to this decision. They wanted to be taken to a Spanish
port, if not to Cadiz, then to the Bay of Vigo, located on Spain's northwest
coast and not blockaded.
"Admiral de Chateau-Renault
was so indecisive as to obey this directive, and the galleons entered the Bay
of Vigo.
"Unfortunately this bay
forms an open, offshore mooring that's impossible to defend. So it was
essential to hurry and empty the galleons before the allied fleets arrived, and
there would have been ample time for this unloading, if a wretched question of
trade agreements hadn't suddenly come up.
"Are you clear on the chain
of events?" Captain Nemo asked me.
"Perfectly clear," I
said, not yet knowing why I was being given this history lesson.
"Then I'll continue. Here's
what came to pass. The tradesmen of Cadiz had negotiated a charter whereby they
were to receive all merchandise coming from the West Indies. Now then,
unloading the ingots from those galleons at the port of Vigo would have been a
violation of their rights. So they lodged a complaint in Madrid, and they obtained
an order from the indecisive King Philip V: without unloading, the convoy would
stay in custody at the offshore mooring of Vigo until the enemy fleets had
retreated.
"Now then, just as this
decision was being handed down, English vessels arrived in the Bay of Vigo on
October 22, 1702. Despite his inferior forces, Admiral de Chateau-Renault
fought courageously. But when he saw that the convoy's wealth was about to fall
into enemy hands, he burned and scuttled the galleons, which went to the bottom
with their immense treasures."
Captain Nemo stopped. I admit it:
I still couldn't see how this piece of history concerned me.
"Well?" I asked him.
"Well, Professor
Aronnax," Captain Nemo answered me, "we're actually in that Bay of
Vigo, and all that's left is for you to probe the mysteries of the place."
The captain stood up and invited
me to follow him. I'd had time to collect myself. I did so. The lounge was
dark, but the sea's waves sparkled through the transparent windows. I stared.
Around the Nautilus for a
half-mile radius, the waters seemed saturated with electric light. The sandy
bottom was clear and bright. Dressed in diving suits, crewmen were busy
clearing away half-rotted barrels and disemboweled trunks in the midst of the
dingy hulks of ships. Out of these trunks and kegs spilled ingots of gold and
silver, cascades of jewels, pieces of eight. The sand was heaped with them.
Then, laden with these valuable spoils, the men returned to the Nautilus,
dropped off their burdens inside, and went to resume this inexhaustible fishing
for silver and gold.
I understood. This was the
setting of that battle on October 22, 1702. Here, in this very place, those
galleons carrying treasure to the Spanish government had gone to the bottom.
Here, whenever he needed, Captain Nemo came to withdraw these millions to
ballast his Nautilus. It was for him, for him alone, that America had yielded
up its precious metals. He was the direct, sole heir to these treasures wrested
from the Incas and those peoples conquered by Hernando Cortez!
"Did you know,
professor," he asked me with a smile, "that the sea contained such
wealth?"
"I know it's
estimated," I replied, "that there are 2,000,000 metric tons of
silver held in suspension in seawater."
"Surely, but in extracting
that silver, your expenses would outweigh your profits. Here, by contrast, I
have only to pick up what other men have lost, and not only in this Bay of Vigo
but at a thousand other sites where ships have gone down, whose positions are
marked on my underwater chart. Do you understand now that I'm rich to the tune
of billions?"
"I understand, captain.
Nevertheless, allow me to inform you that by harvesting this very Bay of Vigo,
you're simply forestalling the efforts of a rival organization."
"What organization?"
"A company chartered by the
Spanish government to search for these sunken galleons. The company's investors
were lured by the bait of enormous gains, because this scuttled treasure is
estimated to be worth 500,000,000 francs."
"It was 500,000,000 francs,"
Captain Nemo replied, "but no more!"
"Right," I said.
"Hence a timely warning to those investors would be an act of charity. Yet
who knows if it would be well received? Usually what gamblers regret the most
isn't the loss of their money so much as the loss of their insane hopes. But
ultimately I feel less sorry for them than for the thousands of unfortunate
people who would have benefited from a fair distribution of this wealth,
whereas now it will be of no help to them!"
No sooner had I voiced this regret
than I felt it must have wounded Captain Nemo.
"No help!" he replied
with growing animation. "Sir, what makes you assume this wealth goes to
waste when I'm the one amassing it? Do you think I toil to gather this treasure
out of selfishness? Who says I don't put it to good use? Do you think I'm
unaware of the suffering beings and oppressed races living on this earth, poor
people to comfort, victims to avenge? Don't you understand . . . ?"
Captain Nemo stopped on these
last words, perhaps sorry that he had said too much. But I had guessed.
Whatever motives had driven him to seek independence under the seas, he
remained a human being before all else! His heart still throbbed for suffering
humanity, and his immense philanthropy went out both to downtrodden races and
to individuals!
And now I knew where Captain Nemo
had delivered those millions, when the Nautilus navigated the waters where
Crete was in rebellion against the Ottoman Empire!
THE NEXT MORNING, February 19, I beheld
the Canadian entering my stateroom. I was expecting this visit. He wore an
expression of great disappointment.
"Well, sir?" he said to
me.
"Well, Ned, the fates were
against us yesterday."
"Yes! That damned captain
had to call a halt just as we were going to escape from his boat."
"Yes, Ned, he had business
with his bankers."
"His bankers?"
"Or rather his bank vaults.
By which I mean this ocean, where his wealth is safer than in any national
treasury."
I then related the evening's
incidents to the Canadian, secretly hoping he would come around to the idea of
not deserting the captain; but my narrative had no result other than Ned's
voicing deep regret that he hadn't strolled across the Vigo battlefield on his
own behalf.
"Anyhow," he said,
"it's not over yet! My first harpoon missed, that's all! We'll succeed the
next time, and as soon as this evening, if need be . . ."
"What's the Nautilus's
heading?" I asked.
"I've no idea," Ned
replied.
"All right, at noon we'll
find out what our position is!"
The Canadian returned to
Conseil's side. As soon as I was dressed, I went into the lounge. The compass
wasn't encouraging. The Nautilus's course was south-southwest. We were turning
our backs on Europe.
I could hardly wait until our
position was reported on the chart. Near 11:30 the ballast tanks emptied, and
the submersible rose to the surface of the ocean. I leaped onto the platform.
Ned Land was already there.
No more shore in sight. Nothing
but the immenseness of the sea. A few sails were on the horizon, no doubt ships
going as far as Cape São Roque to find favorable winds for doubling the Cape of
Good Hope. The sky was overcast. A squall was on the way.
Furious, Ned tried to see through
the mists on the horizon. He still hoped that behind all that fog there lay
those shores he longed for.
At noon the sun made a momentary
appearance. Taking advantage of this rift in the clouds, the chief officer took
the orb's altitude. Then the sea grew turbulent, we went below again, and the
hatch closed once more.
When I consulted the chart an
hour later, I saw that the Nautilus's position was marked at longitude 16
degrees 17' and latitude 33 degrees 22', a good 150 leagues from the nearest
coast. It wouldn't do to even dream of escaping, and I'll let the reader decide
how promptly the Canadian threw a tantrum when I ventured to tell him our
situation.
As for me, I wasn't exactly
grief-stricken. I felt as if a heavy weight had been lifted from me, and I was
able to resume my regular tasks in a state of comparative calm.
Near eleven o'clock in the
evening, I received a most unexpected visit from Captain Nemo. He asked me very
graciously if I felt exhausted from our vigil the night before. I said no.
"Then, Professor Aronnax, I
propose an unusual excursion."
"Propose away,
captain."
"So far you've visited the
ocean depths only by day and under sunlight. Would you like to see these depths
on a dark night?"
"Very much."
"I warn you, this will be an
exhausting stroll. We'll need to walk long hours and scale a mountain. The
roads aren't terribly well kept up."
"Everything you say,
captain, just increases my curiosity. I'm ready to go with you."
"Then come along, professor,
and we'll go put on our diving suits."
Arriving at the wardrobe, I saw that
neither my companions nor any crewmen would be coming with us on this
excursion. Captain Nemo hadn't even suggested my fetching Ned or Conseil.
In a few moments we had put on
our equipment. Air tanks, abundantly charged, were placed on our backs, but the
electric lamps were not in readiness. I commented on this to the captain.
"They'll be useless to
us," he replied.
I thought I hadn't heard him
right, but I couldn't repeat my comment because the captain's head had already
disappeared into its metal covering. I finished harnessing myself, I felt an
alpenstock being placed in my hand, and a few minutes later, after the usual
procedures, we set foot on the floor of the Atlantic, 300 meters down.
Midnight was approaching. The
waters were profoundly dark, but Captain Nemo pointed to a reddish spot in the
distance, a sort of wide glow shimmering about two miles from the Nautilus.
What this fire was, what substances fed it, how and why it kept burning in the
liquid mass, I couldn't say. Anyhow it lit our way, although hazily, but I soon
grew accustomed to this unique gloom, and in these circumstances I understood
the uselessness of the Ruhmkorff device.
Side by side, Captain Nemo and I
walked directly toward this conspicuous flame. The level seafloor rose imperceptibly.
We took long strides, helped by our alpenstocks; but in general our progress
was slow, because our feet kept sinking into a kind of slimy mud mixed with
seaweed and assorted flat stones.
As we moved forward, I heard a
kind of pitter-patter above my head. Sometimes this noise increased and became
a continuous crackle. I soon realized the cause. It was a heavy rainfall
rattling on the surface of the waves. Instinctively I worried that I might get
soaked! By water in the midst of water! I couldn't help smiling at this
outlandish notion. But to tell the truth, wearing these heavy diving suits, you
no longer feel the liquid element, you simply think you're in the midst of air
a little denser than air on land, that's all.
After half an hour of walking,
the seafloor grew rocky. Jellyfish, microscopic crustaceans, and sea-pen coral
lit it faintly with their phosphorescent glimmers. I glimpsed piles of stones
covered by a couple million zoophytes and tangles of algae. My feet often
slipped on this viscous seaweed carpet, and without my alpenstock I would have
fallen more than once. When I turned around, I could still see the Nautilus's
whitish beacon, which was starting to grow pale in the distance.
Those piles of stones just
mentioned were laid out on the ocean floor with a distinct but inexplicable
symmetry. I spotted gigantic furrows trailing off into the distant darkness,
their length incalculable. There also were other peculiarities I couldn't make
sense of. It seemed to me that my heavy lead soles were crushing a litter of
bones that made a dry crackling noise. So what were these vast plains we were
now crossing? I wanted to ask the captain, but I still didn't grasp that sign
language that allowed him to chat with his companions when they went with him
on his underwater excursions.
Meanwhile the reddish light
guiding us had expanded and inflamed the horizon. The presence of this furnace
under the waters had me extremely puzzled. Was it some sort of electrical
discharge? Was I approaching some natural phenomenon still unknown to
scientists on shore? Or, rather (and this thought did cross my mind), had the
hand of man intervened in that blaze? Had human beings fanned those flames? In
these deep strata would I meet up with more of Captain Nemo's companions,
friends he was about to visit who led lives as strange as his own? Would I find
a whole colony of exiles down here, men tired of the world's woes, men who had
sought and found independence in the ocean's lower depths? All these insane,
inadmissible ideas dogged me, and in this frame of mind, continually excited by
the series of wonders passing before my eyes, I wouldn't have been surprised to
find on this sea bottom one of those underwater towns Captain Nemo dreamed
about!
Our path was getting brighter and
brighter. The red glow had turned white and was radiating from a mountain peak
about 800 feet high. But what I saw was simply a reflection produced by the
crystal waters of these strata. The furnace that was the source of this
inexplicable light occupied the far side of the mountain.
In the midst of the stone mazes
furrowing this Atlantic seafloor, Captain Nemo moved forward without
hesitation. He knew this dark path. No doubt he had often traveled it and was
incapable of losing his way. I followed him with unshakeable confidence. He
seemed like some Spirit of the Sea, and as he walked ahead of me, I marveled at
his tall figure, which stood out in black against the glowing background of the
horizon.
It was one o'clock in the
morning. We arrived at the mountain's lower gradients. But in grappling with
them, we had to venture up difficult trails through a huge thicket.
Yes, a thicket of dead trees!
Trees without leaves, without sap, turned to stone by the action of the waters,
and crowned here and there by gigantic pines. It was like a still-erect
coalfield, its roots clutching broken soil, its boughs clearly outlined against
the ceiling of the waters like thin, black, paper cutouts. Picture a forest
clinging to the sides of a peak in the Harz Mountains, but a submerged forest.
The trails were cluttered with algae and fucus plants, hosts of crustaceans
swarming among them. I plunged on, scaling rocks, straddling fallen tree
trunks, snapping marine creepers that swayed from one tree to another, startling
the fish that flitted from branch to branch. Carried away, I didn't feel
exhausted any more. I followed a guide who was immune to exhaustion.
What a sight! How can I describe
it! How can I portray these woods and rocks in this liquid setting, their lower
parts dark and sullen, their upper parts tinted red in this light whose
intensity was doubled by the reflecting power of the waters! We scaled rocks
that crumbled behind us, collapsing in enormous sections with the hollow rumble
of an avalanche. To our right and left there were carved gloomy galleries where
the eye lost its way. Huge glades opened up, seemingly cleared by the hand of
man, and I sometimes wondered whether some residents of these underwater
regions would suddenly appear before me.
But Captain Nemo kept climbing. I
didn't want to fall behind. I followed him boldly. My alpenstock was a great
help. One wrong step would have been disastrous on the narrow paths cut into
the sides of these chasms, but I walked along with a firm tread and without the
slightest feeling of dizziness. Sometimes I leaped over a crevasse whose depth
would have made me recoil had I been in the midst of glaciers on shore;
sometimes I ventured out on a wobbling tree trunk fallen across a gorge,
without looking down, having eyes only for marveling at the wild scenery of
this region. There, leaning on erratically cut foundations, monumental rocks
seemed to defy the laws of balance. From between their stony knees, trees
sprang up like jets under fearsome pressure, supporting other trees that
supported them in turn. Next, natural towers with wide, steeply carved
battlements leaned at angles that, on dry land, the laws of gravity would never
have authorized.
And I too could feel the
difference created by the water's powerful density--despite my heavy clothing,
copper headpiece, and metal soles, I climbed the most impossibly steep
gradients with all the nimbleness, I swear it, of a chamois or a Pyrenees
mountain goat!
As for my account of this
excursion under the waters, I'm well aware that it sounds incredible! I'm the
chronicler of deeds seemingly impossible and yet incontestably real. This was
no fantasy. This was what I saw and felt!
Two hours after leaving the
Nautilus, we had cleared the timberline, and 100 feet above our heads stood the
mountain peak, forming a dark silhouette against the brilliant glare that came
from its far slope. Petrified shrubs rambled here and there in sprawling
zigzags. Fish rose in a body at our feet like birds startled in tall grass. The
rocky mass was gouged with impenetrable crevices, deep caves, unfathomable
holes at whose far ends I could hear fearsome things moving around. My blood
would curdle as I watched some enormous antenna bar my path, or saw some
frightful pincer snap shut in the shadow of some cavity! A thousand specks of
light glittered in the midst of the gloom. They were the eyes of gigantic
crustaceans crouching in their lairs, giant lobsters rearing up like spear
carriers and moving their claws with a scrap-iron clanking, titanic crabs
aiming their bodies like cannons on their carriages, and hideous devilfish
intertwining their tentacles like bushes of writhing snakes.
What was this astounding world
that I didn't yet know? In what order did these articulates belong, these
creatures for which the rocks provided a second carapace? Where had nature
learned the secret of their vegetating existence, and for how many centuries
had they lived in the ocean's lower strata?
But I couldn't linger. Captain
Nemo, on familiar terms with these dreadful animals, no longer minded them. We
arrived at a preliminary plateau where still other surprises were waiting for
me. There picturesque ruins took shape, betraying the hand of man, not our
Creator. They were huge stacks of stones in which you could distinguish the
indistinct forms of palaces and temples, now arrayed in hosts of blossoming
zoophytes, and over it all, not ivy but a heavy mantle of algae and fucus
plants.
But what part of the globe could
this be, this land swallowed by cataclysms? Who had set up these rocks and
stones like the dolmens of prehistoric times? Where was I, where had Captain
Nemo's fancies taken me?
I wanted to ask him. Unable to, I
stopped him. I seized his arm. But he shook his head, pointed to the mountain's
topmost peak, and seemed to tell me:
"Come on! Come with me! Come
higher!"
I followed him with one last
burst of energy, and in a few minutes I had scaled the peak, which crowned the
whole rocky mass by some ten meters.
I looked back down the side we
had just cleared. There the mountain rose only 700 to 800 feet above the
plains; but on its far slope it crowned the receding bottom of this part of the
Atlantic by a height twice that. My eyes scanned the distance and took in a
vast area lit by intense flashes of light. In essence, this mountain was a
volcano. Fifty feet below its peak, amid a shower of stones and slag, a wide
crater vomited torrents of lava that were dispersed in fiery cascades into the
heart of the liquid mass. So situated, this volcano was an immense torch that
lit up the lower plains all the way to the horizon.
As I said, this underwater crater
spewed lava, but not flames. Flames need oxygen from the air and are unable to
spread underwater; but a lava flow, which contains in itself the principle of
its incandescence, can rise to a white heat, overpower the liquid element, and
turn it into steam on contact. Swift currents swept away all this diffuse gas,
and torrents of lava slid to the foot of the mountain, like the disgorgings of
a Mt. Vesuvius over the city limits of a second Torre del Greco.
In fact, there beneath my eyes
was a town in ruins, demolished, overwhelmed, laid low, its roofs caved in, its
temples pulled down, its arches dislocated, its columns stretching over the
earth; in these ruins you could still detect the solid proportions of a sort of
Tuscan architecture; farther off, the remains of a gigantic aqueduct; here, the
caked heights of an acropolis along with the fluid forms of a Parthenon; there,
the remnants of a wharf, as if some bygone port had long ago harbored merchant
vessels and triple-tiered war galleys on the shores of some lost ocean; still
farther off, long rows of collapsing walls, deserted thoroughfares, a whole
Pompeii buried under the waters, which Captain Nemo had resurrected before my
eyes!
Where was I? Where was I? I had
to find out at all cost, I wanted to speak, I wanted to rip off the copper
sphere imprisoning my head.
But Captain Nemo came over and stopped
me with a gesture. Then, picking up a piece of chalky stone, he advanced to a
black basaltic rock and scrawled this one word:
ATLANTIS
What lightning flashed through my
mind! Atlantis, that ancient land of Meropis mentioned by the historian Theopompus;
Plato's Atlantis; the continent whose very existence has been denied by such
philosophers and scientists as Origen, Porphyry, Iamblichus, d'Anville,
Malte-Brun, and Humboldt, who entered its disappearance in the ledger of myths
and folk tales; the country whose reality has nevertheless been accepted by
such other thinkers as Posidonius, Pliny, Ammianus Marcellinus, Tertullian,
Engel, Scherer, Tournefort, Buffon, and d'Avezac; I had this land right under
my eyes, furnishing its own unimpeachable evidence of the catastrophe that had
overtaken it! So this was the submerged region that had existed outside Europe,
Asia, and Libya, beyond the Pillars of Hercules, home of those powerful
Atlantean people against whom ancient Greece had waged its earliest wars!
The writer whose narratives
record the lofty deeds of those heroic times is Plato himself. His dialogues
Timaeus and Critias were drafted with the poet and legislator Solon as their
inspiration, as it were.
One day Solon was conversing with
some elderly wise men in the Egyptian capital of Sais, a town already 8,000
years of age, as documented by the annals engraved on the sacred walls of its
temples. One of these elders related the history of another town 1,000 years
older still. This original city of Athens, ninety centuries old, had been
invaded and partly destroyed by the Atlanteans. These Atlanteans, he said,
resided on an immense continent greater than Africa and
Asia combined, taking in an area
that lay between latitude 12 degrees and 40 degrees north. Their dominion
extended even to Egypt. They tried to enforce their rule as far as Greece, but
they had to retreat before the indomitable resistance of the Hellenic people.
Centuries passed. A cataclysm occurred--floods, earthquakes. A single night and
day were enough to obliterate this Atlantis, whose highest peaks (Madeira, the
Azores, the Canaries, the Cape Verde Islands) still emerge above the waves.
These were the historical
memories that Captain Nemo's scrawl sent rushing through my mind. Thus, led by
the strangest of fates, I was treading underfoot one of the mountains of that
continent! My hands were touching ruins many thousands of years old,
contemporary with prehistoric times! I was walking in the very place where
contemporaries of early man had walked! My heavy soles were crushing the
skeletons of animals from the age of fable, animals that used to take cover in
the shade of these trees now turned to stone!
Oh, why was I so short of time! I
would have gone down the steep slopes of this mountain, crossed this entire
immense continent, which surely connects Africa with America, and visited its
great prehistoric cities. Under my eyes there perhaps lay the warlike town of
Makhimos or the pious village of Eusebes, whose gigantic inhabitants lived for
whole centuries and had the strength to raise blocks of stone that still
withstood the action of the waters. One day perhaps, some volcanic phenomenon
will bring these sunken ruins back to the surface of the waves! Numerous
underwater volcanoes have been sighted in this part of the ocean, and many
ships have felt terrific tremors when passing over these turbulent depths. A
few have heard hollow noises that announced some struggle of the elements far
below, others have hauled in volcanic ash hurled above the waves. As far as the
equator this whole seafloor is still under construction by plutonic forces. And
in some remote epoch, built up by volcanic disgorgings and successive layers of
lava, who knows whether the peaks of these fire-belching mountains may reappear
above the surface of the Atlantic!
As I mused in this way, trying to
establish in my memory every detail of this impressive landscape, Captain Nemo
was leaning his elbows on a moss-covered monument, motionless as if petrified
in some mute trance. Was he dreaming of those lost generations, asking them for
the secret of human destiny? Was it here that this strange man came to revive
himself, basking in historical memories, reliving that bygone life, he who had
no desire for our modern one? I would have given anything to know his thoughts,
to share them, understand them!
We stayed in this place an entire
hour, contemplating its vast plains in the lava's glow, which sometimes took on
a startling intensity. Inner boilings sent quick shivers running through the
mountain's crust. Noises from deep underneath, clearly transmitted by the
liquid medium, reverberated with majestic amplitude.
Just then the moon appeared for
an instant through the watery mass, casting a few pale rays over this submerged
continent. It was only a fleeting glimmer, but its effect was indescribable.
The captain stood up and took one last look at these immense plains; then his
hand signaled me to follow him.
We went swiftly down the
mountain. Once past the petrified forest, I could see the Nautilus's beacon
twinkling like a star. The captain walked straight toward it, and we were back
on board just as the first glimmers of dawn were whitening the surface of the
ocean.
THE NEXT DAY, February 20, I
overslept. I was so exhausted from the night before, I didn't get up until
eleven o'clock. I dressed quickly. I hurried to find out the Nautilus's
heading. The instruments indicated that it was running southward at a speed of
twenty miles per hour and a depth of 100 meters.
Conseil entered. I described our
nocturnal excursion to him, and since the panels were open, he could still
catch a glimpse of this submerged continent.
In fact, the Nautilus was
skimming only ten meters over the soil of these Atlantis plains. The ship
scudded along like an air balloon borne by the wind over some prairie on land;
but it would be more accurate to say that we sat in the lounge as if we were
riding in a coach on an express train. As for the foregrounds passing before our
eyes, they were fantastically carved rocks, forests of trees that had crossed
over from the vegetable kingdom into the mineral kingdom, their motionless
silhouettes sprawling beneath the waves. There also were stony masses buried
beneath carpets of axidia and sea anemone, bristling with long, vertical water
plants, then strangely contoured blocks of lava that testified to all the fury
of those plutonic developments.
While this bizarre scenery was
glittering under our electric beams, I told Conseil the story of the
Atlanteans, who had inspired the old French scientist Jean Bailly to write so
many entertaining-- albeit utterly fictitious--pages.* I told the lad about the
wars of these heroic people. I discussed the question of Atlantis with the
fervor of a man who no longer had any doubts. But Conseil was so distracted he
barely heard me, and his lack of interest in any commentary on this historical
topic was soon explained.
*Bailly believed that Atlantis
was located at the North Pole! Ed.
In essence, numerous fish had
caught his eye, and when fish pass by, Conseil vanishes into his world of
classifying and leaves real life behind. In which case I could only tag along
and resume our ichthyological research.
Even so, these Atlantic fish were
not noticeably different from those we had observed earlier. There were rays of
gigantic size, five meters long and with muscles so powerful they could leap
above the waves, sharks of various species including a fifteen-foot glaucous
shark with sharp triangular teeth and so transparent it was almost invisible
amid the waters, brown lantern sharks, prism-shaped humantin sharks armored
with protuberant hides, sturgeons resembling their relatives in the
Mediterranean, trumpet-snouted pipefish a foot and a half long, yellowish brown
with small gray fins and no teeth or tongue, unreeling like slim, supple
snakes.
Among bony fish, Conseil noticed
some blackish marlin three meters long with a sharp sword jutting from the
upper jaw, bright-colored weevers known in Aristotle's day as sea dragons and
whose dorsal stingers make them quite dangerous to pick up, then dolphinfish
with brown backs striped in blue and edged in gold, handsome dorados, moonlike
opahs that look like azure disks but which the sun's rays turn into spots of silver,
finally eight-meter swordfish from the genus Xiphias, swimming in schools,
sporting yellowish sickle-shaped fins and six-foot broadswords, stalwart
animals, plant eaters rather than fish eaters, obeying the tiniest signals from
their females like henpecked husbands.
But while observing these
different specimens of marine fauna, I didn't stop examining the long plains of
Atlantis. Sometimes an unpredictable irregularity in the seafloor would force
the Nautilus to slow down, and then it would glide into the narrow channels
between the hills with a cetacean's dexterity. If the labyrinth became
hopelessly tangled, the submersible would rise above it like an airship, and
after clearing the obstacle, it would resume its speedy course just a few
meters above the ocean floor. It was an enjoyable and impressive way of
navigating that did indeed recall the maneuvers of an airship ride, with the
major difference that the Nautilus faithfully obeyed the hands of its helmsman.
The terrain consisted mostly of
thick slime mixed with petrified branches, but it changed little by little near
four o'clock in the afternoon; it grew rockier and seemed to be strewn with
pudding stones and a basaltic gravel called "tuff," together with
bits of lava and sulfurous obsidian. I expected these long plains to change
into mountain regions, and in fact, as the Nautilus was executing certain
turns, I noticed that the southerly horizon was blocked by a high wall that
seemed to close off every exit. Its summit obviously poked above the level of
the ocean. It had to be a continent or at least an island, either one of the
Canaries or one of the Cape Verde Islands. Our bearings hadn't been marked on
the chart-- perhaps deliberately--and I had no idea what our position was. In
any case this wall seemed to signal the end of Atlantis, of which, all in all,
we had crossed only a small part.
Nightfall didn't interrupt my
observations. I was left to myself. Conseil had repaired to his cabin. The
Nautilus slowed down, hovering above the muddled masses on the seafloor,
sometimes grazing them as if wanting to come to rest, sometimes rising
unpredictably to the surface of the waves. Then I glimpsed a few bright
constellations through the crystal waters, specifically five or six of those
zodiacal stars trailing from the tail end of Orion.
I would have stayed longer at my
window, marveling at these beauties of sea and sky, but the panels closed. Just
then the Nautilus had arrived at the perpendicular face of that high wall. How
the ship would maneuver I hadn't a guess. I repaired to my stateroom. The
Nautilus did not stir. I fell asleep with the firm intention of waking up in
just a few hours.
But it was eight o'clock the next
day when I returned to the lounge. I stared at the pressure gauge. It told me that
the Nautilus was afloat on the surface of the ocean. Furthermore, I heard the
sound of footsteps on the platform. Yet there were no rolling movements to
indicate the presence of waves undulating above me.
I climbed as far as the hatch. It
was open. But instead of the broad daylight I was expecting, I found that I was
surrounded by total darkness. Where were we? Had I been mistaken? Was it still
night? No! Not one star was twinkling, and nighttime is never so utterly black.
I wasn't sure what to think, when
a voice said to me:
"Is that you,
professor?"
"Ah, Captain Nemo!" I
replied. "Where are we?"
"Underground,
professor."
"Underground!" I
exclaimed. "And the Nautilus is still floating?"
"It always floats."
"But I don't
understand!"
"Wait a little while. Our
beacon is about to go on, and if you want some light on the subject, you'll be
satisfied."
I set foot on the platform and
waited. The darkness was so profound I couldn't see even Captain Nemo. However,
looking at the zenith directly overhead, I thought I caught sight of a feeble
glimmer, a sort of twilight filtering through a circular hole. Just then the
beacon suddenly went on, and its intense brightness made that hazy light
vanish.
This stream of electricity dazzled
my eyes, and after momentarily shutting them, I looked around. The Nautilus was
stationary. It was floating next to an embankment shaped like a wharf. As for
the water now buoying the ship, it was a lake completely encircled by an inner
wall about two miles in diameter, hence six miles around. Its level--as
indicated by the pressure gauge--would be the same as the outside level,
because some connection had to exist between this lake and the sea. Slanting
inward over their base, these high walls converged to form a vault shaped like
an immense upside-down funnel that measured 500 or 600 meters in height. At its
summit there gaped the circular opening through which I had detected that faint
glimmer, obviously daylight.
Before more carefully examining
the interior features of this enormous cavern, and before deciding if it was
the work of nature or humankind, I went over to Captain Nemo.
"Where are we?" I said.
"In the very heart of an
extinct volcano," the captain answered me, "a volcano whose interior was
invaded by the sea after some convulsion in the earth. While you were sleeping,
professor, the Nautilus entered this lagoon through a natural channel that
opens ten meters below the surface of the ocean. This is our home port, secure,
convenient, secret, and sheltered against winds from any direction! Along the
coasts of your continents or islands, show me any offshore mooring that can
equal this safe refuge for withstanding the fury of hurricanes."
"Indeed," I replied,
"here you're in perfect safety, Captain Nemo. Who could reach you in the
heart of a volcano? But don't I see an opening at its summit?"
"Yes, its crater, a crater
formerly filled with lava, steam, and flames, but which now lets in this
life-giving air we're breathing."
"But which volcanic mountain
is this?" I asked.
"It's one of the many islets
with which this sea is strewn. For ships a mere reef, for us an immense cavern.
I discovered it by chance, and chance served me well."
"But couldn't someone enter
through the mouth of its crater?"
"No more than I could exit
through it. You can climb about 100 feet up the inner base of this mountain,
but then the walls overhang, they lean too far in to be scaled."
"I can see, captain, that
nature is your obedient servant, any time or any place. You're safe on this
lake, and nobody else can visit its waters. But what's the purpose of this
refuge? The Nautilus doesn't need a harbor."
"No, professor, but it needs
electricity to run, batteries to generate its electricity, sodium to feed its
batteries, coal to make its sodium, and coalfields from which to dig its coal.
Now then, right at this spot the sea covers entire forests that sank underwater
in prehistoric times; today, turned to stone, transformed into carbon fuel,
they offer me inexhaustible coal mines."
"So, captain, your men
practice the trade of miners here?"
"Precisely. These mines
extend under the waves like the coalfields at Newcastle. Here, dressed in
diving suits, pick and mattock in hand, my men go out and dig this carbon fuel
for which I don't need a single mine on land. When I burn this combustible to
produce sodium, the smoke escaping from the mountain's crater gives it the
appearance of a still-active volcano."
"And will we see your
companions at work?"
"No, at least not this time,
because I'm eager to continue our underwater tour of the world. Accordingly,
I'll rest content with drawing on my reserve stock of sodium. We'll stay here
long enough to load it on board, in other words, a single workday, then we'll
resume our voyage. So, Professor Aronnax, if you'd like to explore this cavern
and circle its lagoon, seize the day."
I thanked the captain and went to
look for my two companions, who hadn't yet left their cabin. I invited them to
follow me, not telling them where we were.
They climbed onto the platform.
Conseil, whom nothing could startle, saw it as a perfectly natural thing to
fall asleep under the waves and wake up under a mountain. But Ned Land had no
idea in his head other than to see if this cavern offered some way out.
After breakfast near ten o'clock,
we went down onto the embankment.
"So here we are, back on
shore," Conseil said.
"I'd hardly call this
shore," the Canadian replied. "And besides, we aren't on it but under
it."
A sandy beach unfolded before us,
measuring 500 feet at its widest point between the waters of the lake and the
foot of the mountain's walls. Via this strand you could easily circle the lake.
But the base of these high walls consisted of broken soil over which there lay
picturesque piles of volcanic blocks and enormous pumice stones. All these
crumbling masses were covered with an enamel polished by the action of
underground fires, and they glistened under the stream of electric light from
our beacon. Stirred up by our footsteps, the mica-rich dust on this beach flew
into the air like a cloud of sparks.
The ground rose appreciably as it
moved away from the sand flats by the waves, and we soon arrived at some long,
winding gradients, genuinely steep paths that allowed us to climb little by little;
but we had to tread cautiously in the midst of pudding stones that weren't
cemented together, and our feet kept skidding on glassy trachyte, made of
feldspar and quartz crystals.
The volcanic nature of this
enormous pit was apparent all around us. I ventured to comment on it to my
companions.
"Can you picture," I
asked them, "what this funnel must have been like when it was filled with
boiling lava, and the level of that incandescent liquid rose right to the
mountain's mouth, like cast iron up the insides of a furnace?"
"I can picture it
perfectly," Conseil replied. "But will master tell me why this huge
smelter suspended operations, and how it is that an oven was replaced by the
tranquil waters of a lake?"
"In all likelihood, Conseil,
because some convulsion created an opening below the surface of the ocean, the
opening that serves as a passageway for the Nautilus. Then the waters of the
Atlantic rushed inside the mountain. There ensued a dreadful struggle between
the elements of fire and water, a struggle ending in King Neptune's favor. But
many centuries have passed since then, and this submerged volcano has changed
into a peaceful cavern."
"That's fine," Ned Land
answered. "I accept the explanation, but in our personal interests, I'm
sorry this opening the professor mentions wasn't made above sea level."
"But Ned my friend,"
Conseil answered, "if it weren't an underwater passageway, the Nautilus
couldn't enter it!"
"And I might add, Mr.
Land," I said, "that the waters wouldn't have rushed under the
mountain, and the volcano would still be a volcano. So you have nothing to be
sorry about."
Our climb continued. The
gradients got steeper and narrower. Sometimes they were cut across by deep pits
that had to be cleared. Masses of overhanging rock had to be gotten around. You
slid on your knees, you crept on your belly. But helped by the Canadian's
strength and Conseil's dexterity, we overcame every obstacle.
At an elevation of about thirty
meters, the nature of the terrain changed without becoming any easier. Pudding
stones and trachyte gave way to black basaltic rock: here, lying in slabs all
swollen with blisters; there, shaped like actual prisms and arranged into a
series of columns that supported the springings of this immense vault, a
wonderful sample of natural architecture. Then, among this basaltic rock, there
snaked long, hardened lava flows inlaid with veins of bituminous coal and in
places covered by wide carpets of sulfur. The sunshine coming through the
crater had grown stronger, shedding a hazy light over all the volcanic waste
forever buried in the heart of this extinct mountain.
But when we had ascended to an
elevation of about 250 feet, we were stopped by insurmountable obstacles. The
converging inside walls changed into overhangs, and our climb into a circular
stroll. At this topmost level the vegetable kingdom began to challenge the
mineral kingdom. Shrubs, and even a few trees, emerged from crevices in the
walls. I recognized some spurges that let their caustic, purgative sap trickle
out. There were heliotropes, very remiss at living up to their sun-worshipping
reputations since no sunlight ever reached them; their clusters of flowers
drooped sadly, their colors and scents were faded. Here and there
chrysanthemums sprouted timidly at the feet of aloes with long, sad, sickly
leaves. But between these lava flows I spotted little violets that still gave
off a subtle fragrance, and I confess that I inhaled it with delight. The soul
of a flower is its scent, and those splendid water plants, flowers of the sea,
have no souls!
We had arrived at the foot of a
sturdy clump of dragon trees, which were splitting the rocks with exertions of
their muscular roots, when Ned Land exclaimed:
"Oh, sir, a hive!"
"A hive?" I answered,
with a gesture of utter disbelief.
"Yes, a hive," the
Canadian repeated, "with bees buzzing around!"
I went closer and was forced to
recognize the obvious. At the mouth of a hole cut in the trunk of a dragon
tree, there swarmed thousands of these ingenious insects so common to all the
Canary Islands, where their output is especially prized.
Naturally enough, the Canadian
wanted to lay in a supply of honey, and it would have been ill-mannered of me
to say no. He mixed sulfur with some dry leaves, set them on fire with a spark
from his tinderbox, and proceeded to smoke the bees out. Little by little the
buzzing died down and the disemboweled hive yielded several pounds of sweet
honey. Ned Land stuffed his haversack with it.
"When I've mixed this honey
with our breadfruit batter," he told us, "I'll be ready to serve you
a delectable piece of cake."
"But of course,"
Conseil put in, "it will be gingerbread!"
"I'm all for
gingerbread," I said, "but let's resume this fascinating
stroll."
At certain turns in the trail we
were going along, the lake appeared in its full expanse. The ship's beacon lit
up that whole placid surface, which experienced neither ripples nor
undulations. The Nautilus lay perfectly still. On its platform and on the
embankment, crewmen were bustling around, black shadows that stood out clearly
in the midst of the luminous air.
Just then we went around the
highest ridge of these rocky foothills that supported the vault. Then I saw
that bees weren't the animal kingdom's only representatives inside this volcano.
Here and in the shadows, birds of prey soared and whirled, flying away from
nests perched on tips of rock. There were sparrow hawks with white bellies, and
screeching kestrels. With all the speed their stiltlike legs could muster, fine
fat bustards scampered over the slopes. I'll let the reader decide whether the
Canadian's appetite was aroused by the sight of this tasty game, and whether he
regretted having no rifle in his hands. He tried to make stones do the work of
bullets, and after several fruitless attempts, he managed to wound one of these
magnificent bustards. To say he risked his life twenty times in order to
capture this bird is simply the unadulterated truth; but he fared so well, the
animal went into his sack to join the honeycombs.
By then we were forced to go back
down to the beach because the ridge had become impossible. Above us, the
yawning crater looked like the wide mouth of a well. From where we stood, the
sky was pretty easy to see, and I watched clouds race by, disheveled by the west
wind, letting tatters of mist trail over the mountain's summit. Proof positive
that those clouds kept at a moderate altitude, because this volcano didn't rise
more than 1,800 feet above the level of the ocean.
Half an hour after the Canadian's
latest exploits, we were back on the inner beach. There the local flora was
represented by a wide carpet of samphire, a small umbelliferous plant that
keeps quite nicely, which also boasts the names glasswort, saxifrage, and sea
fennel. Conseil picked a couple bunches. As for the local fauna, it included
thousands of crustaceans of every type: lobsters, hermit crabs, prawns, mysid
shrimps, daddy longlegs, rock crabs, and a prodigious number of seashells, such
as cowries, murex snails, and limpets.
In this locality there gaped the
mouth of a magnificent cave. My companions and I took great pleasure in
stretching out on its fine-grained sand. Fire had polished the sparkling enamel
of its inner walls, sprinkled all over with mica-rich dust. Ned Land tapped
these walls and tried to probe their thickness. I couldn't help smiling. Our
conversation then turned to his everlasting escape plans, and without going too
far, I felt I could offer him this hope: Captain Nemo had gone down south only
to replenish his sodium supplies. So I hoped he would now hug the coasts of
Europe and America, which would allow the Canadian to try again with a greater
chance of success.
We were stretched out in this
delightful cave for an hour. Our conversation, lively at the outset, then
languished. A definite drowsiness overcame us. Since I saw no good reason to
resist the call of sleep, I fell into a heavy doze. I dreamed--one doesn't
choose his dreams--that my life had been reduced to the vegetating existence of
a simple mollusk. It seemed to me that this cave made up my double-valved
shell. . . .
Suddenly Conseil's voice startled
me awake.
"Get up! Get up!"
shouted the fine lad.
"What is it?" I asked,
in a sitting position.
"The water's coming up to
us!"
I got back on my feet. Like a torrent
the sea was rushing into our retreat, and since we definitely were not
mollusks, we had to clear out.
In a few seconds we were safe on
top of the cave.
"What happened?"
Conseil asked. "Some new phenomenon?"
"Not quite, my
friends!" I replied. "It was the tide, merely the tide, which
wellnigh caught us by surprise just as it did Sir Walter Scott's hero! The
ocean outside is rising, and by a perfectly natural law of balance, the level
of this lake is also rising. We've gotten off with a mild dunking. Let's go
change clothes on the Nautilus."
Three-quarters of an hour later,
we had completed our circular stroll and were back on board. Just then the
crewmen finished loading the sodium supplies, and the Nautilus could have
departed immediately.
But Captain Nemo gave no orders.
Would he wait for nightfall and exit through his underwater passageway in
secrecy? Perhaps.
Be that as it may, by the next
day the Nautilus had left its home port and was navigating well out from any
shore, a few meters beneath the waves of the Atlantic.
THE NAUTILUS didn't change
direction. For the time being, then, we had to set aside any hope of returning
to European seas. Captain Nemo kept his prow pointing south. Where was he
taking us? I was afraid to guess.
That day the Nautilus crossed an
odd part of the Atlantic Ocean. No one is unaware of the existence of that
great warm-water current known by name as the Gulf Stream. After emerging from
channels off Florida, it heads toward Spitzbergen. But before entering the Gulf
of Mexico near latitude 44 degrees north, this current divides into two arms;
its chief arm makes for the shores of Ireland and Norway while the second
flexes southward at the level of the Azores; then it hits the coast of Africa,
sweeps in a long oval, and returns to the Caribbean Sea.
Now then, this second arm--more
accurately, a collar--forms a ring of warm water around a section of cool,
tranquil, motionless ocean called the Sargasso Sea. This is an actual lake in
the open Atlantic, and the great current's waters take at least three years to
circle it.
Properly speaking, the Sargasso
Sea covers every submerged part of Atlantis. Certain authors have even held
that the many weeds strewn over this sea were torn loose from the prairies of
that ancient continent. But it's more likely that these grasses, algae, and
fucus plants were carried off from the beaches of Europe and America, then
taken as far as this zone by the Gulf Stream. This is one of the reasons why
Christopher Columbus assumed the existence of a New World. When the ships of
that bold investigator arrived in the Sargasso Sea, they had great difficulty
navigating in the midst of these weeds, which, much to their crews' dismay,
slowed them down to a halt; and they wasted three long weeks crossing this
sector.
Such was the region our Nautilus
was visiting just then: a genuine prairie, a tightly woven carpet of algae,
gulfweed, and bladder wrack so dense and compact a craft's stempost couldn't
tear through it without difficulty. Accordingly, not wanting to entangle his
propeller in this weed-choked mass, Captain Nemo stayed at a depth some meters
below the surface of the waves.
The name Sargasso comes from the
Spanish word "sargazo," meaning gulfweed. This gulfweed, the swimming
gulfweed or berry carrier, is the chief substance making up this immense shoal.
And here's why these water plants collect in this placid Atlantic basin,
according to the expert on the subject, Commander Maury, author of The Physical
Geography of the Sea.
The explanation he gives seems to
entail a set of conditions that everybody knows: "Now," Maury says,
"if bits of cork or chaff, or any floating substance, be put into a basin,
and a circular motion be given to the water, all the light substances will be
found crowding together near the center of the pool, where there is the least
motion. Just such a basin is the Atlantic Ocean to the Gulf Stream, and the
Sargasso Sea is the center of the whirl."
I share Maury's view, and I was
able to study the phenomenon in this exclusive setting where ships rarely go.
Above us, huddled among the brown weeds, there floated objects originating from
all over: tree trunks ripped from the Rocky Mountains or the Andes and sent
floating down the Amazon or the Mississippi, numerous pieces of wreckage,
remnants of keels or undersides, bulwarks staved in and so weighed down with
seashells and barnacles, they couldn't rise to the surface of the ocean. And
the passing years will someday bear out Maury's other view that by collecting
in this way over the centuries, these substances will be turned to stone by the
action of the waters and will then form inexhaustible coalfields. Valuable
reserves prepared by farseeing nature for that time when man will have
exhausted his mines on the continents.
In the midst of this hopelessly
tangled fabric of weeds and fucus plants, I noted some delightful pink-colored,
star-shaped alcyon coral, sea anemone trailing the long tresses of their
tentacles, some green, red, and blue jellyfish, and especially those big
rhizostome jellyfish that Cuvier described, whose bluish parasols are trimmed
with violet festoons.
We spent the whole day of
February 22 in the Sargasso Sea, where fish that dote on marine plants and
crustaceans find plenty to eat. The next day the ocean resumed its usual
appearance.
From this moment on, for nineteen
days from February 23 to March 12, the Nautilus stayed in the middle of the
Atlantic, hustling us along at a constant speed of 100 leagues every
twenty-four hours. It was obvious that Captain Nemo wanted to carry out his
underwater program, and I had no doubt that he intended, after doubling Cape
Horn, to return to the Pacific South Seas.
So Ned Land had good reason to
worry. In these wide seas empty of islands, it was no longer feasible to jump
ship. Nor did we have any way to counter Captain Nemo's whims. We had no choice
but to acquiesce; but if we couldn't attain our end through force or cunning, I
liked to think we might achieve it through persuasion. Once this voyage was
over, might not Captain Nemo consent to set us free in return for our promise
never to reveal his existence? Our word of honor, which we sincerely would have
kept. However, this delicate question would have to be negotiated with the
captain. But how would he receive our demands for freedom? At the very outset
and in no uncertain terms, hadn't he declared that the secret of his life
required that we be permanently imprisoned on board the Nautilus? Wouldn't he
see my four-month silence as a tacit acceptance of this situation? Would my
returning to this subject arouse suspicions that could jeopardize our escape
plans, if we had promising circumstances for trying again later on? I weighed
all these considerations, turned them over in my mind, submitted them to
Conseil, but he was as baffled as I was. In short, although I'm not easily
discouraged, I realized that my chances of ever seeing my fellow men again were
shrinking by the day, especially at a time when Captain Nemo was recklessly
racing toward the south Atlantic!
During those nineteen days just
mentioned, no unique incidents distinguished our voyage. I saw little of the
captain. He was at work. In the library I often found books he had left open,
especially books on natural history. He had thumbed through my work on the
great ocean depths, and the margins were covered with his notes, which
sometimes contradicted my theories and formulations. But the captain remained
content with this method of refining my work, and he rarely discussed it with
me. Sometimes I heard melancholy sounds reverberating from the organ, which he
played very expressively, but only at night in the midst of the most secretive
darkness, while the Nautilus slumbered in the wilderness of the ocean.
During this part of our voyage,
we navigated on the surface of the waves for entire days. The sea was nearly
deserted. A few sailing ships, laden for the East Indies, were heading toward
the Cape of Good Hope. One day we were chased by the longboats of a whaling
vessel, which undoubtedly viewed us as some enormous baleen whale of great
value. But Captain Nemo didn't want these gallant gentlemen wasting their time
and energy, so he ended the hunt by diving beneath the waters. This incident
seemed to fascinate Ned Land intensely. I'm sure the Canadian was sorry that
these fishermen couldn't harpoon our sheet-iron cetacean and mortally wound it.
During this period the fish
Conseil and I observed differed little from those we had already studied in
other latitudes. Chief among them were specimens of that dreadful cartilaginous
genus that's divided into three subgenera numbering at least thirty-two
species: striped sharks five meters long, the head squat and wider than the
body, the caudal fin curved, the back with seven big, black, parallel lines running
lengthwise; then perlon sharks, ash gray, pierced with seven gill openings,
furnished with a single dorsal fin placed almost exactly in the middle of the
body.
Some big dogfish also passed by,
a voracious species of shark if there ever was one. With some justice,
fishermen's yarns aren't to be trusted, but here's what a few of them relate.
Inside the corpse of one of these animals there were found a buffalo head and a
whole calf; in another, two tuna and a sailor in uniform; in yet another, a soldier
with his saber; in another, finally, a horse with its rider. In candor, none of
these sounds like divinely inspired truth. But the fact remains that not a
single dogfish let itself get caught in the Nautilus's nets, so I can't vouch
for their voracity.
Schools of elegant, playful
dolphin swam alongside for entire days. They went in groups of five or six,
hunting in packs like wolves over the countryside; moreover, they're just as
voracious as dogfish, if I can believe a certain Copenhagen professor who says
that from one dolphin's stomach, he removed thirteen porpoises and fifteen
seals. True, it was a killer whale, belonging to the biggest known species,
whose length sometimes exceeds twenty-four feet. The family Delphinia numbers
ten genera, and the dolphins I saw were akin to the genus Delphinorhynchus,
remarkable for an extremely narrow muzzle four times as long as the cranium.
Measuring three meters, their bodies were black on top, underneath a pinkish
white strewn with small, very scattered spots.
From these seas I'll also mention
some unusual specimens of croakers, fish from the order Acanthopterygia, family
Scienidea. Some authors-- more artistic than scientific--claim that these fish
are melodious singers, that their voices in unison put on concerts unmatched by
human choristers. I don't say nay, but to my regret these croakers didn't
serenade us as we passed.
Finally, to conclude, Conseil
classified a large number of flying fish. Nothing could have made a more
unusual sight than the marvelous timing with which dolphins hunt these fish.
Whatever the range of its flight, however evasive its trajectory (even up and
over the Nautilus), the hapless flying fish always found a dolphin to welcome
it with open mouth. These were either flying gurnards or kitelike sea robins,
whose lips glowed in the dark, at night scrawling fiery streaks in the air
before plunging into the murky waters like so many shooting stars.
Our navigating continued under
these conditions until March 13. That day the Nautilus was put to work in some
depth-sounding experiments that fascinated me deeply.
By then we had fared nearly
13,000 leagues from our starting point in the Pacific high seas. Our position
fix placed us in latitude 45 degrees 37' south and longitude 37 degrees 53' west.
These were the same waterways where Captain Denham, aboard the Herald, payed
out 14,000 meters of sounding line without finding bottom. It was here too that
Lieutenant Parker, aboard the American frigate Congress, was unable to reach
the underwater soil at 15,149 meters.
Captain Nemo decided to take his
Nautilus down to the lowest depths in order to double-check these different
soundings. I got ready to record the results of this experiment. The panels in
the lounge opened, and maneuvers began for reaching those strata so
prodigiously far removed.
It was apparently considered out
of the question to dive by filling the ballast tanks. Perhaps they wouldn't
sufficiently increase the Nautilus's specific gravity. Moreover, in order to
come back up, it would be necessary to expel the excess water, and our pumps
might not have been strong enough to overcome the outside pressure.
Captain Nemo decided to make for
the ocean floor by submerging on an appropriately gradual diagonal with the
help of his side fins, which were set at a 45 degrees angle to the Nautilus's
waterline. Then the propeller was brought to its maximum speed, and its four
blades churned the waves with indescribable violence.
Under this powerful thrust the
Nautilus's hull quivered like a resonating chord, and the ship sank steadily
under the waters. Stationed in the lounge, the captain and I watched the needle
swerving swiftly over the pressure gauge. Soon we had gone below the livable
zone where most fish reside. Some of these animals can thrive only at the
surface of seas or rivers, but a minority can dwell at fairly great depths.
Among the latter I observed a species of dogfish called the cow shark that's
equipped with six respiratory slits, the telescope fish with its enormous eyes,
the armored gurnard with gray thoracic fins plus black pectoral fins and a
breastplate protected by pale red slabs of bone, then finally the grenadier,
living at a depth of 1,200 meters, by that point tolerating a pressure of 120
atmospheres.
I asked Captain Nemo if he had
observed any fish at more considerable depths.
"Fish? Rarely!" he
answered me. "But given the current state of marine science, who are we to
presume, what do we really know of these depths?"
"Just this, captain. In
going toward the ocean's lower strata, we know that vegetable life disappears
more quickly than animal life. We know that moving creatures can still be
encountered where water plants no longer grow. We know that oysters and pilgrim
scallops live in 2,000 meters of water, and that Admiral McClintock, England's
hero of the polar seas, pulled in a live sea star from a depth of 2,500 meters.
We know that the crew of the Royal Navy's Bulldog fished up a starfish from
2,620 fathoms, hence from a depth of more than one vertical league. Would you
still say, Captain Nemo, that we really know nothing?"
"No, professor," the
captain replied, "I wouldn't be so discourteous. Yet I'll ask you to
explain how these creatures can live at such depths?"
"I explain it on two
grounds," I replied. "In the first place, because vertical currents,
which are caused by differences in the water's salinity and density, can
produce enough motion to sustain the rudimentary lifestyles of sea lilies and
starfish."
"True," the captain put
in.
"In the second place, because
oxygen is the basis of life, and we know that the amount of oxygen dissolved in
salt water increases rather than decreases with depth, that the pressure in
these lower strata helps to concentrate their oxygen content."
"Oho! We know that, do
we?" Captain Nemo replied in a tone of mild surprise. "Well,
professor, we have good reason to know it because it's the truth. I might add,
in fact, that the air bladders of fish contain more nitrogen than oxygen when
these animals are caught at the surface of the water, and conversely, more
oxygen than nitrogen when they're pulled up from the lower depths. Which bears
out your formulation. But let's continue our observations."
My eyes flew back to the pressure
gauge. The instrument indicated a depth of 6,000 meters. Our submergence had
been going on for an hour. The Nautilus slid downward on its slanting fins,
still sinking. These deserted waters were wonderfully clear, with a
transparency impossible to convey. An hour later we were at 13,000 meters--
about three and a quarter vertical leagues--and the ocean floor was nowhere in
sight.
However, at 14,000 meters I saw
blackish peaks rising in the midst of the waters. But these summits could have
belonged to mountains as high or even higher than the Himalayas or Mt. Blanc,
and the extent of these depths remained incalculable.
Despite the powerful pressures it
was undergoing, the Nautilus sank still deeper. I could feel its sheet-iron
plates trembling down to their riveted joins; metal bars arched; bulkheads
groaned; the lounge windows seemed to be warping inward under the water's
pressure. And this whole sturdy mechanism would surely have given way, if, as
its captain had said, it weren't capable of resisting like a solid block.
While grazing these rocky slopes
lost under the waters, I still spotted some seashells, tube worms, lively
annelid worms from the genus Spirorbis, and certain starfish specimens.
But soon these last
representatives of animal life vanished, and three vertical leagues down, the
Nautilus passed below the limits of underwater existence just as an air balloon
rises above the breathable zones in the sky. We reached a depth of 16,000
meters-- four vertical leagues--and by then the Nautilus's plating was
tolerating a pressure of 1,600 atmospheres, in other words, 1,600 kilograms per
each square centimeter on its surface!
"What an experience!" I
exclaimed. "Traveling these deep regions where no man has ever ventured
before! Look, captain! Look at these magnificent rocks, these uninhabited
caves, these last global haunts where life is no longer possible! What
unheard-of scenery, and why are we reduced to preserving it only as a
memory?"
"Would you like,"
Captain Nemo asked me, "to bring back more than just a memory?"
"What do you mean?"
"I mean that nothing could
be easier than taking a photograph of this underwater region!"
Before I had time to express the
surprise this new proposition caused me, a camera was carried into the lounge
at Captain Nemo's request. The liquid setting, electrically lit, unfolded with
perfect clarity through the wide-open panels. No shadows, no blurs, thanks to
our artificial light. Not even sunshine could have been better for our
purposes. With the thrust of its propeller curbed by the slant of its fins, the
Nautilus stood still. The camera was aimed at the scenery on the ocean floor,
and in a few seconds we had a perfect negative.
I attach a print of the positive.
In it you can view these primordial rocks that have never seen the light of
day, this nether granite that forms the powerful foundation of our globe, the
deep caves cut into the stony mass, the outlines of incomparable distinctness
whose far edges stand out in black as if from the brush of certain Flemish
painters. In the distance is a mountainous horizon, a wondrously undulating
line that makes up the background of this landscape. The general effect of
these smooth rocks is indescribable: black, polished, without moss or other
blemish, carved into strange shapes, sitting firmly on a carpet of sand that
sparkled beneath our streams of electric light.
Meanwhile, his photographic
operations over, Captain Nemo told me:
"Let's go back up,
professor. We mustn't push our luck and expose the Nautilus too long to these
pressures."
"Let's go back up!" I
replied.
"Hold on tight."
Before I had time to realize why
the captain made this recommendation, I was hurled to the carpet.
Its fins set vertically, its
propeller thrown in gear at the captain's signal, the Nautilus rose with
lightning speed, shooting upward like an air balloon into the sky. Vibrating
resonantly, it knifed through the watery mass. Not a single detail was visible.
In four minutes it had cleared the four vertical leagues separating it from the
surface of the ocean, and after emerging like a flying fish, it fell back into
the sea, making the waves leap to prodigious heights.
DURING THE NIGHT of March 13-14,
the Nautilus resumed its southward heading. Once it was abreast of Cape Horn, I
thought it would strike west of the cape, make for Pacific seas, and complete
its tour of the world. It did nothing of the sort and kept moving toward the
southernmost regions. So where was it bound? The pole? That was insanity. I was
beginning to think that the captain's recklessness more than justified Ned
Land's worst fears.
For a good while the Canadian had
said nothing more to me about his escape plans. He had become less sociable,
almost sullen. I could see how heavily this protracted imprisonment was
weighing on him. I could feel the anger building in him. Whenever he
encountered the captain, his eyes would flicker with dark fire, and I was in
constant dread that his natural vehemence would cause him to do something rash.
That day, March 14, he and
Conseil managed to find me in my stateroom. I asked them the purpose of their
visit.
"To put a simple question to
you, sir," the Canadian answered me.
"Go on, Ned."
"How many men do you think
are on board the Nautilus?"
"I'm unable to say, my
friend."
"It seems to me," Ned Land
went on, "that it wouldn't take much of a crew to run a ship like this
one."
"Correct," I replied.
"Under existing conditions some ten men at the most should be enough to
operate it."
"All right," the
Canadian said, "then why should there be any more than that?"
"Why?" I answered.
I stared at Ned Land, whose
motives were easy to guess.
"Because," I said,
"if I can trust my hunches, if I truly understand the captain's way of
life, his Nautilus isn't simply a ship. It's meant to be a refuge for people
like its commander, people who have severed all ties with the shore."
"Perhaps," Conseil
said, "but in a nutshell, the Nautilus can hold only a certain number of
men, so couldn't master estimate their maximum?"
"How, Conseil?"
"By calculating it. Master
is familiar with the ship's capacity, hence the amount of air it contains; on
the other hand, master knows how much air each man consumes in the act of
breathing, and he can compare this data with the fact that the Nautilus must
rise to the surface every twenty-four hours . . ."
Conseil didn't finish his
sentence, but I could easily see what he was driving at.
"I follow you," I said.
"But while they're simple to do, such calculations can give only a very
uncertain figure."
"No problem," the
Canadian went on insistently.
"Then here's how to
calculate it," I replied. "In one hour each man consumes the oxygen
contained in 100 liters of air, hence during twenty-four hours the oxygen
contained in 2,400 liters. Therefore, we must look for the multiple of 2,400
liters of air that gives us the amount found in the Nautilus."
"Precisely," Conseil
said.
"Now then," I went on,
"the Nautilus's capacity is 1,500 metric tons, and that of a ton is 1,000
liters, so the Nautilus holds 1,500,000 liters of air, which, divided by 2,400
. . ."
I did a quick pencil calculation.
". . . gives us the quotient
of 625. Which is tantamount to saying that the air contained in the Nautilus
would be exactly enough for 625 men over twenty-four hours."
"625!" Ned repeated.
"But rest assured," I
added, "that between passengers, seamen, or officers, we don't total
one-tenth of that figure."
"Which is still too many for
three men!" Conseil muttered.
"So, my poor Ned, I can only
counsel patience."
"And," Conseil replied,
"even more than patience, resignation."
Conseil had said the true word.
"Even so," he went on,
"Captain Nemo can't go south forever! He'll surely have to stop, if only
at the Ice Bank, and he'll return to the seas of civilization! Then it will be
time to resume Ned Land's plans."
The Canadian shook his head,
passed his hand over his brow, made no reply, and left us.
"With master's permission,
I'll make an observation to him," Conseil then told me. "Our poor Ned
broods about all the things he can't have. He's haunted by his former life. He
seems to miss everything that's denied us. He's obsessed by his old memories
and it's breaking his heart. We must understand him. What does he have to
occupy him here? Nothing. He isn't a scientist like master, and he doesn't
share our enthusiasm for the sea's wonders. He would risk anything just to
enter a tavern in his own country!"
To be sure, the monotony of life
on board must have seemed unbearable to the Canadian, who was accustomed to
freedom and activity. It was a rare event that could excite him. That day,
however, a development occurred that reminded him of his happy years as a
harpooner.
Near eleven o'clock in the
morning, while on the surface of the ocean, the Nautilus fell in with a herd of
baleen whales. This encounter didn't surprise me, because I knew these animals
were being hunted so relentlessly that they took refuge in the ocean basins of
the high latitudes.
In the maritime world and in the
realm of geographic exploration, whales have played a major role. This is the
animal that first dragged the Basques in its wake, then Asturian Spaniards,
Englishmen, and Dutchmen, emboldening them against the ocean's perils, and
leading them to the ends of the earth. Baleen whales like to frequent the
southernmost and northernmost seas. Old legends even claim that these cetaceans
led fishermen to within a mere seven leagues of the North Pole. Although this
feat is fictitious, it will someday come true, because it's likely that by
hunting whales in the Arctic or Antarctic regions, man will finally reach this
unknown spot on the globe.
We were seated on the platform
next to a tranquil sea. The month of March, since it's the equivalent of
October in these latitudes, was giving us some fine autumn days. It was the
Canadian-- on this topic he was never mistaken--who sighted a baleen whale on
the eastern horizon. If you looked carefully, you could see its blackish back
alternately rise and fall above the waves, five miles from the Nautilus.
"Wow!" Ned Land
exclaimed. "If I were on board a whaler, there's an encounter that would
be great fun! That's one big animal! Look how high its blowholes are spouting
all that air and steam! Damnation! Why am I chained to this hunk of sheet
iron!"
"Why, Ned!" I replied.
"You still aren't over your old fishing urges?"
"How could a whale fisherman
forget his old trade, sir? Who could ever get tired of such exciting
hunting?"
"You've never fished these
seas, Ned?"
"Never, sir. Just the
northernmost seas, equally in the Bering Strait and the Davis Strait."
"So the southern right whale
is still unknown to you. Until now it's the bowhead whale you've hunted, and it
won't risk going past the warm waters of the equator."
"Oh, professor, what are you
feeding me?" the Canadian answered in a tolerably skeptical tone.
"I'm feeding you the
facts."
"By thunder! In '65, just
two and a half years ago, I to whom you speak, I myself stepped onto the
carcass of a whale near Greenland, and its flank still carried the marked
harpoon of a whaling ship from the Bering Sea. Now I ask you, after it had been
wounded west of America, how could this animal be killed in the east, unless it
had cleared the equator and doubled Cape Horn or the Cape of Good Hope?"
"I agree with our friend
Ned," Conseil said, "and I'm waiting to hear how master will reply to
him."
"Master will reply, my
friends, that baleen whales are localized, according to species, within certain
seas that they never leave. And if one of these animals went from the Bering
Strait to the Davis Strait, it's quite simply because there's some passageway
from the one sea to the other, either along the coasts of Canada or
Siberia."
"You expect us to fall for
that?" the Canadian asked, tipping me a wink.
"If master says so,"
Conseil replied.
"Which means," the
Canadian went on, "since I've never fished these waterways, I don't know
the whales that frequent them?"
"That's what I've been
telling you, Ned."
"All the more reason to get
to know them," Conseil answered.
"Look! Look!" the
Canadian exclaimed, his voice full of excitement. "It's approaching! It's
coming toward us! It's thumbing its nose at me! It knows I can't do a blessed
thing to it!"
Ned stamped his foot. Brandishing
an imaginary harpoon, his hands positively trembled.
"These cetaceans," he
asked, "are they as big as the ones in the northernmost seas?"
"Pretty nearly, Ned."
"Because I've seen big
baleen whales, sir, whales measuring up to 100 feet long! I've even heard that
those rorqual whales off the Aleutian Islands sometimes get over 150
feet."
"That strikes me as
exaggerated," I replied. "Those animals are only members of the genus
Balaenoptera furnished with dorsal fins, and like sperm whales, they're
generally smaller than the bowhead whale."
"Oh!" exclaimed the
Canadian, whose eyes hadn't left the ocean. "It's getting closer, it's
coming into the Nautilus's waters!"
Then, going on with his
conversation:
"You talk about sperm
whales," he said, "as if they were little beasts! But there are
stories of gigantic sperm whales. They're shrewd cetaceans. I hear that some
will cover themselves with algae and fucus plants. People mistake them for
islets. They pitch camp on top, make themselves at home, light a fire--"
"Build houses," Conseil
said.
"Yes, funny man," Ned
Land replied. "Then one fine day the animal dives and drags all its
occupants down into the depths."
"Like in the voyages of
Sinbad the Sailor," I answered, laughing. "Oh, Mr. Land, you're
addicted to tall tales! What sperm whales you're handing us! I hope you don't
really believe in them!"
"Mr. Naturalist," the
Canadian replied in all seriousness, "when it comes to whales, you can
believe anything! (Look at that one move! Look at it stealing away!) People
claim these animals can circle around the world in just fifteen days."
"I don't say nay."
"But what you undoubtedly
don't know, Professor Aronnax, is that at the beginning of the world, whales
traveled even quicker."
"Oh really, Ned! And why
so?"
"Because in those days their
tails moved side to side, like those on fish, in other words, their tails were
straight up, thrashing the water from left to right, right to left. But
spotting that they swam too fast, our Creator twisted their tails, and ever
since they've been thrashing the waves up and down, at the expense of their
speed."
"Fine, Ned," I said,
then resurrected one of the Canadian's expressions. "You expect us to fall
for that?"
"Not too terribly," Ned
Land replied, "and no more than if I told you there are whales that are
300 feet long and weigh 1,000,000 pounds."
"That's indeed
considerable," I said. "But you must admit that certain cetaceans do
grow to significant size, since they're said to supply as much as 120 metric
tons of oil."
"That I've seen," the
Canadian said.
"I can easily believe it, Ned,
just as I can believe that certain baleen whales equal 100 elephants in bulk.
Imagine the impact of such a mass if it were launched at full speed!"
"Is it true," Conseil
asked, "that they can sink ships?"
"Ships? I doubt it," I
replied. "However, they say that in 1820, right in these southern seas, a
baleen whale rushed at the Essex and pushed it backward at a speed of four
meters per second. Its stern was flooded, and the Essex went down fast."
Ned looked at me with a bantering
expression.
"Speaking for myself,"
he said, "I once got walloped by a whale's tail-- in my longboat, needless
to say. My companions and I were launched to an altitude of six meters. But
next to the professor's whale, mine was just a baby."
"Do these animals live a
long time?" Conseil asked.
"A thousand years," the
Canadian replied without hesitation.
"And how, Ned," I
asked, "do you know that's so?"
"Because people say
so."
"And why do people say
so?"
"Because people know
so."
"No, Ned! People don't know so,
they suppose so, and here's the logic with which they back up their beliefs.
When fishermen first hunted whales 400 years ago, these animals grew to bigger
sizes than they do today. Reasonably enough, it's assumed that today's whales
are smaller because they haven't had time to reach their full growth. That's
why the Count de Buffon's encyclopedia says that cetaceans can live, and even
must live, for a thousand years. You understand?"
Ned Land didn't understand. He no
longer even heard me. That baleen whale kept coming closer. His eyes devoured
it.
"Oh!" he exclaimed.
"It's not just one whale, it's ten, twenty, a whole gam! And I can't do a
thing! I'm tied hand and foot!"
"But Ned my friend,"
Conseil said, "why not ask Captain Nemo for permission to hunt--"
Before Conseil could finish his
sentence, Ned Land scooted down the hatch and ran to look for the captain. A
few moments later, the two of them reappeared on the platform.
Captain Nemo observed the herd of
cetaceans cavorting on the waters a mile from the Nautilus.
"They're southern right
whales," he said. "There goes the fortune of a whole whaling
fleet."
"Well, sir," the
Canadian asked, "couldn't I hunt them, just so I don't forget my old
harpooning trade?"
"Hunt them? What for?"
Captain Nemo replied. "Simply to destroy them? We have no use for whale
oil on this ship."
"But, sir," the
Canadian went on, "in the Red Sea you authorized us to chase a
dugong!"
"There it was an issue of
obtaining fresh meat for my crew. Here it would be killing for the sake of
killing. I'm well aware that's a privilege reserved for mankind, but I don't
allow such murderous pastimes. When your peers, Mr. Land, destroy decent,
harmless creatures like the southern right whale or the bowhead whale, they
commit a reprehensible offense. Thus they've already depopulated all of Baffin
Bay, and they'll wipe out a whole class of useful animals. So leave these poor
cetaceans alone. They have quite enough natural enemies, such as sperm whales,
swordfish, and sawfish, without you meddling with them."
I'll let the reader decide what
faces the Canadian made during this lecture on hunting ethics. Furnishing such
arguments to a professional harpooner was a waste of words. Ned Land stared at
Captain Nemo and obviously missed his meaning. But the captain was right.
Thanks to the mindless, barbaric bloodthirstiness of fishermen, the last baleen
whale will someday disappear from the ocean.
Ned Land whistled "Yankee
Doodle" between his teeth, stuffed his hands in his pockets, and turned his
back on us.
Meanwhile Captain Nemo studied
the herd of cetaceans, then addressed me:
"I was right to claim that
baleen whales have enough natural enemies without counting man. These specimens
will soon have to deal with mighty opponents. Eight miles to leeward, Professor
Aronnax, can you see those blackish specks moving about?"
"Yes, captain," I
replied.
"Those are sperm whales,
dreadful animals that I've sometimes encountered in herds of 200 or 300! As for
them, they're cruel, destructive beasts, and they deserve to be
exterminated."
The Canadian turned swiftly at
these last words.
"Well, captain," I
said, "on behalf of the baleen whales, there's still time--"
"It's pointless to run any
risks, professor. The Nautilus will suffice to disperse these sperm whales.
It's armed with a steel spur quite equal to Mr. Land's harpoon, I
imagine."
The Canadian didn't even bother
shrugging his shoulders. Attacking cetaceans with thrusts from a spur! Who ever
heard of such malarkey!
"Wait and see, Professor Aronnax,"
Captain Nemo said. "We'll show you a style of hunting with which you
aren't yet familiar. We'll take no pity on these ferocious cetaceans. They're
merely mouth and teeth!"
Mouth and teeth! There's no
better way to describe the long-skulled sperm whale, whose length sometimes
exceeds twenty-five meters. The enormous head of this cetacean occupies about a
third of its body. Better armed than a baleen whale, whose upper jaw is adorned
solely with whalebone, the sperm whale is equipped with twenty-five huge teeth
that are twenty centimeters high, have cylindrical, conical summits, and weigh
two pounds each. In the top part of this enormous head, inside big cavities
separated by cartilage, you'll find 300 to 400 kilograms of that valuable oil
called "spermaceti." The sperm whale is an awkward animal, more
tadpole than fish, as Professor Frédol has noted. It's poorly constructed,
being "defective," so to speak, over the whole left side of its
frame, with good eyesight only in its right eye.
Meanwhile that monstrous herd
kept coming closer. It had seen the baleen whales and was preparing to attack.
You could tell in advance that the sperm whales would be victorious, not only
because they were better built for fighting than their harmless adversaries,
but also because they could stay longer underwater before returning to breathe
at the surface.
There was just time to run to the
rescue of the baleen whales. The Nautilus proceeded to midwater. Conseil, Ned,
and I sat in front of the lounge windows. Captain Nemo made his way to the
helmsman's side to operate his submersible as an engine of destruction. Soon I
felt the beats of our propeller getting faster, and we picked up speed.
The battle between sperm whales and
baleen whales had already begun when the Nautilus arrived. It maneuvered to cut
into the herd of long-skulled predators. At first the latter showed little
concern at the sight of this new monster meddling in the battle. But they soon
had to sidestep its thrusts.
What a struggle! Ned Land quickly
grew enthusiastic and even ended up applauding. Brandished in its captain's
hands, the Nautilus was simply a fearsome harpoon. He hurled it at those fleshy
masses and ran them clean through, leaving behind two squirming animal halves.
As for those daunting strokes of the tail hitting our sides, the ship never
felt them. No more than the collisions it caused. One sperm whale exterminated,
it ran at another, tacked on the spot so as not to miss its prey, went ahead or
astern, obeyed its rudder, dived when the cetacean sank to deeper strata, rose
with it when it returned to the surface, struck it head-on or slantwise, hacked
at it or tore it, and from every direction and at any speed, skewered it with
its dreadful spur.
What bloodshed! What a hubbub on
the surface of the waves! What sharp hisses and snorts unique to these
frightened animals! Their tails churned the normally peaceful strata into
actual billows.
This Homeric slaughter dragged on
for an hour, and the long-skulled predators couldn't get away. Several times
ten or twelve of them teamed up, trying to crush the Nautilus with their sheer
mass. Through the windows you could see their enormous mouths paved with teeth,
their fearsome eyes. Losing all self-control, Ned Land hurled threats and
insults at them. You could feel them clinging to the submersible like hounds
atop a wild boar in the underbrush. But by forcing the pace of its propeller,
the Nautilus carried them off, dragged them under, or brought them back to the
upper level of the waters, untroubled by their enormous weight or their
powerful grip.
Finally this mass of sperm whales
thinned out. The waves grew tranquil again. I felt us rising to the surface of
the ocean. The hatch opened and we rushed onto the platform.
The sea was covered with
mutilated corpses. A fearsome explosion couldn't have slashed, torn, or
shredded these fleshy masses with greater violence. We were floating in the
midst of gigantic bodies, bluish on the back, whitish on the belly, and all
deformed by enormous protuberances. A few frightened sperm whales were fleeing
toward the horizon. The waves were dyed red over an area of several miles, and
the Nautilus was floating in the middle of a sea of blood.
Captain Nemo rejoined us.
"Well, Mr. Land?" he
said.
"Well, sir," replied
the Canadian, whose enthusiasm had subsided, "it's a dreadful sight for
sure. But I'm a hunter not a butcher, and this is plain butchery."
"It was a slaughter of
destructive animals," the captain replied, "and the Nautilus is no
butcher knife."
"I prefer my harpoon,"
the Canadian answered.
"To each his own," the
captain replied, staring intently at Ned Land.
I was in dread the latter would
give way to some violent outburst that might have had deplorable consequences.
But his anger was diverted by the sight of a baleen whale that the Nautilus had
pulled alongside of just then.
This animal had been unable to
escape the teeth of those sperm whales. I recognized the southern right whale,
its head squat, its body dark all over. Anatomically, it's distinguished from
the white whale and the black right whale by the fusion of its seven cervical
vertebrae, and it numbers two more ribs than its relatives. Floating on its
side, its belly riddled with bites, the poor cetacean was dead. Still hanging
from the tip of its mutilated fin was a little baby whale that it had been
unable to rescue from the slaughter. Its open mouth let water flow through its
whalebone like a murmuring surf.
Captain Nemo guided the Nautilus
next to the animal's corpse. Two of his men climbed onto the whale's flank, and
to my astonishment, I saw them draw from its udders all the milk they held, in
other words, enough to fill two or three casks.
The captain offered me a cup of
this still-warm milk. I couldn't help showing my distaste for such a beverage.
He assured me that this milk was excellent, no different from cow's milk.
I sampled it and agreed. So this
milk was a worthwhile reserve ration for us, because in the form of salt butter
or cheese, it would provide a pleasant change of pace from our standard fare.
From that day on, I noted with
some uneasiness that Ned Land's attitudes toward Captain Nemo grew worse and
worse, and I decided to keep a close watch on the Canadian's movements and activities.
THE NAUTILUS resumed its
unruffled southbound heading. It went along the 50th meridian with considerable
speed. Would it go to the pole? I didn't think so, because every previous
attempt to reach this spot on the globe had failed. Besides, the season was
already quite advanced, since March 13 on Antarctic shores corresponds with
September 13 in the northernmost regions, which marks the beginning of the
equinoctial period.
On March 14 at latitude 55
degrees, I spotted floating ice, plain pale bits of rubble twenty to
twenty-five feet long, which formed reefs over which the sea burst into foam.
The Nautilus stayed on the surface of the ocean. Having fished in the Arctic
seas, Ned Land was already familiar with the sight of icebergs. Conseil and I
were marveling at them for the first time.
In the sky toward the southern
horizon, there stretched a dazzling white band. English whalers have given this
the name "ice blink." No matter how heavy the clouds may be, they
can't obscure this phenomenon. It announces the presence of a pack, or shoal,
of ice.
Indeed, larger blocks of ice soon
appeared, their brilliance varying at the whim of the mists. Some of these
masses displayed green veins, as if scrawled with undulating lines of copper
sulfate. Others looked like enormous amethysts, letting the light penetrate
their insides. The latter reflected the sun's rays from the thousand facets of
their crystals. The former, tinted with a bright limestone sheen, would have
supplied enough building material to make a whole marble town.
The farther down south we went,
the more these floating islands grew in numbers and prominence. Polar birds
nested on them by the thousands. These were petrels, cape pigeons, or puffins,
and their calls were deafening. Mistaking the Nautilus for the corpse of a
whale, some of them alighted on it and prodded its resonant sheet iron with
pecks of their beaks.
During this navigating in the
midst of the ice, Captain Nemo often stayed on the platform. He observed these
deserted waterways carefully. I saw his calm eyes sometimes perk up. In these
polar seas forbidden to man, did he feel right at home, the lord of these
unreachable regions? Perhaps. But he didn't say. He stood still, reviving only
when his pilot's instincts took over. Then, steering his Nautilus with
consummate dexterity, he skillfully dodged the masses of ice, some of which
measured several miles in length, their heights varying from seventy to eighty
meters. Often the horizon seemed completely closed off. Abreast of latitude 60
degrees, every passageway had disappeared. Searching with care, Captain Nemo
soon found a narrow opening into which he brazenly slipped, well aware,
however, that it would close behind him.
Guided by his skillful hands, the
Nautilus passed by all these different masses of ice, which are classified by
size and shape with a precision that enraptured Conseil: "icebergs,"
or mountains; "ice fields," or smooth, limitless tracts; "drift
ice," or floating floes; "packs," or broken tracts, called
"patches" when they're circular and "streams" when they
form long strips.
The temperature was fairly low.
Exposed to the outside air, the thermometer marked -2 degrees to
-3 degrees centigrade. But we
were warmly dressed in furs, for which seals and aquatic bears had paid the
price. Evenly heated by all its electric equipment, the Nautilus's interior
defied the most intense cold. Moreover, to find a bearable temperature, the
ship had only to sink just a few meters beneath the waves.
Two months earlier we would have
enjoyed perpetual daylight in this latitude; but night already fell for three
or four hours, and later it would cast six months of shadow over these
circumpolar regions.
On March 15 we passed beyond the
latitude of the South Shetland and South Orkney Islands. The captain told me
that many tribes of seals used to inhabit these shores; but English and
American whalers, in a frenzy of destruction, slaughtered all the adults,
including pregnant females, and where life and activity once existed, those
fishermen left behind only silence and death.
Going along the 55th meridian,
the Nautilus cut the Antarctic Circle on March 16 near eight o'clock in the
morning. Ice completely surrounded us and closed off the horizon. Nevertheless,
Captain Nemo went from passageway to passageway, always proceeding south.
"But where's he going?"
I asked.
"Straight ahead,"
Conseil replied. "Ultimately, when he can't go any farther, he'll
stop."
"I wouldn't bet on it!"
I replied.
And in all honesty, I confess
that this venturesome excursion was far from displeasing to me. I can't express
the intensity of my amazement at the beauties of these new regions. The ice
struck superb poses. Here, its general effect suggested an oriental town with
countless minarets and mosques. There, a city in ruins, flung to the ground by
convulsions in the earth. These views were varied continuously by the sun's
oblique rays, or were completely swallowed up by gray mists in the middle of
blizzards. Then explosions, cave-ins, and great iceberg somersaults would occur
all around us, altering the scenery like the changing landscape in a diorama.
If the Nautilus was submerged
during these losses of balance, we heard the resulting noises spread under the
waters with frightful intensity, and the collapse of these masses created
daunting eddies down to the ocean's lower strata. The Nautilus then rolled and
pitched like a ship left to the fury of the elements.
Often, no longer seeing any way
out, I thought we were imprisoned for good, but Captain Nemo, guided by his
instincts, discovered new passageways from the tiniest indications. He was
never wrong when he observed slender threads of bluish water streaking through
these ice fields. Accordingly, I was sure that he had already risked his
Nautilus in the midst of the Antarctic seas.
However, during the day of March
16, these tracts of ice completely barred our path. It wasn't the Ice Bank as
yet, just huge ice fields cemented together by the cold. This obstacle couldn't
stop Captain Nemo, and he launched his ship against the ice fields with hideous
violence. The Nautilus went into these brittle masses like a wedge, splitting
them with dreadful cracklings. It was an old-fashioned battering ram propelled
with infinite power. Hurled aloft, ice rubble fell back around us like hail.
Through brute force alone, the submersible carved out a channel for itself.
Carried away by its momentum, the ship sometimes mounted on top of these tracts
of ice and crushed them with its weight, or at other times, when cooped up
beneath the ice fields, it split them with simple pitching movements, creating
wide punctures.
Violent squalls assaulted us
during the daytime. Thanks to certain heavy mists, we couldn't see from one end
of the platform to the other. The wind shifted abruptly to every point on the
compass. The snow was piling up in such packed layers, it had to be chipped
loose with blows from picks. Even in a temperature of merely -5 degrees
centigrade, every outside part of the Nautilus was covered with ice. A ship's
rigging would have been unusable, because all its tackle would have jammed in
the grooves of the pulleys. Only a craft without sails, driven by an electric
motor that needed no coal, could face such high latitudes.
Under these conditions the
barometer generally stayed quite low. It fell as far as 73.5 centimeters. Our
compass indications no longer offered any guarantees. The deranged needles
would mark contradictory directions as we approached the southern magnetic
pole, which doesn't coincide with the South Pole proper. In fact, according to
the astronomer Hansteen, this magnetic pole is located fairly close to latitude
70 degrees and longitude 130 degrees, or abiding by the observations of
Louis-Isidore Duperrey, in longitude 135 degrees and latitude 70 degrees 30'.
Hence we had to transport compasses to different parts of the ship, take many
readings, and strike an average. Often we could chart our course only by
guesswork, a less than satisfactory method in the midst of these winding
passageways whose landmarks change continuously.
At last on March 18, after twenty
futile assaults, the Nautilus was decisively held in check. No longer was it an
ice stream, patch, or field--it was an endless, immovable barrier formed by ice
mountains fused to each other.
"The Ice Bank!" the
Canadian told me.
For Ned Land, as well as for
every navigator before us, I knew that this was the great insurmountable
obstacle. When the sun appeared for an instant near noon, Captain Nemo took a
reasonably accurate sight that gave our position as longitude 51 degrees 30'
and latitude 67 degrees 39' south. This was a position already well along in
these Antarctic regions.
As for the liquid surface of the
sea, there was no longer any semblance of it before our eyes. Before the
Nautilus's spur there lay vast broken plains, a tangle of confused chunks with
all the helter-skelter unpredictability typical of a river's surface a short
while before its ice breakup; but in this case the proportions were gigantic.
Here and there stood sharp peaks, lean spires that rose as high as 200 feet;
farther off, a succession of steeply cut cliffs sporting a grayish tint, huge
mirrors that reflected the sparse rays of a sun half drowned in mist. Beyond, a
stark silence reigned in this desolate natural setting, a silence barely broken
by the flapping wings of petrels or puffins. By this point everything was
frozen, even sound.
So the Nautilus had to halt in
its venturesome course among these tracts of ice.
"Sir," Ned Land told me
that day, "if your captain goes any farther . . ."
"Yes?"
"He'll be a superman."
"How so, Ned?"
"Because nobody can clear
the Ice Bank. Your captain's a powerful man, but damnation, he isn't more
powerful than nature. If she draws a boundary line, there you stop, like it or
not!"
"Correct, Ned Land, but I
still want to know what's behind this Ice Bank! Behold my greatest source of
irritation--a wall!"
"Master is right,"
Conseil said. "Walls were invented simply to frustrate scientists. All
walls should be banned."
"Fine!" the Canadian
put in. "But we already know what's behind this Ice Bank."
"What?" I asked.
"Ice, ice, and more
ice."
"You may be sure of that,
Ned," I answered, "but I'm not. That's why I want to see for
myself."
"Well, professor," the
Canadian replied, "you can just drop that idea! You've made it to the Ice
Bank, which is already far enough, but you won't get any farther, neither your
Captain Nemo or his Nautilus. And whether he wants to or not, we'll head north
again, in other words, to the land of sensible people."
I had to agree that Ned Land was
right, and until ships are built to navigate over tracts of ice, they'll have
to stop at the Ice Bank.
Indeed, despite its efforts, despite
the powerful methods it used to split this ice, the Nautilus was reduced to
immobility. Ordinarily, when someone can't go any farther, he still has the
option of returning in his tracks. But here it was just as impossible to turn
back as to go forward, because every passageway had closed behind us, and if
our submersible remained even slightly stationary, it would be frozen in
without delay. Which is exactly what happened near two o'clock in the
afternoon, and fresh ice kept forming over the ship's sides with astonishing
speed. I had to admit that Captain Nemo's leadership had been most injudicious.
Just then I was on the platform.
Observing the situation for some while, the captain said to me:
"Well, professor! What think
you?"
"I think we're trapped,
captain."
"Trapped! What do you
mean?"
"I mean we can't go forward,
backward, or sideways. I think that's the standard definition of 'trapped,' at
least in the civilized world."
"So, Professor Aronnax, you
think the Nautilus won't be able to float clear?"
"Only with the greatest
difficulty, captain, since the season is already too advanced for you to depend
on an ice breakup."
"Oh, professor,"
Captain Nemo replied in an ironic tone, "you never change! You see only
impediments and obstacles! I promise you, not only will the Nautilus float
clear, it will go farther still!"
"Farther south?" I
asked, gaping at the captain.
"Yes, sir, it will go to the
pole."
"To the pole!" I
exclaimed, unable to keep back a movement of disbelief.
"Yes," the captain
replied coolly, "the Antarctic pole, that unknown spot crossed by every
meridian on the globe. As you know, I do whatever I like with my
Nautilus."
Yes, I did know that! I knew this
man was daring to the point of being foolhardy. But to overcome all the
obstacles around the South Pole--even more unattainable than the North Pole,
which still hadn't been reached by the boldest navigators-- wasn't this an
absolutely insane undertaking, one that could occur only in the brain of a
madman?
It then dawned on me to ask
Captain Nemo if he had already discovered this pole, which no human being had
ever trod underfoot.
"No, sir," he answered
me, "but we'll discover it together. Where others have failed, I'll
succeed. Never before has my Nautilus cruised so far into these southernmost
seas, but I repeat: it will go farther still."
"I'd like to believe you,
captain," I went on in a tone of some sarcasm. "Oh I do believe you!
Let's forge ahead! There are no obstacles for us! Let's shatter this Ice Bank!
Let's blow it up, and if it still resists, let's put wings on the Nautilus and
fly over it!"
"Over it, professor?"
Captain Nemo replied serenely. "No, not over it, but under it."
"Under it!" I
exclaimed.
A sudden insight into Captain
Nemo's plans had just flashed through my mind. I understood. The marvelous
talents of his Nautilus would be put to work once again in this superhuman
undertaking!
"I can see we're starting to
understand each other, professor," Captain Nemo told me with a half smile.
"You already glimpse the potential--myself, I'd say the success--of this
attempt. Maneuvers that aren't feasible for an ordinary ship are easy for the
Nautilus. If a continent emerges at the pole, we'll stop at that continent. But
on the other hand, if open sea washes the pole, we'll go to that very
place!"
"Right," I said,
carried away by the captain's logic. "Even though the surface of the sea
has solidified into ice, its lower strata are still open, thanks to that divine
justice that puts the maximum density of salt water one degree above its
freezing point. And if I'm not mistaken, the submerged part of this Ice Bank is
in a four-to-one ratio to its emerging part."
"Very nearly, professor. For
each foot of iceberg above the sea, there are three more below. Now then, since
these ice mountains don't exceed a height of 100 meters, they sink only to a
depth of 300 meters. And what are 300 meters to the Nautilus?"
"A mere nothing, sir."
"We could even go to greater
depths and find that temperature layer common to all ocean water, and there
we'd brave with impunity the -30 degrees or -40 degrees cold on the
surface."
"True, sir, very true,"
I replied with growing excitement.
"Our sole difficulty,"
Captain Nemo went on, "lies in our staying submerged for several days
without renewing our air supply."
"That's all?" I
answered. "The Nautilus has huge air tanks; we'll fill them up and they'll
supply all the oxygen we need."
"Good thinking, Professor
Aronnax," the captain replied with a smile. "But since I don't want to
be accused of foolhardiness, I'm giving you all my objections in advance."
"You have more?"
"Just one. If a sea exists
at the South Pole, it's possible this sea may be completely frozen over, so we
couldn't come up to the surface!"
"My dear sir, have you
forgotten that the Nautilus is armed with a fearsome spur? Couldn't it be
launched diagonally against those tracts of ice, which would break open from
the impact?"
"Ah, professor, you're full
of ideas today!"
"Besides, captain," I
added with still greater enthusiasm, "why wouldn't we find open sea at the
South Pole just as at the North Pole? The cold-temperature poles and the
geographical poles don't coincide in either the northern or southern
hemispheres, and until proof to the contrary, we can assume these two spots on
the earth feature either a continent or an ice-free ocean."
"I think as you do,
Professor Aronnax," Captain Nemo replied. "I'll only point out that
after raising so many objections against my plan, you're now crushing me under
arguments in its favor."
Captain Nemo was right. I was
outdoing him in daring! It was I who was sweeping him to the pole. I was
leading the way, I was out in front . . . but no, you silly fool! Captain Nemo
already knew the pros and cons of this question, and it amused him to see you
flying off into impossible fantasies!
Nevertheless, he didn't waste an
instant. At his signal, the chief officer appeared. The two men held a quick
exchange in their incomprehensible language, and either the chief officer had
been alerted previously or he found the plan feasible, because he showed no
surprise.
But as unemotional as he was, he
couldn't have been more impeccably emotionless than Conseil when I told the
fine lad our intention of pushing on to the South Pole. He greeted my
announcement with the usual "As master wishes," and I had to be
content with that. As for Ned Land, no human shoulders ever executed a higher
shrug than the pair belonging to our Canadian.
"Honestly, sir," he
told me. "You and your Captain Nemo, I pity you both!"
"But we will go to the pole,
Mr. Land."
"Maybe, but you won't come
back!"
And Ned Land reentered his cabin,
"to keep from doing something desperate," he said as he left me.
Meanwhile preparations for this
daring attempt were getting under way. The Nautilus's powerful pumps forced air
down into the tanks and stored it under high pressure. Near four o'clock
Captain Nemo informed me that the platform hatches were about to be closed. I
took a last look at the dense Ice Bank we were going to conquer. The weather
was fair, the skies reasonably clear, the cold quite brisk, namely -12 degrees
centigrade; but after the wind had lulled, this temperature didn't seem too
unbearable.
Equipped with picks, some ten men
climbed onto the Nautilus's sides and cracked loose the ice around the ship's
lower plating, which was soon set free. This operation was swiftly executed
because the fresh ice was still thin. We all reentered the interior. The main
ballast tanks were filled with the water that hadn't yet congealed at our line
of flotation. The Nautilus submerged without delay.
I took a seat in the lounge with
Conseil. Through the open window we stared at the lower strata of this
southernmost ocean. The thermometer rose again. The needle on the pressure gauge
swerved over its dial.
About 300 meters down, just as
Captain Nemo had predicted, we cruised beneath the undulating surface of the
Ice Bank. But the Nautilus sank deeper still. It reached a depth of 800 meters.
At the surface this water gave a temperature of -12 degrees centigrade, but now
it gave no more than -10 degrees. Two degrees had already been gained. Thanks
to its heating equipment, the Nautilus's temperature, needless to say, stayed
at a much higher degree. Every maneuver was accomplished with extraordinary
precision.
"With all due respect to
master," Conseil told me, "we'll pass it by."
"I fully expect to!" I
replied in a tone of deep conviction.
Now in open water, the Nautilus
took a direct course to the pole without veering from the 52nd meridian. From
67 degrees 30' to 90 degrees, twenty-two and a half degrees of latitude were
left to cross, in other words, slightly more than 500 leagues. The Nautilus
adopted an average speed of twenty-six miles per hour, the speed of an express
train. If it kept up this pace, forty hours would do it for reaching the pole.
For part of the night, the
novelty of our circumstances kept Conseil and me at the lounge window. The sea
was lit by our beacon's electric rays. But the depths were deserted. Fish
didn't linger in these imprisoned waters. Here they found merely a passageway
for going from the Antarctic Ocean to open sea at the pole. Our progress was
swift. You could feel it in the vibrations of the long steel hull.
Near two o'clock in the morning,
I went to snatch a few hours of sleep. Conseil did likewise. I didn't encounter
Captain Nemo while going down the gangways. I assumed that he was keeping to
the pilothouse.
The next day, March 19, at five
o'clock in the morning, I was back at my post in the lounge. The electric log
indicated that the Nautilus had reduced speed. By then it was rising to the
surface, but cautiously, while slowly emptying its ballast tanks.
My heart was pounding. Would we
emerge into the open and find the polar air again?
No. A jolt told me that the
Nautilus had bumped the underbelly of the Ice Bank, still quite thick to judge
from the hollowness of the accompanying noise. Indeed, we had "struck
bottom," to use nautical terminology, but in the opposite direction and at
a depth of 3,000 feet. That gave us 4,000 feet of ice overhead, of which 1,000
feet emerged above water. So the Ice Bank was higher here than we had found it
on the outskirts. A circumstance less than encouraging.
Several times that day, the
Nautilus repeated the same experiment and always it bumped against this surface
that formed a ceiling above it. At certain moments the ship encountered ice at
a depth of 900 meters, denoting a thickness of 1,200 meters, of which 300
meters rose above the level of the ocean. This height had tripled since the
moment the Nautilus had dived beneath the waves.
I meticulously noted these
different depths, obtaining the underwater profile of this upside-down mountain
chain that stretched beneath the sea.
By evening there was still no improvement
in our situation. The ice stayed between 400 and 500 meters deep. It was
obviously shrinking, but what a barrier still lay between us and the surface of
the ocean!
By then it was eight o'clock. The
air inside the Nautilus should have been renewed four hours earlier, following
daily practice on board. But I didn't suffer very much, although Captain Nemo
hadn't yet made demands on the supplementary oxygen in his air tanks.
That night my sleep was fitful.
Hope and fear besieged me by turns. I got up several times. The Nautilus
continued groping. Near three o'clock in the morning, I observed that we
encountered the Ice Bank's underbelly at a depth of only fifty meters. So only
150 feet separated us from the surface of the water. Little by little the Ice
Bank was turning into an ice field again. The mountains were changing back into
plains.
My eyes didn't leave the pressure
gauge. We kept rising on a diagonal, going along this shiny surface that
sparkled beneath our electric rays. Above and below, the Ice Bank was subsiding
in long gradients. Mile after mile it was growing thinner.
Finally, at six o'clock in the
morning on that memorable day of March 19, the lounge door opened. Captain Nemo
appeared.
"Open sea!" he told me.
I RUSHED UP onto the platform.
Yes, open sea! Barely a few sparse floes, some moving
icebergs; a sea stretching into
the distance; hosts of birds in the air and myriads of fish under the waters,
which varied from intense blue to olive green depending on the depth. The
thermometer marked 3 degrees centigrade. It was as if a comparative springtime
had been locked up behind that Ice Bank, whose distant masses were outlined on
the northern horizon.
"Are we at the pole?" I
asked the captain, my heart pounding.
"I've no idea," he
answered me. "At noon we'll fix our position."
"But will the sun show
through this mist?" I said, staring at the grayish sky.
"No matter how faintly it
shines, it will be enough for me," the captain replied.
To the south, ten miles from the
Nautilus, a solitary islet rose to a height of 200 meters. We proceeded toward
it, but cautiously, because this sea could have been strewn with reefs.
In an hour we had reached the
islet. Two hours later we had completed a full circle around it. It measured
four to five miles in circumference. A narrow channel separated it from a
considerable shore, perhaps a continent whose limits we couldn't see. The
existence of this shore seemed to bear out Commander Maury's hypotheses. In
essence, this ingenious American has noted that between the South Pole and the
60th parallel, the sea is covered with floating ice of dimensions much greater
than any found in the north Atlantic. From this fact he drew the conclusion
that the Antarctic Circle must contain considerable shores, since icebergs
can't form on the high seas but only along coastlines. According to his
calculations, this frozen mass enclosing the southernmost pole forms a vast ice
cap whose width must reach 4,000 kilometers.
Meanwhile, to avoid running
aground, the Nautilus halted three cable lengths from a strand crowned by
superb piles of rocks. The skiff was launched to sea. Two crewmen carrying
instruments, the captain, Conseil, and I were on board. It was ten o'clock in
the morning. I hadn't seen Ned Land. No doubt, in the presence of the South
Pole, the Canadian hated having to eat his words.
A few strokes of the oar brought
the skiff to the sand, where it ran aground. Just as Conseil was about to jump
ashore, I held him back.
"Sir," I told Captain
Nemo, "to you belongs the honor of first setting foot on this shore."
"Yes, sir," the captain
replied, "and if I have no hesitation in treading this polar soil, it's
because no human being until now has left a footprint here."
So saying, he leaped lightly onto
the sand. His heart must have been throbbing with intense excitement. He scaled
an overhanging rock that ended in a small promontory and there, mute and
motionless, with crossed arms and blazing eyes, he seemed to be laying claim to
these southernmost regions. After spending five minutes in this trance, he
turned to us.
"Whenever you're ready,
sir," he called to me.
I got out, Conseil at my heels,
leaving the two men in the skiff.
Over an extensive area, the soil
consisted of that igneous gravel called "tuff," reddish in color as
if made from crushed bricks. The ground was covered with slag, lava flows, and
pumice stones. Its volcanic origin was unmistakable. In certain localities thin
smoke holes gave off a sulfurous odor, showing that the inner fires still kept
their wide-ranging power. Nevertheless, when I scaled a high escarpment, I
could see no volcanoes within a radius of several miles. In these Antarctic
districts, as is well known, Sir James Clark Ross had found the craters of Mt.
Erebus and Mt. Terror in fully active condition on the 167th meridian at
latitude 77 degrees 32'.
The vegetation on this desolate
continent struck me as quite limited. A few lichens of the species Usnea
melanoxanthra sprawled over the black rocks. The whole meager flora of this
region consisted of certain microscopic buds, rudimentary diatoms made up of a
type of cell positioned between two quartz-rich shells, plus long purple and
crimson fucus plants, buoyed by small air bladders and washed up on the coast
by the surf.
The beach was strewn with
mollusks: small mussels, limpets, smooth heart-shaped cockles, and especially
some sea butterflies with oblong, membrane-filled bodies whose heads are formed
from two rounded lobes. I also saw myriads of those northernmost sea
butterflies three centimeters long, which a baleen whale can swallow by the
thousands in one gulp. The open waters at the shoreline were alive with these
delightful pteropods, true butterflies of the sea.
Among other zoophytes present in
these shallows, there were a few coral tree forms that, according to Sir James
Clark Ross, live in these Antarctic seas at depths as great as 1,000 meters;
then small alcyon coral belonging to the species Procellaria pelagica, also a
large number of starfish unique to these climes, plus some feather stars
spangling the sand.
But it was in the air that life
was superabundant. There various species of birds flew and fluttered by the
thousands, deafening us with their calls. Crowding the rocks, other fowl
watched without fear as we passed and pressed familiarly against our feet.
These were auks, as agile and supple in water, where they are sometimes
mistaken for fast bonito, as they are clumsy and heavy on land. They uttered
outlandish calls and participated in numerous public assemblies that featured
much noise but little action.
Among other fowl I noted some
sheathbills from the wading-bird family, the size of pigeons, white in color,
the beak short and conical, the eyes framed by red circles. Conseil laid in a
supply of them, because when they're properly cooked, these winged creatures
make a pleasant dish. In the air there passed sooty albatross with four-meter
wingspans, birds aptly dubbed "vultures of the ocean," also gigantic
petrels including several with arching wings, enthusiastic eaters of seal that
are known as quebrantahuesos,* and cape pigeons, a sort of small duck, the tops
of their bodies black and white--in short, a whole series of petrels, some
whitish with wings trimmed in brown, others blue and exclusive to these
Antarctic seas, the former "so oily," I told Conseil, "that
inhabitants of the Faroe Islands simply fit the bird with a wick, then light it
up."
*Spanish: "ospreys."
Ed.
"With that minor addition,"
Conseil replied, "these fowl would make perfect lamps! After this, we
should insist that nature equip them with wicks in advance!"
Half a mile farther on, the
ground was completely riddled with penguin nests, egg-laying burrows from which
numerous birds emerged. Later Captain Nemo had hundreds of them hunted because
their black flesh is highly edible. They brayed like donkeys. The size of a
goose with slate-colored bodies, white undersides, and lemon-colored neck
bands, these animals let themselves be stoned to death without making any
effort to get away.
Meanwhile the mists didn't clear,
and by eleven o'clock the sun still hadn't made an appearance. Its absence
disturbed me. Without it, no sights were possible. Then how could we tell
whether we had reached the pole?
When I rejoined Captain Nemo, I
found him leaning silently against a piece of rock and staring at the sky. He
seemed impatient, baffled. But what could we do? This daring and powerful man
couldn't control the sun as he did the sea.
Noon arrived without the orb of
day appearing for a single instant. You couldn't even find its hiding place
behind the curtain of mist. And soon this mist began to condense into snow.
"Until tomorrow," the
captain said simply; and we went back to the Nautilus, amid flurries in the
air.
During our absence the nets had
been spread, and I observed with fascination the fish just hauled on board. The
Antarctic seas serve as a refuge for an extremely large number of migratory
fish that flee from storms in the subpolar zones, in truth only to slide down
the gullets of porpoises and seals. I noted some one-decimeter southern
bullhead, a species of whitish cartilaginous fish overrun with bluish gray
stripes and armed with stings, then some Antarctic rabbitfish three feet long,
the body very slender, the skin a smooth silver white, the head rounded, the
topside furnished with three fins, the snout ending in a trunk that curved back
toward the mouth. I sampled its flesh but found it tasteless, despite Conseil's
views, which were largely approving.
The blizzard lasted until the
next day. It was impossible to stay on the platform. From the lounge, where I
was writing up the incidents of this excursion to the polar continent, I could
hear the calls of petrel and albatross cavorting in the midst of the turmoil.
The Nautilus didn't stay idle, and cruising along the coast, it advanced some
ten miles farther south amid the half light left by the sun as it skimmed the
edge of the horizon.
The next day, March 20, it
stopped snowing. The cold was a little more brisk. The thermometer marked -2
degrees centigrade. The mist had cleared, and on that day I hoped our noon
sights could be accomplished.
Since Captain Nemo hadn't yet
appeared, only Conseil and I were taken ashore by the skiff. The soil's nature
was still the same: volcanic. Traces of lava, slag, and basaltic rock were
everywhere, but I couldn't find the crater that had vomited them up. There as
yonder, myriads of birds enlivened this part of the polar continent. But they
had to share their dominion with huge herds of marine mammals that looked at us
with gentle eyes. These were seals of various species, some stretched out on
the ground, others lying on drifting ice floes, several leaving or reentering
the sea. Having never dealt with man, they didn't run off at our approach, and
I counted enough of them thereabouts to provision a couple hundred ships.
"Ye gods," Conseil
said, "it's fortunate that Ned Land didn't come with us!"
"Why so, Conseil?"
"Because that madcap hunter
would kill every animal here."
"Every animal may be
overstating it, but in truth I doubt we could keep our Canadian friend from
harpooning some of these magnificent cetaceans. Which would be an affront to
Captain Nemo, since he hates to slay harmless beasts needlessly."
"He's right."
"Certainly, Conseil. But
tell me, haven't you finished classifying these superb specimens of marine
fauna?"
"Master is well aware,"
Conseil replied, "that I'm not seasoned in practical application. When
master has told me these animals' names . . ."
"They're seals and
walruses."
"Two genera," our
scholarly Conseil hastened to say, "that belong to the family Pinnipedia,
order Carnivora, group Unguiculata, subclass Monodelphia, class Mammalia,
branch Vertebrata."
"Very nice, Conseil," I
replied, "but these two genera of seals and walruses are each divided into
species, and if I'm not mistaken, we now have a chance to actually look at
them. Let's."
It was eight o'clock in the
morning. We had four hours to ourselves before the sun could be productively
observed. I guided our steps toward a huge bay that made a crescent-shaped
incision in the granite cliffs along the beach.
There, all about us, I swear that
the shores and ice floes were crowded with marine mammals as far as the eye
could see, and I involuntarily looked around for old Proteus, that mythological
shepherd who guarded King Neptune's immense flocks. To be specific, these were
seals. They formed distinct male-and-female groups, the father watching over
his family, the mother suckling her little ones, the stronger youngsters
emancipated a few paces away. When these mammals wanted to relocate, they moved
in little jumps made by contracting their bodies, clumsily helped by their
imperfectly developed flippers, which, as with their manatee relatives, form
actual forearms. In the water, their ideal element, I must say these animals
swim wonderfully thanks to their flexible backbones, narrow pelvises,
close-cropped hair, and webbed feet. Resting on shore, they assumed extremely
graceful positions. Consequently, their gentle features, their sensitive
expressions equal to those of the loveliest women, their soft, limpid eyes,
their charming poses, led the ancients to glorify them by metamorphosing the
males into sea gods and the females into mermaids.
I drew Conseil's attention to the
considerable growth of the cerebral lobes found in these intelligent cetaceans.
No mammal except man has more abundant cerebral matter. Accordingly, seals are
quite capable of being educated; they make good pets, and together with certain
other naturalists, I think these animals can be properly trained to perform
yeoman service as hunting dogs for fishermen.
Most of these seals were sleeping
on the rocks or the sand. Among those properly termed seals--which have no
external ears, unlike sea lions whose ears protrude--I observed several
varieties of the species stenorhynchus, three meters long, with white hair,
bulldog heads, and armed with ten teeth in each jaw: four incisors in both the
upper and lower, plus two big canines shaped like the fleur-de-lis. Among them
slithered some sea elephants, a type of seal with a short, flexible trunk;
these are the giants of the species, with a circumference of twenty feet and a
length of ten meters. They didn't move as we approached.
"Are these animals
dangerous?" Conseil asked me.
"Only if they're
attacked," I replied. "But when these giant seals defend their little
ones, their fury is dreadful, and it isn't rare for them to smash a fisherman's
longboat to bits."
"They're within their
rights," Conseil answered.
"I don't say nay."
Two miles farther on, we were
stopped by a promontory that screened the bay from southerly winds. It dropped
straight down to the sea, and surf foamed against it. From beyond this ridge
there came fearsome bellows, such as a herd of cattle might produce.
"Gracious," Conseil put
in, "a choir of bulls?"
"No," I said, "a
choir of walruses."
"Are they fighting with each
other?"
"Either fighting or
playing."
"With all due respect to
master, this we must see."
"Then see it we must,
Conseil."
And there we were, climbing these
blackish rocks amid sudden landslides and over stones slippery with ice. More
than once I took a tumble at the expense of my backside. Conseil, more cautious
or more stable, barely faltered and would help me up, saying:
"If master's legs would
kindly adopt a wider stance, master will keep his balance."
Arriving at the topmost ridge of
this promontory, I could see vast white plains covered with walruses. These
animals were playing among themselves. They were howling not in anger but in
glee.
Walruses resemble seals in the
shape of their bodies and the arrangement of their limbs. But their lower jaws
lack canines and incisors, and as for their upper canines, they consist of two
tusks eighty centimeters long with a circumference of thirty-three centimeters
at the socket. Made of solid ivory, without striations, harder than elephant
tusks, and less prone to yellowing, these teeth are in great demand.
Accordingly, walruses are the victims of a mindless hunting that soon will
destroy them all, since their hunters indiscriminately slaughter pregnant
females and youngsters, and over 4,000 individuals are destroyed annually.
Passing near these unusual
animals, I could examine them at my leisure since they didn't stir. Their hides
were rough and heavy, a tan color leaning toward a reddish brown; their coats
were short and less than abundant. Some were four meters long. More tranquil
and less fearful than their northern relatives, they posted no sentinels on
guard duty at the approaches to their campsite.
After examining this community of
walruses, I decided to return in my tracks. It was eleven o'clock, and if
Captain Nemo found conditions favorable for taking his sights, I wanted to be
present at the operation. But I held no hopes that the sun would make an
appearance that day. It was hidden from our eyes by clouds squeezed together on
the horizon. Apparently the jealous orb didn't want to reveal this inaccessible
spot on the globe to any human being.
Yet I decided to return to the
Nautilus. We went along a steep, narrow path that ran over the cliff's summit.
By 11:30 we had arrived at our landing place. The beached skiff had brought the
captain ashore. I spotted him standing on a chunk of basalt. His instruments
were beside him. His eyes were focused on the northern horizon, along which the
sun was sweeping in its extended arc.
I found a place near him and
waited without speaking. Noon arrived, and just as on the day before, the sun
didn't put in an appearance.
It was sheer bad luck. Our noon
sights were still lacking. If we couldn't obtain them tomorrow, we would
finally have to give up any hope of fixing our position.
In essence, it was precisely
March 20. Tomorrow, the 21st, was the day of the equinox; the sun would
disappear below the horizon for six months not counting refraction, and after
its disappearance the long polar night would begin. Following the September
equinox, the sun had emerged above the northerly horizon, rising in long
spirals until December 21. At that time, the summer solstice of these
southernmost districts, the sun had started back down, and tomorrow it would
cast its last rays.
I shared my thoughts and fears
with Captain Nemo.
"You're right, Professor
Aronnax," he told me. "If I can't take the sun's altitude tomorrow, I
won't be able to try again for another six months. But precisely because
sailors' luck has led me into these seas on March 21, it will be easy to get
our bearings if the noonday sun does appear before our eyes."
"Why easy, captain?"
"Because when the orb of day
sweeps in such long spirals, it's difficult to measure its exact altitude above
the horizon, and our instruments are open to committing serious errors."
"Then what can you do?"
"I use only my
chronometer," Captain Nemo answered me. "At noon tomorrow, March 21,
if, after accounting for refraction, the sun's disk is cut exactly in half by
the northern horizon, that will mean I'm at the South Pole."
"Right," I said.
"Nevertheless, it isn't mathematically exact proof, because the equinox
needn't fall precisely at noon."
"No doubt, sir, but the
error will be under 100 meters, and that's close enough for us. Until tomorrow
then."
Captain Nemo went back on board.
Conseil and I stayed behind until five o'clock, surveying the beach, observing
and studying. The only unusual object I picked up was an auk's egg of
remarkable size, for which a collector would have paid more than 1,000 francs.
Its cream-colored tint, plus the streaks and markings that decorated it like so
many hieroglyphics, made it a rare trinket. I placed it in Conseil's hands, and
holding it like precious porcelain from China, that cautious, sure-footed lad
got it back to the Nautilus in one piece.
There I put this rare egg inside
one of the glass cases in the museum. I ate supper, feasting with appetite on
an excellent piece of seal liver whose flavor reminded me of pork. Then I went
to bed; but not without praying, like a good Hindu, for the favors of the
radiant orb.
The next day, March 21, bright
and early at five o'clock in the morning, I climbed onto the platform. I found
Captain Nemo there.
"The weather is clearing a
bit," he told me. "I have high hopes. After breakfast we'll make our
way ashore and choose an observation post."
This issue settled, I went to
find Ned Land. I wanted to take him with me. The obstinate Canadian refused,
and I could clearly see that his tight-lipped mood and his bad temper were
growing by the day. Under the circumstances I ultimately wasn't sorry that he
refused. In truth, there were too many seals ashore, and it would never do to
expose this impulsive fisherman to such temptations.
Breakfast over, I made my way ashore.
The Nautilus had gone a few more miles during the night. It lay well out, a
good league from the coast, which was crowned by a sharp peak 400 to 500 meters
high. In addition to me, the skiff carried Captain Nemo, two crewmen, and the
instruments--in other words, a chronometer, a spyglass, and a barometer.
During our crossing I saw
numerous baleen whales belonging to the three species unique to these
southernmost seas: the bowhead whale (or "right whale," according to
the English), which has no dorsal fin; the humpback whale from the genus
Balaenoptera (in other words, "winged whales"), beasts with wrinkled
bellies and huge whitish fins that, genus name regardless, do not yet form
wings; and the finback whale, yellowish brown, the swiftest of all cetaceans.
This powerful animal is audible from far away when it sends up towering spouts
of air and steam that resemble swirls of smoke. Herds of these different
mammals were playing about in the tranquil waters, and I could easily see that
this Antarctic polar basin now served as a refuge for those cetaceans too
relentlessly pursued by hunters.
I also noted long, whitish
strings of salps, a type of mollusk found in clusters, and some jellyfish of
large size that swayed in the eddies of the billows.
By nine o'clock we had pulled up
to shore. The sky was growing brighter. Clouds were fleeing to the south. Mists
were rising from the cold surface of the water. Captain Nemo headed toward the
peak, which he no doubt planned to make his observatory. It was an arduous
climb over sharp lava and pumice stones in the midst of air often reeking with
sulfurous fumes from the smoke holes. For a man out of practice at treading
land, the captain scaled the steepest slopes with a supple agility I couldn't
equal, and which would have been envied by hunters of Pyrenees mountain goats.
It took us two hours to reach the
summit of this half-crystal, half-basalt peak. From there our eyes scanned a
vast sea, which scrawled its boundary line firmly against the background of the
northern sky. At our feet: dazzling tracts of white. Over our heads: a pale
azure, clear of mists. North of us: the sun's disk, like a ball of fire already
cut into by the edge of the horizon. From the heart of the waters: jets of
liquid rising like hundreds of magnificent bouquets. Far off, like a sleeping
cetacean: the Nautilus. Behind us to the south and east: an immense shore, a
chaotic heap of rocks and ice whose limits we couldn't see.
Arriving at the summit of this
peak, Captain Nemo carefully determined its elevation by means of his
barometer, since he had to take this factor into account in his noon sights.
At 11:45 the sun, by then seen
only by refraction, looked like a golden disk, dispersing its last rays over
this deserted continent and down to these seas not yet plowed by the ships of
man.
Captain Nemo had brought a
spyglass with a reticular eyepiece, which corrected the sun's refraction by
means of a mirror, and he used it to observe the orb sinking little by little
along a very extended diagonal that reached below the horizon. I held the
chronometer. My heart was pounding mightily. If the lower half of the sun's
disk disappeared just as the chronometer said noon, we were right at the pole.
"Noon!" I called.
"The South Pole!"
Captain Nemo replied in a solemn voice, handing me the spyglass, which showed
the orb of day cut into two exactly equal parts by the horizon.
I stared at the last rays
wreathing this peak, while shadows were gradually climbing its gradients.
Just then, resting his hand on my
shoulder, Captain Nemo said to me:
"In 1600, sir, the Dutchman
Gheritk was swept by storms and currents, reaching latitude 64 degrees south
and discovering the South Shetland Islands. On January 17, 1773, the famous
Captain Cook went along the 38th meridian, arriving at latitude 67 degrees 30';
and on January 30, 1774, along the 109th meridian, he reached latitude 71
degrees 15'. In 1819 the Russian Bellinghausen lay on the 69th parallel, and in
1821 on the 66th at longitude 111 degrees west. In 1820 the Englishman
Bransfield stopped at 65 degrees. That same year the American Morrel, whose
reports are dubious, went along the 42nd meridian, finding open sea at latitude
70 degrees 14'. In 1825 the Englishman Powell was unable to get beyond 62
degrees. That same year a humble seal fisherman, the Englishman Weddell, went
as far as latitude 72 degrees 14' on the 35th meridian, and as far as 74
degrees 15' on the 36th. In 1829 the Englishman Forster, commander of the
Chanticleer, laid claim to the Antarctic continent in latitude 63 degrees 26'
and longitude 66 degrees 26'. On February 1, 1831, the Englishman Biscoe
discovered Enderby Land at latitude 68 degrees 50', Adelaide Land at latitude
67 degrees on February 5, 1832, and Graham Land at latitude 64 degrees 45' on
February 21. In 1838 the Frenchman Dumont d'Urville stopped at the Ice Bank in
latitude 62 degrees 57', sighting the Louis-Philippe Peninsula; on January 21
two years later, at a new southerly position of 66 degrees 30', he named the
Adélie Coast and eight days later, the Clarie Coast at 64 degrees 40'. In 1838
the American Wilkes advanced as far as the 69th parallel on the 100th meridian.
In 1839 the Englishman Balleny discovered the Sabrina Coast at the edge of the
polar circle. Lastly, on January 12, 1842, with his ships, the Erebus and the
Terror, the Englishman Sir James Clark Ross found Victoria Land in latitude 70
degrees 56' and longitude 171 degrees 7' east; on the 23rd of that same month,
he reached the 74th parallel, a position denoting the Farthest South attained
until then; on the 27th he lay at 76 degrees 8'; on the 28th at 77 degrees 32';
on February 2 at 78 degrees 4'; and late in 1842 he returned to 71 degrees but
couldn't get beyond it. Well now! In 1868, on this 21st day of March, I myself,
Captain Nemo, have reached the South Pole at 90 degrees, and I hereby claim
this entire part of the globe, equal to one-sixth of the known
continents."
"In the name of which
sovereign, captain?"
"In my own name, sir!"
So saying, Captain Nemo unfurled
a black flag bearing a gold "N" on its quartered bunting. Then,
turning toward the orb of day, whose last rays were licking at the sea's
horizon:
"Farewell, O sun!" he
called. "Disappear, O radiant orb! Retire beneath this open sea, and let
six months of night spread their shadows over my new domains!"
THE NEXT DAY, March 22, at six
o'clock in the morning, preparations for departure began. The last gleams of
twilight were melting into night. The cold was brisk. The constellations were
glittering with startling intensity. The wonderful Southern Cross, polar star
of the Antarctic regions, twinkled at its zenith.
The thermometer marked -12
degrees centigrade, and a fresh breeze left a sharp nip in the air. Ice floes
were increasing over the open water. The sea was starting to congeal
everywhere. Numerous blackish patches were spreading over its surface,
announcing the imminent formation of fresh ice. Obviously this southernmost
basin froze over during its six-month winter and became utterly inaccessible.
What happened to the whales during this period? No doubt they went beneath the
Ice Bank to find more feasible seas. As for seals and walruses, they were
accustomed to living in the harshest climates and stayed on in these icy
waterways. These animals know by instinct how to gouge holes in the ice fields
and keep them continually open; they go to these holes to breathe. Once the
birds have migrated northward to escape the cold, these marine mammals remain
as sole lords of the polar continent.
Meanwhile the ballast tanks
filled with water and the Nautilus sank slowly. At a depth of 1,000 feet, it
stopped. Its propeller churned the waves and it headed due north at a speed of
fifteen miles per hour. Near the afternoon it was already cruising under the
immense frozen carapace of the Ice Bank.
As a precaution, the panels in
the lounge stayed closed, because the Nautilus's hull could run afoul of some
submerged block of ice. So I spent the day putting my notes into final form. My
mind was completely wrapped up in my memories of the pole. We had reached that
inaccessible spot without facing exhaustion or danger, as if our seagoing
passenger carriage had glided there on railroad tracks. And now we had actually
started our return journey. Did it still have comparable surprises in store for
me? I felt sure it did, so inexhaustible is this series of underwater wonders!
As it was, in the five and a half months since fate had brought us on board, we
had cleared 14,000 leagues, and over this track longer than the earth's
equator, so many fascinating or frightening incidents had beguiled our voyage:
that hunting trip in the Crespo forests, our running aground in the Torres
Strait, the coral cemetery, the pearl fisheries of Ceylon, the Arabic tunnel,
the fires of Santorini, those millions in the Bay of Vigo, Atlantis, the South
Pole! During the night all these memories crossed over from one dream to the
next, not giving my brain a moment's rest.
At three o'clock in the morning,
I was awakened by a violent collision. I sat up in bed, listening in the
darkness, and then was suddenly hurled into the middle of my stateroom.
Apparently the Nautilus had gone aground, then heeled over sharply.
Leaning against the walls, I
dragged myself down the gangways to the lounge, whose ceiling lights were on.
The furniture had been knocked over. Fortunately the glass cases were solidly
secured at the base and had stood fast. Since we were no longer vertical, the
starboard pictures were glued to the tapestries, while those to port had their
lower edges hanging a foot away from the wall. So the Nautilus was lying on its
starboard side, completely stationary to boot.
In its interior I heard the sound
of footsteps and muffled voices. But Captain Nemo didn't appear. Just as I was
about to leave the lounge, Ned Land and Conseil entered.
"What happened?" I
instantly said to them.
"I came to ask master
that," Conseil replied.
"Damnation!" the
Canadian exclaimed. "I know full well what happened! The Nautilus has gone
aground, and judging from the way it's listing, I don't think it'll pull
through like that first time in the Torres Strait."
"But," I asked,
"are we at least back on the surface of the sea?"
"We have no idea,"
Conseil replied.
"It's easy to find
out," I answered.
I consulted the pressure gauge.
Much to my surprise, it indicated a depth of 360 meters.
"What's the meaning of
this?" I exclaimed.
"We must confer with Captain
Nemo," Conseil said.
"But where do we find
him?" Ned Land asked.
"Follow me," I told my
two companions.
We left the lounge. Nobody in the
library. Nobody by the central companionway or the crew's quarters. I assumed
that Captain Nemo was stationed in the pilothouse. Best to wait. The three of
us returned to the lounge.
I'll skip over the Canadian's
complaints. He had good grounds for an outburst. I didn't answer him back,
letting him blow off all the steam he wanted.
We had been left to ourselves for
twenty minutes, trying to detect the tiniest noises inside the Nautilus, when
Captain Nemo entered. He didn't seem to see us. His facial features, usually so
emotionless, revealed a certain uneasiness. He studied the compass and pressure
gauge in silence, then went and put his finger on the world map at a spot in
the sector depicting the southernmost seas.
I hesitated to interrupt him. But
some moments later, when he turned to me, I threw back at him a phrase he had
used in the Torres Strait:
"An incident, captain?"
"No, sir," he replied,
"this time an accident."
"Serious?"
"Perhaps."
"Is there any immediate
danger?"
"No."
"The Nautilus has run
aground?"
"Yes."
"And this accident came
about . . . ?"
"Through nature's
unpredictability not man's incapacity. No errors were committed in our
maneuvers. Nevertheless, we can't prevent a loss of balance from taking its
toll. One may defy human laws, but no one can withstand the laws of
nature."
Captain Nemo had picked an odd
time to philosophize. All in all, this reply told me nothing.
"May I learn, sir," I
asked him, "what caused this accident?"
"An enormous block of ice,
an entire mountain, has toppled over," he answered me. "When an
iceberg is eroded at the base by warmer waters or by repeated collisions, its
center of gravity rises. Then it somersaults, it turns completely upside down.
That's what happened here. When it overturned, one of these blocks hit the
Nautilus as it was cruising under the waters. Sliding under our hull, this
block then raised us with irresistible power, lifting us into less congested
strata where we now lie on our side."
"But can't we float the
Nautilus clear by emptying its ballast tanks, to regain our balance?"
"That, sir, is being done
right now. You can hear the pumps working. Look at the needle on the pressure
gauge. It indicates that the Nautilus is rising, but this block of ice is
rising with us, and until some obstacle halts its upward movement, our position
won't change."
Indeed, the Nautilus kept the
same heel to starboard. No doubt it would straighten up once the block came to
a halt. But before that happened, who knew if we might not hit the underbelly
of the Ice Bank and be hideously squeezed between two frozen surfaces?
I mused on all the consequences
of this situation. Captain Nemo didn't stop studying the pressure gauge. Since
the toppling of this iceberg, the Nautilus had risen about 150 feet, but it
still stayed at the same angle to the perpendicular.
Suddenly a slight movement could
be felt over the hull. Obviously the Nautilus was straightening a bit. Objects hanging
in the lounge were visibly returning to their normal positions. The walls were
approaching the vertical. Nobody said a word. Hearts pounding, we could see and
feel the ship righting itself. The floor was becoming horizontal beneath our
feet. Ten minutes went by.
"Finally, we're
upright!" I exclaimed.
"Yes," Captain Nemo
said, heading to the lounge door.
"But will we float
off?" I asked him.
"Certainly," he
replied, "since the ballast tanks aren't yet empty, and when they are, the
Nautilus must rise to the surface of the sea."
The captain went out, and soon I
saw that at his orders, the Nautilus had halted its upward movement. In fact,
it soon would have hit the underbelly of the Ice Bank, but it had stopped in
time and was floating in midwater.
"That was a close
call!" Conseil then said.
"Yes. We could have been
crushed between these masses of ice, or at least imprisoned between them. And
then, with no way to renew our air supply. . . . Yes, that was a close
call!"
"If it's over with!"
Ned Land muttered.
I was unwilling to get into a
pointless argument with the Canadian and didn't reply. Moreover, the panels
opened just then, and the outside light burst through the uncovered windows.
We were fully afloat, as I have
said; but on both sides of the Nautilus, about ten meters away, there rose
dazzling walls of ice. There also were walls above and below. Above, because
the Ice Bank's underbelly spread over us like an immense ceiling. Below,
because the somersaulting block, shifting little by little, had found points of
purchase on both side walls and had gotten jammed between them. The Nautilus
was imprisoned in a genuine tunnel of ice about twenty meters wide and filled
with quiet water. So the ship could easily exit by going either ahead or astern,
sinking a few hundred meters deeper, and then taking an open passageway beneath
the Ice Bank.
The ceiling lights were off, yet
the lounge was still brightly lit. This was due to the reflecting power of the
walls of ice, which threw the beams of our beacon right back at us. Words
cannot describe the effects produced by our galvanic rays on these huge,
whimsically sculpted blocks, whose every angle, ridge, and facet gave off a
different glow depending on the nature of the veins running inside the ice. It
was a dazzling mine of gems, in particular sapphires and emeralds, whose jets
of blue and green crisscrossed. Here and there, opaline hues of infinite
subtlety raced among sparks of light that were like so many fiery diamonds,
their brilliance more than any eye could stand. The power of our beacon was
increased a hundredfold, like a lamp shining through the biconvex lenses of a
world-class lighthouse.
"How beautiful!"
Conseil exclaimed.
"Yes," I said,
"it's a wonderful sight! Isn't it, Ned?"
"Oh damnation, yes!"
Ned Land shot back. "It's superb! I'm furious that I have to admit it.
Nobody has ever seen the like. But this sight could cost us dearly. And in all
honesty, I think we're looking at things God never intended for human
eyes."
Ned was right. It was too
beautiful. All at once a yell from Conseil made me turn around.
"What is it?" I asked.
"Master must close his eyes!
Master mustn't look!"
With that, Conseil clapped his
hands over his eyes.
"But what's wrong, my
boy?"
"I've been dazzled, struck blind!"
Involuntarily my eyes flew to the
window, but I couldn't stand the fire devouring it.
I realized what had happened. The
Nautilus had just started off at great speed. All the tranquil glimmers of the
ice walls had then changed into blazing streaks. The sparkles from these
myriads of diamonds were merging with each other. Swept along by its propeller,
the Nautilus was traveling through a sheath of flashing light.
Then the panels in the lounge
closed. We kept our hands over our eyes, which were utterly saturated with
those concentric gleams that swirl before the retina when sunlight strikes it
too intensely. It took some time to calm our troubled vision.
Finally we lowered our hands.
"Ye gods, I never would have
believed it," Conseil said.
"And I still don't believe
it!" the Canadian shot back.
"When we return to shore,
jaded from all these natural wonders," Conseil added, "think how
we'll look down on those pitiful land masses, those puny works of man! No, the
civilized world won't be good enough for us!"
Such words from the lips of this
emotionless Flemish boy showed that our enthusiasm was near the boiling point.
But the Canadian didn't fail to throw his dram of cold water over us.
"The civilized world!"
he said, shaking his head. "Don't worry, Conseil my friend, we're never
going back to that world!"
By this point it was five o'clock
in the morning. Just then there was a collision in the Nautilus's bow. I
realized that its spur had just bumped a block of ice. It must have been a faulty
maneuver because this underwater tunnel was obstructed by such blocks and
didn't make for easy navigating. So I had assumed that Captain Nemo, in
adjusting his course, would go around each obstacle or would hug the walls and
follow the windings of the tunnel. In either case our forward motion wouldn't
receive an absolute check. Nevertheless, contrary to my expectations, the
Nautilus definitely began to move backward.
"We're going astern?"
Conseil said.
"Yes," I replied.
"Apparently the tunnel has no way out at this end."
"And so . . . ?"
"So," I said, "our
maneuvers are quite simple. We'll return in our tracks and go out the southern
opening. That's all."
As I spoke, I tried to sound more
confident than I really felt. Meanwhile the Nautilus accelerated its backward
movement, and running with propeller in reverse, it swept us along at great
speed.
"This'll mean a delay,"
Ned said.
"What are a few hours more
or less, so long as we get out."
"Yes," Ned Land
repeated, "so long as we get out!"
I strolled for a little while
from the lounge into the library. My companions kept their seats and didn't
move. Soon I threw myself down on a couch and picked up a book, which my eyes
skimmed mechanically.
A quarter of an hour later,
Conseil approached me, saying:
"Is it deeply fascinating,
this volume master is reading?"
"Tremendously
fascinating," I replied.
"I believe it. Master is
reading his own book!"
"My own book?"
Indeed, my hands were holding my
own work on the great ocean depths. I hadn't even suspected. I closed the book
and resumed my strolling. Ned and Conseil stood up to leave.
"Stay here, my
friends," I said, stopping them. "Let's stay together until we're out
of this blind alley."
"As master wishes,"
Conseil replied.
The hours passed. I often studied
the instruments hanging on the lounge wall. The pressure gauge indicated that
the Nautilus stayed at a constant depth of 300 meters, the compass that it kept
heading south, the log that it was traveling at a speed of twenty miles per
hour, an excessive speed in such a cramped area. But Captain Nemo knew that by
this point there was no such thing as too fast, since minutes were now worth
centuries.
At 8:25 a second collision took
place. This time astern. I grew pale. My companions came over. I clutched
Conseil's hand. Our eyes questioned each other, and more directly than if our
thoughts had been translated into words.
Just then the captain entered the
lounge. I went to him.
"Our path is barred to the
south?" I asked him.
"Yes, sir. When it overturned,
that iceberg closed off every exit."
"We're boxed in?"
"Yes."
CONSEQUENTLY, above, below, and
around the Nautilus, there were impenetrable frozen walls. We were the Ice
Bank's prisoners! The Canadian banged a table with his fearsome fist. Conseil
kept still. I stared at the captain. His face had resumed its usual
emotionlessness. He crossed his arms. He pondered. The Nautilus did not stir.
The captain then broke into
speech:
"Gentlemen," he said in
a calm voice, "there are two ways of dying under the conditions in which
we're placed."
This inexplicable individual
acted like a mathematics professor working out a problem for his pupils.
"The first way," he
went on, "is death by crushing. The second is death by asphyxiation. I
don't mention the possibility of death by starvation because the Nautilus's
provisions will certainly last longer than we will. Therefore, let's
concentrate on our chances of being crushed or asphyxiated."
"As for asphyxiation,
captain," I replied, "that isn't a cause for alarm, because the air
tanks are full."
"True," Captain Nemo
went on, "but they'll supply air for only two days. Now then, we've been
buried beneath the waters for thirty-six hours, and the Nautilus's heavy
atmosphere already needs renewing. In another forty-eight hours, our reserve
air will be used up."
"Well then, captain, let's
free ourselves within forty-eight hours!"
"We'll try to at least, by
cutting through one of these walls surrounding us."
"Which one?" I asked.
"Borings will tell us that.
I'm going to ground the Nautilus on the lower shelf, then my men will put on
their diving suits and attack the thinnest of these ice walls."
"Can the panels in the
lounge be left open?"
"Without ill effect. We're
no longer in motion."
Captain Nemo went out. Hissing
sounds soon told me that water was being admitted into the ballast tanks. The
Nautilus slowly settled and rested on the icy bottom at a depth of 350 meters,
the depth at which the lower shelf of ice lay submerged.
"My friends," I said,
"we're in a serious predicament, but I'm counting on your courage and
energy."
"Sir," the Canadian
replied, "this is no time to bore you with my complaints. I'm ready to do
anything I can for the common good."
"Excellent, Ned," I said,
extending my hand to the Canadian.
"I might add," he went
on, "that I'm as handy with a pick as a harpoon. If I can be helpful to
the captain, he can use me any way he wants."
"He won't turn down your
assistance. Come along, Ned."
I led the Canadian to the room
where the Nautilus's men were putting on their diving suits. I informed the
captain of Ned's proposition, which was promptly accepted. The Canadian got
into his underwater costume and was ready as soon as his fellow workers. Each
of them carried on his back a Rouquayrol device that the air tanks had supplied
with a generous allowance of fresh oxygen. A considerable but necessary drain
on the Nautilus's reserves. As for the Ruhmkorff lamps, they were unnecessary
in the midst of these brilliant waters saturated with our electric rays.
After Ned was dressed, I
reentered the lounge, whose windows had been uncovered; stationed next to
Conseil, I examined the strata surrounding and supporting the Nautilus.
Some moments later, we saw a
dozen crewmen set foot on the shelf of ice, among them Ned Land, easily
recognized by his tall figure. Captain Nemo was with them.
Before digging into the ice, the
captain had to obtain borings, to insure working in the best direction. Long
bores were driven into the side walls; but after fifteen meters, the
instruments were still impeded by the thickness of those walls. It was futile
to attack the ceiling since that surface was the Ice Bank itself, more than 400
meters high. Captain Nemo then bored into the lower surface. There we were
separated from the sea by a ten-meter barrier. That's how thick the iceberg
was. From this point on, it was an issue of cutting out a piece equal in
surface area to the Nautilus's waterline. This meant detaching about 6,500
cubic meters, to dig a hole through which the ship could descend below this
tract of ice.
Work began immediately and was
carried on with tireless tenacity. Instead of digging all around the Nautilus,
which would have entailed even greater difficulties, Captain Nemo had an
immense trench outlined on the ice, eight meters from our port quarter. Then
his men simultaneously staked it off at several points around its
circumference. Soon their picks were vigorously attacking this compact matter,
and huge chunks were loosened from its mass. These chunks weighed less than the
water, and by an unusual effect of specific gravity, each chunk took wing, as
it were, to the roof of the tunnel, which thickened above by as much as it
diminished below. But this hardly mattered so long as the lower surface kept
growing thinner.
After two hours of energetic
work, Ned Land reentered, exhausted. He and his companions were replaced by new
workmen, including Conseil and me. The Nautilus's chief officer supervised us.
The water struck me as unusually
cold, but I warmed up promptly while wielding my pick. My movements were quite
free, although they were executed under a pressure of thirty atmospheres.
After two hours of work,
reentering to snatch some food and rest, I found a noticeable difference
between the clean elastic fluid supplied me by the Rouquayrol device and the
Nautilus's atmosphere, which was already charged with carbon dioxide. The air
hadn't been renewed in forty-eight hours, and its life-giving qualities were
considerably weakened. Meanwhile, after twelve hours had gone by, we had
removed from the outlined surface area a slice of ice only one meter thick,
hence about 600 cubic meters. Assuming the same work would be accomplished
every twelve hours, it would still take five nights and four days to see the
undertaking through to completion.
"Five nights and four
days!" I told my companions. "And we have oxygen in the air tanks for
only two days."
"Without taking into
account," Ned answered, "that once we're out of this damned prison,
we'll still be cooped up beneath the Ice Bank, without any possible contact
with the open air!"
An apt remark. For who could
predict the minimum time we would need to free ourselves? Before the Nautilus
could return to the surface of the waves, couldn't we all die of asphyxiation?
Were this ship and everyone on board doomed to perish in this tomb of ice? It
was a dreadful state of affairs. But we faced it head-on, each one of us
determined to do his duty to the end.
During the night, in line with my
forecasts, a new one-meter slice was removed from this immense socket. But in
the morning, wearing my diving suit, I was crossing through the liquid mass in
a temperature of -6 degrees to -7 degrees centigrade, when I noted that little
by little the side walls were closing in on each other. The liquid strata
farthest from the trench, not warmed by the movements of workmen and tools,
were showing a tendency to solidify. In the face of this imminent new danger,
what would happen to our chances for salvation, and how could we prevent this
liquid medium from solidifying, then cracking the Nautilus's hull like glass?
I didn't tell my two companions
about this new danger. There was no point in dampening the energy they were
putting into our arduous rescue work. But when I returned on board, I mentioned
this serious complication to Captain Nemo.
"I know," he told me in
that calm tone the most dreadful outlook couldn't change. "It's one more
danger, but I don't know any way of warding it off. Our sole chance for salvation
is to work faster than the water solidifies. We've got to get there first,
that's all."
Get there first! By then I should
have been used to this type of talk!
For several hours that day, I
wielded my pick doggedly. The work kept me going. Besides, working meant
leaving the Nautilus, which meant breathing the clean oxygen drawn from the air
tanks and supplied by our equipment, which meant leaving the thin, foul air
behind.
Near evening one more meter had
been dug from the trench. When I returned on board, I was wellnigh asphyxiated
by the carbon dioxide saturating the air. Oh, if only we had the chemical
methods that would enable us to drive out this noxious gas! There was no lack
of oxygen. All this water contained a considerable amount, and after it was
decomposed by our powerful batteries, this life-giving elastic fluid could have
been restored to us. I had thought it all out, but to no avail because the
carbon dioxide produced by our breathing permeated every part of the ship. To
absorb it, we would need to fill containers with potassium hydroxide and shake
them continually. But this substance was missing on board and nothing else
could replace it.
That evening Captain Nemo was
forced to open the spigots of his air tanks and shoot a few spouts of fresh
oxygen through the Nautilus's interior. Without this precaution we wouldn't
have awakened the following morning.
The next day, March 26, I
returned to my miner's trade, working to remove the fifth meter. The Ice Bank's
side walls and underbelly had visibly thickened. Obviously they would come
together before the Nautilus could break free. For an instant I was gripped by
despair. My pick nearly slipped from my hands. What was the point of this
digging if I was to die smothered and crushed by this water turning to stone, a
torture undreamed of by even the wildest savages! I felt like I was lying in
the jaws of a fearsome monster, jaws irresistibly closing.
Supervising our work, working
himself, Captain Nemo passed near me just then. I touched him with my hand and
pointed to the walls of our prison. The starboard wall had moved forward to a
point less than four meters from the Nautilus's hull.
The captain understood and gave
me a signal to follow him. We returned on board. My diving suit removed, I went
with him to the lounge.
"Professor Aronnax," he
told me, "this calls for heroic measures, or we'll be sealed up in this
solidified water as if it were cement."
"Yes!" I said.
"But what can we do?"
"Oh," he exclaimed,
"if only my Nautilus were strong enough to stand that much pressure
without being crushed!"
"Well?" I asked, not
catching the captain's meaning.
"Don't you understand,"
he went on, "that the congealing of this water could come to our rescue?
Don't you see that by solidifying, it could burst these tracts of ice
imprisoning us, just as its freezing can burst the hardest stones? Aren't you
aware that this force could be the instrument of our salvation rather than our
destruction?"
"Yes, captain, maybe so. But
whatever resistance to crushing the Nautilus may have, it still couldn't stand
such dreadful pressures, and it would be squashed as flat as a piece of sheet
iron."
"I know it, sir. So we can't
rely on nature to rescue us, only our own efforts. We must counteract this
solidification. We must hold it in check. Not only are the side walls closing
in, but there aren't ten feet of water ahead or astern of the Nautilus. All
around us, this freeze is gaining fast."
"How long," I asked,
"will the oxygen in the air tanks enable us to breathe on board?"
The captain looked me straight in
the eye.
"After tomorrow," he
said, "the air tanks will be empty!"
I broke out in a cold sweat. But
why should I have been startled by this reply? On March 22 the Nautilus had
dived under the open waters at the pole. It was now the 26th. We had lived off
the ship's stores for five days! And all remaining breathable air had to be
saved for the workmen. Even today as I write these lines, my sensations are so
intense that an involuntary terror sweeps over me, and my lungs still seem
short of air!
Meanwhile, motionless and silent,
Captain Nemo stood lost in thought. An idea visibly crossed his mind. But he
seemed to brush it aside. He told himself no. At last these words escaped his
lips:
"Boiling water!" he
muttered.
"Boiling water?" I
exclaimed.
"Yes, sir. We're shut up in
a relatively confined area. If the Nautilus's pumps continually injected
streams of boiling water into this space, wouldn't that raise its temperature
and delay its freezing?"
"It's worth trying!" I
said resolutely.
"So let's try it,
professor."
By then the thermometer gave -7
degrees centigrade outside. Captain Nemo led me to the galley where a huge
distilling mechanism was at work, supplying drinking water via evaporation. The
mechanism was loaded with water, and the full electric heat of our batteries
was thrown into coils awash in liquid. In a few minutes the water reached 100
degrees centigrade. It was sent to the pumps while new water replaced it in the
process. The heat generated by our batteries was so intense that after simply
going through the mechanism, water drawn cold from the sea arrived boiling hot
at the body of the pump.
The steaming water was injected
into the icy water outside, and after three hours had passed, the thermometer
gave the exterior temperature as -6 degrees centigrade. That was one degree
gained. Two hours later the thermometer gave only -4 degrees.
After I monitored the operation's
progress, double-checking it with many inspections, I told the captain, "It's
working."
"I think so," he
answered me. "We've escaped being crushed. Now we have only asphyxiation
to fear."
During the night the water
temperature rose to -1 degrees centigrade. The injections couldn't get it to go
a single degree higher. But since salt water freezes only at -2 degrees, I was
finally assured that there was no danger of it solidifying.
By the next day, March 27, six
meters of ice had been torn from the socket. Only four meters were left to be
removed. That still meant forty-eight hours of work. The air couldn't be
renewed in the Nautilus's interior. Accordingly, that day it kept getting
worse.
An unbearable heaviness weighed
me down. Near three o'clock in the afternoon, this agonizing sensation affected
me to an intense degree. Yawns dislocated my jaws. My lungs were gasping in
their quest for that enkindling elastic fluid required for breathing, now
growing scarcer and scarcer. My mind was in a daze. I lay outstretched,
strength gone, nearly unconscious. My gallant Conseil felt the same symptoms,
suffered the same sufferings, yet never left my side. He held my hand, he kept
encouraging me, and I even heard him mutter:
"Oh, if only I didn't have
to breathe, to leave more air for master!"
It brought tears to my eyes to
hear him say these words.
Since conditions inside were
universally unbearable, how eagerly, how happily, we put on our diving suits to
take our turns working! Picks rang out on that bed of ice. Arms grew weary,
hands were rubbed raw, but who cared about exhaustion, what difference were
wounds? Life-sustaining air reached our lungs! We could breathe! We could
breathe!
And yet nobody prolonged his
underwater work beyond the time allotted him. His shift over, each man
surrendered to a gasping companion the air tank that would revive him. Captain
Nemo set the example and was foremost in submitting to this strict discipline.
When his time was up, he yielded his equipment to another and reentered the
foul air on board, always calm, unflinching, and uncomplaining.
That day the usual work was
accomplished with even greater energy. Over the whole surface area, only two
meters were left to be removed. Only two meters separated us from the open sea.
But the ship's air tanks were nearly empty. The little air that remained had to
be saved for the workmen. Not an atom for the Nautilus!
When I returned on board, I felt
half suffocated. What a night! I'm unable to depict it. Such sufferings are
indescribable. The next day I was short-winded. Headaches and staggering fits
of dizziness made me reel like a drunk. My companions were experiencing the
same symptoms. Some crewmen were at their last gasp.
That day, the sixth of our
imprisonment, Captain Nemo concluded that picks and mattocks were too slow to
deal with the ice layer still separating us from open water--and he decided to
crush this layer. The man had kept his energy and composure. He had subdued
physical pain with moral strength. He could still think, plan, and act.
At his orders the craft was eased
off, in other words, it was raised from its icy bed by a change in its specific
gravity. When it was afloat, the crew towed it, leading it right above the
immense trench outlined to match the ship's waterline. Next the ballast tanks
filled with water, the boat sank, and was fitted into its socket.
Just then the whole crew returned
on board, and the double outside door was closed. By this point the Nautilus
was resting on a bed of ice only one meter thick and drilled by bores in a
thousand places.
The stopcocks of the ballast
tanks were then opened wide, and 100 cubic meters of water rushed in,
increasing the Nautilus's weight by 100,000 kilograms.
We waited, we listened, we forgot
our sufferings, we hoped once more. We had staked our salvation on this one
last gamble.
Despite the buzzing in my head, I
soon could hear vibrations under the Nautilus's hull. We tilted. The ice
cracked with an odd ripping sound, like paper tearing, and the Nautilus began
settling downward.
"We're going through!"
Conseil muttered in my ear.
I couldn't answer him. I clutched
his hand. I squeezed it in an involuntary convulsion.
All at once, carried away by its
frightful excess load, the Nautilus sank into the waters like a cannonball, in
other words, dropping as if in a vacuum!
Our full electric power was then
put on the pumps, which instantly began to expel water from the ballast tanks.
After a few minutes we had checked our fall. The pressure gauge soon indicated
an ascending movement. Brought to full speed, the propeller made the sheet-iron
hull tremble down to its rivets, and we sped northward.
But how long would it take to
navigate under the Ice Bank to the open sea? Another day? I would be dead
first!
Half lying on a couch in the
library, I was suffocating. My face was purple, my lips blue, my faculties in
abeyance. I could no longer see or hear. I had lost all sense of time. My
muscles had no power to contract.
I'm unable to estimate the hours
that passed in this way. But I was aware that my death throes had begun. I
realized that I was about to die . . .
Suddenly I regained
consciousness. A few whiffs of air had entered my lungs. Had we risen to the
surface of the waves? Had we cleared the Ice Bank?
No! Ned and Conseil, my two
gallant friends, were sacrificing themselves to save me. A few atoms of air
were still left in the depths of one Rouquayrol device. Instead of breathing it
themselves, they had saved it for me, and while they were suffocating, they
poured life into me drop by drop! I tried to push the device away. They held my
hands, and for a few moments I could breathe luxuriously.
My eyes flew toward the clock. It
was eleven in the morning. It had to be March 28. The Nautilus was traveling at
the frightful speed of forty miles per hour. It was writhing in the waters.
Where was Captain Nemo? Had he
perished? Had his companions died with him?
Just then the pressure gauge
indicated we were no more than twenty feet from the surface. Separating us from
the open air was a mere tract of ice. Could we break through it?
Perhaps! In any event the
Nautilus was going to try. In fact, I could feel it assuming an oblique
position, lowering its stern and raising its spur. The admission of additional
water was enough to shift its balance. Then, driven by its powerful propeller, it
attacked this ice field from below like a fearsome battering ram. It split the
barrier little by little, backing up, then putting on full speed against the
punctured tract of ice; and finally, carried away by its supreme momentum, it
lunged through and onto this frozen surface, crushing the ice beneath its
weight.
The hatches were opened--or torn
off, if you prefer--and waves of clean air were admitted into every part of the
Nautilus.
HOW I GOT ONTO the platform I'm
unable to say. Perhaps the Canadian transferred me there. But I could breathe,
I could inhale the life-giving sea air. Next to me my two companions were
getting tipsy on the fresh oxygen particles. Poor souls who have suffered from
long starvation mustn't pounce heedlessly on the first food given them. We, on
the other hand, didn't have to practice such moderation: we could suck the
atoms from the air by the lungful, and it was the breeze, the breeze itself,
that poured into us this luxurious intoxication!
"Ahhh!" Conseil was
putting in. "What fine oxygen! Let master have no fears about breathing.
There's enough for everyone."
As for Ned Land, he didn't say a
word, but his wide-open jaws would have scared off a shark. And what powerful
inhalations! The Canadian "drew" like a furnace going full blast.
Our strength returned promptly,
and when I looked around, I saw that we were alone on the platform. No crewmen.
Not even Captain Nemo. Those strange seamen on the Nautilus were content with
the oxygen circulating inside. Not one of them had come up to enjoy the open
air.
The first words I pronounced were
words of appreciation and gratitude to my two companions. Ned and Conseil had
kept me alive during the final hours of our long death throes. But no expression
of thanks could repay them fully for such devotion.
"Good lord, professor,"
Ned Land answered me, "don't mention it! What did we do that's so
praiseworthy? Not a thing. It was a question of simple arithmetic. Your life is
worth more than ours. So we had to save it."
"No, Ned," I replied,
"it isn't worth more. Nobody could be better than a kind and generous man
like yourself!"
"All right, all right!"
the Canadian repeated in embarrassment.
"And you, my gallant
Conseil, you suffered a great deal."
"Not too much, to be candid
with master. I was lacking a few throatfuls of air, but I would have gotten by.
Besides, when I saw master fainting, it left me without the slightest desire to
breathe. It took my breath away, in a manner of . . ."
Confounded by this lapse into
banality, Conseil left his sentence hanging.
"My friends," I
replied, very moved, "we're bound to each other forever, and I'm deeply
indebted to you--"
"Which I'll take advantage
of," the Canadian shot back.
"Eh?" Conseil put in.
"Yes," Ned Land went
on. "You can repay your debt by coming with me when I leave this infernal
Nautilus."
"By the way," Conseil
said, "are we going in a favorable direction?"
"Yes," I replied,
"because we're going in the direction of the sun, and here the sun is due
north."
"Sure," Ned Land went
on, "but it remains to be seen whether we'll make for the Atlantic or the
Pacific, in other words, whether we'll end up in well-traveled or deserted
seas."
I had no reply to this, and I
feared that Captain Nemo wouldn't take us homeward but rather into that huge
ocean washing the shores of both Asia and America. In this way he would
complete his underwater tour of the world, going back to those seas where the
Nautilus enjoyed the greatest freedom. But if we returned to the Pacific, far
from every populated shore, what would happen to Ned Land's plans?
We would soon settle this
important point. The Nautilus traveled swiftly. Soon we had cleared the
Antarctic Circle plus the promontory of Cape Horn. We were abreast of the tip
of South America by March 31 at seven o'clock in the evening.
By then all our past sufferings
were forgotten. The memory of that imprisonment under the ice faded from our
minds. We had thoughts only of the future. Captain Nemo no longer appeared, neither
in the lounge nor on the platform. The positions reported each day on the world
map were put there by the chief officer, and they enabled me to determine the
Nautilus's exact heading. Now then, that evening it became obvious, much to my
satisfaction, that we were returning north by the Atlantic route.
I shared the results of my
observations with the Canadian and Conseil.
"That's good news," the
Canadian replied, "but where's the Nautilus going?"
"I'm unable to say,
Ned."
"After the South Pole, does
our captain want to tackle the North Pole, then go back to the Pacific by the
notorious Northwest Passage?"
"I wouldn't double dare
him," Conseil replied.
"Oh well," the Canadian
said, "we'll give him the slip long before then."
"In any event," Conseil
added, "he's a superman, that Captain Nemo, and we'll never regret having
known him."
"Especially once we've left
him," Ned Land shot back.
The next day, April 1, when the
Nautilus rose to the surface of the waves a few minutes before noon, we raised
land to the west. It was Tierra del Fuego, the Land of Fire, a name given it by
early navigators after they saw numerous curls of smoke rising from the
natives' huts. This Land of Fire forms a huge cluster of islands over thirty
leagues long and eighty leagues wide, extending between latitude 53 degrees and
56 degrees south, and between longitude 67 degrees 50' and 77 degrees 15' west.
Its coastline looked flat, but high mountains rose in the distance. I even
thought I glimpsed Mt. Sarmiento, whose elevation is 2,070 meters above sea
level: a pyramid-shaped block of shale with a very sharp summit, which,
depending on whether it's clear or veiled in vapor, "predicts fair weather
or foul," as Ned Land told me.
"A first-class barometer, my
friend."
"Yes, sir, a natural
barometer that didn't let me down when I navigated the narrows of the Strait of
Magellan."
Just then its peak appeared
before us, standing out distinctly against the background of the skies. This
forecast fair weather. And so it proved.
Going back under the waters, the
Nautilus drew near the coast, cruising along it for only a few miles. Through
the lounge windows I could see long creepers and gigantic fucus plants,
bulb-bearing seaweed of which the open sea at the pole had revealed a few specimens;
with their smooth, viscous filaments, they measured as much as 300 meters long;
genuine cables more than an inch thick and very tough, they're often used as
mooring lines for ships. Another weed, known by the name velp and boasting
four-foot leaves, was crammed into the coral concretions and carpeted the ocean
floor. It served as both nest and nourishment for myriads of crustaceans and
mollusks, for crabs and cuttlefish. Here seals and otters could indulge in a
sumptuous meal, mixing meat from fish with vegetables from the sea, like the
English with their Irish stews.
The Nautilus passed over these
lush, luxuriant depths with tremendous speed. Near evening it approached the
Falkland Islands, whose rugged summits I recognized the next day. The sea was
of moderate depth. So not without good reason, I assumed that these two
islands, plus the many islets surrounding them, used to be part of the Magellan
coastline. The Falkland Islands were probably discovered by the famous
navigator John Davis, who gave them the name Davis Southern Islands. Later Sir
Richard Hawkins called them the Maidenland, after the Blessed Virgin.
Subsequently, at the beginning of the 18th century, they were named the
Malouines by fishermen from Saint-Malo in Brittany, then finally dubbed the
Falklands by the English, to whom they belong today.
In these waterways our nets
brought up fine samples of algae, in particular certain fucus plants whose
roots were laden with the world's best mussels. Geese and duck alighted by the
dozens on the platform and soon took their places in the ship's pantry. As for
fish, I specifically observed some bony fish belonging to the goby genus,
especially some gudgeon two decimeters long, sprinkled with whitish and yellow
spots.
I likewise marveled at the
numerous medusas, including the most beautiful of their breed, the compass
jellyfish, unique to the Falkland seas. Some of these jellyfish were shaped
like very smooth, semispheric parasols with russet stripes and fringes of
twelve neat festoons. Others looked like upside-down baskets from which wide
leaves and long red twigs were gracefully trailing. They swam with quiverings
of their four leaflike arms, letting the opulent tresses of their tentacles
dangle in the drift. I wanted to preserve a few specimens of these delicate
zoophytes, but they were merely clouds, shadows, illusions, melting and
evaporating outside their native element.
When the last tips of the
Falkland Islands had disappeared below the horizon, the Nautilus submerged to a
depth between twenty and twenty-five meters and went along the South American
coast. Captain Nemo didn't put in an appearance.
We didn't leave these Patagonian
waterways until April 3, sometimes cruising under the ocean, sometimes on its
surface. The Nautilus passed the wide estuary formed by the mouth of the Rio de
la Plata, and on April 4 we lay abreast of Uruguay, albeit fifty miles out.
Keeping to its northerly heading, it followed the long windings of South
America. By then we had fared 16,000 leagues since coming on board in the seas
of Japan.
Near eleven o'clock in the
morning, we cut the Tropic of Capricorn on the 37th meridian, passing well out
from Cape Frio. Much to Ned Land's displeasure, Captain Nemo had no liking for
the neighborhood of Brazil's populous shores, because he shot by with dizzying
speed. Not even the swiftest fish or birds could keep up with us, and the
natural curiosities in these seas completely eluded our observation.
This speed was maintained for
several days, and on the evening of April 9, we raised South America's
easternmost tip, Cape São Roque. But then the Nautilus veered away again and
went looking for the lowest depths of an underwater valley gouged between this
cape and Sierra Leone on the coast of Africa. Abreast of the West Indies, this
valley forks into two arms, and to the north it ends in an enormous depression
9,000 meters deep. From this locality to the Lesser Antilles, the ocean's
geologic profile features a steeply cut cliff six kilometers high, and abreast
of the Cape Verde Islands, there's another wall just as imposing; together
these two barricades confine the whole submerged continent of Atlantis. The
floor of this immense valley is made picturesque by mountains that furnish
these underwater depths with scenic views. This description is based mostly on
certain hand-drawn charts kept in the Nautilus's library, charts obviously
rendered by Captain Nemo himself from his own personal observations.
For two days we visited these
deep and deserted waters by means of our slanting fins. The Nautilus would do
long, diagonal dives that took us to every level. But on April 11 it rose
suddenly, and the shore reappeared at the mouth of the Amazon River, a huge
estuary whose outflow is so considerable, it desalts the sea over an area of
several leagues.
We cut the Equator. Twenty miles
to the west lay Guiana, French territory where we could easily have taken
refuge. But the wind was blowing a strong gust, and the furious billows would
not allow us to face them in a mere skiff. No doubt Ned Land understood this
because he said nothing to me. For my part, I made no allusion to his escape
plans because I didn't want to push him into an attempt that was certain to
misfire.
I was readily compensated for
this delay by fascinating research. During those two days of April 11-12, the
Nautilus didn't leave the surface of the sea, and its trawl brought up a simply
miraculous catch of zoophytes, fish, and reptiles.
Some zoophytes were dredged up by
the chain of our trawl. Most were lovely sea anemone belonging to the family
Actinidia, including among other species, the Phyctalis protexta, native to
this part of the ocean: a small cylindrical trunk adorned with vertical lines,
mottled with red spots, and crowned by a wondrous blossoming of tentacles. As
for mollusks, they consisted of exhibits I had already observed: turret snails,
olive shells of the "tent olive" species with neatly intersecting
lines and russet spots standing out sharply against a flesh-colored background,
fanciful spider conchs that looked like petrified scorpions, transparent glass
snails, argonauts, some highly edible cuttlefish, and certain species of squid
that the naturalists of antiquity classified with the flying fish, which are
used chiefly as bait for catching cod.
As for the fish in these
waterways, I noted various species that I hadn't yet had the opportunity to
study. Among cartilaginous fish: some brook lamprey, a type of eel fifteen
inches long, head greenish, fins violet, back bluish gray, belly a silvery
brown strewn with bright spots, iris of the eye encircled in gold, unusual
animals that the Amazon's current must have swept out to sea because their
natural habitat is fresh water; sting rays, the snout pointed, the tail long,
slender, and armed with an extensive jagged sting; small one-meter sharks with
gray and whitish hides, their teeth arranged in several backward-curving rows,
fish commonly known by the name carpet shark; batfish, a sort of reddish
isosceles triangle half a meter long, whose pectoral fins are attached by
fleshy extensions that make these fish look like bats, although an appendage
made of horn, located near the nostrils, earns them the nickname of sea
unicorns; lastly, a couple species of triggerfish, the cucuyo whose stippled
flanks glitter with a sparkling gold color, and the bright purple leatherjacket
whose hues glisten like a pigeon's throat.
I'll finish up this catalog, a
little dry but quite accurate, with the series of bony fish I observed: eels
belonging to the genus Apteronotus whose snow-white snout is very blunt, the
body painted a handsome black and armed with a very long, slender, fleshy whip;
long sardines from the genus Odontognathus, like three-decimeter pike, shining
with a bright silver glow; Guaranian mackerel furnished with two anal fins;
black-tinted rudderfish that you catch by using torches, fish measuring two
meters and boasting white, firm, plump meat that, when fresh, tastes like eel,
when dried, like smoked salmon; semired wrasse sporting scales only at the
bases of their dorsal and anal fins; grunts on which gold and silver mingle
their luster with that of ruby and topaz; yellow-tailed gilthead whose flesh is
extremely dainty and whose phosphorescent properties give them away in the
midst of the waters; porgies tinted orange, with slender tongues; croakers with
gold caudal fins; black surgeonfish; four-eyed fish from Surinam, etc.
This "et cetera" won't
keep me from mentioning one more fish that Conseil, with good reason, will long
remember.
One of our nets had hauled up a
type of very flat ray that weighed some twenty kilograms; with its tail cut
off, it would have formed a perfect disk. It was white underneath and reddish
on top, with big round spots of deep blue encircled in black, its hide quite
smooth and ending in a double-lobed fin. Laid out on the platform, it kept
struggling with convulsive movements, trying to turn over, making such efforts
that its final lunge was about to flip it into the sea. But Conseil, being very
possessive of his fish, rushed at it, and before I could stop him, he seized it
with both hands.
Instantly there he was, thrown on
his back, legs in the air, his body half paralyzed, and yelling:
"Oh, sir, sir! Will you help
me!"
For once in his life, the poor
lad didn't address me "in the third person."
The Canadian and I sat him up; we
massaged his contracted arms, and when he regained his five senses, that
eternal classifier mumbled in a broken voice:
"Class of cartilaginous
fish, order Chondropterygia with fixed gills, suborder Selacia, family
Rajiiforma, genus electric ray."
"Yes, my friend," I
answered, "it was an electric ray that put you in this deplorable
state."
"Oh, master can trust me on
this," Conseil shot back. "I'll be revenged on that animal!"
"How?"
"I'll eat it."
Which he did that same evening,
but strictly as retaliation. Because, frankly, it tasted like leather.
Poor Conseil had assaulted an
electric ray of the most dangerous species, the cumana. Living in a conducting
medium such as water, this bizarre animal can electrocute other fish from
several meters away, so great is the power of its electric organ, an organ
whose two chief surfaces measure at least twenty-seven square feet.
During the course of the next
day, April 12, the Nautilus drew near the coast of Dutch Guiana, by the mouth
of the Maroni River. There several groups of sea cows were living in family
units. These were manatees, which belong to the order Sirenia, like the dugong
and Steller's sea cow. Harmless and unaggressive, these fine animals were six
to seven meters long and must have weighed at least 4,000 kilograms each. I
told Ned Land and Conseil that farseeing nature had given these mammals a major
role to play. In essence, manatees, like seals, are designed to graze the
underwater prairies, destroying the clusters of weeds that obstruct the mouths
of tropical rivers.
"And do you know," I
added, "what happened since man has almost completely wiped out these
beneficial races? Rotting weeds have poisoned the air, and this poisoned air
causes the yellow fever that devastates these wonderful countries. This toxic
vegetation has increased beneath the seas of the Torrid Zone, so the disease
spreads unchecked from the mouth of the Rio de la Plata to Florida!"
And if Professor Toussenel is
correct, this plague is nothing compared to the scourge that will strike our
descendants once the seas are depopulated of whales and seals. By then, crowded
with jellyfish, squid, and other devilfish, the oceans will have become huge
centers of infection, because their waves will no longer possess "these
huge stomachs that God has entrusted with scouring the surface of the
sea."
Meanwhile, without scorning these
theories, the Nautilus's crew captured half a dozen manatees. In essence, it
was an issue of stocking the larder with excellent red meat, even better than
beef or veal. Their hunting was not a fascinating sport. The manatees let
themselves be struck down without offering any resistance. Several thousand
kilos of meat were hauled below, to be dried and stored.
The same day an odd fishing
practice further increased the Nautilus's stores, so full of game were these
seas. Our trawl brought up in its meshes a number of fish whose heads were
topped by little oval slabs with fleshy edges. These were suckerfish from the
third family of the subbrachian Malacopterygia. These flat disks on their heads
consist of crosswise plates of movable cartilage, between which the animals can
create a vacuum, enabling them to stick to objects like suction cups.
The remoras I had observed in the
Mediterranean were related to this species. But the creature at issue here was
an Echeneis osteochara, unique to this sea. Right after catching them, our
seamen dropped them in buckets of water.
Its fishing finished, the
Nautilus drew nearer to the coast. In this locality a number of sea turtles
were sleeping on the surface of the waves. It would have been difficult to
capture these valuable reptiles, because they wake up at the slightest sound,
and their solid carapaces are harpoon-proof. But our suckerfish would effect
their capture with extraordinary certainty and precision. In truth, this animal
is a living fishhook, promising wealth and happiness to the greenest fisherman
in the business.
The Nautilus's men attached to
each fish's tail a ring that was big enough not to hamper its movements, and to
this ring a long rope whose other end was moored on board.
Thrown into the sea, the
suckerfish immediately began to play their roles, going and fastening
themselves onto the breastplates of the turtles. Their tenacity was so great,
they would rip apart rather than let go. They were hauled in, still sticking to
the turtles that came aboard with them.
In this way we caught several
loggerheads, reptiles a meter wide and weighing 200 kilos. They're extremely
valuable because of their carapaces, which are covered with big slabs of horn,
thin, brown, transparent, with white and yellow markings. Besides, they were
excellent from an edible viewpoint, with an exquisite flavor comparable to the
green turtle.
This fishing ended our stay in
the waterways of the Amazon, and that evening the Nautilus took to the high
seas once more.
FOR SOME DAYS the Nautilus kept
veering away from the American coast. It obviously didn't want to frequent the
waves of the Gulf of Mexico or the Caribbean Sea. Yet there was no shortage of
water under its keel, since the average depth of these seas is 1,800 meters;
but these waterways, strewn with islands and plowed by steamers, probably
didn't agree with Captain Nemo.
On April 16 we raised Martinique
and Guadalupe from a distance of about thirty miles. For one instant I could
see their lofty peaks.
The Canadian was quite
disheartened, having counted on putting his plans into execution in the gulf,
either by reaching shore or by pulling alongside one of the many boats plying a
coastal trade from one island to another. An escape attempt would have been
quite feasible, assuming Ned Land managed to seize the skiff without the
captain's knowledge. But in midocean it was unthinkable.
The Canadian, Conseil, and I had
a pretty long conversation on this subject. For six months we had been
prisoners aboard the Nautilus. We had fared 17,000 leagues, and as Ned Land put
it, there was no end in sight. So he made me a proposition I hadn't
anticipated. We were to ask Captain Nemo this question straight out: did the
captain mean to keep us on board his vessel permanently?
This measure was distasteful to
me. To my mind it would lead nowhere. We could hope for nothing from the
Nautilus's commander but could depend only on ourselves. Besides, for some time
now the man had been gloomier, more withdrawn, less sociable. He seemed to be
avoiding me. I encountered him only at rare intervals. He used to take pleasure
in explaining the underwater wonders to me; now he left me to my research and
no longer entered the lounge.
What changes had come over him?
From what cause? I had no reason to blame myself. Was our presence on board
perhaps a burden to him? Even so, I cherished no hopes that the man would set
us free.
So I begged Ned to let me think
about it before taking action. If this measure proved fruitless, it could
arouse the captain's suspicions, make our circumstances even more arduous, and
jeopardize the Canadian's plans. I might add that I could hardly use our state
of health as an argument. Except for that grueling ordeal under the Ice Bank at
the South Pole, we had never felt better, neither Ned, Conseil, nor I. The
nutritious food, life-giving air, regular routine, and uniform temperature kept
illness at bay; and for a man who didn't miss his past existence on land, for a
Captain Nemo who was at home here, who went where he wished, who took paths
mysterious to others if not himself in attaining his ends, I could understand such
a life. But we ourselves hadn't severed all ties with humanity. For my part, I
didn't want my new and unusual research to be buried with my bones. I had now
earned the right to pen the definitive book on the sea, and sooner or later I
wanted that book to see the light of day.
There once more, through the
panels opening into these Caribbean waters ten meters below the surface of the
waves, I found so many fascinating exhibits to describe in my daily notes!
Among other zoophytes there were Portuguese men-of-war known by the name
Physalia pelagica, like big, oblong bladders with a pearly sheen, spreading
their membranes to the wind, letting their blue tentacles drift like silken
threads; to the eye delightful jellyfish, to the touch actual nettles that ooze
a corrosive liquid. Among the articulates there were annelid worms one and a
half meters long, furnished with a pink proboscis, equipped with 1,700 organs
of locomotion, snaking through the waters, and as they went, throwing off every
gleam in the solar spectrum. From the fish branch there were manta rays,
enormous cartilaginous fish ten feet long and weighing 600 pounds, their
pectoral fin triangular, their midback slightly arched, their eyes attached to
the edges of the face at the front of the head; they floated like wreckage from
a ship, sometimes fastening onto our windows like opaque shutters. There were
American triggerfish for which nature has ground only black and white pigments,
feather-shaped gobies that were long and plump with yellow fins and jutting
jaws, sixteen-decimeter mackerel with short, sharp teeth, covered with small
scales, and related to the albacore species. Next came swarms of red mullet
corseted in gold stripes from head to tail, their shining fins all aquiver,
genuine masterpieces of jewelry, formerly sacred to the goddess Diana, much in
demand by rich Romans, and about which the old saying goes: "He who
catches them doesn't eat them!" Finally, adorned with emerald ribbons and
dressed in velvet and silk, golden angelfish passed before our eyes like
courtiers in the paintings of Veronese; spurred gilthead stole by with their
swift thoracic fins; thread herring fifteen inches long were wrapped in their
phosphorescent glimmers; gray mullet thrashed the sea with their big fleshy tails;
red salmon seemed to mow the waves with their slicing pectorals; and silver
moonfish, worthy of their name, rose on the horizon of the waters like the
whitish reflections of many moons.
How many other marvelous new
specimens I still could have observed if, little by little, the Nautilus hadn't
settled to the lower strata! Its slanting fins drew it to depths of 2,000 and
3,500 meters. There animal life was represented by nothing more than sea
lilies, starfish, delightful crinoids with bell-shaped heads like little
chalices on straight stems, top-shell snails, blood-red tooth shells, and
fissurella snails, a large species of coastal mollusk.
By April 20 we had risen to an
average level of 1,500 meters. The nearest land was the island group of the
Bahamas, scattered like a batch of cobblestones over the surface of the water.
There high underwater cliffs reared up, straight walls made of craggy chunks
arranged like big stone foundations, among which there gaped black caves so
deep our electric rays couldn't light them to the far ends.
These rocks were hung with huge
weeds, immense sea tangle, gigantic fucus-- a genuine trellis of water plants
fit for a world of giants.
In discussing these colossal plants,
Conseil, Ned, and I were naturally led into mentioning the sea's gigantic
animals. The former were obviously meant to feed the latter. However, through
the windows of our almost motionless Nautilus, I could see nothing among these
long filaments other than the chief articulates of the division Brachyura:
long-legged spider crabs, violet crabs, and sponge crabs unique to the waters
of the Caribbean.
It was about eleven o'clock when
Ned Land drew my attention to a fearsome commotion out in this huge seaweed.
"Well," I said,
"these are real devilfish caverns, and I wouldn't be surprised to see some
of those monsters hereabouts."
"What!" Conseil put in.
"Squid, ordinary squid from the class Cephalopoda?"
"No," I said,
"devilfish of large dimensions. But friend Land is no doubt mistaken,
because I don't see a thing."
"That's regrettable,"
Conseil answered. "I'd like to come face to face with one of those
devilfish I've heard so much about, which can drag ships down into the depths.
Those beasts go by the name of krake--"
"Fake is more like it,"
the Canadian replied sarcastically.
"Krakens!" Conseil shot
back, finishing his word without wincing at his companion's witticism.
"Nobody will ever make me
believe," Ned Land said, "that such animals exist."
"Why not?" Conseil
replied. "We sincerely believed in master's narwhale."
"We were wrong,
Conseil."
"No doubt, but there are
others with no doubts who believe to this day!"
"Probably, Conseil. But as
for me, I'm bound and determined not to accept the existence of any such
monster till I've dissected it with my own two hands."
"Yet," Conseil asked
me, "doesn't master believe in gigantic devilfish?"
"Yikes! Who in Hades ever
believed in them?" the Canadian exclaimed.
"Many people, Ned my
friend," I said.
"No fishermen. Scientists
maybe!"
"Pardon me, Ned. Fishermen
and scientists!"
"Why, I to whom you
speak," Conseil said with the world's straightest face, "I recall
perfectly seeing a large boat dragged under the waves by the arms of a
cephalopod."
"You saw that?" the
Canadian asked.
"Yes, Ned."
"With your own two
eyes?"
"With my own two eyes."
"Where, may I ask?"
"In Saint-Malo,"
Conseil returned unflappably.
"In the harbor?" Ned
Land said sarcastically.
"No, in a church,"
Conseil replied.
"In a church!" the
Canadian exclaimed.
"Yes, Ned my friend. It had
a picture that portrayed the devilfish in question."
"Oh good!" Ned Land
exclaimed with a burst of laughter. "Mr. Conseil put one over on me!"
"Actually he's right,"
I said. "I've heard about that picture. But the subject it portrays is
taken from a legend, and you know how to rate legends in matters of natural
history! Besides, when it's an issue of monsters, the human imagination always
tends to run wild. People not only claimed these devilfish could drag ships
under, but a certain Olaus Magnus tells of a cephalopod a mile long that looked
more like an island than an animal. There's also the story of how the Bishop of
Trondheim set up an altar one day on an immense rock. After he finished saying
mass, this rock started moving and went back into the sea. The rock was a
devilfish."
"And that's everything we
know?" the Canadian asked.
"No," I replied,
"another bishop, Pontoppidan of Bergen, also tells of a devilfish so large
a whole cavalry regiment could maneuver on it."
"They sure did go on, those
oldtime bishops!" Ned Land said.
"Finally, the naturalists of
antiquity mention some monsters with mouths as big as a gulf, which were too
huge to get through the Strait of Gibraltar."
"Good work, men!" the
Canadian put in.
"But in all these stories,
is there any truth?" Conseil asked.
"None at all, my friends, at
least in those that go beyond the bounds of credibility and fly off into fable
or legend. Yet for the imaginings of these storytellers there had to be, if not
a cause, at least an excuse. It can't be denied that some species of squid and
other devilfish are quite large, though still smaller than cetaceans. Aristotle
put the dimensions of one squid at five cubits, or 3.1 meters. Our fishermen
frequently see specimens over 1.8 meters long. The museums in Trieste and
Montpellier have preserved some devilfish carcasses measuring two meters.
Besides, according to the calculations of naturalists, one of these animals
only six feet long would have tentacles as long as twenty-seven. Which is
enough to make a fearsome monster."
"Does anybody fish for 'em
nowadays?" the Canadian asked.
"If they don't fish for
them, sailors at least sight them. A friend of mine, Captain Paul Bos of Le
Havre, has often sworn to me that he encountered one of these monsters of
colossal size in the seas of the East Indies. But the most astonishing event,
which proves that these gigantic animals undeniably exist, took place a few
years ago in 1861."
"What event was that?"
Ned Land asked.
"Just this. In 1861, to the
northeast of Tenerife and fairly near the latitude where we are right now, the
crew of the gunboat Alecto spotted a monstrous squid swimming in their waters.
Commander Bouguer approached the animal and attacked it with blows from
harpoons and blasts from rifles, but without much success because bullets and
harpoons crossed its soft flesh as if it were semiliquid jelly. After several
fruitless attempts, the crew managed to slip a noose around the mollusk's body.
This noose slid as far as the caudal fins and came to a halt. Then they tried
to haul the monster on board, but its weight was so considerable that when they
tugged on the rope, the animal parted company with its tail; and deprived of this
adornment, it disappeared beneath the waters."
"Finally, an actual
event," Ned Land said.
"An indisputable event, my
gallant Ned. Accordingly, people have proposed naming this devilfish Bouguer's
Squid."
"And how long was it?"
the Canadian asked.
"Didn't it measure about six
meters?" said Conseil, who was stationed at the window and examining anew
the crevices in the cliff.
"Precisely," I replied.
"Wasn't its head,"
Conseil went on, "crowned by eight tentacles that quivered in the water
like a nest of snakes?"
"Precisely."
"Weren't its eyes
prominently placed and considerably enlarged?"
"Yes, Conseil."
"And wasn't its mouth a real
parrot's beak but of fearsome size?"
"Correct, Conseil."
"Well, with all due respect
to master," Conseil replied serenely, "if this isn't Bouguer's Squid,
it's at least one of his close relatives!"
I stared at Conseil. Ned Land
rushed to the window.
"What an awful animal!"
he exclaimed.
I stared in my turn and couldn't
keep back a movement of revulsion. Before my eyes there quivered a horrible
monster worthy of a place among the most farfetched teratological legends.
It was a squid of colossal
dimensions, fully eight meters long. It was traveling backward with tremendous speed
in the same direction as the Nautilus. It gazed with enormous, staring eyes
that were tinted sea green. Its eight arms (or more accurately, feet) were
rooted in its head, which has earned these animals the name cephalopod; its
arms stretched a distance twice the length of its body and were writhing like
the serpentine hair of the Furies. You could plainly see its 250 suckers,
arranged over the inner sides of its tentacles and shaped like semispheric
capsules. Sometimes these suckers fastened onto the lounge window by creating
vacuums against it. The monster's mouth--a beak made of horn and shaped like
that of a parrot--opened and closed vertically. Its tongue, also of horn
substance and armed with several rows of sharp teeth, would flicker out from between
these genuine shears. What a freak of nature! A bird's beak on a mollusk! Its
body was spindle-shaped and swollen in the middle, a fleshy mass that must have
weighed 20,000 to 25,000 kilograms. Its unstable color would change with
tremendous speed as the animal grew irritated, passing successively from bluish
gray to reddish brown.
What was irritating this mollusk?
No doubt the presence of the Nautilus, even more fearsome than itself, and
which it couldn't grip with its mandibles or the suckers on its arms. And yet
what monsters these devilfish are, what vitality our Creator has given them,
what vigor in their movements, thanks to their owning a triple heart!
Sheer chance had placed us in the
presence of this squid, and I didn't want to lose this opportunity to
meticulously study such a cephalopod specimen. I overcame the horror that its
appearance inspired in me, picked up a pencil, and began to sketch it.
"Perhaps this is the same as
the Alecto's," Conseil said.
"Can't be," the
Canadian replied, "because this one's complete while the other one lost
its tail!"
"That doesn't necessarily
follow," I said. "The arms and tails of these animals grow back
through regeneration, and in seven years the tail on Bouguer's Squid has surely
had time to sprout again."
"Anyhow," Ned shot
back, "if it isn't this fellow, maybe it's one of those!"
Indeed, other devilfish had
appeared at the starboard window. I counted seven of them. They provided the
Nautilus with an escort, and I could hear their beaks gnashing on the
sheet-iron hull. We couldn't have asked for a more devoted following.
I continued sketching. These
monsters kept pace in our waters with such precision, they seemed to be
standing still, and I could have traced their outlines in miniature on the
window. But we were moving at a moderate speed.
All at once the Nautilus stopped.
A jolt made it tremble through its entire framework.
"Did we strike bottom?"
I asked.
"In any event we're already
clear," the Canadian replied, "because we're afloat."
The Nautilus was certainly
afloat, but it was no longer in motion. The blades of its propeller weren't
churning the waves. A minute passed. Followed by his chief officer, Captain
Nemo entered the lounge.
I hadn't seen him for a good
while. He looked gloomy to me. Without speaking to us, without even seeing us
perhaps, he went to the panel, stared at the devilfish, and said a few words to
his chief officer.
The latter went out. Soon the
panels closed. The ceiling lit up.
I went over to the captain.
"An unusual assortment of
devilfish," I told him, as carefree as a collector in front of an
aquarium.
"Correct, Mr.
Naturalist," he answered me, "and we're going to fight them at close
quarters."
I gaped at the captain. I thought
my hearing had gone bad.
"At close quarters?" I
repeated.
"Yes, sir. Our propeller is
jammed. I think the horn-covered mandibles of one of these squid are entangled
in the blades. That's why we aren't moving."
"And what are you going to
do?"
"Rise to the surface and
slaughter the vermin."
"A difficult
undertaking."
"Correct. Our electric
bullets are ineffective against such soft flesh, where they don't meet enough
resistance to go off. But we'll attack the beasts with axes."
"And harpoons, sir,"
the Canadian said, "if you don't turn down my help."
"I accept it, Mr.
Land."
"We'll go with you," I
said. And we followed Captain Nemo, heading to the central companionway.
There some ten men were standing
by for the assault, armed with boarding axes. Conseil and I picked up two more
axes. Ned Land seized a harpoon.
By then the Nautilus had returned
to the surface of the waves. Stationed on the top steps, one of the seamen
undid the bolts of the hatch. But he had scarcely unscrewed the nuts when the hatch
flew up with tremendous violence, obviously pulled open by the suckers on a
devilfish's arm.
Instantly one of those long arms
glided like a snake into the opening, and twenty others were quivering above.
With a sweep of the ax, Captain Nemo chopped off this fearsome tentacle, which
slid writhing down the steps.
Just as we were crowding each
other to reach the platform, two more arms lashed the air, swooped on the
seaman stationed in front of Captain Nemo, and carried the fellow away with
irresistible violence.
Captain Nemo gave a shout and
leaped outside. We rushed after him.
What a scene! Seized by the
tentacle and glued to its suckers, the unfortunate man was swinging in the air
at the mercy of this enormous appendage. He gasped, he choked, he yelled:
"Help! Help!" These words, pronounced in French, left me deeply
stunned! So I had a fellow countryman on board, perhaps several! I'll hear his
harrowing plea the rest of my life!
The poor fellow was done for. Who
could tear him from such a powerful grip? Even so, Captain Nemo rushed at the
devilfish and with a sweep of the ax hewed one more of its arms. His chief
officer struggled furiously with other monsters crawling up the Nautilus's
sides. The crew battled with flailing axes. The Canadian, Conseil, and I sank
our weapons into these fleshy masses. An intense, musky odor filled the air. It
was horrible.
For an instant I thought the poor
man entwined by the devilfish might be torn loose from its powerful suction.
Seven arms out of eight had been chopped off. Brandishing its victim like a
feather, one lone tentacle was writhing in the air. But just as Captain Nemo
and his chief officer rushed at it, the animal shot off a spout of blackish
liquid, secreted by a pouch located in its abdomen. It blinded us. When this
cloud had dispersed, the squid was gone, and so was my poor fellow countryman!
What rage then drove us against
these monsters! We lost all self-control. Ten or twelve devilfish had overrun
the Nautilus's platform and sides. We piled helter-skelter into the thick of
these sawed-off snakes, which darted over the platform amid waves of blood and
sepia ink. It seemed as if these viscous tentacles grew back like the many
heads of Hydra. At every thrust Ned Land's harpoon would plunge into a squid's
sea-green eye and burst it. But my daring companion was suddenly toppled by the
tentacles of a monster he could not avoid.
Oh, my heart nearly exploded with
excitement and horror! The squid's fearsome beak was wide open over Ned Land.
The poor man was about to be cut in half. I ran to his rescue. But Captain Nemo
got there first. His ax disappeared between the two enormous mandibles, and the
Canadian, miraculously saved, stood and plunged his harpoon all the way into
the devilfish's triple heart.
"Tit for tat," Captain
Nemo told the Canadian. "I owed it to myself!"
Ned bowed without answering him.
This struggle had lasted a
quarter of an hour. Defeated, mutilated, battered to death, the monsters
finally yielded to us and disappeared beneath the waves.
Red with blood, motionless by the
beacon, Captain Nemo stared at the sea that had swallowed one of his
companions, and large tears streamed from his eyes.
THIS DREADFUL SCENE on April 20
none of us will ever be able to forget. I wrote it up in a state of intense
excitement. Later I reviewed my narrative. I read it to Conseil and the
Canadian. They found it accurate in detail but deficient in impact. To convey
such sights, it would take the pen of our most famous poet, Victor Hugo, author
of The Toilers of the Sea.
As I said, Captain Nemo wept
while staring at the waves. His grief was immense. This was the second
companion he had lost since we had come aboard. And what a way to die! Smashed,
strangled, crushed by the fearsome arms of a devilfish, ground between its iron
mandibles, this friend would never rest with his companions in the placid
waters of their coral cemetery!
As for me, what had harrowed my
heart in the thick of this struggle was the despairing yell given by this unfortunate
man. Forgetting his regulation language, this poor Frenchman had reverted to
speaking his own mother tongue to fling out one supreme plea! Among the
Nautilus's crew, allied body and soul with Captain Nemo and likewise fleeing
from human contact, I had found a fellow countryman! Was he the only
representative of France in this mysterious alliance, obviously made up of
individuals from different nationalities? This was just one more of those
insoluble problems that kept welling up in my mind!
Captain Nemo reentered his
stateroom, and I saw no more of him for a good while. But how sad, despairing,
and irresolute he must have felt, to judge from this ship whose soul he was,
which reflected his every mood! The Nautilus no longer kept to a fixed heading.
It drifted back and forth, riding with the waves like a corpse. Its propeller
had been disentangled but was barely put to use. It was navigating at random.
It couldn't tear itself away from the setting of this last struggle, from this
sea that had devoured one of its own!
Ten days went by in this way. It
was only on May 1 that the Nautilus openly resumed its northbound course, after
raising the Bahamas at the mouth of Old Bahama Channel. We then went with the
current of the sea's greatest river, which has its own banks, fish, and
temperature. I mean the Gulf Stream.
It is indeed a river that runs
independently through the middle of the Atlantic, its waters never mixing with
the ocean's waters. It's a salty river, saltier than the sea surrounding it.
Its average depth is 3,000 feet, its average width sixty miles. In certain
localities its current moves at a speed of four kilometers per hour. The
unchanging volume of its waters is greater than that of all the world's rivers
combined.
As discovered by Commander Maury,
the true source of the Gulf Stream, its starting point, if you prefer, is
located in the Bay of Biscay. There its waters, still weak in temperature and
color, begin to form. It goes down south, skirts equatorial Africa, warms its
waves in the rays of the Torrid Zone, crosses the Atlantic, reaches Cape São
Roque on the coast of Brazil, and forks into two branches, one going to the
Caribbean Sea for further saturation with heat particles. Then, entrusted with
restoring the balance between hot and cold temperatures and with mixing
tropical and northern waters, the Gulf Stream begins to play its stabilizing
role. Attaining a white heat in the Gulf of Mexico, it heads north up the
American coast, advances as far as Newfoundland, swerves away under the thrust
of a cold current from the Davis Strait, and resumes its ocean course by going
along a great circle of the earth on a rhumb line; it then divides into two
arms near the 43rd parallel; one, helped by the northeast trade winds, returns
to the Bay of Biscay and the Azores; the other washes the shores of Ireland and
Norway with lukewarm water, goes beyond Spitzbergen, where its temperature
falls to 4 degrees centigrade, and fashions the open sea at the pole.
It was on this oceanic river that
the Nautilus was then navigating. Leaving Old Bahama Channel, which is fourteen
leagues wide by 350 meters deep, the Gulf Stream moves at the rate of eight
kilometers per hour. Its speed steadily decreases as it advances northward, and
we must pray that this steadiness continues, because, as experts agree, if its
speed and direction were to change, the climates of Europe would undergo
disturbances whose consequences are incalculable.
Near noon I was on the platform
with Conseil. I shared with him the relevant details on the Gulf Stream. When
my explanation was over, I invited him to dip his hands into its current.
Conseil did so, and he was quite
astonished to experience no sensation of either hot or cold.
"That comes," I told
him, "from the water temperature of the Gulf Stream, which, as it leaves
the Gulf of Mexico, is barely different from your blood temperature. This Gulf
Stream is a huge heat generator that enables the coasts of Europe to be decked
in eternal greenery. And if Commander Maury is correct, were one to harness the
full warmth of this current, it would supply enough heat to keep molten a river
of iron solder as big as the Amazon or the Missouri."
Just then the Gulf Stream's speed
was 2.25 meters per second. So distinct is its current from the surrounding
sea, its confined waters stand out against the ocean and operate on a different
level from the colder waters. Murky as well, and very rich in saline material,
their pure indigo contrasts with the green waves surrounding them. Moreover,
their line of demarcation is so clear that abreast of the Carolinas, the
Nautilus's spur cut the waves of the Gulf Stream while its propeller was still
churning those belonging to the ocean.
This current swept along with it
a whole host of moving creatures. Argonauts, so common in the Mediterranean,
voyaged here in schools of large numbers. Among cartilaginous fish, the most
remarkable were rays whose ultra slender tails made up nearly a third of the
body, which was shaped like a huge diamond twenty-five feet long; then little
one-meter sharks, the head large, the snout short and rounded, the teeth sharp
and arranged in several rows, the body seemingly covered with scales.
Among bony fish, I noted grizzled
wrasse unique to these seas, deep-water gilthead whose iris has a fiery gleam,
one-meter croakers whose large mouths bristle with small teeth and which let
out thin cries, black rudderfish like those I've already discussed, blue
dorados accented with gold and silver, rainbow-hued parrotfish that can rival
the loveliest tropical birds in coloring, banded blennies with triangular
heads, bluish flounder without scales, toadfish covered with a crosswise yellow
band in the shape of a Greek t, swarms of little freckled gobies stippled with
brown spots, lungfish with silver heads and yellow tails, various specimens of
salmon, mullet with slim figures and a softly glowing radiance that Lacépède
dedicated to the memory of his wife, and finally the American cavalla, a
handsome fish decorated by every honorary order, bedizened with their every
ribbon, frequenting the shores of this great nation where ribbons and orders
are held in such low esteem.
I might add that during the
night, the Gulf Stream's phosphorescent waters rivaled the electric glow of our
beacon, especially in the stormy weather that frequently threatened us.
On May 8, while abreast of North
Carolina, we were across from Cape Hatteras once more. There the Gulf Stream is
seventy-five miles wide and 210 meters deep. The Nautilus continued to wander
at random. Seemingly, all supervision had been jettisoned. Under these
conditions I admit that we could easily have gotten away. In fact, the populous
shores offered ready refuge everywhere. The sea was plowed continuously by the
many steamers providing service between the Gulf of Mexico and New York or
Boston, and it was crossed night and day by little schooners engaged in coastal
trade over various points on the American shore. We could hope to be picked up.
So it was a promising opportunity, despite the thirty miles that separated the
Nautilus from these Union coasts.
But one distressing circumstance
totally thwarted the Canadian's plans. The weather was thoroughly foul. We were
approaching waterways where storms are commonplace, the very homeland of
tornadoes and cyclones specifically engendered by the Gulf Stream's current. To
face a frequently raging sea in a frail skiff was a race to certain disaster.
Ned Land conceded this himself. So he champed at the bit, in the grip of an
intense homesickness that could be cured only by our escape.
"Sir," he told me that
day, "it's got to stop. I want to get to the bottom of this. Your Nemo's
veering away from shore and heading up north. But believe you me, I had my fill
at the South Pole and I'm not going with him to the North Pole."
"What can we do, Ned, since
it isn't feasible to escape right now?"
"I keep coming back to my
idea. We've got to talk to the captain. When we were in your own country's
seas, you didn't say a word. Now that we're in mine, I intend to speak up.
Before a few days are out, I figure the Nautilus will lie abreast of Nova
Scotia, and from there to Newfoundland is the mouth of a large gulf, and the
St. Lawrence empties into that gulf, and the St. Lawrence is my own river, the
river running by Quebec, my hometown-- and when I think about all this, my
gorge rises and my hair stands on end! Honestly, sir, I'd rather jump
overboard! I can't stay here any longer! I'm suffocating!"
The Canadian was obviously at the
end of his patience. His vigorous nature couldn't adapt to this protracted
imprisonment. His facial appearance was changing by the day. His moods grew
gloomier and gloomier. I had a sense of what he was suffering because I also
was gripped by homesickness. Nearly seven months had gone by without our having
any news from shore. Moreover, Captain Nemo's reclusiveness, his changed
disposition, and especially his total silence since the battle with the
devilfish all made me see things in a different light. I no longer felt the
enthusiasm of our first days on board. You needed to be Flemish like Conseil to
accept these circumstances, living in a habitat designed for cetaceans and
other denizens of the deep. Truly, if that gallant lad had owned gills instead
of lungs, I think he would have made an outstanding fish!
"Well, sir?" Ned Land
went on, seeing that I hadn't replied.
"Well, Ned, you want me to
ask Captain Nemo what he intends to do with us?"
"Yes, sir."
"Even though he has already
made that clear?"
"Yes. I want it settled once
and for all. Speak just for me, strictly on my behalf, if you want."
"But I rarely encounter him.
He positively avoids me."
"All the more reason you
should go look him up."
"I'll confer with him,
Ned."
"When?" the Canadian
asked insistently.
"When I encounter him."
"Professor Aronnax, would
you like me to go find him myself?"
"No, let me do it.
Tomorrow--"
"Today," Ned Land said.
"So be it. I'll see him
today," I answered the Canadian, who, if he took action himself, would
certainly have ruined everything.
I was left to myself. His request
granted, I decided to dispose of it immediately. I like things over and done
with.
I reentered my stateroom. From
there I could hear movements inside Captain Nemo's quarters. I couldn't pass up
this chance for an encounter. I knocked on his door. I received no reply. I
knocked again, then tried the knob. The door opened.
I entered. The captain was there.
He was bending over his worktable and hadn't heard me. Determined not to leave
without questioning him, I drew closer. He looked up sharply, with a frowning
brow, and said in a pretty stern tone:
"Oh, it's you! What do you
want?"
"To speak with you,
captain."
"But I'm busy, sir, I'm at
work. I give you the freedom to enjoy your privacy, can't I have the same for
myself?"
This reception was less than
encouraging. But I was determined to give as good as I got.
"Sir," I said coolly,
"I need to speak with you on a matter that simply can't wait."
"Whatever could that be,
sir?" he replied sarcastically. "Have you made some discovery that
has escaped me? Has the sea yielded up some novel secret to you?"
We were miles apart. But before I
could reply, he showed me a manuscript open on the table and told me in a more
serious tone:
"Here, Professor Aronnax, is
a manuscript written in several languages. It contains a summary of my research
under the sea, and God willing, it won't perish with me. Signed with my name,
complete with my life story, this manuscript will be enclosed in a small,
unsinkable contrivance. The last surviving man on the Nautilus will throw this
contrivance into the sea, and it will go wherever the waves carry it."
The man's name! His life story
written by himself! So the secret of his existence might someday be unveiled?
But just then I saw this announcement only as a lead-in to my topic.
"Captain," I replied,
"I'm all praise for this idea you're putting into effect. The fruits of
your research must not be lost. But the methods you're using strike me as
primitive. Who knows where the winds will take that contrivance, into whose
hands it may fall? Can't you find something better? Can't you or one of your
men--"
"Never, sir," the
captain said, swiftly interrupting me.
"But my companions and I
would be willing to safeguard this manuscript, and if you give us back our
freedom--"
"Your freedom!" Captain
Nemo put in, standing up.
"Yes, sir, and that's the
subject on which I wanted to confer with you. For seven months we've been
aboard your vessel, and I ask you today, in the name of my companions as well
as myself, if you intend to keep us here forever."
"Professor Aronnax,"
Captain Nemo said, "I'll answer you today just as I did seven months ago:
whoever boards the Nautilus must never leave it."
"What you're inflicting on
us is outright slavery!"
"Call it anything you
like."
"But every slave has the
right to recover his freedom! By any worthwhile, available means!"
"Who has denied you that
right?" Captain Nemo replied. "Did I ever try to bind you with your
word of honor?"
The captain stared at me,
crossing his arms.
"Sir," I told him,
"to take up this subject a second time would be distasteful to both of us.
So let's finish what we've started. I repeat: it isn't just for myself that I
raise this issue. To me, research is a relief, a potent diversion, an
enticement, a passion that can make me forget everything else. Like you, I'm a
man neglected and unknown, living in the faint hope that someday I can pass on
to future generations the fruits of my labors--figuratively speaking, by means
of some contrivance left to the luck of winds and waves. In short, I can admire
you and comfortably go with you while playing a role I only partly understand;
but I still catch glimpses of other aspects of your life that are surrounded by
involvements and secrets that, alone on board, my companions and I can't share.
And even when our hearts could beat with yours, moved by some of your griefs or
stirred by your deeds of courage and genius, we've had to stifle even the
slightest token of that sympathy that arises at the sight of something fine and
good, whether it comes from friend or enemy. All right then! It's this feeling
of being alien to your deepest concerns that makes our situation unacceptable,
impossible, even impossible for me but especially for Ned Land. Every man, by
virtue of his very humanity, deserves fair treatment. Have you considered how a
love of freedom and hatred of slavery could lead to plans of vengeance in a
temperament like the Canadian's, what he might think, attempt, endeavor . . . ?"
I fell silent. Captain Nemo stood
up.
"Ned Land can think,
attempt, or endeavor anything he wants, what difference is it to me? I didn't
go looking for him! I don't keep him on board for my pleasure! As for you,
Professor Aronnax, you're a man able to understand anything, even silence. I
have nothing more to say to you. Let this first time you've come to discuss
this subject also be the last, because a second time I won't even listen."
I withdrew. From that day forward
our position was very strained. I reported this conversation to my two
companions.
"Now we know," Ned
said, "that we can't expect a thing from this man. The Nautilus is nearing
Long Island. We'll escape, no matter what the weather."
But the skies became more and
more threatening. There were conspicuous signs of a hurricane on the way. The
atmosphere was turning white and milky. Slender sheaves of cirrus clouds were
followed on the horizon by layers of nimbocumulus. Other low clouds fled
swiftly. The sea grew towering, inflated by long swells. Every bird had
disappeared except a few petrels, friends of the storms. The barometer fell
significantly, indicating a tremendous tension in the surrounding haze. The
mixture in our stormglass decomposed under the influence of the electricity
charging the air. A struggle of the elements was approaching.
The storm burst during the
daytime of May 13, just as the Nautilus was cruising abreast of Long Island, a
few miles from the narrows to Upper New York Bay. I'm able to describe this
struggle of the elements because Captain Nemo didn't flee into the ocean
depths; instead, from some inexplicable whim, he decided to brave it out on the
surface.
The wind was blowing from the
southwest, initially a stiff breeze, in other words, with a speed of fifteen
meters per second, which built to twenty-five meters near three o'clock in the
afternoon. This is the figure for major storms.
Unshaken by these squalls,
Captain Nemo stationed himself on the platform. He was lashed around the waist
to withstand the monstrous breakers foaming over the deck. I hoisted and
attached myself to the same place, dividing my wonderment between the storm and
this incomparable man who faced it head-on.
The raging sea was swept with
huge tattered clouds drenched by the waves. I saw no more of the small
intervening billows that form in the troughs of the big crests. Just long,
soot-colored undulations with crests so compact they didn't foam. They kept
growing taller. They were spurring each other on. The Nautilus, sometimes lying
on its side, sometimes standing on end like a mast, rolled and pitched
frightfully.
Near five o'clock a torrential
rain fell, but it lulled neither wind nor sea. The hurricane was unleashed at a
speed of forty-five meters per second, hence almost forty leagues per hour.
Under these conditions houses topple, roof tiles puncture doors, iron railings
snap in two, and twenty-four-pounder cannons relocate. And yet in the midst of
this turmoil, the Nautilus lived up to that saying of an expert engineer:
"A well-constructed hull can defy any sea!" This submersible was no
resisting rock that waves could demolish; it was a steel spindle, obediently in
motion, without rigging or masting, and able to brave their fury with impunity.
Meanwhile I was carefully
examining these unleashed breakers. They measured up to fifteen meters in
height over a length of 150 to 175 meters, and the speed of their propagation
(half that of the wind) was fifteen meters per second. Their volume and power
increased with the depth of the waters. I then understood the role played by
these waves, which trap air in their flanks and release it in the depths of the
sea where its oxygen brings life. Their utmost pressure--it has been
calculated-- can build to 3,000 kilograms on every square foot of surface they
strike. It was such waves in the Hebrides that repositioned a stone block
weighing 84,000 pounds. It was their relatives in the tidal wave on December
23, 1854, that toppled part of the Japanese city of Tokyo, then went that same
day at 700 kilometers per hour to break on the beaches of America.
After nightfall the storm grew in
intensity. As in the 1860 cyclone on Réunion Island, the barometer fell to 710
millimeters. At the close of day, I saw a big ship passing on the horizon,
struggling painfully. It lay to at half steam in an effort to hold steady on
the waves. It must have been a steamer on one of those lines out of New York to
Liverpool or Le Havre. It soon vanished into the shadows.
At ten o'clock in the evening,
the skies caught on fire. The air was streaked with violent flashes of
lightning. I couldn't stand this brightness, but Captain Nemo stared straight
at it, as if to inhale the spirit of the storm. A dreadful noise filled the
air, a complicated noise made up of the roar of crashing breakers, the howl of
the wind, claps of thunder. The wind shifted to every point of the horizon, and
the cyclone left the east to return there after passing through north, west,
and south, moving in the opposite direction of revolving storms in the southern
hemisphere.
Oh, that Gulf Stream! It truly
lives up to its nickname, the Lord of Storms! All by itself it creates these
fearsome cyclones through the difference in temperature between its currents
and the superimposed layers of air.
The rain was followed by a
downpour of fire. Droplets of water changed into exploding tufts. You would
have thought Captain Nemo was courting a death worthy of himself, seeking to be
struck by lightning. In one hideous pitching movement, the Nautilus reared its
steel spur into the air like a lightning rod, and I saw long sparks shoot down
it.
Shattered, at the end of my
strength, I slid flat on my belly to the hatch. I opened it and went below to
the lounge. By then the storm had reached its maximum intensity. It was
impossible to stand upright inside the Nautilus.
Captain Nemo reentered near
midnight. I could hear the ballast tanks filling little by little, and the
Nautilus sank gently beneath the surface of the waves.
Through the lounge's open
windows, I saw large, frightened fish passing like phantoms in the fiery
waters. Some were struck by lightning right before my eyes!
The Nautilus kept descending. I
thought it would find calm again at fifteen meters down. No. The upper strata
were too violently agitated. It needed to sink to fifty meters, searching for a
resting place in the bowels of the sea.
But once there, what tranquility
we found, what silence, what peace all around us! Who would have known that a
dreadful hurricane was then unleashed on the surface of this ocean?
IN THE AFTERMATH of this storm,
we were thrown back to the east. Away went any hope of
escaping to the landing places of
New York or the St. Lawrence. In despair, poor Ned went into seclusion like
Captain Nemo. Conseil and I no longer left each other.
As I said, the Nautilus veered to
the east. To be more accurate, I should have said to the northeast. Sometimes
on the surface of the waves, sometimes beneath them, the ship wandered for days
amid these mists so feared by navigators. These are caused chiefly by melting
ice, which keeps the air extremely damp. How many ships have perished in these
waterways as they tried to get directions from the hazy lights on the coast!
How many casualties have been caused by these opaque mists! How many collisions
have occurred with these reefs, where the breaking surf is covered by the noise
of the wind! How many vessels have rammed each other, despite their running
lights, despite the warnings given by their bosun's pipes and alarm bells!
So the floor of this sea had the
appearance of a battlefield where every ship defeated by the ocean still lay,
some already old and encrusted, others newer and reflecting our beacon light on
their ironwork and copper undersides. Among these vessels, how many went down
with all hands, with their crews and hosts of immigrants, at these trouble
spots so prominent in the statistics: Cape Race, St. Paul Island, the Strait of
Belle Isle, the St. Lawrence estuary! And in only a few years, how many victims
have been furnished to the obituary notices by the Royal Mail, Inman, and
Montreal lines; by vessels named the Solway, the Isis, the Paramatta, the
Hungarian, the Canadian, the Anglo-Saxon, the Humboldt, and the United States,
all run aground; by the Arctic and the Lyonnais, sunk in collisions; by the
President, the Pacific, and the City of Glasgow, lost for reasons unknown; in
the midst of their gloomy rubble, the Nautilus navigated as if passing the dead
in review!
By May 15 we were off the
southern tip of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. These banks are the result of
marine sedimentation, an extensive accumulation of organic waste brought either
from the equator by the Gulf Stream's current, or from the North Pole by the
countercurrent of cold water that skirts the American coast. Here, too,
erratically drifting chunks collect from the ice breakup. Here a huge boneyard
forms from fish, mollusks, and zoophytes dying over it by the billions.
The sea is of no great depth at
the Grand Banks. A few hundred fathoms at best. But to the south there is a
deep, suddenly occurring depression, a 3,000-meter pit. Here the Gulf Stream
widens. Its waters come to full bloom. It loses its speed and temperature, but
it turns into a sea.
Among the fish that the Nautilus
startled on its way, I'll mention a one-meter lumpfish, blackish on top with
orange on the belly and rare among its brethren in that it practices monogamy,
a good-sized eelpout, a type of emerald moray whose flavor is excellent,
wolffish with big eyes in a head somewhat resembling a canine's, viviparous
blennies whose eggs hatch inside their bodies like those of snakes, bloated
gobio (or black gudgeon) measuring two decimeters, grenadiers with long tails
and gleaming with a silvery glow, speedy fish venturing far from their High
Arctic seas.
Our nets also hauled in a bold,
daring, vigorous, and muscular fish armed with prickles on its head and stings
on its fins, a real scorpion measuring two to three meters, the ruthless enemy
of cod, blennies, and salmon; it was the bullhead of the northerly seas, a fish
with red fins and a brown body covered with nodules. The Nautilus's fishermen
had some trouble getting a grip on this animal, which, thanks to the formation
of its gill covers, can protect its respiratory organs from any parching
contact with the air and can live out of water for a good while.
And I'll mention--for the
record--some little banded blennies that follow ships into the northernmost
seas, sharp-snouted carp exclusive to the north Atlantic, scorpionfish, and
lastly the gadoid family, chiefly the cod species, which I detected in their
waters of choice over these inexhaustible Grand Banks.
Because Newfoundland is simply an
underwater peak, you could call these cod mountain fish. While the Nautilus was
clearing a path through their tight ranks, Conseil couldn't refrain from making
this comment:
"Mercy, look at these
cod!" he said. "Why, I thought cod were flat, like dab or sole!"
"Innocent boy!" I exclaimed.
"Cod are flat only at the grocery store, where they're cut open and spread
out on display. But in the water they're like mullet, spindle-shaped and
perfectly built for speed."
"I can easily believe
master," Conseil replied. "But what crowds of them! What
swarms!"
"Bah! My friend, there'd be
many more without their enemies, scorpionfish and human beings! Do you know how
many eggs have been counted in a single female?"
"I'll go all out,"
Conseil replied. "500,000."
"11,000,000, my
friend."
"11,000,000! I refuse to
accept that until I count them myself."
"So count them, Conseil. But
it would be less work to believe me. Besides, Frenchmen, Englishmen, Americans,
Danes, and Norwegians catch these cod by the thousands. They're eaten in
prodigious quantities, and without the astonishing fertility of these fish, the
seas would soon be depopulated of them. Accordingly, in England and America
alone, 5,000 ships manned by 75,000 seamen go after cod. Each ship brings back
an average catch of 4,400 fish, making 22,000,000. Off the coast of Norway, the
total is the same."
"Fine," Conseil
replied, "I'll take master's word for it. I won't count them."
"Count what?"
"Those 11,000,000 eggs. But
I'll make one comment."
"What's that?"
"If all their eggs hatched,
just four codfish could feed England, America, and Norway."
As we skimmed the depths of the
Grand Banks, I could see perfectly those long fishing lines, each armed with
200 hooks, that every boat dangled by the dozens. The lower end of each line
dragged the bottom by means of a small grappling iron, and at the surface it
was secured to the buoy-rope of a cork float. The Nautilus had to maneuver
shrewdly in the midst of this underwater spiderweb.
But the ship didn't stay long in these
heavily traveled waterways. It went up to about latitude 42 degrees. This
brought it abreast of St. John's in Newfoundland and Heart's Content, where the
Atlantic Cable reaches its end point.
Instead of continuing north, the
Nautilus took an easterly heading, as if to go along this plateau on which the
telegraph cable rests, where multiple soundings have given the contours of the
terrain with the utmost accuracy.
It was on May 17, about 500 miles
from Heart's Content and 2,800 meters down, that I spotted this cable lying on
the seafloor. Conseil, whom I hadn't alerted, mistook it at first for a
gigantic sea snake and was gearing up to classify it in his best manner. But I
enlightened the fine lad and let him down gently by giving him various details on
the laying of this cable.
The first cable was put down
during the years 1857-1858; but after transmitting about 400 telegrams, it went
dead. In 1863 engineers built a new cable that measured 3,400 kilometers,
weighed 4,500 metric tons, and was shipped aboard the Great Eastern. This
attempt also failed.
Now then, on May 25 while
submerged to a depth of 3,836 meters, the Nautilus lay in precisely the
locality where this second cable suffered the rupture that ruined the
undertaking. It happened 638 miles from the coast of Ireland. At around two
o'clock in the afternoon, all contact with Europe broke off. The electricians
on board decided to cut the cable before fishing it up, and by eleven o'clock
that evening they had retrieved the damaged part. They repaired the joint and
its splice; then the cable was resubmerged. But a few days later it snapped
again and couldn't be recovered from the ocean depths.
These Americans refused to give
up. The daring Cyrus Field, who had risked his whole fortune to promote this
undertaking, called for a new bond issue. It sold out immediately. Another
cable was put down under better conditions. Its sheaves of conducting wire were
insulated within a gutta-percha covering, which was protected by a padding of
textile material enclosed in a metal sheath. The Great Eastern put back to sea
on July 13, 1866.
The operation proceeded apace.
Yet there was one hitch. As they gradually unrolled this third cable, the
electricians observed on several occasions that someone had recently driven
nails into it, trying to damage its core. Captain Anderson, his officers, and
the engineers put their heads together, then posted a warning that if the
culprit were detected, he would be thrown overboard without a trial. After
that, these villainous attempts were not repeated.
By July 23 the Great Eastern was
lying no farther than 800 kilometers from Newfoundland when it received
telegraphed news from Ireland of an armistice signed between Prussia and
Austria after the Battle of Sadova. Through the mists on the 27th, it sighted
the port of Heart's Content. The undertaking had ended happily, and in its
first dispatch, young America addressed old Europe with these wise words so
rarely understood: "Glory to God in the highest, and peace on earth to men
of good will."
I didn't expect to find this
electric cable in mint condition, as it looked on leaving its place of
manufacture. The long snake was covered with seashell rubble and bristling with
foraminifera; a crust of caked gravel protected it from any mollusks that might
bore into it. It rested serenely, sheltered from the sea's motions, under a
pressure favorable to the transmission of that electric spark that goes from
America to Europe in 32/100 of a second. This cable will no doubt last
indefinitely because, as observers note, its gutta-percha casing is improved by
a stay in salt water.
Besides, on this well-chosen
plateau, the cable never lies at depths that could cause a break. The Nautilus
followed it to its lowest reaches, located 4,431 meters down, and even there it
rested without any stress or strain. Then we returned to the locality where the
1863 accident had taken place.
There the ocean floor formed a
valley 120 kilometers wide, into which you could fit Mt. Blanc without its
summit poking above the surface of the waves. This valley is closed off to the
east by a sheer wall 2,000 meters high. We arrived there on May 28, and the
Nautilus lay no farther than 150 kilometers from Ireland.
Would Captain Nemo head up north
and beach us on the British Isles? No. Much to my surprise, he went back down
south and returned to European seas. As we swung around the Emerald Isle, I
spotted Cape Clear for an instant, plus the lighthouse on Fastnet Rock that
guides all those thousands of ships setting out from Glasgow or Liverpool.
An important question then popped
into my head. Would the Nautilus dare to tackle the English Channel? Ned Land
(who promptly reappeared after we hugged shore) never stopped questioning me.
What could I answer him? Captain Nemo remained invisible. After giving the
Canadian a glimpse of American shores, was he about to show me the coast of
France?
But the Nautilus kept gravitating
southward. On May 30, in sight of Land's End, it passed between the lowermost
tip of England and the Scilly Islands, which it left behind to starboard.
If it was going to enter the
English Channel, it clearly needed to head east. It did not.
All day long on May 31, the
Nautilus swept around the sea in a series of circles that had me deeply
puzzled. It seemed to be searching for a locality that it had some trouble
finding. At noon Captain Nemo himself came to take our bearings. He didn't
address a word to me. He looked gloomier than ever. What was filling him with
such sadness? Was it our proximity to these European shores? Was he reliving
his memories of that country he had left behind? If so, what did he feel?
Remorse or regret? For a good while these thoughts occupied my mind, and I had
a hunch that fate would soon give away the captain's secrets.
The next day, June 1, the
Nautilus kept to the same tack. It was obviously trying to locate some precise
spot in the ocean. Just as on the day before, Captain Nemo came to take the
altitude of the sun. The sea was smooth, the skies clear. Eight miles to the
east, a big steamship was visible on the horizon line. No flag was flapping
from the gaff of its fore-and-aft sail, and I couldn't tell its nationality.
A few minutes before the sun
passed its zenith, Captain Nemo raised his sextant and took his sights with the
utmost precision. The absolute calm of the waves facilitated this operation.
The Nautilus lay motionless, neither rolling nor pitching.
I was on the platform just then.
After determining our position, the captain pronounced only these words:
"It's right here!"
He went down the hatch. Had he
seen that vessel change course and seemingly head toward us? I'm unable to say.
I returned to the lounge. The
hatch closed, and I heard water hissing in the ballast tanks. The Nautilus
began to sink on a vertical line, because its propeller was in check and no
longer furnished any forward motion.
Some minutes later it stopped at
a depth of 833 meters and came to rest on the seafloor.
The ceiling lights in the lounge
then went out, the panels opened, and through the windows I saw, for a
half-mile radius, the sea brightly lit by the beacon's rays.
I looked to port and saw nothing
but the immenseness of these tranquil waters.
To starboard, a prominent bulge on
the sea bottom caught my attention. You would have thought it was some ruin
enshrouded in a crust of whitened seashells, as if under a mantle of snow.
Carefully examining this mass, I could identify the swollen outlines of a ship
shorn of its masts, which must have sunk bow first. This casualty certainly
dated from some far-off time. To be so caked with the limestone of these
waters, this wreckage must have spent many a year on the ocean floor.
What ship was this? Why had the
Nautilus come to visit its grave? Was it something other than a maritime
accident that had dragged this craft under the waters?
I wasn't sure what to think, but
next to me I heard Captain Nemo's voice slowly say:
"Originally this ship was
christened the Marseillais. It carried seventy-four cannons and was launched in
1762. On August 13, 1778, commanded by La Poype-Vertrieux, it fought valiantly
against the Preston. On July 4, 1779, as a member of the squadron under Admiral
d'Estaing, it assisted in the capture of the island of Grenada. On September 5,
1781, under the Count de Grasse, it took part in the Battle of Chesapeake Bay.
In 1794 the new Republic of France changed the name of this ship. On April 16
of that same year, it joined the squadron at Brest under Rear Admiral Villaret
de Joyeuse, who was entrusted with escorting a convoy of wheat coming from
America under the command of Admiral Van Stabel. In this second year of the
French Revolutionary Calendar, on the 11th and 12th days in the Month of
Pasture, this squadron fought an encounter with English vessels. Sir, today is
June 1, 1868, or the 13th day in the Month of Pasture. Seventy-four years ago
to the day, at this very spot in latitude 47 degrees 24' and longitude 17
degrees 28', this ship sank after a heroic battle; its three masts gone, water
in its hold, a third of its crew out of action, it preferred to go to the
bottom with its 356 seamen rather than surrender; and with its flag nailed up
on the afterdeck, it disappeared beneath the waves to shouts of 'Long live the Republic!'"
"This is the Avenger!"
I exclaimed.
"Yes, sir! The Avenger! A
splendid name!" Captain Nemo murmured, crossing his arms.
THE WAY HE SAID THIS, the
unexpectedness of this scene, first the biography of this patriotic ship, then
the excitement with which this eccentric individual pronounced these last
words--the name Avenger whose significance could not escape me--all this, taken
together, had a profound impact on my mind. My eyes never left the captain.
Hands outstretched toward the sea, he contemplated the proud wreck with blazing
eyes. Perhaps I would never learn who he was, where he came from or where he
was heading, but more and more I could see a distinction between the man and
the scientist. It was no ordinary misanthropy that kept Captain Nemo and his
companions sequestered inside the Nautilus's plating, but a hate so monstrous
or so sublime that the passing years could never weaken it.
Did this hate also hunger for
vengeance? Time would soon tell.
Meanwhile the Nautilus rose
slowly to the surface of the sea, and I watched the Avenger's murky shape
disappearing little by little. Soon a gentle rolling told me that we were
afloat in the open air.
Just then a hollow explosion was
audible. I looked at the captain. The captain did not stir.
"Captain?" I said.
He didn't reply.
I left him and climbed onto the
platform. Conseil and the Canadian were already there.
"What caused that
explosion?" I asked.
"A cannon going off,"
Ned Land replied.
I stared in the direction of the
ship I had spotted. It was heading toward the Nautilus, and you could tell it
had put on steam. Six miles separated it from us.
"What sort of craft is it,
Ned?"
"From its rigging and its
low masts," the Canadian replied, "I bet it's a warship. Here's
hoping it pulls up and sinks this damned Nautilus!"
"Ned my friend,"
Conseil replied, "what harm could it do the Nautilus? Will it attack us
under the waves? Will it cannonade us at the bottom of the sea?"
"Tell me, Ned," I
asked, "can you make out the nationality of that craft?"
Creasing his brow, lowering his
lids, and puckering the corners of his eyes, the Canadian focused the full
power of his gaze on the ship for a short while.
"No, sir," he replied.
"I can't make out what nation it's from. It's flying no flag. But I'll
swear it's a warship, because there's a long pennant streaming from the peak of
its mainmast."
For a quarter of an hour, we
continued to watch the craft bearing down on us. But it was inconceivable to me
that it had discovered the Nautilus at such a distance, still less that it knew
what this underwater machine really was.
Soon the Canadian announced that
the craft was a big battleship, a double-decker ironclad complete with ram.
Dark, dense smoke burst from its two funnels. Its furled sails merged with the
lines of its yardarms. The gaff of its fore-and-aft sail flew no flag. Its
distance still kept us from distinguishing the colors of its pennant, which was
fluttering like a thin ribbon.
It was coming on fast. If Captain
Nemo let it approach, a chance for salvation might be available to us.
"Sir," Ned Land told
me, "if that boat gets within a mile of us, I'm jumping overboard, and I
suggest you follow suit."
I didn't reply to the Canadian's
proposition but kept watching the ship, which was looming larger on the
horizon. Whether it was English, French, American, or Russian, it would surely
welcome us aboard if we could just get to it.
"Master may recall,"
Conseil then said, "that we have some experience with swimming. He can
rely on me to tow him to that vessel, if he's agreeable to going with our
friend Ned."
Before I could reply, white smoke
streamed from the battleship's bow. Then, a few seconds later, the waters
splashed astern of the Nautilus, disturbed by the fall of a heavy object. Soon
after, an explosion struck my ears.
"What's this? They're firing
at us!" I exclaimed.
"Good lads!" the
Canadian muttered.
"That means they don't see
us as castaways clinging to some wreckage!"
"With all due respect to
master--gracious!" Conseil put in, shaking off the water that had sprayed
over him from another shell. "With all due respect to master, they've
discovered the narwhale and they're cannonading the same."
"But it must be clear to
them," I exclaimed, "that they're dealing with human beings."
"Maybe that's why!" Ned
Land replied, staring hard at me.
The full truth dawned on me.
Undoubtedly people now knew where they stood on the existence of this so-called
monster. Undoubtedly the latter's encounter with the Abraham Lincoln, when the
Canadian hit it with his harpoon, had led Commander Farragut to recognize the
narwhale as actually an underwater boat, more dangerous than any unearthly
cetacean!
Yes, this had to be the case, and
undoubtedly they were now chasing this dreadful engine of destruction on every
sea!
Dreadful indeed, if, as we could
assume, Captain Nemo had been using the Nautilus in works of vengeance! That
night in the middle of the Indian Ocean, when he imprisoned us in the cell,
hadn't he attacked some ship? That man now buried in the coral cemetery, wasn't
he the victim of some collision caused by the Nautilus? Yes, I repeat: this had
to be the case. One part of Captain Nemo's secret life had been unveiled. And
now, even though his identity was still unknown, at least the nations allied
against him knew they were no longer hunting some fairy-tale monster, but a man
who had sworn an implacable hate toward them!
This whole fearsome sequence of
events appeared in my mind's eye. Instead of encountering friends on this
approaching ship, we would find only pitiless enemies.
Meanwhile shells fell around us
in increasing numbers. Some, meeting the liquid surface, would ricochet and
vanish into the sea at considerable distances. But none of them reached the
Nautilus.
By then the ironclad was no more
than three miles off. Despite its violent cannonade, Captain Nemo hadn't
appeared on the platform. And yet if one of those conical shells had scored a
routine hit on the Nautilus's hull, it could have been fatal to him.
The Canadian then told me:
"Sir, we've got to do
everything we can to get out of this jam! Let's signal them! Damnation! Maybe
they'll realize we're decent people!"
Ned Land pulled out his
handkerchief to wave it in the air. But he had barely unfolded it when he was
felled by an iron fist, and despite his great strength, he tumbled to the deck.
"Scum!" the captain
shouted. "Do you want to be nailed to the Nautilus's spur before it
charges that ship?"
Dreadful to hear, Captain Nemo
was even more dreadful to see. His face was pale from some spasm of his heart,
which must have stopped beating for an instant. His pupils were hideously
contracted. His voice was no longer speaking, it was bellowing. Bending from
the waist, he shook the Canadian by the shoulders.
Then, dropping Ned and turning to
the battleship, whose shells were showering around him:
"O ship of an accursed
nation, you know who I am!" he shouted in his powerful voice. "And I
don't need your colors to recognize you! Look! I'll show you mine!"
And in the bow of the platform,
Captain Nemo unfurled a black flag, like the one he had left planted at the
South Pole.
Just then a shell hit the
Nautilus's hull obliquely, failed to breach it, ricocheted near the captain,
and vanished into the sea.
Captain Nemo shrugged his
shoulders. Then, addressing me:
"Go below!" he told me
in a curt tone. "You and your companions, go below!"
"Sir," I exclaimed,
"are you going to attack this ship?"
"Sir, I'm going to sink
it."
"You wouldn't!"
"I will," Captain Nemo
replied icily. "You're ill-advised to pass judgment on me, sir. Fate has
shown you what you weren't meant to see. The attack has come. Our reply will be
dreadful. Get back inside!"
"From what country is that
ship?"
"You don't know? Fine, so much
the better! At least its nationality will remain a secret to you. Go
below!"
The Canadian, Conseil, and I
could only obey. Some fifteen of the Nautilus's seamen surrounded their captain
and stared with a feeling of implacable hate at the ship bearing down on them.
You could feel the same spirit of vengeance enkindling their every soul.
I went below just as another
projectile scraped the Nautilus's hull, and I heard the captain exclaim:
"Shoot, you demented vessel!
Shower your futile shells! You won't escape the Nautilus's spur! But this isn't
the place where you'll perish! I don't want your wreckage mingling with that of
the Avenger!"
I repaired to my stateroom. The
captain and his chief officer stayed on the platform. The propeller was set in
motion. The Nautilus swiftly retreated, putting us outside the range of the
vessel's shells. But the chase continued, and Captain Nemo was content to keep
his distance.
Near four o'clock in the
afternoon, unable to control the impatience and uneasiness devouring me, I went
back to the central companionway. The hatch was open. I ventured onto the
platform. The captain was still strolling there, his steps agitated. He stared
at the ship, which stayed to his leeward five or six miles off. He was circling
it like a wild beast, drawing it eastward, letting it chase after him. Yet he
didn't attack. Was he, perhaps, still undecided?
I tried to intervene one last
time. But I had barely queried Captain Nemo when the latter silenced me:
"I'm the law, I'm the
tribunal! I'm the oppressed, and there are my oppressors! Thanks to them, I've
witnessed the destruction of everything I loved, cherished, and
venerated--homeland, wife, children, father, and mother! There lies everything
I hate! Not another word out of you!"
I took a last look at the
battleship, which was putting on steam. Then I rejoined Ned and Conseil.
"We'll escape!" I
exclaimed.
"Good," Ned put in.
"Where's that ship from?"
"I've no idea. But wherever
it's from, it will sink before nightfall. In any event, it's better to perish
with it than be accomplices in some act of revenge whose merits we can't
gauge."
"That's my feeling,"
Ned Land replied coolly. "Let's wait for nightfall."
Night fell. A profound silence
reigned on board. The compass indicated that the Nautilus hadn't changed
direction. I could hear the beat of its propeller, churning the waves with
steady speed. Staying on the surface of the water, it rolled gently, sometimes
to one side, sometimes to the other.
My companions and I had decided
to escape as soon as the vessel came close enough for us to be heard--or seen,
because the moon would wax full in three days and was shining brightly. Once we
were aboard that ship, if we couldn't ward off the blow that threatened it, at
least we could do everything that circumstances permitted. Several times I
thought the Nautilus was about to attack. But it was content to let its
adversary approach, and then it would quickly resume its retreating ways.
Part of the night passed without
incident. We kept watch for an opportunity to take action. We talked little,
being too keyed up. Ned Land was all for jumping overboard. I forced him to
wait. As I saw it, the Nautilus would attack the double-decker on the surface
of the waves, and then it would be not only possible but easy to escape.
At three o'clock in the morning,
full of uneasiness, I climbed onto the platform. Captain Nemo hadn't left it.
He stood in the bow next to his flag, which a mild breeze was unfurling above
his head. His eyes never left that vessel. The extraordinary intensity of his
gaze seemed to attract it, beguile it, and draw it more surely than if he had
it in tow!
The moon then passed its zenith.
Jupiter was rising in the east. In the midst of this placid natural setting,
sky and ocean competed with each other in tranquility, and the sea offered the
orb of night the loveliest mirror ever to reflect its image.
And when I compared this deep
calm of the elements with all the fury seething inside the plating of this
barely perceptible Nautilus, I shivered all over.
The vessel was two miles off. It
drew nearer, always moving toward the phosphorescent glow that signaled the
Nautilus's presence. I saw its green and red running lights, plus the white
lantern hanging from the large stay of its foremast. Hazy flickerings were
reflected on its rigging and indicated that its furnaces were pushed to the
limit. Showers of sparks and cinders of flaming coal escaped from its funnels,
spangling the air with stars.
I stood there until six o'clock
in the morning, Captain Nemo never seeming to notice me. The vessel lay a mile
and a half off, and with the first glimmers of daylight, it resumed its
cannonade. The time couldn't be far away when the Nautilus would attack its
adversary, and my companions and I would leave forever this man I dared not
judge.
I was about to go below to alert
them, when the chief officer climbed onto the platform. Several seamen were
with him. Captain Nemo didn't see them, or didn't want to see them. They
carried out certain procedures that, on the Nautilus, you could call
"clearing the decks for action." They were quite simple. The manropes
that formed a handrail around the platform were lowered. Likewise the
pilothouse and the beacon housing were withdrawn into the hull until they lay
exactly flush with it. The surface of this long sheet-iron cigar no longer
offered a single protrusion that could hamper its maneuvers.
I returned to the lounge. The
Nautilus still emerged above the surface. A few morning gleams infiltrated the
liquid strata. Beneath the undulations of the billows, the windows were
enlivened by the blushing of the rising sun. That dreadful day of June 2 had
dawned.
At seven o'clock the log told me
that the Nautilus had reduced speed. I realized that it was letting the warship
approach. Moreover, the explosions grew more intensely audible. Shells furrowed
the water around us, drilling through it with an odd hissing sound.
"My friends," I said,
"it's time. Let's shake hands, and may God be with us!"
Ned Land was determined, Conseil
calm, I myself nervous and barely in control.
We went into the library. Just as
I pushed open the door leading to the well of the central companionway, I heard
the hatch close sharply overhead.
The Canadian leaped up the steps,
but I stopped him. A well-known hissing told me that water was entering the
ship's ballast tanks. Indeed, in a few moments the Nautilus had submerged some
meters below the surface of the waves.
I understood this maneuver. It was
too late to take action. The Nautilus wasn't going to strike the double-decker
where it was clad in impenetrable iron armor, but below its waterline, where
the metal carapace no longer protected its planking.
We were prisoners once more,
unwilling spectators at the performance of this gruesome drama. But we barely
had time to think. Taking refuge in my stateroom, we stared at each other
without pronouncing a word. My mind was in a total daze. My mental processes
came to a dead stop. I hovered in that painful state that predominates during
the period of anticipation before some frightful explosion. I waited, I
listened, I lived only through my sense of hearing!
Meanwhile the Nautilus's speed
had increased appreciably. So it was gathering momentum. Its entire hull was
vibrating.
Suddenly I let out a yell. There
had been a collision, but it was comparatively mild. I could feel the
penetrating force of the steel spur. I could hear scratchings and scrapings.
Carried away with its driving power, the Nautilus had passed through the
vessel's mass like a sailmaker's needle through canvas!
I couldn't hold still. Frantic,
going insane, I leaped out of my stateroom and rushed into the lounge.
Captain Nemo was there. Mute,
gloomy, implacable, he was staring through the port panel.
An enormous mass was sinking
beneath the waters, and the Nautilus, missing none of its death throes, was
descending into the depths with it. Ten meters away, I could see its gaping
hull, into which water was rushing with a sound of thunder, then its double
rows of cannons and railings. Its deck was covered with dark, quivering
shadows.
The water was rising. Those poor
men leaped up into the shrouds, clung to the masts, writhed beneath the waters.
It was a human anthill that an invading sea had caught by surprise!
Paralyzed, rigid with anguish, my
hair standing on end, my eyes popping out of my head, short of breath,
suffocating, speechless, I stared-- I too! I was glued to the window by an
irresistible allure!
The enormous vessel settled
slowly. Following it down, the Nautilus kept watch on its every movement.
Suddenly there was an eruption. The air compressed inside the craft sent its
decks flying, as if the powder stores had been ignited. The thrust of the
waters was so great, the Nautilus swerved away.
The poor ship then sank more
swiftly. Its mastheads appeared, laden with victims, then its crosstrees
bending under clusters of men, finally the peak of its mainmast. Then the dark
mass disappeared, and with it a crew of corpses dragged under by fearsome
eddies. . . .
I turned to Captain Nemo. This
dreadful executioner, this true archangel of hate, was still staring. When it
was all over, Captain Nemo headed to the door of his stateroom, opened it, and
entered. I followed him with my eyes.
On the rear paneling, beneath the
portraits of his heroes, I saw the portrait of a still-youthful woman with two
little children. Captain Nemo stared at them for a few moments, stretched out
his arms to them, sank to his knees, and melted into sobs.
THE PANELS CLOSED over this
frightful view, but the lights didn't go on in the lounge. Inside the Nautilus
all was gloom and silence. It left this place of devastation with prodigious
speed, 100 feet beneath the waters. Where was it going? North or south? Where
would the man flee after this horrible act of revenge?
I reentered my stateroom, where
Ned and Conseil were waiting silently. Captain Nemo filled me with
insurmountable horror. Whatever he had once suffered at the hands of humanity,
he had no right to mete out such punishment. He had made me, if not an
accomplice, at least an eyewitness to his vengeance! Even this was intolerable.
At eleven o'clock the electric
lights came back on. I went into the lounge. It was deserted. I consulted the
various instruments. The Nautilus was fleeing northward at a speed of
twenty-five miles per hour, sometimes on the surface of the sea, sometimes
thirty feet beneath it.
After our position had been
marked on the chart, I saw that we were passing into the mouth of the English
Channel, that our heading would take us to the northernmost seas with
incomparable speed.
I could barely glimpse the swift
passing of longnose sharks, hammerhead sharks, spotted dogfish that frequent
these waters, big eagle rays, swarms of seahorse looking like knights on a
chessboard, eels quivering like fireworks serpents, armies of crab that fled
obliquely by crossing their pincers over their carapaces, finally schools of
porpoise that held contests of speed with the Nautilus. But by this point
observing, studying, and classifying were out of the question.
By evening we had cleared 200
leagues up the Atlantic. Shadows gathered and gloom overran the sea until the
moon came up.
I repaired to my stateroom. I
couldn't sleep. I was assaulted by nightmares. That horrible scene of
destruction kept repeating in my mind's eye.
From that day forward, who knows
where the Nautilus took us in the north Atlantic basin? Always at incalculable
speed! Always amid the High Arctic mists! Did it call at the capes of
Spitzbergen or the shores of Novaya Zemlya? Did it visit such uncharted seas as
the White Sea, the Kara Sea, the Gulf of Ob, the Lyakhov Islands, or those
unknown beaches on the Siberian coast? I'm unable to say. I lost track of the
passing hours. Time was in abeyance on the ship's clocks. As happens in the
polar regions, it seemed that night and day no longer followed their normal
sequence. I felt myself being drawn into that strange domain where the overwrought
imagination of Edgar Allan Poe was at home. Like his fabled Arthur Gordon Pym,
I expected any moment to see that "shrouded human figure, very far larger
in its proportions than any dweller among men," thrown across the cataract
that protects the outskirts of the pole!
I estimate--but perhaps I'm
mistaken--that the Nautilus's haphazard course continued for fifteen or twenty
days, and I'm not sure how long this would have gone on without the catastrophe
that ended our voyage. As for Captain Nemo, he was no longer in the picture. As
for his chief officer, the same applied. Not one crewman was visible for a
single instant. The Nautilus cruised beneath the waters almost continuously.
When it rose briefly to the surface to renew our air, the hatches opened and closed
as if automated. No more positions were reported on the world map. I didn't
know where we were.
I'll also mention that the
Canadian, at the end of his strength and patience, made no further appearances.
Conseil couldn't coax a single word out of him and feared that, in a fit of
delirium while under the sway of a ghastly homesickness, Ned would kill
himself. So he kept a devoted watch on his friend every instant.
You can appreciate that under
these conditions, our situation had become untenable.
One morning--whose date I'm
unable to specify--I was slumbering near the first hours of daylight, a
painful, sickly slumber. Waking up, I saw Ned Land leaning over me, and I heard
him tell me in a low voice:
"We're going to
escape!"
I sat up.
"When?" I asked.
"Tonight. There doesn't seem
to be any supervision left on the Nautilus. You'd think a total daze was
reigning on board. Will you be ready, sir?"
"Yes. Where are we?"
"In sight of land. I saw it
through the mists just this morning, twenty miles to the east."
"What land is it?"
"I've no idea, but whatever
it is, there we'll take refuge."
"Yes, Ned! We'll escape
tonight even if the sea swallows us up!"
"The sea's rough, the wind's
blowing hard, but a twenty-mile run in the Nautilus's nimble longboat doesn't
scare me. Unknown to the crew, I've stowed some food and flasks of water
inside."
"I'm with you."
"What's more," the
Canadian added, "if they catch me, I'll defend myself, I'll fight to the
death."
"Then we'll die together,
Ned my friend."
My mind was made up. The Canadian
left me. I went out on the platform, where I could barely stand upright against
the jolts of the billows. The skies were threatening, but land lay inside those
dense mists, and we had to escape. Not a single day, or even a single hour,
could we afford to lose.
I returned to the lounge,
dreading yet desiring an encounter with Captain Nemo, wanting yet not wanting
to see him. What would I say to him? How could I hide the involuntary horror he
inspired in me? No! It was best not to meet him face to face! Best to try and
forget him! And yet . . . !
How long that day seemed, the
last I would spend aboard the Nautilus! I was left to myself. Ned Land and
Conseil avoided speaking to me, afraid they would give themselves away.
At six o'clock I ate supper, but
I had no appetite. Despite my revulsion, I forced it down, wanting to keep my
strength up.
At 6:30 Ned Land entered my
stateroom. He told me:
"We won't see each other
again before we go. At ten o'clock the moon won't be up yet. We'll take
advantage of the darkness. Come to the skiff. Conseil and I will be inside
waiting for you."
The Canadian left without giving
me time to answer him.
I wanted to verify the Nautilus's
heading. I made my way to the lounge. We were racing north-northeast with
frightful speed, fifty meters down.
I took one last look at the
natural wonders and artistic treasures amassed in the museum, this unrivaled
collection doomed to perish someday in the depths of the seas, together with
its curator. I wanted to establish one supreme impression in my mind. I stayed
there an hour, basking in the aura of the ceiling lights, passing in review the
treasures shining in their glass cases. Then I returned to my stateroom.
There I dressed in sturdy
seafaring clothes. I gathered my notes and packed them tenderly about my
person. My heart was pounding mightily. I couldn't curb its pulsations. My
anxiety and agitation would certainly have given me away if Captain Nemo had
seen me.
What was he doing just then? I
listened at the door to his stateroom. I heard the sound of footsteps. Captain
Nemo was inside. He hadn't gone to bed. With his every movement I imagined he
would appear and ask me why I wanted to escape! I felt in a perpetual state of
alarm. My imagination magnified this sensation. The feeling became so acute, I
wondered whether it wouldn't be better to enter the captain's stateroom, dare
him face to face, brave it out with word and deed!
It was an insane idea.
Fortunately I controlled myself and stretched out on the bed to soothe my
bodily agitation. My nerves calmed a little, but with my brain so aroused, I
did a swift review of my whole existence aboard the Nautilus, every pleasant or
unpleasant incident that had crossed my path since I went overboard from the
Abraham Lincoln: the underwater hunting trip, the Torres Strait, our running
aground, the savages of Papua, the coral cemetery, the Suez passageway, the
island of Santorini, the Cretan diver, the Bay of Vigo, Atlantis, the Ice Bank,
the South Pole, our imprisonment in the ice, the battle with the devilfish, the
storm in the Gulf Stream, the Avenger, and that horrible scene of the vessel
sinking with its crew . . . ! All these events passed before my eyes like
backdrops unrolling upstage in a theater. In this strange setting Captain Nemo
then grew fantastically. His features were accentuated, taking on superhuman
proportions. He was no longer my equal, he was the Man of the Waters, the
Spirit of the Seas.
By then it was 9:30. I held my
head in both hands to keep it from bursting. I closed my eyes. I no longer
wanted to think. A half hour still to wait! A half hour of nightmares that
could drive me insane!
Just then I heard indistinct
chords from the organ, melancholy harmonies from some undefinable hymn, actual
pleadings from a soul trying to sever its earthly ties. I listened with all my
senses at once, barely breathing, immersed like Captain Nemo in this musical
trance that was drawing him beyond the bounds of this world.
Then a sudden thought terrified
me. Captain Nemo had left his stateroom. He was in the same lounge I had to
cross in order to escape. There I would encounter him one last time. He would
see me, perhaps speak to me! One gesture from him could obliterate me, a single
word shackle me to his vessel!
Even so, ten o'clock was about to
strike. It was time to leave my stateroom and rejoin my companions.
I dared not hesitate, even if
Captain Nemo stood before me. I opened the door cautiously, but as it swung on
its hinges, it seemed to make a frightful noise. This noise existed, perhaps,
only in my imagination!
I crept forward through the
Nautilus's dark gangways, pausing after each step to curb the pounding of my
heart.
I arrived at the corner door of the
lounge. I opened it gently. The lounge was plunged in profound darkness. Chords
from the organ were reverberating faintly. Captain Nemo was there. He didn't
see me. Even in broad daylight I doubt that he would have noticed me, so
completely was he immersed in his trance.
I inched over the carpet,
avoiding the tiniest bump whose noise might give me away. It took me five
minutes to reach the door at the far end, which led into the library.
I was about to open it when a
gasp from Captain Nemo nailed me to the spot. I realized that he was standing
up. I even got a glimpse of him because some rays of light from the library had
filtered into the lounge. He was coming toward me, arms crossed, silent, not
walking but gliding like a ghost. His chest was heaving, swelling with sobs.
And I heard him murmur these words, the last of his to reach my ears:
"O almighty God! Enough!
Enough!"
Was it a vow of repentance that
had just escaped from this man's conscience . . . ?
Frantic, I rushed into the
library. I climbed the central companionway, and going along the upper gangway,
I arrived at the skiff. I went through the opening that had already given
access to my two companions.
"Let's go, let's go!" I
exclaimed.
"Right away!" the
Canadian replied.
First, Ned Land closed and bolted
the opening cut into the Nautilus's sheet iron, using the monkey wrench he had
with him. After likewise closing the opening in the skiff, the Canadian began
to unscrew the nuts still bolting us to the underwater boat.
Suddenly a noise from the ship's
interior became audible. Voices were answering each other hurriedly. What was
it? Had they spotted our escape? I felt Ned Land sliding a dagger into my hand.
"Yes," I muttered,
"we know how to die!"
The Canadian paused in his work.
But one word twenty times repeated, one dreadful word, told me the reason for
the agitation spreading aboard the Nautilus. We weren't the cause of the crew's
concern.
"Maelstrom! Maelstrom!"
they were shouting.
The Maelstrom! Could a more
frightening name have rung in our ears under more frightening circumstances?
Were we lying in the dangerous waterways off the Norwegian coast? Was the
Nautilus being dragged into this whirlpool just as the skiff was about to
detach from its plating?
As you know, at the turn of the
tide, the waters confined between the Faroe and Lofoten Islands rush out with
irresistible violence. They form a vortex from which no ship has ever been able
to escape. Monstrous waves race together from every point of the horizon. They
form a whirlpool aptly called "the ocean's navel," whose attracting
power extends a distance of fifteen kilometers. It can suck down not only ships
but whales, and even polar bears from the northernmost regions.
This was where the Nautilus had
been sent accidentally-- or perhaps deliberately--by its captain. It was
sweeping around in a spiral whose radius kept growing smaller and smaller. The
skiff, still attached to the ship's plating, was likewise carried around at
dizzying speed. I could feel us whirling. I was experiencing that accompanying
nausea that follows such continuous spinning motions. We were in dread, in the
last stages of sheer horror, our blood frozen in our veins, our nerves numb,
drenched in cold sweat as if from the throes of dying! And what a noise around
our frail skiff! What roars echoing from several miles away! What crashes from
the waters breaking against sharp rocks on the seafloor, where the hardest
objects are smashed, where tree trunks are worn down and worked into "a
shaggy fur," as Norwegians express it!
What a predicament! We were
rocking frightfully. The Nautilus defended itself like a human being. Its steel
muscles were cracking. Sometimes it stood on end, the three of us along with
it!
"We've got to hold on
tight," Ned said, "and screw the nuts down again! If we can stay
attached to the Nautilus, we can still make it . . . !"
He hadn't finished speaking when
a cracking sound occurred. The nuts gave way, and ripped out of its socket, the
skiff was hurled like a stone from a sling into the midst of the vortex.
My head struck against an iron
timber, and with this violent shock I lost consciousness.
WE COME TO the conclusion of this
voyage under the seas. What happened that night, how the skiff escaped from the
Maelstrom's fearsome eddies, how Ned Land, Conseil, and I got out of that
whirlpool, I'm unable to say. But when I regained consciousness, I was lying in
a fisherman's hut on one of the Lofoten Islands. My two companions, safe and
sound, were at my bedside clasping my hands. We embraced each other heartily.
Just now we can't even dream of
returning to France. Travel between upper Norway and the south is limited. So I
have to wait for the arrival of a steamboat that provides bimonthly service
from North Cape.
So it is here, among these
gallant people who have taken us in, that I'm reviewing my narrative of these
adventures. It is accurate. Not a fact has been omitted, not a detail has been
exaggerated. It's the faithful record of this inconceivable expedition into an
element now beyond human reach, but where progress will someday make great
inroads.
Will anyone believe me? I don't
know. Ultimately it's unimportant. What I can now assert is that I've earned
the right to speak of these seas, beneath which in less than ten months, I've
cleared 20,000 leagues in this underwater tour of the world that has shown me
so many wonders across the Pacific, the Indian Ocean, the Red Sea, the
Mediterranean, the Atlantic, the southernmost and northernmost seas!
But what happened to the
Nautilus? Did it withstand the Maelstrom's clutches? Is Captain Nemo alive? Is
he still under the ocean pursuing his frightful program of revenge, or did he
stop after that latest mass execution? Will the waves someday deliver that
manuscript that contains his full life story? Will I finally learn the man's
name? Will the nationality of the stricken warship tell us the nationality of
Captain Nemo?
I
hope so. I likewise hope that his powerful submersible has defeated the sea
inside its most dreadful whirlpool, that the Nautilus has survived where so
many ships have perished! If this is the case and Captain Nemo still inhabits
the ocean-- his adopted country--may the hate be appeased in that fierce heart!
May the contemplation of so many wonders extinguish the spirit of vengeance in
him! May the executioner pass away, and the scientist continue his peaceful
exploration of the seas! If his destiny is strange, it's also sublime. Haven't
I encompassed it myself? Didn't I lead ten months of this otherworldly
existence? Thus to that question asked 6,000 years ago in the Book of
Ecclesiastes--"Who can fathom the soundless depths?"-- two men out of
all humanity have now earned the right to reply. Captain Nemo and I.