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<main class="book-content">
<div class="chapter" id="pgepubid00044">

<h2><a id="chap40"/>CHAPTER XVII<br/>
FROM CAPE HORN TO THE AMAZON</h2>

<p>
How I got on to the platform, I have no idea; perhaps the Canadian had carried
me there. But I breathed, I inhaled the vivifying sea-air. My two companions
were getting drunk with the fresh particles. The other unhappy men had been so
long without food, that they could not with impunity indulge in the simplest
aliments that were given them. We, on the contrary, had no end to restrain
ourselves; we could draw this air freely into our lungs, and it was the breeze,
the breeze alone, that filled us with this keen enjoyment.
</p>

<p>
“Ah!” said Conseil, “how delightful this oxygen is! Master need not fear to
breathe it. There is enough for everybody.”
</p>

<p>
Ned Land did not speak, but he opened his jaws wide enough to frighten a shark.
Our strength soon returned, and, when I looked round me, I saw we were alone on
the platform. The foreign seamen in the <i>Nautilus</i> were contented with the
air that circulated in the interior; none of them had come to drink in the open
air.
</p>

<p>
The first words I spoke were words of gratitude and thankfulness to my two
companions. Ned and Conseil had prolonged my life during the last hours of this
long agony. All my gratitude could not repay such devotion.
</p>

<p>
“My friends,” said I, “we are bound one to the other for ever, and I am under
infinite obligations to you.”
</p>

<p>
“Which I shall take advantage of,” exclaimed the Canadian.
</p>

<p>
“What do you mean?” said Conseil.
</p>

<p>
“I mean that I shall take you with me when I leave this infernal
<i>Nautilus</i>.”
</p>

<p>
“Well,” said Conseil, “after all this, are we going right?”
</p>

<p>
“Yes,” I replied, “for we are going the way of the sun, and here the sun is in
the north.”
</p>

<p>
“No doubt,” said Ned Land; “but it remains to be seen whether he will bring the
ship into the Pacific or the Atlantic Ocean, that is, into frequented or
deserted seas.”
</p>

<p>
I could not answer that question, and I feared that Captain Nemo would rather
take us to the vast ocean that touches the coasts of Asia and America at the
same time. He would thus complete the tour round the submarine world, and
return to those waters in which the <i>Nautilus</i> could sail freely. We
ought, before long, to settle this important point. The <i>Nautilus</i> went at
a rapid pace. The polar circle was soon passed, and the course shaped for Cape
Horn. We were off the American point, March 31st, at seven o’clock in the
evening. Then all our past sufferings were forgotten. The remembrance of that
imprisonment in the ice was effaced from our minds. We only thought of the
future. Captain Nemo did not appear again either in the drawing-room or on the
platform. The point shown each day on the planisphere, and, marked by the
lieutenant, showed me the exact direction of the <i>Nautilus</i>. Now, on that
evening, it was evident, to my great satisfaction, that we were going back to
the North by the Atlantic. The next day, April 1st, when the <i>Nautilus</i>
ascended to the surface some minutes before noon, we sighted land to the west.
It was Terra del Fuego, which the first navigators named thus from seeing the
quantity of smoke that rose from the natives’ huts. The coast seemed low to me,
but in the distance rose high mountains. I even thought I had a glimpse of
Mount Sarmiento, that rises 2,070 yards above the level of the sea, with a very
pointed summit, which, according as it is misty or clear, is a sign of fine or
of wet weather. At this moment the peak was clearly defined against the sky.
The <i>Nautilus</i>, diving again under the water, approached the coast, which
was only some few miles off. From the glass windows in the drawing-room, I saw
long seaweeds and gigantic fuci and varech, of which the open polar sea
contains so many specimens, with their sharp polished filaments; they measured
about 300 yards in length—real cables, thicker than one’s thumb; and, having
great tenacity, they are often used as ropes for vessels. Another weed known as
velp, with leaves four feet long, buried in the coral concretions, hung at the
bottom. It served as nest and food for myriads of crustacea and molluscs,
crabs, and cuttlefish. There seals and otters had splendid repasts, eating the
flesh of fish with sea-vegetables, according to the English fashion. Over this
fertile and luxuriant ground the <i>Nautilus</i> passed with great rapidity.
Towards evening it approached the Falkland group, the rough summits of which I
recognised the following day. The depth of the sea was moderate. On the shores
our nets brought in beautiful specimens of sea weed, and particularly a certain
fucus, the roots of which were filled with the best mussels in the world. Geese
and ducks fell by dozens on the platform, and soon took their places in the
pantry on board.
</p>

<p>
When the last heights of the Falklands had disappeared from the horizon, the
<i>Nautilus</i> sank to between twenty and twenty-five yards, and followed the
American coast. Captain Nemo did not show himself. Until the 3rd of April we
did not quit the shores of Patagonia, sometimes under the ocean, sometimes at
the surface. The <i>Nautilus</i> passed beyond the large estuary formed by the
Plata, and was, on the 4th of April, fifty-six miles off
Uraguay. Its direction was northwards, and followed the long windings of the
coast of South America. We had then made 1,600 miles since our embarkation in
the seas of Japan. About eleven o’clock in the morning the Tropic of Capricorn
was crossed on the thirty-seventh meridian, and we passed Cape Frio standing
out to sea. Captain Nemo, to Ned Land’s great displeasure, did not like the
neighbourhood of the inhabited coasts of Brazil, for we went at a giddy speed.
Not a fish, not a bird of the swiftest kind could follow us, and the natural
curiosities of these seas escaped all observation.
</p>

<p>
This speed was kept up for several days, and in the evening of the 9th of April
we sighted the most easterly point of South America that forms Cape San Roque.
But then the <i>Nautilus</i> swerved again, and sought the lowest depth of a
submarine valley which is between this Cape and Sierra Leone on the African
coast. This valley bifurcates to the parallel of the Antilles, and terminates
at the north by the enormous depression of 9,000 yards. In this place, the
geological basin of the ocean forms, as far as the Lesser Antilles, a cliff of
three and a half miles perpendicular in height, and, at the parallel of the
Cape Verde Islands, another wall not less considerable, that encloses thus all
the sunk continent of the Atlantic. The bottom of this immense valley is dotted
with some mountains, that give to these submarine places a picturesque aspect.
I speak, moreover, from the manuscript charts that were in the library of the
<i>Nautilus</i>—charts evidently due to Captain Nemo’s hand, and made after his
personal observations. For two days the desert and deep waters were visited by
means of the inclined planes. The <i>Nautilus</i> was furnished with long
diagonal broadsides which carried it to all elevations. But on the 11th of
April it rose suddenly, and land appeared at the mouth of the Amazon River, a
vast estuary, the embouchure of which is so considerable that it freshens the
sea-water for the distance of several leagues.
</p>

<p>
The equator was crossed. Twenty miles to the west were the Guianas, a French
territory, on which we could have found an easy refuge; but a stiff breeze was
blowing, and the furious waves would not have allowed a single boat to face
them. Ned Land understood that, no doubt, for he spoke not a word about it. For
my part, I made no allusion to his schemes of flight, for I would not urge him
to make an attempt that must inevitably fail. I made the time pass pleasantly
by interesting studies. During the days of April 11th and 12th, the
<i>Nautilus</i> did not leave the surface of the sea, and the net brought in a
marvellous haul of zoophytes, fish and reptiles. Some zoophytes had been fished
up by the chain of the nets; they were for the most part beautiful
phyctallines, belonging to the actinidian family, and among other species the
phyctalis protexta, peculiar to that part of the ocean, with a little
cylindrical trunk, ornamented with vertical lines, speckled with red dots,
crowning a marvellous blossoming of tentacles. As to the molluscs, they
consisted of some I had already observed—turritellas, olive porphyras, with
regular lines intercrossed, with red spots standing out plainly against the
flesh; odd pteroceras, like petrified scorpions; translucid hyaleas, argonauts,
cuttle-fish (excellent eating), and certain species of calmars that naturalists
of antiquity have classed amongst the flying-fish, and that serve principally
for bait for cod-fishing. I had now an opportunity of studying several species
of fish on these shores. Amongst the cartilaginous ones, petromyzons-pricka, a
sort of eel, fifteen inches long, with a greenish head, violet fins, grey-blue
back, brown belly, silvered and sown with bright spots, the pupil of the eye
encircled with gold—a curious animal, that the current of the Amazon had drawn
to the sea, for they inhabit fresh waters—tuberculated streaks, with pointed
snouts, and a long loose tail, armed with a long jagged sting; little sharks, a
yard long, grey and whitish skin, and several rows of teeth, bent back, that
are generally known by the name of pantouffles; vespertilios, a kind of red
isosceles triangle, half a yard long, to which pectorals are attached by fleshy
prolongations that make them look like bats, but that their horny appendage,
situated near the nostrils, has given them the name of sea-unicorns; lastly,
some species of balistae, the curassavian, whose spots were of a brilliant gold
colour, and the capriscus of clear violet, and with varying shades like a
pigeon’s throat.
</p>

<p>
I end here this catalogue, which is somewhat dry perhaps, but very exact, with
a series of bony fish that I observed in passing belonging to the apteronotes,
and whose snout is white as snow, the body of a beautiful black, marked with a
very long loose fleshy strip; odontognathes, armed with spikes; sardines nine
inches long, glittering with a bright silver light; a species of mackerel
provided with two anal fins; centronotes of a blackish tint, that are fished
for with torches, long fish, two yards in length, with fat flesh, white and
firm, which, when they arc fresh, taste like eel, and when dry, like smoked
salmon; labres, half red, covered with scales only at the bottom of the dorsal
and anal fins; chrysoptera, on which gold and silver blend their brightness
with that of the ruby and topaz; golden-tailed spares, the flesh of which is
extremely delicate, and whose phosphorescent properties betray them in the
midst of the waters; orange-coloured spares with long tongues; maigres, with
gold caudal fins, dark thorn-tails, anableps of Surinam, etc.
</p>

<p>
Notwithstanding this “et cetera,” I must not omit to mention fish that Conseil
will long remember, and with good reason. One of our nets had hauled up a sort
of very flat ray fish, which, with the tail cut off, formed a perfect disc, and
weighed twenty ounces. It was white underneath, red above, with large round
spots of dark blue encircled with black, very glossy skin, terminating in a
bilobed fin. Laid out on the platform, it struggled, tried to turn itself by
convulsive movements, and made so many efforts, that one last turn had nearly
sent it into the sea. But Conseil, not wishing to let the fish go, rushed to
it, and, before I could prevent him, had seized it with both hands. In a moment
he was overthrown, his legs in the air, and half his body paralysed, crying—
</p>

<p>
“Oh! master, master! help me!”
</p>

<p>
It was the first time the poor boy had spoken to me so familiarly. The Canadian
and I took him up, and rubbed his contracted arms till he became sensible. The
unfortunate Conseil had attacked a cramp-fish of the most dangerous kind, the
cumana. This odd animal, in a medium conductor like water, strikes fish at
several yards’ distance, so great is the power of its electric organ, the two
principal surfaces of which do not measure less than twenty-seven square feet.
The next day, April 12th, the <i>Nautilus</i> approached the Dutch coast, near
the mouth of the Maroni. There several groups of sea-cows herded together; they
were manatees, that, like the dugong and the stellera, belong to the sirenian
order. These beautiful animals, peaceable and inoffensive, from eighteen to
twenty-one feet in length, weigh at least sixteen hundredweight. I told Ned
Land and Conseil that provident nature had assigned an important role to these
mammalia. Indeed, they, like the seals, are designed to graze on the submarine
prairies, and thus destroy the accumulation of weed that obstructs the tropical
rivers.
</p>

<p>
“And do you know,” I added, “what has been the result since men have almost
entirely annihilated this useful race? That the putrefied weeds have poisoned
the air, and the poisoned air causes the yellow fever, that desolates these
beautiful countries. Enormous vegetations are multiplied under the torrid seas,
and the evil is irresistibly developed from the mouth of the Rio de la Plata to
Florida. If we are to believe Toussenel, this plague is nothing to what it
would be if the seas were cleaned of whales and seals. Then, infested with
poulps, medusæ, and cuttle-fish, they would become immense centres of
infection, since their waves would not possess ‘these vast stomachs that God
had charged to infest the surface of the seas.’”
</p>

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